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List of states by the date of adoption of the Reformation[edit]

Reformation in Germany[edit]

Political situation in Germany about 1560
Religious situation in Germany and Europe about 1560

Officially, Protestantism remained an exclusively German phenomenon that concerned the Holy Roman Empire through the late 1510s. It did not became an international issue until the 1520s. In 1521, King Gustav I of Sweden broke any contact with the papal authorities in Rome and in 1527, he formally introduced Reformation in his realm (see Reformation in Sweden).

In 1517, the Reformation began with Luther and caught on instantly. Different reformers arose independently of Luther in 1518 (for example Andreas Karlstadt, Philip Melanchthon, Erhard Schnepf, Johannes Brenz and Martin Bucer) and in 1519 (for example Huldrych Zwingli, Nikolaus von Amsdorf, Ulrich von Hutten), and in the following years. Each year drew new theologians to embrace the Reformation and participate in the ongoing, European-wide discussion about faith.

Before princely support[edit]

The early Reformation in Germany mostly concerns the life of Martin Luther until he was outlawed and excommunicated in 1521.[1]

The exact moment Martin Luther realized the key doctrine of Justification by Faith is described in German as the Turmerlebnis. It is often seen as the breakthrough of the reformational ideas. In Table Talk, Luther describes it as a sudden realization. Experts often speak of a gradual process of realization between 1514 and 1518.

In 1517, Martin Luther was convinced to publish his Ninety-Five Theses, being provoked by the behavior exhibited by Albrecht of Brandenburg, the prince-elector and archbishop of Mainz, who instructed Johann Tetzel to introduce indulgences so that he may have the money to resolve his large debt to both the Pope and the Fugger family of bankers. Luther did not intend for his theses to be translated into German, nor did he think Albert of Mainz knew anything of Tetzel selling indulgences. Albert of Mainz upon receiving Luther's theses intended to silence the monk and notified both the University of Mainz and the Pope of Luther's findings. Perceived by the Catholic hierarchy as "another Hus", Luther went through an interrogation process led by Thomas Cajetan (1517), defended his beliefs in the Leipzig Disputation (1518) against his Catholic opponent Johannes Eck, and eventually before the Holy Roman Emperor and imperial princes at the Diet of Worms (1521). Following the Diet of Worms, Luther was declared an outlaw (vogelfrei) by the Holy Roman Emperor. By then, he was also excommunicated by the Pope. Following the Diet, Luther was captured and brought to safety at Wartburg Castle by Saxon soldiers where he hid until his return to Wittenberg in 1522. Frederick the Wise, the elector of Saxony, ultimately never delivered Luther into the Emperor's authority, claiming he never knew that such person existed.

After the Heidelberg Disputation (1518) and the Leipzig Disputation (1519), the faith issues were more and more brought to the attention of other German theologians throughout the Holy Roman Empire. Other Protestant reformers arose independently from Luther almost immediately throughout Germany. The pace of the Reformation proved unstoppable already by 1520. Reformational ideas and Protestant church services were first introduced in cities, being supported by local citizens and also some nobles. The Reformation did not receive state support until 1525. It was more of a movement among the German people between 1517 and 1525, and then also a political one after 1525.

Princes' Reformation[edit]

The first state to formally adopt a Protestant confession was the Duchy of Prussia (1525). Albert, Duke of Prussia formally declared Lutheranism to be the state religion. Ducal Prussia was followed by many imperial free cities and other minor imperial entities. The next sizeable territories were the Landgraviate of Hesse (1526; at the Synod of Homberg) and the Electorate of Saxony (1527; Luther's homeland), Electoral Palatinate (1530s) and the Duchy of Württemberg (1534). The reformational wave swept first the Holy Roman Empire, and then extended beyond it to the rest of the European continent.

Germany was home to the greatest number of Protestant reformers that developed the Reformation. Nearly each state that turned Protestant had their own reformers responsible for the implementation of the renewed faith and the foundation of churches. Martin Luther pioneered these activities in Electoral Saxony, where under his own supervision, the Evangelical-Lutheran Church of Saxony was organized and served as an example for other states.

