English
Noun
counties
- Plural of county
A county is generally a sub-unit of regional
self-government within a larger jurisdiction.
History
Originally, in continental Europe, a county (comté,
Grafschaft) was the land under the jurisdiction of a
count (
comte,
Graf).
Counts are called
earls in post-Celtic
Britain and
Ireland—the
term is from
Old
Norse jarl and was introduced by the
Vikings—but there is
no correlation between counties and
earldoms. Rather, county, from
French
comté, was simply used by the
Normans after
1066 to replace the native English term scir (
[ʃir])—
Modern
English shire, as the
Anglo-Saxon system of Shires was unique and thus hard for the
Norman invaders to comprehend so they resorted to calling them
Counties. A shire was an administrative division of an Anglo-Saxon
kingdom (
Wessex,
Mercia,
East Anglia,
etc.), usually named after its administrative centre: for example,
Gloucester, in
Gloucestershire;
Worcester, in
Worcestershire;
etc. or originate from these forms of names (e.g.
Wiltshire derived
from 'Wiltonshire' with
Wilton
as its old
county
town).
Thus, whereas the word comté denoted a sovereign
jurisdiction in the original French, the English county denotes a
subdivision of a sovereign jurisdiction.
Overview
* The 32 refers to the counties of the
Republic
of Ireland and
Northern
Ireland combined. For more information, see the sections on
Ireland
and
United
Kingdom below.
Austria
Each Austrian state (in German Bundesland, plural
Bundesländer) is divided in a number of counties (in German Bezirk,
plural Bezirke). Each county is subdivided in towns or villages.
Some larger towns do not form part of a county and are governed by
a unitary administration instead which counts both for city
administration as well as county governance. The federal capital
Vienna is
considered as a state as well. The capital government of Vienna is
responsible for state, county and town governance. Vienna is
subdivided in boroughs which are called "Bezirk" in German as well,
but have a different function than the counties in the other
federal states.
Australia
The eastern Australian states, and parts of the
western states were divided into counties, mostly in the nineteenth
century. These were further subdivided into parishes in New South
Wales, Victoria, Tasmania and Queensland; and
hundreds in South Australia.
The counties currently have no political function, and became dead
letters for most purposes other than the registration of land
ownership, and are unknown by most of the population today.
Local Government Areas including shires, municipalities and
others are instead used in Australia as the second level
subdivision.
Canada
Five of Canada's ten provinces are divided into
counties. In
Ontario and
Nova
Scotia, these are local government units, whereas in
New
Brunswick,
Quebec and
Prince
Edward Island they are now only geographical divisions. Most
counties consist of several municipalities, however there are a few
that consist of a single large city. In sparsely populated northern
Ontario and Quebec, these units are called districts not counties,
and in densely populated areas of south-central Ontario new
regional municipalities are used for local government instead of
counties.
See also:
Divisions of the other provinces:
China
The word "county" is used to translate the
Chinese
term xiàn (县 or 縣). On
Mainland
China under the
People's Republic of China, counties are the
third level of local government, coming under both the
province level and the
prefecture level.
The number of counties in
China proper
numbers about 2,000, and has remained more or less constant since
the
Han
Dynasty (
206 BC -
AD 220). The county
remains one of the oldest levels of government in China and
significantly predates the establishment of provinces in the
Yuan
Dynasty (
1279 -
1368). The county
government was particularly important in imperial China because
this was the lowest layer at which the imperial government
functioned. The head of a county during imperial times was the
magistrate.
In older context, "prefecture" and "district" are
alternative terms to refer to xiàn before the establishment of the
Republic
of China. The English nomenclature "county" was adopted
following the establishment of the ROC.
Denmark
Denmark was divided
into counties (amter) from
1662 to
2006. On
January 1,
2007, the
counties were replaced by five
Regions.
At the same time, the number of municipalities was slashed from 271
to 98.
The counties were first introduced in
1662, replacing the 49
fiefs (len) in
Denmark-Norway
with the same number of counties. This number does not include the
subdivisions of the
Duchy of
Schleswig, which was only under partial Danish control. The
number of counties in Denmark (excluding Norway) had dropped to c.
20 by 1793. Following the reunification of
South
Jutland with Denmark in 1920, four counties replaced the
Prussian
Kreise.
Aabenraa
and
Sønderborg
County merged in 1932 and
Skanderborg
and
Aarhus were
separated in 1942. From 1942 to 1970, the number stayed at
22.
http://www.byhistorie.dk/kommuner/artikel.aspx?artikel=amter.xml
The number was further decreased by the 1970 Danish municipal
reform, leaving 14 counties plus two cities unconnected to the
county structure;
Copenhagen and
Frederiksberg.
In 2003,
Bornholm
County merged with the local four municipalities, forming the
Bornholm
Regional Municipality. The remaining 13 counties were abolished
on effective
January 1,
2007 where
they were replaced by five new
regions.
In the same reform, the number of municipalities was slashed from
270 to 98 and all municipalities now belong to a region.
