Manchester () is a city and metropolitan borough in Greater Manchester, England. Often referred to as the 'Capital city of the Northern England', it was the world's first industrialised city and has held city status since 1853. It had a population of 552,000 in the 2021 census. Greater Manchester is the third-most populous metropolitan area in the United Kingdom and the largest in Northern England, with a 2021 population of 2.87million.
The history of Manchester began with the civilian settlement associated with the Roman fort of Mamucium, established on a bluff near the confluence of the rivers River Medlock and River Irwell. Throughout the Middle Ages, Manchester remained a manorialism township but began to expand rapidly around the turn of the 19th century. Manchester's unplanned urbanisation was brought on by a boom in textile manufacture during the Industrial Revolution and resulted in its becoming the world's first industrialised city. Historically part of Lancashire, areas south of the River Mersey were incorporated into Manchester in the 20th century. Manchester achieved city status in 1853. The Manchester Ship Canal opened in 1894, creating the Port of Manchester and linking the city to the Irish Sea. The city's fortunes declined after the Second World War, owing to deindustrialisation. The IRA bombing in 1996 led to extensive investment and regeneration.
The city is considered notable for its architecture, culture, higher education, musical exports, media links, scientific and engineering output, social impact, sports clubs and transport connections. Manchester Liverpool Road railway station is the world's oldest surviving inter-city passenger railway station. The city has also been praised for the extent of its Urban renewal, with buildings such as the Corn Exchange being repurposed as modern venues.
Manchester borders the Cheshire Plain to the south, the Pennines to the north and east, and the neighbouring city of Salford to the west, the latter of which it is contiguous with and only separated by the River Irwell. The city borders the metropolitan boroughs of Trafford, Stockport, Tameside, Oldham, Rochdale, Bury and Salford. The M60 motorway forms a ring road around the outskirts of the city. Manchester Airport is the only English airport outside London with two fully-operational runways.
Nicknames for the city that originated from its role in the Industrial Revolution include "warehouse city" and "cottonopolis". The city is widely known as 'the Capital city of the Northern England' and is part of an ongoing dispute with the city of Birmingham as to which one is to be considered the unofficial second city of the United Kingdom,. "Manchester is frequently lauded as the UK's 'second city' ... While the claim to the 'second city' title may stir debate, particularly among those from Birmingham, experts are in unanimous agreement that Manchester is forging ahead" although only considering population Birmingham is bigger. The city is also infrequently referred to as 'Manny', especially by non-Mancunians, which is considered offensive by some residents of the city. The phrase was particularly popularised by rapper Bugzy Malone's use of the phrase "putting Manny on the map".
Although the name Manchester only officially applies to metropolitan borough within the metropolitan county of Greater Manchester, it has been informally applied to various other areas over the years; examples include the "Manchester City Zone", "Manchester post town", and the "Manchester Congestion Charge", none of which simply cover the official confines of the city.
A stabilised fragment of foundations of the final version of the Mamucium fort is visible in Castlefield today. The Roman habitation of Manchester probably ended around the 3rd century; its civilian settlement appears to have been abandoned by the mid-3rd century, although the fort may have supported a small garrison until the late 3rd or early 4th century.
The town was later held by the Grelley family, who were the lords of the manor and residents of Manchester Castle before a manor house was built for them in 1215. By 1421, Thomas de la Warre had founded and constructed a collegiate church for the parish, which would later become Manchester Cathedral; other church buildings have since become Chetham's School of Music and Chetham's Library. The latter opened in 1653 and is still open to the public, which makes it the oldest free public reference library in the United Kingdom.
Manchester is mentioned as having a Market town in 1282. Around the 14th century, Manchester received an influx of Flemish people weavers, which have sometimes been credited as the foundation of the region's textile industry. Manchester became an important centre for the manufacture and trade of and linen, and by about 1540 had expanded to become, in the words of John Leland, "the fairest, best builded, quickest, and most populous town of all Lancashire". The cathedral and Chetham's buildings are the only prominent survivors of Manchester at the time that Leland described it.
During the English Civil War, Manchester strongly favoured the Parliamentarians who were led by Oliver Cromwell. He gave the town the right to elect its own Member of Parliament; Charles Worsley was elected to the seat but only sat for a year. He was later appointed as the Major-General for Lancashire, Cheshire and Staffordshire during the Rule of the Major-Generals. He was a diligent puritan, who forcibly shut down ale houses operating in the town and banned the celebration of Christmas.
