This map shows the religion practiced by the majority of religious persons in the states of the world. It is pretty good. It does not depict non-religious populations. (For example, although recent surveys[1]archive copy at the Wayback Machine estimate that 43-54% of French, and 46-85% of Swedes self-identify as atheist, agnostic, or non-spriritual, those nations are depicted as Catholic, and Protestant, respectively.) If the ratio of the largest religious group to the next largest religious group is less than 60:40, then the color of the state is a blend of the colors of the two largest groups. Therefore:
Countries such as Lebanon receive a blend of of colors representing the two main religious groups i.e Christians and Muslims
States consisting of multiple nations, countries, or autonomous regions receive a single color determined by the aggregate of their inhabitants. Thus, Tibet, for example, receives the same color as the People's Republic of China, even though that color does not accurately describe the Vajrayana Buddhist religious affiliation of its inhabitants.
Persons without a religion (atheists) are not counted in determining the majority religion. Because of this, the Netherlands is colored steel-blue (mixed Protestant and Catholic), even though there are more non-religious people than there are Catholics, who constitute the largest religious group[2].
Regions within a state whose predominant religion is different from the plurality religion of the nation-state are not separately indicated. Thus, the southern islands of Mindanao, the Sulu archipelago and parts of Palawan which contain most of the Philippines small 5% to 10% Muslim population are painted Catholic pink. Russia is painted Orthodox purple because its officially small Muslim population who cluster around the Caucasus and Tatarstan at 5% to 6%, according to Russian state figures are not numerous enough to justify a mixed green-pink colour.
In Kazakhstan, Muslims (mostly Sunni) are generally estimated to form around 70% of the population while the large Christian minority (mostly Orthodox) consists of 26% of the population which justifies colouring this state a green in favour of Sunni Islam.
In Iraq, Shi'ite Muslims are generally estimated to form around 60% to 65% of the population while the large Sunni Muslim minority consists of 35% of the population and Christians only 3% which justifies colouring this state a light green in favour of Shi'ite Islam.
In contrast, Yemen is colored a mix of light dark green to reflect the fact that no religious group forms 60% of its population; the UNHCR[3] reports that its Shia Zaydi minority forms 45% of the population whereas Sunni Muslims comprise 53% of the population.
It is interesting to note that predominantly Hindu majority India--at 79.8%--according to the 2011 census has the second largest population of Muslims in any country of the world which stands at 14.2% of this state.
"Orthodox Christianity" on this map includes both branches that call themselves "Orthodox" (Eastern and Oriental). Thus, Armenia (Armenian Apostolic Church, an Oriental Orthodox denomination) is coloured the same as Georgia (Georgian Orthodox, an autocephalous Eastern Orthodox church).
GNU 자유 문서 사용 허가서 1.2판 또는 자유 소프트웨어 재단에서 발행한 이후 판의 규정에 따라 본 문서를 복제하거나 개작 및 배포할 수 있습니다. 본 문서에는 변경 불가 부분이 없으며, 앞 표지 구절과 뒷 표지 구절도 없습니다. 본 사용 허가서의 전체 내용은 GNU 자유 문서 사용 허가서 부분에 포함되어 있습니다.http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.htmlGFDLGNU Free Documentation Licensetruetrue
저작자표시 – 적절한 저작자 표시를 제공하고, 라이센스에 대한 링크를 제공하고, 변경사항이 있는지를 표시해야 합니다. 당신은 합리적인 방식으로 표시할 수 있지만, 어떤 방식으로든 사용권 허가자가 당신 또는 당신의 사용을 지지하는 방식으로 표시할 수 없습니다.
동일조건변경허락 – 만약 당신이 이 저작물을 리믹스 또는 변형하거나 이 저작물을 기반으로 제작하는 경우, 당신은 당신의 기여물을 원저작물과 동일하거나 호환 가능한 라이선스에 따라 배포하여야 합니다.
이 라이선스 틀은 GFDL 라이선스 변경의 일부로 이 파일에 추가되었습니다.http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/CC BY-SA 3.0Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0truetrue
기존 올리기 기록
The original description page was here. All following user names refer to en.wikipedia.
2007-12-15 22:39 LilTeK21 1357×628×??? (32145 bytes) Reverted to version as of 13:14, 11 January 2007
I put Madagascar in blue (Protestant) because in Madagascar there are more Protestants than Catholics, but doing more research it turns out that Madagascar is actually almost equally divided between Catholics and Protestants.