Hungary
The administrative unit of
Hungary is called
megye, (historically, they were also called
comitatus
in
Latin),
which can be translated with the word county. It is the highest
level of the administrative subdivisions of the country, although
counties are grouped into seven statistical regions. Counties are
subdivided to kistérségs, which literally means "little area",
though translating this as a commune is more proper. Communes have
statistical and organizational functions only, whilst they have
their own "capital cities". Presently Hungary is subdivided into 19
"proper" counties, 22 urban counties (cities with the same rights
as a whole county) and 1 capital,
Budapest. See the
list of
counties
of Hungary.
The comitatus was also the historic
administrative unit in the
Kingdom
of Hungary, which included areas of present-day neighbouring
countries of Hungary. See the
list of historic counties of Hungary.
Although the Latin name (comitatus) is the
equivalent of the French comté, historical Hungarian counties have
never been sovereign jurisdictions. They were subdivisions of the
royal administration and as such, should really be translated as
shire. Even the word megye is a shortened form of the original
vármegye, where the element vár means castle, thus denoting an area
supervised and governed from a royal castle, much like an
Anglo-Saxon shire indeed.
India
The administrative unit in India immediately next to
the state is called a Zila in
Hindi, or Mavattam in
Tamil, or
district (never County)
in English.
Ireland
The island of
Ireland was
historically divided into
32
counties, of which 26 later formed the
Republic
of Ireland and 6 made up
Northern
Ireland.
These counties are traditionally grouped into
4
provinces -
Leinster (12),
Munster (6)
Connacht
(5) and
Ulster (9).
Historically, the counties of Meath, West Meath and small parts of
surrounding counties constituted the province of
Meath, which was one
of the "Five Fifths" of Ireland (in the
Irish
language the word for province means "a fifth"); however, these
have long since become the three northernmost counties of Leinster
province. In the Republic each county is administered by an elected
"
county
council", and the old provincial divisions are merely
traditional names with no political significance.
The number and boundaries of administrative
counties in the Republic of Ireland were reformed in the 1990s. For
example
County
Dublin was broken into three:
Dun
Laoghaire-Rathdown,
Fingal, and
South Dublin
- the
City of
Dublin had existed for centuries before. In addition "
County
Tipperary" is actually two administrative counties, called
North
Tipperary and
South
Tipperary while the major urban centres
Cork,
Galway,
Limerick,
and
Waterford have
been separated from the town and rural areas of their counties.
Thus, the Republic of Ireland now has thirty-four 'county-level'
authorities, although the borders of the original twenty-six
counties are still officially in place
http://www.osi.ie/mapping/FAQ/areasMeasurements.shtml.
In Northern Ireland, the six county councils and
the smaller town councils were abolished in 1973 and replaced by a
single tier of local government. However, in the north as well as
in the south, the traditional 32 counties and 4 provinces remain in
common usage for many sporting, cultural and other purposes. County
identity is heavily reinforced in the local culture by allegiances
to county teams in
Hurling and
Gaelic
football. Each
GAA county has
its own flag/colours (and often a nickname too), and county
allegiances are taken quite seriously. See the
counties
of Ireland and the
Gaelic Athletic Association.
Japan
"County" is one of the translations of gun (郡), which
is a subdivision of
prefecture. It is also
translated as
rural
district,
rural area or
district. The
translation "district" is not preferred, because it comes into
conflict with the usual translation of "district", chome. In this
encyclopedia, district is used for gun. See
Japanese translation note.
Currently, "counties" have no political power or
administrative function. The division is mainly significant in
postal
services.
Liberia
Liberia has 15
counties, each of which elects two senators to the Liberian
Senate.
Lithuania
Apskritis (pl. apskritys) is the Lithuanian word
for county. Since 1994
Lithuania has 10
counties; before 1950 it had 20. The only purpose with the county
is an office of a state governor who shall conduct law and order in
the county. See
counties
of Lithuania.
New Zealand
After
New Zealand
abolished its
provinces
in 1876, a system of counties similar to other countries' systems
was instituted, lasting until 1989.
They had chairmen, not mayors as
boroughs and cities had; many
legislative provisions (such as
burial and
land
subdivision control) were different for the counties.
During the second half of the
20th
century, many counties received overflow population from nearby
cities. The result was often a merger of the two into a "district"
(eg
Rotorua) or a
change of name to "district' (eg Waimairi) or "
city" (eg
Manukau).
The Local Government Act 1974 began the process
of bringing urban, mixed, and rural councils into the same
legislative framework. Substantial reorganisations under that Act
resulted in the 1989 shake-up, which covered the country in
(non-overlapping) cities and districts and abolished all the
counties except for the
Chatham
Islands County, which survived under that name for a further 6
years but then became a "Territory" under the "Chatham Islands
Council".
Norway
Norway is divided into 19
counties
(sing. fylke, plur. fylke/fylker, literally "folk") as of 1972. Up
to that year
Bergen was
a separate county, but is today a
municipality in the county
of
Hordaland. All
counties are divided into
municipalities,
(sing. kommune, plur. kommunar/kommuner), the ones with
incorporated cities being called city municipalities (sing.
bykommune, plur. bykommunar/bykommuner). The county of
Oslo is equivalent to
the municipality of Oslo.
