Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Handbook of Commercial Geography
For the preparation of these new tables I am indebted to Miss E. J. Hastings.
The three volumes which have now appeared distinguishing the 'consignment' from the import and export trade of the United Kingdom throw much more light on some of the features of British trade than could be got from the only returns formerly published, and for that reason a few paragraphs and notes relating to that subject have been added (pp. 601 - 2, pars. 6005, 607a, 624a, No change has been made in the town populations of France and Germany in consequence of the new censuses of 1906 and December 31, 1905, respectively. The object of giving these populations is to allow of a rough comparison of the relative importance of towns in different parts of the world, and as in most other cases the populations are based on returns about 1900, it would be misleading to introduce in these two cases returns of a later date. It may be here mentioned, however, that in France the round numbers adopted to give the results of the census returns of 1901 would serve almost equally well in many cases for those of 1906. Some of the large towns have even gone back in population. Lille lost Roubaix between the two censuses. In nearly all the large towns of Germany, however, the rapid growth of previous periods was shown by the 1905 census to have been continued.
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