Igor Karkaroff sounds like a Russian or Slavic name, and I always assumed he was an eastern European. But unlike e.g. Viktor Krum, Madame Maxime, and Hagrid, the character isn't portrayed in the books as having an accent, so he could be British of Russian descent.
In his youth, he was a Death Eater, a member of an organisation based primarily in Britain. Later he became headmaster of Durmstrang, a school in Scandinavia but which accepted students from as far afield as Bulgaria and possibly Britain.
Where was he from originally? Is there any canon evidence on this?
Answer
As @TheDoc's comment points out (and confirmed on IMDB), the actor who played him was Predrag Bjelac, from Belgrade, Serbia, Yugoslavia. That's pretty much the only piece of hard information we have.
Obviously, Igor is a Slavic first name (with Scandinavian etymology). While it's very popular in Russia, it's also popular in other Eastern European/Slavic countries (definitely, Poland, Hungary, Serbia and Bulgaria).
Ironically, many people are convinced (I don't know of canon support) that JKR's use of the name was inspired by Dr. Frankenstein's assistant, Igor (classically played by Bela Lugosi). The fact that Boris Karloff who played the monster has a loosely similar sounding surname doesn't seem too convincing to me but people list that as "proof" of this theory.
Last name sounds Slavic as well, but not necessarily Russian. It could just as (or even more) easily be Bulgarian or Serbian or even Polish. Typical Russian spelling would end in "ov" and not "off", but the anglicized version frequently converts this.
There are actually some plausible theories that he's British national by birth (but of Slavic lineage), based on the fact that he:
a. may have attended Hogwarts ("Good Old Hogwarts" quote); although that is contradicted by the fact that in most likely case, Drumstrang wouldn't have appointed him as Headmaster,
b. was a Death Eater, which was largely if not exclusively shown to be British organization.
c. Wasn't portrayed as speaking with an accent, like other foreigners (e.g. Fleur or Seamus).
d. Was under British Wizengamot jurisdiction. Presumably, if he was a foreigner, he'd have tried to claim he was a foreign national and get deported, not stand trial and be put in Azkaban.
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