1524[edit]

1525[edit]

1526[edit]

1527[edit]

1534[edit]

1536[edit]

1539[edit]

1556[edit]

1557[edit]

1575[edit]

1581[edit]

BBB[edit]

Demographics of major traditions within Christianity (Pew Research Center, 2010 data)
Tradition Followers % of the Christian population % of the world population Followers dynamics Dynamics in- and outside Christianity
Catholic Church 1,094,610,000 50.1 15.9 Increase Growing Decrease Declining
Protestantism 800,640,000 36.7 11.6 Increase Growing Increase Growing
Orthodoxy 260,380,000 11.9 3.8 Decrease Declining Decrease Declining
Other Christianity 28,430,000 1.3 0.4 Increase Growing Increase Growing
Christianity 2,184,060,000 31.7 100 Increase Growing Steady Stable

German[edit]

Pie chart showing the distribution of native German speakers.

  Germany (78.3%)
  Austria (8.4%)
  Switzerland (5.6%)
  Italy (0.4%)
  Other (7.3%)

Demographics[edit]

Huguenot regions (purple) and royal intervention (red) between 1620 and 1622.

The issue of demographic strengh and geographical spread of the Reformed tradition in France has been covered in a variety of sources. Most of them usually agree that the Huguenot population reached as many as 10% of the total population, or roughly 2 million people on the eve of the St. Bartholomew's Day massacre in 1572.[2][3]

The new teaching attracted sizeable portions of the nobility and urban bourgeoisie. The number of French Protestants steadily swelled to ten percent of the population since John Calvin introduced the Reformation in France, or roughly 1.8 million people in the decade between 1560 and 1570.[4] During the same period there were some 1,400 Reformed churches operating in France.[5] Hans J. Hillerbrand, an expert on the subject, in his Encyclopedia of Protestantism: 4-volume Set claims the Huguenot community reached as much as 10% of the French population on the eve of the St. Bartholomew's Day massacre, declining to 7-8% by the end of the 16th century, and further after heavy persecution began once again with the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes by Louis XIV of France.[6]

Among the nobles, Calvinism peaked on the eve of the St. Bartholomew's Day massacre. Since then it has been sharply decreasing, as the Huguenots were no more tolerated by the French royalty and Catholic mass. By the end of the sixteenth century Huguenots constituted 7-8% of the whole population, or 1.2 million people. By the time Louis XIV of France revoked the Edict of Nantes, Huguenots accounted for 800,000 to 1 million people.[7]

Huguenots controlled sizeable areas in central and southern France. They used to be nobles in the countryside and merchants, artisans and sailors in the coastal cities. The population around the Massif Central and the area around Dordogne was almost entirely Reformed. John Calvin was a Frenchman and largely responsible for the introduction and spread of the Reformed tradition in France.[8] He wrote in French, but unlike the Protestant development in Germany where Lutheran writings were widely distributed and could be read by the common man, it was not the case in France where only nobles adopted the new faith and the folk remained Catholic. This is true for areas in the west and south controlled by the Huguenot nobility. Although large portions of peasant population became Reformed, the people remained majority Catholic.[9]

Overall, Huguenot presence was heavily concentrated in the western and southern portions of the French kingdom, as nobles there secured practise of the new faith. That included Languedoc-Roussillon, Aquitaine and even streched into the Dauphiné. They lived on the Atlantic coast in La Rochelle, and spread across provinces of Normandy and Poitou. In the south, towns like Castres, Montauban, Montpellier and Nimes were Huguenot strongholds. In addition, a dense network of Protestant villages permeated the rural montainous region of the Cevennes. It continues to be the backbone of French Protestantism to this very day. Roughly four-fifths of all Huguenots lived in the western and southern areas.

Today, there are some Reformed communities around the world that retain their Huguenot identity apart from some Calvinists in the United Protestant Church of France, including a rural community in the Cevennes and around Alsace-Moselle region. Huguenot emigrees in the United Kingdom, the United States, South Africa and Australia still retain their identity.[10][11]

1[edit]

Name Founded Headquarters Membership General Secretary/other leading position Movements Notes
World Evangelical Alliance worldea.org 1846 New York City, New York, United States 600,000,000[12] Efraim Tendero Evangelicals

2[edit]

Name Founded Headquarters Membership Person in leading position Movements Notes
Anglican Communion anglicancommunion.org unclear; origins traced to the first international Anglican organization, 1698 London, England, United Kingdom 85,000,000[13] Archbishop of Canterbury
Justin Welby
Anglicans
World Methodist Council worldmethodistcouncil.org 1881 Lake Junaluska, North Carolina, United States 80,500,000[14] General Secretary
Bishop Ivan M. Abrahams
Methodists
World Communion of Reformed Churches www.wcrc.ch 2010 Hanover, Lower Saxony, Germany 80,000,000[15] General Secretary
Chris Ferguson
Reformed
Lutheran World Federation
www.lutheranworld.org
1947 Geneva, Canton of Geneva, Switzerland 72,000,000[16] General Secretary
Martin Junge
Lutherans
World Assemblies of God Fellowship
worldagfellowship.org
1988 Springfield, Missouri, United States 68,000,000[17] General Superintendent & Chairman
George O. Wood
Pentecostals
Baptist World Alliance
bwanet.org
1905 Falls Church, Virginia, United States 42,000,000[18] General Secretary

Neville Callam

Baptists

3[edit]

Name Founded Headquarters Membership Person in leading position Movements Notes
Church of England
churchofengland.org
597; 1534 separated from the Roman Catholic Church London, England, United Kingdom 26,000,000[19] Archbishop of Canterbury
Justin Welby
Anglicans
Church of Christ in Congo
ecc.faithweb.com
1970 Kinshasa, Kinshasa Province, Democratic Republic of the Congo 25,500,000[20] President
Pierre Marini Bodho
Methodists
Pentecostals
Baptists
Mennonites
Reformed
Evangelicals
United Protestant[21]
Evangelical Church in Germany
ekd.de
1948 Hanover, Lower Saxony, Germany 24,300,000[22] Praeses of the Synod
Irmgard Schwätzer
Chairman of the Council of the EKD
Heinrich Bedford-Strohm
Prussian United
Lutheran
Reformed
Three-Self Patriotic Movement
1951 Shanghai, People's Republic of China 23,000,000[23] Chairperson
Fu Xianwei
Secretary General
Xu Xiaohong
State-controlled theology; various Protestants
Assembleias de Deus
www.adbelem.com.br
1911 São Paulo, Brazil 22,500,000[24] General Superintendent
José Wellington Bezerra da Costa
Pentecostals
Church of Nigeria
www.anglican-nig.org
1979 Abuja, Nigeria 18,000,000[25] Primate of all Nigeria, Archbishop of Abuja Province

Nicholas Okoh

Anglicans
Southern Baptist Convention
www.sbc.net
1845 Augusta, Georgia, United States 16,000,000[26] President

Dr. Ronnie Floyd

Baptists
Fangcheng Fellowship
1971 10,000,000[27] Evangelicals
Church of Uganda
churchofuganda.org
1897 Namirembe Hill, Kampala District, Uganda 8,800,000[28] Archbishop of Uganda and Bishop of Kampala

Stanley Ntagali

Anglicans
China Gospel Fellowship
8,000,000[29] Evangelicals
National Baptist Convention, USA, Inc.
www.nationalbaptist.com
1880 Montgomery, Alabama, United States 7,500,000[30] President
Rev. Jerry Young
Baptists
Church of Sweden
svenskakyrkan.se
1593 Uppsala, Uppsala County, Sweden 6,400,000[31] Archbishop of Uppsala
Antje Jackelén
Lutherans
Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania
www.elct.org
1963 Arusha, Arusha Region, Tanzania 6,100,000[32] Bishop

Rev. Dr. Fredrick Onael Shoo

Lutherans
Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus
www.eecmy.org
1959 Addis Ababa, Ethiopia 5,300,000[33] Bishop

Rev. Dr. Wakseyoum Idossa

Lutherans

GGG[edit]

Countries with state religion.
  Protestantism (including Anglicanism)
   
  Islam
   
Countries with state religion (detailed).
   
  Islam
      

Chan[edit]

Every German Chancellor was a follower of a Christian church. German society has been affected by the Catholic-Protestant divide since the Protestant Reformation, and the same effect is visible in this list of German Chancellors. It is largely dominated by Roman Catholics and Lutherans as these remain the main confessions in the country. One chancellor was Reformed (Calvinist). Although there were some religiously sceptic chancellors, such as Friedrich Ebert, they never officially renounced their faith and were given a Christian funeral. A significant portion of Protestant chancellors belonged to the Prussian Union of churches, which united the Reformed and Lutheran confessions throughout the Kingdom of Prussia, and was in force since 1817. Roman Catholic chancellors during Imperial Germany came from the Catholic Centre Party, while Protestants.

By term[edit]

North German Confederation[edit]

Name Term Religious affiliation
1 Otto von Bismarck 1867–1871 Lutheran

Germany[edit]

Name Term Religious affiliation
1 Otto von Bismarck 1871–1890 Lutheran
2 Leo von Caprivi 1890–1894 Lutheran
3 Chlodwig zu Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst 1894–1900 Roman Catholic
4 Bernhard von Bülow 1900–1909 Lutheran
5 Theobald von Bethmann-Hollweg 1909–1917 Lutheran
6 Georg Michaelis 1917 Lutheran
7 Georg von Hertling 1917–1918 Roman Catholic
8 Max von Baden 1918 Roman Catholic
9 Friedrich Ebert 1918–1919 Roman Catholic
10 Philipp Scheidemann 1919 Reformed
11 Gustav Bauer 1919–1920 Lutheran
12 Hermann Müller 1920 Unknown
13 Constantin Fehrenbach 1920-1921 Roman Catholic
14 Joseph Wirth 1921–1922 Roman Catholic
15 Wilhelm Cuno 1922–1923 Roman Catholic
16 Gustav Stresemann 1923 Lutheran
17 Wilhelm Marx 1923–1925 Roman Catholic
18 Hans Luther 1925–1926 Lutheran
19 Wilhelm Marx 1926–1928 Roman Catholic
20 Hermann Müller 1928-1930 Unknown
21 Heinrich Brüning 1930-1932 Roman Catholic
22 Franz von Papen 1932 Roman Catholic
23 Kurt von Schleicher 1932–1933 Lutheran
24 Adolf Hitler 1933–1945 initially Roman Catholic, see details
25 Joseph Goebbels 1945 initially Roman Catholic
26 Lutz Graf Schwerin von Krosigk 1945 Lutheran
N/A Vacant 1945-1949 N/A
27 Konrad Adenauer 1949–1963 Roman Catholic
28 Ludwig Erhard 1963–1966 Lutheran
29 Kurt Georg Kiesinger 1966–1969 Roman Catholic
30 Willy Brandt 1969–1974 Lutheran
31 Walter Scheel 1974 Lutheran
32 Helmut Schmidt 1974–1982 Lutheran
33 Helmut Kohl 1982–1998 Roman Catholic
34 Gerhard Schröder 1998-2005 Lutheran
35 Angela Merkel 2005–present Lutheran

Religion[edit]

Religion in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (2013)

  Catholicism (36.8%)
  Protestantism (32%)
  Other Christian (11.2%)
  Sunni Islam (6%)
  Shia Islam (1.2%)
  Ahmadiyya Islam (0.7%)
  Other Muslims (4.1%)
  Other or non-specified (1%)
  Unaffiliated (4%)

Table[edit]

Country/Region[34] Protestant population
2010 Pew Report[34]
Protestant percentage (%) of total population
2010 Pew Report[34]
Percentage (%) of World Protestant population
2010 Pew Report[34]
Protestant population
Other sources
Protestant percentage (%)
Other sources
Afghanistan Afghanistan 29,047,000 0.1 1.8
Albania Albania 2,601,000 - 0.2
Algeria Algeria 34,780,000 0.2 2.1
American Samoa American Samoa < 1,000 72 < 0.1
Andorra Andorra 1,000 - < 0.1
Angola Angola 195,000 30.7 < 0.1
Anguilla Anguilla < 1,000 73.5 < 0.1
Antigua and Barbuda Antigua and Barbuda < 1,000 85.6 < 0.1
Argentina Argentina 1,000,000 7.3 0.1
Armenia Armenia 1,000 2.2 < 0.1
Aruba Aruba < 1,000 9.85 < 0.1
Australia Australia 399,000 38.7 < 0.1
Austria Austria 475,000 5.1 < 0.1
Azerbaijan Azerbaijan 8,795,000 0.2 0.5
The Bahamas Bahamas < 1,000 79.2 < 0.1
Bahrain Bahrain 655,000 4.9 < 0.1
Bangladesh Bangladesh 148,607,000 0.1 9.2
Barbados Barbados 2,000 86.9 < 0.1
Belarus Belarus 19,000 0.9 < 0.1
Belgium Belgium 638,000 1.4 < 0.1
Belize Belize < 1,000 35.1 < 0.1
Benin Benin 2,259,000 22.3 0.1
Bermuda Bermuda < 1,000 62.3 < 0.1
Bhutan Bhutan 7,000 - < 0.1
Bolivia Bolivia 2,000 13 < 0.1
Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosnia-Herzegovina 1,564,000 - 0.1
Botswana Botswana 8,000 65 < 0.1
Brazil Brazil 204,000 20.8 < 0.1
British Virgin Islands British Virgin Islands < 1,000 72 < 0.1
Brunei Brunei 211,000 4.8 < 0.1
Bulgaria Bulgaria 1,002,000 0.5 0.1
Burkina Faso Burkina Faso 9,600,000 4.4 0.6
Myanmar Burma (Myanmar) 1,900,000 5.3 0.1
Burundi Burundi 184,000 19.8 < 0.1
Cambodia Cambodia 240,000 0.3 < 0.1
Cameroon Cameroon 3,598,000 31 0.2
Canada Canada 940,000 27.3 0.1
Cape Verde Cape Verde < 1,000 7.8 < 0.1
Cayman Islands Cayman Islands < 1,000 70.5 < 0.1
Central African Republic Central African Republic 403,000 59.3 < 0.1
Chad Chad 6,404,000 16.9 0.4
Chile Chile 4,000 15.6 < 0.1
China China 23,308,000 4.3 1.4
Colombia Colombia 14,000 10.2 < 0.1
Comoros Comoros 679,000 - < 0.1
Democratic Republic of the Congo Congo 969,000 48.1 0.1
Cook Islands Cook Islands < 1,000 51.1 < 0.1
Costa Rica Costa Rica < 1,000 23.2 < 0.1
Croatia Croatia 56,000 0.2 < 0.1
Cuba Cuba 10,000 5.7 < 0.1
Cyprus Cyprus 200,000 - < 0.1
Czech Republic Czech Republic 4,000 3.4 < 0.1
Denmark Denmark 226,000 82.2 < 0.1
Djibouti Djibouti 853,000 - 0.1
Dominica Dominica < 1,000 27.5 < 0.1
Dominican Republic Dominican Republic 2,000 21 < 0.1
Ecuador Ecuador 2,000 9.6 < 0.1
Egypt Egypt 80,024,000 0.4 4.9
El Salvador El Salvador 2,000 35.7 < 0.1
Equatorial Guinea Equatorial Guinea 28,000 3.8 < 0.1
Eritrea Eritrea 1,909,000 0.8 0.1
Estonia Estonia 2,000 20.9 < 0.1
Ethiopia Ethiopia 28,721,000 19 1.8
Faroe Islands Faroe Islands < 1,000 100 < 0.1
Falkland Islands Falkland Islands < 1,000 - < 0.1
Federated States of Micronesia Federated States of Micronesia < 1,000 48.7 < 0.1
Fiji Fiji 54,000 54 < 0.1
Finland Finland 42,000 80.4 < 0.1
France France 4,704,000 1.8 0.3
French Guiana French Guiana 2,000 4.3 < 0.1
French Polynesia French Polynesia < 1,000 41.2 < 0.1
Gabon Gabon 145,000 24 < 0.1
The Gambia Gambia 1,669,000 17.1 0.1
Georgia (country) Georgia 442,000 0.5 < 0.1
