Misplaced Pages

Administrative counties of England

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 195.149.37.134 (talk) at 12:04, 20 May 2002 (*south east). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Revision as of 12:04, 20 May 2002 by 195.149.37.134 (talk) (*south east)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

A county is one of the top-level divisions of local government in England: the others are unitary authorities, London boroughs and metropolitan districts. Counties are divided into districts, which form a 2nd level of local government.

The county boundaries have varied considerably over the centuries. When the counties were originally defined, they often included large areas of land owned by the local abbeys, resulting in a number of counties having small detached parts entirely surrounded by some other county. After boundary changes from the 1880s to the 1960s, many of these anomalies were resolved and a number of parishes were incorporated in a more logical county. The last such anomalies were removed by the local government reorganisation in 1974.

In the 1974 reorganisation, six new metropolitan counties were created to administer the larger urban areas: the ? (covering Birmingham, Coventry, Wolverhampton? and the ?, and including former parts of Warwickshire, Staffordshire? and Worcestershire); Greater Manchester; Merseyside (Liverpool and neighbouring districts); West Yorkshire (Leeds, Bradford and nearby towns); ? (Sheffield?, Barnsley? and Doncaster?); and Tyne and Wear (Newcastle? and Sunderland? ). Additional non-metropolitan counties were created for areas centred on a major city but divided by former county boundaries, in Avon? (Bristol and surroundings), Humberside? (Hull) and Cleveland? (Middlesbrough/Teesside).

The metropolitan counties were abolished as administrative entities in 1986 along with the county of Greater London (created in 1965) and broken up into their constituent districts, though statistical data are still published for the 1974-86 county areas. Avon, Humberside and Cleveland were also scrapped in 1996, their districts becoming unitary authorities combining county and district functions, and 1999 saw the restoration of Rutland?, the smallest county in England, and Herefordshire?, merged respectively with Leicestershire? and Worcestershire 25 years earlier.

England is now classified into 8 regions, each containing various counties, unitary authories, etc. -- see http://www.lgce.gov.uk/reviews/periodic/map.htm.

(only counties belong on this page, but the others are here for now. Unitary authorities are marked UA below).

East

Bedfordshire
Cambridgeshire
Essex
Hertfordshire
Norfolk
Suffolk
Luton (UA)
Peterborough (UA)
Southend-on-Sea (UA)
Thurrock (UA)

South East

Buckinghamshire
East Sussex
Hampshire
Isle of Wight
Kent
Oxfordshire
Surrey
West Sussex
Greater London, with 32 London boroughs
Brighton and Hove (UA)
Milton Keynes (UA)
Portsmouth (UA)
Southampton (UA)
Bracknell Forest (UA)
Reading (UA)
Slough (UA)
West Berkshire (UA)
Windsor and Maidenhead (UA)
Wokingham (UA)
note: Berkshire and Middlesex counties no longer exist.
note: Sussex was formerly a single county.

The Rest (very roughly)