From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Czech diaspora refers to both historical and present
emigration from the
Czech Republic, as well as from the former
Czechoslovakia and the
Czech lands (including
Bohemia,
Moravia and
Silesia). The country with the largest number of
Czechs living abroad is the
United States.
Communities
Distribution by country
Below is a list of top 15 countries with the most Czech-born people. In the case of Germany, it is noteworthy that many might be
Sudeten Germans, expelled from the Czech Republic following Germany's defeat in
WW2.
[1]
Germany: 603,049
United States: 110,257
Slovakia: 89,560
United Kingdom: 45,578
Austria: 37,118
Canada: 22,677
Switzerland: 15,522
Australia: 14,045
Spain: 11,539
Russia: 11,249
Italy: 9,536
France: 8,907
Ireland: 6,972
Poland: 5,952
Greece: 4,516
Famous people of Czech descent
-
Madeleine Albright, the first woman to become a United States Secretary of State
-
Yehuda Bauer, an Israeli historian and scholar of the Holocaust
-
Edouard Borovansky, a Czech-born Australian ballet dancer, choreographer and director
-
Georgina Bouzova, an English television actress
-
Louis Brandeis, an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1916 to 1939
-
Thomas Cech, a Nobel Laureate in chemistry
-
Anton Cermak, the mayor of Chicago, Illinois, from 1931 until his assassination in 1933
-
Eugene Cernan, a retired United States Navy officer and a former NASA astronaut and engineer
-
Miloš Forman, a Czech-American director, screenwriter, professor, and an emigrant from Czechoslovakia
-
André Glucksmann, a French philosopher and writer
-
George Halas, a player, coach, owner and pioneer in professional American football
-
Hippolyte Havel, a Czech anarchist who lived in Greenwich Village, New York
-
Juscelino Kubitschek, a prominent Brazilian politician of Czech
[2] descent who was President of Brazil from 1956 to 1961
-
Milan Kundera, a writer of Czech origin who has lived in exile in France since 1975, where he became a naturalized citizen in 1981
-
Lenka, an Australian singer and songwriter
-
Jim Lovell, a former NASA astronaut and a retired captain in the United States Navy
-
Felix Moscheles, an English painter, peace activist and advocate of Esperanto
-
Kim Novak, is an American actress best known for her performance in the 1958 film
Vertigo
-
Fredy Perlman, an author, publisher and activist
-
Jan Pinkava, a Czech-British animator and film director
-
Václav Smil, a Czech-Canadian scientist and policy analyst
-
Josef Škvorecký, a leading contemporary Czech writer and publisher who has spent much of his life in Canada
-
Tom Stoppard, a British playwright, knighted in 1997
-
Roberto Weiss, an Italian-British scholar and historian
-
John Zerzan, an American anarchist and primitivist philosopher and author
-
Robert Vanasek, an American politician
-
Exene Cervenka, an American singer
See also
Further reading
- Dejmek, Andrea Theresa. The Canadian Czech Diaspora: Bilingual and Multilingual Language Inheritance and Affiliations, McGill University, 2007.
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Caucasus | |
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Central Europe | |
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Northern Europe | |
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Southwestern Europe | |
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Western Europe | |
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Africa | |
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Asia | |
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Americas | |
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Europe | |
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Oceania | |
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References