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Central Europe | |
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Eastern Europe | |
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Northern Europe | |
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Southeast Europe3 | |
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Southern Europe | |
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Western Europe | |
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Other Europeans | |
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1 Poles came to the United States legally as Austrians, Germans, Prussians or Russians throughout the 19th century, because from 1772–1795 till 1918, all Polish lands had been partitioned between imperial Austria, Prussia (a protoplast of Germany) and Russia until Poland regained its sovereignty in the wake of World War I.
3 Yugoslav Americans are the American people from the former Yugoslavia.
4 Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan and Turkey span the conventional boundary between Europe and Asia.
5 Disputed; Roma have recognized origins and historic ties to Asia (specifically to Northern India), but they experienced at least some distinctive identity development while in diaspora among Europeans.
6 Armenia and Cyprus are located entirely in Asia, but historically have stronger tie with Europe. |
Note to editors on how to manage collapsibility:
- Use {{European Americans|state=collapsed}} to show this template in its collapsed (hidden) state.
- Use {{European Americans|state=expanded}} to show this template in its expanded (fully visible) state.
- Use {{European Americans|state=autocollapse}} to show this template in its collapsed (hidden) state only if there is another template of the same type on the page. (This is usually the default.)