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List of countries by population in 1600

Historical Demographics

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List of Countries by Population
1500 1600 1700

This is a list of countries by population in 1600. Estimate numbers are from the beginning of the year, and exact population figures are for countries that held a census on various dates in that year. The bulk of these numbers are sourced from Alexander V. Avakov's Two Thousand Years of Economic Statistics, Volume 1, pages 15 to 17, which cover population figures from the year 1600 divided into modern borders. Avakov, in turn, cites a variety of sources, mostly Angus Maddison.

Country/Territory Population c. 1600 estimate Percentage of World Population
  World 579,000,000
Ming China[1][2] 60,000,000–150,000,000 27.6%
Mughal Empire[3][4][a]
Subdivisions
~115,000,000 19.9%
 Holy Roman Empire[4][b]
subdivisions
27,000,000+ – 34,000,000+ 5.2%
Iberian Union and possessions
subdivisions
28,745,000 5.0%
Ottoman Empire[4][27]
subdivisions
vassal states
28,740,000 5.0%
 Kingdom of France[4] 20,000,000 3.5%
Kingdom of Morocco and possessions[4][32][d]
subdivisions
13,060,860 2.3%
Tokugawa Japan[33] 12,000,000 2.1%
Joseon[34] 11,000,000 1.6%
 Tsardom of Russia[35] ~9,000,000 1.6%
Safavid Iran[36] under 5,000,000 to near 10,000,000 1.3%
 Habsburg Monarchy[37]
subdivisions
7,800,000 1.3%
 Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth[38] 7,950,000 1.4%
England and possessions[39]
subdivisions
5,600,000 1.0%
          Lê dynasty (Đại Việt)[40] 5,500,000 0.9%
Taungoo dynasty (Burma)[41][42][e]
subdivisions
3,500,000 0.6%
          Ahom kingdom 2,000,000-3,000,000[46] 0.3%-0.5%
Northern Yuan[47] ~2,760,000 0.5%
          Malla[4] 2,750,000 0.5%
Ayutthaya Kingdom (Siam)[48] c. 2,500,000 0.4%
 Ethiopian Empire[4] 2,104,000 0.4%
Republic of Venice[49] 2,000,000 0.3%
Jianzhou Jurchen Confederation[50] <2,000,000 0.3%
 Dutch Republic[4] 1,500,000 0.3%
Cambodia[4] 1,419,000 0.2%
Sweden[51]
subdivisions
1,361,000 0.2%
 Denmark–Norway[52][53][54]
subdivisions
1,100,000 0.2%
 Kingdom of Scotland[55] 800,000 0.14%
 Republic of Genoa[14] 650,000 0.11%
          Kingdom of Lan Xang[4] 319,000 0.055%
          Malay Sultanates of Johor, Kedah, Pattani, and Perak[56] <200,000 (together) 0.133%
          Kingdom of Mrauk U 160,000+[57][58][f] 0.107%
          Arab Emirates[4] 35,000 0.006%
          Nan Madol (Saudeleur dynasty) 25,000[59] 0.004%
          Rapa Nui (Easter Island)[60] 15,000 0.003%

The source used here calculates the said nations population by modern day borders, so the estimates are likely inaccurate.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In 1600 the Mughals ruled roughly 50% of India, which had a population of 113 million at the time according to Avakov.
  2. ^ Combining Avakov's listed populations for Germany (16m), Austria (2.5m), Czechia (3.242m), Belgium (1.6m), Switzerland (1m), Slovenia (0.248m), and a third of Italy (4.3m) yields 28.9 million inhabitants; Avakov p. 15. This total does not include the Empire's various now-French territories such as Franche-Comté (6,300 square miles, ruled by the Spanish Habsburgs), the départements of Nord and Pas-de-Calais (4,800 square miles together, ruled by the Spanish Habsburgs as part of the Spanish Netherlands), Alsace (3,200 square miles), or the County of Nice (1,500 square miles, ruled by the Savoyards). While still claimed by the Emperor, this total also does not count the independent Dutch Republic. An estimate by the Austrian War Archives in the first decade of the 18th century (most scholars agree that the areas of the Empire covered had a similar population in both the early 17th and early 18th centuries)[5] gives a population of 28 million for the German lands, Bohemia, and the Spanish Netherlands, which would add up to 33.5 million for the whole Empire in the early 17th century, excluding said now-French territories (Italian and Swiss populations listed below for their individual states). However, Benecke considers the Austrian War Archives figure to be "overgenerous."[6] Yet another source gives a population of 20 million for "Germany, Austria, and Bohemia."[7] Adding to that figure the already-listed ones for the Spanish Netherlands, Switzerland, and Italy equals a population of about 27 million, plus the French territories.