Significant quantities of cotton began to be used after about 1600, firstly in linen and cotton , but by around 1750 pure cotton fabrics were being produced and cotton had overtaken wool in importance. The Irwell and Mersey were made navigable by 1736, opening a route from Manchester to the sea docks on the Mersey. The Bridgewater Canal, Britain's first wholly artificial waterway, was opened in 1761, bringing coal from mines at Worsley to central Manchester. The canal was extended to the Mersey at Runcorn by 1776. The combination of competition and improved efficiency halved the cost of coal and halved the transport cost of raw cotton. Manchester became the dominant marketplace for textiles produced in the surrounding towns. A commodities exchange, opened in 1729, and numerous large warehouses, aided commerce. In 1780, Richard Arkwright began construction of Manchester's first cotton mill. In 1803, John Dalton formulated his atomic theory in Manchester while he was a teacher in the city.
Brought on by the Industrial Revolution, the unplanned urban expansion of Manchester reached "an astonishing rate" around the turn of the 19th century as people flocked to the city from all other parts of the British Isles looking for work. The city quickly developed a wide range of industries, such that urbanist Peter Hall described the city by 1835 as "without challenge the first and greatest industrial city in the world". Engineering firms initially made machines for the cotton trade, before subsequently diversifying into general manufacture. Similarly, the chemical industry started by producing bleaches and dyes, but expanded into other areas. Commerce was supported by financial service industries such as banking and insurance.
A centre of industrial capitalism, Manchester was once the scene of bread and labour riots, as well as calls for greater political recognition by the city's working and non-titled classes. On 16 August 1819, large crowds of working-class people protested in St Peter's Square, Manchester; estimates of the crowd range between 30,000–150,000 contemporaneously and 50,000–80,000 by modern critics. When ordered to disperse the peaceful crowd, the soldiers instead charged and attacked them on horseback, killing at least 18 and injuring more than 700. The event was given the name 'Peterloo' as a Blend word of Peter's Square and Waterloo (after the battle).
The political landscape of early industrial Manchester contained capitalist and communist schools of thought alike. The city was the home of, and eponymous to, Manchester Liberalism, and it was also the centre of the Anti-Corn Law League after 1838. Manchester has an equally notable place in the history of left-wing politics; the city is the subject of Friedrich Engels' work The Condition of the Working Class in England in 1844. Engels spent much of his life in and around Manchester, and when Karl Marx visited Manchester, they met at Chetham's Library in the city. The economics books which Marx was reading at the time can still be seen at the library, as can the window seat where Marx and Engels would meet. The first Trades Union Congress was held in Manchester at the Mechanics' Institute on David Street between 2–6 June 1868. Manchester was an equally important centre of the Labour Party, the Suffragette Movement, and the Chartist Movement.
Trade, and feeding the growing population, required a large transport and distribution infrastructure: the canal system was extended, and Manchester became one end of the world's first intercity passenger railway – the Liverpool and Manchester Railway – in 1830. Competition between the various forms of transport helped to keep costs down. The number of in Manchester itself peaked at 108 in 1853, after which the number began to decline and Manchester had been surpassed as the largest centre of cotton spinning by Bolton by the 1850s and Oldham by the 1860s. However, this period of decline coincided with the rise of the city as the financial centre of the region. In 1878 the General Post Office (the forerunner of BT Group) provided its first telephones to a firm in Manchester.
Others interpret the newly industrialised Manchester as a site of widespread poverty and squalor. Historian Simon Schama noted that "Manchester was the very best and the very worst taken to terrifying extremes, a new kind of city in the world; the chimneys of industrial suburbs greeting you with columns of smoke". An American visitor taken to Manchester's blackspots reported that he saw "wretched, defrauded, oppressed, crushed human nature, lying and bleeding fragments".
The Manchester Ship Canal was built between 1888 and 1894, in some sections by canalisation of the Rivers Irwell and Mersey, running from Salford to Eastham Locks on the tidal Mersey. This enabled oceangoing ships to sail right into the Port of Manchester. On the canal's banks, just outside the borough, the world's first industrial estate was created at Trafford Park. Manchester began exporting its cotton to Africa as a way of paying for slaves to be purchased for the transatlantic slave trade. Manchester's relation to the slave trade and its reliance on the British Empire for its expansion forms a complex and controversial part of its history; historian Eric Williams, said it was a "tremendous dependence on the triangular trade that made Manchester" in 1944.
Manchester continued to process cotton, and in 1913, 65% of the world's cotton was processed in the area. The First World War interrupted access to the export markets; combined with increased cotton processing in other parts of the world, this led to the rapid decline of the textile industry within the city. Furthermore, industry and employment suffered greatly as a result of the Great Depression, particularly due to its effect on the value of British exports. However, Manchester also saw a cultural revolution in the 1930s as locals tried to use greater creativity and local pride in order to counteract the effect of the status of the economy; this included the first formation of the British High Street, and embarking on infrastructure projects such as the Manchester Central Library.
