Demographics of Europe

Figures for the population of Europe vary according to the particular definition of Europe's boundaries. In 2018, Europe had a total population of over 751 million people.[1][2] Russia is the most populous country in Europe, with a population of 146 million. (The population of Siberia and the Asian part of Turkey are not counted.)

Population density in the European Union and the EFTA countries, along with candidate countries (2017)
Population growth and decline as of 2020 in Europe

Europe's population growth is low, and its median age high. Most of Europe is in a mode of sub-replacement fertility, which means that each new(-born) generation is less populous than the one before.[3] Nonetheless, most West European countries still have growing populations, mainly due to immigration within Europe and from outside Europe and some due to increases in life expectancy and population momentum. Some current and past factors in European demography have included emigration, ethnic relations, economic immigration, a declining birth rate and an ageing population.

History

According to Volker Heyd, an archaeologist at the University of Helsinki, up to 7 million people lived in Europe in 3000 BC.[4]

Estimates for historical population sizes of Europe (including Central Asia, listed under "former USSR") based on Maddison (2007),[5] in millions, with estimated percentage of world population:

Population of Europe, in millions, by year
Year Population
(% of world total)
AD 1 34 (15%)
1000 40 (15%)
1500 78 (18%)
1600 112 (20%)
1700 127 (21%)
1820 224 (21%)
1913 498 (28%)
2000 742 (13%)

Historical population of Europe and former USSR within modern state boundaries, AD 1–2020

Source: Maddison and others (University of Groningen)[6]

Population by year (in thousands)
Country/region 1 1000 1500 1600 1700 1820 1870 1913 1950 1973 1998[6] 2020
Austria 500 700 2000 2500 2500 3369 4520 6767 6935 7586 8078 8901
Belgium 300 400 1400 1600 2000 3424 5096 7666 8640 9738 10197 11493
Denmark 180 360 600 650 700 1155 1888 2983 4269 5022 5303 5823
Finland 20 40 300 400 400 1169 1754 3027 4009 4666 5153 5536
France 5000 6500 15000 18500 21471 31246 38440 41463 41836 52118 58805 67287
Germany 3000 3500 12000 16000 15000 24905 39231 65058 68371 78956 82029 83191
Italy 7000 5000 10500 13100 13300 20176 27888 37248 47105 54751 57592 59258
Netherlands 200 300 950 1500 1900 2355 3615 6164 10114 13438 15700 17425
Norway 100 200 300 400 500 970 1735 2447 3265 3961 4432 5368
Sweden 200 400 550 760 1260 2585 4164 5621 7015 8137 8851 10379
Switzerland 300 300 650 1000 1200 1829 2664 3864 4694 6441 7130 8667
United Kingdom 800 2000 3942 6170 8565 21226 31393 45649 50363 56223 59237 67886
Portugal 500 600 1000 1100 2000 3297 4353 6004 8512 8634 9968 10305