  3. ^ A figure of 800,000 is given by Smith for "Savoy in Italy", with no clarification as to whether that refers to the whole Savoyard state or just its Italian territories of Piedmont and the Aosta Valley (thus excluding Savoy proper and the County of Nice). However another source[11] gives early 17th century Piedmont's population as 700,000, and Savoy proper's as 400,000, with no numbers given for Aosta or Nice; indicating that Smith's use of "Savoy in Italy" does indeed only refer to Piedmont and Aosta.
  4. ^ The Songhai kingdom ruled roughly 1,400,000 sq km of land, or 540,543.022 sq miles in the 15th and 16th centuries. Around the same time, West Africa's population density was 20 persons per sq mile, an average between the estimates of Manning and Niane.
  5. ^ (Lieberman 1984: 18): No large-scale censuses of any kind were conducted. Extant censuses from the period cover just four corridors of settlement in Lower Burma: Bassein-Myaungmya in the western delta; Martaban-Moulmein littoral; Myan Aung to Danubyu in the eastern delta; Pegu-Syriam-Dagon—capital region. (Lieberman 1984: 21–22): In 1581, a regional census of the 16 leading townships of Lower Burma showed a combined population of less than 28,000 households (~200,000 people). (Lieberman 1984: 20): The first-ever Irrawaddy valley-wide census was conducted only in 1638, and the results did not survive.

    Estimates above of the population of the empire point to over 6 million. In 1600, the most populous region of the erstwhile empire was Upper Burma (1.5 million),[43] followed by the Shan high lands (1 million)[44] and Lower Burma (0.5 million)[45]—for a total of at least 5.5 million. Estimates for Lan Na, Lan Xang and Manipur are not known. The size of the population of the empire before the devastating wars of 1584–99 was probably over 6 million. The population of the Pegu capital region, according to a 1581 census, was only about 200,000.[45]
  6. ^ Southeast Asian polities were traditionally centered on the capital. The capital, Mrauk U, had a population of 160,000 in 1635.

References edit

  1. ^ Rowe, William T. (2009). China's Last Empire: The Great Qing. p. 91.
  2. ^ Yi, Zhongtian (November 2007). The End of the Empire. Fudan University Press. p. 254.
  3. ^ Irfan Habib, Dharma Kumar, Tapan Raychaudhuri (1987). The Cambridge Economic History of India (PDF). Vol. 1. Cambridge University Press. p. 170.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Avakov, Alexander V. (April 2015). Two Thousand Years of Economic Statistics, Volume 1. ISBN 9781628941012. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
  5. ^ Wilson, p. 795.
  6. ^ G. Benecke, Society and Politics in Germany, 1500–1750, Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1974, p. 162.
  7. ^ J.P. Sommerville. . Archived from the original on 31 January 2014. Retrieved 21 May 2017.. Archived .
  8. ^ Wilson, p. 788.
  9. ^ 1.6 million only counts Belgium; the Spanish Netherlands also included Luxembourg and bits of modern Germany and France.
  10. ^ Preserved Smith. The Social Background of the Reformation. 1920. Page 19.
  11. ^ Gregory Hanlon. "The Hero of Italy: Odoardo Farnese, Duke of Parma, his Soldiers, and his Subjects in the Thirty Years' War." Routledge: May 2014. Page 87.
  12. ^ Wilson, Peter H. (2009). "Europe's Tragedy: A History of the Thirty Years War." Allen Lane. Page 18.
  13. ^ Wilson, p. 23.
  14. ^ a b Smith, p. 19: 500,000 on the mainland and 150,000 in Corsica.
  15. ^ a b c d e f Smith, p. 19.
