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Île-de-France (région)

Région Île-de-France
Île-de-France (région):Flag of Île-de-France
Île-de-France (région):Logo of Île-de-France
(Région flag)(Région logo)
Location
Île-de-France (région):Map of France highlighting the Region of Île-de-France
Administration
CapitalParis
Regional President Jean-Paul Huchon
(PS) (since 1998)
Départements Essonne
Hauts-de-Seine
Paris
Seine-Saint-Denis
Seine-et-Marne
Val-de-Marne
Val-d'Oise
Yvelines
Arrondissements 25
Cantons 317
Communes 1,281
Statistics
Land area112,011 km²
Population (Ranked 1st)
 - January 1, 2005 est. 11,362,000
 - March 8, 1999 est. 10,952,011
 - Density (2005) 946/km²
1 French Land Register data, which exclude lakes, ponds, and glaciers larger than 1 km² (0.386 sq. mi. or 247 acres) as well as the estuaries of rivers
Île-de-France (région):France
This article is about the French administrative région. For the historical province, see Île-de-France (province).
For the ocean liner named for the region, see SS Ile de France.

Île-de-France is one of the twenty-six régions of France. It was created as the "District of the Paris Region" in 1961 and, with borders unchanged, was transformed into the Île-de-France région in 1976. Despite the name change, Île-de-France is still popularly referred to by French people as the Région Parisienne ("Paris Region") or RP.

Île-de-France is the most populated région of France, having more residents than Belgium, Greece, or Sweden, and a comparable population to the U.S. state of Ohio. It is the fourth most populous country subdivision in the European Union after England, North Rhine-Westphalia and Bavaria.


Contents

Timeline

Demographics and map

The Île-de-France région is made up of eight départements centered around its innermost département and capital, Paris. Around the Paris département, urbanization fills a first concentric ring of three départements commonly known as the petite couronne ("small ring"), and extends into a second outer ring of four départements known as the grande couronne ("large ring").

Most of the Île-de-France is covered by the Paris metropolitan area (aire urbaine de Paris), a statistical area encompassing the Paris urban area and its couronne périurbaine commuter belt. At the last census in 1999, 88% of the Île-de-France's population lived in the Paris urban area and 99% of the same regional population lived in the Paris metropolitan area (respectively 9,644,507 people and 10,842,037 people).[1]

Departments in Ile-de-France (INSEE official 1999 census)
Île-de-France (région):Paris metropolitan area
Concentric Area Departments Population Area Density 1990-1999</br>pop. growth
  Paris (75) 2,142,800 105 km² 20,330/km² -1.26%
Inner ring
(Petite Couronne)
Hauts-de-Seine (92) 1,428,881 176 km² 8,119/km² +2.67%
Seine-Saint-Denis (93) 1,382,861 236 km² 5,860/km² +0.12%
Val-de-Marne (94) 1,227,250 245 km² 5,009/km² +0.96%
Outer ring
(Grande Couronne)
Val-d'Oise (95) 1,105,464 1,246 km² 887/km² +5.32%
Essonne (91) 1,134,238 1,804 km² 629/km² +4.56%
Yvelines (78) 1,354,304 2,284 km² 593/km² +3.61%
Seine-et-Marne (77) 1,193,767 5,915 km² 202/km² +10.72%

Holders of the executive office

References

Categories


Île-de-France | Regions of France | NUTS 1 Statistical Regions of Europe | NUTS 2 Statistical Regions of Europe

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