Belarusians

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Belarusians (Template:Langx Script error: No such module "IPA".) are an East Slavic ethnic group native to Belarus. They natively speak Belarusian, an East Slavic language. More than 9 million people proclaim Belarusian ethnicity worldwide.[1] Nearly 7.99 million Belarusians reside in Belarus,[2][3] with the United States[4][5][6] and Russia[7] being home to more than 500,000 Belarusians each. The majority of Belarusians adhere to Eastern Orthodoxy.

Name

During the Soviet era, Belarusians were referred to as Byelorussians or Belorussians (from Byelorussia, derived from Russian "Белоруссия"). Before, they were typically known as White Russians or White Ruthenians (from White Russia or White Ruthenia, based on "Белая Русь"). Upon Belarusian independence in 1991, they became known as Belarusians (from Belarus, derived from "Беларусь"), sometimes spelled as Belarusans,[8] Belarussians[9] or Belorusians.[9]

The term White Rus' (Template:Langx), also known as White Ruthenia or White Russia (as the term Rus' is often conflated with its Latin forms Russia and Ruthenia), was first used in the Middle Ages to refer to the area of Polotsk.[9][10] The name Rus' itself is derived from the Rus' people which gave the name to the territories of Kievan Rus'.[11] The chronicles of Jan of Czarnków mention the imprisonment of Lithuanian grand duke Jogaila and his mother at "Script error: No such module "Lang"." in 1381.[12] During the 17th century, the Russian tsars used the term to describe the lands added from the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.[13] However, during the Russian Civil War, the term White Russian became associated with the White movement.[9]

Geographic distribution

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Belarusians are an East Slavic ethnic group, who constitute the majority of Belarus' population.[9] Belarusian minority populations live in countries neighboring Belarus: Ukraine, Poland (especially in the Podlaskie Voivodeship), the Russian Federation and Lithuania.[9] At the beginning of the 20th century, Belarusians constituted a minority in the regions around the city of Smolensk in Russia.

Significant numbers of Belarusians emigrated to the United States, Brazil and Canada in the early 20th century. During Soviet times (1917–1991), many Belarusians were deported or migrated to various regions of the USSR, including Siberia, Kazakhstan and Ukraine.[14]

Since the 1991 breakup of the USSR, several hundred thousand Belarusians have emigrated to the Baltic states, the United States, Canada, Russia, and EU countries.[15]

Languages

The two official languages of Belarus are Belarusian and Russian. Russian was made co-official with Belarusian after the 1995 Belarusian referendum, which also established that the flag (with the hammer and sickle removed), anthem, and coat of arms would be those of the BSSR. The OSCE Parliamentary Assembly stated that the referendum violated international standards. Members of the opposition claimed that the organization of the referendum involved several serious violations of legislation, including a violation of the constitution.[16]

Genetics

Script error: No such module "labelled list hatnote". Belarusians, like most Europeans, largely descend from three distinct lineages:[17] Mesolithic hunter-gatherers, descended from a Cro-Magnon population that arrived in Europe about 45,000 years ago;[18] Neolithic farmers who migrated from Asia Minor during the Neolithic Revolution 9,000 years ago;[19] and Yamnaya steppe pastoralists who expanded into Europe from the Pontic–Caspian steppe in the context of Indo-European migrations 5,000 years ago.[17]

History

The Neolithic and the Bronze Age

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File:The prevalence of Baltic hydronyms.png
The prevalence of Baltic hydronyms

Balts have historically inhabited most of the territory of present-day Belarus, particularly The upper Dnieper River basin, Sozh, Berezina, Pripyat, and Western Dvina river regions. Many ancient place names in Belarus are of Baltic origin. These names predate Slavic settlement, showing that Balts lived in these areas before the arrival of Slavs which began around the 6th–7th centuries AD. In Belarus, Balts gradually assimilated into Slavic tribes, especially during the 1st millennium AD.[20]

Early Middle Ages

File:Slavic tribes in the 7th to 9th century.svg
Slavic tribes in the 7th-9th century

According to Russian archaeologist Template:Ill, it was intensive contacts with the Balts that contributed to the distinctiveness of the Belarusian tribes from the other Eastern Slavs.Template:Sfn

The Baltic population gradually became Slavic, undergoing assimilation, a process that for eastern and central Belarus ended around the 12th century.Template:Sfn Most of present-day Belarusian lands in the 8th-9th centuries were inhabited by 3 tribal unions: the Krivichs, Dregoviches and Radimichs. Of these, the Krivichs played the most important role; Polotsk, founded by them, was the most important cultural and political center during this period. The principalities formed at that time on the territory of Belarus were part of Kievan Rus'. The process of the beginning of the East Slavic linguistic community and the separation of Belarusian dialects slowly took place.Template:Sfn

