Coordinates:
53°28′N, 2°14′W
Manchester (pronounced IPA: /ˈmæntʃɛstɚ/) is a city and metropolitan borough of Greater Manchester,
England. The City of Manchester metropolitan borough, which has city status, has a population of 452,000.[1] Manchester lies at the centre of the wider
Greater Manchester Urban Area which has a population of 2,240,230,[2] the United Kingdom's third largest
conurbation. It is also the second largest urban
zone in the UK and the fourteenth most populated in Europe.
Forming part of the English Core Cities Group, and often described as the
"Capital of the North",[3] Manchester today is a centre of
the arts, the media, higher education and commerce. In a recent poll of British business
leaders, Manchester was regarded as the best place to locate business in the UK.[4] A report commissioned by Manchester Partnership, published in
2007, showed Manchester to be the "fastest-growing city" economically.[5] It is the third most visited city in the United Kingdom by
foreign visitors[6] and is now often considered to be the
second city of the UK.[7] Manchester was the host of the 2002 Commonwealth Games, and among its other sporting connections are its two Premier League football teams, Manchester United and
Manchester City.[8]
It is claimed that Manchester was the world's first industrialised city[9] and is notable for the central
role it played during the Industrial Revolution. It was the dominant international
centre of textile manufacture and cotton spinning.[10] During the 19th century it acquired the nickname Cottonopolis,[10] suggesting that the area was a metropolis of
cotton mills. Manchester City Centre is now
on a "tentative list" of UNESCO World Heritage
Sites, mainly due to the network of canals and mills that facilitated its development during the 19th century.[11]
History
-
Toponymy
The name Manchester came from the Roman name Mamucium, thought to be a
Latinisation of an original Celtic name (possibly
meaning "breast-like hill" from mamm- = "breast"), plus Anglo-Saxon
ceaster = "town", which is derived from Latin castra
= "camp".[12]
Early history
A map of Manchester from 1801
There are few signs of prehistoric occupation of the city. The only major Bronze age finds have been to south of the city, where the remains of an extensive farming community were
discovered during the construction of Manchester Airport's second runway.[13]
Central Manchester has been settled since at least Roman times.[14] The Roman general Gnaeus
Julius Agricola constructed a fort called Mamucium in the 70s AD on a defensible hill where the River Medlock meets the
River Irwell, at the junction of roads to Chester,
York, Buxton, Ribchester,
and Melandra. A stabilised fragment of foundations of the final version of the fort is visible
in Castlefield. The Romans withdrew in the early fifth century, and by the time of the
Norman Conquest in 1066 the focus of settlement had shifted to the confluence
of the rivers Irwell and Irk.[15] Much of the wider area was laid waste in the subsequent
Harrying of the North.[16][17]
Thomas de la Warre, lord of the manor, founded and constructed a collegiate church for the parish in 1421. The church is now Manchester
Cathedral; the domestic premises of the college now house Chetham's School of
Music and Chetham's Library.[13][15]
Around the 14th century, Manchester received an influx of Flemish weavers, sometimes
credited as the foundation of the region's textile industry.[18] Manchester became an important centre for the manufacture and trade of woollens and linen, and
by about 1540, had expanded to become, in John Leland's words, "The fairest, best builded,
quickest, and most populous town of all Lancashire."[15] The cathedral and Chetham's buildings are the only significant survivors of Leland's
Manchester.[16]
Significant quantities of cotton began to be used after about 1600, firstly in linen/cotton fustians, but by around 1750 pure cotton fabrics were being produced and cotton had overtaken wool in
importance.[15] The Irwell and Mersey were made
navigable by 1736, opening a route from Manchester to the sea docks on the Mersey. The Bridgewater Canal, Britain's first wholly artificial waterway, was opened in 1761, bringing coal from
mines at Worsley to central Manchester. The canal was extended to the Mersey at Runcorn by
1776. The combination of competition and improved efficiency halved the cost of coal and halved the transport cost of raw
cotton.[15][13] Manchester became the dominant marketplace for textiles produced in the
surrounding towns.[15] A commodities exchange, opened in 1729,[16] and numerous large warehouses, aided commerce.
