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  1. Population pyramid of Bosnia Herzegovina in 2020. Population: 3,219,415 (2022 est.) ... Population of Bosnia and Herzegovina according to ethnic group 1948-2013; Ethnic

  2. Population and Vital Statistics Reprot ( various years ), ( 5 ) U.S. Census Bureau: International Database, and ( 6 ) Secretariat of the Pacific Community: Statistics and Demography Programme. License : CC BY-4.0. Line Bar Map. 1960 - 2022. Thousands. Population, total - Bosnia and Herzegovina from The World Bank: Data.

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  4. 2024. -0.51. The current population of Bosnia and Herzegovina is 3,196,598 as of Saturday, May 11, 2024, based on Worldometer elaboration of the latest United Nations data 1. Bosnia and Herzegovina 2023 population is estimated at 3,210,847 people at mid year. Bosnia and Herzegovina population is equivalent to 0.04% of the total world population.

    • Prehistoric
    • Medieval
    • Migrations and Other
    • Ottoman Empire
    • Austro-Hungarian Empire
    • World War I
    • Migrations
    • Kingdom of Yugoslavia
    • World War II
    • Socialist Yugoslavia

    The highest concentration of Haplogroup I-M170, the only native European Haplogroup, is found in present-day Bosnia and Herzegovina, ranging from 65% to 73%. The oldest traces of mankind in Bosnia and Herzegovina were during the Paleolithic period near Doboj, Prnjavor and in the Valley of the River of Usora. During the Neolithic period there were t...

    Due to a variety of factors (such as frequent boundary shifts and a relative isolation from the rest of Europe) there are no detailed statistics dealing with Bosnia's population during the Middle Ages. It is generally estimated that the population of the Kingdom of Bosnia at the height of its power was between 500,000 and 1,000,000 people. There we...

    Throughout the 15th–19th centuries there were many demographic changes. Frequent wars, religious persecutions, rebellions, uprisings, taking of children as tribute, high tributes, high taxes, years of bad crops, epidemics, violence, and oppression have caused a high mortality rate and suffering of the whole population and instigated the migration f...

    During and shortly after the Ottoman conquest of Bosnia, between 1463 and 1557, it is estimated[by whom?] that the Ottoman forces took around 100,000 of Bosnia's inhabitants into captivity and 30,000 young into the Janissaries as a result of the devshirmeh.[according to whom?] The first official population census by religion in Bosnia conducted: In...

    1879 census

    The Austro-Hungarian government published the Haupt-Uebersicht der politischen Eintheilung von Bosnien und der Hercegovina, with demographics according to the census collected on 16 June 1879. The first thorough population census,[citation needed]it recorded 1,158,440 citizens of Bosnia and Herzegovina, by religion:

    1885 census

    The Austro-Hungarian government published the Ortschafts-Bevölkerungs-Statistik von Bosnien und der Hercegovina nach dem Volkszählungs-Ergebnisse vom I. Mai 1885..According to the 1885 population census there were 1,336,091 citizens of Bosnia and Herzegovina, by religion:

    1895 census

    An Austro-Hungarian population census conducted in Bosnia and Herzegovina on 22 April 1895 which reported that the area of Bosnia had approximately 1,361,868 inhabitants while Herzegovina had 229,168 inhabitants. The Catholic Encyclopediatreated the majority Slavic population (98%) as Serbs. The number of persons per square mile was the second lowest in Austro-Hungary: 80 inhabitants per square mile. The number of persons per square mile across districts: There were 5,388 settlements, 11 of w...

    The First World War left Bosnia and Herzegovina without a total figure of 360,000 citizens or 19%of its population.

    As soon as the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs was formed, a number of earlier colonized families started to emigrate and return to their homelands, among them Germans, Czechs, Poles, Slovaks, Hungarians and Ruthenians. The new planned resettlement plans hit most the Orthodox Serb population, as large masses were moved from passive regions of H...

    Territorial distribution

    Following the agrarian reforms of 1918 and 1919,the government confiscated the property of Muslim landowners and redistributed it to non-Muslims.

    1921 census

    The Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes conducted a population census in the territorial entity of Bosnia and Herzegovinaon 31 January 1921. There were 1,890,440 persons in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The people were split among two nationalities: 1. Serbsand Croats 2. undecided and others(mostly Muslims) By religion: 1. Serbian Orthodox Christians 829,290 (43.87%) 2. Sunni Muslims 588,244 (31.07%) 3. Catholic Christians 444,308 (23.58%) 4. others 28,595 (1.58%)

    1931 census

    The Kingdom of Yugoslavia has conducted a population census on the territory of Bosnia and Herzegovinaon 31 March 1931 which stated that there were 2,323,555 persons. The population was given several nationalities: 1. Yugoslavs 2. Germans 3. Ukrainians 4. Poles 5. Hungarians 6. Roma 7. Turks By religion:

    Losses

    The Federal Bureau of Statistics in Belgrade composed a figure of 179,173 persons killed in the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina during the Second World War: 1. 129,114 Serbs (72.1%) 2. 29,539 Muslims (16.5%) 3. 7,850 Croats (4.4%) 4. others (7%)

    Expulsions and relocations

    By the plans of Nazi Germany and the Independent State of Croatia 110,000 Serbs were relocated and transported to German-occupied Serbia. Just in the period of May to August 1941 over 100,000 Serbs were expelled to Serbia. In the heat of war Serbia had 200,000–400,000 Serbian refugees from Ustaša-held Bosnia and Herzegovina. By the end of war 137,000 Serbs have permanently left the territories of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The Muslim population was also exposed to suffering and intense relocatio...

    1945–1948 colonization of Vojvodina

    Prior to the expulsions of Germans from Vojvodina in 1945–1948, a number of inhabitants of Bosnia and Herzegovinamoved to the new living spaces in Vojvodina: 1. Serbs around 70,000 (98%) 2. Croats and Muslims (around 2%)

    1948 census

    According to the 1948 People's Federal Republic of Yugoslavia population census, the People's Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovinahad 2,565,277 inhabitants: 1. Serbs 1,136,116 (44.3%) 2. undecided 788,403 (30.7%)[note 1] 3. Croats 614,123 (23.9%) 4. Slovenes 4,338 (0.2%) 5. Montenegrins 3,094 (0.1%) 6. Macedonians675 7. others 18,528 (0.8%)

    1953 census

    According to the 1953 Yugoslav population census, Bosnia and Herzegovinahad 2,847,790 inhabitants: 1. Serbs 1,264,372 (44.4%) 2. undecided 891,800 (31.3%)[note 1] 3. Croats 654,229 (23%) 4. Montenegrins 7,336 (0.3%) 5. Slovenes 6,300 (0.2%) 6. Macedonians 1,884 (0.1%) 7. others 21,869 (0.7%)

  5. Sarajevo, 2021. BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA IN FIGURES 2020. Statistical data sources for the "BiH in figures 2020" are: - Statistical institutions of Bosnia and Herzegovina: Agency for Statistics of BiH, Institute for Statistics of FBiH and the Institute for Statistics of RS - Central Bank of Bosnia and Herzegovina - Administrative sources ...

  6. Dashboards available for Bosnia and Herzegovina. Transparency Portal. World Population Dashboard. Save to PDF. The World Population Dashboard showcases global population data, including fertility rate, gender parity in school enrolment, information on sexual and reproductive health, and much more. Together, these data shine a light on the ...

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