Demographics of Paris

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[edit] Historical population

Population of Paris from Julius Caesar to the French Revolution.
Population of Paris from Julius Caesar to the French Revolution.
City proper, urban area, and metropolitan area population from 1800 to 2000.
City proper, urban area, and metropolitan area population from 1800 to 2000.

Notes for the table:

  • until the 1830s, urbanization was contained within the administrative borders of the City of Paris; urban area figures before 1835 are thus the same as the city proper figures
  • the phenomenon of long commutes did not appear until the 1960s; metropolitan area figures before 1968 are thus essentially the same as the urban area figures
  • time comparisons should be exercised with care, as statistical borders vary year after year. E.g., the metropolitan area figure for 1968 is within the 1968 borders of the metropolitan area, whereas the metropolitan area figure for 1975 is within the 1975 expanded borders of the metropolitan area.
Historical Population
City proper Urban area Metropolitan area Comments
  59 BC  
25,000
Gallic population of the city at the start of the Roman conquest of Gaul.
150 AD
80,000
Peak of Roman era.
510
30,000
Losses after invasions of 3rd and 4th centuries.
1000
20,000
Lowest point after Viking invasions.
1200
110,000
Recovery of the High Middle Ages.
1328
250,000
Blossoming of the 13th century, golden age of King Saint Louis.
1500
200,000
Losses of the Black Plague and the Hundred Years' War.
1550
275,000
Renaissance recovery.
1594
210,000
Losses of religious and civil wars.
1634
420,000
Spectacular recovery under King Henry IV and Richelieu.
1700
515,000
1750
565,000
1789
630,000
Peak of prosperous 18th century.
City proper
Urban area
Metropolitan area
Comments
1801
546,856
Losses of French Revolution and wars.
1811
622,636
1817
718,966
1831
785,862
1835
1,000,000
1836
899,313
1841
935,261
1846
1,053,897
1851
1,053,262
1856
1,174,346
1860
2,000,000
Fastest historical growth under Emperor Napoleon III and Haussmann.
1861
1,696,141
New city limits; population in 1856 in the new city limits was 1,538,613.
1866
1,825,274
1872
1,851,792
Temporary stagnation due to the losses of the Siege of Paris during the Franco-Prussian War and the civil war of the Paris Commune and the Third Republic's brutal retribution towards the city.
1876
1,988,806
1881
2,269,023
1885
3,000,000
1886
2,344,550
1891
2,447,957
1896
2,536,834
City proper
Urban area
Metropolitan area
Comments
1901
2,714,068
1905
4,000,000
1906
2,763,393
1911
2,888,110
4,500,000
1921
2,906,472
4,850,000
Temporary stagnation due to losses of First World War.
1926
2,871,429
1931
2,891,020
5,600,000
1936
2,829,753
6,000,000
1946
2,725,374
5,850,000
Losses of Second World War.
1954
2,850,189
6,436,296
1962
2,790,091
7,384,363
Fastest population growth in the 20th century.
1968
2,590,771
8,196,746
8,368,000
End of postwar baby boom, end of immigration surplus for Paris; henceforth migration flows from the rest of France become negative, population growth is significantly slower.
1975
2,299,830
8,549,898
9,096,000
1982
2,176,243
8,706,963
9,362,000
1990
2,152,423
9,318,821
10,291,851
1999
2,125,246
9,644,507
11,174,743
2005
2,153,600
ca. 10.1 million
ca. 11.6 million

Sources:

  • City proper figures from 1801 on, urban area figures from 1954 on, and metropolitan area figures from 1990 on are official census figures.
  • City proper figures before 1801 and urban area figures before 1954 are estimates from various sources.
  • Metropolitan area figures before 1990 were reconstructed by Ph. Julien of INSEE by applying the current INSEE definition of metropolitan areas to past censuses.

[edit] Immigration

Outside of the touristic areas and expensive historical neighbourhoods, modern buildings provide housing to Parisians. Here, a neighbourhood of high rise apartment buildings with a large Eastern Asian (mainly Vietnamese and Chinese) population.
Outside of the touristic areas and expensive historical neighbourhoods, modern buildings provide housing to Parisians. Here, a neighbourhood of high rise apartment buildings with a large Eastern Asian (mainly Vietnamese and Chinese) population.

