Total population | |
---|---|
39,855 (1951 census); unofficial estimates count up to 300,000[1] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Attica, Epirus, Thessaly, Western Macedonia, Central Macedonia | |
Languages | |
Aromanian (native), Greek | |
Religion | |
Predominantly Eastern Orthodoxy | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Aromanians, Vlachs, Romanians, Greeks |
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Aromanians |
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The Aromanians in Greece (Aromanian: Armãnji tu Gãrtsii; Greek: Βλάχοι/Αρμάνοι στην Ελλάδα) are an Aromanian ethno-linguistic group native in Epirus, Thessaly and Western and Central Macedonia, in Greece.[2]
In the country, they are commonly known as "Vlachs" (Βλάχοι, Vláchoi) and referred to as "Vlachophone Greeks"[3][4] or "Vlach-speaking Greeks",[5] because most Aromanians in Greece have a Greek identity and identify themselves with the Greek nation and culture.[6][7]
Vlachs, or Vlachophone Greeks, are traditionally mountain pastoralists.
The Vlachs or Macedo-Romanians, also called Aromanians or Vlachophone Greeks by others [...]
In August 2003 the Greek Federation of Cultural Associations of Vlachs objected to the direct or indirect characterization of the Vlach-speaking Greeks as an ethnic, linguistic or other type of minority, a position expressed in a subsequent report issued by the American organization Freedom House. The Federation asserted that Vlach-speaking Greeks never asked to be recognized as a minority by the Greek state as both historically and culturally they were, and still are an integral part of Hellenism.