In the Grand Duchy of Lithuania

File:Nicolas de Fer's map in which Lithuania proper (Vraye Lithuanie) is clearly separated with a green line from Samogitia (Samogitie), and the Belarusian territories of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (Russie Blanche ou Lituanique).jpg
A fragment of an 18th-century map by Nicolas de Fer featuring Samogitia (Samogitie), Lithuania proper (Vraye Lithuanie) and the Belarusian territories of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (Russie Blanche ou Lituanique)

The lands of modern-day Belarus played a central role in the history and development of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Over time, East Slavic populations — today broadly identified as Belarusians — came to comprise a substantial portion of the Grand Duchy's population, territory, and administrative structure.[21][22] Beginning with the reigns of Grand Dukes Mindaugas and Gediminas, the Duchy expanded rapidly eastward and southward. By the mid-14th century, most of the territories of modern Belarus — including Polotsk, Vitebsk, Minsk, Turov, and Pinsk — had been incorporated into the Lithuanian state.[23] These regions were historically part of the Kievan Rus' cultural and political sphere and retained strong Orthodox Christian and East Slavic traditions. Their elites, while politically integrated into the Lithuanian state, continued to identify with the Rus' legacy and maintained local self-governance to varying degrees.[24] The nobility of Belarusian territories often referred to as Ruthenian szlachta were full participants in the political life of the Grand Duchy. Many of them were bilingual or trilingual, speaking Ruthenian, Polish, and Latin, and later came under increasing Polish cultural influence, especially after the Union of Lublin in 1569 and the Union of Brest in 1596, which created the Greek Catholic (Uniate) Church.[25] While a modern Belarusian national identity did not yet exist, the Ruthenian-speaking population of the GDL played a key role in shaping the Duchy’s culture, legal traditions, and demographic landscape. These populations are widely recognized by scholars as the cultural and linguistic ancestors of modern Belarusians.[26] Over the next two centuries, Belarusian lands experienced growing Polonization and religious shifts, although Ruthenian continued to be used in some official contexts until the late 17th century, when it was replaced by Polish.[27]

After the Partitions of the Commonwealth in the late 18th century, most Belarusian territories were annexed by the Russian Empire, where a new phase of identity development, repression, and cultural shifts began.[28]

In the Russian Empire

Following the destruction of Poland–Lithuania with the Third Partition in 1795, Empress Catherine of Russia created the Belarusian Governorate from the Template:Ill and Mogilev Governorates.[10] However, Tsar Nicholas I of Russia banned the use of the word Belarus in 1839, replacing it with the designation Northwestern Krai.[29] Due to the ban, various different names were used for naming the inhabitants of those territories.[30] It was part of the Pale of Settlement, which was the region where Jews were allowed permanent residency.

20th century

During World War I and the fall of Russian Empire, a short-lived Belarusian Democratic Republic was declared in March 1918. Thereafter, modern Belarus' territory was split between the Second Polish Republic and Soviet Russia during the Peace of Riga in 1921. The latter created the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic, which was reunited with Western Belarus during World War 2 and lasted until the dissolution of the Soviet Union, which was ended by the Belovezh Accords in 1991. The modern Republic of Belarus exists since then.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

More than two million people were killed in Belarus during the three years of German occupation in 1941–44, around a quarter of the region's population,[31] or even as high as three million killed or thirty percent of the population.[32]

Cuisine

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See also

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References

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Bibliography

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External links

Template:Country topics Template:Slavic ethnic groups Template:Authority control

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  21. Rowell, S. C. Lithuania Ascending: A Pagan Empire Within East-Central Europe, 1295–1345. Cambridge University Press, 1994.
  22. Kiaupa, Zigmantas et al. The History of Lithuania Before 1795. Lithuanian Institute of History, 2000.
  23. Koneczny, Feliks. Dzieje Polski za Jagiellonów. Kraków, 1903.
  24. Plokhy, Serhii. The Origins of the Slavic Nations. Cambridge University Press, 2006.
  25. Magocsi, Paul Robert. A History of Ukraine: The Land and Its Peoples. University of Toronto Press, 2010.
  26. Zaprudnik, Jan. Belarus: At a Crossroads in History. Westview Press, 1993.
  27. Kamuntavičius, Rūstis et al. The Grand Duchy of Lithuania: The State of the Nobility. Vilnius: Aidai, 2007.
  28. Weeks, Theodore R. Nation and State in Late Imperial Russia: Nationalism and Russification on the Western Frontier, 1863–1914. Northern Illinois University Press, 1996.
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