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Île-de-France (région)

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This article is about the French administrative région of Île-de-France. For the historical province, see Île-de-France (province). For the ocean liner named for the region, see SS Ile de France

Région Île-de-France

(Région flag) (logo)

Capital Paris
Ranked_list_of_French_regions#By_area>Land area¹ 12,011 km²
President of the regional council>Regional President Jean-Paul Huchon
(PS) (since 1998)
Population
 - Jan.1, 2005 estimate
 - March 8, 1999 census
 - Density
(Ranked 1st)
11,362,000
10,952,011
946/km² (2005)
Arrondissement in France>Arrondissements 25
Canton in France>Cantons 317
Commune in France>Communes 1,281
Département in France>Départements Essonne
Hauts-de-Seine
Paris
Seine-Saint-Denis
Seine-et-Marne
Val-de-Marne
Val-d'Oise
Yvelines
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 is one of the 26 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 inhabitants than the European countries Belgium, Greece, or Sweden, and about as many inhabitants as the U.S. state of Ohio. It is the third most populous subnational entity in the European Union after North Rhine-Westphalia and Bavaria.

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).[[Citing sources citation needed]]

Departments in Ile-de-France (INSEE official 1999 census)
450px
  Departments Population Area Density 1990-1999
pop. growth
  City of 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

External links

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[Special]
Régions of France

Alsace | Aquitaine | Auvergne | Bourgogne | Bretagne | Centre | Champagne-Ardenne | Corsica | Franche-Comté | Île-de-France | Languedoc-Roussillon | Limousin | Lorraine | Midi-Pyrénées | Nord-Pas de Calais | Basse-Normandie | Haute-Normandie | Pays-de-la-Loire | Picardie | Poitou-Charentes | Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur | Rhône-Alpes
Overseas Régions: French Guiana | Guadeloupe | Martinique | Réunion

 


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