Avranches - Population

Population

Historical population
Year Pop. ±%
1793 5,880
1800 5,413 −7.9%
1806 6,144 +13.5%
1821 6,431 +4.7%
1831 7,269 +13.0%
1836 7,690 +5.8%
1841 8,256 +7.4%
1846 7,965 −3.5%
1851 8,932 +12.1%
1856 8,702 −2.6%
1861 8,592 −1.3%
1866 8,642 +0.6%
1872 8,137 −5.8%
1876 8,157 +0.2%
1881 8,057 −1.2%
1886 8,000 −0.7%
1891 7,785 −2.7%
1896 7,845 +0.8%
1901 7,384 −5.9%
1906 7,360 −0.3%
1911 7,174 −2.5%
1921 6,597 −8.0%
1926 6,803 +3.1%
1931 6,881 +1.1%
1936 7,130 +3.6%
1946 7,554 +5.9%
1954 8,004 +6.0%
1962 8,854 +10.6%
1968 9,775 +10.4%
1975 10,136 +3.7%
1982 9,468 −6.6%
1990 8,638 −8.8%
1999 8,509 −1.5%
2006 8,239 −3.2%
2009 8,090 −1.8%

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Famous quotes containing the word population:

    A multitude of little superfluous precautions engender here a population of deputies and sub-officials, each of whom acquits himself with an air of importance and a rigorous precision, which seemed to say, though everything is done with much silence, “Make way, I am one of the members of the grand machine of state.”
    Marquis De Custine (1790–1857)

    America is like one of those old-fashioned six-cylinder truck engines that can be missing two sparkplugs and have a broken flywheel and have a crankshaft that’s 5000 millimeters off fitting properly, and two bad ball-bearings, and still runs. We’re in that kind of situation. We can have substantial parts of the population committing suicide, and still run and look fairly good.
    Thomas McGuane (b. 1939)

    I think that cars today are almost the exact equivalent of the great Gothic cathedrals: I mean the supreme creation of an era, conceived with passion by unknown artists, and consumed in image if not in usage by a whole population which appropriates them as a purely magical object.
    Roland Barthes (1915–1980)