1921 Polish census

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The Polish census of 1921 or First General Census in Poland (Polish: Pierwszy Powszechny Spis Ludności) was the first census in the Second Polish Republic, performed on September 30, 1921, by the Main Bureau of Statistics (Główny Urząd Statystyczny). It was followed by the Polish census of 1931.

Quick facts Polish census of 1921 ...
Polish census of 1921
1921 Census of Poland, vol. 31: Population by Religion and Nationality (go to p. 80: PDF)
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Due to war, not all of interwar Poland was enumerated. Upper Silesia was formally assigned to Poland by the League of Nations after the census was conducted elsewhere. Meanwhile, the conditions in eastern Galicia were still unstable and chaotic, and the census data had to be adjusted after the fact, wrote Joseph Marcus, thus leading to more questions than answers.[1] The army and personnel under military jurisdiction were not included in the results. Also, specific areas of considerable size lacked complete returns due to absence of war refugees.[2]

Entire categories considered essential today were absent from the questionnaires, subject to historic interpretation at any given time. For example, the Ukrainian ethnicity was not surveyed. The census followed all previous Habsburg censuses and surveyed only the Rusyns (as Ruthenes) with the only possible distinguishing factor for Ukrainians being religion. Within a single total number of Ruthenes (narodowość rusińska), separate categories existed only for Greek Catholics (68.4 percent or 2,667,840 of them) and Orthodox Christians (31 percent or 1,207,739 of the total),[page 80] but did not address language in the same way as the next Polish census of 1931. Neither the Ukrainians, Carpatho-Rusyns (or Rusnaks), nor Polesians were defined by their name. The categories listed in the census included verbatim: Narodowość: polska (polonais), rusińska (ruthènes), żydowska (juifs), białoruska (biėlorusses), niemiecka (allemands), litewska (lithuaniens), rosyjska (russes), tutejsza (indigène), czeska (tchèques), inna (autre), niewiadoma (inconnue).[3]

Some scholars claim that minorities had been undercounted, with some claiming as much as 40% of Poland's population was a minority, 18 percent Ukrainian, 10 percent Jewish, 6 percent Byelorussian, and 5 percent German.[4]

Results

Nationality

More information Religion/Nationality, Total ...
Religion/Nationality Total Poles Ruthenians Jews Belarusians Germans Lithuanians Russians Local peoples Czechs Others Not specified
Total 25,694,700 17.789.287 3.898.428 2.048.878 1.035.693 769.392 24.044 48.920 38.943 30.628 9.856 631
Roman Catholics 16.057.229 15.850.890 16.239 1.316 60.123 94.017 21.639 1.144 113 7.398 4.310 40
Greek Catholics 3.031.057 361.294 2,667,840 125 197 383 6 0 348 32 325 3
Orthodox 2.815.817 545.457 1.207.739 140 960.539 303 2.227 3.597 38.135 18.404 891 14
Jews 2,771,949 707.400 3.751 2.044.637 3.983 9937 74 1.081 346 91 644 5
Protestants 940.234 274.471 1.992 300 205 656.865 76 12 1 3.952 1.968 31
Mariavites 33.003 32.865 9 5 5 111 1 41.968 0 4 3 0
Ost. Orthodox 21.707 7.875 47 2 10.078 50 6 373 0 0 51 1
Evangelicals 12.426 3.374 720 41 41 7.375 3 178 0 726 133 1
Beyond Confessions 5.972 3.309 50 2.287 10 135 7 46 0 17 111 0
Other non-Christians 4.397 2.098 35 16 510 173 2 191 0 1 1.370 1
Not specified 909 254 6 9 2 43 3 4 0 3 50 535
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More information All, Polish ...
AllPolishRuthenians[5]JewishBelarusianGermanLithuanian[6]RussianTutejszy[6]Czechotherunknown
25.694.70017.789.2873.898.4282.048.8781.035.693769.39224.04448.92038.94330.6289.856631
100%69,23%15,17%7,97%4,03%2,99%0,09%0,19%0,15%0,12%0,04%~0,002%
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Religion

More information All, Roman Catholics ...
AllRoman CatholicsGreco CatholicsOther Catholic (Mariavite and others)OrthodoxOther Eastern ChristiansEvangelicalsOther EvangelicalsJewsOther Non-ChristiansAgnosticsUnknown
25 694 70016 057 2293 031 05733 0032 815 81721 707940 23412 4262 771 9494 3975 972909
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Source:[3]

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