Page:EB1911 - Volume 09.djvu/956

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POPULATION]
EUROPE
921


boundary between Norway and Sweden descends from the fjeld in the south it should leave to Norway both sides of the valley of the Glommen.

The preceding table shows the area of the countries of Europe, with their estimated or enumerated populations in thousands (000 omitted) at different dates.Population.

A noteworthy feature of the distribution of population in Europe, especially in western, southern and central Europe, in modern times, is the high degree of aggregation in towns, which is exhibited in the following table[1] for the different countries or regions of the continent:—

 Percentage in Towns.   All Towns 
over
20,000.

Over
100,000.
From
20,000 to
100,000.




 England and Wales 34.8 23.5 58.3
 Scotland 29.7  9.9 39.7
 Ireland 14.2  5.3 19.5
 Norway 10.8  6.8 17.6
 Sweden  8.5  2.6 11.2
 Denmark 19.4  6.6 26.0
 German Empire 17.0 11.2 28.2
 Netherlands 22.3 15.0 37.3
 Belgium 18.6 12.0 30.6
 France 13.7 10.3 24.0
 Spain and Portugal 10.5  5.7 16.2
 Bosnia, Servia and Bulgaria ..  4.2  4.2
 Rumania  4.6  7.2 11.8
 Hungary  3.7  9.1 12.8
 Galicia and Bukovina  2.0  4.8  6.8
 Cis-Leithan provinces of Austria
  (exclusive of the two latter) 12.4  5.9 18.3
 Poland 10.6  4.2 14.8
 Baltic Provinces, Russia 11.4  8.3 19.7
 Moscow region[2]  9.6  5.4 15.0
 Black earth governments, Great Russia[3]  0.7  4.9  5.6
 Governments of middle and lower Volga[4]  3.3  4.0  7.3
 South Russia[5]  7.0  8.5 15.5
 Finland  3.8  4.3  8.1

The following table contains a list of the towns with more than 100,000 inhabitants, not in every case according to the most recent census, but, in order to make the populations fairly comparable with one another, according to the nearest census or available estimate to 1900. Population in thousands (000 omitted):—

* London (Greater, 1901) 6581
 London (Registration, 1901) 4536
* Paris (w. subs.) 2877
 Paris (City, 1901) 2661
* Berlin (w. subs.) 2073
 Berlin (1900) 1884
 Vienna (1900) 1662
* St Petersburg (w. subs., 1897)  1267
* Constantinople (w. subs.) 1200
 Moscow (w. subs., 1897) 1036
 Glasgow (w. subs., 1901)  910
 Hamburg-Altona (1900)  867
 Liverpool (w. subs., 1901)  767
 Manchester-Salford (1901)  765
 Budapest (1900)  732
 Warsaw (1897)  638
†Birmingham (w. subs., 1901)  599
* Naples (comm., 1901)  565
 Brussels (1901)  563
* Madrid (1900)  540
 Amsterdam (1902)  540
* Barcelona (1900)  533
 Munich (1900)  500
 Marseilles (1901)  495
* Milan (comm., 1901)  493
 Copenhagen (w. subs., 1901)  477
* Rome (comm., 1901)  463
 Lyons (1901)  460
 Leipzig (1900)  455
 Leeds (w. subs., 1901)  444
 Breslau (1900)  423
 Odessa (1897)  405
 Dresden (1900)  395
 Edinburgh-Leith (1901)  393
 Sheffield (1901)  381
 Dublin (w. subs., 1901)  373
 Cologne (1900)  372
* Lisbon (1900)  356
 Belfast (1901)  349
 Rotterdam (1902)  348
 Turin (comm., 1901)  335
 Bristol (1901)  329
 Newcastle-Gateshead (1901)  325
 Prague (w. subs., 1900)  317
 Lódz (1897)  315
* Palermo (comm., 1901)  310
 Stockholm (1902)  306
 Elbferfeld-Barmen (1901)  299
 Bordeaux (w. subs., 1896)  289
 Frankfort-on-Main  288
 Riga (w. subs., 1897)  283
 Bucharest (1899)  282
 Bradford (1901)  280
 Antwerp (1901)  273
‡West Ham (1901)  267
 Nuremberg (1900)  261
 Kiev (1897)  247
 Hull (1901)  241
 Nottingham (1901)  240
 Hanover (1900)  237
 Genoa (comm., 1901)  235
 Magdeburg (1900)  230
 Christiania (1900)  226
 The Hague (1902)  222
 Roubaix-Tourcoing (1901)  220
 Düsseldorf (1900)  214
* Valencia (1900)  214
 Florence (comm., 1901)  205
 Leicester (1901)  212
 Lille (1901)  211
 Chemnitz (1900)  207
 Portsmouth (1901)  189
 Charlottenburg (1900)  189
 Königsberg (1900)  188
 Triest (1900)  179
 Plymouth-Devonport (1901)  177
 Stuttgart (1900)  176
 Kharkov (1897)  174
 Bolton (1901)  168
 Oporto (1900)  168
 Cardiff (1901)  164
 Bremen (1900)  163
 Ghent (1901)  162
 Dundee (1901)  161
 Vilna (1897)  160
 Brighton-Hove (1901)  160
 Lemberg (1900)  160
 Liége (1901)  160
 Halle a S. (1900)  157
 Aberdeen (1901)  153
 Bologna (comm., 1901)  152
* Venice (comm., 1901)  152
 Catania (comm., 1901)  150
 Messina (comm., 1901)  150
 Salonica  150
 Strassburg (1900)  150
 Zürich (comm., 1900)  150
 Seville (1900)  148
 St Etienne (1901)  147
 Sunderland (1901)  147
 Dortmund (1900)  142
 Danzig (1900)  141
 Mannheim (1900)  140
 Stettin (1895)  140
 Croydon (1901)  139
 Graz (1900)  138
 Oldham (1901)  137
 Saratov (1897)  137
 Aachen (1900)  135
 Gothenburg (1902)  134
 Toulouse (1896)  134
 Nantes (1901)  133
 Kazan (1897)  132
 Malaga (1900)  130
 Havre (1901)  130
 Blackburn (1901)  128
 Brunswick (1900)  128
 Ekaterinoslav (1897)  121
 Rostov-on-Don (1897)  120
 Essen (1900)  119
 Posen (1900)  117
 Preston (1901)  113
 Astrakhan (1897)  113
 Norwich (1901)  112
 Murcia (1900)  112
 Birkenhead (1901)  111
 Athens (1896)  111
 Tula (1897)  111
 Brünn (1900)  110
 Kishinev (1897)  109
 Basel (comm., 1900)  109
 Utrecht (1902)  109
 Kiel (1900)  108
 Reims (1901)  108
 Krefeld (1900)  107
 Derby (1901)  106
 Kassel (1900)  106
 Halifax (1901)  105
 Nice (1901)  105
 Southampton (1901)  105
 Nancy (1901)  103
 Szeged (1900)  103
 Toulon (1901)  102
 Cartagena (1900)  100
Comm. = commune. w. subs. = with suburbs.
* In 1800 only those to which an asterisk is prefixed rose above 100,000. Thirty-four out of the 144 towns enumerated in the list above belong to the British Isles.
† The contiguous parliamentary boroughs of Birmingham and Aston Manor.
‡ Part of Greater London.

