< Page:PettyWilliam1899EconomicWritingsVol2.djvu
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

The Index.

331

76. The housing of the sixteen and ten Suburb-Parishes is thrice as big as that of the ninety seven Parishes within the walls, ibid. [385]
77. The number of souls in the ninety seven, sixteen, and two out-Parishes is about 384000, ibid. [386]
78. Whereof 199000 are Males, and 185000 Females, ibid. [386]
79. A Table shewing of 100 quick conceptions how many die within six years, how many the next Decad, and so for every Decad till 76, p. 84 [387]
80. Tables, whereby may be collected how many there be in London of every Age Assign'd, ibid. [387]
81. That there be in the 97, 16, and ten Parishes near 70000 Fighting Men, that is, Men between the Ages, of 16, and 56, p. 85 [387]
82. That Westminster, Lambeth, Islington, Hackney, Redriff, Stepney, Newington, contain as many people as the 97 Parishes within the walls , and are consequently 15 of the whole Pile, ibid. [387]
83. So that in, and about London are about 81000 Fighting men, and 460000[1] in all, ibid. [387]
84. Adam and Eve in 5610 years might have by the ordinary proportion of Procreation, begotten more people, than are now probably upon the face of the earth, p. 86 [388]
85. Wherefore the World cannot be older than the Scriptures represent it, ibid. [388]
86. That every Wedding one with another produces four Children, p. 87 [388]
87. That in several places the proportion between the Males and Females differ, ibid. [389]
88. That in ninety years there were just as many Males as Females Buried within a certain great Parish in the Country, ibid. [389]
89. That a Parish, consisting of about 2700 Inhabitants, had in 90 years but 1059 more Christnings, than Burials, p. 88 [389]
90. There come yearly to dwell at London about 6000 strangers out of the Countrey, which swells the Burials about 200 per Annum, ibid. [389]
91. In the Country there have been five Christnings for four Burials, p. 89 [390]
92. A Confirmation, that the most healthful years are also the most fruitful, ibid. [390]
93. The proportion between the greatest, and least mortalities, in the Countrey are greater than the same in the City, p. 91 [391]
94. The Countrey Air more capable of good, and bad impressions, than that of the City, p. 92 [392]
  1. The calculation of a total population of 460000 is not made in the text at p. 387, but that estimate is used at pp. 371, 399, 400 and 401.
This article is issued from Wikisource. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.