In 1780, Richard Arkwright began construction of Manchester's first cotton
mill.[13][16]
Industrial Revolution
A map of Manchester from 1894
Manchester (or
Cottonopolis as it was sometimes referred) during the early 19th
century
The cotton industry was at the forefront of the industrial revolution in England. The great majority of cotton processing took
place in the towns of south Lancashire and north Cheshire, and Manchester was the world's largest marketplace for cotton
goods.[15][19] The area was dubbed "Cottonopolis" in
its honour.
Manchester developed a wide range of industries, so that by 1835 "Manchester was without challenge the first and greatest
industrial city in the world."[19] Engineering
firms initially made machines for the cotton trade, but diversified into general manufacture. Similarly, the chemical industry
started by producing bleaches and dyes, but expanded into other areas. Commerce was supported by financial service industries
such as banking and insurance. Trade, and feeding the growing population, required a large transport and distribution
infrastructure: the canal system was extended, and Manchester became one end of the world's first intercity passenger railway—the
Liverpool and Manchester Railway. Competition between the various forms
of transport kept costs down.[15] In 1878 the
GPO (the forerunner of British Telecom)
provided its first telephones to a firm in Manchester.[20]
At that time, it seemed a place in which anything could happen—new industrial processes, new ways of thinking (the
Manchester School, promoting free trade and
laissez-faire), new classes or groups in society, new religious sects, and new
forms of labour organisation. It attracted educated visitors from all parts of Britain and Europe. A saying capturing this sense
of innovation survives today: "What Manchester does today, the rest of the world does tomorrow."[21] As well as being a
centre of capitalism, the city has seen its fair share of rebellions by the working and non-titled classes; the most famous were
the events on St Peter’s Field on 16 August 1819, which have
become known as Peterloo. The first Trades
Union Congress was held in Manchester (at the Mechanics' Institute, David Street), from 2 to 6 June 1868. Manchester was
the subject of Friedrich Engels's The Condition of the Working Class in England in 1844, Engels
himself spending much of his life in and around Manchester.[22] Manchester was also an important cradle of the Labour
Party and the Suffragette Movement.[23]
Manchester's golden age was perhaps the last quarter of the 19th century. Many of the great public buildings (including the
Town Hall) date from then. The city's cosmopolitan atmosphere contributed to a vibrant culture, which included the
Hallé Orchestra. In 1889, when county councils were created in England, the municipal borough became a county borough with even greater
autonomy. During this period, the Manchester Ship Canal was created by the
canalisation of the Rivers Irwell and Mersey for miles ( km) from Salford to the Mersey estuary. This enabled ocean
going ships to sail right into the Port of Manchester. On the canal's banks, just outside the borough, the world's first
industrial estate was created at Trafford Park.[15] Large quantities of machinery, including cotton processing plant, were
exported around the world.
By 1963 the port was the UK's third largest,[24] and employed over 3,000 men, but the canal was unable to handle the increasingly
large container ships. Traffic declined, and the port closed in 1982.[25]
In 1913, 65% of the world's cotton was processed in the area,[15] but the First World War interrupted access to the export markets. Cotton processing in other
parts of the world increased, often on machines produced in Manchester. Manchester suffered greatly from the inter-war depression
and the underlying structural changes that began to supplant the old industries, including textile manufacture.