Authorities.—Elisée Reclus, vols. i. to v. of Nouvelle Géographie universelle (Paris, 1876–1880), translated by E. G. Ravenstein and A. H. Keane (vol. i. Southern Europe, vol. ii. France and Switzerland, vol. iii. Austria-Hungary, Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands, vol. iv. The British Isles, vol. v. Scandinavia, Russia in Europe, and the European islands, translation undated); G. G. Chisholm, “Europe” (2 vols.) in Stanford’s Compendium of Geography and Travel (London, 1899, 1902); Kirchhoff and others, Die Länderkunde des Erdteils Europa, vols. ii. and iii. of Unser Wissen von der Erde (comprising all the countries of Europe except Russia) (Vienna, &c., 1887–1893); A. Philippson and L. Neumann, Europa, eine allgemeine Länderkunde (Leipzig, 1895, 2nd edition by A. Philippson, 1906); Joseph Partsch, Central Europe (London, 1903) (embraces Belgium, the Netherlands, Germany, Austria-Hungary, Rumania, Servia, Bulgaria and Montenegro treated from a general point of view); Joseph Partsch, Mitteleuropa (Gotha, 1904) (the same work in German, extended and furnished with additional coloured maps); M. Fallex and A. Moirey, L’Europe moins la France (Paris, 1906) (no index); A. Hettner, Europa (Leipzig, 1907) (an important feature of this work is the division of Europe into natural regions); Vidal de la Blache, Tableau de la géographie de la France (Paris, 1903) (contains a most instructive map embracing western and central Europe to about 42° N. and 24°-26° E., showing the former extent of forest, the distribution of soils earliest fit for cultivation, of littoral alluvium and of the mines of salt and tin which were so important in early European commerce); H. B. George, The Relations of Geography and History (Oxford, 1901) (deals very largely


  1. Taken from a paper by Professor Voeikov on “Verteilung der Bevölkerung auf der Erde unter dem Einfluss der Naturverhältnisse und der menschlichen Tatigkeit,” in Petermanns Mitteil. (1906), p. 249, where corresponding figures are given for other parts of the world.
  2. Kaluga, Smolensk, Tver, Moscow, Yaroslav, Kostromer and Vladimir.
  3. Kursk, Orel, Tula, Ryazan, Tambov, Voronezh and Penza.
  4. Nizhniy Novgorod, Kazan, Simbirsk, Samara, Saratov and Astrakhan.
  5. Bessarabia, Kherson, Taurida, Ekaterinoslav and Don Province.