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Liverpool

Liverpool is a city and metropolitan borough in Merseyside, North West England. The metropolitan borough had a population of 486,100 in 2021, and it is part of a larger metropolitan area with a population of 2.24 million in 2001.[11][12] The city is located on the eastern side of the Mersey Estuary, adjacent to the Irish Sea, and is approximately 178 miles (286 km) from London. It was historically in Lancashire and is part of the Liverpool City Region today.

Liverpool
Nicknames: 
  • The Capital City of North Wales[1]
  • The Second Capital of Ireland[2]
  • The World Capital of Pop[3]
  • The World in One City[4]
Motto(s): 
Latin: Deus Nobis Haec Otia Fecit, lit.'God has granted us this ease'
Liverpool shown within Merseyside
Liverpool
Location within England
Liverpool
Location within the United Kingdom
Liverpool
Location in Europe
Coordinates: 53°24′27″N 02°59′31″W / 53.40750°N 2.99194°W / 53.40750; -2.99194
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
CountryEngland
RegionNorth West
City regionLiverpool
Ceremonial countyMerseyside
Historic countyLancashire
Founded1207
City status1880
Administrative HQCunard Building
Civic suiteLiverpool Town Hall
Government
 • TypeMetropolitan borough with leader and cabinet
 • BodyLiverpool City Council
 • ControlLabour
 • LeaderLiam Robinson (L)
 • Lord MayorMary Rasmussen
 • Chief ExecutiveAndrew Lewis
 • House of Commons
Area
 • City51.5 sq mi (133.5 km2)
 • Land43.2 sq mi (111.8 km2)
 • Urban
77.1 sq mi (199.6 km2)
 • Rank185th
Elevation
230 ft (70 m)
Population
 (2021)
 • City486,100[5]
 • Rank12th
 • Density11,220/sq mi (4,332/km2)
 • Urban
864,122 (2,011)[8]
 • Urban density11,210/sq mi (4,329/km2)
 • Metro
2,241,000 (Liverpool-Birkenhead) (2,011)
Demonyms
  • Liverpudlian
  • Scouser
Ethnicity (2021)
 • Ethnic groups
List
Religion (2021)
 • Religion
List
Time zoneUTC+0 (GMT)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+1 (BST)
Postcode area
Dialling code0151
ISO 3166 codeGB-LIV
GSS codeE08000012
ITL codeTLD72
GVA2021 estimate[10]
 • Total£14.3 billion
 • Per capita£29,489
GDP (nominal)2021 estimate[10]
 • Total£15.9 billion
 • Per capita£32,841
Websiteliverpool.gov.uk

Liverpool was established as a borough in 1207 and became a significant town in the late seventeenth century, when the port at nearby Chester began to silt up. The Port of Liverpool became heavily involved in the Atlantic slave trade, with the first slave ship departing from the town in 1699. The port also imported much of the cotton required by the neighbouring Lancashire textile mills, and became a major departure point for English and Irish emigrants to North America. In the nineteenth century, Liverpool rose to global economic importance at the forefront of the Industrial Revolution, and built the first intercity railway, the first non-combustible warehouse system, and a pioneering elevated electrical railway; it was granted city status in 1880. In common with many British cities, the city entered a period of decline in the mid-twentieth century after which it experienced significant regeneration when it was selected as the European Capital of Culture in 2008.[13][14]

Liverpool's modern economy is diversified. The city has a significant influence on the knowledge sector, maritime industry, tourism, culture, hospitality, healthcare industry, life sciences, advanced manufacturing, the creative and digital sectors.[15][16][17] The city contains the second-highest number of national museums, listed buildings, and listed parks in the UK after London.[18] Its architecture means the city is often used as a filming location, and in 2022 it was one of top five cities in the UK most visited by overseas tourists. Liverpool is England's only UNESCO City of Music and has produced many notable musicians, including the Beatles. In sports, the city is widely noted as the home of Premier League football teams Everton F.C. and Liverpool F.C. The Port of Liverpool was the fourth-largest in the UK in 2020, and numerous shipping and freight lines have headquarters and offices in the city.

Residents of Liverpool are often called "Scousers" in reference to scouse, a local stew made popular by sailors in the city; the name is also applied to the distinct Liverpool accent and dialect. The city has a culturally and ethnically diverse population, and historically attracted many immigrants from Ireland, Norway, and Wales. It is also home to the oldest black community in the UK, the oldest Chinese community in Europe and the first mosque in England, now restored.[19]

Toponymy

The name comes from the Old English lifer, meaning thick or muddy water, and pōl, meaning a pool or creek, and is first recorded around 1190 as Liuerpul.[20][21] According to the Cambridge Dictionary of English Place-Names, "The original reference was to a pool or tidal creek now filled up into which two streams drained".[22] The place appearing as Leyrpole, in a legal record of 1418, may also refer to Liverpool.[23] Other origins of the name have been suggested, including "elverpool", a reference to the large number of eels in the Mersey.[24] The adjective "Liverpudlian" was first recorded in 1833.[21]

Although the Old English origin of the name Liverpool is beyond dispute, claims are sometimes made that the name Liverpool is of Welsh origin, but these are without foundation. The Welsh name for Liverpool is Lerpwl, from a former English local form Leerpool. This is a reduction of the form "Leverpool" with the loss of the intervocalic [v] (seen in other English names and words e.g. Daventry (Northamptonshire) > Danetry, never-do-well > ne’er-do-well).

In the 19th century, some Welsh publications used the name "Lle'r Pwll" ("(the) place (of) the pool"), a reinterpretation of Lerpwl, probably in the belief that "Lle'r Pwll" was the original form.

Another name, which is widely known even today, is Llynlleifiad, again a 19th-century coining. "Llyn" is pool, but "lleifiad" has no obvious meaning. G. Melville Richards (1910–1973), a pioneer of scientific toponymy in Wales, in "Place Names of North Wales",[25] does not attempt to explain it beyond noting that "lleifiad" is used as a Welsh equivalent of "Liver".

A derivative form of a learned borrowing into Welsh (*llaf) of Latin lāma (slough, bog, fen) to give "lleifiad" is possible, but unproven.

History

 
The earliest known image of Liverpool, in 1680
 
A map of Liverpool's original seven streets (north to the left)
 
Bluecoat Chambers, completed in 1725, the oldest surviving building in Liverpool city centre

Early history

In the Middle Ages, Liverpool existed firstly as farmland within the West Derby Hundred[26] before growing in to a small town of farmers, fishermen and tradesmen and tactical army base for King John of England. The town was planned with its own castle, although due to outbreaks of disease and its subordinance to the nearby Roman port of Chester, the town's growth and prosperity stagnated until the late 17th and early 18th centuries. Substantial growth took place in the mid-late 18th century when the town became the most heavily involved European port in the Atlantic slave trade.[27]

King John's letters patent of 1207 announced the foundation of the borough of Liverpool (then spelt as Liuerpul). There is no evidence that the place had previously been a centre of any trade. The creation of the borough was probably due to King John deciding it would be a convenient place to embark men and supplies for his Irish campaigns, in particular John's Irish campaign of 1209.[28][29] The original street plan of Liverpool is said to have been designed by King John near the same time it was granted a royal charter, making it a borough. The original seven streets were laid out in the shape of a double cross: Bank Street (now Water Street), Castle Street, Chapel Street, Dale Street, Juggler Street (now High Street), Moor Street (now Tithebarn Street) and Whiteacre Street (now Old Hall Street).[29] Liverpool Castle was built before 1235, it survived until it was demolished in the 1720s.[30] By the middle of the 16th century, the population was still around 600, although this was likely to have fallen from an earlier peak of 1000 people due to slow trade and the effects of the plague.[31][32][33]

In the 17th century, there was slow progress in trade and population growth. Battles for control of the town were waged during the English Civil War, including a brief siege in 1644.[34] In 1699, the same year as its first recorded slave ship, Liverpool Merchant, set sail for Africa,[35] Liverpool was made a parish by Act of Parliament. But arguably, the legislation of 1695 that reformed the Liverpool council was of more significance to its subsequent development.[36] Since Roman times, the nearby city of Chester on the River Dee had been the region's principal port on the Irish Sea. However, as the Dee began to silt up, maritime trade from Chester became increasingly difficult and shifted towards Liverpool on the neighbouring River Mersey. The first of the Liverpool docks was constructed in 1715, and the system of docks gradually grew into a large interconnected system.[37]

As trade from the West Indies, including sugar, surpassed that of Ireland and Europe, and as the River Dee continued to silt up, Liverpool began to grow with increasing rapidity. The first commercial wet dock was built in Liverpool in 1715.[38][39] Substantial profits from the slave trade and tobacco helped the town to prosper and rapidly grow, although several prominent local men, including William Rathbone, William Roscoe and Edward Rushton, were at the forefront of the local abolitionist movement.[40]

19th century

 
Inaugural journey of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway in 1830, the first-ever commercial railway line in the world
 
Lime Street, Liverpool, in the 1890s, St.George's Hall to the left, Great North Western Hotel to the right, Walker Art Gallery and Sessions House in the background. Statues of Prince Albert, Disraeli, Queen Victoria and Wellington's Column in the middle ground.

The 19th century saw Liverpool rise to global economic importance. Pioneering, world first, technology and civic facilities launched in the city to serve the accelerating population which was fuelled by an influx of ethnic and religious communities from all around the world.

By the start of the 19th century, a large volume of trade was passing through Liverpool, and the construction of major buildings reflected this wealth. In 1830, Liverpool and Manchester became the first cities to have an intercity rail link, through the Liverpool and Manchester Railway. The population continued to rise rapidly, especially during the 1840s when Irish migrants began arriving by the hundreds of thousands as a result of the Great Famine. While many Irish settled during this time in the city, a large percentage also emigrated to the United States or moved to the industrial centres of Lancashire, Yorkshire and the Midlands.[41]

In her poetical illustration "Liverpool" (1832), which celebrates the city's worldwide commerce, Letitia Elizabeth Landon refers specifically to the Macgregor Laird expedition to the Niger River, at that time in progress.[42] This is to a painting by Samuel Austin, Liverpool, from the Mersey.[43]

Britain was a major market for cotton imported from the Deep South of the United States, which fed the textile industry in the country. Given the crucial place cotton held in the city's economy, during the American Civil War Liverpool was, in the words of historian Sven Beckert, "the most pro-Confederate place in the world outside the Confederacy itself."[44] Liverpool merchants helped to bring out cotton from ports blockaded by the Union Navy, built ships of war for the Confederacy, and supplied the South with military equipment and credit.[45]

During the war, the Confederate Navy ship, the CSS Alabama, was built at Birkenhead on the Mersey, and the CSS Shenandoah surrendered there (being the final surrender at the end of the war). The city was also the center of Confederate purchasing war materiel, including arms and ammunition, uniforms, and naval supplies to be smuggled by British blockade runners to the South.[46]

For periods during the 19th century, the wealth of Liverpool exceeded that of London,[47] and Liverpool's Custom House was the single largest contributor to the British Exchequer.[48] Liverpool was the only British city ever to have its own Whitehall office.[49] During this century, at least 40% of the world's entire trade passed through Liverpool.[50]

In the early 19th century, Liverpool played a major role in the Antarctic sealing industry, in recognition of which Liverpool Beach in the South Shetland Islands is named after the city.[51]

As early as 1851, the city was described as "the New York of Europe".[52] During the late 19th and early 20th century, Liverpool was attracting immigrants from across Europe. This resulted in the construction of a diverse array of religious buildings in the city for the new ethnic and religious groups, many of which are still in use today. The Deutsche Kirche Liverpool, Greek Orthodox Church of St Nicholas, Gustav Adolf Church and Princes Road Synagogue were all established in the 1800s to serve Liverpool's growing German, Greek, Nordic and Jewish communities, respectively. One of Liverpool's oldest surviving churches, St. Peter's Roman Catholic Church, served the Polish community in its final years as a place of worship.

20th century

 
Liverpool's Lime Street area pictured from above in 1946

The 20th century saw Liverpool's established rank as a global economic powerhouse challenged. Its strategic location as an international seaport made it particularly vulnerable in two World wars. Economic depressions (both in the United Kingdom and across the world), changing housing patterns and containerisation in the maritime industry contributed to a downtrend in the city's productivity and prosperity. Despite this, the city's influence on global popular culture excelled and by the end of the century, the continuing process of urban renewal paved the way for the redefined modern city of the 21st century.

The period after the Great War was marked by social unrest, as society grappled with the massive war losses of young men, as well as trying to re-integrate veterans into civilian life and the economy. Unemployment and poor living standards greeted many ex-servicemen. Union organising and strikes took place in numerous locations, including a police strike in Liverpool among the City Police. Numerous colonial soldiers and sailors from Africa and India, who had served with the British Armed Forces, settled in Liverpool and other port cities. In June 1919, they were subject to attack by whites in racial riots; residents in the port included Swedish immigrants, and both groups had to compete with native people from Liverpool for jobs and housing. In this period, race riots also took place in other port cities.[53]

 
Liverpool was the port of registry of the ill-fated ocean liner Titanic. The ship sank on its maiden voyage in April 1912, with the loss of 1,517 lives (including numerous Liverpudlians). A Memorial to the Engine Room Heroes of the Titanic is located on the city's waterfront.

The Housing Act 1919 resulted in mass council housing being built across Liverpool during the 1920s and 1930s. In the 1920s and 1930s, as much as 15% of the city's population (around 140,000 people) was relocated from the inner-city to new purpose built, lower density suburban housing estates, based on the belief that this would improve their standard of living, though the overall benefits have been contested.[54][55] Numerous private homes were also built during this era. During the Great Depression of the early 1930s, unemployment peaked at around 30% in the city. Liverpool was the site of Britain's first provincial airport, operating from 1930.

During the Second World War, the critical strategic importance of Liverpool was recognised by both Hitler and Churchill. The city was heavily bombed by the Germans, suffering a blitz second only to London's.[56] The pivotal Battle of the Atlantic was planned, fought and won from Liverpool.[57]

The Luftwaffe made 80 air raids on Merseyside, killing 2,500 people and causing damage to almost half the homes in the metropolitan area. Significant rebuilding followed the war, including massive housing estates and the Seaforth Dock, the largest dock project in Britain. Since 1952, Liverpool has been twinned with Cologne, Germany, a city which also suffered severe aerial bombing during the war. In the 1950s and 1960s, much of the immediate reconstruction that took place in the city centre proved to be deeply unpopular. The historic portions of the city that had survived German bombing suffered extensive destruction during urban renewal. It has been argued that the so-called 'Shankland Plan' of the 1960s, named after the town planner Graeme Shankland, led to compromised town planning and vast road-building schemes that devastated and divided inner city neighbourhoods. Concrete brutalist architecture, compromised visions, botched projects and grand designs that were never realised became the subject of condemnation. Historian Raphael Samuel labelled Graeme Shankland "the butcher of Liverpool".[58][59][60][61]

A significant West Indian black community has existed in the city since the first two decades of the 20th century. Like most British cities and industrialised towns, Liverpool became home to a significant number of Commonwealth immigrants, beginning after World War I with colonial soldiers and sailors who had served in the area. More immigrants arrived after World War II, mostly settling in older inner-city areas such as Toxteth, where housing was less expensive. The black population of Liverpool was recorded at 1.90% in 2011. In the 2021 Census, 5.2% described themselves as black African, Caribbean, mixed white and black African, mixed white and Caribbean or 'other black'.[62][63]

The construction of suburban public housing expanded after the Second World War. Some of the older inner-city areas were redeveloped for new homes.

 
Mathew Street is one of many tourist attractions related to the Beatles, and the location of The Cavern Club and Liverpool Wall of Fame

In the 1960s, Liverpool was the centre of the "Merseybeat" sound, which became synonymous with the Beatles and fellow Liverpudlian rock bands. Influenced by American rhythm and blues and rock music, they also in turn strongly affected American music. The Beatles became internationally known in the early 1960s and performed around the world together; they were, and continue to be, the most commercially successful and musically influential band in popular history. Their co-founder, singer, and composer John Lennon was killed in New York City in 1980. Liverpool Airport was renamed after him in 2002, the first British airport to be named in honour of an individual.[64][65]

Previously part of Lancashire, and a county borough from 1889, Liverpool became a metropolitan borough within the newly created metropolitan county of Merseyside, in 1974. From the mid-1970s onwards, Liverpool's docks and traditional manufacturing industries declined due to restructuring of shipping and heavy industry, causing massive losses of jobs. The advent of containerisation meant that the city's docks became largely obsolete, and dock workers were made unemployed. By the early 1980s, unemployment rates in Liverpool were among the highest in the UK,[66] standing at 17% by January 1982 although, this was about half the level of unemployment that had affected the city during the Great Depression some 50 years previously.[67] During this period, Liverpool became a hub of fierce left-wing opposition to the central government in London.[68] Liverpool in the 1980s has been labelled as Britain's 'shock city'. Once the second city of the British Empire which rivalled the capital city in global significance, Liverpool had collapsed in to its 'nadir' at the depths of post-colonial, post-industrial Britain.[69][70] In the late 20th century, Liverpool's economy began to recover. The late 1980s saw the opening of a regenerated Albert Dock which proved to be a catalyst for further regeneration.[71] In the mid-1990s, the city enjoyed growth rates higher than the national average. At the end of the 20th century, Liverpool was concentrating on regeneration, a process that continues today.

21st century

 
The Liverpool Cruise Terminal and surrounding office and residential developments, part of the Liverpool Waters megaproject

Ongoing regeneration combined with the hosting of internationally significant events has helped to re-purpose Liverpool as one of the most visited, tourist orientated, cities in the United Kingdom. City leaders are focussing on long-term strategies to grow the city's population and economy, while national government explores the continuous potential for devolution in the city.

In 2002, Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh visited Liverpool to mark the Golden Jubilee. On speaking to an audience at Liverpool Town Hall, the Queen recognised Liverpool as "one of the most distinctive and energetic parts of the United Kingdom", and paid tribute to the city's "major orchestras, world-class museums and galleries". She also acknowledged Liverpool's bid to become the European Capital of Culture.[72][73] To celebrate the Golden Jubilee of Elizabeth II in 2002, the conservation charity Plantlife organised a competition to choose county flowers; the sea-holly was Liverpool's final choice. The initiative was designed to highlight growing threats to the UK's flower species and also ask the public about which flowers best represented their county.[74]

Capitalising on the popularity of 1960s rock groups, such as the Beatles, as well as the city's world-class art galleries, museums and landmarks, tourism and culture have become a significant factor in Liverpool's economy.

 
Modern developments on the Liverpool Waterfront

In 2004, property developer Grosvenor started the Paradise Project, a £920 million development based on Paradise Street. This produced one of the most significant changes to Liverpool's city centre since the post-war reconstruction. Renamed as 'Liverpool One,' the centre opened in May 2008.

In 2007, events and celebrations took place in honour of the 800th anniversary of the founding of the borough of Liverpool. Liverpool was designated as a joint European Capital of Culture for 2008. The celebrations included the erection of La Princesse, a large mechanical spider 20 metres high and weighing 37 tonnes, which represented the "eight legs" of Liverpool: honour, history, music, the Mersey, the ports, governance, sunshine and culture. La Princesse roamed the streets of the city during the festivities, and concluded by entering the Queensway Tunnel.

Spearheaded by the multi-billion-pound Liverpool ONE development, regeneration continued throughout the 2010s. Some of the most significant redevelopment projects included new buildings in the Commercial District, King's Dock, Mann Island, around Lime Street, the Baltic Triangle, RopeWalks, and Edge Lane.[75][76][77]

 
Headquarters of Liverpool City Region Combined Authority, which invests in Liverpool's major infrastructure and regeneration projects

Changes to Liverpool's governance took place in 2014. The local authority of Liverpool City Council decided to pool its power and resources with surrounding boroughs through the formation of the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority in a form of devolution. With a devolved budget granted by central government, the authority now oversees and invests in foremost strategic affairs throughout the Liverpool City Region, including major regeneration projects. The authority, along with Liverpool City Council itself, has embarked on long-term plans to grow the population and economy of the city.[78][79][80][81]

By the 2020s, urban regeneration throughout the city continues. Liverpool Waters, a mixed-use development in the city's disused northern docklands, has been identified as one of the largest megaprojects in the UK's history. Everton's new stadium at Bramley-Moore Dock was regarded as the largest single-site private sector development in the United Kingdom at the time of construction.[82][83]

Major events, business and political conferences regularly take place in the city and form an important part of the economy. In June 2014, Prime Minister David Cameron launched the International Festival for Business in Liverpool, the world's largest business event in 2014,[84] and the largest in the UK since the Festival of Britain in 1951.[85] The Labour Party has chosen Liverpool numerous times since the mid 2010s for their annual Labour Party Conference. Liverpool hosted the Eurovision Song Contest 2023.

Inventions and innovations

 
The Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, the first such school in the world

Liverpool has been a centre of invention and innovation. Railways, transatlantic steamships, municipal trams,[86] and electric trains were all pioneered in Liverpool as modes of mass transit. In 1829 and 1836, the first railway tunnels in the world were constructed under Liverpool (Wapping Tunnel). From 1950 to 1951, the world's first scheduled passenger helicopter service ran between Liverpool and Cardiff.[87]

The first School for the Blind,[88] Mechanics' Institute,[89] High School for Girls,[90][91] council house,[92] and Juvenile Court[93] were all founded in Liverpool. Charities such as the RSPCA,[94] NSPCC,[95] Age Concern,[96] Relate, and Citizen's Advice Bureau[97] all evolved from work in the city.

The first lifeboat station, public bath and wash-house,[98] sanitary act,[99] medical officer for health (William Henry Duncan), district nurse, slum clearance,[100] purpose-built ambulance,[101] X-ray medical diagnosis,[102] school of tropical medicine (Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine), motorised municipal fire-engine,[103] free school meal,[104] cancer research centre,[105] and zoonosis research centre[106] all originated in Liverpool. The first British Nobel Prize was awarded in 1902 to Ronald Ross, professor at the School of Tropical Medicine, the first school of its kind in the world.[107] Orthopaedic surgery was pioneered in Liverpool by Hugh Owen Thomas,[108] and modern medical anaesthetics by Thomas Cecil Gray.

The world's first integrated sewer system was constructed in Liverpool by James Newlands, appointed in 1847 as the UK's first borough engineer.[109][110] Liverpool also founded the UK's first Underwriters' Association[111] and the first Institute of Accountants. The Western world's first financial derivatives (cotton futures) were traded on the Liverpool Cotton Exchange in the late 1700s.[112]

 
Oriel Chambers, the first "modern" building in the world

In the arts, Liverpool was home to the first lending library (The Lyceum), athenaeum society (Liverpool Athenaeum), arts centre (Bluecoat Chambers),[113] and public art conservation centre (National Conservation Centre).[114] It is also home to the UK's oldest surviving classical orchestra (Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra)[115] and repertory theatre (Liverpool Playhouse).[116]

In 1864, Peter Ellis built the world's first iron-framed, curtain-walled office building, Oriel Chambers, which was a prototype of the skyscraper. The UK's first purpose-built department store was Compton House, completed in 1867 for the retailer J.R. Jeffrey.[117] It was the largest store in the world at the time.[118]

Between 1862 and 1867, Liverpool held an annual Grand Olympic Festival. Devised by John Hulley and Charles Pierre Melly, these games were the first to be wholly amateur in nature and international in outlook.[119][120] The programme of the first modern Olympiad in Athens in 1896 was almost identical to that of the Liverpool Olympics.[121] In 1865, Hulley co-founded the National Olympian Association in Liverpool, a forerunner of the British Olympic Association. Its articles of foundation provided the framework for the International Olympic Charter.

Sir Alfred Lewis Jones, a shipowner, introduced bananas to the UK via Liverpool's docks in 1884.[122] The Mersey Railway, opened in 1886, incorporated the world's first tunnel under a tidal estuary[123] and the world's first deep-level underground stations (Liverpool James Street railway station).

 
Liverpool was the first city outside London to be chosen to have an official Blue plaque and now has the largest number outside London[124][125]

In 1889, borough engineer John Alexander Brodie invented the football goal net. He was also a pioneer in the use of pre-fabricated housing[126] and oversaw the construction of the UK's first ring road (A5058) and intercity highway (East Lancashire Road), as well as the Queensway Tunnel linking Liverpool and Birkenhead. Described as "the eighth wonder of the world" at the time of its construction, it was the longest underwater tunnel in the world for 24 years.

In 1897, the Lumière brothers filmed Liverpool,[127] including what is believed to be the world's first tracking shot,[128] taken from the Liverpool Overhead Railway, the world's first elevated electrified railway. The Overhead Railway was the first railway in the world to use electric multiple units, employ automatic signalling, and install an escalator.

Liverpool inventor Frank Hornby was a visionary in toy development and manufacture, producing three of the most popular lines of toys in the 20th century: Meccano, Hornby Model Railways, and Dinky Toys. The British Interplanetary Society, founded in Liverpool in 1933 by Phillip Ellaby Cleator, is the world's oldest existing organisation devoted to the promotion of spaceflight. Its journal, the Journal of the British Interplanetary Society, is the longest-running astronautical publication in the world.[129]

In 1999, Liverpool was the first city outside London to be awarded blue plaques by English Heritage in recognition of the "significant contribution made by its sons and daughters in all walks of life".[130]

Government

 
The Cunard Building (left), housing the main offices of Liverpool City Council

For the purposes of local government, the city of Liverpool is classified as a metropolitan borough. The metropolitan borough is located within both the county of Merseyside and the Liverpool City Region. Each of these geographical areas is treated as an administrative area with different levels of local governance applying to each.

Liverpool City Council is the governing body solely for the city of Liverpool and performs functions that are standard of an English Unitary Authority. The Liverpool City Region Combined Authority reserves major strategic powers over such things as transport, economic development and regeneration for the city along with the 5 surrounding boroughs of the Liverpool City Region. The Combined Authority has competency over areas which have been devolved by national government and are specific to the local area.[131]

Nevertheless, there are a few exceptions to local governance apart from these two structures. Liverpool was administered by Merseyside County Council between 1974 and 1986 and some residual aspects of organisation which date back to this time have survived. When the County Council was disbanded in 1986, most civic functions were transferred to Liverpool City Council. However, several authorities such as the police and fire and rescue service, continue to be run at a county-wide level. The county of Merseyside, therefore, continues to exist as an administrative area for a few limited services only, while the capability and capacity of the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority is evolving over time.[132]

The city also elects five members of Parliament (MPs) to the Westminster Parliament, all Labour as of the 2019 general election.

City Council Leader and Cabinet

 
City Councillors meet regularly at the Council Chamber in Liverpool Town Hall to conduct civic business[133]

Liverpool City Council operates under a constitution comprising 85 city councillors who are directly elected by the Liverpool electorate every 4 years and represent a variety of different political parties. The city councillors make decisions about local services for the city's people.

At each election, the political party that wins the majority of the 85 council seats leads the council for the following 4 years. The local leader of this party assumes the role of Leader of the City Council who then chairs a Cabinet of 9 councillors who are assigned specific responsibilities known as 'portfolios'.

The incumbent Leader of Liverpool City Council is Councillor Liam Robinson, who represents the Labour Party, which secured a large majority at the 2023 local election.[134]

The City Council's decisions and scrutiny of activities are undertaken by a number of different committees and panels which include the Overview and Scrutiny Committees, Scrutiny Panels, Regulatory Committees and other committees. The day-to-day management of the council is carried out by the management team which includes the Chief Executive and several directors and senior officers. The management team works with the Cabinet and councillors to deliver strategic direction and priorities such as the budget and the City Plan.[135][136]

Liverpool City Council elections

Every 4 years, the city elects 85 councillors from 64 local council wards,[137] which in alphabetical order are:

  1. Aigburth
  2. Allerton
  3. Anfield
  4. Arundel
  5. Belle Vale
  6. Broadgreen
  7. Brownlow Hill
  8. Calderstones
  9. Canning
  10. Childwall
  11. Church
  12. City Centre North
  13. City Centre South
  14. Clubmoor East
  15. Clubmoor West
  16. County
  17. Croxteth
  18. Croxteth Country Park
  19. Dingle
  20. Edge Hill
  21. Everton East
  22. Everton North
  23. Everton West
  24. Fazakerley East
  25. Fazakerley North
  26. Fazakerley West
  27. Festival Gardens
  28. Garston
  29. Gateacre
  30. Grassendale & Cressington
  31. Greenbank Park
  32. Kensington & Fairfield
  33. Kirkdale East
 
  1. Kirkdale West
  2. Knotty Ash & Dovecot Park
  3. Mossley Hill
  4. Much Woolton & Hunts Cross
  5. Norris Green
  6. Old Swan East
  7. Old Swan West
  8. Orrell Park
  9. Penny Lane
  10. Princes Park
  11. Sandfield Park
  12. Sefton Park
  13. Smithdown
  14. Speke
  15. Springwood
  16. St Michaels
  17. Stoneycroft
  18. Toxteth
  19. Tuebrook Breckside Park
  20. Tuebrook Larkhill
  21. Vauxhall
  22. Walton
  23. Waterfront North
  24. Waterfront South
  25. Wavertree Garden Suburb
  26. Wavertree Village
  27. West Derby Deysbrook
  28. West Derby Leyfield
  29. West Derby Muirhead
  30. Woolton Village
  31. Yew Tree

During the 2023 Liverpool City Council election, the Labour Party consolidated its control of Liverpool City Council, following on from the previous elections. Out of the total 85 City Council seats up for election, The Labour Party won 61 seats (53.13% of the electorate's total votes), the Liberal Democrats won 15 seats (21.61% of the votes), the Green Party won 3 seats (9.76% of the votes), the Liverpool Community Independents won 3 seats (4.64% of the votes) and the Liberal Party won the remaining 3 seats (3.21% of the votes). The Conservative Party, the political party in power at national government, had no representation on Liverpool City Council. Only 27.27% of the eligible Liverpool electorate turned out to vote.[138]

Throughout most of the 19th and early 20th centuries, Liverpool was a municipal stronghold of Toryism. However, support for the Conservative Party in recent times has been among the lowest in any part of Britain, particularly since the monetarist economic policies of former prime minister Margaret Thatcher. After the 1979 general election, many have claimed that her victory contributed to longstanding high unemployment and decline in the city.[139] Liverpool is one of the Labour Party's key strongholds; however, the city has also seen hard times under Labour governments also. Particularly in the Winter of Discontent (late 1978 and early 1979) when Liverpool suffered public sector strikes along with the rest of the United Kingdom, but also when it suffered the particularly humiliating misfortune of having grave-diggers going on strike, leaving the dead unburied for long periods.[140]

City Council criticism and improvement

In recent years, Liverpool City Council began an extensive improvement program designed to ensure that the authority makes efficient use of taxpayer's money and to encourage more business and investment in the city. Grosvenor Group, the property company responsible for Liverpool One, commended the changes as an "opportunity for bold thinking in liverpool".[141]

In 2021, a highly critical government inspection and subsequent report of Liverpool City Council (referred to as the Caller report) identified multiple shortcomings at Liverpool City Council. The Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government, Robert Jenrick sent government commissioners to oversee the City Council's highways, regeneration, property management, governance and financial decision-making. The authority was compelled to commit to a three-year improvement plan in which the entire structure of the council would be overhauled. As a result of the intervention, major structural changes at the City Council took place by the 2023 United Kingdom local elections, which were labelled "the most unpredictable [elections] in the city's history". The number of electoral wards in the city was doubled from 30 to 64, while the overall number of City Councillors up for election was reduced from 90 to 85. In future, the council would also change to 'all out' elections every four years whereby every single City Councillor would be eligible for re-election at the same time. The role of elected city mayor was also abolished and the Council reverted to the previous Leader and Cabinet style of leadership. The outcome of the elections were seen not only as a test of how the general public would respond to the government intervention in the city, but also to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak's government as a whole.[142][143][144][145]

Councillor Liam Robinson became the new Leader of Liverpool City Council at the 2023 City Council election. The Liverpool Strategic Futures Advisory Panel, chaired by the Mayor of Liverpool City Region Steve Rotheram, and including several high-profile figures with experience in local government, was established. The panel was tasked with directing the council's long-term future outside of government intervention measures and to advise on plans and priorities that the city should pursue.[146]

In February 2008, Liverpool City Council was reported to be the worst-performing council in the country, receiving just a one-star rating (classified as inadequate). The main cause of the poor rating was attributed to the council's poor handling of tax-payer money, including the accumulation of a £20m shortfall while the city held the title of European Capital of Culture.[147]

Lord Mayor of Liverpool

 
Liverpool Town Hall houses the official office for the Lord Mayor of Liverpool

The Lord Mayor of Liverpool is an ancient ceremonial role. Councillors within Liverpool City Council (not the general public) elect the Lord Mayor annually, who then serves a one-year term. The Lord Mayor is styled as the 'first citizen' and is chosen to represent the city at civic functions and engagements, promote it to the wider world, support local charities and community groups, attend religious events, meet delegates from Liverpool's twin cities, chair council meetings and confer Honorary Freemen and associations.[148]

Metro Mayor of Liverpool City Region

The City of Liverpool is one of the six constituent local government districts of the Liverpool City Region. The Metro Mayor of the Liverpool City Region is directly every four years by residents of those six boroughs and oversees the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority. The Combined Authority is the top-tier administrative body for the local governance of the city region and is tasked with taking major strategic decisions on issues such as transport and investment, economic development, employment and skills, tourism, culture, housing and physical infrastructure. The current Metro Mayor is Steve Rotheram.

