England is perhaps the country most people think of first when they think of the United Kingdom. It borders both Scotland and Wales and almost 50 million people live there, which is over 80 per cent of the UK’s total population.
Major cities include London (the capital), Birmingham, Sheffield, Leeds, Newcastle and Manchester. London is one of the most well-known cities in the world and for many is representative of the whole of England, if not the whole of the UK.
Other icons include football, actors Jude Law and Kate Winslet, Bridget Jones, pubs and beer. But for most these represent the whole of the UK, not just England.
 Many of the people in our survey, either English by birth or now living here, commented that it was very difficult to distinguish between English and British culture and identity. People found that they often identified more with other things than with England as a country. These other things include: the place or region in which they live, whether it be a major city or one of the English counties such as Yorkshire, Devon or Northumberland; the UK as a whole; or the religious or ethnic community that they are from.
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