Spain 4500 4000 6800 8240 8770 12203 16201 20263 27868 34810 39371 47431
Greece 2000 1000 1000 1500 1500 2312 7554 8929 10835 10689
13 small countries 100 113 276 358 394 657
Total Western Europe 24700 25413 57268 73778 81460 132888 187532 261007 305060 358390 388399 419639
Albania 200 200 200 200 300 437 1215 2296 3108 2878
Bulgaria 500 800 800 1250 1250 2187 4200 7251 8621 8257 6917
Czechoslovakia 1000 1250 3000 4500 4500 7190 12393 14563 15686 16366
- Czech Rep. 10221 8930 10295 10702
- Slovakia 3463 4642 5391 5460
Hungary 300 500 1250 1250 1500 4571 9338 10432 10237 9770
Poland 450 1200 4000 5000 6000 10426 25753 33363 38666 38268
Romania 800 800 2000 2000 2500 6389 7360 16311 20828 22503 19266
Yugoslavia 1500 1750 2250 2750 2750 5215 16578 21088
Eastern Europe 4750 6500 13500 16950 18800 36415 52182 79604 139428 173037 164513 151529
Former USSR 3900 7100 16950 20700 26550 54765 88672 156192 180050 249748 290866
- Russia 102833 132434 147671 146171
- Ukraine 31142 36905 48274 50370 41902
World 230820 268273 437818 555828 603410 1041092 1270014 1791020 2524531 3913482 5907680 7800000
(%) Percentages of world population, by year[6]
Country/region 1 1000 1500 1600 1700 1820 1870 1913 1950 1973 1998 2018
Austria 0.2 0.3 0.5 0.4 0.4 0.3 0.4 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1
Belgium 0.1 0.1 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.4 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.2
Denmark 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.1 0.1
Finland 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.1 0.1
France 2.2 2.4 3.4 3.3 3.6 3.0 3.0 2.3 1.7 1.3 1.0
Germany 1.3 1.3 2.7 2.9 2.5 2.4 3.1 3.6 2.7 2.0 1.4
Italy 3.0 1.9 2.4 2.4 2.2 1.9 2.2 2.1 1.9 1.4 1.0
Netherlands 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.3 0.2 0.3 0.3 0.4 0.3 0.3
Norway 0.0 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1
Sweden 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.2 0.1
Switzerland 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.1
United Kingdom 0.3 0.7 0.9 1.1 1.4 2.0 2.5 2.5 2.0 1.4 1.0
Portugal 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.2 0.2
Spain 1.9 1.5 1.6 1.5 1.5 1.2 1.3 1.1 1.1 0.9 0.7
Other 0.9 0.4 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.4 0.4 0.5 0.4 0.3
Total Western Europe 10.7 9.5 13.1 13.3 13.5 12.8 14.8 14.6 12.1 9.2 6.6
Eastern Europe 2.1 2.4 3.1 3.0 3.1 3.5 4.1 4.4 3.5 2.8 2.0
Former USSR 1.7 2.6 3.9 3.7 4.4 5.3 7.0 8.7 7.1 6.4 4.9
Total Europe 14.5 14.5 20.1 20.0 21.0 21.6 25.9 27.7 22.7 18.4 13.5 9.8[7]
World 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Note: These numbers do not include the population of European countries' colonies. Only population within Europe.