Parliamentary constituencies and MPs

Liverpool is included within five parliamentary constituencies, through which MPs are elected to represent the city in Westminster: Liverpool Riverside, Liverpool Walton, Liverpool Wavertree, Liverpool West Derby and Garston and Halewood.[149] At the last general election, all were won by Labour with representation being from Kim Johnson, Dan Carden, Paula Barker and Ian Byrne respectively.[150] Due to boundary changes prior to the 2010 election, the Liverpool Garston constituency was merged with most of Knowsley South to form the Garston and Halewood cross-boundary seat. At the most recent 2019 election, this seat was won by Maria Eagle of the Labour Party.[150]

Geography

Environment

 
Satellite imagery showing Liverpool Bay, Liverpool and the wider Merseyside area

Liverpool has been described as having "the most splendid setting of any English city."[151] At 53°24′0″N 2°59′0″W / 53.40000°N 2.98333°W / 53.40000; -2.98333 (53.4, −2.98), 176 miles (283 kilometres) northwest of London, located on the Liverpool Bay of the Irish Sea the city of Liverpool is built across a ridge of sandstone hills rising up to a height of around 230 feet (70 m) above sea-level at Everton Hill, which represents the southern boundary of the West Lancashire Coastal Plain.

The Mersey Estuary separates Liverpool from the Wirral Peninsula. The boundaries of Liverpool are adjacent to Bootle, Crosby and Maghull in south Sefton to the north, and Kirkby, Huyton, Prescot and Halewood in Knowsley to the east.

Climate

Liverpool
Climate chart (explanation)
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
 
 
69
 
 
8
3
 
 
57
 
 
8
3
 
 
53
 
 
10
4
 
 
50
 
 
13
6
 
 
53
 
 
16
8
 
 
64
 
 
18
11
 
 
66
 
 
20
14
 
 
72
 
 
20
14
 
 
77
 
 
18
11
 
 
90
 
 
14
9
 
 
82
 
 
11
6
 
 
92
 
 
8
3
Average max. and min. temperatures in °C
Precipitation totals in mm
Source: Met Office
Imperial conversion
JFMAMJJASOND
 
 
2.7
 
 
46
37
 
 
2.2
 
 
46
37
 
 
2.1
 
 
50
39
 
 
2
 
 
55
43
 
 
2.1
 
 
61
46
 
 
2.5
 
 
64
52
 
 
2.6
 
 
68
57
 
 
2.8
 
 
68
57
 
 
3
 
 
64
52
 
 
3.5
 
 
57
48
 
 
3.2
 
 
52
43
 
 
3.6
 
 
46
37
Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation totals in inches

Liverpool experiences a temperate maritime climate (Köppen: Cfb), like much of the British Isles, with relatively mild summers, cool winters and rainfall spread fairly evenly throughout the year. Rainfall and temperature records had been kept at Bidston Hill since 1867, but records for atmospheric pressure go back as far as at least 1846.[152] Bidston closed down in 2002 but the Met Office also has a weather station at Crosby. Since records began in 1867, temperatures have ranged from −17.6 °C (0.3 °F) on 21 December 2010 to 34.5 °C (94.1 °F) on 2 August 1990, although Liverpool Airport recorded a temperature of 35.0 °C (95.0 °F) on 19 July 2006.[153]

The lowest amount of sunshine on record was 16.5 hours in December 1927 whereas the most was 314.5 hours in July 2013.[154][155]

Tornado activity or funnel cloud formation is very rare in and around the Liverpool area and tornadoes that do form are usually weak. Recent tornadoes or funnel clouds in Merseyside have been seen in 1998 and 2014.[156][157]

During the period 1981–2010, Crosby recorded an average of 32.8 days of air frost per year, which is low for the United Kingdom.[158] Snow is fairly common during the winter although heavy snow is rare. Snow generally falls between November and March but can occasionally fall earlier and later. In recent times, the earliest snowfall was on 1 October 2008[159] while the latest occurred on 15 May 2012.[160] Although historically, the earliest snowfall occurred on 10 September 1908[161] and the latest on 2 June 1975.[162]

Rainfall, although light, is quite a common occurrence in Liverpool, with the wettest month on record being August 1956, which recorded 221.2 mm (8.71 in) of rain and the driest being February 1932, with 0.9 mm (0.035 in).[163] The driest year on record was 1991, with 480.5 mm (18.92 in) of rainfall and the wettest was 1872, with 1,159.9 mm (45.67 in).[164]

Climate data for Crosby[a]
WMO ID: 03316; coordinates 53°29′50″N 3°03′28″W / 53.49721°N 3.05767°W / 53.49721; -3.05767 (Met Office Crosby); elevation: 30 m (98 ft); 1991–2020 normals,[b][c] extremes 1867–present[d]
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 15.1
(59.2)
18.9
(66.0)
21.2
(70.2)
24.6
(76.3)
28.2
(82.8)
30.7
(87.3)
35.5
(95.9)
34.5
(94.1)
30.4
(86.7)
25.9
(78.6)
18.7
(65.7)
15.8
(60.4)
35.5
(95.9)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 7.5
(45.5)
7.9
(46.2)
9.9
(49.8)
12.8
(55.0)
15.9
(60.6)
18.4
(65.1)
20.0
(68.0)
19.7
(67.5)
17.7
(63.9)
14.2
(57.6)
10.5
(50.9)
8.0
(46.4)
13.6
(56.5)
Daily mean °C (°F) 5.2
(41.4)
5.3
(41.5)
6.9
(44.4)
9.2
(48.6)
12.1
(53.8)
14.9
(58.8)
16.7
(62.1)
16.6
(61.9)
14.5
(58.1)
11.4
(52.5)
8.1
(46.6)
5.6
(42.1)
10.5
(50.9)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 2.8
(37.0)
2.7
(36.9)
3.9
(39.0)
5.6
(42.1)
8.3
(46.9)
11.3
(52.3)
13.5
(56.3)
13.5
(56.3)
11.2
(52.2)
8.5
(47.3)
5.7
(42.3)
3.1
(37.6)
7.5
(45.5)
Record low °C (°F) −13.1
(8.4)
−11.3
(11.7)
−8.6
(16.5)
−5.6
(21.9)
−1.7
(28.9)
1.0
(33.8)
5.0
(41.0)
3.1
(37.6)
1.7
(35.1)
−2.9
(26.8)
−7.5
(18.5)
−17.6
(0.3)
−17.6
(0.3)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 69.4
(2.73)
57.1
(2.25)
53.3
(2.10)
49.8
(1.96)
52.5
(2.07)
64.4
(2.54)
65.5
(2.58)
72.1
(2.84)
76.6
(3.02)
89.7
(3.53)
82.2
(3.24)
91.9
(3.62)
824.3
(32.45)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) 13.8 11.5 11.3 10.0 9.8 10.4 11.0 12.2 11.8 14.4 15.5 15.4 146.9
Average snowy days 6 5 4 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 4 22
Average relative humidity (%) 85.1 83.5 80.7 77.9 76.6 78.9 79.0 80.1 81.9 84.6 85.1 85.6 80.8
Mean monthly sunshine hours 56.0 70.3 105.1 154.2 207.0 191.5 197.0 175.2 132.7 97.3 65.8 46.8 1,499.1
Mean daily daylight hours 8.2 9.9 11.9 14.1 15.9 16.9 16.4 14.7 12.7 10.5 8.6 7.6 12.3
Average ultraviolet index 0 1 2 4 5 6 6 5 4 2 1 0 3
Source 1: Met Office[165]
Source 2: National Oceanography Centre[166] WeatherAtlas[167] CEDA Archive[168]
  1. ^ Weather station is located 7 miles (11 km) from the Liverpool city centre.
  2. ^ Sunshine hours were recorded at the Bidston Observatory from the period of 1971–2000.
  3. ^ Humidity was recorded at the Bidston Observatory for the period of 1975–June 2002. The period Jul–Sep 1992 has no record, with Jan–May 2001 reporting unreliabe data.
  4. ^ From 1867–2002, extremes were recorded at the Bidston Observatory in Wirral. Since 1983, extremes were recorded at Crosby, Sefton.

Human

Suburbs and districts

Suburbs and districts of Liverpool include:

Green Liverpool

UK core cities – Population and population density (Number of usual residents per km2) (2021)[169][170][171][172]
Core City Population Population density
Birmingham 1,144,900 4275.4
Leeds 812,000 1471.7
Glasgow 635,130 3637
Sheffield 556,500 1512.5
Manchester 552,000 4772.7
Liverpool 486,100 4346.1
Bristol 472,400 4308.1
Cardiff 362,400 2571.3
Belfast 345,418 2597.8
Nottingham 323,700 4337.6
Newcastle 300,200 2646.1

In 2010, Liverpool City Council and the Primary Care Trust commissioned the Mersey Forest to complete "A Green Infrastructure Strategy" for the city.[173]

Green belt

Liverpool is a core urban element of a green belt region that extends into the wider surrounding counties, which is in place to reduce urban sprawl, prevent the towns in the conurbation from further convergence, protect the identity of outlying communities, encourage brownfield reuse, and preserve nearby countryside. This is achieved by restricting inappropriate development within the designated areas and imposing stricter conditions on permitted building.[174]

Due to being already highly built up, the city contains limited portions of protected green belt area within greenfield throughout the borough at Fazakerley, Croxteth Hall and country park and Craven Wood, Woodfields Park and nearby golf courses in Netherley, small greenfield tracts east of the Speke area by the St Ambrose primary school, and the small hamlet of Oglet and the surrounding area south of Liverpool Airport.[175]

The green belt was first drawn up in 1983 under Merseyside County Council[176] and the size in the city amounts to 530 hectares (5.3 km2; 2.0 sq mi).[177]

Demography

Population

Historical population of Liverpool
(numbers vary by source)

Sources:[178][179][180][181][182][183][184][185][186][187][188]
Date Population Notes
1207 Borough of Liverpool founded by John, King of England. The economy was focused on agricultural and food processing, grain mills and warehouses until the 16th century.
1272 840
14th century 1,000 – 1,200 Population roughly 1,000 in 1300. Because Liverpool was a port, it was more at risk from the spread of disease. Townspeople lived partly by farming and fishing. Some were craftsmen or tradesmen such as bakers, brewers, butchers, blacksmiths, and carpenters. A watermill existed to ground grain into flour for the townspeople's bread, and there was a windmill. Black Death wiped out whole families and bodies were buried in a mass grave at St Nicholas's churchyard.
16th century Ireland was still Liverpool's main trading partner. In 1540, a writer said: "Irish merchants come much hither as to a good harbor". He also said there was "good merchandise at Liverpool and much Irish yarn, that Manchester men buy there". Skins and hides were still imported from Ireland. Exports from Liverpool included coal, woolen cloth, knives and leather goods. There were still many fishermen in Liverpool. In the mid 16th century, the town was under the control of the country gentry and trade was slow. The population dropped to below 600, in part due to deaths in the 1558 plague when a third of the townspeople died. Further plague outbreaks took place in 1609, 1647 and 1650 which led to static or retrogressive population levels. The town was regarded as subordinate to Chester until the 1650s.
1600 <2,000 English troops bound for rebellions in Ireland settled in the 16th and early 17th centuries.
1626 Charles I of England issued new Charter for the town. Trade with other cities, Ireland, Isle of Man, France and Spain increased. Fish and wool was exported to the Continent, and wines, iron and other commodities imported. In the following decades, merchants invested in Liverpool and its importance grew. Regular shipping began to America and West Indies. Liverpool was controlled by the Crown, the Molyneux and Stanley families.
1642 2,500 Liverpool overtook Chester in exporting coal and salt in early 17th century, especially to Ireland.
1644 During English Civil War, Prince Rupert led a royalist army to capture Liverpool. He described the town as a "mere crow's nest which a parcel of boys could take". He stormed Liverpool Castle in the 'Siege of Liverpool' with considerable slaughter.
1647 Liverpool was made a free and independent port, no longer subject to Chester.
1648 First recorded cargo from America landed at Liverpool.
Late 17th century Liverpool grew rapidly with the growth of English colonies in North America and West Indies. Liverpool was well placed to trade across Atlantic Ocean. The writer Celia Fiennes visited Liverpool and said: "Liverpool is built on the River Mersey. It is mostly newly built, of brick and stone after the London fashion. The original (town) was a few fishermen's houses. It has now grown into a large, fine town. It is but one parish with one church though there be 24 streets in it, there is indeed a little chapel and there are a great many dissenters in the town (Protestants who did not belong to the Church of England). It's a very rich trading town, the houses are of brick and stone, built high and even so that a street looks very handsome. The streets are well paved. There is an abundance of persons who are well dressed and fashionable. The streets are fair and long. It's London in miniature as much as I ever saw anything. There is a very pretty exchange. It stands on 8 pillars, over which is a very handsome Town Hall."
1700 5,714 First recorded Liverpool slave ship, the 'Liverpool Merchant', sold a cargo of 220 slaves in Barbados. In the early 1700s, the writer Daniel Defoe said: "Liverpool has an opulent, flourishing and increasing trade to Virginia and English colonies in America. They trade around the whole island (of Great Britain), send ships to Norway, to Hamburg, and to the Baltic as also to Holland and Flanders (roughly modern Belgium)." Welsh people in search of work and opportunity made up a large amount of population in early 18th century.
1715 World's first wet dock opened in Liverpool, symbolising a new era in the town's growth, the starting point of the 18th century boom in Liverpool's fortunes.
1720s Liverpool Castle demolished (built in the 1230s)
1750 20,000
1795 Influx of Irish, Welsh, Scandinavian and Dutch communities grew the town rapidly. Most of the population were not native to Liverpool.
1797 77,708
1801 77,000 – 85,000
1811 94,376
1821 118,972
1831 165,175
1835 Boundary of Liverpool expanded to include Everton, Kirkdale and parts of Toxteth and West Derby. Liverpool was second only to London in importance. Poor, overcrowded and unsanitary living conditions led to disease and epidemics of cholera in 1830s to 1860s.
1841 286,487
1851 375,955 At the height of the potato famine, Liverpool's Irish born population peaked to about 83,000–90,000. 43,000 were settled in the area around the docks. More Irish people lived in Liverpool than the majority of Irish towns. 40% of the world's trade was passing through Liverpool's docks.
1861 413,000 – 462,749
1871 493,405 – 539,248
1880 Liverpool officially became a city.
1881 552,508 – 648,616
1891 617,032 – 644,243
1895 Boundary of Liverpool expanded to include Wavertree, Walton, and parts of Toxteth and West Derby.
1901 684,958 – 711,030
1902 Boundary of Liverpool expanded to include Garston, Aigburth, Cressington and Grassendale.
1904 Boundary of Liverpool expanded to include Fazakerley.
1907 746,144
1911 746,421 – 766,044
1913 Boundary of Liverpool expanded to include Woolton and Gateacre.
1921 805,046 – 821,000
1931 855,688
1937 867,000 The highest recorded population of Liverpool city proper.
1941 806,271 Liverpool's population fell in the following decades, largely due to the new towns movement and the British government's policy to displace thousands of people from major British cities (including Central Liverpool) to various new towns such as Kirkby, Skelmersdale, Runcorn and Warrington. Liverpool's downward population trend continued until the early 21st century as people escaped rising unemployment and increasing deprivation.
1951 765,641 – 768,337
1961 683,133 – 737,637
1971 595,252 – 607,454
1981 492,164 – 503,726 High levels of unemployment led to significant numbers of people leaving the city.
1991 448,629 – 480,196
2001 439,428 – 439,476 Liverpool's population steadily increased again, partly attributed to a rise in students, student accommodation, young professionals, and increased job opportunities through urban regeneration.
2011 466,415
2021 486,100

The city

The city of Liverpool is at the core of a much larger and more populous metropolitan area, however, at the most recent UK Census in 2021, the area governed by Liverpool City Council had a population of 486,100, a 4.2% increase from the previous Census in 2011. This figure increased to 500,500 people by 2022, according to data from Liverpool City Council.

Taking in to account how local government is organised within the cities and metropolitan areas of England, the city of Liverpool was the fifth largest of England's 'core cities' and had the second overall highest population density of those, by 2021.[189][190][191]

The population of the city has steadily risen since the 2001 Census. As well as having a growing population, the population density also grew at the 2021 Census compared to the previous Census. This makes Liverpool the second most densely populated local authority in North West England, after Manchester.

The population of the city is comparatively younger than that of England as a whole. Family life in the city is also growing at odds with the North West England region as a whole: At the 2021 Census, the percentage of households including a couple without children increased in Liverpool, but fell across the North West. The percentage of people aged 16 years and over (excluding full-time students) who were employed also increased in Liverpool compared to the overall North West region where it fell.

 
Liverpool's ethnic and international population is growing. More people in the city identified as Asian and Black in the most recent census, compared to the previous census.

The 2021 Census also showed that Liverpool's ethnic and international population was growing. The number of residents in the city born outside of England has increased since the previous Census, while the number of residents who did not identify with any national identity associated with the UK has also increased at a faster rate than England as a whole. The overall share of the city's population who identified as Asian and Black increased, while the percentage who identified as white decreased in the city compared with previous Census.[192]

It has been argued that the city can claim to have one of the strongest Irish heritages in the United Kingdom, with as many as 75 percent (estimated) of Liverpool's population with some form of Irish ancestry.[193]

The growing population of Liverpool in the 21st century reverses a trend which took place between the 1930s and 2001, when the population of the city proper effectively halved.

At the 1931 United Kingdom census, Liverpool's population reached an all-time high of 846,302. Following this peak, in response to central government policy, the Council authority of Liverpool then built and owned large several 'new town' council estates in the suburbs within Liverpool's metropolitan area. Tens of thousands of people were systematically relocated to new housing in areas such as Halton, Knowsley, St Helens, Sefton, Wirral, Cheshire West and Chester, West Lancashire, Warrington and as far as North Wales.

Such a mass relocation and population loss during this time was common practice for many British cities, including London and Manchester, In contrast, satellite towns such as Kirkby, Skelmersdale and Runcorn saw a corresponding rise in their populations (Kirkby being the fastest growing town in Britain during the 1960s).[194][195][196][197]

Urban and metropolitan area

Liverpool is typically grouped with the wider Merseyside (plus Halton) area for the purpose of defining its metropolitan footprint, and there are several methodologies. Sometimes, this metropolitan area is broadened to encompass urban settlements in the neighbouring counties of Lancashire and Cheshire.

The Office for National Statistics in the United Kingdom uses the international standardised International Territorial Levels (ITLs) to divide up the economic territory of the UK. This enables the ONS to calculate regional and local statistics and data. The ONS uses a series of codes to identify these areas. In order of hierarchy from largest area to smallest area, Liverpool is part of the following regions:[198][199][200]

ITL 1 region

North West England (code TLD)
At the 2021 Census, the ITL 1 region of North West England had a usual resident population of 7,417,300.[201]

ITL 2 region

Merseyside (code TLD7)
The ITL 2 region of Merseyside is defined as the area comprising East Merseyside (TLD71) plus Liverpool (TLD72), Sefton (TLD73) and Wirral (TLD74).
At the 2021 Census, the population of this area was as follows:[202]

East Merseyside (TLD71):

Liverpool (TLD72) = 486,100

Sefton (TLD73) = 279,300

Wirral (TLD74) = 320,200

Therefore, the total population of the ITL 2 Merseyside region was 1,551,500 based on the 2021 Census.

ITL 3 region

The smallest ITL 3 area classed as Liverpool (code TLD72), therefore, had a population of 486,100 at the 2021 Census.

Other definitions

At the 2021 Census, the ONS used a refreshed concept of built-up areas (BUAs) based on the physical built environment, using satellite imagery to recognise developed land, such as cities, towns, and villages. This allows the ONS to investigate economic and social statistics based on actual settlements where most people live. Data from the 2021 Census is not directly comparable with 2011 Census data due to this revised methodology. Using the population figures of BUAs at the 2021 Census (excluding London), Liverpool Built-up Area is the third largest in England with some 506,565 usual residents (behind only Birmingham and Leeds). Liverpool's built-up area is, therefore, larger than the major English cities of Bristol, Manchester, Newcastle upon Tyne, Nottingham and Sheffield.[203]

 
Map showing the six boroughs of Liverpool City Region: the 4th largest combined authority area in England.

Excluding London, the Liverpool City Region was the 4th largest combined authority area in England, by 2021. The population is approximately 1.6 million. The Liverpool City Region is a political and economic partnership between local authorities including Liverpool, plus the Metropolitan boroughs of Knowsley, Sefton, St Helens, Wirral and the Borough of Halton. The Liverpool City Region Combined Authority exercises strategic governance powers for the region in many areas. The economic data of the Liverpool city region is of particular policy interest to the Office for National Statistics, particularly as the British Government continuously explores the potential to negotiate increased devolved powers for each combined authority area.[204][205][206][207]

A 2011 report, Liverpool City Region – Building on its Strengths, by Lord Heseltine and Terry Leahy, stated that "what is now called Liverpool City Region has a population of around 1.5 million", but also referred to "an urban region that spreads from Wrexham and Flintshire to Chester, Warrington, West Lancashire and across to Southport", with a population of 2.3 million.[208]

In 2006, in an attempt to harmonise the series of metropolitan areas across the European Union, ESPON (now European Observation Network for Territorial Development and Cohesion) released a study defining a "Liverpool/Birkenhead Metropolitan area" with an estimated population of 2,241,000 people. The metro area comprised a functional urban area consisting of a contiguous urban sprawl, labour pool, and commuter Travel to work areas. The analysis defined this metropolitan area as Liverpool itself, combined with the surrounding areas of Birkenhead, Wigan/Ashton, Warrington, Widnes/Runcorn, Chester, Southport, Ellesmere Port, Ormskirk and Skelmersdale.[209]

Liverpool and Manchester are sometimes considered as one large polynuclear metropolitan area,[210][211][212] or megalopolis.

Ethnicity

In recent decades, Liverpool's population is becoming more multicultural. According to the 2021 census, 77% of all Liverpool residents described their ethnic group as White English, Welsh, Scottish, Northern Irish or British. The remaining 23% were described as non-White English/British. Between 2011 and 2021, there was population growth across all ethnic groups, except 'White English/British' and 'Any Other', where there were overall losses. The number of 'Other White residents' in Liverpool also increased by almost 12,000 people, with notable increases in the 'Other Asian', 'Arab', and 'Other Mixed/Multiple' population categories. The non-White English/British population as a percentage of the total population across the 'newly organised city electoral wards' ranged from 5% in the Orrell Park ward to 69% in the Princes Park ward. 9 out of 10 Liverpool residents regarded English as their main language. The highest non-English languages in the city were Arabic (5,743 main speakers) followed by Polish (4,809 main speakers). Overall, almost 45,000 residents had a main language that was not English.[213]

According to a 2014 survey, the ten most popular surnames of Liverpool and their occurrence in the population are:[214][215]

1. Jones – 23,012
2. Smith – 16,276
3. Williams – 13,997
4. Davies – 10,149
5. Hughes – 9,787
6. Roberts – 9,571
7. Taylor – 8,219
8. Johnson – 6,715
9. Brown – 6,603
10. Murphy – 6,495

Liverpool is home to Britain's oldest Black community, dating to at least the 1730s. Some Liverpudlians can trace their black ancestry in the city back ten generations.[216] Early Black settlers in the city included seamen, the children of traders sent to be educated, and freed slaves, since slaves entering the country after 1722 were deemed free men.[217] Since the 20th century, Liverpool is also noted for its large African-Caribbean,[9] Ghanaian,[218] and Somali[219] communities, formed of more recent African-descended immigrants and their subsequent generations.

 
Liverpool has the oldest Chinese community in Europe and the largest Chinese arch outside China.

The city is also home to the oldest Chinese community in Europe; the first residents of the city's Chinatown arrived as seamen in the 19th century.[220] The traditional Chinese gateway erected in Liverpool's Chinatown is the largest gateway outside China. Liverpool also has a long-standing Filipino community. Lita Roza, a singer from Liverpool who was the first woman to achieve a UK number one hit, had Filipino ancestry.

Ethnic breakdown in Liverpool – (UK Census 2021)[221][222]
Ethnic group Population Percentage
White: English, Welsh, Scottish, Northern Irish or British 375,785 77.3
White: Other White 24,162 5
Black, Black British, Black Welsh, Caribbean or African: African 12,709 2.6
Asian, Asian British or Asian Welsh: Chinese 8,841 1.8
Other ethnic group: Arab 8,312 1.7
Other ethnic group: Any other ethnic group 7,722 1.6
Asian, Asian British or Asian Welsh: Other Asian 7,085 1.5
White: Irish 6,826 1.4
Asian, Asian British or Asian Welsh: Indian 6,251 1.3
Mixed or multiple ethnic groups: Other mixed or multiple ethnic groups 4,934 1
Mixed or multiple ethnic groups: White and Black African 4,157 0.9
Mixed or multiple ethnic groups: White and Black Caribbean 4,127 0.8
Asian, Asian British or Asian Welsh: Pakistani 3,673 0.8
Mixed or multiple ethnic groups: White and Asian 3,662 0.8
Black, Black British, Black Welsh, Caribbean or African: Other Black 2,762 0.6
Asian, Asian British or Asian Welsh: Bangladeshi 1,917 0.4
Black, Black British, Black Welsh, Caribbean or African: Caribbean 1,493 0.3
White: Roma 1,169 0.2
White: Gypsy or Irish Traveller 501 0.1

The city is also known for its large Irish and Welsh populations.[223] In 1813, 10 per cent of Liverpool's population was Welsh, leading to the city becoming known as "the capital of North Wales."[223]

During, and in the decades following, the Great Irish Famine in the mid-19th century, up to two million Irish people travelled to Liverpool within one decade, with many subsequently departing for the United States.[224] By 1851, more than 20 per cent of the population of Liverpool was Irish.[225] At the 2001 Census, 1.17 per cent of the population were Welsh-born and 0.75 per cent were born in the Republic of Ireland, while 0.54 per cent were born in Northern Ireland,[226] but many more Liverpudlians are of legacy Welsh or Irish ancestry.[227]

Other contemporary ethnicities include Indian,[9] Latin American,[228] Malaysian,[229] and Yemeni[230] communities, which number several thousand each.

Religion

Religion of Liverpool residents, 2021
Christian
57.3%
No religion
29.4%
Religion not stated
5.9%
Muslim
5.3%
Hindu
0.8%
Buddhist
0.4%
Any other religion
0.4%
Jewish
0.4%
Sikh
0.1%
Source: 2021 census[231]
 
The Al-Rahma Mosque in the Toxteth area of Liverpool

The thousands of migrants and sailors passing through Liverpool resulted in a religious diversity that is still apparent today. This is reflected in the equally diverse collection of religious buildings,[232] including two Christian cathedrals.

Liverpool is known to be England's 'most Catholic city', with a Catholic population much larger than in other parts of England.[233] This is mainly due to high historic Irish migration to the city and their descendants since.[234]

The parish church of Liverpool is the Anglican Our Lady and St Nicholas, colloquially known as "the sailors church", which has existed near the waterfront since 1257. It regularly plays host to Catholic masses. Other notable churches include the Greek Orthodox Church of St Nicholas (built in the Neo-Byzantine architecture style), and the Gustav Adolf Church (the Swedish Seamen's Church, reminiscent of Nordic styles).

