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and as a minority in and as a minority in
* ] - 500,000; in Southern ] and Northern ] * ] - 500,000; in Southern ] and Northern ]
* ] - 35,000, mostly in the Serbian ] * ] - 75,000 (35,000 in the Serbian ] and other 40,000 in the Timok Valley)
* ] - 20,000 * ] - 20,000
* ] - 11,000 * ] - 11,000

Revision as of 17:41, 8 June 2004

Vlachs (also called Wlachs, Wallachs, Olahs) are the Romanized population in Central and Eastern Europe, including Romanians, Aromanians, Istro-Romanians and Megleno-Romanians, but since the creation of the Romanian state, this term was mostly used for the Vlachs living South of Danube.

They are the descendants of the Roman colonists or of the Romanized Dacian, Thracian and Illyrian local population (see Origin of Romanians for more about the dispute about the origin). Their languages are closely related to each other and it is believed that they were still the same language until the 10th century.

The origin of the name is Germanic: the same origin led to the words Welsh and Walloons in other parts of Europe. Slavic peoples initially used the name Vlachs when referring to Romanic peoples in general. Later on, the meaning got narrower or just different. For example Italy in Polish is called Włochy. In English, Wallachia is the name given to a part of their original territory.

Map of Balkans with regions inhabited by Romanians/Vlachs highlighted

Romanians (also known as Daco-Romanians, speaking Romanian language) are living in

and as a minority in

Aromanians (speaking Macedoromanian language) are living as a minority in

Note: the Greek government does not recognise any ethnic divisions, so there are no exact statistics. See Demographics of Greece.

Megleno-Romanians (speaking Megleno-Romanian language) are living in the Greek province of Meglen, with a population of 12,000.

Istro-Romanians (speaking Istro-Romanian language) are living in Croatia, with a population of less than 1,000.

Religion

The religion of the Vlachs is predominantly Eastern Orthodox Christianity, but there are some regions where they are Catholics and Protestants (in Transylvania) and a few are even Muslims (in some regions of Greece and in the European part of Turkey).

See also: