Template:Short description Template:Use American English Template:Infobox place demographics

Syria's estimated pre–Syrian Civil War 2011 population was 22 ±.5<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> million permanent inhabitants, which included 21,124,000 Syrians,<ref name="cbspop">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> as well as 1.3 million Iraqi refugees<ref name="World Refugee Survey 2008" /> and over 500,000 Palestinian refugees.<ref name="World Refugee Survey 2008" /refugees.<ref name="World Refugee Survey 2008">Template:Cite news</ref> The war makes an accurate count of the Syrian population difficult, as the numbers of Syrian refugees,<ref name="unhcr">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> internally displaced Syrians and casualty numbers are in flux. The CIA World Factbook showed an estimated 20.4 m people as of July 2021.<ref name="CIA">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Of the pre-war population, six million are refugees outside the country, seven million are internally displaced and two million live in the Kurdish-ruled Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria.

Most modern-day Syrians are commonly described as Arabs by virtue of their modern-day language and bonds to Arab culture and history. But they are, in fact, genetically a blend of the various Semitic-speaking groups indigenous to the region.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> With around 10% of the population, Kurds are the second biggest ethnic group in Syria, followed by Turkmen.

PopulationEdit

Template:Update section

This data is from CIA World Factbook:<ref name="SyriaTWF" /> In 2023, the Syrian population increased by 6.39%. This made Syria the country with the highest population growth. The birth rate was estimated at 22.19 births per 1000 people. The death rate is 4.07 deaths for 1000 people. The median age (estimated in 2020) for males is 23 years old, while for females, it is 24 years old. Overall, the Syrian median age is 23.5 years old. The migration rate is 45.78 migrants for 1,000 people.

Template:Historical populations

File:Population development of Syria.svg
Population history of Syria

In 1200, the territories of modern-day Syria had an estimated population of 2.7 million.<ref name="Russell Crusader">Template:Setton-A History of the Crusades</ref> This number sharply decreased due to the Plague epidemic in 1348–1353, which killed off an estimated third of the Levant's population. By 1937, the population reached an estimated 2,368,000, still considerably lower than 1200's estimated population.

Since 1960, censuses have been conducted in 1960, 1970, 1981, 1994, and 2004.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In 2014, 17,951,639, a massive decline due to nearly 4 million Syrian refugees leaving the country because of the Syrian Civil War and furthermore because of the death in the war. This is a drop of 9.7% from the previous year.<ref name="SyriaIM">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In 2017, the head of the Syrian Commission for Family Affairs, Mohammad Akram al-Qash, said that the Syrian population was 28 million, of which, 21 million were living in Syria and that 7 million were refugees.<ref name="EnabBaladi">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In 2018, the population was estimated to be 19,454,263 people.<ref name="SyriaTWF">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }} This data is from CIA World Factbook</ref> Ever since the Syrian Civil War, the population has been steadily declining, however rebounded in 2023, with an estimated population of 23,022,427 people.

Forced displacementEdit

Template:See also More than six million refugees left the country during the civil war,<ref name="BBC News 2016">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> of whom over five million are registered as refugees by the UNHCR as of mid-2019.<ref name="Situations ">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Most of them fled to neighboring countries such as Turkey,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Lebanon, Jordan,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and Iraq,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> as well as European nations like Greece, Germany and Sweden. Since 2017, tens of thousands have returned.<ref name="ECFR.EU 2019">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The war resulted in large-scale displacement in the country. The UNHCR estimates internally displaced people (IDPs) at seven million. A further 70,000 people were trapped on the border with Jordan at Rukban in 2016–18,<ref name="Human Rights Watch 2017">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="Enab Baladi 2018">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> with up to 40,000 still there in 2019.<ref name="Al-Khalidi 2019">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

A significant part of the population lives in territory outside government sovereignty. At its peak in 2015, ISIL ruled over ten million people across Syria and Iraq.<ref name="BBC ISIL maps 2018">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria (NES), commonly referred to as Rojava, has a population of around two million.<ref name="washingtoninstitute1">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Areas controlled by the opposition have had a population in the millions. In mid-2017, UN OCHA estimated that around 540,000 persons were trapped in besieged areas as of June 2017, the majority besieged by government forces in Eastern Ghouta.<ref name="Human Rights Watch 2018">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> By the time the government retook Ghouta in April 2018, some 140,000 individuals had fled their homes and up to 50,000 were evacuated to Idlib and Aleppo governorates.<ref name="UN News 2018">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The latter rebel areas had an estimated population of 3 million (40% of them displaced from defeated rebel areas).<ref name="BBC News 2019">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect 2019">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Fighting in Idlib has led to further displacements, of up to 250,000 people, and generating new refugee outflows to neighbouring Turkey.<ref name="TRTWorld NGOs 2019">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Displacement has led to demographic shifts. One example is the area in the North under control by Kurdish-led and US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF). Many human rights groups, including Amnesty International<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and international organizations<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> have accused SDF forces of committing ethnic cleansing in Arab areas they were capturing from other war factions.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The accusation was repeated on 8 May 2019 by Russia's foreign minister Sergey Lavrov.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> NGOs and the opposition have also accused the government of using the conflict to affect demographic restructuring.<ref name="FILDH ReliefWeb 2019">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="Arfeh 2019">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="Dajani Sheff 2018">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="TRTWorld 2019">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Casualties of the civil warEdit

Template:Human toll of Syrian Civil War Template:See also In April 2016, the UN estimated that 400,000 people had died in the war,<ref name="Al Jazeera 2016">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and casualties have continued since, with estimates for the total dead by mid-2019 of up to 220,000 civilians, 175,000 government combatants, and 174,000 anti-government combatants (see Casualties of the Syrian Civil War).

Age structureEdit

Template:Bar chart Template:Bar chart

(2011-07-01) (Estimates, including Palestinian refugees)<ref name="UN Stats">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Age Group Male Female Total %
Total 10 794 000 10 330 000 21 124 000 100
0-4 1 428 000 1 347 000 2 775 000 13.14
5-9 1 384 000 1 270 000 2 654 000 12.56
10-14 1 232 000 1 198 000 2 430 000 11.50
15-19 1 191 000 1 088 000 2 279 000 10.79
20-24 1 035 000 944 000 1 979 000 9.37
25-29 864 000 873 000 1 737 000 8.22
30-34 674 000 697 000 1 371 000 6.49
35-39 601 000 628 000 1 229 000 5.82
40-44 545 000 551 000 1 096 000 5.19
45-49 437 000 433 000 870 000 4.12
50-54 387 000 405 000 792 000 3.75
55-59 293 000 280 000 573 000 2.71
60-64 254 000 227 000 481 000 2.28
65+ 469 000 389 000 858 000 4.06
Age group Male Female Total Percent
0–14 4 044 000 3 815 000 7 859 000 37.20
15–64 6 281 000 6 126 000 12 407 000 58.73
65+ 469 000 389 000 858 000 4.06

Population centersEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

Template:Location map+ 60% of the population lives in the Aleppo Governorate, the Euphrates valley or along the coastal plain; a fertile strip between the coastal mountains and the desert. Overall population density is about Template:Convert.

UrbanizationEdit

This data is from CIA World Factbook:<ref name="SyriaTWF"/> Urban population: 54.2% of total population (2018) Rate of urbanization: 1.43% annual rate of change (2015-20 est.)

Major urban areasEdit

File:Syria pop.jpg
Population density, 1993

As of 2018; this data is from CIA World Factbook:<ref name="SyriaTWF"/> Damascus (capital): 2.32 million Aleppo: 1.754 million Homs: 1.295 million Hama: 894,000

Vital statisticsEdit

UN estimates:<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Period Population Live births Deaths Natural change Birth rate
(per 1000)
Death rate
(per 1000)
Natural change
(per 1000)
Crude migration rate
(per 1000)
Total Fertility rate Infant mortality (1000 births) Life expectancy (years)
1950 3 544 000 167 000 92 000 75 000 47.0 25.9 21.1 7.60 179.6 44.14
1951 3 621 000 171 000 92 000 80 000 47.3 25.4 22.0 -0.7 7.60 177.5 44.45
1952 3 703 000 176 000 91 000 85 000 47.6 24.7 23.0 -0.9 7.61 173.3 44.99
1953 3 791 000 182 000 90 000 91 000 47.9 23.9 24.0 -0.8 7.61 169.1 45.70
1954 3 886 000 187 000 88 000 99 000 48.0 22.6 25.5 -1.1 7.62 160.2 46.97
1955 3 989 000 192 000 85 000 107 000 48.2 21.3 26.8 -1.0 7.62 151.7 48.31
1956 4 099 000 197 000 83 000 114 000 48.0 20.3 27.7 -0.9 7.59 143.9 49.39
1957 4 217 000 202 000 81 000 121 000 47.8 19.1 28.7 -0,7 7.57 136.6 50.58
1958 4 341 000 207 000 79 000 128 000 47.6 18.2 29.4 -0.8 7.54 129.9 51.57
1959 4 473 000 212 000 77 000 135 000 47.3 17.2 30.1 -0.6 7.51 123.7 52.61
1960 4 611 000 217 000 75 000 142 000 47.0 16.3 30.7 -0.8 7.49 118.0 53.55
1961 4 752 000 221 000 74 000 147 000 46.5 15.5 31.0 -1.3 7.43 113.0 54.44
1962 4 895 000 227 000 73 000 154 000 46.4 14.8 31.5 -2.3 7.44 108.4 55.09
1963 5 045 000 233 000 72 000 162 000 46.2 14.2 32.0 -2.3 7.44 104.2 55.78
1964 5 203 000 241 000 71 000 170 000 46.2 13.6 32.6 -2.2 7.47 100.3 56.50
1965 5 368 000 249 000 70 000 179 000 46.3 13.1 33.3 -2.6 7.51 96.5 57.11
1966 5 542 000 258 000 70 000 188 000 46.5 12.6 33.8 -2.4 7.55 92.7 57.60
1967 5 723 000 267 000 70 000 197 000 46.6 12.2 34.4 -2.8 7.58 88.9 58.10
1968 5 913 000 276 000 68 000 208 000 46.6 11.5 35.1 -3.0 7.60 85.0 59.07
1969 6 111 000 288 000 67 000 220 000 47.0 11.0 36.0 -3.6 7.67 81.1 59.88
1970 6 319 000 298 000 67 000 231 000 47.1 10.5 36.5 -3.6 7.69 77.2 60.53
1971 6 539 000 305 000 65 000 240 000 46.7 10.0 36.7 -3.1 7.65 73.5 61.37
1972 6 769 000 314 000 65 000 249 000 46.3 9.6 36.7 -2.7 7.61 70.1 61.90
1973 7 003 000 322 000 69 000 253 000 45.9 9.8 36.1 -2.7 7.56 66.9 60.69
1974 7 245 000 331 000 63 000 267 000 45.6 8.7 36.9 -3.5 7.51 63.8 63.12
1975 7 497 000 341 000 63 000 278 000 45.4 8.4 37.0 -3.4 7.47 60.9 63.54
1976 7 759 000 352 000 63 000 289 000 45.3 8.1 37.2 -3.4 7.44 58.0 63.92
1977 8 029 000 364 000 65 000 299 000 45.2 8.1 37.2 -3.6 7.41 55.2 63.76
1978 8 310 000 373 000 60 000 314 000 44.8 7.2 37.7 -3.9 7.35 52.4 65.81
1979 8 601 000 382 000 60 000 322 000 44.3 6.9 37.4 -3.6 7.27 49.7 66.14
1980 8 899 000 390 000 60 000 330 000 43.8 6.7 37.1 -3.6 7.16 47.2 66.35
1981 9 204 000 396 000 68 000 328 000 43.0 7.4 35.6 -2.5 7.01 47.0 64.37
1982 9 511 000 404 000 83 000 321 000 42.4 8.7 33.7 -1.4 6.88 48.6 61.12
1983 9 835 000 413 000 58 000 355 000 41.9 5.9 36.0 -3.1 6.74 40.3 67.83
1984 10 183 000 422 000 55 000 366 000 41.4 5.4 35.9 -1.7 6.61 38.3 68.92
1985 10 541 000 432 000 57 000 375 000 41.0 5.4 35.5 -1.5 6.48 36.6 68.76
1986 10 908 000 441 000 57 000 384 000 40.4 5.2 35.2 -1.6 6.33 35.0 69.21
1987 11 281 000 447 000 58 000 389 000 39.6 5.1 34.5 -1.4 6.13 33.5 69.30
1988 11 658 000 448 000 58 000 390 000 38.4 4.9 33.4 -1.1 5.89 32.3 69.67
1989 12 034 000 446 000 58 000 388 000 37.1 4.9 32.2 -1.0 5.63 31.1 69.76
1990 12 409 000 446 000 59 000 387 000 35.9 4.8 31.1 -0.9 5.38 29.9 69.82
1991 12 782 000 444 000 60 000 384 000 34.7 4.7 30.0 -0.8 5.12 28.8 70.04
1992 13 156 000 448 000 60 000 387 000 34.0 4.6 29.4 -1.0 4.95 27.7 70.26
1993 13 537 000 459 000 62 000 397 000 33.9 4.6 29.3 -1.2 4.83 26.5 70.19
1994 13 923 000 468 000 64 000 404 000 33.6 4.6 29.0 -1.3 4.72 25.4 70.14
1995 14 313 000 474 000 64 000 409 000 33.1 4.5 28.6 -1.4 4.57 24.2 70.42
1996 14 709 000 478 000 67 000 411 000 32.5 4.5 28.0 -1.1 4.43 23.1 70.35
1997 15 104 000 481 000 69 000 412 000 31.8 4.5 27.3 -1.1 4.28 22.0 70.28
1998 15 501 000 487 000 71 000 416 000 31.4 4.6 26.8 -1.2 4.18 21.0 70.20
1999 15 901 000 493 000 72 000 421 000 31.0 4.5 26.5 -1.3 4.08 20.1 70.43
2000 16 308 000 500 000 72 000 428 000 30.6 4.4 26.2 -1.2 4.00 19.3 70.76
2001 16 728 000 519 000 70 000 449 000 31.0 4.2 26.8 -1.7 4.01 18.6 71.64
2002 17 164 000 529 000 70 000 459 000 30.8 4.1 26.7 -1.3 3.95 18.0 71.94
2003 17 611 000 541 000 70 000 471 000 30.7 4.0 26.7 -1.3 3.90 17.4 72.41
2004 18 084 000 553 000 72 000 481 000 30.6 4.0 26.6 -0.4 3.86 17.0 72.48
2005 18 584 000 567 000 73 000 494 000 30.5 3.9 26.6 0.3 3.81 16.6 72.77
2006 19 432 000 579 000 72 000 507 000 30.3 3.8 26.5 17.1 3.76 16.3 73.35
2007 20 703 000 625 000 75 000 551 000 30.8 3.7 27.1 34.3 3.70 16.1 73.71
2008 21 474 000 673 000 81 000 592 000 31.0 3.7 27.3 8.6 3.61 16.0 73.55
2009 21 827 000 650 000 80 000 569 000 29.7 3.7 26.1 -9.9 3.51 15.9 73.85
2010 22 338 000 641 000 83 000 558 000 28.7 3.7 25.0 -2.1 3.40 15.9 73.88
2011 22 731 000 629 000 90 000 539 000 27.5 3.9 23.6 -2.1 3.28 16.4 73.31
2012 22 606 000 615 000 148 000 467 000 26.6 6.4 20.2 -6.3 3.22 23.0 66.77
2013 21 496 000 568 000 173 000 394 000 25.2 7.7 17.5 -25.7 3.17 26.3 63.83
2014 20 072 000 465 000 168 000 297 000 22.4 8.1 14.3 -69.1 3.10 27.1 63.15
2015 19 205 000 397 000 143 000 254 000 20.2 7.3 12.9 -85.2 3.05 25.1 65.12
2016 18 964 000 359 000 133 000 226 000 18.9 7.0 11.9 -24.6 2.99 24.5 65.99
2017 18 983 000 355 000 115 000 240 000 18.6 6.0 12.5 -11.5 2.94 18.5 68.48
2018 19 333 000 346 000 106 000 240 000 18.2 5.6 12.6 5.5 2.89 18.6 70.15
2019 20 098 000 375 000 100 000 275 000 18.9 5.0 13.9 24.2 2.84 18.1 71.82
2020 20 773 000 406 000 103 000 303 000 19.7 5.0 14.7 17.8 2.80 18.1 72.14
2021 21 324 000 427 000 109 000 318 000 20.1 5.1 15.0 10.8 2.75 17.8 72.06

Template:GraphChart Template:GraphChart Template:GraphChart Template:GraphChart

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Name TFR (2009)
Aleppo 3.2
Damascus 2.6
Daraa 5.2
Deir ez-Zor 6.9
Hama 3.3
Al-Hasakah 3.5
Homs 3.1
Idlib 4.8
Latakia 2.2
Quneitra 3.8
Raqqa 5
Rif Dimashq 3.3
Al-Suwayda 2.1
Tartus 2.3
Syria 3.5
File:Life expectancy by WBG -Syria -diff.png
Life expectancy in Syria since 1960 by gender
Marital fertility rate<ref name="research" />
Name MFR (2009)
Aleppo 5.4
Damascus 4.7
Daraa 7.3
Deir ez-Zor 10.2
Hama 6.6
Al-Hasakah 6.8
Homs 5.9
Idlib 7.7
Latakia 4.5
Quneitra 6.5
Raqqa 7.9
Rif Dimashq 5.4
Al-Suwayda 4
Tartus 4.8
Syria 6

Life expectancy at birth

This data is from CIA World Factbook:<ref name="SyriaTWF"/>

total: 75.2 years
male: 72.8 years
female: 77.8 years (2018 est.)


Ethnicity and religionEdit

Template:See also On 1 January 2011, Syria was estimated to have a population of 24 million people, distributed over its 14 governorates.<ref name=Khalifa2013>Template:Cite journal</ref> Arabs represent 80-85% of the population, with the rest being a mixture of many ethnic and religious sects, as shown in the table below:

Ethnic and religious groups % of Syrian population<ref name=Khalifa2013/> Notes<ref name=Khalifa2013/>
Syrian Arabs 80–85% The Arabs form the majority in all districts except for the Al-Hasakah Governorate.
Kurds 10% The majority of Kurds are Sunni Muslims, with a Yazidi minority; concentrated in Syrian Kurdistan region and major urban centres outside that region. 1.5 million Kurds live in Syria.<ref name="HeritageforPeace">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Turkmen/Turkoman 4–5% Descendants of ethnic Turks, rather than Turkmens. These figures exclude the Arabic-speaking Turks. Only approximately 30% of Turkmen speak a Turkic language. The majority are Sunni Muslims.
Assyrians/Syriacs 3–4% Assyrians are exclusively Christians following the Syriac Christian Rite.
Circassians 1.5% The majority of Circassians are Sunni Muslims.
Armenians 1% The majority of Armenians are Christians.
Smaller groups of Albanians, Greeks and Chechens, among others <0.9% (combined) A significant number of these ethnic groups are Arabized, particularly those that adhere to Islam.

The CIA World Factbook cites the following figures for ethnic groups as in July 2018: approximately Arab 50%, Alawite 15%, Kurd 10%, Levantine 10%, other 15% (includes Druze, Ismaili, Imami, Nusairi, Assyrians, Turkmen, Armenian, and Chechens).<ref name="CIA" /> Professor John A. Shoup estimated in 2018 that Kurds made 9% of the population, followed by Turkish-speaking Turkmen comprising 4-5%, Assyrians 4%, Armenians 2%, and Circassians about 1% of the total population.<ref name=Shoup>Template:Cite book</ref>

Template:Pie chart There has been no Syrian census including a question about religion since 1960, these are thus the last official statistics available:<ref name="table p.9">Template:In lang Mouna Liliane Samman, La population de la Syrie: étude géo-démographique, IRD Editions, Paris, 1978, Template:ISBN table p.9 Template:Webarchive</ref>

In 1991, Professor Alasdair Drysdale and Professor Raymond Hinnebusch said that some 85% of Syrians were Muslims and that the remainder were almost all Christians, however, both religious groups were subdivided into many ethnic sects.<ref name=Drysdale&Hinnebusch1991>Template:Cite book</ref> Among the former, approximately 75% of Syrians were Sunni Muslim, of whom, 60% were Arabic-speaking and the remainder of Sunnis included Kurds 8.5%, Turkmen/Turkoman 3%, and Circassians (less than 1%).<ref name=Drysdale&Hinnebusch1991/> In addition, Alawis formed 5.5%, Druze 3%, and Ismailis 1.5% of the population. In regards to the Christians, they were subdivided into the Greek Orthodox 4.7%, Armenians 4%, and Assyrians 1%.<ref name=Drysdale&Hinnebusch1991/>

According to Pierre Beckouche, before 2011, Sunni Muslims accounted for 78% of Syria's population, which included 500,000 Palestinian refugees and the non-Arab Sunni Muslims, namely the Kurds 9-10% and the Turkmen/Turkoman 4%.<ref name=Pierre>Template:Cite book</ref> Other Muslims included Shias and Alawites 11%-16%, whilst the Christians made up 6% of the population.<ref name=Pierre/> There were also a few Jewish communities in Aleppo and Damascus.<ref name=Pierre/>

The CIA World Factbook cites the following figures for religious groups: religions - Muslim 87% (official; includes Sunni 74% and Alawi, Ismaili, and Shia 13%), Christian 10% (mainly of the Greek Orthodox and Greek Catholic churches<ref name=IRFR2006>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> - may be smaller as a result of Christians fleeing the country), Druze 3%.<ref name="CIA" />

The first census which focused on the sectarian distribution was carried out in 1932 under the French mandate, however, this census was only carried out in the lands under the short-lived Government of Latakia (the Alawite State established by the French) which covered only Template:Cvt out of modern Syria's total area of Template:Cvt.<ref name=Khalifa2013page3/> A general census of Syria in 1943 gave details of religious groups of the population and the rate of growth of each and estimates of the population in 1953 from an unnamed source were as follows:

citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref><ref name=Hourani>Template:Cite book. See also Albert Hourani.</ref>

1953 census<ref name=Khalifa2013page3/> Growth<ref name=Khalifa2013page3/>
Total Muslims 2,427,605 (84.87%) 3,145,287 (86.03%) 30%
Individual sects and religions
Sunnis 1,971,053 (68.91%) 2,578,810 (70.54%) 31%
Christians 403,036 (14.09%) 478,970 (13.10%) 19%
Alawites 325,311 (11.37%) 398,445 (10.90%) 22%
Druze 87,184 (3.05%) 113,318 (3.10%) 30%
Ismailis 28,527 (1.00%) 36,745 (1.01%) 29%
Jews 29,770 (1.04%) 31,647 (0.87%) 6%
Shi'ites 12,742 (0.45%) 14,887 (0.41%) 17%
Yezidi 2,788 (0.10%) 3,082 (0.08%) 11%

LanguagesEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Arabic is the official, and most widely spoken, language. Arabic speakers make up 85% of the population. Several modern Arabic dialects are used in everyday life, most notably Levantine in the west and Mesopotamian in the northeast. A report published by the UNHCR points out that "while the majority of Syrians are considered Arabs, this is a term based on spoken language (Arabic), not ethnicity."<ref name=UNHCR>Template:Cite report</ref>

According to The Encyclopedia of Arabic Language and Linguistics, in addition to Arabic, the following languages are spoken in the country, in order of the number of speakers: Kurdish,<ref name=Behnstedt>Template:Cite book</ref> Turkish,<ref name=Behnstedt/> Neo-Aramaic (four dialects),<ref name=Behnstedt/> Circassian,<ref name=Behnstedt/> Chechen,<ref name=Behnstedt/> Armenian,<ref name=Behnstedt/> and finally Greek.<ref name=Behnstedt/> None of these languages have official status.<ref name=Behnstedt/>

Many educated Syrians also speak English and French.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name=Etheredge>Template:Cite book</ref>

ReferencesEdit

Template:Reflist

External linksEdit

Template:Asia in topic Template:Asia topic Template:Demographics of Syria

pt:Síria#Demografia