Jewish Population

The number of Jews in the world is difficult to calculate, especially given the constant debates of the definition of Jew. All numbers given in this article will be estimates, from sources noted below.

Historical Populations

b>Increase in European Jewish populations before 1900
style="background:#efefef;" | Date style="background:#efefef;" | Population
colspan="2" style="background:#ffdead;" | Holland
829 46,408
839 52,245
849 58,626
859 63,790
869 68,003
879 81,693
colspan="2" style="background:#ffdead;" | Hungary
720 12,656
785 75,089
786 77,647
804 124,128
805 127,816
829 202,328
842 241,632
850 352,400
857 413,118
869 516,658
880 624,737
890 725,222
colspan="2" style="background:#ffdead;" | Poland
6th century 200,000
659 100,000
764 315,298
816 212,000
825 341,125
826 368,773
828 384,263
856 563,000
868 764,947
875 860,327
882 1,045,000
893 1,229,000
897 1,333,000
colspan="2" style="background:#ffdead;" | Wrttemberg
832 10,670
846 12,356
858 11,088
864 11,610
871 12,245
880 13,331
890 12,639
900 11,916
olspan="2" align="center" style="background:#ffdead;" | Source: The Jewish Encyclopedia (1901-1906).''
Jewish population centers have shifted tremendously over time, due to the constant streams of Jewish refugees created by expulsions, persecution, and sancitoned killing of Jews in various places at various times. The 20th century saw a large shift in Jewish populations, due mostly to persecution in Eastern Europe followed by the Holocaust, migration to the United States and the creation of Israel and subsequent explusions of Sephardic Jews from the Arab world.

Ancient and medieval times

According to Joseph Jacobs, writing in the Jewish Encyclopedia (1901-1906) http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=1044&letter=S, the Pentateuch contains a number of statements as to the number of Jews that left Egypt, the descendants of the seventy sons and grandsons of Jacob who took up their residence in that country. Altogether, including Levites, there were 611,730 males over twenty years of age, and therefore capable of bearing arms; this would imply a population of about 3,154,000. The Census of David is said to have recorded 1,300,000 males over twenty years of age, which would imply a population of over 5,000,000. The number of exiles who returned from Babylon is given at 42,360. Tacitus declares that Jerusalem at its fall contained 600,000 persons; Josephus, that there were as many as 1,100,000, of whom 97,000 were sold as slaves. It is from the latter that most European Jews are descended. These appear (writes Jacobs) to be all the figures accessible for ancient times, and their trustworthiness is a matter of dispute. The difficulties of commissariat in the Sinaitic desert for such a number as 3,000,000 have been pointed out by John William Colenso; and the impossibility of the area of Jerusalem containing much more than 80,000 persons with any comfort has been referred to as proving the exaggeration of the figures of Josephus and Tacitus. In the Hadrianic war 580,000 Jews were slain, according to Dion Cassius (lxix. 14). According to Theodor Mommsen, in the first century C.E. there were no less than 1,000,000 Jews in Egypt, in a total of 8,000,000 inhabitants; of these 200,000 lived in Alexandria, whose total population was 500,000. Adolf Harnack (Ausbreitung des Christentums, Leipzig, 1902) reckons that there were 1,000,000 Jews in Syria at the time of Nero, and 700,000 in Palestine, and he allows for an additional 1,500,000 in other places, thus estimating that there were in the first century 4,200,000 Jews in the world. Jacobs remarks that this estimate is probably excessive. As regards the number of Jews in the Middle Ages, Benjamin of Tudela, about 1170, enumerates altogether 1,049,565; but of these 100,000 are attributed to Persia and India, 100,000 to Arabia, and 300,000 to an undecipherable "Thanaim", obviously mere guesses with regard to the Eastern Jews, with whom he did not come in contact. There were at that time probably not many more than 500,000 in the countries he visited, and probably not more than 750,000 altogether. The only real data for the Middle Ages are with regard to special Jewish communities. The Jewish Encyclopedia provides a table of this datahttp://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/table.jsp?table_id=421&volid=11&title=STATISTICS:. The Middle Ages were mainly a period of expulsions. In 1290, 16,000 Jews were expelled from England; in 1306, 100,000 from France; and in 1492, about 200,000 from Spain. Smaller but more frequent expulsions occurred in Germany, so that at the commencement of the 16th century only four great Jewish communities remained: Frankfurt, 2,000; Worms, 1,400; Prague, 10,000; and Vienna, 3,000 (Heinrich Grtz, Geschichte der Juden x. 29). It has been estimated that during the five centuries from 1000 to 1500, 380,000 Jews were killed during the persecutions, reducing the total number in the world to about 1,000,000. In the 16th and 17th centuries the main centers of Jewish population were in Poland and the Mediterranean countries, Spain excepted.