  16. ^ Wilson, p. 18
  17. ^ Wilson, p. 18.
  18. ^ Smith, p. 19: the population of "Parma, Piacenza, and Modena together" is given as 500,000.
  19. ^ Roughly modern Slovenia.
  20. ^ Wilson, p. 870: "The Rheinfels branch died out in 1583 and was shared between the other three. As senior line, Hessen-Kassel possessed 6,100 km^2 with 160,000 inhabitants, while Darmstadt had 1,300 km^2 and 50,000 inhabitants and Marburg the remaining quarter." Hesse-Kassel and Marburg were integrated in 1604.
  21. ^ Wilson, p. 169
  22. ^ a b c Wilson, p. 17
  23. ^ Smith, p. 17.
  24. ^ Figures derived from Ángel Rosenblat (1902–1984).
  25. ^ Avakov, Alexander V. (April 2015). Two Thousand Years of Economic Statistics, Volume 1. ISBN 9781628941012. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
  26. ^ M.N. Pearson. "The New Cambridge History of India: The Portuguese in India." 1988. Pages 92–93: "In 1524 there were 450 Portuguese householders in Goa city, and in 1540 about 1800. The former figure refers to 'pure' Portuguese, while the latter includes descendants of Portuguese and local women, in other words mestizos. There were also 3,600 soldiers in the town in 1540. Later in the 1540s, at the time of St Francis Xavier, the city population included 10,000 Indian Christians, 3,000–4,000 Portuguese, and many non-Christians, while outside the city the rest of Ilhas contained 50,000 inhabitants, 80 percent of them Hindu. Recent estimates put the city population at 60,000 in the 1580s, and about 75,000 at 1600, the latter figure including 1,500 Portuguese and mestizos, 20,000 Hindus, and the rest local Christians, Africans, and others. In the 1630s the total population of the Old Conquests — Ilhas, Bardes and Salcette — was perhaps a little more than a quarter of a million... Casualties in the endless skirmishes with Malabaris and others were often substantial. Cholera and malaria also took their toll; one estimate claims that from 1604 to 1634, 25,000 soldiers died in the Royal Hospital in Goa."
  27. ^ "religiya-karaimov" (PDF).
  28. ^ At the time, divided between the Eyalet of the Archipelago and the Rumelia Eyalet.
  29. ^ A. Maddison, The World Economy Volume 1: A Millennial Perspective, 2001
  30. ^ Keul, István (2009). Early Modern Religious Communities in East-Central Europe: Ethnic Diversity, Denominational Plurality, and Corporative Politics in the Principality of Transylvania (1526–1691). BRILL. p. 41. ISBN 978-9004176522.
  31. ^ a b Murgescu, Bogdan (14 June 2016). Romania si Europa. Polirom. pp. 75–76. ISBN 9789734620418.
  32. ^ Walker, Sheila S. (2001). African Roots/American Cultures: Africa in the Creation of the Americas. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-7425-0165-2.
  33. ^ Maddison (27 July 2016). "Growth of World Population GDP and GDP Per Capita before 1820" (PDF). Retrieved 29 September 2017.
  34. ^ Avakov, p. 15; the figure is 10.1 million for all of modern European Russia, including the steppe and Caucasian polities that were not yet under the Tsardom of Russia's control.
  35. ^ Dale, Stephen Frederic (15 August 2002). Indian Merchants and Eurasian Trade, 1600–1750. ISBN 9780521525978. Retrieved 15 April 2016.
  36. ^ Wilson, p. 788
  37. ^ Charles A. Frazee, World History the Easy Way, Barron's Educational Series, ISBN 0-8120-9766-1, Google Print, 50
  38. ^ "European Population History". Retrieved 30 June 2016.
  39. ^ Li 1998, p. 160-171.
  40. ^ Lieberman, Victor B. (14 July 2014). Burmese Administrative Cycles: Anarchy and Conquest, c. 1580-1760. Princeton University Press. p. 18, 21. ISBN 978-1-4008-5585-8.
  41. ^ Lieberman, Victor B.; Victor, Lieberman (14 May 2014). Strange Parallels: Southeast Asia in Global Context, C 800-1830. Cambridge University Press. p. 52, 175. ISBN 978-0-511-65854-9.