Liverpool's wealth as a port city enabled the construction of two enormous cathedrals in the 20th century. The Anglican Cathedral, which was designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott and plays host to the annual Liverpool Shakespeare Festival, has one of the longest naves, largest organs and heaviest and highest peals of bells in the world. The Roman Catholic Metropolitan Cathedral, on Mount Pleasant next to Liverpool Science Park, was initially planned to be even larger. Of Sir Edwin Lutyens's original design, only the crypt was completed. The cathedral was eventually built to a simpler design by Sir Frederick Gibberd. While this is on a smaller scale than Lutyens' original design, it still incorporates the largest panel of stained glass in the world. The road running between the two cathedrals is called Hope Street. The cathedral has long been colloquially referred to as "Paddy's Wigwam" due to its shape.[235][nb 1]

Liverpool contains several synagogues, of which the Grade I listed Moorish Revival Princes Road Synagogue is architecturally the most notable. Princes Road is widely considered to be the most magnificent of Britain's Moorish Revival synagogues and one of the finest buildings in Liverpool.[236] Liverpool has a thriving Jewish community with a further two orthodox Synagogues, one in the Allerton district of the city and a second in the Childwall district of the city where a significant Jewish community reside. A third orthodox Synagogue in the Greenbank Park area of L17 has recently closed and is a listed 1930s structure. There is also a Lubavitch Chabad House and a reform Synagogue. Liverpool has had a Jewish community since the mid-18th century. The Jewish population of Liverpool is around 5,000.[237] The Liverpool Talmudical College existed from 1914 until 1990, when its classes moved to the Childwall Synagogue.[citation needed]

Liverpool also has a Hindu community, with a Mandir on Edge Lane, Edge Hill. The Shri Radha Krishna Temple from the Hindu Cultural Organisation in Liverpool is located there.[238] Liverpool also has the Guru Nanak Sikh Gurdwara in Wavertree[239] and a Baháʼí Centre in the same area.[240]

The city had the earliest Mosque in England and possibly the UK, founded in 1887 by William Abdullah Quilliam, a lawyer who had converted to Islam who set up the Liverpool Muslim Institute in a terraced house on West Derby Road.[241] Apart from the first mosque in England which now houses a museum,[242][243] the largest and main one, Al-Rahma mosque, was also the third purpose built mosque in the United Kingdom.[244] The second largest mosque in Liverpool is the Masjid Al-Taiseer.[245] Other mosques in the city include the Bait ul Lateef Ahmadiyya Mosque,[246] Hamza Center (Community Center),[247] Islamic community centre,[248] Liverpool Mosque and Islamic Institute,[249] Liverpool Towhid Centre,[250] Masjid Annour,[251] and the Shah Jalal Mosque.[252]

Demonym and identity

Natives of the city of Liverpool are referred to as Liverpudlians, and colloquially as "Scousers", a reference to "scouse", a form of stew.[253] The word "Scouse" has also become synonymous with the Liverpool accent and dialect. Many people "self-identify" as Liverpudlians or Scousers without actually being born or living within the city boundaries of Liverpool.[254]

Economy

City and region

 
Liverpool is a major component of the third largest regional economy in the United Kingdom. Important sectors in the city include the knowledge economy, maritime industry, tourism, culture, hospitality, healthcare industry, life sciences, the creative and digital sectors.[255][256][257]

The Liverpool City Region GDP in 2021 was £40.479 billion. The 6 contributing boroughs to this GDP were as follows:[258]

  City of Liverpool
(£15.911 billion) (39.3%)
  Wirral
(£6.632 billion) (16.38%)
  Sefton
(£5.431 billion) (13.42%)
  Knowsley
(£4.557 billion) (11.26%)
  Halton
(£4.498 billion) (11.11%)
  St Helens
(£3.448 billion) (8.52%)
 
Liverpool is one of the top retail destinations in the UK
 
Knowledge Quarter, Liverpool hosts globally significant institutions
 
Liverpool is home to many global headquarters and major branch offices

The City of Liverpool forms an integral part of North West England's economy, the third largest regional economy in the United Kingdom. The city is also a major contributor to the economy of Liverpool City Region, worth over £40 billion per year.[259][260][261]

The local authority area governed by Liverpool City Council accounts for 39% of the Liverpool city region's total jobs, 40% of its total GVA and 35% of its total businesses. At the local authority level, the city's GVA (balanced) at current basic prices was £14.3 billion in 2021. Its GDP at current market prices was £15.9 billion. This equates to £32,841 per head of the population.[262][263]

At the 2021 United Kingdom census, 51.1% of Liverpool's population aged 16 years and over was classed as employed, 44.2% economically inactive and 4.8% unemployed. Of those employed, the most popular industries providing the employment were human health and social work activities (18.7%), wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles and motor cycles (15%), education (10.8%), public administration and defence; compulsory social security (7.3%), accommodation and food service activities (6.8%), construction (6.5%), transport and storage (5.8%), manufacturing (5.5%) and professional, scientific and technical activities (5.2%).[264]

According to the ONS Business Register and Employment Survey 2021, some industries within Liverpool perform strongly compared to other local authorities in Great Britain. In terms of absolute number of jobs per industry in Great Britain's local authority areas, Liverpool features in the national top 10 for human health and social work activities; arts, entertainment and recreation; public administration and defence; compulsory social security; accommodation and food service activities and real estate activities. Liverpool features in the national top 20 for number of jobs in education; construction; wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles; transportation and storage; financial and insurance activities and professional, scientific and technical activities.[265]

In 2023, Liverpool City Council set out an economic growth plan for the city over the following 20 years. The City Council will have particular focus on economic sectors such as the visitor economy (tourism), culture, life sciences, digital and creative sectors, and advanced car manufacturing.[266]

According to the International passenger Survey, from the ONS, Liverpool was one of the top 5 most visited cities in the UK by overseas tourists in 2022. As of the same year, the city's tourist industry was worth a total of £3.5 billion annually and was part of a larger city region tourist industry worth £5 billion. A consistent calendar of major events, as well as a plethora of cultural attractions, continue to provide a significant draw for tourists. Tourism related to the Beatles is worth an estimated £100m to the Liverpool economy each year alone. Liverpool One, as well as a growing retail offer overall, has led to the city being one of the most prominent destinations for shopping in the UK. Liverpool Cruise Terminal, which is situated close to the Pier Head, enables tourists to berth in the centre of the city.[267][268][269][270][271][272][273]

Liverpool is home to the Knowledge Quarter, a 450-acre city centre district that hosts some of the world's most influential institutions in science, health, technology, education, music and the creative performing arts. The UK government has also identified the city as a 'pharmaceutical production superpower' and one of the UK's leading regions for bioprocessing. The accolade led to the government choosing the city for England's second ever 'Investment Zone' in 2023. This will involve millions of pounds being invested over the coming years in to science orientated districts including the Knowledge Quarter and the so-called 'pharma cluster' in the city suburb of Speke. The two clusters form an internationally significant role in infectious disease control. Liverpool City Council also plan to invest in the city's Baltic Triangle, which is renowned in the creative and digital industries.[274][275][276][277][278][279]

Car manufacturing also takes place in the city at the Jaguar Land Rover Halewood plant, where the Range Rover Evoque model is assembled. In 2023, Jaguar Land Rover announced that the Halewood plant would begin to shift its focus to electric car production.[280][281]

Historically, the economy of Liverpool was centred on the city's port and manufacturing base. Today, the Port of Liverpool is the UK's fourth largest port by tonnage of freight, handling over 30 million tonnes in 2020. The city is also the UK's largest port for transatlantic trade, handling 45% of the country's trade from the United States. In 2023, the city was chosen by the British government to be a designated Freeport to encourage growing international commerce.

The Liverpool2 container terminal, completed in 2022, has greatly increased the volume of cargo which Liverpool is able to handle and has facilitated the world's biggest container vessels.[282][283][284][285][286][287][288]

Liverpool is also home to numerous UK headquarters, or the major strategic branch offices, of many shipping and freight lines including: Atlantic Container Line,[289] Bibby Line,[290] Borchard Lines Ltd,[291] CMA CGM,[292] Hapag-Lloyd,[293] Independent Container Line,[294] Irish Ferries,[295] Maersk Line,[296] Mediterranean Shipping Company[297] and Zim Integrated Shipping Services.[298]

Liverpool's rich architectural base has helped the city become the second most filmed city in the UK outside London. As well as being a featured location in its own right, it often doubles up for Chicago, London, Moscow, New York City, Paris and Rome. The Depot studios, close to the city centre, provide space for film and TV productions.[299][300]

Major economic projects planned for the city include the revitalisation of disused land in the North docks/Ten Streets area, Liverpool Waters and a new purpose built TV studio at the former Littlewoods Pools building, adjacent to the Depot.[301][302][303]

City region economy and devolution

The policy agenda of the British Government is to continuously monitor the economy and productivity of the UK's core cities within the context of their respective city regions. The government's longer-term plan is to assess each area's potential for increased devolution and transfer of additional powers and budgets from central government in Whitehall to their corresponding combined authorities. As such, official statistics about Liverpool's economy within the context of the Liverpool City Region, are closely monitored by the Office for National Statistics. This allows policy and decision makers to more accurately assess the 'functional economic area' of the city, which is not bound by traditional local government geographies.[304][305][306][307][308]

As of 2023, there are 10 city regions in England with Combined Authorities. The economy of Liverpool's combined authority area in comparison to the other city regions is as follows:

Economy of Liverpool City Region compared to all combined authority areas in England[309]
Combined authority area Core city (if applicable) GVA (2021)
(£ billions)
GDP (2021)
(£ billions)
GDP per head (2021)
(£)
Cambridgeshire and Peterborough 28.648 31.698 35,348
Greater Manchester Manchester 78.744 87.703 30,576
Liverpool City Region Liverpool 35.345 40.479 26,086
North East 22.516 26.255 23,038
North of Tyne Newcastle upon Tyne 19.725 22.444 27,075
South Yorkshire Sheffield 28.971 33.528 24,399
Tees Valley 14.241 16.346 24,103
West Midlands Birmingham 70.961 79.076 27,117
West of England Bristol 34.110 37.571 39,371
West Yorkshire Leeds 60.137 67.607 28,769

Landmarks and recent development projects

 
Liverpool's Three Graces, the Royal Liver Building, Cunard Building and Port of Liverpool Building at the Pier Head

Liverpool's long commercial history has given rise to a considerable variety of architectural styles found within the city, ranging from 16th century Tudor buildings to modern-day contemporary architecture.[310] The majority of buildings in the city date from the late-18th century onwards, the period during which the city grew into one of the foremost powers in the British Empire.[311] There are over 2,500 listed buildings in Liverpool, of which 27 are Grade I listed[312] and 85 are Grade II* listed.[313] The city also has a greater number of public sculptures than any other location in the United Kingdom aside from Westminster[314] and more Georgian houses than the city of Bath.[315] This richness of architecture has subsequently seen Liverpool described by English Heritage, as England's finest Victorian city.[316]

The value of Liverpool's architecture and design was recognised in 2004, when several areas throughout the city were declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Known as the Liverpool Maritime Mercantile City, the sites were added in recognition of the city's role in the development of international trade and docking technology.[317] However, this status was revoked in July 2021, when UNESCO resolved that recent and proposed developments, such as the Bramley-Moore Dock Stadium and Liverpool Waters projects, had resulted in the "serious deterioration" of the area's significance.[318]

Waterfront and docks

 
The Liverpool Waterfront with the Port of Liverpool Building, Museum of Liverpool, Royal Albert Dock and Wheel of Liverpool all visible
 
Modern office and commercial developments on the Liverpool Waterfront

As a major British port, the docks in Liverpool have historically been central to the city's development. Several major docking firsts have occurred in the city including the construction of the world's first enclosed wet dock (the Old Dock) in 1715 and the first ever hydraulic lifting cranes.[319] The best-known dock in Liverpool is the Royal Albert Dock, which was constructed in 1846 and today comprises the largest single collection of Grade I listed buildings anywhere in Britain.[320] Built under the guidance of Jesse Hartley, it was considered to be one of the most advanced docks anywhere in the world upon completion and is often attributed with helping the city to become one of the most important ports in the world. Today, the Royal Albert Dock houses restaurants, bars, shops, two hotels as well as the Merseyside Maritime Museum, International Slavery Museum, Tate Liverpool and The Beatles Story. North of the city centre is Stanley Dock, home to the Stanley Dock Tobacco Warehouse, which was at the time of its construction in 1901, the world's largest building in terms of area[321] and today stands as the world's largest brick-work building.[322]

One of the most famous locations in Liverpool is the Pier Head, renowned for the trio of buildings – the Royal Liver Building, the Cunard Building and the Port of Liverpool Building – which sit upon it. Collectively referred to as the Three Graces, these buildings stand as a testament to the great wealth in the city during the late 19th and early 20th century. Built in a variety of architectural styles, they are recognised as being the symbol of 'maritime Liverpool' and are regarded by many as contributing to one of the most impressive waterfronts in the world.[323][324][325][326]

In the 21st century, several areas along Liverpool's waterfront have undergone significant redevelopment. Among the notable developments are the Museum of Liverpool, the construction of the Liverpool Arena, ACC Liverpool and Exhibition Centre Liverpool on King's Dock, Alexandra Tower and 1 Princes Dock on Prince's Dock and Liverpool Marina around Coburg and Brunswick Docks. The Wheel of Liverpool opened on 25 March 2010.[327][328]

However, plans to redevelop parts of Liverpool city centre have been marred by controversy. In December 2016, a newly formed company called North Point Global Ltd. was given the rights to develop part of the docks under the "New Chinatown" working name. Though heavily advertised in Liverpool, Hong Kong and Chinese cities with high profile advertisements and videos, the "New Chinatown" development failed to materialise.[329] In January 2018, the Liverpool Echo and Asia Times revealed that the site remained sans any construction. North Point Global as well as its subcontractor "Bilt" had both declared bankruptcy, and the small investors (mostly middle class couples) who had already paid money for the apartments had lost most of their savings in them.[330]

Commercial district and cultural quarter

 
St George's Hall
 
Municipal Buildings

Liverpool's historic position as one of the most important trading ports in the world has meant that over time many grand buildings have been constructed in the city as headquarters for shipping firms, insurance companies, banks and other large firms. The great wealth this brought then allowed for the development of grand civic buildings, which were designed to allow the local administrators to 'run the city with pride'.[331]

The commercial district is centred on the Castle Street, Dale Street and Old Hall Street areas of the city, with many of the area's roads still following their medieval layout. Having developed predominantly over a period of three centuries, the area is regarded as one of the most important architectural locations in the city, as recognised by its inclusion in Liverpool's former World Heritage site.[332]

The oldest building in the area is the Grade I listed Liverpool Town Hall, which is located at the top of Castle Street and dates from 1754. Often regarded as the city's finest piece of Georgian architecture, the building is known as one of the most extravagantly decorated civic buildings anywhere in Britain.[333][334] Also on Castle Street is the Grade I listed Bank of England Building, constructed between 1845 and 1848, as one of only three provincial branches of the national bank.[333] Among the other buildings in the area are the Tower Buildings, Albion House (the former White Star Line headquarters), the Municipal Buildings and Oriel Chambers,[335] which is considered to be one of the earliest Modernist style buildings ever built.[336]

The area around William Brown Street is referred to as the city's 'Cultural Quarter', owing to the presence of numerous civic buildings, including the William Brown Library, Walker Art Gallery, Picton Reading Rooms and World Museum Liverpool. The area is dominated by neo-classical architecture, of which the most prominent, St George's Hall,[337] is widely regarded as the best example of a neo-classical building anywhere in Europe.[338] A Grade I listed building, it was constructed between 1840 and 1855 to serve a variety of civic functions in the city and its doors are inscribed with "S.P.Q.L." (Latin senatus populusque Liverpudliensis), meaning "the senate and people of Liverpool". William Brown Street is also home to numerous public monuments and sculptures, including Wellington's Column and the Steble Fountain. Many others are located around the area, particularly in St John's Gardens, which was specifically developed for this purpose.[339] The William Brown Street area has been likened to a modern recreation of the Roman Forum.[340]

Other notable landmarks

 
Speke Hall Tudor manor house is one of Liverpool's oldest buildings.
 
Liverpool Cathedral, the largest cathedral in the UK
 
Sefton Park Palm House

While the majority of Liverpool's architecture dates from the mid-18th century onwards, there are several buildings that pre-date this time. One of the oldest surviving buildings is Speke Hall, a Tudor manor house located in the south of the city, which was completed in 1598.[341] The building is one of the few remaining timber framed Tudor houses left in the north of England and is particularly noted for its Victorian interiors, which were added in the mid-19th century.[342] In addition to Speke Hall, many of the city's other oldest surviving buildings are also former manor houses including Croxteth Hall and Woolton Hall, which were completed in 1702 and 1704 respectively.[343]

The oldest building within the city centre is the Grade I listed Bluecoat Chambers,[344] which was built between 1717 and 1718. Constructed in British Queen Anne style architecture,[345][346] the building was influenced in part by the work of Christopher Wren[347] and was originally the home of the Bluecoat School (who later moved to a larger site in Wavertree in the south of the city). Since 1908, it has acted as a centre for arts in Liverpool.[345]

Liverpool is noted for having two Cathedrals, each of which imposes over the landscape around it.[348] The Anglican Cathedral, which was constructed between 1904 and 1978, is the largest Cathedral in Britain[349] and the fifth largest in the world. Designed and built in Gothic style, it is regarded as one of the greatest buildings to have been constructed during the 20th century[350] and was described by former British Poet Laureate, John Betjeman, as "one of the great buildings of the world".[351] The Roman Catholic Metropolitan Cathedral was constructed between 1962 and 1967 and is known as one of the first cathedrals to break the traditional longitudinal design.[352]

In the 21st century, many parts of Liverpool's city centre have undergone significant redevelopment and regeneration after years of decline. So far, the largest of these developments has been Liverpool One, which saw almost £1 billion invested in the redevelopment of 42 acres (17 hectares) of land, providing new retail, commercial, residential and leisure space.[353] Around the north of the city centre, several new skyscrapers have also been constructed including the RIBA award-winning Unity Buildings and West Tower, which at 140m is Liverpool's tallest building. Many redevelopment schemes are also in progress including Circus,[354] King's Dock,[355] Paddington Village[356] and Liverpool Waters.[357]

There are many other notable buildings in Liverpool, including the art deco former terminal building of Speke Airport, the University of Liverpool's Victoria Building, (which provided the inspiration for the term Red Brick University), and the Adelphi Hotel, which was in the past considered to be one of the finest hotels anywhere in the world.[358]

Parks and gardens

The Register of Historic Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in England describes Merseyside's Victorian Parks as collectively the "most important in the country".[359] The city of Liverpool has ten listed parks and cemeteries, including two Grade I and five Grade II*, more than any other English city apart from London.[360]

Transport

Liverpool has an extensive transport infrastructure that connects the city with its metropolitan area, the rest of the United Kingdom, Europe and the world. Various modes of transport provide considerable connections by road, rail, air and sea. The local network of buses, trains and ferries is managed by Merseytravel on behalf of the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority and the Metro Mayor of the Liverpool City Region. The Mayor and Combined Authority have control of a devolved transport budget and associated transport powers for this local system. The city's major port and international airport provide global links for both passengers and freight.[361][362]

National and international travel

Roads

 
The Liverpool city centre entrance to the Queensway tunnel under the River Mersey

The city of Liverpool proper sits at the centre of a much larger metropolitan area. The city's suburbs run contiguously in to the neighbouring boroughs of the Liverpool City Region, a heavily urbanised region with substantial road links to many other areas within England. The city is surrounded by a network of six motorways (M58 to the north, M56 to the south, M6 & M62 to the east and M53 to the west). The M57 also acts as an outer ring road and bypass for the city of Liverpool itself.

To the north, the M58 motorway runs 12 miles and provides links from Liverpool to the neighbouring counties of Lancashire and Greater Manchester.[363] To the south, Liverpool is connected to Widnes and Warrington via the A562 and across the River Mersey to Runcorn, via the Silver Jubilee and Mersey Gateway bridges. The M56 motorway then provides routes in to parts of the neighbouring counties of Cheshire and Greater Manchester, with connections to the Wirral and North Wales.[364] To the east, the M62 motorway connects Liverpool with Hull and along the route to several large cities including Manchester, Leeds and Bradford. The M62 also provides a connection to both the M6 and M1 motorways, providing indirect links to more distant areas including Birmingham, London, Nottingham, Preston and Sheffield.[365][366] To the west of the city, the Kingsway and Queensway Tunnels connect Liverpool with the Wirral Peninsula, including Birkenhead, and Wallasey. The A41 road and M53 motorway, which both begin in Birkenhead, link to Cheshire and Shropshire and via the A55, to North Wales.[367] The M57 acts as a 10 mile ring road for the city itself and links various towns east of the city with the M62 and M58 motorways.[368]

Railway

 
Liverpool Lime Street Station, one of the busiest train stations in the UK outside London[369]

Liverpool is served by two separate rail networks. The local rail network is managed and run by Merseyrail and provides links throughout the Liverpool city region and beyond (see Local travel below). The national network, which is managed by Network Rail, provides Liverpool with connections to major towns and cities across England. The city's primary main line station is Lime Street station, which is the terminus for several lines into the city. The station is served by a number of different train operating companies including Avanti West Coast, East Midlands Railway, London North Eastern Railway, Northern Rail, TransPennine Express and West Midlands Trains.[370][371] Between them, the station is connected with direct train services to numerous destinations including London (in 2 hours 8 minutes with Pendolino trains), Birmingham, Glasgow, Hull, Leeds, Manchester, Newcastle upon Tyne, Norwich, Nottingham, Preston, Scarborough, Sheffield and York.[372][373][374][375] Opened in 1836, Lime Street station is the world's oldest mainline terminus station still in use.[376] In the south of the city, Liverpool South Parkway provides a connection to the city's airport.

Port

The Port of Liverpool connects passengers and freight to Liverpool from all around the world. Passenger ferry services depart from the city across the Irish Sea to Belfast, Dublin and the Isle of Man. Services are provided by several companies, including the Isle of Man Steam Packet Company, P&O Ferries and Stena Line.

The Liverpool Cruise Terminal handles over 200,000 passengers and crew annually and is located alongside the Pier Head in the city centre. Berthing facilities for long-distance passenger cruises are provided and served by a large number of different cruise lines. Ports in Australia, France, Faroe Islands, Iceland, North America, Norway, Spain and the Caribbean are served by the facility.[377][378][379] The cruise lines that call at Liverpool cruise terminal include the following:

In terms of freight traffic today, the Port of Liverpool is the 4th busiest port in the UK by tonnage. It is the main port in the country for transatlantic trade and the largest port on the west coast of the UK. The Royal Seaforth and Liverpool2 container terminals are the port's two main terminals and handle a wide variety of cargo including containers, liquid and dry bulk cargoes such as coal and grain, biomass and roll-on/roll-off cargoes such as cars and trucks.[399][400][401][402][403][404]Leeds and Liverpool Canal runs into Liverpool city centre via Liverpool Canal Link at Pier Head since 2009.[405]

Airport

 
Liverpool John Lennon Airport terminal building

Liverpool John Lennon Airport, which is located in the south of the city, provides Liverpool with direct air connections across the United Kingdom and Europe. It offers direct services to over 60 airports world wide and to over 100 destinations via one-stop connections in Frankfurt, Dublin and Reykjavík. The airport is primarily served by low-cost airlines namely Aer Lingus, easyJet, Jet2.com, Loganair, Lufthansa, Play, Ryanair, Widerøe and Wizz Air, although it does provide facilities for private aircraft. Jet2 have announced that new services to winter sun destinations will be starting from winter 2024 to destinations such as Lanzarote & Tenerife.[406][407][408][409][410][411]

Local travel

Trains

 
A Class 777 train operated by Merseyrail

Liverpool's urban railway network, known as Merseyrail, is one of the busiest and most extensive in the country. The network provides approximately 30 million passenger journeys per year, across a system of 69 stations throughout Liverpool's metropolitan area, within the formal boundaries of the Liverpool city region and adjacent areas of Cheshire and Lancashire.[412][413][414][415]

The network consists of three lines: the Northern Line, which runs to Southport, Ormskirk, Headbolt Lane and Hunts Cross; the Wirral Line, which runs through the Mersey Railway Tunnel and has branches to New Brighton, West Kirby, Chester and Ellesmere Port; and the City Line, which begins at Lime Street, providing links to St Helens, Wigan, Preston, Warrington and Manchester.[416][417] The network is predominantly electric and covers 75 miles (120 kilometres) of track.[418][419] Trains are owned and operated by the Merseyrail franchise and managed by Merseytravel under the direction of the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority. Local services on the City Line are operated by Northern rather than Merseyrail, although the line itself remains part of the Merseyrail network. Within Liverpool city centre, four stations and over 6+12 miles (10.5 kilometres) of tunnels are underground.[418] Hamilton Square and Liverpool James Street are the oldest deep level underground stations in the world.[420] In 2023, for the first time in UK history, battery-powered passenger trains launched on Merseyrail tracks from the newly opened Headbolt Lane station in Kirkby. The Liverpool City Region Combined Authority's long term "Merseyrail for All" plan is to reduce dependency on live third rail and promote battery power in order to further expand Merseyrail to previously inaccessible places across the city region and as far as Manchester, Wrexham, Warrington and Preston.[421][422]

Buses

 
Liverpool South Parkway, a bus & rail interchange serving south Liverpool & Liverpool John Lennon Airport

Local bus services within and around Liverpool are managed by Merseytravel[423] and are run by several different companies, including Arriva and Stagecoach. The two principal termini for local buses are Queen Square bus station (located near Lime Street railway station) for services north and east of the city, and Liverpool One bus station (located near the Royal Albert Dock) for services to the south and east.[424] Cross-river services to the Wirral use roadside terminus points in Castle Street and Sir Thomas Street. A night bus service also operates on Saturdays providing services from the city centre across Liverpool and wider region.[425] Tour bus services are provided by Maghull Coaches which allow tourists to hop-on-hop-off and view historical landmarks and attractions, as well as Liverpool F.C. and Beatles related locations.[426][427] National Express services operate from the Liverpool One bus station to and from destinations across the UK.[428] In 2023, the Liverpool city region confirmed plans to become the second place outside London to implement bus franchising. Local leaders have argued that it will improve services by transferring control over fares, ticketing and routes from bus companies to the Combined Authority. The full implementation of bus franchising will take place by the end of 2028.[429][430]

Mersey Ferry

 
A Mersey Ferry (foreground) with the Liverpool waterfront in the distance

The cross-river ferry service in Liverpool, known as the Mersey Ferry, is managed and operated by Merseytravel, with services operating between the Pier Head in Liverpool city centre and both Woodside in Birkenhead and Seacombe in Wallasey. Services operate at intervals ranging from 20 minutes, at peak times, to every hour during the middle of the day and at weekends.[431] Despite remaining an important transport link between the city and the Wirral Peninsula, the Mersey Ferry has become an increasingly popular tourist attraction within the city, with daytime River Explorer Cruises providing passengers with an historical overview of the River Mersey and surrounding areas.[432]

Cycling and scooters

A scooter-sharing system and electric bicycle scheme operates throughout Liverpool which allows residents and visitors to move around the city on rented scooters and bicycles. The scheme is operated by Swedish technology company Voi, and riders are able to pick up and drop off bikes and scooters at various locations around the city.[433][434][435] National Cycle Route 56, National Cycle Route 62 and National Cycle Route 810 run through Liverpool.

Culture

As with other large cities, Liverpool is an important cultural centre within the United Kingdom, incorporating music, performing arts, museums and art galleries, literature and nightlife among others. In 2008, the cultural heritage of the city was celebrated with the city holding the title of European Capital of Culture, during which time a wide range of cultural celebrations took place in the city, including Go Superlambananas! and La Princesse. Liverpool has also held Europe's largest music and poetry event, the Welsh national Eisteddfod, three times, despite being in England, in 1884, 1900, and 1929.

Music

 
The Beatles statue in their home city Liverpool. The group are the most commercially successful and critically acclaimed band in popular music.[436]

Liverpool is internationally known for music and is recognised by Guinness World Records as the "World Capital City of Pop".[437] Musicians from the city have produced 58 No. 1 singles, more than any other city in the world.[438] Both the most successful male band and girl group in global music history have contained Liverpudlian members. Liverpool is most famous as the birthplace of the Beatles and during the 1960s was at the forefront of the Beat Music movement, which would eventually lead to the British Invasion. Many notable musicians of the time originated in the city including Billy J. Kramer, Cilla Black, Gerry and the Pacemakers and The Searchers. The influence of musicians from Liverpool, coupled with other cultural exploits of the time, such as the Liverpool poets, prompted American poet Allen Ginsberg to proclaim that the city was "the centre of consciousness of the human universe".[439] Other musicians from Liverpool include Billy Fury, A Flock of Seagulls, Echo & the Bunnymen, Frankie Goes to Hollywood, Frankie Vaughan, Anathema, Ladytron, The Zutons, Cast, Atomic Kitten and Rebecca Ferguson. The La's 1990 hit single "There She Goes" was described by Rolling Stone as a "founding piece of Britpop's foundation."[440]

 
Philharmonic Hall, home of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic

The city is also home to the oldest surviving professional symphony orchestra in the UK, the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, which is based in the Philharmonic Hall.[441] The chief conductor of the orchestra is Vasily Petrenko.[442] Sir Edward Elgar dedicated his Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1 to the Liverpool Orchestral Society, and the piece had its first performance in the city in 1901.[443] Among Liverpool's curiosities, the Austrian émigré Fritz Spiegl is notable. He not only became a world expert on the etymology of Scouse, but composed the music to Z-cars and the Radio 4 UK Theme.

Well established festivals in the city include Africa Oyé and Brazilica which are the UK's largest free African and Brazilian music festivals respectively.[444][445] The dance music festival Creamfields was established by the Liverpool-based Cream clubbing brand which started life as a weekly event at Nation nightclub. There are numerous music venues located across the city, however, the Liverpool Arena is by far the largest. Opened in 2008, the 11,000-seat arena hosted the MTV Europe Music Awards the same year, and since then has played host to world-renowned acts such as Andrea Bocelli, Beyoncé, Elton John, Kanye West, Kasabian, The Killers, Lady Gaga, Oasis, Pink, Rihanna, and UB40.

 
The Eurovision Village stage at the Pier Head, held as a side event for the Eurovision Song Contest 2023

On 7 October 2022, the BBC and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) announced that Liverpool would host the Eurovision Song Contest 2023 on behalf of the previous year's winning country Ukraine, who were unable to meet the demands of hosting the event due to security concerns caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The contest was held at the Liverpool Arena and consisted of two semi-finals on 9 and 11 May, and a final on 13 May 2023. This was the first time that the contest took place in the city, and was also a record-extending ninth time that the UK has hosted the contest, having last done so in Birmingham in 1998.[446]

Visual arts

 
William Brown Street, also known as the Cultural Quarter, was a World Heritage Site consisting of the World Museum, Central Library, Picton Reading Room and Walker Art Gallery.