Total population

Population pyramid of Europe in 2023 based on the collective United Nations geoscheme for Europe
Europe population pyramid from 1950 to 2023

330,000,000 people lived in Europe in 1916.[8] In 1950 there were 549,000,000.[9] The population of Europe in 2015 was estimated to be 741 million according to the United Nations,[9] which was slightly less than 11% of the world population. The precise figure depends on the exact definition of the geographic extent of Europe. The population of the European Union (EU) was 509 million as of 2015.[10] Non-EU countries situated in Europe in their entirety[11] account for another 90 million. Five transcontinental countries[12] have a total of 247 million people, of which about half reside in Europe proper.

As it stands now, around 10% of the world's people live in Europe. If demographic trends keep their pace, its share may fall to around 7% in 2050, but still amounting to 716 million people in absolute numbers, according to the United Nations estimate.[9] (The decline in the percentage is partly due to high fertility rates in Africa and South America.) The sub-replacement fertility and high life expectancy in most European states mean a declining and aging population. High immigration and emigration levels within and from outside the continent are taking place and quickly changing countries, specifically in Western Europe, from a single ethnic group to a multicultural society. These trends change societies' economies as well as their political and social institutions.

Vital statistics

Birth and death rates, by year[13]
Year Average
population
Live births Deaths Natural
change
Crude rates (per 1000) Total
fertility
rate
Life
expectancy
Births Deaths Natural
change
1950 549,721,718 12,202,220 6,473,233 5,728,987 22.2 11.8 10.4 2.70 62.8
1951 554,559,502 12,112,425 6,609,794 5,502,631 21.8 11.9 9.9 2.66 62.8
1952 559,609,904 12,142,368 6,265,135 5,877,233 21.7 11.2 10.5 2.66 64.0
1953 565,058,633 12,120,826 6,220,937 5,899,889 21.5 11.0 10.4 2.64 64.7
1954 570,670,994 12,151,779 6,072,645 6,079,134 21.3 10.6 10.7 2.64 65.5
1955 576,304,974 12,134,270 5,987,151 6,147,119 21.1 10.4 10.7 2.63 66.0
1956 581,975,516 12,133,583 5,899,594 6,233,989 20.8 10.1 10.7 2.62 66.9
1957 587,711,635 12,194,100 5,963,269 6,230,831 20.7 10.1 10.6 2.62 66.9
1958 593,669,297 12,177,600 5,647,571 6,530,029 20.5 9.5 11.0 2.60 68.2
1959 599,684,870 12,178,245 5,816,056 6,362,189 20.3 9.7 10.6 2.60 68.1
1960 605,629,870 12,098,378 5,783,828 6,314,550 20.0 9.6 10.4 2.58 68.8
1961 611,711,020 11,990,399 5,749,292 6,241,107 19.6 9.4 10.2 2.56 69.1
1962 617,672,206 11,784,056 6,023,706 5,760,350 19.1 9.8 9.3 2.53 68.9
1963 623,335,994 11,654,646 6,031,219 5,623,427 18.7 9.7 9.0 2.52 69.2
1964 628,944,878 11,467,618 5,843,514 5,624,104 18.2 9.3 8.9 2.50 69.9
1965 634,267,606 11,141,596 6,058,752 5,082,844 17.6 9.6 8.0 2.45 69.8
1966 639,264,461 10,950,076 6,074,808 4,875,268 17.1 9.5 7.6 2.42 70.0
1967 644,114,436 10,969,039 6,204,646 4,764,393 17.0 9.6 7.4 2.42 70.0
1968 648,610,191 10,821,004 6,427,622 4,393,382 16.7 9.9 6.8 2.38 69.9
1969 652,740,596 10,685,498 6,652,543 4,032,955 16.4 10.2 6.2 2.33 69.6
1970 656,521,426 10,568,071 6,602,177 3,965,894 16.1 10.1 6.0 2.28 70.0
1971 660,476,010 10,662,541 6,675,051 3,987,490 16.1 10.1 6.0 2.27 70.1
1972 664,799,679 10,499,844 6,699,913 3,799,931 15.8 10.1 5.7 2.21 70.3
1973 668,909,022 10,322,172 6,814,598 3,507,574 15.4 10.2 5.2 2.14 70.4