Germany Germany 4,119,000 34.8 0.3
Ghana Ghana 3,906,000 61.2 0.2
Gibraltar Gibraltar 1,000 - < 0.1
Greece Greece 527,000 0.3 < 0.1
Greenland Greenland < 1,000 89.3 < 0.1
Grenada Grenada < 1,000 45.6 < 0.1
Guadeloupe Guadeloupe 2,000 7.4 < 0.1
Guam Guam < 1,000 16.6 < 0.1
Guatemala Guatemala 1,000 35.7 < 0.1
Guinea Guinea 8,693,000 3.3 0.5
Guinea-Bissau Guinea Bissau 705,000 1.8 < 0.1
Guyana Guyana 55,000 48.6 < 0.1
Haiti Haiti 2,000 29.9 < 0.1
Honduras Honduras 11,000 34.6 < 0.1
Hong Kong Hong Kong 91,000 9.5 < 0.1
Hungary Hungary 25,000 21.6 < 0.1
Iceland Iceland < 1,000 91.3 < 0.1
India India 177,286,000 1.5 10.9
Indonesia Indonesia 204,847,000 5.8 12.7
Iran Iran 74,819,000 0 4.6
Iraq Iraq 31,108,000 0.3 1.9
Republic of Ireland Ireland 43,000 5.1 < 0.1
Isle of Man Isle of Man < 1,000 71 < 0.1
Israel Israel 1,287,000 0.4 0.1
Italy Italy 1,583,000 1.3 0.1
Ivory Coast Ivory Coast 7,960,000 20.8 0.5
Jamaica Jamaica 1,000 74 < 0.1
Japan Japan 185,000 0.7 < 0.1
Jordan Jordan 6,397,000 0.3 0.4
Kazakhstan Kazakhstan 8,887,000 1.9 0.5
Kenya Kenya 2,868,000 59.6 0.2
Kiribati Kiribati < 1,000 39.7 < 0.1
Kosovo Kosovo 2,104,000 - 0.1
Kuwait Kuwait 2,636,000 0.8 0.2
Kyrgyzstan Kyrgyzstan 4,927,000 1.8 0.3
Laos Laos 1,000 1 < 0.1
Latvia Latvia 2,000 20 < 0.1
Lebanon Lebanon 2,542,000 1 0.2
Lesotho Lesotho 1,000 57 < 0.1
Liberia Liberia 523,000 74.1 < 0.1
Libya Libya 6,325,000 0.2 0.4
Liechtenstein Liechtenstein 2,000 - < 0.1
Lithuania Lithuania 3,000 1.5 < 0.1
Luxembourg Luxembourg 11,000 4 < 0.1
Macau Macau < 1,000 - < 0.1
North Macedonia Macedonia 713,000 - < 0.1
Madagascar Madagascar 220,000 40.3 < 0.1
Malawi Malawi 2,011,000 58.8 0.1
Malaysia Malaysia 17,139,000 4.4 1.1
Maldives Maldives 309,000 - < 0.1
Mali Mali 12,316,000 0.9 0.8
Malta Malta 1,000 - < 0.1
Marshall Islands Marshall Islands < 1,000 73.5 < 0.1
Martinique Martinique < 1,000 10 < 0.1
Mauritania Mauritania 3,338,000 - 0.2
Mauritius Mauritius 216,000 0.8 < 0.1
Mayotte Mayotte 197,000 - < 0.1
Mexico Mexico 111,000 8.36 < 0.1
Moldova Moldova 15,000 1.4 < 0.1
Monaco Monaco < 1,000 - < 0.1
Mongolia Mongolia 120,000 1.4 < 0.1
Montenegro Montenegro 116,000 - < 0.1
Montserrat Montserrat < 1,000 - < 0.1
Morocco Morocco 32,381,000 - 2.0
Mozambique Mozambique 5,340,000 28.2 0.3
Namibia Namibia 9,000 75.9 < 0.1
Nauru Nauru < 1,000 - < 0.1
Nepal Nepal 1,253,000 0.5 0.1
Netherlands Netherlands 914,000 21.9 0.1
Netherlands Antilles Netherlands Antilles < 1,000 13.1 < 0.1
New Caledonia New Caledonia 7,000 32.3 < 0.1
New Zealand New Zealand 41,000 40.5 < 0.1
Nicaragua Nicaragua 1,000 26.3 < 0.1
Niger Niger 15,627,000 0.5 1.0
Nigeria Nigeria 75,728,000 37.7 4.7
Niue Niue < 1,000 - < 0.1
North Korea North Korea 3,000 1.8 < 0.1
Northern Mariana Islands Northern Mariana Islands < 1,000 - < 0.1
Norway Norway 144,000 83.8 < 0.1
Oman Oman 2,547,000 1.4 0.2
Pakistan Pakistan 178,097,000 1.1 11.0
Palau Palau < 1,000 - < 0.1
State of Palestine Palestinian territories 4,298,000 0.7 0.3
Panama Panama 25,000 16.6 < 0.1
Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea 2,000 69.5 < 0.1
Paraguay Paraguay 1,000 6.3 < 0.1
Peru Peru < 1,000 12.3 < 0.1
Philippines Philippines 4,737,000 10.7 0.3
