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Emigration from Europe

Total population
(480,000,000 +
6.5% of the total world population
(world population of 7.4 billion).
(not counting partial European descent))
Regions with significant populations
 United States 223,553,265
 Brazil 98,051,646
 Argentina 38,900,000
 Canada 25,186,890
 Australia 20,982,665
 Mexico 20,100,000+
 Colombia 18,519,500
 Venezuela 13,094,085
 Cuba 10,160,399
 South Africa 7,472,100
 Chile 3,5M-5,128,000
 Costa Rica 3,500,000
 New Zealand 3,381,076
 Uruguay 3,151,095
 Puerto Rico 3,064,862
 Guatemala 2,490,000
 Dominican Republic 2,000,000+
 Peru 1,4M - 4,4M+
 Bolivia 2,000,000+
 Ecuador 1,400,000+
 Paraguay 1,300,000+
 Nicaragua 1,000,000+
Languages
Languages of Europe (mostly English, Spanish, minoritily Portuguese and French)
Religion
P christianity.svg Majority Christianity
(mostly Catholic and Protestant, some Orthodox)
Irreligion  · Other Religions
Related ethnic groups
Europeans

European emigration or European diaspora consists of the people and their descendants who have emigrated from Europe.

From 1815 to 1932, 60 million people left Europe (with many returning home), primarily to "areas of European settlement" in the Americas (especially to the United States, Canada, Brazil, the Southern Cone such as Argentina, and Uruguay), Australia,New Zealand and Siberia. These populations also multiplied rapidly in their new habitat; much more so than the populations of Africa and Asia. As a result, on the eve of World War I, 38% of the world’s total population was of European ancestry.

The discovery of the Americas in 1492 stimulated a steady stream of voluntary migration from Europe. About 200,000 Spaniards settled in their American colonies prior to 1600, a small settlement compared to the 3 to 4 million Amerindians who lived in Spanish territory in the Americas but then it grew the number of Spanish immigrants in addition to other European population of Romance language (French and Italian).

However, the development of the mining economy in the 18th century raised the wages and employment opportunities in the Portuguese colony and the emigration grew: in the 18th century alone, about 600,000 Portuguese settled in Brazil, a mass emigration given that Portugal had a population of only 2 million people. In North America the immigration was dominated by British, Irish and other Northern Europeans.


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