1974 672,912,941 10,406,013 6,818,259 3,587,754 15.5 10.1 5.3 2.13 70.6
1975 676,770,845 10,285,047 7,009,188 3,275,859 15.2 10.4 4.8 2.07 70.5
1976 680,361,150 10,242,399 7,085,837 3,156,562 15.1 10.4 4.6 2.03 70.6
1977 683,848,710 10,171,264 7,039,667 3,131,597 14.9 10.3 4.6 1.99 70.9
1978 687,149,553 10,143,418 7,183,531 2,959,887 14.8 10.5 4.3 1.96 70.9
1979 690,287,705 10,159,933 7,268,744 2,891,189 14.7 10.5 4.2 1.95 71.0
1980 693,437,228 10,156,371 7,422,720 2,733,651 14.6 10.7 3.9 1.93 70.9
1981 696,429,190 10,053,030 7,404,116 2,648,914 14.4 10.6 3.8 1.89 71.2
1982 699,220,370 10,102,647 7,373,734 2,728,913 14.4 10.5 3.9 1.89 71.5
1983 702,014,774 10,078,184 7,562,097 2,516,087 14.4 10.8 3.6 1.87 71.5
1984 704,798,623 10,050,688 7,584,914 2,465,774 14.3 10.8 3.5 1.86 71.6
1985 707,516,287 9,969,920 7,702,883 2,267,037 14.1 10.9 3.2 1.84 71.7
1986 710,385,076 9,987,274 7,423,641 2,563,633 14.1 10.5 3.6 1.84 72.5
1987 713,465,338 9,966,304 7,407,417 2,558,887 14.0 10.4 3.6 1.84 72.7
1988 716,444,431 9,840,567 7,475,880 2,364,687 13.7 10.4 3.3 1.82 72.8
1989 719,107,883 9,495,117 7,527,904 1,967,213 13.2 10.5 2.7 1.76 72.9
1990 721,497,282 9,235,425 7,681,197 1,554,228 12.8 10.6 2.2 1.72 72.9
1991 723,602,898 8,888,909 7,796,555 1,092,354 12.3 10.8 1.5 1.66 72.9
1992 725,259,493 8,523,515 7,935,829 587,686 11.8 10.9 0.8 1.60 72.7
1993 726,441,892 8,138,793 8,412,609 -273,816 11.2 11.6 -0.4 1.53 72.1
1994 727,063,162 7,913,453 8,492,472 -579,019 10.9 11.7 -0.8 1.50 72.1
1995 727,300,408 7,663,831 8,553,348 -889,517 10.5 11.8 -1.2 1.46 72.2
1996 727,453,566 7,581,575 8,394,631 -813,056 10.4 11.5 -1.1 1.45 72.7
1997 727,566,480 7,476,674 8,240,385 -763,711 10.3 11.3 -1.0 1.43 73.2
1998 727,445,606 7,369,527 8,193,143 -823,616 10.1 11.3 -1.1 1.42 73.6
1999 727,100,016 7,264,382 8,402,774 -1,138,392 10.0 11.6 -1.6 1.40 73.4
2000 726,968,473 7,325,763 8,401,888 -1,076,125 10.1 11.6 -1.5 1.42 73.5
2001 726,878,371 7,277,594 8,364,598 -1,087,004 10.0 11.5 -1.5 1.41 73.8
2002 726,939,358 7,330,526 8,520,890 -1,190,364 10.1 11.7 -1.6 1.42 73.8
2003 727,424,988 7,442,475 8,655,471 -1,212,996 10.2 11.9 -1.7 1.45 73.8
2004 728,163,243 7,558,652 8,381,363 -822,711 10.4 11.5 -1.1 1.47 74.4
2005 728,950,486 7,568,637 8,494,391 -925,754 10.4 11.7 -1.3 1.47 74.5
2006 729,857,708 7,703,029 8,237,212 -534,183 10.6 11.3 -0.7 1.50 75.2
2007 731,393,136 7,886,129 8,187,820 -301,691 10.8 11.2 -0.4 1.54 75.6
2008 733,256,182 8,169,398 8,195,293 -25,895 11.1 11.2 0.0 1.59 75.8
2009 734,902,805 8,208,268 8,099,043 109,225 11.2 11.0 0.1 1.60 76.3
2010 736,276,813 8,227,484 8,128,387 99,097 11.2 11.0 0.1 1.61 76.5
2011 737,589,666 8,132,980 7,958,960 174,020 11.0 10.8 0.2 1.60 77.1
2012 738,907,594 8,178,804 8,078,292 100,512 11.1 10.9 0.1 1.62 77.3
2013 740,013,806 8,039,791 8,033,963 5,828 10.9 10.9 0.0 1.60 77.6
2014 741,014,147 8,067,454 7,955,740 111,714 10.9 10.7 0.2 1.62 77.9
2015 742,107,449 8,004,465 8,177,599 -173,134 10.8 11.0 -0.2 1.62 78.0
2016 743,318,582 7,950,684 8,009,194 -58,510 10.7 10.8 -0.1 1.62 78.4
2017 744,449,361 7,617,755 8,076,159 -458,404 10.2 10.8 -0.6 1.56 78.7
2018 745,359,130 7,375,157 8,112,356 -737,199 9.9 10.9 -1.0 1.53 78.8
2019 746,189,645 7,108,392 8,020,246 -911,854 9.5 10.7 -1.2 1.49 79.1
2020 746,225,356 6,938,739 9,119,281 -2,180,542 9.3 12.2 -2.9 1.47 77.7
2021 745,173,774 6,879,818 9,656,398 -2,776,580 9.2 13.0 -3.7 1.48 77.0