Liverpool has more galleries and national museums than any other city in the United Kingdom apart from London.[18] National Museums Liverpool is the only English national collection based wholly outside London.[447] The Tate Liverpool gallery houses the modern art collection of the Tate in the North of England and was, until the opening of Tate Modern, the largest exhibition space dedicated to modern art in the United Kingdom. The FACT centre hosts touring multimedia exhibitions, while the Walker Art Gallery houses one of the most impressive permanent collections of Pre-Raphaelite art in the world.[448] Sudley House contains another major collection of pre-20th-century art.[449] Liverpool University's Victoria Building was re-opened as a public art gallery and museum to display the university's artwork and historical collections which include the largest display of art by Audubon outside the US.[450] A number of artists have also come from the city, including painter George Stubbs who was born in Liverpool in 1724.

The Liverpool Biennial festival of arts runs from mid-September to late November and comprises three main sections; the International, The Independents and New Contemporaries although fringe events are timed to coincide.[451] It was during the 2004 festival that Yoko Ono's work "My mother is beautiful" caused widespread public protest when photographs of a naked woman's pubic area were exhibited on the main shopping street.

 
Nelson Monument at Exchange Flags. The other British hero of the Napoleonic Wars is commemorated in Wellington's Column.

Literature

Felicia Hemans (née Browne) was born in Dale Street, Liverpool, in 1793, although she later moved to Flintshire, in Wales. Felicia was born in Liverpool, a granddaughter of the Venetian consul in that city. Her father's business soon brought the family to Denbighshire in North Wales, where she spent her youth. They made their home near Abergele and St. Asaph (Flintshire), and it is clear that she came to regard herself as Welsh by adoption, later referring to Wales as "Land of my childhood, my home and my dead". Her first poems, dedicated to the Prince of Wales, were published in Liverpool in 1808, when she was only fourteen, arousing the interest of Percy Bysshe Shelley, who briefly corresponded with her. [452]

An engraving of a painting of   The Wishing Gate. by S. F. Serres was published in Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1834 with a poetical illustration by Letitia Elizabeth Landon to which she adds the note 'I believe that to this haunted gate, a common superstition is attached, namely, that to wish, and to have that wish fulfilled, is the result of such wish being uttered while passing'. It stood on the North Shore before the docks were built and was a place where farewells could be waved to departing voyagers.[453]

A number of notable authors have visited Liverpool, including Daniel Defoe, Washington Irving, Thomas De Quincey, Herman Melville, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Charles Dickens, Gerard Manley Hopkins and Hugh Walpole. Daniel Defoe, after visiting the city, described it, as "one of the wonders of Britain in his 'Tour through England and Wales'".[454]

Herman Melville's novel Redburn deals with the first seagoing voyage of 19 years old Wellingborough Redburn between New York and Liverpool in 1839. Largely autobiographical, the middle sections of the book are set in Liverpool and describe the young merchantman's wanderings, and his reflections.[452] Hawthorne was stationed in Liverpool as United States consul between 1853 and 1856.[455] Charles Dickens visited the city on numerous occasions to give public readings.[456] Hopkins served as priest at St Francis Xavier Church, Langdale St., Liverpool, between 1879 and 81.[457] Although he is not known to have ever visited Liverpool, Jung famously had a vivid dream of the city which he analysed in one of his works.[458]

 
Constantine P. Cavafy, widely regarded as one of the most important figures in Western literature, spent a significant part of his life in Liverpool

Of all the poets who are connected with Liverpool, perhaps the greatest is Constantine P. Cavafy, a twentieth-century Greek cultural icon, although he was born in Alexandria. From a wealthy family, his father had business interests in Egypt, London and Liverpool. After his father's death, Cavafy's mother brought him in 1872 at the age of nine to Liverpool, where he spent part of his childhood being educated. He lived first in Balmoral Road, then when the family firm crashed, he lived in poorer circumstances in Huskisson Street. After his father died in 1870, Cavafy and his family settled for a while in Liverpool. In 1876, his family faced financial problems due to the Long Depression of 1873, so, by 1877, they had to move back to Alexandria.[452]

Her Benny, a novel telling the tragic story of Liverpool street urchins in the 1870s, written by Methodist preacher Silas K. Hocking, was a best-seller and the first book to sell a million copies in the author's lifetime.[459] The prolific writer of adventure novels, Harold Edward Bindloss (1866–1945), was born in Liverpool.

The writer, docker and political activist George Garrett was born in Seacombe, on the Wirral Peninsula in 1896 and was brought up in Liverpool's South end, around Park Road, the son of a fierce Liverpool–Irish Catholic mother and a staunch 'Orange' stevedore father. In the 1920s and 1930s, his organisation within the Seamen's Vigilance Committees, unemployed demonstrations, and hunger marches from Liverpool became part of a wider cultural force. He spoke at reconciliation meetings in sectarian Liverpool, and helped found the Unity Theatre in the 1930s as part of the Popular Front against the rise of fascism, particularly its echoes in the Spanish Civil War. Garrett died in 1966.[460]

The novelist and playwright James Hanley (1897–1985) was born in Kirkdale, Liverpool, in 1897 (not Dublin, nor 1901 as he generally implied) to a working-class family.[461] Hanley grew up close to the docks and much of his early writing is about seamen. The Furys (1935) is first in a sequence of five loosely autobiographical novels about working-class life in Liverpool. James Hanley's brother, novelist Gerald Hanley (1916–92) was also born in Liverpool (not County Cork, Ireland, as he claimed).[462] While he published a number of novels he also wrote radio plays for the BBC as well as some film scripts, most notably The Blue Max (1966).[463] He was also one of several scriptwriters for a life of Gandhi (1964).[464] Novelist Beryl Bainbridge (1932–2010) was born in Liverpool and raised in nearby Formby. She was primarily known for her works of psychological fiction, often set among the English working classes. Bainbridge won the Whitbread Awards prize for best novel in 1977 and 1996 and was nominated five times for the Booker Prize. The Times newspaper named Bainbridge among their list of "The 50 greatest British writers since 1945".[465]

J. G. Farrell was born in Liverpool in 1935 but left at the outbreak of war in 1939.[466] A novelist of Irish descent, Farrell gained prominence for his historical fiction, most notably his Empire Trilogy (Troubles, The Siege of Krishnapur and The Singapore Grip), dealing with the political and human consequences of British colonial rule. However, his career ended when he drowned in Ireland in 1979 at the age of 44.

 
Clive Barker, Liverpool born writer of Hellraiser and inspiration behind Candyman

Helen Forrester was the pen name of June Bhatia (née Huband) (1919–2011),[467][468] who was known for her books about her early childhood in Liverpool during the Great Depression, including Twopence to Cross the Mersey (1974), as well as several works of fiction. During the late 1960s the city became well known for the Liverpool poets, who include Roger McGough and the late Adrian Henri. An anthology of poems, The Mersey Sound, written by Henri, McGough and Brian Patten, has sold well since it was first being published in 1967.

Liverpool has produced several noted writers of horror fiction, often set on Merseyside – Ramsey Campbell, Clive Barker and Peter Atkins among them. A collection of Liverpudlian horror fiction, Spook City was edited by a Liverpool expatriate, Angus Mackenzie, and introduced by Doug Bradley, also from Liverpool.[469] Bradley is famed for portraying Barker's creation Pinhead in the Hellraiser series of films.

Performing arts

 
The Empire Theatre has the largest two-tier auditorium in the UK.

Liverpool also has a long history of performing arts, reflected in several annual theatre festivals such as the Liverpool Shakespeare Festival, which takes place inside Liverpool Cathedral and in the adjacent historic St James' Gardens every summer; the Everyword Festival of new theatre writing, the only one of its kind in the country;[470] Physical Fest, an international festival of physical theatre;[471] the annual festivals organised by Liverpool John Moores University's drama department and the Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts; and other festivals by the large number of theatres in the city, such as the Empire, Epstein, Everyman,[472][473] Playhouse,[474][475] Royal Court, and Unity theatres.

Notable actors and actresses from Liverpool include Arthur Askey, Tom Baker, Kim Cattrall, Jodie Comer, Stephen Graham, Rex Harrison, Jason Isaacs, Tina Malone, the McGann brothers (Joe, Mark, Paul, and Stephen), David Morrissey, Elizabeth Morton, Peter Serafinowicz, Elisabeth Sladen, Alison Steadman, and Rita Tushingham. Actors and actresses from elsewhere in the world have strong ties to the city, such as Canadian actor Mike Myers (whose parents were both from Liverpool) and American actress Halle Berry (whose mother was from Liverpool).

Nightlife

 
Nightlife in Mathew Street and Temple Court, Liverpool city centre

Liverpool has a thriving and varied nightlife. The majority of the city's late-night restaurants, bars, pubs, nightclubs, music venues and comedy clubs are located in a number of distinct districts.

In 2023, figures from global data company Square show that night-time spending in bars and restaurants in Liverpool city centre outperformed all major UK cities, including London.[476]

Figures by the Liverpool BID Company suggest that the busiest nights of the week in Liverpool city centre are Friday and Saturday. Using cameras to track the flow of people in key locations between 7 pm and 4 am, at least 1.5 million people pass through the city centre every Friday night and almost 2 million people on Saturday nights. The data demonstrates that Monday night is the quietest night of the week in the city centre and footfall then increases every single night to reach its peak on Saturday nights. 125,889 people worked in the city's night time economy as of 2022, according to the Liverpool BID Company.[477][478][479]

Liverpool's nightlife is concentrated in a number of districts including Ropewalks which comprises Concert Square, St. Peter's Square and the adjoining Seel Street and Duke Street. Other popular areas include Hardman Street, the Cavern Quarter, Baltic Triangle, Royal Albert Dock and the city's Pride Quarter, which is home to a large number of LGBT venues.[480][481]

In the city's suburbs, Lark Lane in Aigburth is noted for an abundance of bars and late-night venues.[482][483]

Education

 
University of Liverpool's Victoria Building

In Liverpool primary and secondary education is available in various forms supported by the state including secular, Church of England, Jewish, and Roman Catholic. Islamic education is available at primary level, but there is no secondary provision. One of Liverpool's important early schools was The Liverpool Blue Coat School; founded in 1708 as a charitable school.

The Liverpool Blue Coat School is the top-performing school in the city with 100% 5 or more A*-C grades at GCSE resulting in the 30th best GCSE results in the country and an average point score per student of 1087.4 in A/AS levels.[484] Other notable schools include Liverpool College founded in 1840 Merchant Taylors' School founded in 1620.[485] Another of Liverpool's notable senior schools is St. Edward's College situated in the West Derby area of the city. Historic grammar schools, such as the Liverpool Institute High School and Liverpool Collegiate School—both closed in the 1980s—are still remembered as centres of academic excellence. Bellerive Catholic College is the city's top-performing non-selective school, based upon GCSE results in 2007.

 
Liverpool John Moores University's James Parsons Building

Liverpool has three universities: the University of Liverpool, Liverpool John Moores University and Liverpool Hope University. Edge Hill University, founded as a teacher-training college in the Edge Hill district of Liverpool, is now located in Ormskirk in South-West Lancashire. Liverpool is also home to the Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts (LIPA).

The University of Liverpool was established in 1881 as University College Liverpool. In 1884, it became part of the federal Victoria University. Following a Royal Charter and Act of Parliament in 1903, it became an independent university, the University of Liverpool, with the right to confer its own degrees. It was the first university to offer degrees in biochemistry, architecture, civic design, veterinary science, oceanography and social science.

 
City of Liverpool College's Arts Centre

Liverpool Hope University, which was formed through the merger of three colleges, the earliest of which was founded in 1844, gained university status in 2005. It is the only ecumenical university in Europe.[486] It is situated on both sides of Taggart Avenue in Childwall and has a second campus in the city centre (the Cornerstone).

The Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, founded to address some of the problems created by trade, continues today as a post-graduate school affiliated with the University of Liverpool and houses an anti-venom repository.

Liverpool John Moores University was previously a polytechnic, and gained status in 1992. It is named in honour of Sir John Moores, one of the founders of the Littlewoods football pools and retail group, who was a major benefactor. The institution was previously owned and run by Liverpool City Council. It traces it lineage to the Liverpool Mechanics' institute, opened in 1823, making it by this measure England's third-oldest university.

The city has one further education college, City of Liverpool College in the city centre. Liverpool City Council operates Burton Manor, a residential adult education college in nearby Burton, on the Wirral Peninsula.

There are two Jewish schools in Liverpool, both belonging to the King David Foundation. King David School, Liverpool, is the High School and the King David Primary School. There is also a King David Kindergarten, featured in the community centre of Harold House. These schools are all run by the King David Foundation located in Harold House in Childwall; conveniently next door to the Childwall Synagogue.

Sport

Football

 
The Merseyside derby is the football match between the two biggest clubs in the city; Liverpool in red and Everton in blue

Liverpool is one of the most successful footballing cities in England, and is home to two top flight Premier League teams. Everton F.C. was founded in 1878 and was one of the twelve founder members of the Football League. It plays at Goodison Park. Liverpool F.C. were founded in 1892 and play at Anfield. Between them, the clubs have won 28 English First Division titles, 12 FA Cup titles, 10 League Cup titles, 6 European Cup titles, 1 FIFA Club World Cup title, 1 European Cup Winners' Cup title, 3 UEFA Cup titles, and 24 FA Charity Shields.

The two clubs contest the Merseyside derby, dubbed the 'friendly derby'. Despite the name the fixture is known for its keen rivalry, having seen more sending-offs in this fixture than any other. Unlike many other derbies it is not rare for families in the city to contain supporters of both clubs.[487] Liverpool F.C. is the English and British club with the most European Cup titles with six, the latest in 2019.

 
Anfield, home of Liverpool F.C.

Liverpool has played at Anfield since 1892, when the club was formed to occupy the stadium following Everton's departure due to a dispute with their landlord. Liverpool are still playing there 125 years later, although the ground has been completely rebuilt since the 1970s. The Spion Kop (rebuilt as an all-seater stand in 1994–95) was the most famous part of the ground, gaining cult status across the world due to the songs and celebrations of the many fans who packed onto its terraces. Anfield as capacity for 54,000 spectators in comfort and is a distinctive landmark in an area filled with smaller and older buildings. Liverpool club also has a multimillion-pound youth training facility called The Academy.

 
Goodison Park, home of Everton F.C.

After leaving Anfield in 1892, Everton moved to Goodison Park on the opposite side of Stanley Park. The ground was opened on 24 August 1892, by Lord Kinnaird and Frederick Wall of the FA but the first crowds to attend the ground saw a short athletics meeting followed by a selection of music and a fireworks display. Everton's first game there was on 2 September 1892 when they beat Bolton 4–2. It was one of the host venues during the 1966 FIFA World Cup. It now has the capacity for just under 40,000 spectators all-seated, but the last expansion took place in 1994 when a new Park End Stand gave the stadium an all-seater capacity. The Goodison Road Stand dates back to the 1970s, while the Gwladys Steet Stand and Bullens Road Stand are refurbished pre-Second World War structures.

Everton is currently in the process of relocating, with a stadium move first mooted as early as 1996.[488] In 2003, the club were forced to abandon plans for a 55,000-seat stadium at King's Dock due to financial constraints,[489] with further proposed moves to Kirkby (comprising part of Destination Kirkby, moving the stadium just beyond Liverpool's council boundary into Kirkby) and Walton Hall Park similarly scrapped.

The club will relocate to the multimillion-pound Everton Stadium designed by the American architect Dan Meis at the nearby Bramley-Moore Dock on the River Mersey waterfront during the 2024/25 season, with ground broken on the project in August 2021.[490] The new stadium will have a capacity of 52,888 which could be expanded to 62,000 demand permitting and it will be a host venue for the UEFA Euro 2028. Everton also have a multimillion-pound training facility based at Finch Farm. The Everton Women's Team play in the Women's Super League at the Walton Hall Park Stadium.

Rugby league

Rugby league is a developing sport in Liverpool, with many community partners assisting the sport's governing body (RFL) to offer opportunities to participate. These include well established professional clubs in the neighbouring towns of St. Helens and Widnes. The city has a thriving student rugby league scene; Liverpool University took part in the first university game in 1968 and the other universities have been regular participants in the BUSA competition.

Today there are a number of non-professional clubs in the city, including Liverpool Buccaneers, who in 2006 won the regional final of the Rugby League Conference and in 2008 were elevated to the Rugby League Conference National division. Two junior clubs, Liverpool Lions (based in Croxteth) and Liverpool Storm (based in Childwall), have been established in 2008. They will be competing in the NWC Junior leagues in 2009. Rugby league has more recently returned to Huyton-with-Roby in the form of the Huyton Bulldogs A.R.L.F.C. Huyton Bulldogs currently compete in the RL Merit League, and their home ground is at the Jubilee Playing Fields, Twig Lane, Huyton.

A number of secondary schools throughout Merseyside are now participating in the inaugural merit league and 2008 is the first year that Merseyside schools have qualified for the RFL's Champion Schools tournament. Primary schools have been competing in tag festivals for a few years and the annual Tag World Cup is one of the major events in the Liverpool schools' competition calendar.

Boxing

Boxing is massively popular in Liverpool. The city has a proud heritage and history in the sport and is home to around 22 amateur boxing clubs, which are responsible for producing many successful boxers, such as Nel Tarleton, Alan Rudkin, John Conteh, Andy Holligan, Liam Smith, Paul Hodkinson, Tony Bellew and Robin Ried. The city also boasts a consistently strong amateur contingent which is highlighted by Liverpool being the most represented city on the GB Boxing team, as well as at the 2012 London Olympics, the most notable Liverpool amateur fighters include; Jimmy Lloyd, George Turpin, Tony Willis, Robin Reid and David Price who have all medalled at the Olympic Games. Boxing events are usually hosted at the Echo Arena and Liverpool Olympia within the city, although the former home of Liverpool boxing was the renowned Liverpool Stadium.

Horse racing

 
The Earl of Derby Stand at Aintree Racecourse; home of the Grand National

Aintree Racecourse in the adjacent Metropolitan Borough of Sefton is home to the world's most famous steeple-chase, the Randox Grand National which takes place annually in early April. The race meeting attracts horse owners/ jockeys from around the world to compete in the demanding 4-mile (6.5-kilometre) and 30-fence course. There have been many memorable moments of the Grand National, for instance, the 100/1 outsider Foinavon in 1967, the dominant Red Rum and Ginger McCain of the 1970s and Mon Mome (100/1) who won the 2009 meeting. In 2010, the National became the first horse race to be televised in high-definition in the UK.

Golf

The Royal Liverpool Golf Club, situated in the nearby town of Hoylake on the Wirral Peninsula, has hosted The Open Championship on a number of occasions, most recently in 2023. It also hosted the Walker Cup in 1983.

 
The Royal Liverpool Golf Club, Hoylake

Greyhound racing

Liverpool once contained four greyhound tracks, Seaforth Greyhound Stadium (1933–1965), Breck Park Stadium (1927–1948), Stanley Greyhound Stadium (1927–1961) and.White City Stadium (1932–1973). Breck Park also hosted boxing bouts and both Stanley and Seaforth hosted Motorcycle speedway.

Athletics

Wavertree Sports Park is home to the Liverpool Harriers athletics club, which has produced such athletes as Curtis Robb, Allyn Condon (the only British athlete to compete at both the Summer and Winter Olympics), and Katarina Johnson-Thompson; Great Britain was represented by Johnson-Thompson at the 2012 London Olympics in the women's heptathlon, and she would go on to win the gold medal at the 2019 World Championships, giving Liverpool its first gold medal and breaking the British record in the process.

Gymnastics

In August 2012, Liverpool gymnast Beth Tweddle won an Olympic bronze medal in London 2012 in the uneven bars at her third Olympic Games, thus becoming the most decorated British gymnast in history. Park Road Gymnastics Centre provides training to a high level.

Swimming

Liverpool has produced several swimmers who have represented their nation at major championships such as the Olympic Games. The most notable of which is Steve Parry who claimed a bronze medal at the 2004 Athens Olympics in the 200m butterfly. Others include Herbert Nickel Haresnape, Margaret Kelly, Shellagh Ratcliffe and Austin Rawlinson. There is a purpose-built aquatics centre at Wavertree Sports Park, which opened in 2008. The City of Liverpool Swimming Club has been National Speedo League Champions 8 out of the last 11 years.

Cricket

 
Liverpool Cricket Club

The city is the hub of the Liverpool and District Cricket Competition, an ECB Premier League.[491] Sefton Park and Liverpool are the league's founder members based in the city with Wavertree, Alder and Old Xaverians clubs having joined the league more recently.[492] Liverpool plays host Lancashire County Cricket Club as an outground most seasons, including six of eight home County Championship games during Lancashire's 2011[493] title winning campaign[494] while Old Trafford was refurbished.[495][496]

Tennis

Since 2014 Liverpool Cricket Club has played host[497] to the annual Tradition-ICAP Liverpool International tennis tournament, which has seen tennis stars such as Novak Djokovic, David Ferrer, Mardy Fish, Laura Robson and Caroline Wozniacki. Previously this had been held at Calderstones Park, situated in Allerton in the south of the city. Liverpool Tennis Development Programme at Wavertree Tennis Centre is one of the largest in the UK.

Basketball

 
Liverpool Arena hosts numerous sporting events and was formerly the home of British Basketball League team, the Mersey Tigers.

Professional basketball came to the city in 2007 with the entry of Everton Tigers, now known as Mersey Tigers, into the elite British Basketball League. The club was originally associated with Everton F.C., and was part of the Toxteth Tigers youth development programme, which reached over 1,500 young people every year.[498] The Tigers began to play in Britain's top league for the 2007–08 season, playing at the Greenbank Sports Academy before moving into the newly completed Echo Arena during that season. After the 2009–10 season, Everton F.C. withdrew funding from the Tigers, who then changed their name to Mersey Tigers. Their closest professional rivals are the Cheshire Jets, based 18 miles (29 km) away in Chester.

Baseball

Liverpool is one of three cities which still host the traditional sport of British baseball and it hosts the annual England-Wales international match every two years, alternating with Cardiff and Newport. Liverpool Trojans are the oldest existing baseball club in the UK.

Cycling

The 2014 Tour of Britain cycle race began in Liverpool on 7 September, using a city centre circuit to complete 130 km (80.8 mi) of racing.[499] The Tour of Britain took nine stages and finished in London on 14 September.

Other

A 2016 study of UK fitness centres found that, of the top 20 UK urban areas, Liverpool had the highest number of leisure and sports centres per capita, with 4.3 centres per 100,000 of the city population.[500]

Media

The city has one daily newspaper: the Echo, published by Reach plc. The Liverpool Daily Post was also published until 2013. The UK's first online only weekly newspaper called Southport Reporter (Southport and Mersey Reporter), is also one of the many other news outlets that cover the city. The independent media organisation The Post[501] also covers Liverpool, while Nerve magazine publishes articles and reviews of cultural events.

LOCAL TV Liverpool is a local television station serving Liverpool City Region and surrounding areas. The station is owned and operated by Made Television Ltd and forms part of a group of eight local TV stations. It broadcasts from studios and offices in Liverpool.

 
Radio City Tower, home to Radio City and Greatest Hits Radio

The ITV region which covers Liverpool is ITV Granada. In 2006, the Television company opened a new newsroom in the Royal Liver Building. Granada's regional news broadcasts were produced at the Royal Albert Dock News Centre during the 1980s and 1990s.[502] The BBC also opened a new newsroom on Hanover Street in 2006.

ITV's daily magazine programme This Morning was broadcast from studios at Royal Albert Dock until 1996, when production was moved to London. Granada's short-lived shopping channel "Shop!" was also produced in Liverpool until it was cancelled in 2002.[503]

Liverpool is the home of the TV production company Lime Pictures, formerly Mersey Television, which produced the now-defunct soap operas Brookside and Grange Hill. It also produces the soap opera Hollyoaks, which was formerly filmed in Chester and began on Channel 4 in 1995. All three series were/are largely filmed in the Childwall area of Liverpool.

Radio stations include BBC Radio Merseyside, Liverpool Live Radio,[504] Melodic Distraction,[505] In Demand Radio, Capital Liverpool, Radio City and Greatest Hits Radio Liverpool & The North West. The last two are owned by Bauer and located in Radio City Tower which, along with the two cathedrals, dominates the city's skyline.

Liverpool has also featured in films;[506] see List of films set in Liverpool for some of them. In films the city has "doubled" for London, Paris, New York, Chicago, Moscow, Dublin, Venice and Berlin.[47][507]

Notable people

Quotes about Liverpool

  • "Lyrpole, alias Lyverpoole, a pavid towne, hath but a chapel ... The king hath a castelet there, and the Earl of Darbe hath a stone howse there. Irisch merchants cum much thither, as to a good haven ... At Lyrpole is smaul custom payed, that causith marchantes to resorte thither. Good marchandis at Lyrpole, and much Irish yarrn that Manchester men do buy there ..." – John Leland, Itinerary, c. 1536–1539[508]
  • "Liverpoole is one of the wonders of Britain ... In a word, there is no town in England, London excepted, that can equal [it] for the fineness of the streets, and the beauty of the buildings." – Daniel Defoe, A tour thro' the Whole Island of Great Britain, 1721–1726
  • "[O]ne of the neatest, best towns I have seen in England." – John Wesley. Journal, 1755
  • "I have not come here to be insulted by a set of wretches, every brick in whose infernal town is cemented with an African's blood." – George Frederick Cooke (1756–1812), an actor responding to being hissed at when he came onstage drunk during a visit to Liverpool[509]
  • "That immense City which stands like another Venice upon the water ... where there are riches overflowing and every thing which can delight a man who wishes to see the prosperity of a great community and a great empire ... This quondam village, now fit to be the proud capital of any empire in the world, has started up like an enchanted palace even in the memory of living men." – Thomas Erskine, 1st Baron Erskine, 1791
  • "I have heard of the greatness of Liverpool, but the reality far surpasses my expectation." – Prince Albert, speech, 1846
  • "Liverpool ... has become a wonder of the world. It is the New York of Europe, a world city rather than merely British provincial." – Illustrated London News, 15 May 1886
  • "The dream represented my situation at the time. I can still see the greyish-yellow raincoats, glistening with the wetness of the rain. Everything was extremely unpleasant, black and opaque – just as I felt then. But I had a vision of unearthly beauty, and that is why I was able to live at all. Liverpool is the "pool of life." The "liver," according to an old view, is the seat of life, that which makes to live." – C. G. Jung, Memories, Dreams, Reflections, 1928
  • "The centre is imposing, dignified and darkish, like a city in a rather gloomy Victorian novel ... We had now arrived in the heart of the big city, and as usual it was almost a heart of darkness. But it looked like a big city, there was no denying that. Here, emphatically, was the English seaport second only to London. The very weight of stone emphasised that fact. And even if the sun never seems to properly rise over it, I like a big city to proclaim itself a big city at once..." – J. B. Priestley, English Journey, 1934
  • "If Liverpool can get into top gear again, there is no limit to the city's potential. The scale and resilience of the buildings and people is amazing – it is a world city, far more so than London and Manchester. It doesn't feel like anywhere else in Lancashire: comparisons always end up overseas – Dublin, or Boston, or Hamburg. The city is tremendous, and so, right up to the First World War, were the abilities of the architects who built over it. The centre is humane and convenient to walk around in, but never loses its scale. And, in spite of the bombings and the carelessness, it is still full of superb buildings. Fifty years ago it must have outdone anything in England." – Ian Nairn, Britain's Changing Towns, 1967

International links

Twin cities

Liverpool is twinned[510] with:

Friendship links

Liverpool has friendship links (without formal constitution)[511] with the following cities:

Consulates

The first overseas consulate of the United States was opened in Liverpool in 1790, and it remained operational for almost two centuries.[512] Today, a large number of consulates are located in the city serving Chile, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Romania, Sweden and Thailand. Tunisian & Ivory Coast Consulates are located in the neighbouring Metropolitan Borough of Sefton.

Freedom of the City

The following people and military units have received the Freedom of the City of Liverpool.

Individuals

Military units

Organisations and groups

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The term may have its origins in religious and racial tribalism and sectarianism which, while now largely disappeared, were once notoriously virulent in the city and its environs.

