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Last edited by Jana; 12-27-2021 at 10:38 PM.




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Yes and they were even the majority of inhabitants in several (around five) Counties/Kreise. For example according to 1834 census:
County - percent of Germans
Neisse - 99.9%
Grottkau - 99.9%
Leobschütz - 93.1%
Falkenberg - 78.7%
Neustadt an der Prudnik - 49.9%
Cosel - 28.6% [in this county Germans rose to 42.3% in 1846 census, but then dropped back to 15.9% in 1861 census, weird!]
Kreuzburg - 26.1%
Oppeln - 21.9%
Ratibor - 13.0%
Tost-Gleiwitz - 10.9%
Rybnik - 9.0%
Rosenberg - 8.0%
Groß Strehlitz - 7.8%
Lublinitz - 7.0%
Pless - 6.9%
Beuthen - 5.3%
Source (proportion of Polish and German population by county):
D. = Germans
P. = Poles
https://i.imgur.com/cExEpbm.png
Depends in which sub-region (that's why I suggest you should sub-divide Lower Silesia, if you have enough samples). As I wrote above probably the mountainous part (near the Sudeten Mountains) is the least Slavic. And parts of Lower Silesia on the right bank of the Oder River (between the Oder and Poland) are the most Slavic.
Barthel Stein in his description of Silesia published in 1513 ("Descriptio Tocius Silesie et Civitatis Regie Vratislaviensis") wrote:
"(...) Zwei Volksstämme, die sich nicht nur nach ihren Wohnsitzen, sondern auch nach ihren Sitten scheiden, bewohnen es; den nach Westen und Süden gelegenen Theil nehmen die Deutschen ein, den Theil nach Osten und Norden zu die Polenö beide trennt als eine ganz sichere Grenze die Oder von der Neißemündung ab, sodaß auch in den Städten diesseits die deutsche, jenseits die polnische Sprach vorherrscht. Man erkennt zwischen beiden Völkern einen starken Gegensatz. (...)"
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And according to R. Böckh (the same one who published that data for Upper Silesia which I posted above) in year 1869 there were still 448 Polish-majority settlements (Ortschaften), villages and towns, in Lower Silesia. Mainly in the north-eastern corner of Lower Silesia.
Böckh called the area of Lower Silesia where Polish-speakers were the majority "das polnische Nieder-Schlesien".
Part (but not all) of this territory was actually added to Poland in 1919 after the Treaty of Versaiilles:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Former...ces_after_1918
Last edited by Peterski; 12-27-2021 at 05:14 PM.




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Genetically he is Polish, doesn't matter what he feels - if I give you e.g. Władysław Anders DNA sample (his parents - Albert Anders & Elisabeth Tauchert - were Baltic Germans) to represent ethnic Poles, will you accept? Definitely a Polish nationalist, but autosomally he was probably fully Baltic German.
There can even be Turks who are German nationalists, as Germany has a huge Turkish population.
Are Italians from Istria genetically Slavic? Seriously? Where is evidence?
The family we're talking about probably stayed in Poland after 1945 (which required being verified as Polish - and that was not so easy, there had to be efforts made by them, they had to apply for verification of their Polishness, etc.) and became Germanized only after emigrating to Germany decades later.
Rothaer might ask him if his family could even speak German before moving to Germany.
Or did they learn German language only after moving from Poland to Germany?
If his family stayed in Poland after 1945 (rather than being deported to Germany) it means they declared themselves as Poles and it was verified.
It required some effort and a will to be recognized as Polish on their part.
And why they later changed their mind and emigrated to Germany - probably because Poland became dirt poor after decades of Communist rule.
Most of the "Spätaussiedler" are economic opportunists.
Last edited by Peterski; 12-27-2021 at 04:33 PM.


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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lidia_Bastianich
Although she and her family are nationally Italian, public DNA tests conducted by Lidia have shown that her family is largely of Eastern European descent, due to the multiethnicity of Istria
A DNA test whose results were displayed on the show Finding Your Roots with Henry Louis Gates, Jr. (2016) stated that Joe’s mother’s genetic ancestry is:
*63% Eastern Europe
*28% Italy & Greece
*6% Europe West
*3% Trace Region




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Sort of related, don't mean to shift the thread, but I found this interesting..
Micky Dolenz's (of The Monkees fame) father, born Jure Dolenc, came from Trieste. I read on Wiki that he was from an ethnic Slovene community. However, in a recent interview Micky referred to his father's side of the family as Italians. I would guess his Trieste side has notable Slavic admix, in spite being "Italian".


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