This
article is about the demographic
features of the population of the
United
Kingdom
, including population
density, ethnicity, education
level, health of the populace, economic status, religious
affiliations and other aspects of the population.
According
to the 2001 census, the total population of the United Kingdom
was 58,789,194 - the third-largest in the European Union (behind Germany
and
metropolitan France
) and the
21st-largest in the world. Its overall population density is
one of the highest in the world, due to the particularly high
population density in England.
Almost one-third of the population lives in
England
's southeast and is predominantly urban and
suburban, with about 8.2 million in the capital of London.
The United Kingdom's extremely high
literacy rate (99%) is attributable to
universal public education
introduced for the primary level in 1870 (
Scotland
1872, free 1890) and secondary level in 1900. Education is
compulsory from the ages of 5 to 16, with an option to continue
education free of charge in the form of A-Levels, vocational
training or apprenticeship to age 18. About two-fifths of British
students go on to post-secondary education (18+).
The Church of England and the Church of
Scotland
function as the official national churches in their
respective countries, but all the major religions found in the
world are represented in the United Kingdom.
The UK's population is predominantly
White
British.
Being located close to continental Europe, the countries that formed the United Kingdom
were subject to many invasions and migrations,
especially from Scandinavia and the
continent, including Roman occupation
for several centuries. Historically, British people were
thought to be descended mainly from the varied ethnic stocks that
settled there before the 11th century; the pre-Celtic,
Celtic, Roman, Anglo-Saxon, Norse and the
Normans, who had lived in
Northern France. However, recent genetic analysis
appears to indicate that around 80% of British DNA comes from an
indigenous population who settled Britain around 12,000 years ago,
with subsequent invaders contributing very little to the genepool.
Although
Celtic languages are partially
spoken in Scotland
, Cornwall
, and
Northern
Ireland
, the predominant language overall is English. In North
and West
Wales
, Welsh is widely
spoken as a first language, but much less so in the more English
dominated South
East
of the country.
History
Three sets of demographic statistics are useful to governments and
others concerned with their nations’ political and economic
stability. The first is an enumeration of the number of inhabitants
distinguished by age, sex, and occupation. The second involves a
continuous record of population trends from the registration of
births, marriages, and burials. The third is documentation of the
extent of internal and external migration.
England and Wales
Before
1800, England
had none of
these except for the civil registration of births, marriages, and
burials briefly attempted under the Commonwealth (1653–1660) and an even
more short-lived initiative of the same kind in 1694 in connection
with the attempt to raise a tax on the occasion of every birth,
marriage, and death—paupers excepted. At that time, the
chief source of information on the demography was provided by
parish registration of baptisms, marriages, and burials that had
occurred in the parish churches, supplemented by information on
mortality in the
Bills of
Mortality that were published for certain large towns and by
inferences drawn from various counts of taxpayers. The article
focuses on the reliability of the parochial registration system and
the way in which it was exploited by the state as measured against
the state’s objectives for establishing it in 1538. These
objectives were rarely achieved. By the end of the 18th century,
the parish registers were falling short of providing a national
system of registration. Neither had the registers at any time
provided the requisite detail to allow the verification of age,
lineal descent, or right of inheritance. They had not been used as
a way of raising revenue except briefly between 1694 and 1705.
Moreover, the
Anglican Church was
extremely lax about the enforcement of its own regulations
regarding the appropriate time for registering baptisms, burials,
and marriages.
The ability of the registration system to fulfil these original
objectives can be measured in terms of the breadth of its coverage
and the quality of the information provided. Each category can be
further subdivided. For example, the breadth of coverage can be
defined to include the speed with which parishes throughout the
country commenced the registration of
baptisms, marriages, and burials; the percentage of
the population whose vital events went unrecorded even in the
parishes that established registers; and the success of the
incumbents and churchwardens in preserving the registers completed
by their predecessors. The quality of the recording can be assessed
based on the amount of information offered about individuals
mentioned in the registers, the extent to which that information
was provided in a standard form across the country, and the clarity
of the presentation (whether separate registers for baptisms,
marriages, and burials were maintained). The accuracy of the work
undertaken by the parochial clergy as unpaid servants of the state
in providing
Rickman with the totals of
baptisms, marriages, and burials can also be assessed. Each of
these aspects will now be considered in turn before an assessment
of the overall effectiveness of the registration system is
attempted.
