The Demographic Development of Flanders in the Eighteenth Century

Abstract
The demographic development of the four great Flemish towns, Antwerp, Bruges, Ghent and Malines, was quite different. One very important point stands out at once: throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries the demographic development of the four towns was completely identical. This chapter attempts to study as far as is possible a group of demographic facts which may throw light on the underlying factors and causes of the various demographic movements. The development of legitimate fertility is reflected up to a point in the development of the number of persons per household and also in the development of the births-marriages ratios. Fertility has two main factors: an improvement in legitimate fertility and a decline in mortality among adults. The changes in legitimate fertility resulted from a combination of factors some of which remained stable while others fluctuated. The general improvement was the considerable decline in mortality amongst women of child-bearing age.

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