  42. ^ Lieberman 2003: 52, 175
  43. ^ Lieberman 2003: 175
  44. ^ a b Lieberman 1984: 21
  45. ^ "It is suggested that the actual population of the Ahom territories up to the Manas ranged from two to three millions over one-and-a-half century ending 1750." Guha, Medieval Northeast India:Polity, Society and Economy, 1200-1750 A.D. pp. 26–30.
  46. ^ Chuluun, S. (2014). Mongols: XYII-early XX centuries.
  47. ^ Lieberman, Victor (2003). Strange Parallels: Volume 1, Integration on the Mainland: Southeast Asia in Global Context, c.800–1830 (Studies in Comparative World History) (Kindle ed.). p. 295. ISBN 978-0521800860. "Siam's population must have increased from c. 2,500,000 in 1600 to 4,000,000 in 1800."
  48. ^ Gregory Hanlon, "Twilight of a Military Tradition", 1997, p. 122.
  49. ^ Crossley, Pamela Kyle; Siu, Helen F.; Sutton, Donald S. (2006-01-19). Empire at the Margins: Culture, Ethnicity, and Frontier in Early Modern China. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-23015-6.
  50. ^ The combined population of Sweden (760,000), Finland (400,000), and Estonia (101,000). Avakov, p. 16.
  51. ^ "Historical Population of Scandinavia". Retrieved 15 April 2016.
  52. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 February 2021. Retrieved 15 April 2016.
  53. ^ Grigg, D. B. (18 December 1980). Population Growth and Agrarian Change: An Historical Perspective. ISBN 9780521296359. Retrieved 15 April 2016.
  54. ^ R. E. Tyson, "Population Patterns", in M. Lynch, ed., The Oxford Companion to Scottish History (New York, 2001), pp. 487–8.
  55. ^ Avakov, p. 17; population within the borders of all modern Malaysia (encompassing all these states' areas on the Malay peninsula plus a chunk of Borneo) is given as 191,000, while Singapore's is 3,000.
  56. ^ Magazine, Smithsonian; Hammer, Joshua. "The Hidden City of Myanmar". Smithsonian Magazine.
  57. ^ "The Lost City of Mrauk U, Once As Prosperous as London | Seasia.co". Good News from Southeast Asia. 23 January 2018.
  58. ^ "Nan Madol (U.S. National Park Service)". www.nps.gov.
  59. ^ West, Barbara A. (2008) Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Asia and Oceania 2016-04-12 at the Wayback Machine. Infobase Publishing. p. 684. ISBN 0816071098
  • Li, Tana (1998). Nguyen Cochinchina: Southern Vietnam in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. Cornell University Press. ISBN 9781501732577.
  • Kurt Witthauer. Bevölkerung der Erde (1958)
  • Calendario atlante de Agostini, anno 99 (2003)
  • The Columbia gazetteer of the world (1998)
  • Britannica book of the year : world data (1997)

list, countries, population, 1600, historical, demographicsaltar, domitius, ahenobarbusarticlesdemographic, historyhistorical, demographyworld, population, estimateslist, countries, population1500, 1600, 1700this, list, countries, population, 1600, estimate, n. Historical DemographicsAltar of Domitius AhenobarbusArticlesDemographic historyHistorical demographyWorld population estimatesList of Countries by Population1500 1600 1700This is a list of countries by population in 1600 Estimate numbers are from the beginning of the year and exact population figures are for countries that held a census on various dates in that year The bulk of these numbers are sourced from Alexander V Avakov s Two Thousand Years of Economic Statistics Volume 1 pages 15 to 17 which cover population figures from the year 1600 divided into modern borders Avakov in turn cites a variety of sources mostly Angus Maddison Country Territory Population c 1600 estimate Percentage of World Population World 579 000 000 Ming China 1 2 Subdivisions Liaodong Regional Military Commission Dokham Regional Military Commission Sichuan Province Tusi Guizhou Province Tusi Guangxi Province Tusi Yunnan Province Tusi Chinese Shan States 60 000 000 150 000 000 27 6 Mughal Empire 3 4 a Subdivisions Jaisalmer Bikaner Marwar Mewar Amber Dungarpur Kotah Gondi states 115 000 000 19 9 Holy