Population by country

Modern political map
Council of Europe members, with the ten founding states in yellow
Life expectancy in Europe in 2019–2021

According to different definitions, such as consideration of the concept of Central Europe, the following territories and regions may be subject to various other categorisations aside from geographic conventions.

Population and area of European countries/territories
Country (or territory) Population
[1][2]
Area
(km2)[14]
Density
(per km2)
Capital
 Albania * 2,854,71028,74899Tirana
 Andorra * 79,034468169Andorra la Vella
 Armenia * 2,790,97429,74394Yerevan
 Austria * 8,922,08283,871106Vienna
 Azerbaijan * 10,312,99286,600119Baku
 Belarus * 9,578,167207,60046Minsk
 Belgium * 11,611,41930,528380Brussels
 Bosnia and Herzegovina * 3,270,94351,20964Sarajevo
 Bulgaria * 6,520,314110,90059Sofia
 Croatia * 4,060,13556,59472Zagreb
 Cyprus * 1,244,1889,251134Nicosia
 Czech Republic * 10,510,75178,866133Prague
 Denmark * 5,854,24043,094136Copenhagen
 Estonia * 1,328,70145,22729Tallinn
 Faroe Islands * (Denmark) 49,7091,39935.6Tórshavn
 Finland * 5,535,992336,85216Helsinki
 France * 64,531,444551,500117Paris
 Georgia * 3,757,98069,70054Tbilisi
 Germany * 83,408,554357,137234Berlin
 Gibraltar * (UK) 32,66965,445Gibraltar
 Greece * 10,445,365131,95779Athens
 Guernsey *[d] 65,345631,037St. Peter Port
 Hungary * 9,709,78693,026104Budapest
 Iceland * 370,335103,0004Reykjavík
 Ireland * 4,986,52669,82571Dublin
 Isle of Man *[d] 84,263572147Douglas
 Italy * 59,240,329301,339197Rome
 Jersey *[d] 97,857116844Saint Helier
 Kosovo **[p] 1,859,20310,887171Pristina
 Latvia * 1,873,91964,56229Riga
 Liechtenstein * 39,039160244Vaduz
 Lithuania * 2,786,65165,30043Vilnius
 Luxembourg * 639,3212,586247Luxembourg
 Malta * 526,7483161,667Valletta
 Moldova * 3,061,50633,84690Chişinău
 Monaco * 36,686218,343Monaco
 Montenegro * 627,85913,81245Podgorica
 Netherlands * 17,501,69637,354469Amsterdam
 North Macedonia * 2,103,33025,71382Skopje
 Norway * 5,403,021323,78717Oslo
 Poland * 38,307,726311,888123Warsaw
 Portugal *[f] 10,290,10392,212112Lisbon
 Romania * 19,328,560238,39181Bucharest
 Russia * 145,102,75517,098,2468Moscow
 San Marino * 33,74561553San Marino
 Serbia *[g] 7,296,76988,36183Belgrade
 Slovakia * 5,447,62249,036111Bratislava
 Slovenia * 2,119,41020,273105Ljubljana
 Spain * 47,486,935505,99294Madrid
 Svalbard and Jan Mayen (Norway) 2,86862,4220Longyearbyen
 Sweden * 10,467,097450,29523Stockholm
 Switzerland * 8,691,40641,285211Bern
 Transnistria * 505,0004,163121.3Tiraspol
 Turkey * 84,775,404783,562108Ankara
 Ukraine * 43,531,422603,50072Kyiv
 United Kingdom * 67,281,039242,495277London
 Vatican City * 8420.41,913.6Vatican City
 Åland (Finland) 28,6661,58018Mariehamn

* indicates link goes to article on demographics of the country (or territory), not just the country itself.

Age

Mirroring their mostly sub-replacement fertility and high life expectancy, European countries tend to have older populations overall. They had nine of the top ten highest median ages in national populations in 2005. Only Japan had an older population.[15]

Population pyramids by country (mostly 2020 and 2023 unless stated otherwise)

Fertility

According to Eurostat, the average birth rate in the European Union was 1.5 children per woman in 2020. The EU countries with the highest rates were France (1.83 live births per woman), Romania (1.80) and Czechia (1.71). The lowest rates were found in Malta (1.13), Spain (1.19) and Italy (1.24).[16]

The reasons that Italian citizens give for not having children are economic costs, fear of losing their jobs, and lack of services for families.[17]

Eurostat says that the proportion of children born to foreign mothers, including both from other EU member states and from non-EU countries, has been increasing in the EU since 2013 and stood at 21% in 2020.[16]

Religion

Over the last several centuries, religious practice has been on the decline in a process of secularization. Several European countries have experienced a decline in church attendance as well as a decline in the number of people professing a religious belief. The 2010 Eurobarometer survey found that, on average, 51% of the citizens of the European Union that they believe there is a God, 26% believe there is some sort of spirit or life force and 20% don't believe there is any sort of spirit, God or life force. 3% declined to answer.[18] The Eurobarometer survey must be taken with caution, however, as there are discrepancies between it and national census results. For example, in the United Kingdom, the 2001 census revealed that over 70% of the population regarded themselves as "Christians" with only 15% professing to have no religion, though the wording of the question has been criticized as "misleading" by the British Humanist Association.[19] The 2011 census showed a dramatic reduction to less than 60% of the population regarding themselves as "Christians".[20]

