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Religion in the United Kingdom - Statistics |  | Religion in the United Kingdom - Statistics: Encyclopedia II - Religion in the United Kingdom - Statistics |  | In the 2001 census data, people were asked about their beliefs.
Religion in the United Kingdom - Religions in England & Wales 2001.
The 2001 UK census also included responses from 390,127 people (or 0.7% of the population of England and Wales) who gave their religion as the parody religion, Jedi.
A survey[3] in 2002 found average weekly attendance at Anglican churches in England varied between 4.0% of the population in the diocese of Hereford, down to just 1.4% in Birmingham. Church attendance at Christmas in some diocese ...
See also:Religion in the United Kingdom, Religion in the United Kingdom - History, Religion in the United Kingdom - Before Christianity, Religion in the United Kingdom - Christianity, Religion in the United Kingdom - Religion and modern politics, Religion in the United Kingdom - Secularism and tolerance, Religion in the United Kingdom - Judaism, Religion in the United Kingdom - Other faiths, Religion in the United Kingdom - Saints, Religion in the United Kingdom - Monasticism, Religion in the United Kingdom - Religious leaders, Religion in the United Kingdom - Notable places of worship, Religion in the United Kingdom - Statistics, Religion in the United Kingdom - Religions in England & Wales 2001, Religion in the United Kingdom - Religions in Northern Ireland 2001, Religion in the United Kingdom - Religions in Scotland 2001 |  | | Religion in the United Kingdom, Religion in the United Kingdom - Before Christianity, Religion in the United Kingdom - Christianity, Religion in the United Kingdom - History, Religion in the United Kingdom - Judaism, Religion in the United Kingdom - Monasticism, Religion in the United Kingdom - Notable places of worship, Religion in the United Kingdom - Other faiths, Religion in the United Kingdom - Religion and modern politics, Religion in the United Kingdom - Religions in England & Wales 2001, Religion in the United Kingdom - Religions in Northern Ireland 2001, Religion in the United Kingdom - Religions in Scotland 2001, Religion in the United Kingdom - Religious leaders, Religion in the United Kingdom - Saints, Religion in the United Kingdom - Secularism and tolerance, Religion in the United Kingdom - Statistics, Greenbelt festival, Jedi census phenomenon, Jesus Army, Muslim Council of Britain, Lord's Day Observance Society, National Secular Society, Priest hole, Religion in Birmingham |  | |
|  |  | Religion in the United Kingdom: Encyclopedia II - Religion in the United Kingdom - Statistics
Religion in the United Kingdom - Statistics
In the 2001 census data, people were asked about their beliefs.
Religion in the United Kingdom - Religions in England & Wales 2001
The 2001 UK census also included responses from 390,127 people (or 0.7% of the population of England and Wales) who gave their religion as the parody religion, Jedi.
A survey[3] in 2002 found average weekly attendance at Anglican churches in England varied between 4.0% of the population in the diocese of Hereford, down to just 1.4% in Birmingham. Church attendance at Christmas in some dioceses was up to three times the average for the rest of the year.
A 2004 YouGov poll found that 44 per cent of UK citizens believe in God, while 35 per cent do not [4]. The disparity between the census data and the YouGov data has been put down to a phenomenon described as "cultural Christianity", whereby many who do not believe in God still identify with the religion they were bought up as, or the religion of their parents.
Beside the Roman Catholic Church (Eglwys Catholig Rufeinig) and the Church in Wales (Eglwys yng Nghymru), which both have less than 5 % of the population as members, the largest religious societies are the Presbyterian Church of Wales (Eglwys Bresbyteraidd Cymru) with 34,819 (2004) members and 1 % of the population as members and the Union of Welsh Independents (Undeb yr Annibynwyr Cymraeg) as well as the Baptist Union of Wales (Undeb Bedydd wyr Cymru) with about 1 % of the population as members each.
Religion in the United Kingdom - Religions in Northern Ireland 2001
Source: UK 2001 Census.
