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  2. List of counties of the United Kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_counties_of_the...

    The counties marked in italics below are neither ceremonial nor historic. The list does not include the 61 county boroughs (1889–1974) or the 18 counties corporate (before 1889), each of which was an administrative county for a single town or city, within a larger "county-at-large".

  3. Ordnance Survey Great Britain County Series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ordnance_Survey_Great...

    The Ordnance Survey Great Britain County Series maps were produced from the 1840s to the 1890s by the Ordnance Survey, with revisions published until the 1940s.The series mapped the counties of Great Britain at both a six inch and twenty-five inch scale with accompanying acreage and land use information.

  4. Subdivisions of England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subdivisions_of_England

    At the highest level, all of England is divided into nine regions that are each made up of a number of counties and districts. These "government office regions" were created in 1994, [ 12 ] and from the 1999 Euro-elections up until the UK's exit from the EU, they were used as the European Parliament constituencies in the United Kingdom and in ...

  5. Counties of England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counties_of_England

    The counties of England are a type of subdivision of England.Counties have been used as administrative areas in England since Anglo-Saxon times. There are three definitions of county in England: the 48 ceremonial counties used for the purposes of lieutenancy; the 84 metropolitan and non-metropolitan counties for local government; [a] and the 39 historic counties which were used for ...

  6. Types of subdivision of the United Kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Types_of_subdivision_of...

    Today in England, the pre-1974 county boundaries survive in the form of historic counties, also known as traditional counties. This could refer to the counties at any point from the Domesday Book to 1974, as the boundaries often changed in between then. In medieval times, counties were administered by a sheriff (meaning shire-reeve). Prior to ...

  7. Counties of the United Kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counties_of_the_United_Kingdom

    The 1889 legislation created county councils, turned each civil county (with one exception) into a contiguous area and adjusted boundaries where civil parishes straddled county boundaries, or had fragments in more than one county. The counties of Ross and Cromarty were merged to form Ross and Cromarty. [9]

  8. HuffPost Data

    projects.huffingtonpost.com

    Interactive maps, databases and real ... An interactive map showing how opioid abuse rates outpace treatment capacity 2 to 1. ... charts and county-level maps of each ...

  9. Historic counties of England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historic_counties_of_England

    The historic counties of England continue to be used as the basis for county cricket teams [65] and the governance of cricket in England through the ECB County Boards. [66] There are exceptions in that Rutland is integrated with Leicestershire; the Isle of Wight has its own board outside the Hampshire one; there is a board for the ceremonial ...