Cromwell’s brief
instructions establishing the registration system did not specify
what sort of register book was to be provided. Not unnaturally,
most parishes chose to use paper rather than the dearer, but more
durable, parchment.
In 1597, the Convocation of the clergy, bishops, and
archbishop of the province of Canterbury
found it necessary to order parchment copies of all
entries from old paper registers, instructions that were soon
reissued in 1603.
The first
census held throughout the UK was
organised in 1801.
England and
Wales started the civil registration of births, marriages, and
deaths in 1837. The first attempt by the state to compile
statistics on migration was included in the census of 1841.
United Kingdom
During the
Industrial
Revolution, the
life expectancy
of children increased dramatically. The percentage of the children
born in London who died before the age of five decreased from 74.5%
in 1730 - 1749 to 31.8% in 1810 - 1829. According to Robert Hughes
in
The Fatal Shore, the population of England and Wales,
which had remained steady at 6 million from 1700 to 1740, rose
dramatically after 1740.
The first
Census in 1801 revealed that the
population of England
, Scotland
and Wales
was 10.5
million. In 1800 the population of Ireland
was between 4.5 and 5.5 million.
The
1841 UK Census
counted the population of England and Wales to be 15.9 million.
Ireland's population was 8.2 million in 1841. The population of
Scotland was 2.6 million.
The
Great Irish Famine, which
began in the 1840s, caused the deaths of one million
Irish people, and caused over a million to
emigrate. Mass emigration became entrenched as a result of the
famine and the population continued to decline until late in the
20th century.
The
population of England had
almost doubled from 16.8 million in 1851 to 30.5 million in 1901.
Ireland’s population decreased rapidly, from 8.2 million in 1841 to
less than 4.5 million in 1901.
Population
The population of the United Kingdom in the
2001 census was 58,789,194. This
has since risen to 60,587,300 according to mid-2006 estimates by
the Office for National Statistics
[5534].
| Part |
Population (mid-2006) |
% (mid-2006) |
England |
50,762,900 |
83.8 |
Scotland |
5,116,900 |
8.4 |
Wales |
2,965,900 |
4.9 |
Northern Ireland |
1,741,600 |
2.9 |
United Kingdom |
60,587,300 |
100 |
(1 July 2006 population estimates by UK National
Statistics)
[5535]
There are
11 cities which exceed 300,000 inhabitants, these being London
, Birmingham
, Glasgow
, Leeds
, Sheffield
, Liverpool
, Manchester
, Edinburgh
, Bristol
, Cardiff
and Coventry
. Cities with urban areas in excess of 300,000
inhabitants include Nottingham
, Leicester
, Belfast
, Southampton
and Newcastle Upon Tyne
.
Age structure
The most numerous age groups (at the 2001 census) were the 5-year
group born in the years 1946-51 (the
post-World War II baby boom);
the baby boom born a generation later in 1961-66 (the largest group
of all); and a more modest boom a generation after that, born in
1986-91.
[5536] The 1946-51 group reaches retirement age
from 2006 onwards (women from 2006 and men from 2011), and the
sudden increase in the number of people claiming the state pension
has led politicians and political commentators to fear a "pensions
crisis".
The age groups are not evenly distributed around the country, with
some areas having many young adults and children
[5537] and some areas having large numbers of
older people.
[5538]
| Age group |
Population |
% |
| Male |
Female |
| 0–14 |
5,560,489 |
5,293,871 |
18.0 |
| 15–64 |
20,193,876 |
19,736,516 |
66.3 |
| 65+ |
4,027,721 |
5,458,235 |
15.7 |
Fertility
In 2008 the UK's
total fertility
rate (TFR) was 1.96 children per woman, below the replacement
rate of 2.10. In 2001, the TFR was at a record low of 1.63, but it
has increased each year since. The TFR was considerably higher
during the 1960s 'baby boom', peaking at 2.95 children per woman in
1964. TFR varies widely across the UK, standing at 2.10 in Northern
Ireland, 1.80 in Scotland, 1.94 in England and 1.96 in Wales in
2008.