Pitcairn Islands Pitcairn Islands < 1,000 - < 0.1
Poland Poland 20,000 0.4 < 0.1
Portugal Portugal 65,000 1.6 < 0.1
Puerto Rico Puerto Rico 1,000 25.26 < 0.1
Qatar Qatar 1,168,000 2.9 0.1
Republic of the Congo Republic of Congo 60,000 55.3 < 0.1
Réunion Reunion 35,000 7.2 < 0.1
Romania Romania 73,000 6.3 < 0.1
Russia Russia 16,379,000 1.8 1.0
Rwanda Rwanda 188,000 44.3 < 0.1
Saint Helena St. Helena < 1,000 13.9 < 0.1
Saint Kitts and Nevis St. Kitts and Nevis < 1,000 77.6 < 0.1
Saint Lucia St. Lucia < 1,000 28.8 < 0.1
Saint Pierre and Miquelon St. Pierre and Miquelon < 1,000 - < 0.1
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines St. Vincent and the Grenadines 2,000 87.4 < 0.1
Samoa Samoa < 1,000 65.5 < 0.1
San Marino San Marino < 1,000 - < 0.1
São Tomé and Príncipe São Tomé and Príncipe < 1,000 10.7 < 0.1
Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia 25,493,000 0.4 1.6
Senegal Senegal 12,333,000 0.2 0.8
Serbia Serbia 280,000 1.4 < 0.1
Seychelles Seychelles < 1,000 - < 0.1
Sierra Leone Sierra Leone 4,171,000 13.9 0.3
Singapore Singapore 721,000 10.8 < 0.1
Slovakia Slovakia 4,000 10 < 0.1
Slovenia Slovenia 49,000 1 < 0.1
Solomon Islands Solomon Islands < 1,000 77.3 < 0.1
Somalia Somalia 9,231,000 - 0.6
South Africa South Africa 737,000 72.9 < 0.1
South Korea South Korea 75,000 17.3 < 0.1
South Sudan South Sudan 27.1
Spain Spain 1,021,000 1 0.1
Sri Lanka Sri Lanka 1,725,000 0.9 0.1
Sudan Sudan 30,855,000 2 1.9
Suriname Suriname 84,000 20.7 < 0.1
Eswatini Swaziland 2,000 91.9 < 0.1
Sweden Sweden 451,000 64.7 < 0.1
Switzerland Switzerland 433,000 36.2 < 0.1
Syria Syria 20,895,000 0.2 1.3
Taiwan Taiwan 23,000 4.1 < 0.1
Tajikistan Tajikistan 7,006,000 0.1 0.4
Tanzania Tanzania 13,450,000 28.4 0.8
Thailand Thailand 3,952,000 0.5 0.2
East Timor Timor-Leste 1,000 1.7 < 0.1
Togo Togo 827,000 16.6 0.1
Tokelau Tokelau < 1,000 - < 0.1
Tonga Tonga < 1,000 67.7 < 0.1
Trinidad and Tobago Trinidad and Tobago 78,000 38.7 < 0.1
Tunisia Tunisia 10,349,000 - 0.6
Turkey Turkey 74,660,000 0.1 4.6
Turkmenistan Turkmenistan 4,830,000 0.5 0.3
Turks and Caicos Islands Turks and Caicos Islands < 1,000 95.4 < 0.1
Tuvalu Tuvalu < 1,000 - < 0.1
Uganda Uganda 4,060,000 46.6 0.3
Ukraine Ukraine 393,000 1.3 < 0.1
United Arab Emirates United Arab Emirates 3,577,000 1.2 0.2
United Kingdom United Kingdom 2,869,000 54.5 0.2
United States United States 2,595,000 51.5 0.2
United States Virgin Islands U.S. Virgin Islands < 1,000 - < 0.1
Uruguay Uruguay < 1,000 6.3 < 0.1
Uzbekistan Uzbekistan 26,833,000 0.8 1.7
Vanuatu Vanuatu < 1,000 77.5 < 0.1
Vatican City Vatican City 0 - 0
Venezuela Venezuela 95,000 10.1 < 0.1
Vietnam Vietnam 160,000 1.6 < 0.1
Wallis and Futuna Wallis and Futuna < 1,000 - < 0.1
Western Sahara Western Sahara 528,000 - < 0.1
Yemen Yemen 24,023,000 0.1 1.5
Zambia Zambia 59,000 66.9 < 0.1
Zimbabwe Zimbabwe 109,000 66.4 < 0.1
South & Southeast Asia 1,005,507,000 24.8 62.1
Middle East-North Africa 321,869,000 91.2 19.9
Sub-Saharan Africa 242,544,000 29.6 15.0
Europe 44,138,000 6.0 2.7
Americas 5,256,000 0.6 0.3
World Total 1,619,314,000 23.4 100.0
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