Iraqis

Iraqis
العراقيون (Arabic)
عێراقییەکان (Kurdish)

Map of the Iraqi diaspora, including people of full or partial Iraqi origin and their descendants
Regions with significant populations
Iraq
46,100,000
United Kingdom350,000–450,000
Germany380,000
Sweden245,586
Iran203,000
United Arab Emirates200,000
United States155,055
Jordan131,000
Australia104,170
Lebanon90,000
Netherlands85,000
Canada84,130
Finland26,653
France14,500
Austria13,000+
Languages
Majority:
Iraqi Arabic
Minority:
Kurdish, Turkmen Turkic, Neo-Aramaic, Assyrian, Armenian, Mandaic, Shabaki, Domari, etc. (See: Languages of Iraq)
Religion
Majority:
Islam (~95%)
Minority:
Christianity (1%),
Yazidism, Mandaeism,Yarsanism, Judaism, etc. (See: Religion in Iraq)
Related ethnic groups
Other Middle Eastern ethnic groups

Iraqis (Arabic: العراقيون al-ʿIrāqiyyūn; Kurdish: عێراقییەکان, romanized'Êraqiyekan) are the citizens and nationals of the Republic of Iraq. The majority of Iraqis are Arabs, with Kurds accounting for the largest ethnic minority, followed by Turkmen. Other ethnic groups from the country include Yazidis, Assyrians, Mandaeans, and other Mesopotamian Minorities. Approximately 95% of Iraqis adhere to Islam, with nearly 64% of this figure consisting of Shia Muslims and the remainder consisting of Sunni Muslims. The largest minority religion is Christianity at 1%, while other religions collectively represent as much as 4% of the Iraqi populace.

The territory of modern-day Iraq largely overlaps with what was historically known as Mesopotamia, which was home to many noteworthy civilizations, such as Sumer, Akkad, Assyria, and Babylonia. The fall of these native Mesopotamian civilizations, particularly Babylon in the 6th century BC, marked the beginning of centuries-long foreign conquests and rule. Recent studies showed that two individuals from the same group (Iraqi Arab or Iraqi Kurd) could differ more genetically from each other than the average genetic difference between Iraqi Arabs and Iraqi Kurds as populations.

Arabic and Kurdish are Iraq's two official languages; Mesopotamian Arabic is the Iraqi Arabic variety, having emerged in the aftermath of the Arab conquest of Mesopotamia in the 7th century. The process of Arabization and Islamization that began during the medieval era resulted in the decline of various Eastern Aramaic languages and local religions, most notably during the Abbasid Caliphate, when the city of Baghdad became the capital of the Muslim world and the centre of the Islamic Golden Age. Mesopotamian Arabic is considered to be the most Aramaic-influenced dialect of Arabic, as Aramaic originated in Mesopotamia and spread throughout the Fertile Crescent during the Neo-Assyrian period, eventually becoming the lingua franca of the entire region prior to the early Muslim conquests. Other languages spoken within the Iraqi community include Turkmen Turkic, Neo-Aramaic, and Mandaic.