The biggest air raids on the city during the war took place during the Manchester Blitz on the nights of 22–23 and 24–25 December 1940, when an estimated of high explosives plus over 37,000 incendiary bombs were dropped. A large part of the historic city centre was destroyed, including 165 warehouses, 200 business premises, and 150 offices. 376 were killed and 30,000 houses were damaged. Manchester Cathedral, Royal Exchange and Free Trade Hall were among the buildings seriously damaged, with the restoration of the cathedral taking 20 years. In total, 589 civilians were recorded to have died as result of enemy action within the Manchester County Borough.
Manchester has a history of attacks attributed to Irish Republicans; in 1867, a group called the Manchester Martyrs were Hanging following their conviction of murder after an attack on a police van in which a police officer was accidentally shot dead. The perpetrators were linked with the Fenian groups that wished to free Ireland from British rule. Other instances before the 1996 attack include arson in 1920, a series of explosions in 1939, and two bombs in 1992.
On 15 June 1996, the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) set off a Car bomb in Corporation Street in the city centre. The largest to be detonated on British soil, the bomb injured over 200 people, heavily damaged nearby buildings, and broke windows away. Although no one was killed by the explosion, it was one of the most expensive man-made disasters in history: the cost of the immediate damage was initially estimated at £50million (equivalent to £ in ), but this was quickly revised upwards. The final insurance pay-out was over £400million (equivalent to £ in ); many affected businesses never recovered from the loss of trade. However, it is also credited as helping to drive the regeneration of the city.
Large city sections from the 1960s have been demolished, re-developed or modernised with the use of glass and steel. Old mills have been converted into apartments. Hulme has undergone extensive regeneration, with million-pound loft-house apartments being developed. The 47-storey, Beetham Tower was the tallest UK building outside of London and the highest residential accommodation in Europe when completed in 2006. It was surpassed in 2018 by the South Tower of the Deansgate Square project, also in Manchester. In January 2007, the independent Casino Advisory Panel licensed Manchester to build the UK's only supercasino, but plans were abandoned in February 2008.
On 22 May 2017, an Islamist terrorist carried out a suicide bombing in one of the four entrances to the Manchester Arena, shortly after the end of an Ariana Grande concert. At the time of the bombing, there were an estimated 14,200 people in the arena; the explosion killed 23 people (including the perpetrator) and injured over 800. It was the deadliest terrorist attack and first suicide bombing in Britain since the 7 July 2005 London bombings. It caused worldwide condemnation and changed the UK's threat level to "critical" for the first time since 2007.
From a very early time, the township of Manchester lay within the historic or ceremonial county boundaries of Lancashire. Nikolaus Pevsner wrote "That neighbouring Stretford and Salford are not administratively one with Manchester is one of the most curious anomalies of England". A stroke of a baron's pen is said to have divorced Manchester and Salford, though it was not Salford that became separated from Manchester, it was Manchester, with its humbler line of lords, that was separated from Salford. It was this separation that resulted in Salford becoming the judicial seat of Salfordshire, which included the ancient parish of Manchester. Manchester later formed its own Poor Law Union using the name "Manchester".
In 1792, Commissioners – usually known as "Police Commissioners" – were established for the social improvement of Manchester. Manchester regained its borough status in 1838 and comprised the townships of Beswick, Cheetham Hill, Chorlton upon Medlock and Hulme. By 1846, with increasing population and greater industrialisation, the Borough Council had taken over the powers of the "Police Commissioners". In 1853, Manchester was granted city status.
In 1885, Bradford, Harpurhey, Rusholme and parts of Moss Side and Withington townships became part of the City of Manchester. In 1889, the city became a county borough, as did many larger Lancashire towns, and therefore not governed by Lancashire County Council. Between 1890 and 1933, more areas were added to the city, which had been administered by Lancashire County Council, including former villages such as Burnage, Chorlton-cum-Hardy, Didsbury, Fallowfield, Levenshulme, Longsight, and Withington. In 1931, the Cheshire civil parishes of Baguley, Northenden and Northen Etchells from the south of the River Mersey were added. In 1974, by way of the Local Government Act 1972, the City of Manchester became a metropolitan district of the metropolitan county of Greater Manchester. That year, Ringway, the village where the Manchester Airport is located, was added to the city.
As Mayor of Greater Manchester, Burnham is responsible for ten local authorities which form the Greater Manchester Combined Authority, with a budget of £2.6bn in 2024. Of this, £1.51bn is spent on policing and transport alone. The role of Mayor of Greater Manchester is the most powerful mayoral role in the country; he is the police and crime commissioner for Greater Manchester ex officio and is responsible for some housing, education, and welfare policies.
The River Mersey flows through the south of Manchester. Much of the inner city, especially in the south, is flat, offering extensive views from many highrise buildings in the city of the foothills and moors of the Pennines, which can often be capped with snow in the winter months. Manchester's geographic features were highly influential in its early development as the world's first industrial city. These features are its climate, its proximity to a port at Liverpool, the availability of waterpower from its rivers, and its nearby coal reserves.