The modern world

Again following Jacobs, Jacques Basnage at the beginning of the 18th century estimated the total number of European Jews at 1,360,000, but according to a census at the First Partition of Poland in 1772, the Jews of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth numbered 308,500. As these formed the larger part of the European Jews, it is doubtful whether the total number was more than 400,000 at the middle of the 18th century; and, counting those in the lands of Islam, the entire number in the world at that time could not have been much more than 1,000,000. Assuming that those numbers are reasonable, the increase in the next few centuries was remarkably rapid. It was checked in Germany by the laws limiting the number of Jews in special towns, and perhaps still more by overcrowding; Jacobs gives citations for there being 7,951 Jews at Prague in 1786 and 5,646 in 1843, and 2,214 at Frankfurt in 1811. Chubinsky reports that in 1840 the Jews of southern Russia were accustomed to dwell thirteen in a house, whereas among the general population the average was only four to five (Globus, 1880, p. 340). The rapid increase was undoubtedly due to the early age of marriage and the small number of deaths of infants in the stable communities. The chief details known for any length of time are for Holland, Hungary, Poland, and Wrttemberg; see chart at right. Jacobs in the Jewish Encyclopedia presents some evidence that Jewish increase in this period may have exceeded that of the general population, but remarks also that such figures of increase are often very deceptive, as they may indicate not the natural increase by surplus of births over deaths, but accession by immigration. This applies especially to Germany during the early part of the 19th century, when Jews from Galicia and Poland seized every opportunity of moving westward. Arthur Ruppin, writing in the late 19th century, when forcible measures were taken to prevent Russian Jews from settling in Germany, showed that the growth of the Jewish population in Germany had almost entirely ceased, owing to a falling birth rate and, possibly, to emigration. Similarly, during this period, England and the United States showed notable Jewish immigration. This growth in actual numbers was somewhat offset by conversion away from Judaism. While Halakha (Jewish law) says that a Jew who converts is still a Jew, in the climate of persecution that prevailed in much of Europe in this period, conversion tended to be accompanied by a repudiation of Jewish identity, and converts to Christianity generally ceased to be considered part of the Jewish community. The Jewish Encyclopedia gives some statistics on conversion of Jews to Protestantism, Roman Catholicism, and Orthodox Christianity (which they call "Greek Catholicism"). http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/table.jsp?table_id=425&volid=11&title=STATISTICS: The upshot is that some 2,000 European Jews converted to Christianity every year during the 19th century, but that in the 1890s the number was running closer to 3,000 per year, — 1,000 in Austria-Hungary, 1,000 in Russia, 500 in Germany, and the remainder in the Anglo-Saxon world. Partly balancing this were about 500 converts to Judaism each year, mainly formerly Christian women who married Jewish men. For Russia, Galicia, and Romania, conversions were dwarfed by emigration: in the last quarter of the 19th century, probably 1,000,000 Jews from this area of Europe emigrated, primarily to the United States, but many also to the United Kingdom. Toward the end of the 19th century, estimates of the number of Jews in the world ranged from about 6,200,000 (Encyclopdia Britannica, 1881) to 10,932,777 (American Jewish Year-Book, 1904-1905). This can be contrasted with estimates of about half that number a mere 60 years earlier. http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/table.jsp?table_id=426&volid=11&title=STATISTICS: The Jewish Encyclopedia article on which this discussion is largely based estimates only 314,000 Sephardic Jews at the end of the 19th century. More recent scholarship tends to suggest that this estimate is low. The same source gives two wildly different estimate for the Falasha, the Ethiopian Jews, variously estimating them at 50,000 and 200,000; the former would be comparable to their present-day population.

