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2005 | 27 | 71-99

Article title

THE RELIGIOUS STRUCTURE OF POLAND'S POPULATION IN 1931 BASED ON THE SECOND NATIONAL CENSUS

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Title variants

Languages of publication

PL

Abstracts

EN
This paper examines the religious diversity of Poland's interwar population. The results of the National Census of 9 December, 1931 provide the statistical database used in this analysis. Using the numerical material obtained from the afore-mentioned Census, the author projects the religious structure of the interwar population in Poland in relation to its nationality structure. This paper is also an attempt to determine the extent to which religion and mother tongue determined membership within a given nationality. It should be noted that the question of objectivity in classifying individual nationalities is quite problematic. In the course of national censuses, the respondents' declarations were (and are) affected by a variety of factors, e.g. mutual relations between the majority and minority groups in the given area. At times, some members of a minority group will not formally declare their minority identity. Additionally, declarations of identity may vary with respect to the respondents' needs. The author examines the interrelation between mother tongue and religion on the territory of the Second Polish Republic. Nationality groups can be identified by a variety of criteria. Frequently, the main criterion for identifying nationality is what the respondent declares to be his/her mother tongue. Another criterion may be the respondent's religion, which is frequently related to his/her mother language. It is quite interesting to examine the interrelation between the mother tongue, which is a subjective criterion of nationality, and a relatively objective criterion, e.g. the religious denomination. Roman Catholics represented the predominate religious group of the Second Polish Republic. That religion was generally identified with Polish nationality. Other faiths with relatively numerous representation in interwar Poland included the Orthodox Church, the Greek Catholic Church, and Judaism. Members of the Orthodox and Greek Catholic Churches were typically identified with East Slavic nationalities (Belorussians, Ukrainians, Ruthenians) and adherents of Judaism with Jews. The CHI2 tests of independence have shown that the nationality and religious population structures in the Second Polish Republic were closely linked.

Year

Issue

27

Pages

71-99

Physical description

Document type

ARTICLE

Contributors

author
  • T. Wysocki, c/o Uniwersytet Lódzki, Zaklad Demografii, ul. Rewolucji 1905r. 41/43, 90-214 Lódz, Poland

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

CEJSH db identifier
06PLAAAA00761873

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.bd46e39f-23e7-367e-95d3-dc9722eea470
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