The Social and Economic Structure of the Old Regime 321
tersburg reached sixty-eight thousand in 1730. Buda
and Pest were then separate towns with a combined to-
tal of seventeen thousand people. Many cities, such as
Geneva, with a population of twenty-eight thousand in
1750, were so small that residents could easily walk
their full width for an evening stroll.
The largest city in Europe sat on its southeastern
edge: Constantinople had an estimated 700,000 per-
sons. The two dominant cities in the development of
modern European civilization, London and Paris, both
exceeded 500,000 people, but no other cities rivaled
them. Rome was smaller than it had been under the
Caesars, with a population of 135,000 in 1700. Such
large cities were the centers of western civilization, but
they did not yet make it an urban civilization. If one
defines urban as beginning at a population of ten thou-
sand people, Europe was only 9.4 percent urban at the
end of the eighteenth century; if the definition goes
down to towns of five thousand people, Europe was
12.1 percent urban. Even if one counts small farming
towns of two thousand people (which were different
from manufacturing and commercial towns), Europe
was still less than one-fourth urban, although some re-
gions were one-third urban.
In legal terms, cities and towns of the Old Regime
were corporate entities (hence the terms incorporatedand
unincorporatedfor towns). Towns held legal charters, of-
ten centuries old, from the government. Charters speci-
fied the rights of town dwellers—collectively called the
bourgeoisie (from the French term bourg,for town) or
burghers (from the similar German term)—rights that
the rural population did not enjoy. As in the Middle
Ages, the old German saying held true: “City air makes
one free.” The urban population thus formed a clearly
defined estate, lacking many of the privileges of the
aristocracy but freed from the obligations upon the
peasantry. Hence, they came to be seen as a “middle”
class. As a group, they possessed significant nonlanded
Alp
s
Mts.
Pyrene
esMts.
Carpathian
Mt
s.
Po R.
Ebro
Douro R.
R.
Seine
R.
Danube
R.
Donets
R.
Dniest
erR
.
Black Sea
Atlantic
Ocean
North
Sea
Mediter
ranean
Sea
Bal
tic
Se
a
Elbe
R.
Rhine
R
Constantinople
Paris
London
Dublin
St. Petersburg
Moscow
Vienna
Amsterdam
Lyon
Milan
Lisbon
Madrid
Rome
Palermo
Naples
Venice
Florence
Bologna
Barcelona
Seville
Valencia
Cadiz
Marseilles
Genoa
Bordeaux
Granada
Turin
Brussels
Prague
Dresden Breslau
Königsberg
Lille
Rouen
Hamburg
Stockholm
Adrianople
Edinburgh
Cork
Balearic Islands
Corsica
KINGDOM
OF SARDINIA
Sicily
Crete Cyprus
PORTUGAL
SPAIN
KINGDOM
OF THE
TWO SICILIES
PAPAL
STATES
ALGERIA
OTTOMAN EMPIRE
ANATOLIA
IRELAND
SCOTLAND
ENGLAND
NORWAY
SWEDEN FINLAND
RUSSIAN EMPIRE
FRANCE
SWITZERLAND
LORRAINE
BRANDENBURG-
PRUSSIA
HOLY
ROMAN
EMPIRE
SILESIA
HUNGARY
BANAT
BOSNIA
SERBIA BULGARIA
MONTENEGRO
BESSARABIA
UKRAINE
VOLHYNIA
LITTLE POLAND
POLAND
LITHUANIA
KINGDOM OF
DENMARK–NORWAY
DUTCH
REPUBLIC
DENMARK
STYRIA
CRIMEA
0 250 500 Miles
0 250 500 750 Kilometers
Elbe -Trieste Line
MAP 17.1
Urban Europe in 1750