POPULATION. 



97 



l>uition. 



O f fa Tawnt of Great Britain above 15,000 



Population. 



SCOTLAND. 



ENGLAND. 



Manchester, . . 



Liverpool, 



Birmingham, 



Bristol, 



Leeds, 



Plymouth, 



Portsmouth, portion of Gosport, 



Norwich, 



Sheffield, 



Deptford and Greenwich, 



Nottingliam, 



lUli, 



Newcastle- upon-Tyne, 



K ingston-upou- H ull, 



Leicester, 



Brighton, 



Chatham and Rochester, 



Exeter, 



Shrewsbury, 



Coventry, . 



York, 



Chester, 



Yarmouth, 



Macclesfteld, 



Wigan, 



Derby, 



Wenlock, 



Ipswich, . 



Worcester, 



Woolwich, 



Oxford, 



Carlisle, 



Population In ls? 



1,225,94 



133,788 



119,972 



106,722 



87,779 



83,790 



61,212 



44,648 



50,288 



42,157 



40,574 



40,415 



36,811 



35,181 



31,425 



30,125 



24,429 



24,063 



23,479 



21,694 



21,242 



20,787 



19,949 



18,040 



17,746 



17,716 



17,423 



17,265 



17,186 



17,023 



17,008 



16,365 



15,476 



fihugov, 



Kdinburgh and I/eitli, 



Dundee, . 



Paisley, 



Aberdeen, 



(J ret nock, 



Perth, 



IRKI.ANI). 



Dublin, estimated in 1812 at about 



Limerick, estimated according to Wakefield, 



Cork, * 4 years preceding' 1811, 



Waterford, . 



Belfast, estimated in 1812, 



Londonderry, 



Kilkenny, .... 



9MTI 



28.000 



20,4V, 



22.0N* 



10,069 



2 7 S00.1 

 60,000 



11,000 



.'{0,0'Xl 

 18,500 



15,000 



In a very interesting paper on the " Numerical 

 Changes of the Population of Great Britain, as divided 

 into the classes of Agriculturists, Manufacturers, and 

 non-productive Labourers, during the period from 

 1811 to 1821," by Mr. George Harvey, F.R,S.E.t that 

 able writer has given the following results. The sign 

 -j- indicates in the column of agriculture, for example, 

 that the agricultural population has increased by the 

 number annexed to it in every particular county of 

 any of the three kingdoms; and the sign that the 

 same population has diminished. 



The total population of each county has been as- 

 sumed at 10,000 families, the returns having been given 

 only in families in relation to these subjects. 



VOL. XVII. PART I. 



Wakefield supposes that the population of Cork may amount to 80,000. 

 See the Quarterly Journal, No. XXXII. p. 203. 



