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  2. Danish minority of Southern Schleswig - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danish_minority_of...

    The Danish ethnic minority in Southern Schleswig, Germany, has existed by this name since 1920, when the Schleswig Plebiscite split German-ruled Schleswig into two parts: Northern Schleswig with a Danish majority and a German minority was united with Denmark, while Southern Schleswig remained a part of Germany and had a German majority and ...

  3. Flensborg Avis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flensborg_Avis

    Flensborg Avis is a Danish language daily newspaper, published in Flensburg (Danish: Flensborg), Germany. It regularly cooperates with Flensburger Tageblatt , a German majority newspaper in the city, and Der Nordschleswiger , a German minority newspaper published in Denmark .

  4. Danish exonyms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danish_exonyms

    The use of German placenames in North Slesvig is similarly preferred by the local German minority (when speaking and writing German), but traditionally shunned by many Danes in the region. From 2008, municipalities in Schleswig-Holstein have been allowed bilingual town signs with the official minority languages: Danish, North Frisian and Low ...

  5. Category:Danish minority of Southern Schleswig - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Danish_minority...

    South Schleswig Voters' Association (1 C) Pages in category "Danish minority of Southern Schleswig" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total.

  6. German minority in Denmark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_minority_in_Denmark

    Bund Deutscher Nordschleswiger estimates the current number of North Schleswig Germans to be around 15,000, [5] i.e. around 6% of the North Schleswig population of c. 250,000. This is a far smaller group than the 50,000 Danes who live in Southern Schleswig, where, for instance, Flensborg Avis, a newspaper in Danish, is printed every day.

  7. Southern Schleswig - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_Schleswig

    Learn Danish banner in Flensburg, one of the major cities of Southern Schleswig. Besides Standard German, Low Saxon dialects (Schleswigsch) are spoken, as well as Danish (Standard Danish or South Schleswig Danish) and its South Jutlandic variant, plus North Frisian in the west. [11] Danish and North Frisian are official minority languages.

  8. Danes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danes

    It describes people of Danish nationality, both in Denmark and elsewhere–most importantly, ethnic Danes in both Denmark proper and the former Danish Duchy of Schleswig. Excluded from this definition are people from the formerly Norway, Faroe Islands, and Greenland; members of the German minority; and members of other ethnic minorities.

  9. Southern Schleswig Danish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_Schleswig_Danish

    Southern Schleswig Danish (Danish: Sydslesvigdansk, German: Südschleswigdänisch) is a variety of the Danish language spoken in Southern Schleswig in Northern Germany.It is a variety of Standard Danish (rigsmål, rigsdansk) influenced by the surrounding German language in relation to prosody, syntax and morphology, used by the Danish minority in Southern Schleswig.