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・ List of usurpers
・ List of Uta no Prince-sama characters
・ List of Uta no Prince-sama episodes
・ List of Utagawa school members
・ List of Utah area codes
・ List of Utah artists
・ List of Utah Blaze seasons
・ List of urban agglomerations in Uttar Pradesh
・ List of urban areas by population
・ List of urban areas in Denmark by population
・ List of urban areas in Europe
・ List of urban areas in Finland by population
・ List of urban areas in Norway by population
・ List of urban areas in Sweden
・ List of urban areas in Sweden by population
List of urban areas in the European Union
・ List of urban areas in the Nordic countries
・ List of urban areas in the Republic of Ireland by population
・ List of urban areas in the United Kingdom
・ List of urban blues musicians
・ List of urban centers in Istanbul
・ List of urban contemporary artists
・ List of urban debate leagues
・ List of urban districts of Vietnam
・ List of urban fantasy novels
・ List of urban parishes of Guayaquil
・ List of urban parks by size
・ List of urban planners
・ List of urban prefects of Constantinople
・ List of urban prefects of Rome


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List of urban areas in the European Union : ウィキペディア英語版
List of urban areas in the European Union
This is a list of all the urban areas of the European Union which have greater than 500,000 inhabitants each, in 2014. This list is an attempt to present a consistent list of population figures for urban areas in the European Union. Figures here have been compiled by Demographia and the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs.〔(Demographia: World Urban Areas ). Retrieved 6 September 2015.〕〔''Annual Population of Urban Agglomerations with 300,000 Inhabitants or More in 2014, by Country, 1950-2030 (thousands), (World Urbanization Prospects, the 2014 revision )'', Population Division of the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs. Retrieved 6 September 2015. Note: List based on estimates for 2015, from 2014.〕 Demographia provides figures for urban areas (including conurbations),〔 while the UN DESA figures are for agglomerations only.〔
==Important notes==

* This is a list of urban areas, ''not'' a list of metropolitan areas. Urban areas are contiguous built-up areas where houses are typically not more than 200 m apart (discounting rivers, parks, roads, industrial fields, etc.). A metropolitan area is an urban area plus the satellite cities around the urban area and the agricultural land in between. For instance London is sometimes listed with 14 million inhabitants, Stuttgart is frequently listed with 2.2 million inhabitants, Munich with 2 million or more, etc., indicating the wider metropolitan area of those places. Metropolitan areas, which imply much more complicated definitions (such as the proportion of people in satellite cities working in the core of the metropolitan area), can be accurately computed only by statistical offices, after they have chosen a definition for metropolitan areas, whereas urban areas can be computed by any institution or person with the study of maps, satellite imagery and other geographical data in order to determine the outer limits of a continuous built-up area with one or more neighbouring cities. Furthermore, the list does not make a difference between cities that have multiple satellites and cities that do not. Therefore, two cities with the same demographics for their urban area will have an equal ranking on this list, even if one of the two cities may be much larger as it is the core of a number of satellites.
* This is a list of urban areas, ''not'' a list of administrative cities. For example, the list of conurbations contains the urban area of Lille-Kortrijk. Lille and Kortrijk remain two very distinct cities, each belonging to a different country, culture and language area. For a list of the largest cities of the European Union by population, please see Largest cities of the European Union by population within city limits.
* The study of urban areas is useful to analyse how cities develop, which in turn can be used to define transportation, planning and environmental policies, to adjust administrative boundaries etc. At the same time its limitations have to be acknowledged. It is a purely geographic study and disregards all other factors that contribute to the analysis of the functional city. For instance, several cities in the European Union such as Brussels and London have reserved green belts in the outskirts which impacts the size of urban areas but not the "perceived city" as these green belts have now become integrated in what people consider to be the functional city.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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