Religion in the United Kingdom - Religions in Scotland 2001
Source: UK 2001 census General Register Office for Scotland, The Registrar General's 2001 Census Report to the Scottish Parliament (Excel). See also Analysis of Religion in the 2001 Census: Summary Report
Other related archives1689 Baptist Confession of Faith, 17th century, 1850, 1871, 18th, 18th century, 1904-1905 Welsh Revival, 1920, 19th century, 2002, 2004, 20th century, 7th century, Abbeys and priories in England, Abbeys and priories in Northern Ireland, Abbeys and priories in Scotland, Abbeys and priories in Wales, Act of Security, Act of Settlement 1701, Act of Supremacy, Act of Uniformity, Alban, Anglicanism, Anglo-Catholicism, Anglo-Saxon, Anglo-Saxon England, Annotated Lyrics to The Vicar of Bray, Anthony Bloom, Antidisestablishmentarianism, Archbishop of Canterbury, Archbishop of Westminster, As of 2004, Augustine of Canterbury, Baptist Union of Great Britain, Baptist Union of Wales, Bede, Birmingham, Bishops' Wars, Board of Deputies of British Jews, Book of Common Order, Book of Common Prayer, British Isles, British toponymy, Buddhism, Calvinism, Canterbury Tales, Catholic, Catholic Church in Great Britain, Catholic Emancipation, Celtic Christianity, Chaplains, Charismatic, Charles Bradlaugh, Charles, Prince of Wales, Chief Rabbi, Christian, Christian socialism, Christmas, Church in Wales, Church of England, Church of Ireland, Church of Scotland, Church of Scotland Act 1921, Connexion, Conservative Party, Conventicle Act 1664, Cornish Saints, Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion, Covenanter, Crathie Kirk, Cuthbert, Declaration of Indulgence, Defender of the Faith, Disestablishmentarianism, Disruption of 1843, Dissent, Dissolution of the Monasteries, Ecumenical, Education Act 1944, Elizabethan Religious Settlement, England, English Catholic parish histories, English Dissenters, English Reformation, English mythology, Exclusion Bill, Finsbury Park mosque, Five Mile Act 1665, Forty Martyrs of England and Wales, France, Franks, Free Church of Scotland, Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland, General Assembly of Unitarian and Free Christian Churches, Glasgow Cathedral, Glastonbury, Gordon riots, Greek Orthodox Church of St Nicholas, Greenbelt festival, Gunpowder Plot, Henry VIII of England, Hereford, Hinduism, Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum, History of anti-Semitism, History of the Church of England, History of the Jews in England, Huguenots, Islam, Islam in the United Kingdom, Jedi, Jedi census phenomenon, Jenny Geddes, Jesus Army, Jewish, John Knox, John Wesley, John Wyclif, Joseph of Arimathea, Judaism, Kingdom of Kent, Kingdom of Northumbria, Labour Party, Lindisfarne Gospels, List of Anglican diocesan bishops in Britain and Ireland, List of Chief Rabbis, List of cathedrals in the United Kingdom, Lollardy, Lord Spiritual, Lord's Day Observance Society, Marian exiles, Marian martyr, Methodism, Metropolitan Tabernacle, Mill Hill Synagogue, Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, Muslim Council of Britain, National Secular Society, Neasden Temple, Neo-druidism, Nonconformism, Nonjuring schism, Norman Conquest, Northern Ireland, Oath of Supremacy, Orthodoxy, Oxford Movement, Paganism, Papacy, Papist, Patron saints, Penal law, Pentecostal, Pilgrimages, Pope Gregory, Popery, Popish Plot, Prayer Book Rebellion, Presbyterian, Presbyterian Church, Presbyterian Church in Ireland, Priest hole, Primate of All Ireland, Primus of Scotland, Protestant, Protestantism, Public Worship Regulation Act 1874, Reformation, Regnans in Excelsis, Religion in Birmingham, Religious Society of Friends - Britain Yearly Meeting, Religious rivalry in Glasgow, Roman Catholic Church, Romano-British, Romans, Royal Army Chaplains' Department, Royal Declaration of Indulgence, Royal Navy, Saint Andrew, Saint Columba, Saint David, Saint George, Saint Patrick, Saint Swithun, Salvation Army, School uniform, Scotland, Scottish Episcopal Church, Seven Bishops, Sikhism, Six Articles, State religion, Status of religious freedom in the United Kingdom, Stephen Langton, Sulis, Supreme Governor of the Church of England, Synod of Whitby, Temple of Mithras, London, Test Act, The Queen, The Satanic Verses (novel), Thirty-Nine Articles, Thomas Becket, UK 2001 Census, UK 2001 census, United Free Church of Scotland, United Kingdom, United Presbyterian Church of Scotland, United Reformed Church, Victoria Park Mosque, Viridios, Walsingham, Welsh Bible, Welsh Church Act 1914, Welsh Methodist revival, Westminster Abbey, Westminster Assembly, Westminster Cathedral, Westminster Central Hall, Westminster Confession, Wicca, William Morgan, William Tyndale, Wyclif's Bible, York Minster, YouGov, atheism, blasphemy law in the United Kingdom, canonised, cathedrals, chapels, chapels of ease, churches, disestablished, established church, ethnic minorities, home nations, languages in the United Kingdom, martyr, monasticism, mosques, nationalists, pagan, parody religion, recusants, religious persecution, saints, satanist, sectarianism, secular, separation of church and state, shrine, synagogues, temples, turbans, unionists, venerated, vernacular
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Statistics", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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