Roman Empire 4 b subdivisions Bohemian Crown 2 950 000 8 Archduchy of Austria and related territories 2 500 000Spanish Netherlands 1 600 000 9 Duchy of Milan 1 350 000 10 Savoy 1 200 000 c Electorate of Saxony 1 200 000 12 Republic of the Swiss 1 000 000 Electorate of Bavaria 800 000 13 Republic of Genoa 650 000 14 Grand Duchy of Tuscany 648 000 15 Electoral Palatinate 600 000 16 Margraviate of Brandenburg 350 000 17 Duchy of Wurttemberg Duchy of Modena and Reggio 250 000 18 Duchy of Parma 250 000Margraviate of Baden Thuringian states Duchy of Carniola 248 000 19 Landgraviate of Hesse Kassel 230 000 20 Duchy of Holstein 185 000 21 Republic of Lucca 110 000 15 Landgraviate of Hesse Darmstadt 50 000Duchy of Mecklenburg Schwerin Nassau Weilburg Prince Bishopric of Wurzburg County of Oldenburg Duchy of Luxemburg Imperial County of Reuss Principality of Lippe Duchy of Mecklenburg Strelitz Anhalt Dessau Arenberg Anhalt Bernburg Anhalt Kothen County of Schaumburg Liechtenstein Prince Archbishopric of Salzburg Principality of Calenberg Electorate of Mainz 100 000 22 Franche Comte Electorate of Trier 100 000 22 Electorate of Cologne 100 000 22 Duchy of Brunswick Luneburg Saxe Lauenburg Prince Bishopric of Munster Archbishopric of Magdeburg Hamburg 20 000 23 Free City of Lubeck Duchy of Schleswig Prince bishopric of Lubeck Prince Bishopric of Trent Principality of Ansbach 27 000 000 34 000 000 5 2 Iberian Union and possessions subdivisions Spanish America c 9 745 000 24 Kingdom of Spain 8 240 000 25 Kingdom of Naples 3 000 000 15 Spanish Netherlands Belgium 1 600 000 Duchy of Milan 1 350 000 Kingdom of Portugal 1 100 000Kingdom of Sicily 1 100 000 15 Captaincy General of the Philippines 791 000Franche Comte Goa state 250 000 26 Diu Viceroyalty of Sardinia 300 000 15 Malacca 195 000 15 Viceroyalty of Brazil 45 000Bahrain 54 000Duchy of Luxemburg Andorra 28 745 000 5 0 Ottoman Empire 4 27 subdivisions Anatolia and East Thrace 7 275 000Egypt Eyalet 5 000 000Ottoman Algeria 2 250 000Greece 28 1 500 000Bulgaria 1 250 000Syria 1 175 000Iraq 1 070 000Serbia 1 057 000Beylik of Tunis 1 000 000Ottoman Hungary 900 000Ottoman Tripolitania 500 000Bosnia Eyalet 449 000Sidon Eyalet 292 000Palestine 352 000Cyprus 98 000Habesh Eyalet Ottoman Albania 29 200 000 vassal states Principality of Transylvania 965 000 30 Principality of Moldavia 440 000 31 Principality of Wallachia 300 000 31 Crimean Khanate 2 740 000 Sultanate of Aceh 28 740 000 5 0 Kingdom of France 4 subdivisions Kingdom of Navarre AndorraViscounty of Bearn 20 000 000 3 5 Kingdom of Morocco and possessions 4 32 d subdivisions Pashalik of Timbuktu 10 810 860Morocco 2 250 000 13 060 860 2 3 Tokugawa Japan 33 12 000 000 2 1 Joseon 34 11 000 000 1 6 Tsardom of Russia 35 9 000 000 1 6 Safavid Iran 36 under 5 000 000 to near 10 000 000 1 3 Habsburg Monarchy 37 subdivisions Bohemian Crown 2 950 000 Archduchy of Austria 2 100 000Kingdom of Hungary 1 800 000Kingdom of Croatia est 647 000Duchy of Carniola 290 000 7 800 000 1 3 Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth 38 subdivisions Royal Prussia Duchy of Courland and Semigallia Duchy of Livonia 7 950 000 1 4 England and possessions 39 subdivisions Kingdom of England 4 150 000Kingdom of Ireland 1 200 000Wales 250 000 5 600 000 1 0 Le dynasty Đại Việt 40 5 500 000 0 9 Taungoo dynasty Burma 41 42 e subdivisions Shan States 3 500 000 0 6 Ahom kingdom 2 000 000 3 000 000 46 0 3 0 5 Northern Yuan 47 2 760 000 0 5 Malla 4 2 750 000 0 5 Ayutthaya Kingdom Siam 48 c 2 500 000 0 4 Ethiopian Empire 4 2 104 000 0 4 Republic of Venice 49 2 000 000 0 3 Jianzhou Jurchen Confederation 50 lt 2 000 000 0 3 Dutch Republic 4 1 500 000 0 3 Cambodia 4 1 419 000 0 2 Sweden 51 subdivisions Kingdom of Sweden 760 000Grand Duchy of Finland 500 000Duchy of Estonia 101 000 1 361 000 0 2 Denmark Norway 52 53 54 subdivisions Denmark 650 000Norway 400 000Iceland 50 000Greenland 1 100 000 0 2 Kingdom of Scotland 55 800 000 0 14 Republic