Austrian people

citizens and residents of Austria From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Austrian people

Austrians (German: Österreicher) are the citizens and nationals of Austria. The English term Austrians was used for the population of Habsburg Austria from the 17th or 18th century. During the 19th century, it was for the citizens of the Empire of Austria (18041867). From 1867 until 1918, it was used for the citizens of Cisleithania. The term Austria first referred to the historical March of Austria. This was mostly the Vienna Basin in what is today Lower Austria.

Quick Facts German: Österreicher, Total population ...
Austrians
German: Österreicher
Total population
c. 8–8.5 million
Thumb
Regions with significant populations
 Austria 7,427,759[a]
 United States684,184[2]
 Germany345,620[3]
 Canada197,990[4]
 Switzerland40,300–65,090[5][6][7]
 Australia45,530[8]
 United Kingdom21,600–25,000[6][7]
 France20,000[9][7]
 Italy16,331[7]
 Netherlands15,771 (2017)[10]
 Brazil14,000[6]
 Spain12,000[6]
 South Africa10,000[6]
Other countries (1,000–10,000)
 Argentina9,800[6]
 Hungary9,044[7]
 Israel9,000[6]
 Sweden6,311[11]
 Turkey1,900[6]–14,400[7]
 Chile5,000[12]
 Czech Republic5,000[6]
 Greece4,000[6]
 Thailand4,000[13]
 Liechtenstein3,868[7]
 Poland3,790[7]
 Mexico3,500[6]
 Egypt3,400[6]
 Norway3,200[6]
 Slovakia3,154[7]
 Romania3,100[6]
 Slovenia3,052[7]
 Belgium3,020[7]
 Russia2,953[7]
 United Arab Emirates2,500[6]
 China1,900[6]
 Denmark1,500–1,900[7][6]
 Colombia1,600[6]
 New Zealand1,500[6]
 Portugal1,500[6]
 Philippines1,400[6]
 Croatia1,000[6]
 Uruguay1,000[6]
Languages
German
(Austro-Bavarian, Alemannic)
Religion
Historically:[14]
primarily Roman Catholic
minority Lutheran
Nowadays (2016):[15][16]
Christian (68%)
Irreligious (24%)
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Notes

  1. Citizens of Austria living there in 2018 according to official census data.[1]

References

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