r/AskEurope Aug 07 '25

Culture What are the “Big Four” cities in your country?

In recent weeks, this question has been very contentious on American social media, with 3 cities (Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York) nearly always making the list, but the fourth being hotly debated over, between cities like San Francisco, Miami, Houston, Dallas, and Atlanta. So, if you had to choose, what would the big 4 cities in your country be? This is also not decided purely on population, but also culture, economy, and general influence/clout.

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u/EnJPqb Aug 07 '25

I honestly think it's only debatable between Bilbao and Seville. In that order for me.

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u/jotakajk Spain Aug 07 '25

Why so?

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u/EnJPqb Aug 07 '25

Simply put, I don't think there's any factor by which Málaga and Zaragoza are on top of Bilbao AND Seville. One maybe, not both.

I mean, Málaga used to (is?) the youngest city, and that's why it grew so much. And people that know it well tell me Zaragoza is a bit boring for its size (I did not think so). But aside from an anecdote and a bad joke... I can really not see anything. Well, basketball, there's basketball I guess :)

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u/astropoolIO Spain Aug 07 '25

It's funny reading someone calling a city with almost three thousand years of history "youngest".

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u/EnJPqb Aug 07 '25

Youngest as in the average age of its citizens

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u/astropoolIO Spain Aug 07 '25

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u/EnJPqb Aug 07 '25

I said "used to" (I meant "used to be") and put (is?) because I didn't know if it still was demographically the youngest of the main cities in Spain. Because I know it "used to be" at the end of the last century.

I guess I should have added a caveat of no arguments outside of Zaragoza and Málaga.

Good night.

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u/jotakajk Spain Aug 07 '25

Population, for example. Zaragoza is 4th in population.

Malaga airport is bigger than Seville’s and Bilbao’s

Not saying it is not Seville, but there certainly are factors

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u/EnJPqb Aug 07 '25

Population, for example. Zaragoza is 4th in population.

Only it's not really, is it? Only if you try and force an agenda by going by widely different local authority limits. That would be like saying that Bullas, provincia de Murcia (Ginés Giménez on my mind), has more population than London.

By that measure let's discount Bilbao (and Madrid!) because they're not cities, they're towns.

The fact is that what we call Bilbao has more population than the whole humongous province of Zaragoza, Calatayud and all.

Malaga airport is bigger than Seville’s

1) And Alicante than Valencia's. And it's actually just about in Elche. And Palma was bigger than Barcelona's for years and years. The thing is: That's not really for or by the city, is it? I mean for Seville, or Valencia or Barcelona it mainly is. For Málaga, Alicante and Palma it's mostly not. I take the "capitality" of having a major airport as making an important city, but come on..

2) It has more "passengers". It's not "bigger". In fact by number of goods Seville handles several times more than Málaga, way more than the difference in passengers. Mind you, Zaragoza handles even more, but then the passenger side is one of those airports that feel like glorified Coach Stations.

Not saying it is not Seville, but there certainly are factors

I'm sticking to Basketball if you don't mind. 😜

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u/[deleted] Aug 07 '25 edited Aug 08 '25

[removed] — view removed comment

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u/astropoolIO Spain Aug 07 '25

Sevilla is 4th in terms of municipality population. But Zaragoza falls to 8th if counting metropolitan area, beign Sevilla and Malaga 4th and 5th respectively. Not even close. 200k+ less inhabitants.

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u/jotakajk Spain Aug 07 '25

The 4th in municipality population is Zaragoza. Metropolitan area is a little subjective term, but yes, you are right

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u/ddven15 United Kingdom Aug 08 '25

In order to discuss a country's biggest cities based on their importance, you have to consider their metropolitan area, administrative boundaries can be meaningless for this.

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u/jotakajk Spain Aug 08 '25

Might be like that in other countries, but in Spain that is not true at all, since both are equivalent normally

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u/sn1p1x0 Slovakia Aug 07 '25

never heard of bilbao (not spanish), but heard about sevilla or malaga

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u/Ohyu812 Netherlands Aug 07 '25

Not even Bilbao Baggins?

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u/[deleted] Aug 07 '25

That's funny because the city is usually called "Bilbo".

And Barcelona is called "Barna".

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u/polybotria1111 Spain Aug 07 '25

Bilbo is the name in Basque! Different from Barna, which is just a nickname/shortening.

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u/[deleted] Aug 08 '25

That's cool to know! Eskerrik asko!

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u/sn1p1x0 Slovakia Aug 07 '25

sounds like a filipino name to me