- Krashovani
Ethnic group
group=Krashovani
poptime=5,000 approx. (most declare themselves asCroats , with some as Krashovani)
popplace=Romania (Caraş-Severin County )
langs=Croatian language
rels=PredominantlyRoman Catholic
related=otherSlavic peoples , especiallySouth Slavs The Krashovani (Croatian and Serbian: "Krašovani" (Крашовани), "Karašovani" or "Krašovanje", "Karaševci" and "Koroševci"; Romanian: "Caraşoveni", "Cârşoveni", "Cotcoreţi" or "Cocoşi", Bulgarian: Крашовени, "Krashoveni"; also known in English as "Krashovans") are a South Slavic people indigenous toCaraşova and other nearby locations inCaraş-Severin County within theRomania nBanat .It is estimated that around 5,000 people compose the Krashovani community in Romania. At the 2002 census, only 207 persons identified as Krashovans at a national level. [ro icon [http://www.recensamant.ro/pagini/rezultate.html# "Recensământ 2002. Rezultate: Populaţia după etnie la recensământul din 2002"] ; retrieved
November 10 ,2007 ] The vast majority identify today as Croatian.Geography
Krashovani form a majority in two communes of Caraş-Severin County:
Caraşova and Lupac.According to the 2002 census in Romania, the population of the Caraşova commune comprised 84.60% Croats, 4.96% others (presumably Krashovan), 4.47% Roma, 4.41%
Romanians , etc. [ [http://www.edrc.ro/recensamant.jsp?regiune_id=1832&judet_id=1909&localitate_id=1930 "Structura etno-demografică pe arii geografice. Caraşova"] , at the [http://www.edrc.ro/ Ethnocultural Diversity Resource Center. Open Society Foundation Romania] ; retrievedNovember 10 ,2007 ] The population of Lupac commune comprises 93.38% Croats, 5.32% Romanians, etc. [ [http://www.edrc.ro/recensamant.jsp?regiune_id=1832&judet_id=1909&localitate_id=1930 "Structura etno-demografică pe arii geografice. Lupac"] , at the [http://www.edrc.ro/ Ethnocultural Diversity Resource Center. Open Society Foundation Romania] ; retrievedNovember 10 ,2007 ] The 79.75% of population of Caraşova municipality and 93.45% of population of Lupac municipality declared to speak Croatian as mother tongue in 2002 census.Origin and history
Original Slavic settlements had existed in these regions before the Krashovan migration. Krashovani themselves are mostly descendants of the Torlakian inhabitants of what is today eastern
Serbia , namely the region around theTimok River .Some of the Krashovani originate from
Turopolje region of present-dayCroatia (they are being referred as "Turopoljci"). Because of the long-time influence of other Krashovani, who speak theTorlakian dialect , the original (Kajkavian) dialect of this group also became Torlakian. Other groups are supposedly Croats from theFranciscan province of "Bosna Srebrena".The Krashovani are also considered
Bulgarians by some (mainly Bulgarian)Fact|date=February 2007 scientists from the first half of the 20th century (such as G. Cibrus, M. Mladenov, K. Telbizov, and T. Balkanski). These claims are partially based on the fact that these and some other scientists consider the entire Torlakian-speaking Slavic population ethnically Bulgarian, just as others consider it ethnically Serbian.Fact|date=February 2007 The question of whether the Torlakian dialect belongs to the eastern or western branches ofSouth Slavic languages is also disputed, and it is often classified as a transitional dialect between the two.Krashovani migration to Banat can be traced to the 1370s, when fleeing the Ottoman onslaught, they moved there from Timok region (at that time ruled by
Bulgaria ). The Catholic supremacy inside theKingdom of Hungary (to which the Banat region belonged at the time) may account for their distinctiveness from the rest of the Torlakian-speaking population in present-day eastern Serbia.According to the Austrian population census there were over 10,000 Krashovans in the Romanian Banat. In the 1847 census over 10,000 people declared as Carasovans. In 1896 the Austro-Hungarian census around 7,500 Krashovans were listed. The same was stated by the authorities of the
Kingdom of Romania in 1940. Their number dropped to 2,775 in 1992. ["Spaţiul istoric şi etnic românesc", Vol.I,Editura Militară , Bucharest, 1992]Ever since the Romanian Revolution, the government of Romania has awarded special minority status and privileges to its ethnic Serb citizens. The Democratic Union of Serbs and Krashovani of Romania ("Uniunea Democratică a Sârbilor si Caraşovenilor din România") was founded in 1989.
Language and religion
The dialect of the Krashovani is based on the
Torlakian as traditionally spoken in the area of eastern and southern Serbia and in theRepublic of Macedonia andBulgaria , theTorlakian dialect of the Timok valley aroundZaječar . Torlakian as a linguistic entity forms a part of theBalkan Linguistic Union ; the Krashovani are the only speakers of a language - belonging to this union for having developed many shared features with the adjacent languages - which is detached from the main section. The population however, declare their language as Croatian, probably along the ethnic lines.However, their religion has more recently set them apart from Eastern Orthodox Serbs in the Banat, despite the common language and a long history of solidarity (partly continued to this day through joint Serb-Krashovan organizations).
ee also
*
Minorities of Romania
*Caraşova
*Lupac
*Torlaks
*Torlakian dialect
*Croats of Romania
*Serbs of Romania
*Banat Bulgarians References
External links
* [http://www.carasova.net/ Rumunjski Hrvati - Home]
* [http://www.carasova.net/mladost Mladost Karaševo]
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