World War II
Like most of the UK, the Manchester area mobilised extensively during World War II. For
example, casting and machining expertise at Beyer-Peacock's locomotive works in
Gorton was switched to bomb making; Dunlop's rubber works
in Chorlton-on-Medlock made barrage
balloons; and just outside the city in Trafford Park, engineers Metropolitan-Vickers and Ford made aircraft and the
Rolls-Royce Merlin engines to power them. Manchester was thus the target of bombing by the Luftwaffe, and by the middle of 1940 air raids were taking place against non-military targets. The biggest
took place during the "Christmas Blitz" on the nights of 22/23 and 23/24 December 1940,
when an estimated 467 tons (475 tonnes) of high explosives plus over 37,000 incendiary bombs
were dropped. A large part of the historic city centre was destroyed, including 165 warehouses, 200 business premises, and 150
offices. 376 were killed and 30,000 houses were damaged.[26] Manchester Cathedral was among the buildings seriously
damaged; its restoration took 20 years.[27]
1996 bomb
-
Manchester has a history of attacks attributed to Irish Republicans, including the Manchester Martyrs of 1867, arson in 1920, a series of explosions in 1939, and two bombs in 1992. On
Saturday 15 June 1996, the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) detonated a large bomb adjacent to a
department store in the city centre. The largest to be detonated on British soil, the bomb caused over 200 injuries, heavily
damaged nearby buildings, and broke windows half a mile away. The cost of the immediate damage was initially estimated at
GB£50 million, but this was quickly revised upwards.[28] The final insurance payout has
been estimated at over GB£400 million; many affected businesses never recovered from the loss of trade.[29]
Redevelopment
Spurred by the investment after the 1996 bomb, and aided by the XVII Commonwealth
Games, Manchester's city centre has undergone extensive regeneration.[30] New and renovated complexes such as The Printworks and the Triangle have become popular shopping and entertainment destinations. The
Manchester Arndale is the UK's largest city centre shopping mall.[31]
Large sections of the city dating from the 1960s have been either demolished and re-developed or modernised with the use of
glass and steel. Old mills have been converted into modern apartments, Hulme has undergone
extensive regeneration programmes, and million-pound lofthouse apartments have since been developed. The 169-metre tall,
47-storey Beetham Tower, completed in 2006, is the tallest building in the UK
outside London and highest residential accommodation in the Western Europe. The lower 23 floors form the Hilton Hotel, featuring
a 'sky bar' on the 23rd floor. Its upper 24 floors are apartments.[32] In January 2007, the independent Casino Advisory Panel awarded Manchester a licence to
build the only supercasino in the UK to regenerate the Eastlands area of the
city,[33] but in March the
House of Lords rejected the decision by three votes rendering previous House of Commons acceptance meaningless. This left the supercasino, and fourteen other smaller
concessions, in parliamentary limbo until a final decision was made.[34] On 11 July 2007, a source close to the government declared the entire supercasino project "dead in the water".[35] A member of the Manchester
Chamber of Commerce professed himself "amazed and a bit shocked" and that "there has been an awful lot of time and money
wasted".[36] After a
meeting with the Prime Minister, Manchester City Council issued a press release on 24 July
2007 stating that "contrary to some reports the door is not closed to a regional casino".[37]
Governance
-
Manchester is represented by three tiers of government, Manchester City
Council ("local"), UK Parliament ("national"), and European Parliament ("Europe"). Greater Manchester County Council administration was abolished in 1986, and so the
city is effectively a unitary authority. Since its inception in 1995, Manchester has
been a member of the English Core Cities Group,[38] which, amongst other things, serves to promote the social,
cultural and economic status of the city at an international level.
The town of Manchester was granted a charter by Thomas Grelley in 1301 but lost its borough status in a court case of 1359. Until the 19th century, local government
was largely provided by manorial courts, the last of which ended in 1846.[39] From a very early
time, the township of Manchester lay within the historic county
boundaries of Lancashire.[39] It has been said "That [neighbouring] Stretford and
Salford are not administratively one with Manchester is one of the most curious anomalies of
England".[18] A stroke of a Norman baron's pen is said to have divorced Manchester and Salford, though it was
not Salford that became separated from Manchester, it was Manchester, with its humbler line of lords, that was separated from Salford.[40] It was this separation that resulted in Salford becoming the judicial seat of
Salfordshire, which included the ancient
parish of Manchester. Manchester later formed its own Poor Law Union by the name
of Manchester.[39] In 1792,
commissioners—usually known as police commissioners—were established for the social improvement of Manchester. In 1838 Manchester
regained its borough status, and comprised the townships of Beswick,
Cheetham Hill, Chorlton upon Medlock and
Hulme.[39] By 1846 the borough council had taken over the powers of the police commissioners. In
1853 Manchester was granted city status in the United Kingdom.[39]
In 1885 Bradford, Harpurhey,
Rusholme and parts of Moss Side and Withington townships became part of the City of Manchester. In 1889 the city became the County borough of Manchester, separate from the administrative county of Lancashire, and thus not governed by Lancashire County Council.[39] Between 1890 and 1933, more areas were added to the city from Lancashire, including
former villages such as Burnage, Chorlton-cum-Hardy,
Didsbury, Fallowfield, Levenshulme, Longsight, and Withington. In 1931 the Cheshire civil
parishes of Baguley, Northenden and Northern Etchells
from the south of the River Mersey were added.[39] In 1974, by way of the Local Government Act 1972, the City of Manchester became a metropolitan district of the metropolitan county of
Greater Manchester.[39] Also in 1974, Ringway, now home to Manchester Airport,
was added to the city.
