According to the statistics of Bulgarian ethnographer Vasil Kanchov from 1900, 240 inhabitants lived in Elšani, all Christian Bulgarians.[2] Elšani has 620 inhabitants living in the village all year around,[3] though, in the summer, there are approximately 400 additional temporary inhabitants staying in their holiday (second) homes.
As of the 2021 census, Elšani had 620 residents with the following ethnic composition:[4]
Macedonians 598
Persons for whom data are taken from administrative sources 17
Others 5
Ethnicity
All of Elšani's inhabitants are ethnic Macedonians, and Macedonian is their mother tongue.
Religion
For centuries, Orthodox Christianity has been the traditional religion in Elšani and the dating of the oldest church in the village goes back as far as 1408. The Cathedral Church is dedicated to St. Elijah (restored in 1859; painted in 1944), and there is a chapel dedicated to Saint Menas (built in 1994). The chapel of St. Petka from 1947 is shared with the neighbouring village of Peštani.[5]
Economy
Most of the local people work in hotels by the lakeside, or in the Ohrid factories. There are still some more traditional activities, as well: each family has its own vineyard and a garden, animals are still kept, and traditional production of wine and rakija (brandy) is still practised.
Historical timeline of Elšani
Early 13th century: first written record on Elšani under Byzantian rule
1912: end of Ottoman rule; during the First Balkan War Elšani is occupied by Serbs who impose recruitment on local men and 13 of them killed on battlefield
1915-1918: the time of Bulgarian military occupation during World War I
1943: Bulgarian occupation; many of the local men join the antifascist guerilla movement – 7 of them killed in battle
1944: end of the Bulgarian rule and Elšani is now in the Socialist Republic of Macedonia, which at that time is one of the six republics of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia; the village makes the biggest progress in its centuries old history, when roads, water supply, electricity and telephony for very first time were introduced
1991: Elšani is now one of the prosperous villages in the independent Republic of Macedonia