That's a pretty good population map for Germany as well.
That's a pretty good population map for Germany as well.
A good population map of modern Germany.
But in case of 19th century Germany population density was probably (I'm not 100% sure) differently distributed.
That's a pretty good population map for Germany as well.
Obligatory xkcd reference http://xkcd.com/1138/
Assuming that proportions between relative population densities of various regions remained unchanged throughout time is wrong. I can give you several examples if you want. One of them is France compared to England.
=================
Population density in late 1930s (map is from 1938):
Take a look at Poland - densely populated south vs. sparsely north. In Poland it was like that already since the 1700s, but it doesn't mean that in other regions things did not change over that period. And when it comes to Poland, during the 1500s it was differently - there was a densely populated strip of territory leading from north to south along central part of the country (roughly along the Vistula River from Cuiavia to Lesser Poland) - not from west to east along the Carpathian Mountains, as it was later, since the 1700s until WW2 and in fact to a large extent even today.
(Technically all immigration to the United States is legal. It's just not necessarily lawful, is the trick.)
Yeah, I can provide an anecdote for this. My hometown changed its name around WWI from a very German name to a generic English one.
If something is "illegal", then it is actively prohibited by law, but if it's "unlawful", it only means it's not protected. In the US, constitutional law forbids the criminalisation of unlawful immigration, so "illegal immigrants" by definition cannot exist.BTW, Traitorfish, I'm not sure I understand the difference between "legal" and "lawful" in that context. My personal preference is for "entered without inspection and admission or parole," since that's the exact removable offense they've committed under the Immigration and Nationality Act, but I'll admit that this is a bit of a mouthful.