Federal Institute for Population Research

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Babyschuhe auf Babybett (refer to: Just fertility postponement or permanent fertility decline?) | Source: © luchschenF/stock.adobe.com

Fertility trends in OECD countriesJust fertility postponement or permanent fertility decline?

Experts discussed the causes of falling birth rates at the OECD webinar on 20 June 2024. BiB Director Prof. Dr. C. Katharina Spieß and BiB Research Director Prof. Dr. Martin Bujard were also present.

Journal ArticlesZum Wandel der Siedlungsstruktur der jüdischen Bevölkerung in der Bayerischen Pfalz im 19. Jahrhundert

Aspekte der historischen Bevölkerungsgeographie einer Minderheit

Swiaczny, Frank (2007)

Zeitschrift für Bevölkerungswissenschaft 32(1–2): 289–312

The article covers the change of settlement patterns of the Jewish communities of the Bavarian Palatinate during the 19th century until the First World War. With the analysis of population growth and decline, as well as of the foundation and disappearance of Jewish communities – differentiated by location, size, and population share – spatial patterns of the population change and settlement structures are to be identified.

At the beginning of the 19th century, the Palatinate had around 6,700 Jewish inhabitants, which represents a population share of roughly 2 % (1801, source unreliable). In the following years the number of Jews in the Palatinate was growing fast, and with 15,300 persons the Jewish population reached a population share of 2.7 % in 1840, the highest share ever during the 19th century. The population continued to grow up to about 15,600 persons in 1852, while the population share already started to decline to 2.67 %. From 1852 on, the Jewish population in the Palatinate declined considerably, falling to around 10,100 persons in 1900; and the population share was only 1.2 % at that time. Looking at individual communities independently, this general trend has to be differentiated. The article shows that the population development of the Jewish communities in the Palatinate at the beginning of the 19th century was highly influenced by the newly granted freedom of settlement. This led to a phase of considerable fluctuation among Jewish settlements, followed by consolidation since the second third of the 19th century. This spatial process was overshadowed from the beginning by the concentration of the Jewish population in the urban and centrally located areas during the industrialisation process, and less in settlements with a large Jewish populace or a high Jewish population share.

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