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ "How Liverpool became known as 'the capital of North Wales'". March 2021. Retrieved 1 March 2021.
  2. ^ "Second capital of Ireland: Liverpool's unique Irish history and culture and what it means to the city". 25 July 2021. Retrieved 23 August 2022.
  3. ^ "It's official – Liverpool rocks!". Retrieved 31 October 2020.
  4. ^ "Is Liverpool still the world in one city?". Retrieved 1 May 2010.
  5. ^ "The population reached nearly 490,000". www.ons.gov.uk. Retrieved 29 December 2023.
  6. ^ "Council". Liverpool City Council. Retrieved 16 December 2023.
  7. ^ "Mid-Year Population Estimates, UK, June 2021". Office for National Statistics. 21 December 2022. Retrieved 18 October 2023.
  8. ^ UK Census (2011). "Local Area Report – Liverpool Built-up area (E34004801)". Nomis. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 16 December 2023.
  9. ^ a b c d UK Census (2021). "2021 Census Area Profile – Liverpool Local Authority (E08000012)". Nomis. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 16 December 2023.
  10. ^ a b Fenton, Trevor (25 April 2023). "Regional gross domestic product: city regions". Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 2 September 2023.
  11. ^ "The population reached nearly 490,000". www.ons.gov.uk. Retrieved 29 December 2023.
  12. ^ "British urban pattern: population data" (PDF). ESPON project 1.4.3 Study on Urban Functions. European Spatial Planning Observation Network. March 2007. p. 119. Retrieved 8 March 2019.
  13. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 August 2008. Retrieved 11 July 2008.
  14. ^ "Liverpool, European Capital of Culture: 2008 – 2018". 6 April 2018.
  15. ^ "Liverpool to become £80m investment zone". www.lbndaily.co.uk. 15 March 2023. Retrieved 3 January 2024.
  16. ^ "Economy of Liverpool". www.varbes.com. Retrieved 3 January 2024.
  17. ^ "'Liverpool's economy will thrive' says Prof Parkinson". www.lbndaily.co.uk. 8 August 2022. Retrieved 3 January 2024.
  18. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 7 September 2008. Retrieved 16 April 2009.
  19. ^ "Help Restore & Expand England's First Mosque". www.abdullahquilliam.org. Retrieved 8 October 2023.
  20. ^ Hanks, Patrick; Hodges, Flavia; Mills, David; Room, Adrian (2002). The Oxford Names Companion. Oxford: The University Press. p. 1110. ISBN 978-0198605614.
  21. ^ a b Harper, Douglas. "Liverpool". The Online Etymology Dictionary.
  22. ^ The Cambridge Dictionary of English Place-Names, ed. by Victor Watts (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004), s.v. Liverpool.
  23. ^ "Plea Rolls of the Court of Common Pleas". National Archives. Retrieved 25 November 2015. Third entry, the home of John Stanle, the defendant, in a plea of debt.
  24. ^ Crowley, Tony (2013). Scouse: A Social and Cultural History. Liverpool: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9781781389089. Retrieved 15 June 2014.
  25. ^ Richards, G. Melville (1953). "Place-Names of North Wales". A Scientific Survey of Merseyside. British Association. pp. 242–250.
  26. ^ "The Victoria history of the county of Lancaster. Edited by William Farrer and J. Brownbill". www.clickfind.com.au. Retrieved 8 October 2023.
  27. ^ "European traders". www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk.
  28. ^ Picton, J.A. (1875). Memorials of Liverpool. Vol. 1. Historical (2nd ed.). London: Longmans, Green & Co. pp. 11–12. OCLC 10476612.
liverpool, this, article, about, city, england, football, club, other, uses, disambiguation, city, metropolitan, borough, merseyside, north, west, england, metropolitan, borough, population, 2021, part, larger, metropolitan, area, with, population, million, 20. This article is about the city in England For the football club see Liverpool F C For other uses see Liverpool disambiguation Liverpool is a city and metropolitan borough in Merseyside North West England The metropolitan borough had a population of 486 100 in 2021 and it is part of a larger metropolitan area with a population of 2 24 million in 2001 11 12 The city is located on the eastern side of the Mersey Estuary adjacent to the Irish Sea and is approximately 178 miles 286 km from London It was historically in Lancashire and is part of the Liverpool City Region today LiverpoolCity and metropolitan boroughLiverpool waterfront seen from the River MerseyRoyal Albert DockThree GracesSt George s HallLiverpool Town HallLiverpool Metropolitan CathedralAnglican Cathedral Church of the Risen ChristCoat of armsNicknames The Capital City of North Wales 1 The Second Capital of Ireland 2 The World Capital of Pop 3 The World in One City 4 Motto s Latin Deus Nobis Haec Otia Fecit lit God has granted us this ease Liverpool shown within MerseysideLiverpoolLocation within EnglandShow map of EnglandLiverpoolLocation within the United KingdomShow map of the United KingdomLiverpoolLocation in EuropeShow map of EuropeCoordinates 53 24 27 N 02 59 31 W 53 40750 N 2 99194 W 53 40750 2 99194Sovereign stateUnited KingdomCountryEnglandRegionNorth WestCity regionLiverpoolCeremonial countyMerseysideHistoric countyLancashireFounded1207City status1880Administrative HQCunard BuildingCivic suiteLiverpool Town HallGovernment 6 TypeMetropolitan borough with leader and cabinet BodyLiverpool City Council ControlLabour LeaderLiam Robinson L Lord MayorMary Rasmussen Chief ExecutiveAndrew Lewis House of Commons5 MPs Paula Barker L Ian Byrne L Dan Carden L Maria Eagle L Kim Johnson L Area 7 City51 5 sq mi 133 5 km2 Land43 2 sq mi 111 8 km2 Urban77 1 sq mi 199 6 km2 Rank185thElevation230 ft 70 m Population 2021 City486 100 5 Rank12th Density11 220 sq mi 4 332 km2 Urban864 122 2 011 8 Urban density11 210 sq mi 4 329 km2 Metro2 241 000 Liverpool Birkenhead 2 011 DemonymsLiverpudlianScouserEthnicity 2021 9 Ethnic groupsList 84 0 White5 7 Asian3 5 Black3 5 Mixed3 3 otherReligion 2021 9 ReligionList 57 3 Christianity29 4 no religion5 3 Islam0 8 Hinduism0 4 Buddhism0 4 Judaism0 1 Sikhism0 4 other5 9 not statedTime zoneUTC 0 GMT Summer DST UTC 1 BST Postcode areaLDialling code0151ISO 3166 codeGB LIVGSS codeE08000012ITL codeTLD72GVA2021 estimate 10 Total 14 3 billion Per capita 29 489GDP nominal 2021 estimate 10 Total 15 9 billion Per capita 32 841Websiteliverpool wbr gov wbr ukLiverpool was established as a borough in 1207 and became a significant town in the late seventeenth century when the port at nearby Chester began to silt up The Port of Liverpool became heavily involved in the Atlantic slave trade with the first slave ship departing from the town in 1699 The port also imported much of the cotton required by the neighbouring Lancashire textile mills and became a major departure point for English and Irish emigrants to North America In the nineteenth century Liverpool rose to global economic importance at the forefront of the Industrial Revolution and built the first intercity railway the first non combustible warehouse system and a pioneering elevated electrical railway it was granted city status in 1880 In common with many British cities the city entered a period of decline in the mid twentieth century after which it experienced significant regeneration when it was selected as the European Capital of Culture in 2008 13 14 Liverpool s modern economy is diversified The city has a significant influence on the knowledge sector maritime industry tourism culture hospitality healthcare industry life sciences advanced manufacturing the creative and digital sectors 15 16 17 The city contains the second highest number of national museums listed buildings and listed parks in the UK after London 18 Its architecture means the city is often used as a filming location and in 2022 it was one of top five cities in the UK most visited by overseas tourists Liverpool is England s only UNESCO City of Music and has produced many notable musicians including the Beatles In sports the city is widely noted as the home of Premier League football teams Everton F C and Liverpool F C The Port of Liverpool was the fourth largest in the UK in 2020 and numerous shipping and freight lines have headquarters and offices in the city Residents of Liverpool are often called Scousers in reference to scouse a local stew made popular by sailors in the city the name is also applied to the distinct Liverpool accent and dialect The city has a culturally and ethnically diverse population and historically attracted many immigrants from Ireland Norway and Wales It is also home to the oldest black community in the UK the oldest Chinese community in Europe and the first mosque in England now restored 19 Contents 1 Toponymy 2 History 2 1 Early history 2 2 19th century 2 3 20th century 2 4 21st century 2 5 Inventions and innovations 3 Government 3 1 City Council Leader and Cabinet 3 2 Liverpool City Council elections 3 3 City Council criticism and improvement 3 4 Lord Mayor of Liverpool 3 5 Metro Mayor of Liverpool City Region 3 6 Parliamentary constituencies and MPs 4 Geography 4 1 Environment 4 2 Climate 4 3 Human 4 3 1 Suburbs and districts 4 3 2 Green Liverpool 4 3 3 Green belt 5 Demography 5 1 Population 5 1 1 The city 5 1 2 Urban and metropolitan area 5 1 2 1 ITL 1 region 5 1 2 2 ITL 2 region 5 1 2 3 ITL 3 region 5 1 2 4 Other definitions 5 2 Ethnicity 5 3 Religion 5 4 Demonym and identity 6 Economy 6 1 City and region 6 2 City region economy and devolution 7 Landmarks and recent development projects 7 1 Waterfront and docks 7 2 Commercial district and cultural quarter 7 3 Other notable landmarks 7 4 Parks and gardens 8 Transport 8 1 National and international travel 8 1 1 Roads 8 1 2 Railway 8 1 3 Port 8 1 4 Airport 8 2 Local travel 8 2 1 Trains 8 2 2 Buses 8 2 3 Mersey Ferry 8 3 Cycling and scooters 9 Culture 9 1 Music 9 2 Visual arts 9 3 Literature 9 4 Performing arts 9 5 Nightlife 10 Education 11 Sport 11 1 Football 11 2 Rugby league 11 3 Boxing 11 4 Horse racing 11 5 Golf 11 6 Greyhound racing 11 7 Athletics 11 8 Gymnastics 11 9 Swimming 11 10 Cricket 11 11 Tennis 11 12 Basketball 11 13 Baseball 11 14 Cycling 11 15 Other 12 Media 13 Notable people 14 Quotes about Liverpool 15 International links 15 1 Twin cities 15 2 Friendship links 15 3 Consulates 16 Freedom of the City 16 1 Individuals 16 2 Military units 16 3 Organisations and groups 17 See also 18 Notes 19 References 19 1 Footnotes 19 2 Bibliography 20 Further readingToponymyThe name comes from the Old English lifer meaning thick or muddy water and pōl meaning a pool or creek and is first recorded around 1190 as Liuerpul 20 21 According to the Cambridge Dictionary of English Place Names The original reference was to a pool or tidal creek now filled up into which two streams drained 22 The place appearing as Leyrpole in a legal record of 1418 may also refer to Liverpool 23 Other origins of the name have been suggested including elverpool a reference to the large number of eels in the Mersey 24 The adjective Liverpudlian was first recorded in 1833 21 Although the Old English origin of the name Liverpool is beyond dispute claims are sometimes made that the name Liverpool is of Welsh origin but these are without foundation The Welsh name for Liverpool is Lerpwl from a former English local form Leerpool This is a reduction of the form Leverpool with the loss of the intervocalic v seen in other English names and words e g Daventry Northamptonshire gt Danetry never do well gt ne er do well In the 19th century some Welsh publications used the name Lle r Pwll the place of the pool a reinterpretation of Lerpwl probably in the belief that Lle r Pwll was the original form Another name which is widely known even today is Llynlleifiad again a 19th century coining Llyn is pool but lleifiad has no obvious meaning G Melville Richards 1910 1973 a pioneer of scientific toponymy in Wales in Place Names of North Wales 25 does not attempt to explain it beyond noting that lleifiad is used as a Welsh equivalent of Liver A derivative form of a learned borrowing into Welsh llaf of Latin lama slough bog fen to give lleifiad is possible but unproven HistoryMain articles History of Liverpool and Timeline of Liverpool nbsp The earliest known image of Liverpool in 1680 nbsp A map of Liverpool s original seven streets north to the left nbsp Bluecoat Chambers completed in 1725 the oldest surviving building in Liverpool city centreEarly history In the Middle Ages Liverpool existed firstly as farmland within the West Derby Hundred 26 before growing in to a small town of farmers fishermen and tradesmen and tactical army base for King John of England The town was planned with its own castle although due to outbreaks of disease and its subordinance to the nearby Roman port of Chester the town s growth and prosperity stagnated until the late 17th and early 18th centuries Substantial growth took place in the mid late 18th century when the town became the most heavily involved European port in the Atlantic slave trade 27 King John s letters patent of 1207 announced the foundation of the borough of Liverpool then spelt as Liuerpul There is no evidence that the place had previously been a centre of any trade The creation of the borough was probably due to King John deciding it would be a convenient place to embark men and supplies for his Irish campaigns in particular John s Irish campaign of 1209 28 29 The original street plan of Liverpool is said to have been designed by King John near the same time it was granted a royal charter making it a borough The original seven streets were laid out in the shape of a double cross Bank Street now Water Street Castle Street Chapel Street Dale Street Juggler Street now High Street Moor Street now Tithebarn Street and Whiteacre Street now Old Hall Street 29 Liverpool Castle was built before 1235 it survived until it was demolished in the 1720s 30 By the middle of the 16th century the population was still around 600 although this was likely to have fallen from an earlier peak of 1000 people due to slow trade and the effects of the plague 31 32 33 In the 17th century there was slow progress in trade and population growth Battles for control of the town were waged during the English Civil War including a brief siege in 1644 34 In 1699 the same year as its first recorded slave ship Liverpool Merchant set sail for Africa 35 Liverpool was made a parish by Act of Parliament But arguably the legislation of 1695 that reformed the Liverpool council was of more significance to its subsequent development 36 Since Roman times the nearby city of Chester on the River Dee had been the region s principal port on the Irish Sea However as the Dee began to silt up maritime trade from Chester became increasingly difficult and shifted towards Liverpool on the neighbouring River Mersey The first of the Liverpool docks was constructed in 1715 and the system of docks gradually grew into a large interconnected system 37 As trade from the West Indies including sugar surpassed that of Ireland and Europe and as the River Dee continued to silt up Liverpool began to grow with increasing rapidity The first commercial wet dock was built in Liverpool in 1715 38 39 Substantial profits from the slave trade and tobacco helped the town to prosper and rapidly grow although several prominent local men including William Rathbone William Roscoe and Edward Rushton were at the forefront of the local abolitionist movement 40 19th century nbsp Inaugural journey of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway in 1830 the first ever commercial railway line in the world nbsp Lime Street Liverpool in the 1890s St George s Hall to the left Great North Western Hotel to the right Walker Art Gallery and Sessions House in the background Statues of Prince Albert Disraeli Queen Victoria and Wellington s Column in the middle ground The 19th century saw Liverpool rise to global economic importance Pioneering world first technology and civic facilities launched in the city to serve the accelerating population which was fuelled by an influx of ethnic and religious communities from all around the world By the start of the 19th century a large volume of trade was passing through Liverpool and the construction of major buildings reflected this wealth In 1830 Liverpool and Manchester became the first cities to have an intercity rail link through the Liverpool and Manchester Railway The population continued to rise rapidly especially during the 1840s when Irish migrants began arriving by the hundreds of thousands as a result of the Great Famine While many Irish settled during this time in the city a large percentage also emigrated to the United States or moved to the industrial centres of Lancashire Yorkshire and the Midlands 41 nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Liverpool a poeticalillustration by L E L In her poetical illustration Liverpool 1832 which celebrates the city s worldwide commerce Letitia Elizabeth Landon refers specifically to the Macgregor Laird expedition to the Niger River at that time in progress 42 This is to a painting by Samuel Austin Liverpool from the Mersey 43 Britain was a major market for cotton imported from the Deep South of the United States which fed the textile industry in the country Given the crucial place cotton held in the city s economy during the American Civil War Liverpool was in the words of historian Sven Beckert the most pro Confederate place in the world outside the Confederacy itself 44 Liverpool merchants helped to bring out cotton from ports blockaded by the Union Navy built ships of war for the Confederacy and supplied the South with military equipment and credit 45 During the war the Confederate Navy ship the CSS Alabama was built at Birkenhead on the Mersey and the CSS Shenandoah surrendered there being the final surrender at the end of the war The city was also the center of Confederate purchasing war materiel including arms and ammunition uniforms and naval supplies to be smuggled by British blockade runners to the South 46 For periods during the 19th century the wealth of Liverpool exceeded that of London 47 and Liverpool s Custom House was the single largest contributor to the British Exchequer 48 Liverpool was the only British city ever to have its own Whitehall office 49 During this century at least 40 of the world s entire trade passed through Liverpool 50 In the early 19th century Liverpool played a major role in the Antarctic sealing industry in recognition of which Liverpool Beach in the South Shetland Islands is named after the city 51 As early as 1851 the city was described as the New York of Europe 52 During the late 19th and early 20th century Liverpool was attracting immigrants from across Europe This resulted in the construction of a diverse array of religious buildings in the city for the new ethnic and religious groups many of which are still in use today The Deutsche Kirche Liverpool Greek Orthodox Church of St Nicholas Gustav Adolf Church and Princes Road Synagogue were all established in the 1800s to serve Liverpool s growing German Greek Nordic and Jewish communities respectively One of Liverpool s oldest surviving churches St Peter s Roman Catholic Church served the Polish community in its final years as a place of worship 20th century nbsp Liverpool s Lime Street area pictured from above in 1946The 20th century saw Liverpool s established rank as a global economic powerhouse challenged Its strategic location as an international seaport made it particularly vulnerable in two World wars Economic depressions both in the United Kingdom and across the world changing housing patterns and containerisation in the maritime industry contributed to a downtrend in the city s productivity and prosperity Despite this the city s influence on global popular culture excelled and by the end of the century the continuing process of urban renewal paved the way for the redefined modern city of the 21st century The period after the Great War was marked by social unrest as society grappled with the massive war losses of young men as well as trying to re integrate veterans into civilian life and the economy Unemployment and poor living standards greeted many ex servicemen Union organising and strikes took place in numerous locations including a police strike in Liverpool among the City Police Numerous colonial soldiers and sailors from Africa and India who had served with the British Armed Forces settled in Liverpool and other port cities In June 1919 they were subject to attack by whites in racial riots residents in the port included Swedish immigrants and both groups had to compete with native people from Liverpool for jobs and housing In this period race riots also took place in other port cities 53 nbsp Liverpool was the port of registry of the ill fated ocean liner Titanic The ship sank on its maiden voyage in April 1912 with the loss of 1 517 lives including numerous Liverpudlians A Memorial to the Engine Room Heroes of the Titanic is located on the city s waterfront The Housing Act 1919 resulted in mass council housing being built across Liverpool during the 1920s and 1930s In the 1920s and 1930s as much as 15 of the city s population around 140 000 people was relocated from the inner city to new purpose built lower density suburban housing estates based on the belief that this would improve their standard of living though the overall benefits have been contested 54 55 Numerous private homes were also built during this era During the Great Depression of the early 1930s unemployment peaked at around 30 in the city Liverpool was the site of Britain s first provincial airport operating from 1930 During the Second World War the critical strategic importance of Liverpool was recognised by both Hitler and Churchill The city was heavily bombed by the Germans suffering a blitz second only to London s 56 The pivotal Battle of the Atlantic was planned fought and won from Liverpool 57 The Luftwaffe made 80 air raids on Merseyside killing 2 500 people and causing damage to almost half the homes in the metropolitan area Significant rebuilding followed the war including massive housing estates and the Seaforth Dock the largest dock project in Britain Since 1952 Liverpool has been twinned with Cologne Germany a city which also suffered severe aerial bombing during the war In the 1950s and 1960s much of the immediate reconstruction that took place in the city centre proved to be deeply unpopular The historic portions of the city that had survived German bombing suffered extensive destruction during urban renewal It has been argued that the so called Shankland Plan of the 1960s named after the town planner Graeme Shankland led to compromised town planning and vast road building schemes that devastated and divided inner city neighbourhoods Concrete brutalist architecture compromised visions botched projects and grand designs that were never realised became the subject of condemnation Historian Raphael Samuel labelled Graeme Shankland the butcher of Liverpool 58 59 60 61 A significant West Indian black community has existed in the city since the first two decades of the 20th century Like most British cities and industrialised towns Liverpool became home to a significant number of Commonwealth immigrants beginning after World War I with colonial soldiers and sailors who had served in the area More immigrants arrived after World War II mostly settling in older inner city areas such as Toxteth where housing was less expensive The black population of Liverpool was recorded at 1 90 in 2011 In the 2021 Census 5 2 described themselves as black African Caribbean mixed white and black African mixed white and Caribbean or other black 62 63 The construction of suburban public housing expanded after the Second World War Some of the older inner city areas were redeveloped for new homes nbsp Mathew Street is one of many tourist attractions related to the Beatles and the location of The Cavern Club and Liverpool Wall of FameIn the 1960s Liverpool was the centre of the Merseybeat sound which became synonymous with the Beatles and fellow Liverpudlian rock bands Influenced by American rhythm and blues and rock music they also in turn strongly affected American music The Beatles became internationally known in the early 1960s and performed around the world together they were and continue to be the most commercially successful and musically influential band in popular history Their co founder singer and composer John Lennon was killed in New York City in 1980 Liverpool Airport was renamed after him in 2002 the first British airport to be named in honour of an individual 64 65 Previously part of Lancashire and a county borough from 1889 Liverpool became a metropolitan borough within the newly created metropolitan county of Merseyside in 1974 From the mid 1970s onwards Liverpool s docks and traditional manufacturing industries declined due to restructuring of shipping and heavy industry causing massive losses of jobs The advent of containerisation meant that the city s docks became largely obsolete and dock workers were made unemployed By the early 1980s unemployment rates in Liverpool were among the highest in the UK 66 standing at 17 by January 1982 although this was about half the level of unemployment that had affected the city during the Great Depression some 50 years previously 67 During this period Liverpool became a hub of fierce left wing opposition to the central government in London 68 Liverpool in the 1980s has been labelled as Britain s shock city Once the second city of the British Empire which rivalled the capital city in global significance Liverpool had collapsed in to its nadir at the depths of post colonial post industrial Britain 69 70 In the late 20th century Liverpool s economy began to recover The late 1980s saw the opening of a regenerated Albert Dock which proved to be a catalyst for further regeneration 71 In the mid 1990s the city enjoyed growth rates higher than the national average At the end of the 20th century Liverpool was concentrating on regeneration a process that continues today 21st century nbsp The Liverpool Cruise Terminal and surrounding office and residential developments part of the Liverpool Waters megaprojectOngoing regeneration combined with the hosting of internationally significant events has helped to re purpose Liverpool as one of the most visited tourist orientated cities in the United Kingdom City leaders are focussing on long term strategies to grow the city s population and economy while national government explores the continuous potential for devolution in the city In 2002 Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip Duke of Edinburgh visited Liverpool to mark the Golden Jubilee On speaking to an audience at Liverpool Town Hall the Queen recognised Liverpool as one of the most distinctive and energetic parts of the United Kingdom and paid tribute to the city s major orchestras world class museums and galleries She also acknowledged Liverpool s bid to become the European Capital of Culture 72 73 To celebrate the Golden Jubilee of Elizabeth II in 2002 the conservation charity Plantlife organised a competition to choose county flowers the sea holly was Liverpool s final choice The initiative was designed to highlight growing threats to the UK s flower species and also ask the public about which flowers best represented their county 74 Capitalising on the popularity of 1960s rock groups such as the Beatles as well as the city s world class art galleries museums and landmarks tourism and culture have become a significant factor in Liverpool s economy nbsp Modern developments on the Liverpool WaterfrontIn 2004 property developer Grosvenor started the Paradise Project a 920 million development based on Paradise Street This produced one of the most significant changes to Liverpool s city centre since the post war reconstruction Renamed as Liverpool One the centre opened in May 2008 In 2007 events and celebrations took place in honour of the 800th anniversary of the founding of the borough of Liverpool Liverpool was designated as a joint European Capital of Culture for 2008 The celebrations included the erection of La Princesse a large mechanical spider 20 metres high and weighing 37 tonnes which represented the eight legs of Liverpool honour history music the Mersey the ports governance sunshine and culture La Princesse roamed the streets of the city during the festivities and concluded by entering the Queensway Tunnel Spearheaded by the multi billion pound Liverpool ONE development regeneration continued throughout the 2010s Some of the most significant redevelopment projects included new buildings in the Commercial District King s Dock Mann Island around Lime Street the Baltic Triangle RopeWalks and Edge Lane 75 76 77 nbsp Headquarters of Liverpool City Region Combined Authority which invests in Liverpool s major infrastructure and regeneration projectsChanges to Liverpool s governance took place in 2014 The local authority of Liverpool City Council decided to pool its power and resources with surrounding boroughs through the formation of the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority in a form of devolution With a devolved budget granted by central government the authority now oversees and invests in foremost strategic affairs throughout the Liverpool City Region including major regeneration projects The authority along with Liverpool City Council itself has embarked on long term plans to grow the population and economy of the city 78 79 80 81 By the 2020s urban regeneration throughout the city continues Liverpool Waters a mixed use development in the city s disused northern docklands has been identified as one of the largest megaprojects in the UK s history Everton s new stadium at Bramley Moore Dock was regarded as the largest single site private sector development in the United Kingdom at the time of construction 82 83 Major events business and political conferences regularly take place in the city and form an important part of the economy In June 2014 Prime Minister David Cameron launched the International Festival for Business in Liverpool the world s largest business event in 2014 84 and the largest in the UK since the Festival of Britain in 1951 85 The Labour Party has chosen Liverpool numerous times since the mid 2010s for their annual Labour Party Conference Liverpool hosted the Eurovision Song Contest 2023 Inventions and innovations nbsp The Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine the first such school in the worldLiverpool has been a centre of invention and innovation Railways transatlantic steamships municipal trams 86 and electric trains were all pioneered in Liverpool as modes of mass transit In 1829 and 1836 the first railway tunnels in the world were constructed under Liverpool Wapping Tunnel From 1950 to 1951 the world s first scheduled passenger helicopter service ran between Liverpool and Cardiff 87 The first School for the Blind 88 Mechanics Institute 89 High School for Girls 90 91 council house 92 and Juvenile Court 93 were all founded in Liverpool Charities such as the RSPCA 94 NSPCC 95 Age Concern 96 Relate and Citizen s Advice Bureau 97 all evolved from work in the city The first lifeboat station public bath and wash house 98 sanitary act 99 medical officer for health William Henry Duncan district nurse slum clearance 100 purpose built ambulance 101 X ray medical diagnosis 102 school of tropical medicine Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine motorised municipal fire engine 103 free school meal 104 cancer research centre 105 and zoonosis research centre 106 all originated in Liverpool The first British Nobel Prize was awarded in 1902 to Ronald Ross professor at the School of Tropical Medicine the first school of its kind in the world 107 Orthopaedic surgery was pioneered in Liverpool by Hugh Owen Thomas 108 and modern medical anaesthetics by Thomas Cecil Gray The world s first integrated sewer system was constructed in Liverpool by James Newlands appointed in 1847 as the UK s first borough engineer 109 110 Liverpool also founded the UK s first Underwriters Association 111 and the first Institute of Accountants The Western world s first financial derivatives cotton futures were traded on the Liverpool Cotton Exchange in the late 1700s 112 nbsp Oriel Chambers the first modern building in the worldIn the arts Liverpool was home to the first lending library The Lyceum athenaeum society Liverpool Athenaeum arts centre Bluecoat Chambers 113 and public art conservation centre National Conservation Centre 114 It is also home to the UK s oldest surviving classical orchestra Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra 115 and repertory theatre Liverpool Playhouse 116 In 1864 Peter Ellis built the world s first iron framed curtain walled office building Oriel Chambers which was a prototype of the skyscraper The UK s first purpose built department store was Compton House completed in 1867 for the retailer J R Jeffrey 117 It was the largest store in the world at the time 118 Between 1862 and 1867 Liverpool held an annual Grand Olympic Festival Devised by John Hulley and Charles Pierre Melly these games were the first to be wholly amateur in nature and international in outlook 119 120 The programme of the first modern Olympiad in Athens in 1896 was almost identical to that of the Liverpool Olympics 121 In 1865 Hulley co founded the National Olympian Association in Liverpool a forerunner of the British Olympic Association Its articles of foundation provided the framework for the International Olympic Charter Sir Alfred Lewis Jones a shipowner introduced bananas to the UK via Liverpool s docks in 1884 122 The Mersey Railway opened in 1886 incorporated the world s first tunnel under a tidal estuary 123 and the world s first deep level underground stations Liverpool James Street railway station nbsp Liverpool was the first city outside London to be chosen to have an official Blue plaque and now has the largest number outside London 124 125 In 1889 borough engineer John Alexander Brodie invented the football goal net He was also a pioneer in the use of pre fabricated housing 126 and oversaw the construction of the UK s first ring road A5058 and intercity highway East Lancashire Road as well as the Queensway Tunnel linking Liverpool and Birkenhead Described as the eighth wonder of the world at the time of its construction it was the longest underwater tunnel in the world for 24 years In 1897 the Lumiere brothers filmed Liverpool 127 including what is believed to be the world s first tracking shot 128 taken from the Liverpool Overhead Railway the world s first elevated electrified railway The Overhead Railway was the first railway in the world to use electric multiple units employ automatic signalling and install an escalator Liverpool inventor Frank Hornby was a visionary in toy development and manufacture producing three of the most popular lines of toys in the 20th century Meccano Hornby Model Railways and Dinky Toys The British Interplanetary Society founded in Liverpool in 1933 by Phillip Ellaby Cleator is the world s oldest existing organisation devoted to the promotion of spaceflight Its journal the Journal of the British Interplanetary Society is the longest running astronautical publication in the world 129 In 1999 Liverpool was the first city outside London to be awarded blue plaques by English Heritage in recognition of the significant contribution made by its sons and daughters in all walks of life 130 GovernmentSee also Merseyside and Liverpool City Region nbsp The Cunard Building left housing the main offices of Liverpool City CouncilFor the purposes of local government the city of Liverpool is classified as a metropolitan borough The metropolitan borough is located within both the county of Merseyside and the Liverpool City Region Each of these geographical areas is treated as an administrative area with different levels of local governance applying to each Liverpool City Council is the governing body solely for the city of Liverpool and performs functions that are standard of an English Unitary Authority The Liverpool City Region Combined Authority reserves major strategic powers over such things as transport economic development and regeneration for the city along with the 5 surrounding boroughs of the Liverpool City Region The Combined Authority has competency over areas which have been devolved by national government and are specific to the local area 131 Nevertheless there are a few exceptions to local governance apart from these two structures Liverpool was administered by Merseyside County Council between 1974 and 1986 and some residual aspects of organisation which date back to this time have survived When the County Council was disbanded in 1986 most civic functions were transferred to Liverpool City Council However several authorities such as the police and fire and rescue service continue to be run at a county wide level The county of Merseyside therefore continues to exist as an administrative area for a few limited services only while the capability and capacity of the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority is evolving over time 132 The city also elects five members of Parliament MPs to the Westminster Parliament all