Since the Middle Ages, at which time it was the largest city of the Western World, Paris has always attracted foreigners. From the Dutch and Swedish students of the Latin Quarter in the 14th century to the English, Scottish and Irish Jacobite refugees in the 17th century, from the Polish nationalist refugees in the early 19th century to the Belgian, Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish workers in the late 19th century, from the Sephardic Jews of North Africa in the middle of the 20th century to the Africans and Eastern Asians of today, Paris has received waves after waves of immigrants. Today, like other world cities, Paris is largely a multicultural city.

French censuses are forbidden to ask questions regarding ethnicity or religion, therefore it is not possible to know the ethnic composition of the metropolitan area of Paris. Still, some interesting data can be extracted from French censuses. At the 1999 census, there were 2,169,406 people living in the metropolitan area of Greater Paris who were born outside of Metropolitan France, which was 19.4% of the total population of the metropolitan area. As a comparison: at the 2001 UK census, 19.5% of the total population of the metropolitan area of London was born outside of the (metropolitan) United Kingdom, while at the 2000 US census 27.5% of the total population of the New York-Newark-Bridgeport metropolitan area was born outside of the United States (50 states), and 31.9% of the total population of the Los Angeles-Riverside-Orange County metropolitan area was born outside of the United States (50 states).

At the 1999 French census, there were 474,768 people living in the metropolitan area of Greater Paris who were living outside of Metropolitan France in 1990, which was 4.2% of the total population of the metropolitan area in 1999.

Patterns of immigration to Paris have changed significantly in the 1990s. Portuguese immigration has significantly decreased, while immigration from other regions of the world has increased. The most important groups of immigrants today are the following:

  • North and west Africans: the immigration of these two groups has been substantially reduced[citation needed] by a tightening of the borders engineered by successive French governments. In the 1990s, immigrants from North Africa and West Africa came mostly through the scheme of family reunions (women and children coming to live with their husband or father already living in France). An unknown number of North Africans and West Africans have also come illegally outside of these family reunions schemes. Although some have been deported back to Africa, most of these illegal immigrants are still in France, without papers, living with the threat of deportation should they be discovered. However, thousands of illegal immigrants were given official papers under the center-left government of Lionel Jospin in the late 1990s, after pressure from French associations defending the rights of immigrants[citation needed]).
  • Chinese people: Although Paris has had a Chinese community for over a century, immigration has increased steadily in recent decades. Immigration is predominately from the regions of Manchuria and Wenzhou in Zhejiang province. Illegal immigration is also a concern.
  • Eastern Europeans, a significant proportion from Romania, a group on the rise since the fall of the Berlin Wall
  • Middle Easterners

Compared with the United Kingdom, South Asian immigrants are still not very numerous in Paris, although their presence has significantly increased in the 1990s. Compared with the United States, Latin American and Filipino immigrants are extremely few in Paris (although it has a sizeable population of Argentine and Chilean exiles whom escaped the dictatorships in the 1970s). Middle Eastern immigrants are also relatively few (compared to Maghreb), although there is a sizeable Lebanese community (mostly rich Christian Lebanese exiles), due to the old ties between France and Lebanon, as well as an important Turkish and Kurdish population. Russians are also extremely few in Paris, despite an old tradition of White Russians presence in Paris following the Communist revolution of 1917, and before of anarchist and socialists Russians.

Finally, it should be remembered that the figures given here are for people permanently living in the metropolitan area of Paris. However, Paris is the most visited city in the world, with a massive influx of tourists at any time in the year (over 75 million a year, which is more than the whole population of France). Most of these visitors are foreigners, so that on any day of the year the actual foreign population being present in the metropolitan area of Paris is probably higher than the 19.4% figure given above. This fact is most felt in the center of the city of Paris, where it is possible to walk in some streets where most people crossed are foreign tourists.

[edit] See also