The TFR for British residents also varies by country of birth. In
England and Wales in 1996, people born in the UK had a TFR of 1.67,
India 2.21 and Pakistan and Bangladesh 4.90, for example.
Most of the increase in overall fertility in England and Wales can
be attributed to rising fertility among UK born women, who make up
the majority of the female population of childbearing age (85 per
cent in 2007). According to new estimates, the TFR for women born
in the UK has risen substantially, from 1.68 in 2004 to 1.79 in
2007.
Ethnicity
Estimated foreign-born population by country of birth, April
2007–March 2008
Estimated foreign-nationals population by country of nationality,
April 2007–March 2008
From the United Kingdom
Census 2001:
Religion
The traditional
religion in the United
Kingdom is
Christianity.
In England
the established church is the Church of England (Anglican). In Scotland
, the Church of Scotland
(a Presbyterian
Church) is regarded as the 'national church' but there is not
an established church. In Wales
there is no
established church, with the Church in
Wales having been disestablished in 1920. Likewise, in Northern
Ireland
the Church of
Ireland was disestablished in 1871. In Northern Ireland
and similarly in parts of Scotland, there is a
sectarian divide between
Roman Catholic and
Protestant communities.
The table below shows the most recent census data regarding
religious belief:
| Religion |
Number |
% |
| Christian |
42,079,000 |
71.6% |
| Muslim |
1,591,000 |
2.7% |
| Hindu |
559,000 |
1.0% |
| Sikh |
336,000 |
0.6% |
| Jewish |
267,000 |
0.5% |
| Buddhist |
152,000 |
0.3% |
| Other religion |
179,000 |
0.3% |
| Not stated |
4,289,000 |
7.3% |
| No religion |
9,104,000 |
15.5% |
| Total religious |
45,163,000 |
76.8% |
Although the
Census 2001
also recorded 390,000
Jedi
Knight, making
Jedi the fourth-largest
"religion" in the UK, this does not confer them any official
recognition.
See also: Status of
religious freedom in the United Kingdom,
Islam in the United Kingdom,
Hinduism in the United
Kingdom,
Buddhism in
the United Kingdom,
Sikhism in the United Kingdom,
Judaism in the United
Kingdom
Languages
The United Kingdom has no
official
language. The dominant language, spoken as a
first language by 95% of the population, is
English.
Scots is spoken by around 500,000 people in
Scotland
and 30,000 in Northern Ireland
, where it is called Ulster Scots. Welsh is spoken by around 850,000 people.
Scottish Gaelic is spoken by about
60,000 speakers, mostly in Scotland
. Cornish is
spoken by around 2,500 people.
Irish
is spoken by about 106,844 speakers in Northern Ireland, although
this is often exaggerated for political reasons. The
Polish minority in the United Kingdom
estimated over 600,000 people speak mostly
Polish language at homes, Polish Britons are
mainly Polish-born immigrants to the UK, although many are those
who settled in Britain after the second world war and their
descendants.
British Sign Language is also
common.
Education
Each country of the United Kingdom has a separate education system,
with power over education matters in Scotland, Wales and Northern
Ireland being devolved.
The
Secretary
of State for Children, Schools and Families and the
Secretary
of State for Innovation, Universities and Skills are
responsible to the UK Parliament for
education in England, though the day to
day administration and funding of state schools is the
responsibility of
Local
Education Authorities. Universal state education in England and
Wales was introduced for primary level in 1870 and secondary level
in 1900. Education is mandatory from ages five to sixteen (15 if
born in late July or August). The majority of children are educated
in state-sector schools, only a small proportion of which select on
the grounds of academic ability. Despite a fall in actual numbers,
the proportion of children in England attending
private schools has risen to over 7%.
