FERTILITY IN ALBANIA DURING WORLD WAR I ACCORDING TO THE 1918 CENSUS

被引:0
作者
Gruber, Siegfried [1 ]
机构
[1] Karl Franzens Univ Graz, Dept Hist, 3 Mozartgasse Str, A-8010 Graz, Austria
来源
IZVESTIYA URALSKOGO FEDERALNOGO UNIVERSITETA-SERIYA 2-GUMANITARNYE NAUKI | 2019年 / 21卷 / 03期
关键词
marital fertility; World War I; Albania; 1918; Census; early 20th century; city and the countryside; databases; MARRIAGE; AGE; PATTERNS;
D O I
10.15826/izv2.2019.21.3.051
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
Apart from Kosovo, Albania was the last country in Europe to enter demographic transition and therefore an analysis of its fertility patterns before the transition is of interest. Was it higher than in neighbouring countries or similar to them? Albania was a part of the Ottoman Empire until the Balkan Wars (1912/1913) and only with the help of the Great Powers an independent Albania managed to emerge. In 1916. the Austro-Hungarian army invaded Albania and occupied the northern and central parts of the country, while the south was occupied by the troops of the Allied Powers. During the time of the Austro-Hungarian occupation, a census was carried out in 1918 and most of the manuscripts have survived. To analyse the level and structure of fertility patterns in Albania, the author refers to these data applying the child-woman ratio. The analysis demonstrates that in Albanian rural areas during World War I, fertility rate was lower than in neighbouring countries one or two decades before, while urban marital fertility was higher than in most of the neighbouring countries. In Albania, marital fertility was almost the same for rural and urban areas, while there were some variations between rural areas and cities. The reason for a very low fertility of young married women is still an open question.
引用
收藏
页码:122 / 137
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
[21]   "War Dysentery" and the Limitations of German Military Hygiene during World War I [J].
Linton, Derek S. .
BULLETIN OF THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE, 2010, 84 (04) :607-639
[22]   The "Myth of the War Experience" and Russian Wartime Nursing during World War I [J].
Stoff, Laurie .
ASPASIA, 2012, 6 (01) :96-116
[23]   Venezuela's Foreign Policfy in World War I (1914-1918): Lessons for the present? [J].
Hernandez, JENIREe ToRREALBA .
PRESENTE Y PASADO-REVISTA DE HISTORIA, 2024, 29 (57) :133-162
[24]   Alice Welford (1887-1918), a nurse in World War I: The impact of kindness and compassion [J].
Watkins, Peter J. ;
Watkins, Valerie J. .
JOURNAL OF MEDICAL BIOGRAPHY, 2017, 25 (01) :56-59
[25]   EVOLUTION AND EMPLOYMENT OF INCENDIARY WEAPONS DURING WORLD WAR I [J].
Shevchenko, Oleksii .
SKHIDNOIEVROPEISKYI ISTORYCHNYI VISNYK-EAST EUROPEAN HISTORICAL BULLETIN, 2021, (20) :49-58
[26]   The Correspondence between Winkler and Monakow During World War I [J].
Koehler, Peter J. ;
Jagella, Caroline .
EUROPEAN NEUROLOGY, 2015, 73 (1-2) :66-70
[27]   Reflections on the Features of Mediality During the First World War: According to the Monograph by A.S. Medyakov "War of the 9X14 Format. Postcards in the German "Culture of War" 1914-1918" [J].
Rostislavleva, Natalia V. .
DIALOG SO VREMENEM-DIALOGUE WITH TIME, 2022, (79) :411-417
[28]   TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION IN TOMSK PROVINCE DURING WORLD WAR I [J].
Vladimir, Morev A. .
TOMSK STATE UNIVERSITY JOURNAL, 2014, (378) :138-142
[29]   The Struggle of Ottomans in Hijaz Region During the World War I [J].
Bostanci, Mustafa .
GAZI AKADEMIK BAKIS-GAZI ACADEMIC VIEW, 2014, 7 (14) :117-136
[30]   THE CRISIS OF GASLIGHTING IN SPAIN CITIES DURING WORLD WAR I [J].
Fernandez-Paradas, Mercedes .
HISTORIA CONTEMPORANEA, 2019, (59) :127-159