MR Description III
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Demography
- The citizens of the Monastic Republic are mainly Greeks. Most of them are descendants of refugees from Turkey. There is also a sizable population of Lebanese, refugees from Lebanon. There has been some immigration from other parts of Europe, but it is kept to a minimum. Non-citizens may not live in the Monastic Republic.
- The Orthodox monks of the Greek monasteries are virtually all Greeks, but the monks of the national monasteries have come from their respective countries.
- Monastic Republic nationality
- A person whose father or mother is a citizen of the Monastic Republic at his birth is a citizen of the Monastic Republic by descent.
- Merely being born in the territory of the Monastic Republic does not confer citizenship.
- Every child who is found within the Monastic Republic and the whereabouts of whose parents are unknown is, until the parents of the child are traced, deemed to be a citizen of the Monastic Republic by descent.
- Any man who enters the novitiate in any one of the twenty monasteries becomes a citizen of the Monastic Republic.
- The acquisition of citizenship of the Monastic Republic by a foreign national is regulated by Law.
- Census of 2005
- The census figures are obtained from the registers that are kept by the townships and the monasteries.
- The name of every citizen and of every monk is recorded with the following details:
- Register number
- Date of birth or naturalization
- Country of birth
- Birthplace of parents
- Complete address
- Marital status and date of marriage
- Occupation at time of census
- If a farmer, crops they grow
- Annual income
- The census of 2005 recorded
- 7,243 citizens in Prosforion, of whom 194 were naturalized,
- 5,280 citizens in Aktí, of whom 449 were naturalized,
- 984 citizens in Ammouliani.
- 4,621 monks in the twenty monasteries.
- Giving a grand total of 18,128 citizens.
Culture
- Public days of rest:
- January 6 (January 7 if January 6 falls on a Sunday), the Epiphany;
- February 2 (February 3 if February 2 falls on a Sunday), the Presentation of Christ;
- Good Friday;
- Easter Monday;
- Ascension Thursday;
- Pentecost Monday;
- July 5 (July 6 if July 5 falls on a Sunday), Constitution Day;
- August 15 (August 16 if August 15 falls on a Sunday), the Dormition;
- the first Monday of September in election years;
- September 8 (September 9 if September 8 falls on a Sunday), the Birth of the Virgin.
- October 5 (October 6 if October 5 falls on a Sunday), Independence Day;
- November 1 (November 2 if November 1 falls on a Sunday), All Saints Day;
- December 8 (December 9 if December 8 falls on a Sunday), the Immaculate Conception;
- December 24, Christmas Eve;
- December 25, Christmas Day (December 26 if December 25 falls on a Sunday).