The Catalan Countries[1] (in Catalan: Països Catalans,[2] abbreviated to PPCC) are a cultural territory of southwestern Europe where Catalan is the native language and where Catalan culture is autochthonous. Some activists promote the name Catalonia (Catalunya in Catalan) as a desirable synonym for "Catalan Countries"[3] but this is not unanimously accepted, since Catalonia is also the name of one constituent region within the Catalan Countries.
The Catalan Countries are split into several states: Spain, France, Andorra and possibly Italy. They include approximately the following territories:
The exact definition of the Catalan Countries varies according to the criteria followed.
According to a strict linguistic criterion, some non-Catalan-speaking areas should not be included in the Catalan Countries.[5] These are:
However, according to an administrative criterion, some Catalan activists think that those Occitan- and Spanish-speaking areas should be seen as parts of the Catalan Countries, but not the enclave of Alghero which they consider too remote.[6]
The Catalan Countries size 59 671 km²[7] and have 13 422 117 inhabitants[8] according to the strictly linguistic criterion (Catalan-speaking area). They would size 69 823 km² and have 14 157 638 inhabitants if Occitan and Spanish-speaking peripheries were included.
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