Just over
half of students at the leading universities of Cambridge
and Oxford
had attended state schools. State schools
which are allowed to select pupils according to intelligence and
academic ability can achieve comparable results to the most
selective private schools: out of the top ten performing schools in
terms of GCSE results in 2006 two were state-run
grammar schools.
England has some of
the top universities in the world with Cambridge
, Oxford
, and London
ranked amongst the top 20 in the 2007 THES - QS World University
Rankings.
In
Scotland
, the Cabinet
Secretary for Education and Lifelong Learning is responsible to
the Scottish
Parliament
for education, with day to day administration and
funding of state schools being the responsibility of Local
Authorities. Scotland first legislated for universal
provision of education in 1696. The proportion of children in
Scotland attending private schools is just over 4% though it has
been rising slowly in recent years. Scottish students who attend
Scottish universities pay neither tuition fees nor graduate
endowment charges as the fees were abolished in 2001 and the
graduate endowment scheme was abolished in 2008.
The
National Assembly for
Wales has responsibility for
education in Wales. A significant number
of students in Wales are educated either wholly or largely through
the medium of
Welsh and lessons in
the language are compulsory for all until the age of 16. There are
plans to increase the provision of Welsh Medium schools as part of
the policy of having a fully bi-lingual Wales.
The
Northern Ireland Assembly
is responsible for education in Northern Ireland
though responsibility at a local level is
administered by 5 Education and Library Boards covering different
geographical areas.
See also
References
- Education (Scotland) Act 1872
- Review of "The Tribes of Britain" James
Owen, National Geographic 19 July
2005.
- Stephen Oppenheimer, Myths of British ancestry, Prospect, October 2006, accessed 21
September 2006.
- Mabel C. Buer, Health, Wealth and Population in the Early
Days of the Industrial Revolution, London: George Routledge
& Sons, 1926, page 30 ISBN 0-415-38218-1
- The UK population: past, present and future,
statistics.gov.uk
- A portrait of Britain in 2031, The Independent,
October 24, 2007
- Statistics | Counting the Emigrants, Public
Record Office of Northern Ireland
- History and Lessons of Potato Late Blight,
University of California
- 1841: A window on Victorian Britain, The
Independent
- Irish-Catholic Immigration, The Library of
Congress
- Undiscovered Scotland: Timeline of Scottish
History: 1800 to 1850
- The Irish Potato Famine
- Ireland - Population Summary
-
http://www.statistics.gov.uk/downloads/theme_population/Popular-Trends136.pdf
- Charles F. Westoff and Tomas Frejka, Fertility and religiousness among European
Muslims, 21 February 2007, accessed 22 September 2007
- 2001 census data ( by ethnicity)
- Private school pupil numbers in decline
guardian.co.uk November 9th, 2007
- More state pupils in universities BBC News,
July 19th, 2007
- in private school intake BBC News April 17th,
2007
- MSPs vote to scrap endowment fee BBC News,
February 28, 2008
- Census 2001 website
- Abstract (1833). Abstract of the Answers and Returns made
pursuant to an act passed in the eleventh year of the reign of His
MajestyKing George IV intituled an
act for taking an account of the population of Great Britain
, and the increase and diminution thereof.
Population Register Abstract 1831. British
Parliamentary Papers, 38.
- Arkell, T. (1992). An examination of the poll taxes of the late
seventeenth century, the Marriage Duty Act and Gregory King.
- K. Schurer, & T. Arkell (Eds.), Surveying the people. The
interpretation and use of document sources for the study of
population in the late seventeenth century (pp. 142–177). Oxford:
Leopard’s Hill Press.
- Boulton, J. (1992). The
Marriage Duty Act and parochial registration in London,
1695–1706. In K. Schurer, & T. Arkell (Eds.), Surveying the
people. The interpretation and use of document sources for the
study of population in the late seventeenth century (pp. 222–252).
Oxford: Leopard’s Hill Press.
- Boulton, J. (1993). Clandestine marriage in London: an
examination of the neglected urban variable. Urban History,
20,
191–210.
External links