Labour as of the 2019 general election City Council Leader and Cabinet nbsp City Councillors meet regularly at the Council Chamber in Liverpool Town Hall to conduct civic business 133 Liverpool City Council operates under a constitution comprising 85 city councillors who are directly elected by the Liverpool electorate every 4 years and represent a variety of different political parties The city councillors make decisions about local services for the city s people At each election the political party that wins the majority of the 85 council seats leads the council for the following 4 years The local leader of this party assumes the role of Leader of the City Council who then chairs a Cabinet of 9 councillors who are assigned specific responsibilities known as portfolios The incumbent Leader of Liverpool City Council is Councillor Liam Robinson who represents the Labour Party which secured a large majority at the 2023 local election 134 The City Council s decisions and scrutiny of activities are undertaken by a number of different committees and panels which include the Overview and Scrutiny Committees Scrutiny Panels Regulatory Committees and other committees The day to day management of the council is carried out by the management team which includes the Chief Executive and several directors and senior officers The management team works with the Cabinet and councillors to deliver strategic direction and priorities such as the budget and the City Plan 135 136 Liverpool City Council elections Main articles Liverpool City Council and Liverpool City Council elections Every 4 years the city elects 85 councillors from 64 local council wards 137 which in alphabetical order are Aigburth Allerton Anfield Arundel Belle Vale Broadgreen Brownlow Hill Calderstones Canning Childwall Church City Centre North City Centre South Clubmoor East Clubmoor West County Croxteth Croxteth Country Park Dingle Edge Hill Everton East Everton North Everton West Fazakerley East Fazakerley North Fazakerley West Festival Gardens Garston Gateacre Grassendale amp Cressington Greenbank Park Kensington amp Fairfield Kirkdale East nbsp Kirkdale West Knotty Ash amp Dovecot Park Mossley Hill Much Woolton amp Hunts Cross Norris Green Old Swan East Old Swan West Orrell Park Penny Lane Princes Park Sandfield Park Sefton Park Smithdown Speke Springwood St Michaels Stoneycroft Toxteth Tuebrook Breckside Park Tuebrook Larkhill Vauxhall Walton Waterfront North Waterfront South Wavertree Garden Suburb Wavertree Village West Derby Deysbrook West Derby Leyfield West Derby Muirhead Woolton Village Yew TreeDuring the 2023 Liverpool City Council election the Labour Party consolidated its control of Liverpool City Council following on from the previous elections Out of the total 85 City Council seats up for election The Labour Party won 61 seats 53 13 of the electorate s total votes the Liberal Democrats won 15 seats 21 61 of the votes the Green Party won 3 seats 9 76 of the votes the Liverpool Community Independents won 3 seats 4 64 of the votes and the Liberal Party won the remaining 3 seats 3 21 of the votes The Conservative Party the political party in power at national government had no representation on Liverpool City Council Only 27 27 of the eligible Liverpool electorate turned out to vote 138 nbsp Steve Rotheram Metro Mayor of the Liverpool City Region nbsp Paula Barker MP for Liverpool Wavertree nbsp Ian Byrne MP for Liverpool West Derby nbsp Dan Carden MP for Liverpool Walton nbsp Maria Eagle MP for Garston and Halewood nbsp Kim Johnson MP for Liverpool Riverside Throughout most of the 19th and early 20th centuries Liverpool was a municipal stronghold of Toryism However support for the Conservative Party in recent times has been among the lowest in any part of Britain particularly since the monetarist economic policies of former prime minister Margaret Thatcher After the 1979 general election many have claimed that her victory contributed to longstanding high unemployment and decline in the city 139 Liverpool is one of the Labour Party s key strongholds however the city has also seen hard times under Labour governments also Particularly in the Winter of Discontent late 1978 and early 1979 when Liverpool suffered public sector strikes along with the rest of the United Kingdom but also when it suffered the particularly humiliating misfortune of having grave diggers going on strike leaving the dead unburied for long periods 140 City Council criticism and improvement In recent years Liverpool City Council began an extensive improvement program designed to ensure that the authority makes efficient use of taxpayer s money and to encourage more business and investment in the city Grosvenor Group the property company responsible for Liverpool One commended the changes as an opportunity for bold thinking in liverpool 141 In 2021 a highly critical government inspection and subsequent report of Liverpool City Council referred to as the Caller report identified multiple shortcomings at Liverpool City Council The Secretary of State for Housing Communities and Local Government Robert Jenrick sent government commissioners to oversee the City Council s highways regeneration property management governance and financial decision making The authority was compelled to commit to a three year improvement plan in which the entire structure of the council would be overhauled As a result of the intervention major structural changes at the City Council took place by the 2023 United Kingdom local elections which were labelled the most unpredictable elections in the city s history The number of electoral wards in the city was doubled from 30 to 64 while the overall number of City Councillors up for election was reduced from 90 to 85 In future the council would also change to all out elections every four years whereby every single City Councillor would be eligible for re election at the same time The role of elected city mayor was also abolished and the Council reverted to the previous Leader and Cabinet style of leadership The outcome of the elections were seen not only as a test of how the general public would respond to the government intervention in the city but also to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak s government as a whole 142 143 144 145 Councillor Liam Robinson became the new Leader of Liverpool City Council at the 2023 City Council election The Liverpool Strategic Futures Advisory Panel chaired by the Mayor of Liverpool City Region Steve Rotheram and including several high profile figures with experience in local government was established The panel was tasked with directing the council s long term future outside of government intervention measures and to advise on plans and priorities that the city should pursue 146 In February 2008 Liverpool City Council was reported to be the worst performing council in the country receiving just a one star rating classified as inadequate The main cause of the poor rating was attributed to the council s poor handling of tax payer money including the accumulation of a 20m shortfall while the city held the title of European Capital of Culture 147 Lord Mayor of Liverpool nbsp Liverpool Town Hall houses the official office for the Lord Mayor of LiverpoolThe Lord Mayor of Liverpool is an ancient ceremonial role Councillors within Liverpool City Council not the general public elect the Lord Mayor annually who then serves a one year term The Lord Mayor is styled as the first citizen and is chosen to represent the city at civic functions and engagements promote it to the wider world support local charities and community groups attend religious events meet delegates from Liverpool s twin cities chair council meetings and confer Honorary Freemen and associations 148 Metro Mayor of Liverpool City Region The City of Liverpool is one of the six constituent local government districts of the Liverpool City Region The Metro Mayor of the Liverpool City Region is directly every four years by residents of those six boroughs and oversees the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority The Combined Authority is the top tier administrative body for the local governance of the city region and is tasked with taking major strategic decisions on issues such as transport and investment economic development employment and skills tourism culture housing and physical infrastructure The current Metro Mayor is Steve Rotheram Parliamentary constituencies and MPs See also List of Parliamentary constituencies on Merseyside Liverpool is included within five parliamentary constituencies through which MPs are elected to represent the city in Westminster Liverpool Riverside Liverpool Walton Liverpool Wavertree Liverpool West Derby and Garston and Halewood 149 At the last general election all were won by Labour with representation being from Kim Johnson Dan Carden Paula Barker and Ian Byrne respectively 150 Due to boundary changes prior to the 2010 election the Liverpool Garston constituency was merged with most of Knowsley South to form the Garston and Halewood cross boundary seat At the most recent 2019 election this seat was won by Maria Eagle of the Labour Party 150 GeographyEnvironment nbsp Satellite imagery showing Liverpool Bay Liverpool and the wider Merseyside areaLiverpool has been described as having the most splendid setting of any English city 151 At 53 24 0 N 2 59 0 W 53 40000 N 2 98333 W 53 40000 2 98333 53 4 2 98 176 miles 283 kilometres northwest of London located on the Liverpool Bay of the Irish Sea the city of Liverpool is built across a ridge of sandstone hills rising up to a height of around 230 feet 70 m above sea level at Everton Hill which represents the southern boundary of the West Lancashire Coastal Plain The Mersey Estuary separates Liverpool from the Wirral Peninsula The boundaries of Liverpool are adjacent to Bootle Crosby and Maghull in south Sefton to the north and Kirkby Huyton Prescot and Halewood in Knowsley to the east Climate Main article Climate of Liverpool LiverpoolClimate chart explanation J F M A M J J A S O N D 69 8 3 57 8 3 53 10 4 50 13 6 53 16 8 64 18 11 66 20 14 72 20 14 77 18 11 90 14 9 82 11 6 92 8 3 Average max and min temperatures in C Precipitation totals in mmSource Met OfficeImperial conversionJFMAMJJASOND 2 7 46 37 2 2 46 37 2 1 50 39 2 55 43 2 1 61 46 2 5 64 52 2 6 68 57 2 8 68 57 3 64 52 3 5 57 48 3 2 52 43 3 6 46 37 Average max and min temperatures in F Precipitation totals in inchesLiverpool experiences a temperate maritime climate Koppen Cfb like much of the British Isles with relatively mild summers cool winters and rainfall spread fairly evenly throughout the year Rainfall and temperature records had been kept at Bidston Hill since 1867 but records for atmospheric pressure go back as far as at least 1846 152 Bidston closed down in 2002 but the Met Office also has a weather station at Crosby Since records began in 1867 temperatures have ranged from 17 6 C 0 3 F on 21 December 2010 to 34 5 C 94 1 F on 2 August 1990 although Liverpool Airport recorded a temperature of 35 0 C 95 0 F on 19 July 2006 153 The lowest amount of sunshine on record was 16 5 hours in December 1927 whereas the most was 314 5 hours in July 2013 154 155 Tornado activity or funnel cloud formation is very rare in and around the Liverpool area and tornadoes that do form are usually weak Recent tornadoes or funnel clouds in Merseyside have been seen in 1998 and 2014 156 157 During the period 1981 2010 Crosby recorded an average of 32 8 days of air frost per year which is low for the United Kingdom 158 Snow is fairly common during the winter although heavy snow is rare Snow generally falls between November and March but can occasionally fall earlier and later In recent times the earliest snowfall was on 1 October 2008 159 while the latest occurred on 15 May 2012 160 Although historically the earliest snowfall occurred on 10 September 1908 161 and the latest on 2 June 1975 162 Rainfall although light is quite a common occurrence in Liverpool with the wettest month on record being August 1956 which recorded 221 2 mm 8 71 in of rain and the driest being February 1932 with 0 9 mm 0 035 in 163 The driest year on record was 1991 with 480 5 mm 18 92 in of rainfall and the wettest was 1872 with 1 159 9 mm 45 67 in 164 Climate data for Crosby a WMO ID 03316 coordinates 53 29 50 N 3 03 28 W 53 49721 N 3 05767 W 53 49721 3 05767 Met Office Crosby elevation 30 m 98 ft 1991 2020 normals b c extremes 1867 present d Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 15 1 59 2 18 9 66 0 21 2 70 2 24 6 76 3 28 2 82 8 30 7 87 3 35 5 95 9 34 5 94 1 30 4 86 7 25 9 78 6 18 7 65 7 15 8 60 4 35 5 95 9 Mean daily maximum C F 7 5 45 5 7 9 46 2 9 9 49 8 12 8 55 0 15 9 60 6 18 4 65 1 20 0 68 0 19 7 67 5 17 7 63 9 14 2 57 6 10 5 50 9 8 0 46 4 13 6 56 5 Daily mean C F 5 2 41 4 5 3 41 5 6 9 44 4 9 2 48 6 12 1 53 8 14 9 58 8 16 7 62 1 16 6 61 9 14 5 58 1 11 4 52 5 8 1 46 6 5 6 42 1 10 5 50 9 Mean daily minimum C F 2 8 37 0 2 7 36 9 3 9 39 0 5 6 42 1 8 3 46 9 11 3 52 3 13 5 56 3 13 5 56 3 11 2 52 2 8 5 47 3 5 7 42 3 3 1 37 6 7 5 45 5 Record low C F 13 1 8 4 11 3 11 7 8 6 16 5 5 6 21 9 1 7 28 9 1 0 33 8 5 0 41 0 3 1 37 6 1 7 35 1 2 9 26 8 7 5 18 5 17 6 0 3 17 6 0 3 Average precipitation mm inches 69 4 2 73 57 1 2 25 53 3 2 10 49 8 1 96 52 5 2 07 64 4 2 54 65 5 2 58 72 1 2 84 76 6 3 02 89 7 3 53 82 2 3 24 91 9 3 62 824 3 32 45 Average precipitation days 1 0 mm 13 8 11 5 11 3 10 0 9 8 10 4 11 0 12 2 11 8 14 4 15 5 15 4 146 9Average snowy days 6 5 4 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 4 22Average relative humidity 85 1 83 5 80 7 77 9 76 6 78 9 79 0 80 1 81 9 84 6 85 1 85 6 80 8Mean monthly sunshine hours 56 0 70 3 105 1 154 2 207 0 191 5 197 0 175 2 132 7 97 3 65 8 46 8 1 499 1Mean daily daylight hours 8 2 9 9 11 9 14 1 15 9 16 9 16 4 14 7 12 7 10 5 8 6 7 6 12 3Average ultraviolet index 0 1 2 4 5 6 6 5 4 2 1 0 3Source 1 Met Office 165 Source 2 National Oceanography Centre 166 WeatherAtlas 167 CEDA Archive 168 Weather station is located 7 miles 11 km from the Liverpool city centre Sunshine hours were recorded at the Bidston Observatory from the period of 1971 2000 Humidity was recorded at the Bidston Observatory for the period of 1975 June 2002 The period Jul Sep 1992 has no record with Jan May 2001 reporting unreliabe data From 1867 2002 extremes were recorded at the Bidston Observatory in Wirral Since 1983 extremes were recorded at Crosby Sefton Human Suburbs and districts See also Category Areas of Liverpool Suburbs and districts of Liverpool include Aigburth Allerton Anfield Belle Vale Broadgreen Canning Childwall Chinatown City Centre Clubmoor Croxteth Dingle Dovecot Edge Hill Everton Fairfield Fazakerley Garston Gateacre Gillmoss Grassendale Hunt s Cross Kensington Kirkdale Knotty Ash Mossley Hill Netherley Norris Green Oglet Old Swan Orrell Park St Michael s Hamlet Speke Stoneycroft Toxteth Tuebrook Vauxhall Walton Wavertree West Derby Woolton Green Liverpool UK core cities Population and population density Number of usual residents per km2 2021 169 170 171 172 Core City Population Population densityBirmingham 1 144 900 4275 4Leeds 812 000 1471 7Glasgow 635 130 3637Sheffield 556 500 1512 5Manchester 552 000 4772 7Liverpool 486 100 4346 1Bristol 472 400 4308 1Cardiff 362 400 2571 3Belfast 345 418 2597 8Nottingham 323 700 4337 6Newcastle 300 200 2646 1In 2010 Liverpool City Council and the Primary Care Trust commissioned the Mersey Forest to complete A Green Infrastructure Strategy for the city 173 Green belt Further information North West Green Belt Liverpool is a core urban element of a green belt region that extends into the wider surrounding counties which is in place to reduce urban sprawl prevent the towns in the conurbation from further convergence protect the identity of outlying communities encourage brownfield reuse and preserve nearby countryside This is achieved by restricting inappropriate development within the designated areas and imposing stricter conditions on permitted building 174 Due to being already highly built up the city contains limited portions of protected green belt area within greenfield throughout the borough at Fazakerley Croxteth Hall and country park and Craven Wood Woodfields Park and nearby golf courses in Netherley small greenfield tracts east of the Speke area by the St Ambrose primary school and the small hamlet of Oglet and the surrounding area south of Liverpool Airport 175 The green belt was first drawn up in 1983 under Merseyside County Council 176 and the size in the city amounts to 530 hectares 5 3 km2 2 0 sq mi 177 DemographyMain article Demography of Liverpool Population Historical population of Liverpool numbers vary by source Sources 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 Date Population Notes1207 Borough of Liverpool founded by John King of England The economy was focused on agricultural and food processing grain mills and warehouses until the 16th century 1272 84014th century 1 000 1 200 Population roughly 1 000 in 1300 Because Liverpool was a port it was more at risk from the spread of disease Townspeople lived partly by farming and fishing Some were craftsmen or tradesmen such as bakers brewers butchers blacksmiths and carpenters A watermill existed to ground grain into flour for the townspeople s bread and there was a windmill Black Death wiped out whole families and bodies were buried in a mass grave at St Nicholas s churchyard 16th century Ireland was still Liverpool s main trading partner In 1540 a writer said Irish merchants come much hither as to a good harbor He also said there was good merchandise at Liverpool and much Irish yarn that Manchester men buy there Skins and hides were still imported from Ireland Exports from Liverpool included coal woolen cloth knives and leather goods There were still many fishermen in Liverpool In the mid 16th century the town was under the control of the country gentry and trade was slow The population dropped to below 600 in part due to deaths in the 1558 plague when a third of the townspeople died Further plague outbreaks took place in 1609 1647 and 1650 which led to static or retrogressive population levels The town was regarded as subordinate to Chester until the 1650s 1600 lt 2 000 English troops bound for rebellions in Ireland settled in the 16th and early 17th centuries 1626 Charles I of England issued new Charter for the town Trade with other cities Ireland Isle of Man France and Spain increased Fish and wool was exported to the Continent and wines iron and other commodities imported In the following decades merchants invested in Liverpool and its importance grew Regular shipping began to America and West Indies Liverpool was controlled by the Crown the Molyneux and Stanley families 1642 2 500 Liverpool overtook Chester in exporting coal and salt in early 17th century especially to Ireland 1644 During English Civil War Prince Rupert led a royalist army to capture Liverpool He described the town as a mere crow s nest which a parcel of boys could take He stormed Liverpool Castle in the Siege of Liverpool with considerable slaughter 1647 Liverpool was made a free and independent port no longer subject to Chester 1648 First recorded cargo from America landed at Liverpool Late 17th century Liverpool grew rapidly with the growth of English colonies in North America and West Indies Liverpool was well placed to trade across Atlantic Ocean The writer Celia Fiennes visited Liverpool and said Liverpool is built on the River Mersey It is mostly newly built of brick and stone after the London fashion The original town was a few fishermen s houses It has now grown into a large fine town It is but one parish with one church though there be 24 streets in it there is indeed a little chapel and there are a great many dissenters in the town Protestants who did not belong to the Church of England It s a very rich trading town the houses are of brick and stone built high and even so that a street looks very handsome The streets are well paved There is an abundance of persons who are well dressed and fashionable The streets are fair and long It s London in miniature as much as I ever saw anything There is a very pretty exchange It stands on 8 pillars over which is a very handsome Town Hall 1700 5 714 First recorded Liverpool slave ship the Liverpool Merchant sold a cargo of 220 slaves in Barbados In the early 1700s the writer Daniel Defoe said Liverpool has an opulent flourishing and increasing trade to Virginia and English colonies in America They trade around the whole island of Great Britain send ships to Norway to Hamburg and to the Baltic as also to Holland and Flanders roughly modern Belgium Welsh people in search of work and opportunity made up a large amount of population in early 18th century 1715 World s first wet dock opened in Liverpool symbolising a new era in the town s growth the starting point of the 18th century boom in Liverpool s fortunes 1720s Liverpool Castle demolished built in the 1230s 1750 20 0001795 Influx of Irish Welsh Scandinavian and Dutch communities grew the town rapidly Most of the population were not native to Liverpool 1797 77 7081801 77 000 85 0001811 94 3761821 118 9721831 165 1751835 Boundary of Liverpool expanded to include Everton Kirkdale and parts of Toxteth and West Derby Liverpool was second only to London in importance Poor overcrowded and unsanitary living conditions led to disease and epidemics of cholera in 1830s to 1860s 1841 286 4871851 375 955 At the height of the potato famine Liverpool s Irish born population peaked to about 83 000 90 000 43 000 were settled in the area around the docks More Irish people lived in Liverpool than the majority of Irish towns 40 of the world s trade was passing through Liverpool s docks 1861 413 000 462 7491871 493 405 539 2481880 Liverpool officially became a city 1881 552 508 648 6161891 617 032 644 2431895 Boundary of Liverpool expanded to include Wavertree Walton and parts of Toxteth and West Derby 1901 684 958 711 0301902 Boundary of Liverpool expanded to include Garston Aigburth Cressington and Grassendale 1904 Boundary of Liverpool expanded to include Fazakerley 1907 746 1441911 746 421 766 0441913 Boundary of Liverpool expanded to include Woolton and Gateacre 1921 805 046 821 0001931 855 6881937 867 000 The highest recorded population of Liverpool city proper 1941 806 271 Liverpool s population fell in the following decades largely due to the new towns movement and the British government s policy to displace thousands of people from major British cities including Central Liverpool to various new towns such as Kirkby Skelmersdale Runcorn and Warrington Liverpool s downward population trend continued until the early 21st century as people escaped rising unemployment and increasing deprivation 1951 765 641 768 3371961 683 133 737 6371971 595 252 607 4541981 492 164 503 726 High levels of unemployment led to significant numbers of people leaving the city 1991 448 629 480 1962001 439 428 439 476 Liverpool s population steadily increased again partly attributed to a rise in students student accommodation young professionals and increased job opportunities through urban regeneration 2011 466 4152021 486 100The city The city of Liverpool is at the core of a much larger and more populous metropolitan area however at the most recent UK Census in 2021 the area governed by Liverpool City Council had a population of 486 100 a 4 2 increase from the previous Census in 2011 This figure increased to 500 500 people by 2022 according to data from Liverpool City Council Taking in to account how local government is organised within the cities and metropolitan areas of England the city of Liverpool was the fifth largest of England s core cities and had the second overall highest population density of those by 2021 189 190 191 The population of the city has steadily risen since the 2001 Census As well as having a growing population the population density also grew at the 2021 Census compared to the previous Census This makes Liverpool the second most densely populated local authority in North West England after Manchester The population of the city is comparatively younger than that of England as a whole Family life in the city is also growing at odds with the North West England region as a whole At the 2021 Census the percentage of households including a couple without children increased in Liverpool but fell across the North West The percentage of people aged 16 years and over excluding full time students who were employed also increased in Liverpool compared to the overall North West region where it fell nbsp Liverpool s ethnic and international population is growing More people in the city identified as Asian and Black in the most recent census compared to the previous census The 2021 Census also showed that Liverpool s ethnic and international population was growing The number of residents in the city born outside of England has increased since the previous Census while the number of residents who did not identify with any national identity associated with the UK has also increased at a faster rate than England as a whole The overall share of the city s population who identified as Asian and Black increased while the percentage who identified as white decreased in the city compared with previous Census 192 It has been argued that the city can claim to have one of the strongest Irish heritages in the United Kingdom with as many as 75 percent estimated of Liverpool s population with some form of Irish ancestry 193 The growing population of Liverpool in the 21st century reverses a trend which took place between the 1930s and 2001 when the population of the city proper effectively halved At the 1931 United Kingdom census Liverpool s population reached an all time high of 846 302 Following this peak in response to central government policy the Council authority of Liverpool then built and owned large several new town council estates in the suburbs within Liverpool s metropolitan area Tens of thousands of people were systematically relocated to new housing in areas such as Halton Knowsley St Helens Sefton Wirral Cheshire West and Chester West Lancashire Warrington and as far as North Wales Such a mass relocation and population loss during this time was common practice for many British cities including London and Manchester In contrast satellite towns such as Kirkby Skelmersdale and Runcorn saw a corresponding rise in their populations Kirkby being the fastest growing town in Britain during the 1960s 194 195 196 197 Urban and metropolitan area Liverpool is typically grouped with the wider Merseyside plus Halton area for the purpose of defining its metropolitan footprint and there are several methodologies Sometimes this metropolitan area is broadened to encompass urban settlements in the neighbouring counties of Lancashire and Cheshire The Office for National Statistics in the United Kingdom uses the international standardised International Territorial Levels ITLs to divide up the economic territory of the UK This enables the ONS to calculate regional and local statistics and data The ONS uses a series of codes to identify these areas In order of hierarchy from largest area to smallest area Liverpool is part of the following regions 198 199 200 ITL 1 region North West England code TLD At the 2021 Census the ITL 1 region of North West England had a usual resident population of 7 417 300 201 ITL 2 region Merseyside code TLD7 The ITL 2 region of Merseyside is defined as the area comprising East Merseyside TLD71 plus Liverpool TLD72 Sefton TLD73 and Wirral TLD74 At the 2021 Census the population of this area was as follows 202 East Merseyside TLD71 Halton 128 200 Knowsley 154 500 St Helens 183 200Liverpool TLD72 486 100Sefton TLD73 279 300Wirral TLD74 320 200Therefore the total population of the ITL 2 Merseyside region was 1 551 500 based on the 2021 Census ITL 3 region The smallest ITL 3 area classed as Liverpool code TLD72 therefore had a population of 486 100 at the 2021 Census Other definitions At the 2021 Census the ONS used a refreshed concept of built up areas BUAs based on the physical built environment using satellite imagery to recognise developed land such as cities towns and villages This allows the ONS to investigate economic and social statistics based on actual settlements where most people live Data from the 2021 Census is not directly comparable with 2011 Census data due to this revised methodology Using the population figures of BUAs at the 2021 Census excluding London Liverpool Built up Area is the third largest in England with some 506 565 usual residents behind only Birmingham and Leeds Liverpool s built up area is therefore larger than the major English cities of Bristol Manchester Newcastle upon Tyne Nottingham and Sheffield 203 nbsp Map showing the six boroughs of Liverpool City Region the 4th largest combined authority area in England Excluding London the Liverpool City Region was the 4th largest combined authority area in England by 2021 The population is approximately 1 6 million The Liverpool City Region is a political and economic partnership between local authorities including Liverpool plus the Metropolitan boroughs of Knowsley Sefton St Helens Wirral and the Borough of Halton The Liverpool City Region Combined Authority exercises strategic governance powers for the region in many areas The economic data of the Liverpool city region is of particular policy interest to the Office for National Statistics particularly as the British Government continuously explores the potential to negotiate increased devolved powers for each combined authority area 204 205 206 207 A 2011 report Liverpool City Region Building on its Strengths by Lord Heseltine and Terry Leahy stated that what is now called Liverpool City Region has a population of around 1 5 million but also referred to an urban region that spreads from Wrexham and Flintshire to Chester Warrington West Lancashire and across to Southport with a population of 2 3 million 208 In 2006 in an attempt to harmonise the series of metropolitan areas across the European Union ESPON now European Observation Network for Territorial Development and Cohesion released a study defining a Liverpool Birkenhead Metropolitan area with an estimated population of 2 241 000 people The metro area comprised a functional urban area consisting of a contiguous urban sprawl labour pool and commuter Travel to work areas The analysis defined this metropolitan area as Liverpool itself combined with the surrounding areas of Birkenhead Wigan Ashton Warrington Widnes Runcorn Chester Southport Ellesmere Port Ormskirk and Skelmersdale 209 Liverpool and Manchester are sometimes considered as one large polynuclear metropolitan area 210 211 212 or megalopolis Ethnicity In recent decades Liverpool s population is becoming more multicultural According to the 2021 census 77 of all Liverpool residents described their ethnic group as White English Welsh Scottish Northern Irish or British The remaining 23 were described as non White English British Between 2011 and 2021 there was population growth across all ethnic groups except White English British and Any Other where there were overall losses The number of Other White residents in Liverpool also increased by almost 12 000 people with notable increases in the Other Asian Arab and Other Mixed Multiple population categories The non White English British population as a percentage of the total population across the newly organised city electoral wards ranged from 5 in the Orrell Park ward to 69 in the Princes Park ward 9 out of 10 Liverpool residents regarded English as their main language The highest non English languages in the city were Arabic 5 743 main speakers followed by Polish 4 809 main speakers Overall almost 45 000 residents had a main language that was not English 213 According to a 2014 survey the ten most popular surnames of Liverpool and their occurrence in the population are 214 215 1 Jones 23 012 2 Smith 16 276 3 Williams 13 997 4 Davies 10 149 5 Hughes 9 787 6 Roberts 9 571 7 Taylor 8 219 8 Johnson 6 715 9 Brown 6 603 10 Murphy 6 495Liverpool is home to Britain s oldest Black community dating to at least the 1730s Some Liverpudlians can trace their black ancestry in the city back ten generations 216 Early Black settlers in the city included seamen the children of traders sent to be educated and freed slaves since slaves entering the country after 1722 were deemed free men 217 Since the 20th century Liverpool is also noted for its large African Caribbean 9 Ghanaian 218 and Somali 219 communities formed of more recent African descended immigrants and their subsequent generations nbsp Liverpool has the oldest Chinese community in Europe and the largest Chinese arch outside China The city is also home to the oldest Chinese community in Europe the first residents of the city s Chinatown arrived as seamen in the 19th century 220 The traditional Chinese gateway erected in Liverpool s Chinatown is the largest gateway outside China Liverpool also has a long standing Filipino community Lita Roza a singer from Liverpool who was the first woman to achieve a UK number one hit had Filipino ancestry Ethnic breakdown in Liverpool UK Census 2021 221 222 Ethnic group Population PercentageWhite English Welsh Scottish Northern Irish or British 375 785 77 3White Other White 24 162 5Black Black British Black Welsh Caribbean or African African 12 709 2 6Asian Asian British or Asian Welsh Chinese 8 841 1 8Other ethnic group Arab 8 312 1 7Other ethnic group Any other ethnic group 7 722 1 6Asian Asian British or Asian Welsh Other Asian 7 085 1 5White Irish 6 826 1 4Asian Asian British or Asian Welsh Indian 6 251 1 3Mixed or multiple ethnic groups Other mixed or multiple ethnic groups 4 934 1Mixed or multiple ethnic groups White and Black African 4 157 0 9Mixed or multiple ethnic groups White and Black Caribbean 4 127 0 8Asian Asian British or Asian Welsh Pakistani 3 673 0 8Mixed or multiple ethnic groups White and Asian 3 662 0 8Black Black British Black Welsh Caribbean or African Other Black 2 762 0 6Asian Asian British or Asian Welsh Bangladeshi 1 917 0 4Black Black British Black Welsh Caribbean or African Caribbean 1 493 0 3White Roma 1 169 0 2White Gypsy or Irish Traveller 501 0 1The city is also known for its large Irish and Welsh populations 223 In 1813 10 per cent of Liverpool s population was Welsh leading to the city becoming known as the capital of North Wales 223 During and in the decades following the Great Irish Famine in the mid 19th century up to two million Irish people travelled to Liverpool within one decade with many subsequently departing for the United States 224 By 1851 more than 20 per cent of the population of Liverpool was Irish 225 At the 2001 Census 1 17 per cent of the population were Welsh born and 0 75 per cent were born in the Republic of Ireland while 0 54 per cent were born in Northern Ireland 226 but many more Liverpudlians are of legacy Welsh or Irish ancestry 227 Other contemporary ethnicities include Indian 9 Latin American 228 Malaysian 229 and Yemeni 230 communities which number several thousand each Religion Religion of Liverpool residents 2021Christian 57 3 No religion 29 4 Religion not stated 5 9 Muslim 5 3 Hindu 0 8 Buddhist 0 4 Any other religion 0 4 Jewish 0 4 Sikh 0 1 Source 2021 census 231 nbsp Liverpool Anglican Cathedral one of the largest cathedrals in the world nbsp Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral of Christ the King nbsp The Al Rahma Mosque in the Toxteth area of Liverpool nbsp Princes Road Synagogue Toxteth The thousands of migrants and sailors passing through Liverpool resulted in a religious diversity that is still apparent today This is reflected in the equally diverse collection of religious buildings 232 including two Christian cathedrals Liverpool is known to be England s most Catholic city with a Catholic population much larger than in other parts of England 233 This is mainly due to high historic Irish migration to the city and their descendants since 234 The parish church of Liverpool is the Anglican Our Lady and St Nicholas colloquially known as the sailors church which has existed near the waterfront since 1257 It regularly plays host to Catholic masses Other notable churches include the Greek Orthodox Church of St Nicholas built in the Neo Byzantine architecture style and the Gustav Adolf Church the Swedish Seamen s Church reminiscent of Nordic styles Liverpool s wealth as a port city enabled the construction of two enormous cathedrals in the 20th century The Anglican Cathedral which was designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott and plays host to the annual Liverpool Shakespeare Festival has one of the longest naves largest organs and heaviest and highest peals of bells in the world The Roman Catholic Metropolitan Cathedral on Mount Pleasant next to Liverpool Science Park was initially planned to be even larger Of Sir Edwin Lutyens s original design only the crypt was completed The cathedral was eventually built to a simpler design by Sir Frederick Gibberd While this is on a smaller scale than Lutyens original design it still incorporates the largest panel of stained glass in the