Total population | |
---|---|
4,690 (2011 census)[2] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Bratislava, Košice, Spiš, Hauerland | |
Languages | |
Slovak, German | |
Religion | |
Roman Catholicism 55.5%, Atheism 21.0%, Lutheranism 14.2%, and 9.3 other religions | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Germans Austrians Germans of Hungary Germans of Romania |
Carpathian Germans (German: Karpatendeutsche or Mantaken, Hungarian: kárpátnémetek or felvidéki németek, Slovak: Karpatskí Nemci, Ukrainian: Карпатські німці, Romanian: Germani carpatini) are a group of ethnic Germans in Central and Eastern Europe. The term was coined by the historian Raimund Friederich Kaindl (1866–1930), originally generally referring to the German-speaking population of the area around the Carpathian Mountains: the Cisleithanian (Austrian) crown lands of Galicia and Bukovina, as well as the Hungarian half of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy (including Szepes County), and the northwestern (Maramuresch) region of Romania. Since the First World War, only the Germans of Slovakia (the Slovak Germans or Slowakeideutsche, including the Zipser Germans) and those of Carpathian Ruthenia in Ukraine have commonly been called Carpathian Germans.