of Genoa 14 650 000 0 11 Kingdom of Lan Xang 4 319 000 0 055 Malay Sultanates of Johor Kedah Pattani and Perak 56 lt 200 000 together 0 133 Kingdom of Mrauk U 160 000 57 58 f 0 107 Arab Emirates 4 35 000 0 006 Nan Madol Saudeleur dynasty 25 000 59 0 004 Rapa Nui Easter Island 60 15 000 0 003 The source used here calculates the said nations population by modern day borders so the estimates are likely inaccurate This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items January 2016 See also editList of countries by population List of countries by population in 1000 List of countries by population in 1500 List of countries by population in 1700 List of countries by population in 1800 List of countries by population in 1900Notes edit In 1600 the Mughals ruled roughly 50 of India which had a population of 113 million at the time according to Avakov Combining Avakov s listed populations for Germany 16m Austria 2 5m Czechia 3 242m Belgium 1 6m Switzerland 1m Slovenia 0 248m and a third of Italy 4 3m yields 28 9 million inhabitants Avakov p 15 This total does not include the Empire s various now French territories such as Franche Comte 6 300 square miles ruled by the Spanish Habsburgs the departements of Nord and Pas de Calais 4 800 square miles together ruled by the Spanish Habsburgs as part of the Spanish Netherlands Alsace 3 200 square miles or the County of Nice 1 500 square miles ruled by the Savoyards While still claimed by the Emperor this total also does not count the independent Dutch Republic An estimate by the Austrian War Archives in the first decade of the 18th century most scholars agree that the areas of the Empire covered had a similar population in both the early 17th and early 18th centuries 5 gives a population of 28 million for the German lands Bohemia and the Spanish Netherlands which would add up to 33 5 million for the whole Empire in the early 17th century excluding said now French territories Italian and Swiss populations listed below for their individual states However Benecke considers the Austrian War Archives figure to be overgenerous 6 Yet another source gives a population of 20 million for Germany Austria and Bohemia 7 Adding to that figure the already listed ones for the Spanish Netherlands Switzerland and Italy equals a population of about 27 million plus the French territories A figure of 800 000 is given by Smith for Savoy in Italy with no clarification as to whether that refers to the whole Savoyard state or just its Italian territories of Piedmont and the Aosta Valley thus excluding Savoy proper and the County of Nice However another source 11 gives early 17th century Piedmont s population as 700 000 and Savoy proper s as 400 000 with no numbers given for Aosta or Nice indicating that Smith s use of Savoy in Italy does indeed only refer to Piedmont and Aosta The Songhai kingdom ruled roughly 1 400 000 sq km of land or 540 543 022 sq miles in the 15th and 16th centuries Around the same time West Africa s population density was 20 persons per sq mile an average between the estimates of Manning and Niane Lieberman 1984 18 No large scale censuses of any kind were conducted Extant censuses from the period cover just four corridors of settlement in Lower Burma Bassein Myaungmya in the western delta Martaban Moulmein littoral Myan Aung to Danubyu in the eastern delta Pegu Syriam Dagon capital region Lieberman 1984 21 22 In 1581 a regional census of the 16 leading townships of Lower Burma showed a combined population of less than 28 000 households 200 000 people Lieberman 1984 20 The first ever Irrawaddy valley wide census was conducted only in 1638 and the results did not survive Estimates above of the population of the empire point to over 6 million In 1600 the most populous region of the erstwhile empire was Upper Burma 1 5 million 43 followed by the Shan high lands 1 million 44 and Lower Burma 0 5 million 45 for a total of at least 5 5 million Estimates for Lan