Only 4,000 inhabitants remained in the city; the rest had followed evacuation orders.
During the war 68 inhabitants fell or remained missing.
Around 1830, after a deadly fever struck the community and killed 200, the remainder of the population moved away; no inhabitants remained by 1832.
By 1912, only around 2,000 inhabitants remained compared to the 30,000 of the boom years and the site was becoming a ghost town.
During the winter months only year-round inhabitants remain in the area to take advantage of outdoor winter sports.
The inhabitants of this rundown building, if there were any, remained hidden.
The devastations of the war resulted in a severe population drop: only 30 inhabitants remained.
By August 1944 only 70,000 inhabitants of the ghetto remained.
By 1951, fewer than 13,000 inhabitants remained of a community that numbered somewhere between 70,000 and 90,000 in the late 1940s.
Only the poorest inhabitants remained, turning the complex into a slum.