Geography
- Further information: Geography of Greater Manchester
| Climate chart for Manchester |
| J |
F |
M |
A |
M |
J |
J |
A |
S |
O |
N |
D |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
temperatures in
°C • precipitation totals in mm
source: [1] |
At 53°28′0″N, 2°14′0″W (53.466, -2.233),
miles ( km) northwest of London, Manchester lies in a bowl-shaped land
area bordered to the north and east by the Pennine hills, a mountain chain that runs the length
of Northern England and to the south by the Cheshire
Plain. The city centre is on the east bank of the River Irwell, near its confluences with the Rivers Medlock and
Irk, and is relatively low-lying, being between 35 and 42 metres (115 to 138 ft) above sea
level.[41] The River Mersey flows through the south of Manchester. Much of the inner city, especially in the south, is
flat, offering extensive views from many highrise buildings in the city of the foothills and moors of the Pennines, which can
often be capped with snow in the winter months. Manchester's geographic features were highly influential in its early development
as the world's first industrial city. These features are its climate, its proximity to a seaport at
Liverpool, the availability of water power from its rivers, and its nearby coal reserves.[42]
Manchester experiences a temperate maritime
climate, like much of the British Isles, with relatively cool summers
and mild winters. There is regular but generally light precipitation throughout the year. The city's average annual rainfall is
806.6 mm[43]
compared to the UK average of 1125.0 mm,[44] and its mean rain days are 140.4 per annum,[43] compared to the UK average of 154.4.[44] Manchester also has a relatively high
humidity level, which lent itself to the optimised and breakage-free textile manufacturing which took place there. Snowfall is
not a common sight in the city, due to the urban warming effect. However the
Pennine and Rossendale Forest hills that surround
the city to its east and north receive more snow and roads leading out of the city can be closed due to snow,[45] notably the A62 road
via Oldham and Standedge, the A57 (Snake Pass) towards Sheffield,[46] and the
M62 over Saddleworth Moor.