For purposes of the Office for National Statistics, Manchester forms the most populous settlement within the Greater Manchester Urban Area, the United Kingdom's second-largest conurbation. There is a mix of high-density urban and suburban locations. The largest open space in the city, at around , is Heaton Park. Manchester is contiguous on all sides with several large settlements, except for a small section along its southern boundary with Cheshire. The M60 and M56 motorways pass through Northenden and Wythenshawe respectively in the south of Manchester. Heavy rail lines enter the city from all directions, the principal destination being Manchester Piccadilly station, the city's largest railway terminus, and the second-busiest in Great Britain outside of London.
Manchester has a relatively high humidity level, and this, along with abundant soft water, was one factor that led to advancement of the textile industry in the area. Snowfalls are not common in the city because of the Urban climate effect. The West Pennine Moors to the north-west, South Pennines to the north-east and Peak District to the east receive more snow, which can close roads leading out of the city. They include the A62 via Oldham and Standedge, the A57, Snake Pass, towards Sheffield, and the Pennine section of the M62. The lowest temperature ever recorded in Manchester was on 7 January 2010. The highest temperature recorded in Manchester is on 19 July 2022, during the 2022 European Heatwave.
Due to being already highly urban, the city contains limited portions of protected green-belt area within Greenfield land throughout the borough, with minimal development opportunities, at Clayton Vale, Heaton Park, Chorlton Water Park along with the Chorlton Ees & Ivy Green nature reserve and the floodplain surrounding the River Mersey, as well as the southern area around Manchester Airport. The green belt was first drawn up in 1961.
According to the Greater Manchester Combined Authority, the population of Greater Manchester in 2021 was 2,867,769, an increase of 6.9% from 2011. Since 1991, the City of Manchester's has grown faster than other major cities in England, growing by 36.3 per cent. Salford, another city in Greater Manchester, saw the highest growth in England across the 2010s with a 15.4 per cent increase. In 2012, 6,547,000 people lived within of Manchester and 11,694,000 within of the city.
Of the increase in Greater Manchester's population between 2011 and 2021, three quarters was as a result of Urbanization. One quarter was as a result of the birth rate being higher than the mortality rate. Between the beginning of July 2011 and end of June 2012, births exceeded deaths by 4,800. Manchester and Greater Manchester have younger populations than the average for England: nationally, 82.6 per cent of people are below the age of 65. For the City of Manchester the figure is 91.2 per cent, and for Greater Manchester the figure is 85.1 per cent. Greater Manchester Combined Authority's analysis of the 2021 census noticed the rising number of 0–15 year olds was a large drive for the increasing population change within the City of Manchester.
The Manchester Larger Urban Zone, a Eurostat measure of the functional city-region approximated to local government districts, had a population of 2,539,100 in 2004. Since Brexit the UK has no longer provided data to Eurostat, and thus it does not define Manchester as a Large Urban Zone anymore. In 2024 a partial deal for GDP data was reached between the Office for National Statistics and Eurostat, but the latter's website does not mention any plans for data sharing in regards to urban population.
In 2021, 5.2 per cent were mixed race (1.8 per cent White and Black Caribbean, 1.1 per cent White and Black African, 1.1 per cent White and Asian, 1.2 per cent other mixed), 20.9 per cent British Asian (2.7 per cent British Indian,11.9 per cent Pakistani, 1.8 per cent Bangladeshi, 2.3 per cent British Chinese, 2.2 per cent other Asian), 12 per cent Black British (8.7 per cent African, 1.9 per cent Caribbean, 1.4 per cent other Black), 2.7 per cent British Arab and 2.4 per cent of other ethnic heritage.
Moss Side, Longsight, Cheetham Hill, and Rusholme are population centres for ethnic minorities. Manchester's Irish Festival, including a St Patrick's Day parade, is one of Europe's largest. There is a well-established Chinatown in the city. The area attracts large numbers of Chinese students who, in attending the local universities, contribute to Manchester having the third-largest Chinese population in Europe.
Ethnicity of Manchester, from 1971 to 2021:
It is ranked as a Beta– (beta minus) city by the Globalization and World Cities Research Network in their 2024 rankings, placing it second for UK cities behind London, which is A++ (the highest ranking). Below Manchester are Bristol and Birmingham in the Gamma category. As the UK economy continues to recover from its 2008–2010 downturn, Manchester compares favourably according to recent figures. In 2012 it showed the strongest annual growth in business stock (5 per cent) of all core cities.
