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Ethnic map of Greece
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A lot of people in the North have Ukrainian surnames. There are full villages of people who identify as Moldovans but have Ukrainian surnames. And in the past they identified as Ukrainians if we go by historic maps. There's no point in denying that. Especially when this is also obvious from the difference in genetic results of the same people from the North. Some like the guys from Glodeni or those academic ones from Singerei look like your regular people in the Centre, but then there are many others who are halfway between them and Ukrainians. Others in general are in Ukrainian range. Such differences from people who live so close to each other can only arise from the introduction of foreign elements.
People mixed with Bulgarians/Gagauz/Ukrainians/Russians/Germans in the South and they also mixed primarily with Ukrainians in the North and along the Dniester. With Russians less, because in villages they are less commonly found. With them, the mixing is almost entirely limited to urban settlements.
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Very detailed map of the 2004 census
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Zamfir Arbore, Basarabia in secolul XIX, 1898
So according to the Moldovan/Romanian historian from Bukovina, Zamfir Arbore, some Romanians in Bessarabian regions bordering Podolia and Galicia come from Ruthenian/Ukrainian origins. In the past, at the end of the 16th and beginning of the 18th centuries they ran from Poland because they didn't want to convert to Catholicism. By 1898 they were already romanised for quite some time.
Podolia
Galicia
I tried to place that on a map (in grey) and unsurprisingly that also coincides with villages were the population is heavily Romanian/Moldovan by identity, but at the same time non-Romanian/Moldovan by surnames.
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Village of Sircova from Rezina district
Currently 96% Moldovan/Romanian
Nr. Ord. Nationalitate Nr. Locuitori % de Locuitori 1 Moldoveni/Romani 1 739 95.5 2 Ucraineni 10 0.55 3 Rusi 67 3.68 4 Gagauzi 1 0.05 5 Bulgari 1 0.05 6 Evrei 0 0 7 Polonezi 0 0 8 Romi/Tigani 0 0 9 Altele 3 0.16
In 1820, it was about 86% Ukrainian, 4% Russian and 10% Moldovan/Romanian.
All the Ukrainians now identify as Moldovans/Romanians. The data in the above map from 1820 is supported by the current surnames in the village. In red are those of non-Moldovan/Romanian origin (mainly Ukrainian and Russian).
Nr. Ord. Nume de familie Numarul total de familii
1 Lisnic 30
2 Gavriliuc 23
3 Covali 21
4 Ceban 13
5 Scutelnic 13
6 Oloinic 12
7 Oleinic 11
8 Cusnir 10
9 Popusoi 10
10 Cuzmici 10
11 Dolghii 10
12 Bolganschi 9
13 Rudii 8
14 Odainic 8
15 Slobodeniuc 8
16 Cutii 7
17 Melnic 7
18 Strah 7
19 Babunic 7
20 Tcaci 6
21 Dolgaia 6
22 Dolghi 6
23 Magola 6
24 Spatari 5
25 Teleatnic 5
26 Crijanovschi 5
27 Cutaia 4
28 Railean 4
29 Moscovciuc 4
30 Sandu 4
31 Bolganschii 4
32 Babcinetcaia 4
33 Litvac 4
34 Braga 3
35 Cirstea 3
36 Bejenaru 3
37 Diacov 3
38 Timohin 3
39 Traci 3
40 Eremeeva 3
41 Sevciuc 3
42 Tverdohleb 3
43 Tvigun 3
44 Paun 2
45 Martiniuc 2
46 Colesnic 2
47 Goncear 2
48 Bejinari 2
49 Zoia 2
50 Corcescu 2
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