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According to the 2021 census, there were 123,892 ethnic Serbs living in Croatia, 3.20% of the total population. Their number was reduced by more than three-quarters in the aftermath of the 1991–95 War in Croatia as the 1991 pre-war census had reported 581,663 Serbs living in Croatia, 12.2% of the total population.
Ethnic structure of Croatia in 2021. Ethnic map of Croatia by municipalities (2021) Croatia is inhabited mostly by Croats (91.63%), while minority groups include: Serbs (3.2%), Bosniaks, Hungarians, Italians, Albanians, Slovenes, Germans, Czechs, Roma and others (less than 1% each). [38]
Pages in category "Serb communities in Croatia" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 243 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
It is recommended to name the SVG file “Serbs in Croatia, Bosnia, Montenegro and Serbia, 1981.svg”—then the template Vector version available (or Vva) does not need the new image name parameter.
According to most recent census conducted in Serbia, Croatia and Montenegro, there are nearly 7 million Serbs living in their native homelands, within the geographical borders of former Yugoslavia. In Serbia itself, around 5.5 million people identify themselves as ethnic Serbs, and constitute about 83% of the population.
The definition of Croatian ethnogenesis begins with the definition of ethnicity, [1] according to which an ethnic group is a socially defined category of people who identify with each other based on common ancestral, social, cultural or other experience, and which shows a certain durability over the long period term of time. [2]
Branko Dobrosavljević (1886 —1941), Serbian Orthodox priest who fell victim to Ustaše during the Genocide of Serbs in the Independent State of Croatia; Hieromartyr Georgije Bogić (1911–1941) Serbian Patriarch Pavle (1914–2009) Jovan Nikolić, Serbian Orthodox priest; Jovan Pavlović (1936–2014), Serbian Orthodox Metropolitan; Other
After 2011 Croatian census Serbs of Vukovar meet the required proportion of population for co-official introduction of Serbian but it led to Anti-Cyrillic protests in Croatia. In April 2015 United Nations Human Rights Committee urged Croatia to ensure the right of minorities to use their language and alphabet. [ 6 ]