Current estimates suggest that slaves constituted about 15 percent of the Empire's total population the. In the 19th century, Britain became the worlds first industrial society. Harper estimates the population at the time of Augustus at 60 million, a discrepancy of 10 from Beloch's 1886 estimate, and suggests a population growth rate of 0.1 per year, reaching 75 million after nearly two centuries of growth. The estimated population of New Zealand was zero. The population of Ireland in 43 AD is not known but an educated guess is about. At this time North and South America were sparsely populated, as was Asia Pacific. Then on top of that you would have to find a reliable increase to give as newspaper, radio, tv, and internet are slowly invented.įurthermore the same numbers wouldn't even apply in terms of famous people, the professions we draw from and value as celebrities today didn't exist for the majority of the time line.Įven then you wouldnt be correct unless you either started with a base definition of what fame is(like how many people know you(which you would then have to adjust down for population and communication limitations)) someone who never be considered famous in todays standards could be in a different 0AD, such as joe the barber, mike the butcher, and dan the knight being famous in their locale in 1100AD. In most countries of the world the geographic distribution of the population is not even with varying degrees of concentration of population giving rise to. The population two thousand years ago is estimated to have been 231 million. Colder Northern latitudes tended to have lower populations. Southern Asia, Northern Africa, China and Southern Europe (parts of the same land mass) had relatively high populations. The estimated population of New Zealand was zero.
However this would be inherently incorrect due to the fact that you can't compensate for a common, easy to cross language barrier these days, the internet and TV which during the majority of this timeline didn't exist. The population two thousand years ago is estimated to have been 231 million. And add them all together, then create a percentage out of that number, and the number of humans to exist since that point
I'm not gonna do it, but the easiest way would probably be to get the number of screen actors today that have been in movie's(though there may be a way to narrow that), signed music artists(including all members of a band, unless you get an average), and professional Sports players then create a ratio between that and the current population of the earth, then apply this ratio to the population of earth during every year since 0AD, to save Time you could apply this during major population increases or after a predetermined time.