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By percentage of the total population, or by the number of people?
By percentage, I'd say the Netherlands.
❀♫ ღ ♬ ♪ And the angle of the sun changed it all. ❀¸.•*¨♥✿ 🎶
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Last edited by Deneb; 02-12-2019 at 09:09 AM.
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Netherlands.
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The Netherlands.
After not shaving for a while:
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73% of Dutch schoolchildren were blond according to Louis Bolk. According to Pearson about 35% of English schoolchildren are blond. If we add red hair in, 2.5% of Dutch schoolchildren have red hair according to Bolk and 3.7% of English schoolchildren have red hair according to Pearson. That comes to 75.5% red or blond hair for Dutch schoolchildren and 38.7% for English schoolchildren.
English schoolchildren as whole seem not to have the overwhelming child blondism that is present in the Netherlands, comparing the surveys of Bolk and Pearson.
According to militarily record organized by Beddoe, 23% of English have hair which is very light brown or blond. According to Beddoe's observations of 1021 Dutch people about 25% of Dutch adults have very light brown or blond hair. Comparing data, red hair appears to be quite stable in both cases with the English adults having 3.5% and the Dutch 2.1%, both figures being under .5% less than the schoolchildren for each respective country. Adding red in for the adult figure means 26.5% of English have very light brown, blond, or red hair, while with the Dutch it is 27.1%.
If we use data from Beddoe, Pearson, and Bolk as I have, the Dutch only have slightly more very light brown, red, or blond hair than the English. Also, using the same data, the discrepancy between the Dutch and English is much greater in children than in adults.
Last edited by Blobu; 02-13-2019 at 02:43 AM.
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I never said that.
Red hair is more common in England. 2.5% of Dutch schoolchildren were red-haired. With the British schoolchildren it was 3.7%.
With the adults it was 3.5% for English and 2.1% for Dutch.
Some shades of reddish-blond were considered ‚pale-auburn‘ and fair rather than red by Beddoe. Beddoe‘s red is best defined as ‚districtivly red‘
I just added in red because Septentrion makes the point that red hair compensates for less pure blond hair among the English resulting in a closer amount of total light hair. If red was excluded the gap for light hair between the Dutch and English would be greater.
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