Extent of London.
529
{| style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; border: none;"
|So as[1] the People of Paris according
to the above account[2], is
|
| style="text-align:right;" | 488,055[3]
|rowspan=3 |
|rowspan=3 |693,055[4]
|-
|Of Rouen according to Monsr. Auzout's
utmost demands
|
| style="text-align:right;" | 80,000
|-
|Of Rome according to his own report
thereof in a former Letter[5]|11|
|
| style="text-align:right;" | 125,000
|-
|colspan=3|So as there are more People at London than at
Paris, Rouen and Rome by
|
|2,663[6]
|-
|colspan=3|Memorandum, That the Parishes of Islington,
Newington and Hackney, for which onely there is
any colour of Non-contiguity, is not 1⁄52 part of
what is contained in the Bills of Mortality, and
consequently London, without the said 3 Parishes,
hath[7] more |12| People than Paris and Rouen put
together, by
|
|114,284[8]
|-
|colspan=5| [9]Which number of 114,284 is probably more People than
any other City of France contains. |13|
|}
- ↑ 1686 omits 'So as.'
- ↑ 1686, 'the above-said Account.'
- ↑ '488,055' should be 489,555.
- ↑ '693,055' should be 694,555.
- ↑ 1686 omits 'in a former letter,' which may imply that a second letter, making the first 'former,' was received from Auzout between the publication of this essay in the Philos. Trans. and its issue in book form.
- ↑ '2663' should be 1163.
- ↑ 1686, 'without them, hath.'
- ↑ '114,284' should be 112,784.
- ↑ 1686 omits the last paragraph 'Which... contains,' and concludes with the 'several other estimates' printed on p. 537.