Population in 1900

The following table is based on a table in the Jewish Encyclopedia of 1901-1906, which also places these numbers in context of the distribution of world population at that time. http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/table.jsp?table_id=427&volid=11&title=STATISTICS:
   

 

Circa 1900

 

 

 

Region

Population

Percent b

World

11,206,849

100.0

 

 

 

Americas, Total

1,549,621

13.8

 North c

1,522,500

13.5

 Central

1,000

0.00

 South

26,121

0.2

 

 

 

Europe, Total

8,966,781

80.0

 Russia (1897)

3,872,625

34.6

 Poland (1897)

1,316,776

11.7

 Austria (Cisleithania, includes Galicia)

1,224,899

10.0

 Kingdom of Hungary

851,378

7.5

 Germany (1901)

586,948

7.5

 Turkey a and Rumelia

282,277

2.5

 Romania (1900)

269,015

2.4

 United Kingdom

250,000

2.2

 Other Europe

312,863

2.7

 

 

 

Asia, Total

300,948

2.6

 Other Arabia and Asia Minor f

95,000

0.8

 Palestine

78,000

0.6

 Caucasus

58,471

0.05

 Persia

35,000

0.3

 Siberia

34,477

0.3

 Other

51,392

0.4

 

 

 

Africa, Total

372,659

3.3

 North e

322,659

2.8

 Sub-Saharan

50,000

0.4

 

 

 

Oceania g

16,840

0.01

a Asian regions of Turkey included in Europe. Turkey at this time includes Mesopotamia, where there were 35,000 Jews in Baghdad; Adrianople had 17,000.
b Minor discrepancies due to rounding.
c U.S. and Canada.
e Including est. 50,000 for Ethiopia
f Excludes Mesopotamia, which is counted with European Turkey and Rumelia.

Current Population

For an alternate estimate of current populations broken down by country, see Jews by country According to the World Jewish Population Survey of 2002, "The size of world Jewry at the beginning of 2002 is assessed at 13,296,100. World Jewry constituted about 2.19 per 1,000 of the worlds total population. One in about 457 people in the world is a Jew. According to the revised figures, between 2001 and 2002 the Jewish population grew by an estimated 44,000 people, or about 0.3 percent."
The major population centers of the Jewish community are (Table from the World Jewish Population Survey)
   

 

2002

 

 

 

Region

Population

Percent b

World

13,296,100

100.0

 

 

 

Americas, Total

6,476,300

48.7

 North c

6,064,000

45.6

 Central

52,500

0.4

 South

359,800

2.7

 

 

 

Europe, Total

1,558,500

11.7

 European Union

1,034,400

7.8

 Other West

19,600

0.1

 Former USSR d

410,000

3.1

 Other East and Balkans d

94,500

0.7

 

 

 

Asia, Total

5,069,900

38.1

 Israel h

5,025,000

37.8

 Former USSR d

25,000

0.2

 Other

19,900

0.1

 

 

 

Africa, Total

87,200

0.7

 North e

7,400

0.1

 South f

79,800

0.6

 

 

 

Oceania g

104,200

0.8

a January 1.
b Minor discrepancies due to rounding.
c U.S. and Canada.
d Asian regions of Russia and Turkey included in Europe.
e Including Ethiopia.
f South Africa, Zimbabwe, and other sub-Saharan countries.
g Australia, New Zealand.
h Including about 370,000 Jewish Israeli citizens living in the disputed territories.

References

 

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