The decade between 2015 and 2025 saw the economy of the United Kingdom significantly affected by the Brexit and by the COVID-19 pandemic. These events impacted Manchester, with estimates showing a decline in economic output from COVID in the region of 9-10 percent, and with only 1 per cent of firms in the city reporting a positive impact from Brexit, with 60 per cent reporting a neutral or negative impact. The years since 2021 have seen some recovery, with forecasts for 2025-28 suggesting that growth in the region will reach 2.4 per cent annually, exceeding the expected national growth rate of 1.6 per cent.
On the other hand, Greater Manchester is home to more multi-millionaires than anywhere outside London, with the City of Manchester taking up most of the tally. In 2013 Manchester was ranked 6th in the UK for quality of life, according to a rating of the UK's 12 largest cities. Women fare better in Manchester than the rest of the country in comparative pay with men. The per hours-worked gender pay gap is 3.3 per cent compared with 11.1 per cent for Britain. 37 per cent of the working-age population in Manchester have degree-level qualifications, as opposed to an average of 33 per cent across other core cities, although its schools under-perform slightly compared with the national average.
Manchester has the largest UK office market outside London, according to GVA Grimley, with a quarterly office uptake (averaged over 2010–2014) of some – equivalent to the quarterly office uptake of Leeds, Liverpool and Newcastle combined and more than the nearest rival, Birmingham. The strong office market in Manchester has been partly attributed to "northshoring" (from offshoring), which entails the relocation or alternative creation of jobs away from the overheated South to areas where office space is possibly cheaper and the workforce market less saturated.
Manchester also has a number of skyscrapers built in the 1960s and 1970s, the tallest being the CIS Tower near Manchester Victoria station until the Beetham Tower was completed in 2006. The latter exemplifies a new surge in high-rise building. It includes a Hilton Hotels, a restaurant and apartments. The largest skyscraper is now Deansgate Square South Tower, at .The Green Building, opposite Oxford Road station, is a eco-friendly housing project, while the recently completed One Angel Square, is one of the most sustainable large buildings in the world.
Adjacent to Manchester Airport is the Runway Visitor Park, an aviation centre which is the site of G-BOAC, one of the twenty Concorde aircraft built.
Heaton Park in the north of the city borough is one of the largest municipal parks in Europe, covering of parkland. The city has 135 parks, gardens, and open spaces. Manchester has six designated local nature reserves: Chorlton Water Park, Blackley Forest, Clayton Vale and Chorlton Ees, Ivy Green, Boggart Hole Clough and Highfield Country Park.
Two of the city's four main line terminus stations did not survive the 1960s: Manchester Central, originally part of the Cheshire Lines Committee, and Manchester Exchange, originally part of the London and North Western Railway, both closed to passengers on 5 May 1969. Manchester Mayfield station closed to passenger services in 1960, before being redeveloped as a parcel depot which opened on 6 July 1970 and closed in 1986. the buildings is extant despite various plans to demolish it. In August 2025, Manchester City Council approved the regeneration of Mayfield Park, which includes the station, to be regenerated from brownfield land into a housing estate.
Today, the city is well served by its rail network although it is now working to capacity, and is at the centre of an extensive county-wide railway network, including the West Coast Main Line, with two mainline stations: Manchester Piccadilly and Manchester Victoria. The Manchester station group – comprising Manchester Piccadilly, Manchester Victoria, Manchester Oxford Road and Deansgate – is the third busiest in the United Kingdom, with 44.9million passengers recorded in 2017/2018. The High Speed 2 link to Birmingham and London was also planned, which would have included a tunnel under Manchester on the final approach into an upgraded Piccadilly station, however this was cancelled by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak in October 2023.
Recent improvements in Manchester as part of the Northern Hub in the 2010s have been numerous electrification schemes into and through Manchester, redevelopment of Victoria station and construction of the Ordsall Chord directly linking Victoria and Piccadilly. Work on two new through platforms at Piccadilly and an extensive upgrade at Oxford Road had not commenced as of 2019. Manchester city centre, specifically the Castlefield Corridor, suffers from constrained rail capacity that frequently leads to delays and cancellations – a 2018 report found that all three major Manchester stations are among the top ten worst stations in the United Kingdom for punctuality, with Oxford Road deemed the worst in the country.
The airport has the highest rating available: " Category 10", encompassing an elite group of airports able to handle " Code F" aircraft, including the Airbus A380 and Boeing 747-8. From September 2010 the airport became one of only 17 airports in the world and one of only three UK airports alongside Heathrow Airport and Gatwick Airport to operate the Airbus A380. Since the COVID-19 pandemic, Boeing 747 aircraft can no longer be seen using Manchester Airport.
A smaller Manchester Barton Aerodrome exists to the west of Manchester city centre. It was Manchester's first municipal airport and became the site of the first air traffic control tower in the UK, and the first municipal airfield in the UK to be licensed by the Air Ministry. Today, private Air charter and general aviation use City. It also has a Flight training, and both the Greater Manchester Police Air Support Unit and the North West Air Ambulance have helicopters based there.