world The road running between the two cathedrals is called Hope Street The cathedral has long been colloquially referred to as Paddy s Wigwam due to its shape 235 nb 1 Liverpool contains several synagogues of which the Grade I listed Moorish Revival Princes Road Synagogue is architecturally the most notable Princes Road is widely considered to be the most magnificent of Britain s Moorish Revival synagogues and one of the finest buildings in Liverpool 236 Liverpool has a thriving Jewish community with a further two orthodox Synagogues one in the Allerton district of the city and a second in the Childwall district of the city where a significant Jewish community reside A third orthodox Synagogue in the Greenbank Park area of L17 has recently closed and is a listed 1930s structure There is also a Lubavitch Chabad House and a reform Synagogue Liverpool has had a Jewish community since the mid 18th century The Jewish population of Liverpool is around 5 000 237 The Liverpool Talmudical College existed from 1914 until 1990 when its classes moved to the Childwall Synagogue citation needed Liverpool also has a Hindu community with a Mandir on Edge Lane Edge Hill The Shri Radha Krishna Temple from the Hindu Cultural Organisation in Liverpool is located there 238 Liverpool also has the Guru Nanak Sikh Gurdwara in Wavertree 239 and a Bahaʼi Centre in the same area 240 The city had the earliest Mosque in England and possibly the UK founded in 1887 by William Abdullah Quilliam a lawyer who had converted to Islam who set up the Liverpool Muslim Institute in a terraced house on West Derby Road 241 Apart from the first mosque in England which now houses a museum 242 243 the largest and main one Al Rahma mosque was also the third purpose built mosque in the United Kingdom 244 The second largest mosque in Liverpool is the Masjid Al Taiseer 245 Other mosques in the city include the Bait ul Lateef Ahmadiyya Mosque 246 Hamza Center Community Center 247 Islamic community centre 248 Liverpool Mosque and Islamic Institute 249 Liverpool Towhid Centre 250 Masjid Annour 251 and the Shah Jalal Mosque 252 Demonym and identity Natives of the city of Liverpool are referred to as Liverpudlians and colloquially as Scousers a reference to scouse a form of stew 253 The word Scouse has also become synonymous with the Liverpool accent and dialect Many people self identify as Liverpudlians or Scousers without actually being born or living within the city boundaries of Liverpool 254 EconomyMain article Economy of LiverpoolSee also Liverpool city centre Headquarters and major offices Category Companies based in Liverpool and Category Manufacturing companies based in Liverpool City and region nbsp Liverpool is a major component of the third largest regional economy in the United Kingdom Important sectors in the city include the knowledge economy maritime industry tourism culture hospitality healthcare industry life sciences the creative and digital sectors 255 256 257 The Liverpool City Region GDP in 2021 was 40 479 billion The 6 contributing boroughs to this GDP were as follows 258 City of Liverpool 15 911 billion 39 3 Wirral 6 632 billion 16 38 Sefton 5 431 billion 13 42 Knowsley 4 557 billion 11 26 Halton 4 498 billion 11 11 St Helens 3 448 billion 8 52 nbsp Liverpool skyline showing the Commercial District nbsp Liverpool is one of the top retail destinations in the UK nbsp Knowledge Quarter Liverpool hosts globally significant institutions nbsp The Range Rover Evoque is manufactured at Jaguar Land Rover Halewood nbsp The Port of Liverpool is the 4th largest port in the UK nbsp Liverpool is home to many global headquarters and major branch offices The City of Liverpool forms an integral part of North West England s economy the third largest regional economy in the United Kingdom The city is also a major contributor to the economy of Liverpool City Region worth over 40 billion per year 259 260 261 The local authority area governed by Liverpool City Council accounts for 39 of the Liverpool city region s total jobs 40 of its total GVA and 35 of its total businesses At the local authority level the city s GVA balanced at current basic prices was 14 3 billion in 2021 Its GDP at current market prices was 15 9 billion This equates to 32 841 per head of the population 262 263 At the 2021 United Kingdom census 51 1 of Liverpool s population aged 16 years and over was classed as employed 44 2 economically inactive and 4 8 unemployed Of those employed the most popular industries providing the employment were human health and social work activities 18 7 wholesale and retail trade repair of motor vehicles and motor cycles 15 education 10 8 public administration and defence compulsory social security 7 3 accommodation and food service activities 6 8 construction 6 5 transport and storage 5 8 manufacturing 5 5 and professional scientific and technical activities 5 2 264 According to the ONS Business Register and Employment Survey 2021 some industries within Liverpool perform strongly compared to other local authorities in Great Britain In terms of absolute number of jobs per industry in Great Britain s local authority areas Liverpool features in the national top 10 for human health and social work activities arts entertainment and recreation public administration and defence compulsory social security accommodation and food service activities and real estate activities Liverpool features in the national top 20 for number of jobs in education construction wholesale and retail trade repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles transportation and storage financial and insurance activities and professional scientific and technical activities 265 In 2023 Liverpool City Council set out an economic growth plan for the city over the following 20 years The City Council will have particular focus on economic sectors such as the visitor economy tourism culture life sciences digital and creative sectors and advanced car manufacturing 266 According to the International passenger Survey from the ONS Liverpool was one of the top 5 most visited cities in the UK by overseas tourists in 2022 As of the same year the city s tourist industry was worth a total of 3 5 billion annually and was part of a larger city region tourist industry worth 5 billion A consistent calendar of major events as well as a plethora of cultural attractions continue to provide a significant draw for tourists Tourism related to the Beatles is worth an estimated 100m to the Liverpool economy each year alone Liverpool One as well as a growing retail offer overall has led to the city being one of the most prominent destinations for shopping in the UK Liverpool Cruise Terminal which is situated close to the Pier Head enables tourists to berth in the centre of the city 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 Liverpool is home to the Knowledge Quarter a 450 acre city centre district that hosts some of the world s most influential institutions in science health technology education music and the creative performing arts The UK government has also identified the city as a pharmaceutical production superpower and one of the UK s leading regions for bioprocessing The accolade led to the government choosing the city for England s second ever Investment Zone in 2023 This will involve millions of pounds being invested over the coming years in to science orientated districts including the Knowledge Quarter and the so called pharma cluster in the city suburb of Speke The two clusters form an internationally significant role in infectious disease control Liverpool City Council also plan to invest in the city s Baltic Triangle which is renowned in the creative and digital industries 274 275 276 277 278 279 Car manufacturing also takes place in the city at the Jaguar Land Rover Halewood plant where the Range Rover Evoque model is assembled In 2023 Jaguar Land Rover announced that the Halewood plant would begin to shift its focus to electric car production 280 281 Historically the economy of Liverpool was centred on the city s port and manufacturing base Today the Port of Liverpool is the UK s fourth largest port by tonnage of freight handling over 30 million tonnes in 2020 The city is also the UK s largest port for transatlantic trade handling 45 of the country s trade from the United States In 2023 the city was chosen by the British government to be a designated Freeport to encourage growing international commerce The Liverpool2 container terminal completed in 2022 has greatly increased the volume of cargo which Liverpool is able to handle and has facilitated the world s biggest container vessels 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 Liverpool is also home to numerous UK headquarters or the major strategic branch offices of many shipping and freight lines including Atlantic Container Line 289 Bibby Line 290 Borchard Lines Ltd 291 CMA CGM 292 Hapag Lloyd 293 Independent Container Line 294 Irish Ferries 295 Maersk Line 296 Mediterranean Shipping Company 297 and Zim Integrated Shipping Services 298 Liverpool s rich architectural base has helped the city become the second most filmed city in the UK outside London As well as being a featured location in its own right it often doubles up for Chicago London Moscow New York City Paris and Rome The Depot studios close to the city centre provide space for film and TV productions 299 300 Major economic projects planned for the city include the revitalisation of disused land in the North docks Ten Streets area Liverpool Waters and a new purpose built TV studio at the former Littlewoods Pools building adjacent to the Depot 301 302 303 City region economy and devolution The policy agenda of the British Government is to continuously monitor the economy and productivity of the UK s core cities within the context of their respective city regions The government s longer term plan is to assess each area s potential for increased devolution and transfer of additional powers and budgets from central government in Whitehall to their corresponding combined authorities As such official statistics about Liverpool s economy within the context of the Liverpool City Region are closely monitored by the Office for National Statistics This allows policy and decision makers to more accurately assess the functional economic area of the city which is not bound by traditional local government geographies 304 305 306 307 308 As of 2023 there are 10 city regions in England with Combined Authorities The economy of Liverpool s combined authority area in comparison to the other city regions is as follows Economy of Liverpool City Region compared to all combined authority areas in England 309 Combined authority area Core city if applicable GVA 2021 billions GDP 2021 billions GDP per head 2021 Cambridgeshire and Peterborough 28 648 31 698 35 348Greater Manchester Manchester 78 744 87 703 30 576Liverpool City Region Liverpool 35 345 40 479 26 086North East 22 516 26 255 23 038North of Tyne Newcastle upon Tyne 19 725 22 444 27 075South Yorkshire Sheffield 28 971 33 528 24 399Tees Valley 14 241 16 346 24 103West Midlands Birmingham 70 961 79 076 27 117West of England Bristol 34 110 37 571 39 371West Yorkshire Leeds 60 137 67 607 28 769Landmarks and recent development projectsMain articles Architecture of Liverpool and Liverpool Maritime Mercantile City See also List of tallest buildings and structures in Liverpool and List of public art in Liverpool nbsp Liverpool s Three Graces the Royal Liver Building Cunard Building and Port of Liverpool Building at the Pier HeadLiverpool s long commercial history has given rise to a considerable variety of architectural styles found within the city ranging from 16th century Tudor buildings to modern day contemporary architecture 310 The majority of buildings in the city date from the late 18th century onwards the period during which the city grew into one of the foremost powers in the British Empire 311 There are over 2 500 listed buildings in Liverpool of which 27 are Grade I listed 312 and 85 are Grade II listed 313 The city also has a greater number of public sculptures than any other location in the United Kingdom aside from Westminster 314 and more Georgian houses than the city of Bath 315 This richness of architecture has subsequently seen Liverpool described by English Heritage as England s finest Victorian city 316 The value of Liverpool s architecture and design was recognised in 2004 when several areas throughout the city were declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site Known as the Liverpool Maritime Mercantile City the sites were added in recognition of the city s role in the development of international trade and docking technology 317 However this status was revoked in July 2021 when UNESCO resolved that recent and proposed developments such as the Bramley Moore Dock Stadium and Liverpool Waters projects had resulted in the serious deterioration of the area s significance 318 Waterfront and docks nbsp The Liverpool Waterfront with the Port of Liverpool Building Museum of Liverpool Royal Albert Dock and Wheel of Liverpool all visible nbsp Modern office and commercial developments on the Liverpool WaterfrontAs a major British port the docks in Liverpool have historically been central to the city s development Several major docking firsts have occurred in the city including the construction of the world s first enclosed wet dock the Old Dock in 1715 and the first ever hydraulic lifting cranes 319 The best known dock in Liverpool is the Royal Albert Dock which was constructed in 1846 and today comprises the largest single collection of Grade I listed buildings anywhere in Britain 320 Built under the guidance of Jesse Hartley it was considered to be one of the most advanced docks anywhere in the world upon completion and is often attributed with helping the city to become one of the most important ports in the world Today the Royal Albert Dock houses restaurants bars shops two hotels as well as the Merseyside Maritime Museum International Slavery Museum Tate Liverpool and The Beatles Story North of the city centre is Stanley Dock home to the Stanley Dock Tobacco Warehouse which was at the time of its construction in 1901 the world s largest building in terms of area 321 and today stands as the world s largest brick work building 322 One of the most famous locations in Liverpool is the Pier Head renowned for the trio of buildings the Royal Liver Building the Cunard Building and the Port of Liverpool Building which sit upon it Collectively referred to as the Three Graces these buildings stand as a testament to the great wealth in the city during the late 19th and early 20th century Built in a variety of architectural styles they are recognised as being the symbol of maritime Liverpool and are regarded by many as contributing to one of the most impressive waterfronts in the world 323 324 325 326 In the 21st century several areas along Liverpool s waterfront have undergone significant redevelopment Among the notable developments are the Museum of Liverpool the construction of the Liverpool Arena ACC Liverpool and Exhibition Centre Liverpool on King s Dock Alexandra Tower and 1 Princes Dock on Prince s Dock and Liverpool Marina around Coburg and Brunswick Docks The Wheel of Liverpool opened on 25 March 2010 327 328 However plans to redevelop parts of Liverpool city centre have been marred by controversy In December 2016 a newly formed company called North Point Global Ltd was given the rights to develop part of the docks under the New Chinatown working name Though heavily advertised in Liverpool Hong Kong and Chinese cities with high profile advertisements and videos the New Chinatown development failed to materialise 329 In January 2018 the Liverpool Echo and Asia Times revealed that the site remained sans any construction North Point Global as well as its subcontractor Bilt had both declared bankruptcy and the small investors mostly middle class couples who had already paid money for the apartments had lost most of their savings in them 330 Commercial district and cultural quarter nbsp St George s Hall nbsp Municipal BuildingsLiverpool s historic position as one of the most important trading ports in the world has meant that over time many grand buildings have been constructed in the city as headquarters for shipping firms insurance companies banks and other large firms The great wealth this brought then allowed for the development of grand civic buildings which were designed to allow the local administrators to run the city with pride 331 The commercial district is centred on the Castle Street Dale Street and Old Hall Street areas of the city with many of the area s roads still following their medieval layout Having developed predominantly over a period of three centuries the area is regarded as one of the most important architectural locations in the city as recognised by its inclusion in Liverpool s former World Heritage site 332 The oldest building in the area is the Grade I listed Liverpool Town Hall which is located at the top of Castle Street and dates from 1754 Often regarded as the city s finest piece of Georgian architecture the building is known as one of the most extravagantly decorated civic buildings anywhere in Britain 333 334 Also on Castle Street is the Grade I listed Bank of England Building constructed between 1845 and 1848 as one of only three provincial branches of the national bank 333 Among the other buildings in the area are the Tower Buildings Albion House the former White Star Line headquarters the Municipal Buildings and Oriel Chambers 335 which is considered to be one of the earliest Modernist style buildings ever built 336 The area around William Brown Street is referred to as the city s Cultural Quarter owing to the presence of numerous civic buildings including the William Brown Library Walker Art Gallery Picton Reading Rooms and World Museum Liverpool The area is dominated by neo classical architecture of which the most prominent St George s Hall 337 is widely regarded as the best example of a neo classical building anywhere in Europe 338 A Grade I listed building it was constructed between 1840 and 1855 to serve a variety of civic functions in the city and its doors are inscribed with S P Q L Latin senatus populusque Liverpudliensis meaning the senate and people of Liverpool William Brown Street is also home to numerous public monuments and sculptures including Wellington s Column and the Steble Fountain Many others are located around the area particularly in St John s Gardens which was specifically developed for this purpose 339 The William Brown Street area has been likened to a modern recreation of the Roman Forum 340 Other notable landmarks nbsp Speke Hall Tudor manor house is one of Liverpool s oldest buildings nbsp Liverpool Cathedral the largest cathedral in the UK nbsp Sefton Park Palm HouseWhile the majority of Liverpool s architecture dates from the mid 18th century onwards there are several buildings that pre date this time One of the oldest surviving buildings is Speke Hall a Tudor manor house located in the south of the city which was completed in 1598 341 The building is one of the few remaining timber framed Tudor houses left in the north of England and is particularly noted for its Victorian interiors which were added in the mid 19th century 342 In addition to Speke Hall many of the city s other oldest surviving buildings are also former manor houses including Croxteth Hall and Woolton Hall which were completed in 1702 and 1704 respectively 343 The oldest building within the city centre is the Grade I listed Bluecoat Chambers 344 which was built between 1717 and 1718 Constructed in British Queen Anne style architecture 345 346 the building was influenced in part by the work of Christopher Wren 347 and was originally the home of the Bluecoat School who later moved to a larger site in Wavertree in the south of the city Since 1908 it has acted as a centre for arts in Liverpool 345 Liverpool is noted for having two Cathedrals each of which imposes over the landscape around it 348 The Anglican Cathedral which was constructed between 1904 and 1978 is the largest Cathedral in Britain 349 and the fifth largest in the world Designed and built in Gothic style it is regarded as one of the greatest buildings to have been constructed during the 20th century 350 and was described by former British Poet Laureate John Betjeman as one of the great buildings of the world 351 The Roman Catholic Metropolitan Cathedral was constructed between 1962 and 1967 and is known as one of the first cathedrals to break the traditional longitudinal design 352 In the 21st century many parts of Liverpool s city centre have undergone significant redevelopment and regeneration after years of decline So far the largest of these developments has been Liverpool One which saw almost 1 billion invested in the redevelopment of 42 acres 17 hectares of land providing new retail commercial residential and leisure space 353 Around the north of the city centre several new skyscrapers have also been constructed including the RIBA award winning Unity Buildings and West Tower which at 140m is Liverpool s tallest building Many redevelopment schemes are also in progress including Circus 354 King s Dock 355 Paddington Village 356 and Liverpool Waters 357 There are many other notable buildings in Liverpool including the art deco former terminal building of Speke Airport the University of Liverpool s Victoria Building which provided the inspiration for the term Red Brick University and the Adelphi Hotel which was in the past considered to be one of the finest hotels anywhere in the world 358 Parks and gardens The Register of Historic Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in England describes Merseyside s Victorian Parks as collectively the most important in the country 359 The city of Liverpool has ten listed parks and cemeteries including two Grade I and five Grade II more than any other English city apart from London 360 TransportMain article Transport in Liverpool Further information Liverpool city centre Transport Liverpool has an extensive transport infrastructure that connects the city with its metropolitan area the rest of the United Kingdom Europe and the world Various modes of transport provide considerable connections by road rail air and sea The local network of buses trains and ferries is managed by Merseytravel on behalf of the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority and the Metro Mayor of the Liverpool City Region The Mayor and Combined Authority have control of a devolved transport budget and associated transport powers for this local system The city s major port and international airport provide global links for both passengers and freight 361 362 National and international travel Roads nbsp The Liverpool city centre entrance to the Queensway tunnel under the River MerseyThe city of Liverpool proper sits at the centre of a much larger metropolitan area The city s suburbs run contiguously in to the neighbouring boroughs of the Liverpool City Region a heavily urbanised region with substantial road links to many other areas within England The city is surrounded by a network of six motorways M58 to the north M56 to the south M6 amp M62 to the east and M53 to the west The M57 also acts as an outer ring road and bypass for the city of Liverpool itself To the north the M58 motorway runs 12 miles and provides links from Liverpool to the neighbouring counties of Lancashire and Greater Manchester 363 To the south Liverpool is connected to Widnes and Warrington via the A562 and across the River Mersey to Runcorn via the Silver Jubilee and Mersey Gateway bridges The M56 motorway then provides routes in to parts of the neighbouring counties of Cheshire and Greater Manchester with connections to the Wirral and North Wales 364 To the east the M62 motorway connects Liverpool with Hull and along the route to several large cities including Manchester Leeds and Bradford The M62 also provides a connection to both the M6 and M1 motorways providing indirect links to more distant areas including Birmingham London Nottingham Preston and Sheffield 365 366 To the west of the city the Kingsway and Queensway Tunnels connect Liverpool with the Wirral Peninsula including Birkenhead and Wallasey The A41 road and M53 motorway which both begin in Birkenhead link to Cheshire and Shropshire and via the A55 to North Wales 367 The M57 acts as a 10 mile ring road for the city itself and links various towns east of the city with the M62 and M58 motorways 368 Railway nbsp Liverpool Lime Street Station one of the busiest train stations in the UK outside London 369 Liverpool is served by two separate rail networks The local rail network is managed and run by Merseyrail and provides links throughout the Liverpool city region and beyond see Local travel below The national network which is managed by Network Rail provides Liverpool with connections to major towns and cities across England The city s primary main line station is Lime Street station which is the terminus for several lines into the city The station is served by a number of different train operating companies including Avanti West Coast East Midlands Railway London North Eastern Railway Northern Rail TransPennine Express and West Midlands Trains 370 371 Between them the station is connected with direct train services to numerous destinations including London in 2 hours 8 minutes with Pendolino trains Birmingham Glasgow Hull Leeds Manchester Newcastle upon Tyne Norwich Nottingham Preston Scarborough Sheffield and York 372 373 374 375 Opened in 1836 Lime Street station is the world s oldest mainline terminus station still in use 376 In the south of the city Liverpool South Parkway provides a connection to the city s airport Port The Port of Liverpool connects passengers and freight to Liverpool from all around the world Passenger ferry services depart from the city across the Irish Sea to Belfast Dublin and the Isle of Man Services are provided by several companies including the Isle of Man Steam Packet Company P amp O Ferries and Stena Line The Liverpool Cruise Terminal handles over 200 000 passengers and crew annually and is located alongside the Pier Head in the city centre Berthing facilities for long distance passenger cruises are provided and served by a large number of different cruise lines Ports in Australia France Faroe Islands Iceland North America Norway Spain and the Caribbean are served by the facility 377 378 379 The cruise lines that call at Liverpool cruise terminal include the following Ambassador 380 Atlas Ocean Voyages 381 Azamara 382 Carnival Cruise Line 383 Celebrity Cruises 384 Cunard Line 385 Disney Cruise Line 386 Fred Olsen 387 Hapag Lloyd cruises 388 Holland America Line 389 Noble Caledonia 390 Norwegian 391 P amp O Cruises 392 Princess Cruises 393 Regent Seven Seas 394 Royal Caribbean 395 Saga Cruises 396 Silversea Cruises 397 Viking 398 nbsp Liverpool Cruise Terminal nbsp MS Borealis nbsp Marella Explorer 2 nbsp Spirit of Discovery nbsp Vasco da Gama nbsp Celebrity Silhouette nbsp Spirit of Adventure nbsp MV Viking Sky In terms of freight traffic today the Port of Liverpool is the 4th busiest port in the UK by tonnage It is the main port in the country for transatlantic trade and the largest port on the west coast of the UK The Royal Seaforth and Liverpool2 container terminals are the port s two main terminals and handle a wide variety of cargo including containers liquid and dry bulk cargoes such as coal and grain biomass and roll on roll off cargoes such as cars and trucks 399 400 401 402 403 404 Leeds and Liverpool Canal runs into Liverpool city centre via Liverpool Canal Link at Pier Head since 2009 405 Airport nbsp Liverpool John Lennon Airport terminal buildingLiverpool John Lennon Airport which is located in the south of the city provides Liverpool with direct air connections across the United Kingdom and Europe It offers direct services to over 60 airports world wide and to over 100 destinations via one stop connections in Frankfurt Dublin and Reykjavik The airport is primarily served by low cost airlines namely Aer Lingus easyJet Jet2 com Loganair Lufthansa Play Ryanair Wideroe and Wizz Air although it does provide facilities for private aircraft Jet2 have announced that new services to winter sun destinations will be starting from winter 2024 to destinations such as Lanzarote amp Tenerife 406 407 408 409 410 411 Local travel Trains nbsp A Class 777 train operated by MerseyrailLiverpool s urban railway network known as Merseyrail is one of the busiest and most extensive in the country The network provides approximately 30 million passenger journeys per year across a system of 69 stations throughout Liverpool s metropolitan area within the formal boundaries of the Liverpool city region and adjacent areas of Cheshire and Lancashire 412 413 414 415 The network consists of three lines the Northern Line which runs to Southport Ormskirk Headbolt Lane and Hunts Cross the Wirral Line which runs through the Mersey Railway Tunnel and has branches to New Brighton West Kirby Chester and Ellesmere Port and the City Line which begins at Lime Street providing links to St Helens Wigan Preston Warrington and Manchester 416 417 The network is predominantly electric and covers 75 miles 120 kilometres of track 418 419 Trains are owned and operated by the Merseyrail franchise and managed by Merseytravel under the direction of the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority Local services on the City Line are operated by Northern rather than Merseyrail although the line itself remains part of the Merseyrail network Within Liverpool city centre four stations and over 6 1 2 miles 10 5 kilometres of tunnels are underground 418 Hamilton Square and Liverpool James Street are the oldest deep level underground stations in the world 420 In 2023 for the first time in UK history battery powered passenger trains launched on Merseyrail tracks from the newly opened Headbolt Lane station in Kirkby The Liverpool City Region Combined Authority s long term Merseyrail for All plan is to reduce dependency on live third rail and promote battery power in order to further expand Merseyrail to previously inaccessible places across the city region and as far as Manchester Wrexham Warrington and Preston 421 422 Buses nbsp Liverpool South Parkway a bus amp rail interchange serving south Liverpool amp Liverpool John Lennon AirportLocal bus services within and around Liverpool are managed by Merseytravel 423 and are run by several different companies including Arriva and Stagecoach The two principal termini for local buses are Queen Square bus station located near Lime Street railway station for services north and east of the city and Liverpool One bus station located near the Royal Albert Dock for services to the south and east 424 Cross river services to the Wirral use roadside terminus points in Castle Street and Sir Thomas Street A night bus service also operates on Saturdays providing services from the city centre across Liverpool and wider region 425 Tour bus services are provided by Maghull Coaches which allow tourists to hop on hop off and view historical landmarks and attractions as well as Liverpool F C and Beatles related locations 426 427 National Express services operate from the Liverpool One bus station to and from destinations across the UK 428 In 2023 the Liverpool city region confirmed plans to become the second place outside London to implement bus franchising Local leaders have argued that it will improve services by transferring control over fares ticketing and routes from bus companies to the Combined Authority The full implementation of bus franchising will take place by the end of 2028 429 430 Mersey Ferry nbsp A Mersey Ferry foreground with the Liverpool waterfront in the distanceThe cross river ferry service in Liverpool known as the Mersey Ferry is managed and operated by Merseytravel with services operating between the Pier Head in Liverpool city centre and both Woodside in Birkenhead and Seacombe in Wallasey Services operate at intervals ranging from 20 minutes at peak times to every hour during the middle of the day and at weekends 431 Despite remaining an important transport link between the city and the Wirral Peninsula the Mersey Ferry has become an increasingly popular tourist attraction within the city with daytime River Explorer Cruises providing passengers with an historical overview of the River Mersey and surrounding areas 432 Cycling and scooters A scooter sharing system and electric bicycle scheme operates throughout Liverpool which allows residents and visitors to move around the city on rented scooters and bicycles The scheme is operated by Swedish technology company Voi and riders are able to pick up and drop off bikes and scooters at various locations around the city 433 434 435 National Cycle Route 56 National Cycle Route 62 and National Cycle Route 810 run through Liverpool CultureAs with other large cities Liverpool is an important cultural centre within the United Kingdom incorporating music performing arts museums and art galleries literature and nightlife among others In 2008 the cultural heritage of the city was celebrated with the city holding the title of European Capital of Culture during which time a wide range of cultural celebrations took place in the city including Go Superlambananas and La Princesse Liverpool has also held Europe s largest music and poetry event the Welsh national Eisteddfod three times despite being in England in 1884 1900 and 1929 Music Main articles Music of Liverpool Beat music and Culture of Liverpool nbsp The Beatles statue in their home city Liverpool The group are the most commercially successful and critically acclaimed band in popular music 436 Liverpool is internationally known for music and is recognised by Guinness World Records as the World Capital City of Pop 437 Musicians from the city have produced 58 No 1 singles more than any other city in the world 438 Both the most successful male band and girl group in global music history have contained Liverpudlian members Liverpool is most famous as the birthplace of the Beatles and during the 1960s was at the forefront of the Beat Music movement which would eventually lead to the British Invasion Many notable musicians of the time originated in the city including Billy J Kramer Cilla Black Gerry and the Pacemakers and The Searchers The influence of musicians from Liverpool coupled with other cultural exploits of the time such as the Liverpool poets prompted American poet Allen Ginsberg to proclaim that the city was the centre of consciousness of the human universe 439 Other musicians from Liverpool include Billy Fury A Flock of Seagulls Echo amp the Bunnymen Frankie Goes to Hollywood Frankie Vaughan Anathema Ladytron The Zutons Cast Atomic Kitten and Rebecca Ferguson The La s 1990 hit single There She Goes was described by Rolling Stone as a founding piece of Britpop s foundation 440 nbsp Philharmonic Hall home of the Royal Liverpool PhilharmonicThe city is also home to the oldest surviving professional symphony orchestra in the UK the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra which is based in the Philharmonic Hall 441 The chief conductor of the orchestra is Vasily Petrenko 442 Sir Edward Elgar dedicated his Pomp and Circumstance March No 1 to the Liverpool Orchestral Society and the piece had its first performance in the city in 1901 443 Among Liverpool s curiosities the Austrian emigre Fritz Spiegl is notable He not only became a world expert on the etymology of Scouse but composed the music to Z cars and the Radio 4 UK Theme Well established festivals in the city include Africa Oye and Brazilica which are the UK s largest free African and Brazilian music festivals respectively 444 445 The dance music festival Creamfields was established by the Liverpool based Cream clubbing brand which started life as a weekly event at Nation nightclub There are numerous music venues located across the city however the Liverpool Arena is by far the largest Opened in 2008 the 11 000 seat arena hosted the MTV Europe Music Awards the same year and since then has played host to world renowned acts such as Andrea Bocelli Beyonce Elton John Kanye West Kasabian The Killers Lady Gaga Oasis Pink Rihanna and UB40 nbsp The Eurovision Village stage at the Pier Head held as a side event for the Eurovision Song Contest 2023On 7 October 2022 the BBC and the European Broadcasting Union EBU announced that Liverpool would host the Eurovision Song Contest 2023 on behalf of the previous year s winning country Ukraine who were unable to meet the demands of hosting the event due to security concerns caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine The contest was held at the Liverpool Arena and consisted of two semi finals on 9 and 11 May and a final on 13 May 2023 This was the first time that the contest took place in the city and was also a record extending ninth time that the UK has hosted the contest having last done so in Birmingham in 1998 446 Visual arts nbsp William Brown Street also known as the Cultural Quarter