It really depends on what you mean by 'Palestine'? There is no country today called Palestine, but in the past there were various territories referred to as Palestine, though it was never a well-defined independent country.
Many people refer to Palestine as the territory controlled by Britain after the First World War, under what was called "The British Mandate of Palestine" (which was captured from Turkey during WWI). That territory today includes the countries of Israel and Jordan, as well as the West Bank and Gaza Strip territories.
Others refer to Palestine only as the territories of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. There are various other definitions, and to many it is a highly charged emotional and political subject.
The population today of Israel is 7.5 million people.
The Arab population of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip today is about 3.5 million (there is no accurate census). The population of Jordan is just over 6 million.
State of Palestine's population is 4,260,636.
10000
Palestine is a city in Anderson County in Texas. In 1950, the population was 5,746. As of the 2010 census, the city population was 18,712.
In 1946 roughly 1/3 of the population of Mandatory Palestine was Jewish, roughly 600,000 people of a total population of 1.85 million people.
Three million.
The United Nations General Assembly.
In Jesus' day, it would have been approximately 200,000
Palestine was mostly an empty land during WW2. Most of the local population worked on agricultural pursuits.
The city of had 409,680 people as of 2006 The Gaza strip had 1,481,080 people as of July 2007
Palestine was inhabited by a multicultural population - approximately 86 percent Muslim, 10 percent Christian, and 4 percent Jewish until the sionist movement took control.
Palestine, Texas is located in the eastern part of the state. As of 2010, it had a population of 18,712 and made history in 2003 when a majority of debris from the Space Shuttle Columbia landed on the small town.
The Balfour Declaration does not say much. The only mention of the Non-Jewish Population in the declaration refers to the requirement that the laws and establishment of the Jewish homeland in Palestine should not prejudice the Non-Jewish population. In this regard, Non-Jews in the Jewish State should have equal rights and privileges.