Former Smiths frontman Morrissey, whose lyrics often refer to Manchester, later found international success as a solo artist. Previously, notable Manchester acts of the 1960s include the Hollies, Herman's Hermits, and Davy Jones of the Monkees, and the earlier Bee Gees, who grew up in Chorlton. Prominent UK rap artists from Manchester include Bugzy Malone, Aitch, and Meekz.
Brass band music, a tradition in the north of England, is important to Manchester's musical heritage; some of the UK's leading bands, such as the CWS Manchester Band and the Fairey Band, are from Manchester and surrounding areas, and the Whit Friday brass-band contest takes place annually in the neighbouring areas of Saddleworth and Tameside.
Manchester has two symphony orchestras, The Hallé and the BBC Philharmonic, and a chamber orchestra, the Manchester Camerata. In the 1950s, the city was home to a so-called "Manchester School" of classical composers, which was composed of Harrison Birtwistle, Peter Maxwell Davies, David Ellis and Alexander Goehr. Manchester is a centre for musical education: the Royal Northern College of Music and Chetham's School of Music. Forerunners of the RNCM were the Northern School of Music (founded 1920) and the Royal Manchester College of Music (founded 1893), which merged in 1973. One of the earliest instructors and classical music pianists/conductors at the RNCM, shortly after its founding, was the Russian-born Arthur Friedheim, (1859–1932), who later had the music library at the famed Peabody Institute conservatory of music in Baltimore, Maryland, named after him. The main classical music venue was the Free Trade Hall on Peter Street until the opening in 1996 of the 2,500 seat Bridgewater Hall.
Since 2007, the city has hosted the Manchester International Festival, a biennial international arts festival with a focus on original work, which has included major new commissions by artists, including Bjork. In 2023, the festival, operated by Factory International, was given a permanent home in Aviva Studios, a purpose-built multi-million pound venue designed by Rem Koolhaas from the Office for Metropolitan Architecture.
The Condition of the Working Class in England in 1844 was a study of the city by Friedrich Engels, which he wrote while living and working here. Manchester was also the meeting place of Engels and Karl Marx, where the two began writing The Communist Manifesto in Chetham's Library
The novel Hard Times is reputed to have been set in Manchester and Preston by Charles Dickens. Similarly, the novel Jane Eyre was first written by Charlotte Brontë in 1846, while she was staying in her lodgings in Hulme, an area of the city. She was accompanying her father Patrick, who was convalescing in the city after cataract surgery. She probably envisioned Manchester Cathedral churchyard as the burial place for Jane's parents and the birthplace of Jane herself.Alexander, Christine, and Sara L. Pearson. Celebrating Charlotte Brontë: Transforming Life into Literature in Jane Eyre. Brontë Society, 2016, p. 173.
Anthony Burgess is among the 20th-century writers who lived in Manchester. During his time in the city he wrote the dystopian satire A Clockwork Orange in 1962, which was named by Modern Library as one of the 100 Best Novels. Dame Carol Ann Duffy, Poet Laureate from 2009 to 2019, moved to the city in 1996 and lives in Didsbury, a village contiguous within the city.
The Madchester scene of the 1980s, from which groups including the Stone Roses, the Happy Mondays, Inspiral Carpets, 808 State, James and the Charlatans emerged, was based around clubs such as The Haçienda. The period was the subject of the movie 24 Hour Party People. Many of the big clubs suffered problems with organised crime at that time; Haslam describes one where staff were so completely intimidated that free admission and drinks were demanded (and given) and drugs were openly dealt. Following a series of drug-related violent incidents, The Haçienda closed in 1997.
Canal Street is now described as the centre of Manchester's gay village, and the surrounding area has been described as the most successful of its kind in Europe. However, critics of the area have also described it as a "gay ghetto" and that its general popularity has led to a decreased focus on LGBTQ rights and inclusion itself.
In 2019, the Manchester Local Education Authority (LEA) was ranked second to last out of Greater Manchester's ten LEAs and 140th out of 151 in the country LEAs based on the percentage of pupils attaining grades 4 or above in English and mathematics GCSEs (General Certificate of Secondary Education) with 56.2 per cent compared with the national average of 64.9 per cent. Of the 63 secondary schools in the LEA, four had 80 per cent or more pupils achieving Grade 4 or above in English and maths GCSEs: Manchester High School for Girls, The King David High School, Manchester Islamic High School for Girls, and Kassim Darwish Grammar School for Boys.
