Altered Maps 4: Partitioning Eastern Europe Like In The Good Old Days

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It had to have been done by a Polish nationalist,

TLO, Squonk, warpus, would you know anything about this? :p

Only one country in the European Union has more than 5% speakers of Polish - Lithuania.

Poland itself has less than 5% speakers of Polish? :confused:
 
Poland itself has less than 5% speakers of Polish? :confused:

As a foreign language, I figured most people viewing this thread would have been able to figure that out.

I was wrong.
 
Their populations are shrinking and they're so interrelated, why not?

Not everywhere is going to shrink
Strongest population growth in Cyprus, Ireland, Luxembourg and the United Kingdom

There are projected to be considerable differences between the individual Member States. Between 2008 and 2060, the population is projected to rise in thirteen Member States and fall in fourteen. The strongest population growth is projected to be found in Cyprus (+66%), Ireland (+53%), Luxembourg (+52%), the United Kingdom (+25%) and Sweden (+18%), and the sharpest declines in Bulgaria (-28%), Latvia (-26%), Lithuania (-24%), Romania (-21%) and Poland (-18%).
http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=STAT/08/119
 
That was a joke. :p
 
Polish now has its own map in the Languages of the European Union page.

595px-Polish_in_Europe.png

Looks like it's time for some annexing! :hammer:
 
TLO, Squonk, warpus, would you know anything about this? :p

I'm not a nationalist. And I wouldn't be dumb enough to paint Brzesc region in Belarus as polish. It is not. Its dialect is close to polish, and nearly all the population speaks polish more or less, but they are not Poles. On another hand, polish minority is much more represented in Grodno region. And it looks as if in this case, someone just painted polish minority along polish-belorusian border. While it is more complicated than that.
Polish minority around

The cities are badly placed too.

In general, the Brzesc case makes me believe someone was inspired by this map:

index.php


a wiki creation as well, which seems to be complete useless, at least when it comes to Poland. On one hand it paints polish minority where there's hardly any, and even where there was hardly any prior to ww2, but also it makes Silesian dialect a separate language, as well as the highlander sub-dialect; It shows Slovincians as still alive... it shows definitely bloated ideas about silesian dialect western extremities... it tends to make polish dialectal borders go along the voivodships' borders, which is naive, it treats polish silesian and czech silesian (laskie dialects) as one, silesian, language, which would be ok, if it didn't show the polish (silesian) linguistic area in Czech Republic as a "czech-polish" dialect of czech language (although with silesian G abbreviation)... indeed, when it comes to polish-ukrainian and polish-lithuanian border, it seems as if someone was annoyed about the fact that (after ww2 slaughters of Poles by Ukrainians and after expulsions, Action Vistula etc) linguistic border is the same as state one, and decided to "make it more interesting" with nonsense changes.
 
Godwyn posted an amazing map! First, it seems that in the West Poles are distributed equally. In the East for some reason, the distruibution is very prescise. I wonder why? :lol:
 
I'm not a nationalist. And I wouldn't be dumb enough to paint Brzesc region in Belarus as polish. It is not. Its dialect is close to polish, and nearly all the population speaks polish more or less, but they are not Poles

But they speak Polish, which is why the map was coloured in in that area, right?
 

Polish-speaking community in Barcelona? You've got to be kidding me. BTW, here's the Catalan map:

20060823135056!Catalan_in_Europe.png


Red -> Native
Grey -> Less than 1%
 
the colour was supposed to show regions with significant polish minority. This is not the case of Brzesc region.

English:
A map of Europe showing:
in red: Poland, where Polish is the official language
in dark pink: regions with significant Polish-speaking minorities
in light pink: the European Union, where Polish is one of the official languages
blue dots indicate major Polish-speaking communities

Polish-speaking minority.

gangleri2001 said:
Polish-speaking community in Barcelona? You've got to be kidding me.

There are 50,000 Poles in Spain. If at least half of them reside in Barcelona, then the marking on the map is probably justified.
 
Polish-speaking minority.



There are 50,000 Poles in Spain. If at least half of them reside in Barcelona, then the marking on the map is probably justified.

The Population of the Barcelona Metropolitan area is roughly 5 million, according to Wiki, so even if all of them lived there, it would still be about 1% of the city's population. So no, it isn't that accurate. :rolleyes:
 
The Population of the Barcelona Metropolitan area is roughly 5 million, according to Wiki, so even if all of them lived there, it would still be about 1% of the city's population. So no, it isn't that accurate. :rolleyes:

It's 4 million, not 5. But anyways, I've never heard of a polish community in here. 50.000 in whole Spain? That's ok, but considering that 46 million people is the whole population of Spain and that polish people living in Spain haven't formed a community at all, I wouldn't have marked the map.
 
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