Na Lan Xang and Manipur are not known The size of the population of the empire before the devastating wars of 1584 99 was probably over 6 million The population of the Pegu capital region according to a 1581 census was only about 200 000 45 Southeast Asian polities were traditionally centered on the capital The capital Mrauk U had a population of 160 000 in 1635 References editThis article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations January 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Rowe William T 2009 China s Last Empire The Great Qing p 91 Yi Zhongtian November 2007 The End of the Empire Fudan University Press p 254 Irfan Habib Dharma Kumar Tapan Raychaudhuri 1987 The Cambridge Economic History of India PDF Vol 1 Cambridge University Press p 170 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c d e f g h i j k Avakov Alexander V April 2015 Two Thousand Years of Economic Statistics Volume 1 ISBN 9781628941012 Retrieved 4 May 2016 Wilson p 795 G Benecke Society and Politics in Germany 1500 1750 Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1974 p 162 J P Sommerville The Holy Roman Empire in the Seventeenth Century Archived from the original on 31 January 2014 Retrieved 21 May 2017 Archived Wilson p 788 1 6 million only counts Belgium the Spanish Netherlands also included Luxembourg and bits of modern Germany and France Preserved Smith The Social Background of the Reformation 1920 Page 19 Gregory Hanlon The Hero of Italy Odoardo Farnese Duke of Parma his Soldiers and his Subjects in the Thirty Years War Routledge May 2014 Page 87 Wilson Peter H 2009 Europe s Tragedy A History of the Thirty Years War Allen Lane Page 18 Wilson p 23 a b Smith p 19 500 000 on the mainland and 150 000 in Corsica a b c d e f Smith p 19 Wilson p 18 Wilson p 18 Smith p 19 the population of Parma Piacenza and Modena together is given as 500 000 Roughly modern Slovenia Wilson p 870 The Rheinfels branch died out in 1583 and was shared between the other three As senior line Hessen Kassel possessed 6 100 km 2 with 160 000 inhabitants while Darmstadt had 1 300 km 2 and 50 000 inhabitants and Marburg the remaining quarter Hesse Kassel and Marburg were integrated in 1604 Wilson p 169 a b c Wilson p 17 Smith p 17 Figures derived from Angel Rosenblat 1902 1984 Avakov Alexander V April 2015 Two Thousand Years of Economic Statistics Volume 1 ISBN 9781628941012 Retrieved 4 May 2016 M N Pearson The New Cambridge History of India The Portuguese in India 1988 Pages 92 93 In 1524 there were 450 Portuguese householders in Goa city and in 1540 about 1800 The former figure refers to pure Portuguese while the latter includes descendants of Portuguese and local women in other words mestizos There were also 3 600 soldiers in the town in 1540 Later in the 1540s at the time of St Francis Xavier the city population included 10 000 Indian Christians 3 000 4 000 Portuguese and many non Christians while outside the city the rest of Ilhas contained 50 000 inhabitants 80 percent of them Hindu Recent estimates put the city population at 60 000 in the 1580s and about 75 000 at 1600 the latter figure including 1 500 Portuguese and mestizos 20 000 Hindus and the rest local Christians Africans and others In the 1630s the total population of the Old Conquests Ilhas Bardes and Salcette was perhaps a little more than a quarter of a million Casualties in the endless skirmishes with Malabaris and others were often substantial Cholera and malaria also took their toll one estimate claims that from 1604 to 1634 25 000 soldiers died in the Royal Hospital in Goa religiya karaimov PDF At the time divided between the Eyalet of the Archipelago and the Rumelia Eyalet A Maddison The World Economy Volume 1 A Millennial Perspective 2001 Keul Istvan 2009 Early Modern Religious Communities in East Central Europe Ethnic Diversity Denominational Plurality and Corporative Politics in the Principality of Transylvania 1526 1691 BRILL p 41 