The University of Manchester is the second largest full-time non-collegiate university in the United Kingdom, and was created in 2004 through the merger of Victoria University of Manchester (founded 1904) and the University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology (founded 1956); the idea of a joint university had developed from the Mechanics' Institute founded, as indicated in the university's logo, in 1824. The University of Manchester also includes the Manchester Business School, which offered the first Master of Business Administration course in the UK in 1965.Description of 'Manchester Business School, Manchester Business School Archive, 1965-2002. University of Manchester Library. GB 133 MBS'
According to the Complete University Guide, the University of Manchester ranks at number 28 in the United Kingdom, Manchester Metropolitan University ranks at 50, and the University of Greater Manchester comes 102 out of 130 universities. The Guardian University Guide ranks the three as 31, 57, and 32 respectively; The Times Good University Guide ranks them as 27, 119, and 46 respectively. The University of Manchester is also one of the 24 universities that form the Russell Group, having been a founding member in 1994. The university has been the site of a number of important scientific developments. Ernest Rutherford led a team which first discovered the nuclear atom and inaugurated the beginnings of nuclear physics in 1919; Frederic C. Williams, Tom Kilburn and Geoff Tootill developed the world's first Stored-program computer, the Manchester Baby, in 1948; and Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov first isolated graphene in 2004.
Manchester Metropolitan University was formed as Manchester Polytechnic on the merger of three colleges in 1970. It gained university status in 1992, and in the same year absorbed Crewe and Alsager College of Higher Education in South Cheshire. The Cheshire campus permanently closed in 2019. The University of Law, the largest provider of vocation legal training in Europe, has a campus in the city. The three universities are grouped around Oxford Road on the southern side of the city centre, which forms Europe's largest urban higher-education precinct. Together they have a combined population of over 80,000 students as of 2022.
Sporting facilities built for the 2002 Commonwealth Games include the City of Manchester Stadium, National Squash Centre and Manchester Aquatics Centre. Manchester has competed twice to host the Olympic Games, beaten by Atlanta for 1996 and Sydney for 2000. The National Cycling Centre includes a velodrome, BMX Arena and Mountainbike trials, and is the home of British Cycling, UCI ProTeam Team Sky and Sky Track Cycling. The Manchester Velodrome, built as a part of the bid for the 2000 games, has become a catalyst for British success in cycling.
The velodrome hosted the UCI Track Cycling World Championships for a record third time in 2008. The National Indoor BMX Arena (2,000 capacity) adjacent to the velodrome opened in 2011. The Manchester Arena hosted the FINA World Swimming Championships in 2008. Manchester hosted the 2008 World Squash Championships, the 2010 World Lacrosse Championship, the 2013 Ashes series, the 2013 Rugby League World Cup, the 2015 Rugby World Cup, the 2019 Ashes series, and the 2019 Cricket World Cup.
An attempt to launch a Northern daily newspaper, the North West Times, employing journalists made redundant by other titles, closed in 1988. Another attempt was made with the North West Enquirer, which hoped to provide a true "regional" newspaper for the North West, much in the same vein as the Yorkshire Post does for Yorkshire or The Northern Echo does for the North East; it folded in October 2006.
The main regional newspaper in the city is the Manchester Evening News, which was for over 80 years the sister publication of The Manchester Guardian. The Manchester Evening News has the largest circulation of a UK regional evening newspaper and is distributed free of charge in the city centre on Thursdays and Fridays, but paid for in the suburbs. Despite its title, it is available all day. Several local weekly free papers are distributed by the MEN group. The Metro North West is available free at Metrolink stops, rail stations and other busy locations.
With the growth in regional television in the 1950s, Manchester became one of the BBC's three main centres in England. In 1954, the BBC opened its first regional BBC Television studio outside London, Dickenson Road Studios, in a converted Methodist chapel in Rusholme. The first edition of Top of the Pops was broadcast here on New Year's Day 1964. From 1975, BBC programmes including Mastermind, and Real Story, were made at New Broadcasting House on Oxford Road. The Cutting It series set in the city's Northern Quarter and The Street were set in Manchester as was Life on Mars. Manchester was the regional base for BBC One North West Region programmes before it relocated to MediaCityUK in nearby Salford Quays.
Student radio stations include Fuse FM at the University of Manchester and MMU Radio at the Manchester Metropolitan University. A community radio network is coordinated by Radio Regen, with stations covering Ardwick, Longsight and Levenshulme (All FM 96.9) and Wythenshawe (Wythenshawe FM 97.2).See Radio at the Ofcom web site and subpages, especially the directory of analogue radio stations , the map (PDF), and the map (PDF). Retrieved on 6 November 2007. Defunct radio stations include Sunset 102, which became Kiss 102, then Galaxy Manchester, and KFM which became Signal Cheshire (later Imagine FM). Pirate radio played a significant role in the city's alternative rock culture during the 1960s and 1970s, as it allowed young people to listen to broadcasts that fell outside of the cultural standard.
