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Bulgarians (Bulgarian: ... any direct connection between the Bulgars and postulated Asian counterparts rest on little more than speculative and "contorted etymologies ...
Category: Bulgarian people of Asian descent. ... Bulgarian people of Vietnamese descent (4 P) This page was last edited on 10 February 2024, at 17:15 (UTC). ...
Pages in category "Japanese people of Bulgarian descent" This category contains only the following page. This list may not reflect recent changes. K. Kotoōshū Katsunori
According to estimates by members of the community, the Chinese in Bulgaria number around 5,000, [1] although Bulgarian researchers put the figure at around 10,000. Chinese are among the most recent immigrants to Bulgaria, the vast majority of them arriving after the democratic changes in 1989, and particularly from 1992 on; prior to 1989, only ...
The Asian diaspora is the diasporic group of Asian people who live outside of the continent. There are several prominent groups within the Asian diaspora. [1] Asian diasporas have been noted for having an increasingly transnational relationship with their ancestral homelands, [2] [3] especially culturally through the use of digital media. [4] [5]
Those with dual Bulgarian and other citizenship were 22 152, or 0.3% of the population. Of them persons with Bulgarian and Russian citizenship were 5 257 (23.7%), followed by persons with Bulgarian and Turkish citizenship - 4 282 (19.3%), Bulgarian and citizenship of the USA- 1 725 (7.8%).
The Anatolian Bulgarians or Bulgarians of Asia Minor (Bulgarian: малоазийски българи, maloazijski bǎlgari, or shortly, малоазианци, maloazianci) were members of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church who settled in Ottoman-ruled northwestern Anatolia (today in Turkey), possibly in the 18th century, and remained there until 1914.
The Bulgarian diaspora includes Bulgarians living outside Bulgaria and its surrounding countries, as well as immigrants from Bulgaria abroad. The number of Bulgarians outside Bulgaria has sharply increased since 1989, following the Revolutions of 1989 in Central and Eastern Europe .