Despite its decline, Christianity is still the largest religion in Europe. According to a survey published in 2010, 76.2% of Europeans identified themselves as Christians.[21][22] Catholics were the largest Christian group in Europe, accounting for more than 48% of European Christians.[23] The second-largest Christian group in Europe was the Orthodox, who made up 32% of European Christians.[23] And about 19% of European Christians were part of the Protestant tradition. Europe constitutes in absolute terms the world's largest Christian population.[24] According to Scholars, in 2017, Europe's population was 77.8% Christian (up from 74.9% 1970),[25][26] these changes were largely result of the collapse of Communism and switching to Christianity in the former Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc countries.[25]

According to a 2003 study,[27] 47% of French people declared themselves as agnostics in 2003. This situation is often called "Post-Christian Europe". A decrease in religiousness and church attendance in western Europe (especially in Belgium, the Czech Republic, Finland, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, Norway, the Netherlands and Sweden) has been noted. According to a survey published in 2012, atheists and agnostics make up about 18.2% of the European population.[28] According to the same survey the religiously unaffiliated make up the majority of the population only in two European countries: Czech Republic (75%) and Estonia (60%).[28]

According to another survey about Religiosity in the European Union from 2012 by Eurobarometer, Christianity was the largest religion in the Union (accounting for 72% of the total population), Catholics were with 48% the largest Christian group in the Union, Protestants made up 12%, Eastern Orthodox made up 8% and other Christians accounted for 4% of the total population.[29] non-believers/agnostics accounted for 16%, atheists accounted for 7% and Muslims accounted for 2%.[30]

Ethnic groups

Pan and Pfeil (2004) count 87 distinct "peoples of Europe", of which 33 form the majority population in at least one sovereign state, while the remaining 54 constitute ethnic minorities. The total number of national minority populations in Europe is estimated at 105 million people, or 14% of 770 million Europeans. (including Europeans in Siberia)[31]

The largest ethnic groups are the Russians, with 117 million, and the Germans, with 72 million. In some countries such as the United Kingdom, France and Spain, the designation of nationality may controversially take on ethnic aspects, subsuming smaller ethnic groups such as Scots, Welsh, Cornish, Northern Irish, Bretons, Catalans, and Basques, making it difficult to quantify a "British" or "French" ethnicity, for example.

Approximately 20 million non-Europeans live in the EU, 4% of the overall population.[32] There are an estimated 10 million Romani people in Europe.[33]

Language

Map of Europe showing the major languages

Most of the languages of Europe belong to the Indo-European language family. This family is divided into a number of branches, including Romance, Germanic, Baltic, Slavic, Albanian, Celtic, Armenian and Greek. The Uralic languages, which include Hungarian, Finnish, Estonian, Udmurt, Mordvin and Sami also have a significant presence in Europe. The Turkic family also has several European members, while the North Caucasian and Kartvelian families which include Georgian, Circassian, Chechen and Abkhaz anong others are important in the southeastern extremity of geographical Europe. The Basque language of the western Pyrenees is an isolate unrelated to any other group, while Maltese is the only Semitic language in Europe with national language status, although Arabic, Hebrew and Assyrian Neo-Aramaic/Syriac are spoken by migrant populations. The Kalmyk language, is an Mongolic language, spoken in Kalmykia, located directly north of the North Caucasus in Eastern Europe. The most spoken language of Europe is Russian, which belongs to the group of Slavic languages.

Languages that are not official state languages are protected in many European countries by the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages. These can include languages spoken by relatively many people, such as Catalan and Basque in Spain, Frisian in the Netherlands, as well as languages spoken by relatively few such as Cornish Manx and Scottish Gaelic in the United Kingdom, and Romansch in Switzerland.

Genetic origins

Bronze Age spread of Yamnaya Steppe pastoralist ancestry. The Yamnaya culture is identified with the late Proto-Indo-Europeans.

