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Bulgarians in Spain

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Bulgarians (Spanish: búlgaros) in Spain (Bulgarian: Испания, Ispania) are one of the largest communities of the Bulgarian diaspora. According to official 2019 data, they numbered 197,373, making them the tenth-largest emigrant community in Spain and the second-largest among Central and Eastern European emigrant communities.[1]

History

The bulk of Bulgarians in Spain consists of recent economic immigrants. Until recent years, Bulgarian emigration to Spain was scarce and unorganized. According to historian Ivan Dimitrov, an unknown number of Bulgarians fled to Spain after the Ottoman conquest of the Second Bulgarian Empire in the late 14th or early 15th century. Dimitrov claims that around 300 families in Spain retain memories of their Bulgarian origin from that period.[2] Among Bulgarians are Banat Bulgarians from Romania, Aromanians and Megleno-Romanians who became adjusted to Spanish society because of the linguistic similarities between Romanian, Aromanian, Megleno-Romanian, and Spanish, as well as Latin identity of Aromanians and Megleno-Romanians, and Banat Bulgarians are predominantly Roman Catholic.

With the upsurge of Bulgarian economy in the 18th and 19th centuries, individual Bulgarian merchants reached the markets of Spain, though a colony was never formed even after the Liberation of Bulgaria in 1878. Only after World War I did Bulgarian gardeners reach Spain and Catalonia specifically. According to a 1930 statistic, 88 Bulgarian gardeners worked in Spain.[3] However, the Spanish Civil War of 1936–39 and World War II that followed hindered the formation of a gardening colony.[2]

After World War II, a small number of Bulgarian political emigrants fleeing the communist regime settled in Spain.[2] Among those emigrants was a large part of the Bulgarian royal family, including the deposed child monarch Tsar Simeon II of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, who was granted asylum by Francisco Franco in 1951. Simeon II lived in Spain for 50 years, until his return to Bulgaria in 2001.

Around 1998, the number of Bulgarians in Spain was only around 3,000. By 2002, around 10,000 people had been officially registered as legal Bulgarian emigrants, though the number of illegal immigrants was thought to be much larger. In the early 21st century, substantial Bulgarian communities were formed in Madrid, Barcelona, Málaga, San Sebastián, Valladolid, Palma de Mallorca and other cities.[4]

Foreign population of Bulgarian citizenship in Spain

Bulgarian citizens living in Spain include ethnic Bulgarians as well as minority groups (including Turks, Pomaks, Armenians etc.).[5]

Vertical bar chart of foreign population of Bulgarian nationality in Spain between 1999 and 2019
  Population (1999–2019). Foreign population in Spain of Bulgarian nationality according to the Instituto Nacional de Estadística.[6]
Year of census Bulgarian residents[6]
1998 1,453
1999 1,831 Increase
2000 3,031 Increase
2001 12,035 Increase
2002 29,741 Increase
2003 52,838 Increase
2004 69,854 Increase
2005 93,037 Increase
2006 101,617 Increase
2007 122,057 Increase
2008 153,973 Increase
2009 164,717 Increase
2010 169,552 Increase
2011 172,926 Increase
2012 176,411 Increase
2013 168,997 Decrease
2014 151,579 Decrease
2015 142,328 Decrease
2016 133,951 Decrease
2017 127,669 Decrease
2018 124,404 Decrease
2019 122,813 Decrease
2020 122,375 Decrease
2021 118,120 Decrease

Notable people

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ "Extranjeros con certificado de registro o tarjeta de residencia en vigor. Principales resultados (30.06.2019)" (PDF). ine.es. Retrieved 2019-12-10.
  2. ^ a b c Колев 2005, p. 272
  3. ^ Бъчваров 1986
  4. ^ Колев 2005, p. 426
  5. ^ Gómez-Mestres, Sílvia; Molina, Jose Luis (2010), "Les nouvelles migrations dans l'Europe : chaînes migratoires, établissement et réseaux sociaux des Bulgares en Espagne et en Catalogne", Balkanologie, 12 (2): 9, En ce qui concerne l'ethnie à lequel appartiennent les Bulgares qui viennent en Espagne, on peut dire qu'on trouvera très difficilement d'établissements clairement ethniques en Espagne, à l'exception des Pomaks qui résident à Tafalla. Même si les appartenances sont très variées — Turcs, Pomaks, Rroms, Arméniens — en règle générale les groupes cohabitent sans apparente distinction.
  6. ^ a b "Población extranjera por Nacionalidad, comunidades, Sexo y Año". Instituto Nacional de Estadística. Retrieved 2019-04-05.

Sources

  • Бъчваров, Стефан (1986), Българско градинарство (исторически бележки) (in Bulgarian), София: Земиздат, OCLC 246888586
  • Колев, Йордан (2005), Българите извън България (in Bulgarian), София: Тангра ТанНакРа, ISBN 954-9942-73-2