| Month |
Jan |
Feb |
Mar |
Apr |
May |
Jun |
Jul |
Aug |
Sep |
Oct |
Nov |
Dec |
| Avg high °C (°F) |
6.4 (43.5) |
6.6 (43.9) |
8.9 (48.0) |
11.6 (52.9) |
15.3 (59.5) |
18.2 (64.8) |
19.6 (67.3) |
19.5 (67.1) |
17.0 (62.6) |
13.7 (56.7) |
9.1 (48.4) |
7.1 (44.8) |
| Avg low temperature °C (°F) |
1.3 (34.3) |
1.2 (34.2) |
2.5 (36.5) |
4.3 (39.7) |
7.3 (45.1) |
10.2 (50.4) |
12.0 (53.6) |
11.9 (53.4) |
10.0 (50.0) |
7.5 (45.5) |
3.6 (38.5) |
2.0 (35.6) |
| Mean Total Rainfall mm |
69 |
50 |
61 |
51 |
61 |
67 |
65 |
79 |
74 |
77 |
78 |
78 |
| Mean Number of Rainy Days |
18.2 |
13.1 |
15.6 |
14.4 |
15.1 |
14.4 |
13.6 |
15.0 |
15.0 |
16.5 |
17.0 |
17.4 |
| Source: Worldweather.org |
Demography
- Further information: Demography of Greater Manchester
| Manchester Compared[47][48] |
| UK Census 2001 |
Manchester |
Greater Manchester |
England |
| Total population |
441,200 |
2,547,700 |
49,138,831 |
| Foreign born |
15% |
7.2% |
9.2% |
| White |
81% |
91% |
91% |
| Asian |
9.1% |
5.7% |
4.6% |
| Black |
4.5% |
1.2% |
2.3% |
| Christian |
62% |
74% |
72% |
| Muslim |
9.1% |
5.0% |
3.1% |
| Hindu |
0.7% |
0.7% |
1.1% |
| No religion |
16% |
11% |
15% |
| Over 75 years old |
6.4% |
7.0% |
7.5% |
| Unemployed |
5.0% |
3.5% |
3.3% |
The United Kingdom Census 2001 showed a total resident population for
Manchester of 392,819, a 9.2% decline from the 1991 census.[49] Approximately 83,000 were aged under 16, 285,000 were aged 16–74, and 25,000 aged 75 and
over.[49] 75.9% of Manchester's
population claim they have been born in the UK, according to the 2001 UK Census. Inhabitants of Manchester are known as
Mancunians or Mancs for short. Manchester reported the second-lowest proportion of the population in employment of any
area in the UK. A primary reason cited for Manchester's high unemployment figure is the high proportion of the population who are
students.[49] Mid-year estimates for
2006 indicate that the population of the metropolitan borough of Manchester stood at 452,000 making Manchester the most populous
city in North West England.[50]
Manchester is a religiously diverse city. It has the second largest Jewish population in the
country,[51] and one of
the largest Muslim populations in Greater
Manchester.
In 2001, 80% of people identified themselves as White British, 9% Asian or
Asian British, 5% Black or Black British, 3% Mixed
Race and 2% Chinese or other ethnic group.[52] Kidd identifies Moss Side, Longsight, Cheetham Hill, Rusholme,
as centers of population for ethnic minorities.[15] It has been estimated that around 35% of Manchester's population has Irish ancestry.[53]
Manchester's Irish Festival, including a St Patrick's Day parade, is one of
Europe's largest.[54] Also,
Manchester's Palace Hotel hosted the 2007 Lloyds TSB's Northern Jewel Awards, where leaders of the Asian community in the North
of the UK were recognised.[55]
Economy
-
- See also: List of
companies based in Greater Manchester
Manchester is regarded to have been at the forefront of the 19th century industrial revolution, and was a leading centre for
manufacturing, particularly cotton. However the city has now switched to a largely service-based economy with many financial
institutions based in the city including the Manchester Building Society and
the Co-operative Bank. The Co-operative
Group, which is the world's largest consumer-owned business, is based in Manchester and is one of the city's biggest
employers. The city is a growing centre for business and has recently been ranked both as the best place,[4] and the second best place to
do business in the UK [56] and the eighteenth best city in
Europe. [57]
Manchester's Central Business District is in the centre of the city, adjacent to Piccadilly, focused on Mosley Street, Deansgate, King Street and
Piccadilly. Spinningfields is a large new business centre west of Deansgate that will
serve as home to several headquarters, squares, and cafes. The first building on the site was the Royal Bank of Scotland's new headquarters on Deansgate.[58] The project is being spear-headed by Sir Norman Foster. Other buildings include a 110-metre (361 ft) tall
office building, a new civil justice centre,[59] and new Magistrates Court,[60] to be built over the next few years.
The city boasts large numbers of shops from large chain stores up to high-end boutiques such as Vivienne Westwood, Emporio Armani, DKNY. The city also has several shopping malls including the Manchester
Arndale which is currently the UK's largest inner city shopping mall.[31]
Landmarks
Manchester skyline, May 2007
-
- See also: List of tallest
buildings in Manchester and List of streets in
Manchester
Manchester's buildings display a variety of architectural styles, ranging from