Homo sapiens appeared in Europe roughly 40,000 years ago, with the settlement of the Cro-Magnons, followed by European hunter-gatherers and Early European Farmers (EEF). Over the prehistoric period there was continuous settlement in Europe, notably by the immediate descendants of the Proto-Indo-Europeans who migrated west after the advent of the Neolithic revolution.[35]

Mitochondrial DNA and Y-chromosome DNA

Studies of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) have suggested substantial genetic homogeneity of European populations,[36] with only a few geographic or linguistic isolates appearing to be genetic isolates as well.[37] On the other hand, analyses of the Y chromosome[38][39] and of autosomal diversity[40] have shown a general gradient of genetic similarity running from the southeast to the northwest of the continent.

Autosomal DNA

Population genomic PCA map, showing Europeans (CEU) among other sampled Eurasian populations[41]

According to geneticist David Reich, based on ancient human genomes that his laboratory sequenced in 2016, Europeans formed from four West-Eurasian ancestral components in varying degrees: Western Hunter-Gatherers (WHG), Eastern Hunter-Gatherers (EHG), Neolithic Levant farmers and Neolithic Iranian farmers respectively.[42]

Population structure

A study in May 2009[43] that examined 19 populations from Europe using 270,000 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) highlighted the genetic diversity of European populations corresponding to the northwest to southeast gradient and distinguished "several distinct regions" within Europe:

In this study, Fst (fixation index) was found to correlate considerably with geographic distances ranging from ≤0.0010 for neighbouring populations to 0.0230 for Southern Italy and Finland. For comparisons, pair-wise Fst of non-European samples were as follows: Europeans – Yoruba (West Africans) 0.1530; Europeans – Chinese 0.1100; Yoruba (West Africans) – Chinese 0.1900.[43]:Table S2

See also

Notes

^ a: Continental regions as per UN categorisations/map. Depending on definitions, various territories cited below may be in one or both of Europe and Asia, or Africa.
^ b: Includes Transnistria, a region that has declared, and de facto achieved, independence; however, it is not recognised de jure by sovereign states.
^ c: Russia is considered a transcontinental country in Eastern Europe and Northern Asia. However, the population and area figures include the entire state.
^ d: Guernsey, the Isle of Man and Jersey are Crown Dependencies of the United Kingdom. Other Channel Islands in the Bailiwick of Guernsey include Alderney and Sark.
^ e: Cyprus is physiographically entirely in Western Asia, but it has strong historical and sociopolitical connections with Europe. The population and area figures refer to the entire state, including the de facto independent part Northern Cyprus.
^ f: Figures for Portugal include the Azores and Madeira archipelagos, both in Northern Atlantic.
^ g: Area figure for Serbia includes Kosovo, a province that unilaterally declared its independence from Serbia on 17 February 2008, and whose sovereign status is unclear. Population and density figures are 2010 estimates and are given without the disputed territory of Kosovo.
^ h: Figures for France include metropolitan France but not overseas departments and territories as they are not part of the European continent.
^ j: Kazakhstan is physiographically considered a transcontinental country in Central Asia (UN region) and Eastern Europe, with European territory west of the Ural Mountains and both the Ural and Emba rivers. However, area and population figures refer to the entire country.
^ k: Armenia is physiographically entirely in Western Asia, but it has strong historical and sociopolitical connections with Europe. The population and area figures include the entire state respectively.
^ m: Georgia is often considered a transcontinental country in Western Asia and Eastern Europe. However, the population and area figures include the entire state. This also includes Georgian estimates for Abkhazia and South Ossetia, two regions that have declared and de facto achieved independence. The International recognition, however, is limited.
^ o: The total figures for area and population includes the whole of the transcontinental countries. The precision of these figure is compromised by the ambiguous geographical extend of Europe and the lack of references for European portions of transcontinental countries.
^ p: Kosovo unilaterally declared its independence from Serbia on 17 February 2008. Its sovereign status is unclear. Its population is a 2007 estimate.
^ r: Abkhazia and South Ossetia unilaterally declared their independence from Georgia on 25 August 1990 and 28 November 1991 respectively. Their sovereign status is unclear. Population figures stated as of 2003 census and 2000 estimates respectively.

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