A. Baines deals in detail with the growth of the population of western Europe during the thirty years 1870-1900. The review covers the sixteen countries of western Europe properly so-called, excluding Russia, the countries of south-eastern Europe, and the half-way States of Hungary, Galicia,...
The approximate stability of Continental Europe as a whole is due solely to the growth of population in western Europe, mainly from immigration. In central... Jean-Paul,Sardon - 《Population》 被引量: 152发表: 2002年 From Provinces into Nations: Demographic Integration in Western Europe, 1870-...
PopulationGrowthinNineteenth-CenturyEuropeBecauseofindustrializationandavastincreaseinagriculturaloutput,inEuropeasawhole,thepopulationrosefrom188millionin1800to400millionin1900.By1900,virtuallyeveryareaofEurope(1)had contributed(contribute)tothetremendoussurgeofpopulation....
Population Growth in Nineteenth-Century Europe Because of industrialization, but also because of a vast increase in agricultural output without which industrialization would have been impossible, Western Europeans by the latter half of the nineteenth century enjoyed higher standards of living and longer,...
因为如果没有农业产量的大幅增长,工业化就不可能实现。
In the developed countries of Western Europe and North America, the population is growing very 62 . This is because women in these countries have, on average(平均), only one or two 63 . But in the developing countries, many women have five or more children. In the developing countries, ...
Population Growth in Nineteenth-Century Europe Because of industrialization, but also because of a vast increase in agricultural output without which industrialization would have been impossible, Western Europeans by the latter half of the nineteenth century enjoyed higher standards of living and longer, ...
Europe's population growth included one additional innovation by the nineteenth century: it combined with rapid urbanization. More and more Western Europeans moved from countryside to city, and big cities grew most rapidly of all. By 1850, over half of all the people in England lived in cities...
The rapid growth of population followed on the train of the Industrial Revolution and the period of imperialistic expansion in western Europe. Growth was a product primarily of life saving rather than of increased procreation, for as death was brought under control, the Western world turned ...