ISBN 978 9004176522 a b Murgescu Bogdan 14 June 2016 Romania si Europa Polirom pp 75 76 ISBN 9789734620418 Walker Sheila S 2001 African Roots American Cultures Africa in the Creation of the Americas Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 7425 0165 2 Population Trends in Tokugawa Japan 1600 1868l https brill com view book 9789004212930 Bej 9781906876098 i 382 009 xml a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty url help Maddison 27 July 2016 Growth of World Population GDP and GDP Per Capita before 1820 PDF Retrieved 29 September 2017 Avakov p 15 the figure is 10 1 million for all of modern European Russia including the steppe and Caucasian polities that were not yet under the Tsardom of Russia s control Dale Stephen Frederic 15 August 2002 Indian Merchants and Eurasian Trade 1600 1750 ISBN 9780521525978 Retrieved 15 April 2016 Wilson p 788 Charles A Frazee World History the Easy Way Barron s Educational Series ISBN 0 8120 9766 1 Google Print 50 European Population History Retrieved 30 June 2016 Li 1998 p 160 171 Lieberman Victor B 14 July 2014 Burmese Administrative Cycles Anarchy and Conquest c 1580 1760 Princeton University Press p 18 21 ISBN 978 1 4008 5585 8 Lieberman Victor B Victor Lieberman 14 May 2014 Strange Parallels Southeast Asia in Global Context C 800 1830 Cambridge University Press p 52 175 ISBN 978 0 511 65854 9 Lieberman 2003 52 175 Lieberman 2003 175 a b Lieberman 1984 21 It is suggested that the actual population of the Ahom territories up to the Manas ranged from two to three millions over one and a half century ending 1750 Guha Medieval Northeast India Polity Society and Economy 1200 1750 A D pp 26 30 Chuluun S 2014 Mongols XYII early XX centuries Lieberman Victor 2003 Strange Parallels Volume 1 Integration on the Mainland Southeast Asia in Global Context c 800 1830 Studies in Comparative World History Kindle ed p 295 ISBN 978 0521800860 Siam s population must have increased from c 2 500 000 in 1600 to 4 000 000 in 1800 Gregory Hanlon Twilight of a Military Tradition 1997 p 122 Crossley Pamela Kyle Siu Helen F Sutton Donald S 2006 01 19 Empire at the Margins Culture Ethnicity and Frontier in Early Modern China University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 23015 6 The combined population of Sweden 760 000 Finland 400 000 and Estonia 101 000 Avakov p 16 Historical Population of Scandinavia Retrieved 15 April 2016 History of Iceland Archived from the original on 27 February 2021 Retrieved 15 April 2016 Grigg D B 18 December 1980 Population Growth and Agrarian Change An Historical Perspective ISBN 9780521296359 Retrieved 15 April 2016 R E Tyson Population Patterns in M Lynch ed The Oxford Companion to Scottish History New York 2001 pp 487 8 Avakov p 17 population within the borders of all modern Malaysia encompassing all these states areas on the Malay peninsula plus a chunk of Borneo is given as 191 000 while Singapore s is 3 000 Magazine Smithsonian Hammer Joshua The Hidden City of Myanmar Smithsonian Magazine The Lost City of Mrauk U Once As Prosperous as London Seasia co Good News from Southeast Asia 23 January 2018 Nan Madol U S National Park Service www nps gov West Barbara A 2008 Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Asia and Oceania Archived 2016 04 12 at the Wayback Machine Infobase Publishing p 684 ISBN 0816071098 Li Tana 1998 Nguyen Cochinchina Southern Vietnam in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries Cornell University Press ISBN 9781501732577 Kurt Witthauer Bevolkerung der Erde 1958 Calendario atlante de Agostini anno 99 2003 The Columbia gazetteer of the world 1998 Britannica book of the year world data 1997 This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items March 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of countries by population in 1600 amp oldid 1183933593, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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