The black death and the bubonic plague. (Same thing).
The disease that killed a quarter of the population in Europe around 1350 is known as the Black Death or the Bubonic Plague.
The population of Europe in 2012 is around 750,000,000.
There are around 200,000,000 protestants in Europe, about 25% of the population.
Tthe population in Europe was scientifically proven to approximately be around 23.
The terrain, the amount of rainfall, and the quality of the soil affected the population density in Western Europe around 1000 AD.
Factors that affected population density in Western Europe around 1000 AD included agricultural advancements like the three-field system, which increased food production. Additionally, technological improvements in plows and mills helped increase efficiency. Political stability and urbanization also played a role in shaping population density during this time.
Tokyo in Japan is the largest country in population on Earth. It has a whopping 37.8 million people - around a quarter of the country's population.
Over 1600 millions (around one quarter of world population).
Around 1600 millions (about one quarter of world population)
Russia has the largest population in Europe (counting just European Russia alone, the population is around 110,000,000). Germany is the most populated country that is wholly in Europe (about 82,000,000).
Europe's is by far greater compared to Russia's. Europe's would be around 75/km2 while Russia's is only around 8/km2, meaning Europe's population density is over 9x that of Russia's. However, only calculating the European portion of Russia's population density would be about 28/km2, but Europe's is still greater.
Yes. The population of South America (a little over 350 million) is less than half the population of Europe (around 750 million).
No. The biggest city in Europe is Moscow with a population of around 12 million.