Manchester has been a so-called "friendship city" of Los Angeles, United States since 2009; this status is different from Los Angeles' twenty-five officially twinned cities. Manchester is home to the largest group of consulates in the UK outside London. The expansion of international trade links during the Industrial Revolution led to the introduction of the first consuls in the 1820s and since then over 800, from all parts of the world, have been based in Manchester. Manchester hosts consular services for most of the north of England.
Religion
Ethnicity
Ethnicity of school pupils
White: White British – – – – – – 292,498 74.5% 298,237 59.3% 268,572 48.7% White: White Irish – – – – – – 14,826 3.8% 11,843 2.4% 9,442 1.7% White: Traveller of Irish heritage – – – – – – – – 509 0.1% 597 0.1% White: Gypsy/Roma – – – – – – – – – – 883 0.2% White: Other White – – – – – – 10,689 2.7% 24,520 4.9% 34,138 6.2% Asian / Asian British: British Indians – – – – 4,404 5,817 11,417 2.3% 14,857 2.7% Asian / Asian British: Pakistani – – – – 15,360 3.8% 23,104 5.9% 42,904 8.5% 65,875 11.9% Asian / Asian British: Bangladeshi – – – – 2,000 3,654 6,437 1.3% 9,673 1.8% Asian / Asian British: British Chinese – – – – 3,103 5,126 13,539 2.7% 12,644 2.3% Asian / Asian British: Other Asians – – – – 1,899 3,302 11,689 2.3% 12,060 2.2% Black: African – – – – 3,465 0.9% 6,655 1.7% 25,718 5.1% 47,858 8.7% Black: Caribbean – – – – 10,390 2.6% 9,044 2.3% 9,642 1.9% 10,472 1.9% Black: Other Blacks – – – – 5,043 2,040 8,124 1.6% 7,563 1.4% White and Black Caribbean – – – – – – 5,295 8,877 1.8% 9,987 1.8% White and Black African – – – – – – 2,412 4,397 0.9% 5,992 1.1% White and Asian – – – – – – 2,459 4,791 1% 6,149 1.1% Any other mixed background – – – – – – 2,507 5,096 1% 6,898 1.2% Other: Arab – – – – 5,517 1.4% 3,391 0.9% 9,503 1.9% 15,028 2.7% Other: Any other ethnic group – – – – – – – – 5,884 1.2% 13,250 2.4% White: White British 33,698 61.9% 29,591 32.2% White: White Irish 373 320 0.3% White: Traveller of Irish heritage 106 87 0.1% White: Gypsy/Roma 23 286 0.3% White: Other White 658 4,325 4.7% Asian / Asian British: British Indians 770 2,163 2.4% Asian / Asian British: Pakistani 6,204 15,838 17.3% Asian / Asian British: Bangladeshi 971 2,157 2.4% Asian / Asian British: British Chinese 390 1,073 1.2% Asian / Asian British: Other Asians 558 2,363 2.6% Black: Caribbean 1,517 1,324 1.4% Black: African 2,618 11,014 12.0% Black: Other Blacks 564 3,361 3.7%
Economy
+ GVA for Manchester
2012–20224.7% 2.6% 3.2% 5.1% 6.4% 10.1% 3.6% 7.7% -2.0% 11.0% 14.6%
Macroeconomic wealth
Individual wealth
Business wealth
Architecture
Landmarks
Transport
Rail
Metrolink
Bus
Air
Canal
In 2012, plans were approved to introduce a water taxi service between Manchester city centre and MediaCityUK at Salford Quays. It ceased to operate in June 2018, citing poor infrastructure.
Cycling
Culture
Music artists
Music venues
With over 21,000 seats, it is the second largest arena of its type in Europe. In terms of concertgoers, it is the busiest indoor arena in the world, ahead of Madison Square Garden in New York and The O2 Arena in London, which are second and third busiest. Other venues include Manchester Apollo, Albert Hall, Victoria Warehouse, Manchester Academy and the Co-op Live arena, the latter being the largest indoor arena in the UK by capacity, and the third largest in the world. Smaller venues include the Band on the Wall, the Night and Day Café, the Ruby Lounge, The Deaf Institute, and Gorilla. Manchester also has the most indie and rock music events outside London.
Performing arts
Museums and galleries
Literature
Mancunian authors
Nightlife
Gay village
Education
Schooling
as a free grammar school next to what is now the cathedral, it moved in 1931 to Old Hall Lane in Fallowfield, south Manchester, to accommodate the growing student body. In the post-war period, it was a direct grant grammar school (i.e. partially state funded), but it reverted to independent status in 1976 after abolition of the direct-grant system. Its previous premises are now used by Chetham's School of Music. There are three other secondary schools in the city: William Hulme's Grammar School, Withington Girls' School, and Manchester High School for Girls.
Higher education
(date accessed :13/05/2022)
Sport
Media
Print
Television
Radio
Twin cities
See also
External links
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