was a World Heritage Site consisting of the World Museum Central Library Picton Reading Room and Walker Art Gallery Liverpool has more galleries and national museums than any other city in the United Kingdom apart from London 18 National Museums Liverpool is the only English national collection based wholly outside London 447 The Tate Liverpool gallery houses the modern art collection of the Tate in the North of England and was until the opening of Tate Modern the largest exhibition space dedicated to modern art in the United Kingdom The FACT centre hosts touring multimedia exhibitions while the Walker Art Gallery houses one of the most impressive permanent collections of Pre Raphaelite art in the world 448 Sudley House contains another major collection of pre 20th century art 449 Liverpool University s Victoria Building was re opened as a public art gallery and museum to display the university s artwork and historical collections which include the largest display of art by Audubon outside the US 450 A number of artists have also come from the city including painter George Stubbs who was born in Liverpool in 1724 The Liverpool Biennial festival of arts runs from mid September to late November and comprises three main sections the International The Independents and New Contemporaries although fringe events are timed to coincide 451 It was during the 2004 festival that Yoko Ono s work My mother is beautiful caused widespread public protest when photographs of a naked woman s pubic area were exhibited on the main shopping street nbsp Nelson Monument at Exchange Flags The other British hero of the Napoleonic Wars is commemorated in Wellington s Column Literature Felicia Hemans nee Browne was born in Dale Street Liverpool in 1793 although she later moved to Flintshire in Wales Felicia was born in Liverpool a granddaughter of the Venetian consul in that city Her father s business soon brought the family to Denbighshire in North Wales where she spent her youth They made their home near Abergele and St Asaph Flintshire and it is clear that she came to regard herself as Welsh by adoption later referring to Wales as Land of my childhood my home and my dead Her first poems dedicated to the Prince of Wales were published in Liverpool in 1808 when she was only fourteen arousing the interest of Percy Bysshe Shelley who briefly corresponded with her 452 An engraving of a painting of nbsp The Wishing Gate by S F Serres was published in Fisher s Drawing Room Scrap Book 1834 with a poetical illustration by Letitia Elizabeth Landon to which she adds the note I believe that to this haunted gate a common superstition is attached namely that to wish and to have that wish fulfilled is the result of such wish being uttered while passing It stood on the North Shore before the docks were built and was a place where farewells could be waved to departing voyagers 453 A number of notable authors have visited Liverpool including Daniel Defoe Washington Irving Thomas De Quincey Herman Melville Nathaniel Hawthorne Charles Dickens Gerard Manley Hopkins and Hugh Walpole Daniel Defoe after visiting the city described it as one of the wonders of Britain in his Tour through England and Wales 454 Herman Melville s novel Redburn deals with the first seagoing voyage of 19 years old Wellingborough Redburn between New York and Liverpool in 1839 Largely autobiographical the middle sections of the book are set in Liverpool and describe the young merchantman s wanderings and his reflections 452 Hawthorne was stationed in Liverpool as United States consul between 1853 and 1856 455 Charles Dickens visited the city on numerous occasions to give public readings 456 Hopkins served as priest at St Francis Xavier Church Langdale St Liverpool between 1879 and 81 457 Although he is not known to have ever visited Liverpool Jung famously had a vivid dream of the city which he analysed in one of his works 458 nbsp Constantine P Cavafy widely regarded as one of the most important figures in Western literature spent a significant part of his life in LiverpoolOf all the poets who are connected with Liverpool perhaps the greatest is Constantine P Cavafy a twentieth century Greek cultural icon although he was born in Alexandria From a wealthy family his father had business interests in Egypt London and Liverpool After his father s death Cavafy s mother brought him in 1872 at the age of nine to Liverpool where he spent part of his childhood being educated He lived first in Balmoral Road then when the family firm crashed he lived in poorer circumstances in Huskisson Street After his father died in 1870 Cavafy and his family settled for a while in Liverpool In 1876 his family faced financial problems due to the Long Depression of 1873 so by 1877 they had to move back to Alexandria 452 Her Benny a novel telling the tragic story of Liverpool street urchins in the 1870s written by Methodist preacher Silas K Hocking was a best seller and the first book to sell a million copies in the author s lifetime 459 The prolific writer of adventure novels Harold Edward Bindloss 1866 1945 was born in Liverpool The writer docker and political activist George Garrett was born in Seacombe on the Wirral Peninsula in 1896 and was brought up in Liverpool s South end around Park Road the son of a fierce Liverpool Irish Catholic mother and a staunch Orange stevedore father In the 1920s and 1930s his organisation within the Seamen s Vigilance Committees unemployed demonstrations and hunger marches from Liverpool became part of a wider cultural force He spoke at reconciliation meetings in sectarian Liverpool and helped found the Unity Theatre in the 1930s as part of the Popular Front against the rise of fascism particularly its echoes in the Spanish Civil War Garrett died in 1966 460 The novelist and playwright James Hanley 1897 1985 was born in Kirkdale Liverpool in 1897 not Dublin nor 1901 as he generally implied to a working class family 461 Hanley grew up close to the docks and much of his early writing is about seamen The Furys 1935 is first in a sequence of five loosely autobiographical novels about working class life in Liverpool James Hanley s brother novelist Gerald Hanley 1916 92 was also born in Liverpool not County Cork Ireland as he claimed 462 While he published a number of novels he also wrote radio plays for the BBC as well as some film scripts most notably The Blue Max 1966 463 He was also one of several scriptwriters for a life of Gandhi 1964 464 Novelist Beryl Bainbridge 1932 2010 was born in Liverpool and raised in nearby Formby She was primarily known for her works of psychological fiction often set among the English working classes Bainbridge won the Whitbread Awards prize for best novel in 1977 and 1996 and was nominated five times for the Booker Prize The Times newspaper named Bainbridge among their list of The 50 greatest British writers since 1945 465 J G Farrell was born in Liverpool in 1935 but left at the outbreak of war in 1939 466 A novelist of Irish descent Farrell gained prominence for his historical fiction most notably his Empire Trilogy Troubles The Siege of Krishnapur and The Singapore Grip dealing with the political and human consequences of British colonial rule However his career ended when he drowned in Ireland in 1979 at the age of 44 nbsp Clive Barker Liverpool born writer of Hellraiser and inspiration behind CandymanHelen Forrester was the pen name of June Bhatia nee Huband 1919 2011 467 468 who was known for her books about her early childhood in Liverpool during the Great Depression including Twopence to Cross the Mersey 1974 as well as several works of fiction During the late 1960s the city became well known for the Liverpool poets who include Roger McGough and the late Adrian Henri An anthology of poems The Mersey Sound written by Henri McGough and Brian Patten has sold well since it was first being published in 1967 Liverpool has produced several noted writers of horror fiction often set on Merseyside Ramsey Campbell Clive Barker and Peter Atkins among them A collection of Liverpudlian horror fiction Spook City was edited by a Liverpool expatriate Angus Mackenzie and introduced by Doug Bradley also from Liverpool 469 Bradley is famed for portraying Barker s creation Pinhead in the Hellraiser series of films Performing arts nbsp The Empire Theatre has the largest two tier auditorium in the UK Liverpool also has a long history of performing arts reflected in several annual theatre festivals such as the Liverpool Shakespeare Festival which takes place inside Liverpool Cathedral and in the adjacent historic St James Gardens every summer the Everyword Festival of new theatre writing the only one of its kind in the country 470 Physical Fest an international festival of physical theatre 471 the annual festivals organised by Liverpool John Moores University s drama department and the Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts and other festivals by the large number of theatres in the city such as the Empire Epstein Everyman 472 473 Playhouse 474 475 Royal Court and Unity theatres Notable actors and actresses from Liverpool include Arthur Askey Tom Baker Kim Cattrall Jodie Comer Stephen Graham Rex Harrison Jason Isaacs Tina Malone the McGann brothers Joe Mark Paul and Stephen David Morrissey Elizabeth Morton Peter Serafinowicz Elisabeth Sladen Alison Steadman and Rita Tushingham Actors and actresses from elsewhere in the world have strong ties to the city such as Canadian actor Mike Myers whose parents were both from Liverpool and American actress Halle Berry whose mother was from Liverpool Nightlife nbsp Nightlife in Mathew Street and Temple Court Liverpool city centreLiverpool has a thriving and varied nightlife The majority of the city s late night restaurants bars pubs nightclubs music venues and comedy clubs are located in a number of distinct districts In 2023 figures from global data company Square show that night time spending in bars and restaurants in Liverpool city centre outperformed all major UK cities including London 476 Figures by the Liverpool BID Company suggest that the busiest nights of the week in Liverpool city centre are Friday and Saturday Using cameras to track the flow of people in key locations between 7 pm and 4 am at least 1 5 million people pass through the city centre every Friday night and almost 2 million people on Saturday nights The data demonstrates that Monday night is the quietest night of the week in the city centre and footfall then increases every single night to reach its peak on Saturday nights 125 889 people worked in the city s night time economy as of 2022 according to the Liverpool BID Company 477 478 479 Liverpool s nightlife is concentrated in a number of districts including Ropewalks which comprises Concert Square St Peter s Square and the adjoining Seel Street and Duke Street Other popular areas include Hardman Street the Cavern Quarter Baltic Triangle Royal Albert Dock and the city s Pride Quarter which is home to a large number of LGBT venues 480 481 In the city s suburbs Lark Lane in Aigburth is noted for an abundance of bars and late night venues 482 483 EducationSee also List of schools in Liverpool nbsp University of Liverpool s Victoria BuildingIn Liverpool primary and secondary education is available in various forms supported by the state including secular Church of England Jewish and Roman Catholic Islamic education is available at primary level but there is no secondary provision One of Liverpool s important early schools was The Liverpool Blue Coat School founded in 1708 as a charitable school The Liverpool Blue Coat School is the top performing school in the city with 100 5 or more A C grades at GCSE resulting in the 30th best GCSE results in the country and an average point score per student of 1087 4 in A AS levels 484 Other notable schools include Liverpool College founded in 1840 Merchant Taylors School founded in 1620 485 Another of Liverpool s notable senior schools is St Edward s College situated in the West Derby area of the city Historic grammar schools such as the Liverpool Institute High School and Liverpool Collegiate School both closed in the 1980s are still remembered as centres of academic excellence Bellerive Catholic College is the city s top performing non selective school based upon GCSE results in 2007 nbsp Liverpool John Moores University s James Parsons BuildingLiverpool has three universities the University of Liverpool Liverpool John Moores University and Liverpool Hope University Edge Hill University founded as a teacher training college in the Edge Hill district of Liverpool is now located in Ormskirk in South West Lancashire Liverpool is also home to the Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts LIPA The University of Liverpool was established in 1881 as University College Liverpool In 1884 it became part of the federal Victoria University Following a Royal Charter and Act of Parliament in 1903 it became an independent university the University of Liverpool with the right to confer its own degrees It was the first university to offer degrees in biochemistry architecture civic design veterinary science oceanography and social science nbsp City of Liverpool College s Arts Centre Liverpool Hope University which was formed through the merger of three colleges the earliest of which was founded in 1844 gained university status in 2005 It is the only ecumenical university in Europe 486 It is situated on both sides of Taggart Avenue in Childwall and has a second campus in the city centre the Cornerstone The Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine founded to address some of the problems created by trade continues today as a post graduate school affiliated with the University of Liverpool and houses an anti venom repository Liverpool John Moores University was previously a polytechnic and gained status in 1992 It is named in honour of Sir John Moores one of the founders of the Littlewoods football pools and retail group who was a major benefactor The institution was previously owned and run by Liverpool City Council It traces it lineage to the Liverpool Mechanics institute opened in 1823 making it by this measure England s third oldest university The city has one further education college City of Liverpool College in the city centre Liverpool City Council operates Burton Manor a residential adult education college in nearby Burton on the Wirral Peninsula There are two Jewish schools in Liverpool both belonging to the King David Foundation King David School Liverpool is the High School and the King David Primary School There is also a King David Kindergarten featured in the community centre of Harold House These schools are all run by the King David Foundation located in Harold House in Childwall conveniently next door to the Childwall Synagogue SportFootball nbsp The Merseyside derby is the football match between the two biggest clubs in the city Liverpool in red and Everton in blueLiverpool is one of the most successful footballing cities in England and is home to two top flight Premier League teams Everton F C was founded in 1878 and was one of the twelve founder members of the Football League It plays at Goodison Park Liverpool F C were founded in 1892 and play at Anfield Between them the clubs have won 28 English First Division titles 12 FA Cup titles 10 League Cup titles 6 European Cup titles 1 FIFA Club World Cup title 1 European Cup Winners Cup title 3 UEFA Cup titles and 24 FA Charity Shields The two clubs contest the Merseyside derby dubbed the friendly derby Despite the name the fixture is known for its keen rivalry having seen more sending offs in this fixture than any other Unlike many other derbies it is not rare for families in the city to contain supporters of both clubs 487 Liverpool F C is the English and British club with the most European Cup titles with six the latest in 2019 nbsp Anfield home of Liverpool F C Liverpool has played at Anfield since 1892 when the club was formed to occupy the stadium following Everton s departure due to a dispute with their landlord Liverpool are still playing there 125 years later although the ground has been completely rebuilt since the 1970s The Spion Kop rebuilt as an all seater stand in 1994 95 was the most famous part of the ground gaining cult status across the world due to the songs and celebrations of the many fans who packed onto its terraces Anfield as capacity for 54 000 spectators in comfort and is a distinctive landmark in an area filled with smaller and older buildings Liverpool club also has a multimillion pound youth training facility called The Academy nbsp Goodison Park home of Everton F C After leaving Anfield in 1892 Everton moved to Goodison Park on the opposite side of Stanley Park The ground was opened on 24 August 1892 by Lord Kinnaird and Frederick Wall of the FA but the first crowds to attend the ground saw a short athletics meeting followed by a selection of music and a fireworks display Everton s first game there was on 2 September 1892 when they beat Bolton 4 2 It was one of the host venues during the 1966 FIFA World Cup It now has the capacity for just under 40 000 spectators all seated but the last expansion took place in 1994 when a new Park End Stand gave the stadium an all seater capacity The Goodison Road Stand dates back to the 1970s while the Gwladys Steet Stand and Bullens Road Stand are refurbished pre Second World War structures Everton is currently in the process of relocating with a stadium move first mooted as early as 1996 488 In 2003 the club were forced to abandon plans for a 55 000 seat stadium at King s Dock due to financial constraints 489 with further proposed moves to Kirkby comprising part of Destination Kirkby moving the stadium just beyond Liverpool s council boundary into Kirkby and Walton Hall Park similarly scrapped The club will relocate to the multimillion pound Everton Stadium designed by the American architect Dan Meis at the nearby Bramley Moore Dock on the River Mersey waterfront during the 2024 25 season with ground broken on the project in August 2021 490 The new stadium will have a capacity of 52 888 which could be expanded to 62 000 demand permitting and it will be a host venue for the UEFA Euro 2028 Everton also have a multimillion pound training facility based at Finch Farm The Everton Women s Team play in the Women s Super League at the Walton Hall Park Stadium Rugby league Rugby league is a developing sport in Liverpool with many community partners assisting the sport s governing body RFL to offer opportunities to participate These include well established professional clubs in the neighbouring towns of St Helens and Widnes The city has a thriving student rugby league scene Liverpool University took part in the first university game in 1968 and the other universities have been regular participants in the BUSA competition Today there are a number of non professional clubs in the city including Liverpool Buccaneers who in 2006 won the regional final of the Rugby League Conference and in 2008 were elevated to the Rugby League Conference National division Two junior clubs Liverpool Lions based in Croxteth and Liverpool Storm based in Childwall have been established in 2008 They will be competing in the NWC Junior leagues in 2009 Rugby league has more recently returned to Huyton with Roby in the form of the Huyton Bulldogs A R L F C Huyton Bulldogs currently compete in the RL Merit League and their home ground is at the Jubilee Playing Fields Twig Lane Huyton A number of secondary schools throughout Merseyside are now participating in the inaugural merit league and 2008 is the first year that Merseyside schools have qualified for the RFL s Champion Schools tournament Primary schools have been competing in tag festivals for a few years and the annual Tag World Cup is one of the major events in the Liverpool schools competition calendar Boxing Main article Boxing in Liverpool Boxing is massively popular in Liverpool The city has a proud heritage and history in the sport and is home to around 22 amateur boxing clubs which are responsible for producing many successful boxers such as Nel Tarleton Alan Rudkin John Conteh Andy Holligan Liam Smith Paul Hodkinson Tony Bellew and Robin Ried The city also boasts a consistently strong amateur contingent which is highlighted by Liverpool being the most represented city on the GB Boxing team as well as at the 2012 London Olympics the most notable Liverpool amateur fighters include Jimmy Lloyd George Turpin Tony Willis Robin Reid and David Price who have all medalled at the Olympic Games Boxing events are usually hosted at the Echo Arena and Liverpool Olympia within the city although the former home of Liverpool boxing was the renowned Liverpool Stadium Horse racing nbsp The Earl of Derby Stand at Aintree Racecourse home of the Grand National Aintree Racecourse in the adjacent Metropolitan Borough of Sefton is home to the world s most famous steeple chase the Randox Grand National which takes place annually in early April The race meeting attracts horse owners jockeys from around the world to compete in the demanding 4 mile 6 5 kilometre and 30 fence course There have been many memorable moments of the Grand National for instance the 100 1 outsider Foinavon in 1967 the dominant Red Rum and Ginger McCain of the 1970s and Mon Mome 100 1 who won the 2009 meeting In 2010 the National became the first horse race to be televised in high definition in the UK GolfThe Royal Liverpool Golf Club situated in the nearby town of Hoylake on the Wirral Peninsula has hosted The Open Championship on a number of occasions most recently in 2023 It also hosted the Walker Cup in 1983 nbsp The Royal Liverpool Golf Club HoylakeGreyhound racing Liverpool once contained four greyhound tracks Seaforth Greyhound Stadium 1933 1965 Breck Park Stadium 1927 1948 Stanley Greyhound Stadium 1927 1961 and White City Stadium 1932 1973 Breck Park also hosted boxing bouts and both Stanley and Seaforth hosted Motorcycle speedway Athletics Wavertree Sports Park is home to the Liverpool Harriers athletics club which has produced such athletes as Curtis Robb Allyn Condon the only British athlete to compete at both the Summer and Winter Olympics and Katarina Johnson Thompson Great Britain was represented by Johnson Thompson at the 2012 London Olympics in the women s heptathlon and she would go on to win the gold medal at the 2019 World Championships giving Liverpool its first gold medal and breaking the British record in the process Gymnastics In August 2012 Liverpool gymnast Beth Tweddle won an Olympic bronze medal in London 2012 in the uneven bars at her third Olympic Games thus becoming the most decorated British gymnast in history Park Road Gymnastics Centre provides training to a high level Swimming Liverpool has produced several swimmers who have represented their nation at major championships such as the Olympic Games The most notable of which is Steve Parry who claimed a bronze medal at the 2004 Athens Olympics in the 200m butterfly Others include Herbert Nickel Haresnape Margaret Kelly Shellagh Ratcliffe and Austin Rawlinson There is a purpose built aquatics centre at Wavertree Sports Park which opened in 2008 The City of Liverpool Swimming Club has been National Speedo League Champions 8 out of the last 11 years Cricket nbsp Liverpool Cricket ClubThe city is the hub of the Liverpool and District Cricket Competition an ECB Premier League 491 Sefton Park and Liverpool are the league s founder members based in the city with Wavertree Alder and Old Xaverians clubs having joined the league more recently 492 Liverpool plays host Lancashire County Cricket Club as an outground most seasons including six of eight home County Championship games during Lancashire s 2011 493 title winning campaign 494 while Old Trafford was refurbished 495 496 Tennis Since 2014 Liverpool Cricket Club has played host 497 to the annual Tradition ICAP Liverpool International tennis tournament which has seen tennis stars such as Novak Djokovic David Ferrer Mardy Fish Laura Robson and Caroline Wozniacki Previously this had been held at Calderstones Park situated in Allerton in the south of the city Liverpool Tennis Development Programme at Wavertree Tennis Centre is one of the largest in the UK Basketball nbsp Liverpool Arena hosts numerous sporting events and was formerly the home of British Basketball League team the Mersey Tigers Professional basketball came to the city in 2007 with the entry of Everton Tigers now known as Mersey Tigers into the elite British Basketball League The club was originally associated with Everton F C and was part of the Toxteth Tigers youth development programme which reached over 1 500 young people every year 498 The Tigers began to play in Britain s top league for the 2007 08 season playing at the Greenbank Sports Academy before moving into the newly completed Echo Arena during that season After the 2009 10 season Everton F C withdrew funding from the Tigers who then changed their name to Mersey Tigers Their closest professional rivals are the Cheshire Jets based 18 miles 29 km away in Chester Baseball Liverpool is one of three cities which still host the traditional sport of British baseball and it hosts the annual England Wales international match every two years alternating with Cardiff and Newport Liverpool Trojans are the oldest existing baseball club in the UK Cycling The 2014 Tour of Britain cycle race began in Liverpool on 7 September using a city centre circuit to complete 130 km 80 8 mi of racing 499 The Tour of Britain took nine stages and finished in London on 14 September Other A 2016 study of UK fitness centres found that of the top 20 UK urban areas Liverpool had the highest number of leisure and sports centres per capita with 4 3 centres per 100 000 of the city population 500 Further information Liverpool MarathonMediaThe city has one daily newspaper the Echo published by Reach plc The Liverpool Daily Post was also published until 2013 The UK s first online only weekly newspaper called Southport Reporter Southport and Mersey Reporter is also one of the many other news outlets that cover the city The independent media organisation The Post 501 also covers Liverpool while Nerve magazine publishes articles and reviews of cultural events LOCAL TV Liverpool is a local television station serving Liverpool City Region and surrounding areas The station is owned and operated by Made Television Ltd and forms part of a group of eight local TV stations It broadcasts from studios and offices in Liverpool nbsp Radio City Tower home to Radio City and Greatest Hits RadioThe ITV region which covers Liverpool is ITV Granada In 2006 the Television company opened a new newsroom in the Royal Liver Building Granada s regional news broadcasts were produced at the Royal Albert Dock News Centre during the 1980s and 1990s 502 The BBC also opened a new newsroom on Hanover Street in 2006 ITV s daily magazine programme This Morning was broadcast from studios at Royal Albert Dock until 1996 when production was moved to London Granada s short lived shopping channel Shop was also produced in Liverpool until it was cancelled in 2002 503 Liverpool is the home of the TV production company Lime Pictures formerly Mersey Television which produced the now defunct soap operas Brookside and Grange Hill It also produces the soap opera Hollyoaks which was formerly filmed in Chester and began on Channel 4 in 1995 All three series were are largely filmed in the Childwall area of Liverpool Radio stations include BBC Radio Merseyside Liverpool Live Radio 504 Melodic Distraction 505 In Demand Radio Capital Liverpool Radio City and Greatest Hits Radio Liverpool amp The North West The last two are owned by Bauer and located in Radio City Tower which along with the two cathedrals dominates the city s skyline Liverpool has also featured in films 506 see List of films set in Liverpool for some of them In films the city has doubled for London Paris New York Chicago Moscow Dublin Venice and Berlin 47 507 Notable peopleMain articles List of people from Merseyside and List of bands and artists from MerseysideQuotes about LiverpoolThis section is a candidate for copying over to Wikiquote using the Transwiki process Lyrpole alias Lyverpoole a pavid towne hath but a chapel The king hath a castelet there and the Earl of Darbe hath a stone howse there Irisch merchants cum much thither as to a good haven At Lyrpole is smaul custom payed that causith marchantes to resorte thither Good marchandis at Lyrpole and much Irish yarrn that Manchester men do buy there John Leland Itinerary c 1536 1539 508 Liverpoole is one of the wonders of Britain In a word there is no town in England London excepted that can equal it for the fineness of the streets and the beauty of the buildings Daniel Defoe A tour thro the Whole Island of Great Britain 1721 1726 O ne of the neatest best towns I have seen in England John Wesley Journal 1755 I have not come here to be insulted by a set of wretches every brick in whose infernal town is cemented with an African s blood George Frederick Cooke 1756 1812 an actor responding to being hissed at when he came onstage drunk during a visit to Liverpool 509 That immense City which stands like another Venice upon the water where there are riches overflowing and every thing which can delight a man who wishes to see the prosperity of a great community and a great empire This quondam village now fit to be the proud capital of any empire in the world has started up like an enchanted palace even in the memory of living men Thomas Erskine 1st Baron Erskine 1791 I have heard of the greatness of Liverpool but the reality far surpasses my expectation Prince Albert speech 1846 Liverpool has become a wonder of the world It is the New York of Europe a world city rather than merely British provincial Illustrated London News 15 May 1886 The dream represented my situation at the time I can still see the greyish yellow raincoats glistening with the wetness of the rain Everything was extremely unpleasant black and opaque just as I felt then But I had a vision of unearthly beauty and that is why I was able to live at all Liverpool is the pool of life The liver according to an old view is the seat of life that which makes to live C G Jung Memories Dreams Reflections 1928 The centre is imposing dignified and darkish like a city in a rather gloomy Victorian novel We had now arrived in the heart of the big city and as usual it was almost a heart of darkness But it looked like a big city there was no denying that Here emphatically was the English seaport second only to London The very weight of stone emphasised that fact And even if the sun never seems to properly rise over it I like a big city to proclaim itself a big city at once J B Priestley English Journey 1934 If Liverpool can get into top gear again there is no limit to the city s potential The scale and resilience of the buildings and people is amazing it is a world city far more so than London and Manchester It doesn t feel like anywhere else in Lancashire comparisons always end up overseas Dublin or Boston or Hamburg The city is tremendous and so right up to the First World War were the abilities of the architects who built over it The centre is humane and convenient to walk around in but never loses its scale And in spite of the bombings and the carelessness it is still full of superb buildings Fifty years ago it must have outdone anything in England Ian Nairn Britain s Changing Towns 1967International linksTwin cities Liverpool is twinned 510 with Surabaya Indonesia 2017 Birmingham Alabama United States 2015 Cologne Germany 1952 Dublin Ireland 1997 Johor Bahru Malaysia Medan Indonesia Odesa Odesa Oblast Ukraine Penang Malaysia Rio de Janeiro Brazil 2003 Shanghai China 1999 Friendship links Liverpool has friendship links without formal constitution 511 with the following cities Givenchy les la Bassee Pas de Calais France Halifax Nova Scotia Canada Havana La Habana Cuba La Plata Buenos Aires Province Argentina Memphis Tennessee US Minamitane Kagoshima Prefecture Japan Naples Campania Italy New Orleans Louisiana US Ponsacco Tuscany Italy Ramnicu Valcea Valcea County Romania Valparaiso Valparaiso Province Chile Guadalajara Jalisco Mexico Consulates The first overseas consulate of the United States was opened in Liverpool in 1790 and it remained operational for almost two centuries 512 Today a large number of consulates are located in the city serving Chile Denmark Estonia Finland France Germany Hungary Iceland Italy Netherlands Norway Romania Sweden and Thailand Tunisian amp Ivory Coast Consulates are located in the neighbouring Metropolitan Borough of Sefton Freedom of the CityThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items November 2019 The following people and military units have received the Freedom of the City of Liverpool Individuals List of Freemen of the City of Liverpool Military units Duke of Lancaster s Regiment 14 September 2008 513 War Widows Association Merseyside Branch 1 December 2014 514 208 3rd West Lancashire Battery 103rd Lancashire Artillery Volunteers Regiment Royal Artillery 14 October 2017 515 8th Engineer Brigade RE 11 December 2020 516 517 518 Organisations and groups The Pain Relief Foundation 3 March 2010 519 The Whitechapel Centre 5 October 2016 520 The Parachute Regiment Association Liverpool Branch 24 October 2021 521 The Royal Signals Association Liverpool Branch 26 November 2021 522 See also nbsp Liverpool portal nbsp North West England portal1911 Liverpool general transport strike 2008 European Amateur Boxing Championships Atlantic history Big Dig Liverpool Healthcare in Liverpool History of slavery International Garden Festival List of films and television shows set in Liverpool List of hotels in Liverpool Magistrates Courts Liverpool Triangular trade Williamson Tunnels Category Culture in Liverpool Liver birdNotes The term may have its origins in religious and racial tribalism and sectarianism which while now largely disappeared were once notoriously virulent in the city and its environs ReferencesFootnotes How Liverpool became known as the capital of North Wales March 2021 Retrieved 1 March 2021 Second capital of Ireland Liverpool s unique Irish history and culture and what it means to the city 25 July 2021 Retrieved 23 August 2022 It s official Liverpool rocks Retrieved 31 October 2020 Is Liverpool still the world in one city Retrieved 1 May 2010 The population reached nearly 490 000 www ons gov uk Retrieved 29 December 2023 Council Liverpool City Council Retrieved 16 December 2023 Mid Year Population Estimates UK June 2021 Office for National Statistics 21 December 2022 Retrieved 18 October 2023 UK Census 2011 Local Area Report Liverpool Built up area E34004801 Nomis Office for National Statistics Retrieved 16 December 2023 a b c d UK Census 2021 2021 Census Area Profile Liverpool Local Authority E08000012 Nomis Office for National Statistics Retrieved 16 December 2023 a b Fenton Trevor 25 April 2023 Regional gross domestic product city regions Office for National Statistics Retrieved 2 September 2023 The population reached nearly 490 000 www ons gov uk Retrieved 29 December 2023 British urban pattern population data PDF ESPON project 1 4 3 Study on Urban Functions European Spatial Planning Observation Network March 2007 p 119 Retrieved 8 March 2019 Report on the Nominations from the UK and Norway for the European Capital of Culture 2008 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 19 August 2008 Retrieved 11 July 2008 Liverpool European Capital of Culture 2008 2018 6 April 2018 Liverpool to become 80m investment zone www lbndaily co uk 15 March 2023 Retrieved 3 January 2024 Economy of Liverpool www varbes com Retrieved 3 January 2024 Liverpool s economy will thrive says Prof Parkinson www lbndaily co uk 8 August 2022 Retrieved 3 January 2024 a b Visit Liverpool Archived from the original on 7 September 2008 Retrieved 16 April 2009 Help Restore amp Expand England s First Mosque www abdullahquilliam org Retrieved 8 October 2023 Hanks Patrick Hodges Flavia Mills David Room Adrian 2002 The Oxford Names Companion Oxford The University Press p 1110 ISBN 978 0198605614 a b Harper Douglas Liverpool The Online Etymology Dictionary The Cambridge Dictionary of English Place Names ed by Victor Watts Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2004 s v Liverpool Plea Rolls of the Court of Common Pleas National Archives Retrieved 25 November 2015 Third entry the home of John Stanle the defendant in a plea of debt Crowley Tony 2013 Scouse A Social and Cultural History Liverpool Oxford University Press ISBN 9781781389089 Retrieved 15 June 2014 Richards G Melville 1953 Place Names of North Wales A Scientific Survey of Merseyside British Association pp 242 250 The Victoria history of the county of Lancaster Edited by William Farrer and J Brownbill www clickfind com au Retrieved 8 October 2023 European traders www liverpoolmuseums org uk Picton J A 1875 Memorials of Liverpool Vol 1 Historical 2nd ed London Longmans Green amp Co pp 11 12 OCLC 10476612, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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