Each county has its own assembly (fylkesting)
whose representatives are elected every four years together with
representatives to the municipality councils. The counties handle
matters as high schools and local roads, and until recently
hospitals as well. This responsibility is now transferred to the
state, and there is a debate on the future of the county as an
administrative entity. Some people, and parties, such as the
Conservative Party of Norway, call for the abolishment of the
counties once and for all, while others, like the
Norwegian
Labour Party merely want to merge some of them into larger
regions.
Pakistan
The administrative unit in
Pakistan
immediately next to the state is called a Zilla in Urdu and
district (never County) in English.
Philippines
In the Philippines during the Spanish colonial
times, when the descendants of the Pre-conquest nobles were
utilized by Spain to indirectly rule the natives, the equivalent of
a county was the town or
pueblo, and also
municipality. The pueblos
were composed of
Barangays. Each
pueblo was ruled by the
Gobernadorcillo
who was elected by the
Principalía
of the pueblo. In turn, each
barangay (equivalent to a
barony) was ruled by a
Cabeza
de Barangay (a hereditary office and title previously referred
before the Spanish conquest as
datu).
Poland
A second-level administrative division in
Poland is called a
powiat. (This is a subdivision of a
voivodeship
and is further subdivided into
gminas.) The term is often
translated into English as county (or sometimes district). For more
details see
powiat and
List of counties in Poland.
Romania
The administrative subdivisions of
Romania are called
judeţ (plural: judeţe), name derived from jude, a mayor and judge
of a city (akin to English judge; both are derived from Latin)
Presently Romania is subdivided into 41 counties and the capital,
Bucharest
having a separate status. See the list of
counties
of Romania.
Russia
Russian subdivisions is usually called municipality
rayon (
Russian:
Муниципальный район) or okrug (
Russian:
округ). Rayons are named as Ulus(Улус) in
Sakha
Republic.
Rayon, Okrug and
Ulus may be
translated into English as county or district.
Serbia and Montenegro
Subdivisions of Serbia (
okrug) are sometimes translated as
counties, though more often as districts. See
District#Serbia and Montenegro
Korea (South)
In
Korea(both North and
South), county(
Korean:
군-郡). Gun(군) can be the same concept of county in English. County
in
South
Korea is the substructure of province(Doh) and should have more
than 50,000 population. But actually, in case of South Korea, a gun
consists of one town (eup) and five to ten myeon. It means eup and
myeon is sub-feature of counties.
Sweden
The Swedish division into
counties
was established in 1634, and was based on an earlier division into
Provinces.
Sweden is
today divided into 21 counties, and each county is further divided
into
municipalities.
At the county level there is a
county administrative board led by a governor appointed by the
central
government
of Sweden, as well as an elected
county council that handles a separate set of issues, notably
hospitals and
public
transportation.
The Swedish term used is
län, which
literally means "
fief."
United Kingdom
The
United
Kingdom is divided into a number of
metropolitan and non-metropolitan counties. There are also
ceremonial counties which group small non-metropolitan counties
into geographic areas broadly based on the
historic counties of England. The metropolitan and
non-metropolitan counties had replaced in 1974 a system of
administrative counties and
county
boroughs which were introduced in 1889.
Most non-metropolitan counties in England are run
by
county
councils and divided into
non-metropolitan
districts, each with its own council. Local authorities in the
UK are usually responsible for running education, emergency
services, planning, transport, social services, and a number of
other functions.
In
England, in the
Anglo-Saxon
period, Shires were established as areas used for the raising of
taxes, and usually had a
fortified town at their centre. These became known as the shire
town or later the
county town.
In most cases, the shires were named after their shire town (for
example Bedfordshire) however exceptions to this rule exist, such
as
Wiltshire. In
several other cases, such as
Devon, the shire has
a county town different from that which it is named after. The name
'county' was introduced by the
Normans, and was
derived from a Norman term for an area administered by a
Count (lord). These
Norman 'counties' were geographically based upon the Saxon shires,
and kept their Saxon names. Several traditional counties, including
Essex,
Sussex and
Kent, predate
the unification of England by
Alfred the
Great, and originally existed as independent kingdoms.
The thirteen
historic counties of Wales were fixed by Statute in 1539
(although counties such as
Pembrokeshire
date from 1138) and most of those of Scotland are of at least this
age.
The county boundaries of England have changed
over time. In the
mediæval
period, a number of important cities were granted the status of
counties in their own right, such as
London,
Bristol and
Coventry,
and numerous small
exclaves such as
Islandshire
were created. The next major change occurred in 1844, when many of
these exclaves were re-merged with their surrounding counties (for
example Coventry was re-merged with
Warwickshire).
In 1965 and 1974 a major re-organisation of local
government created several new administrative counties such as
Hereford
and Worcester and also created several new
metropolitan
counties which served large urban areas as a single
administrative unit. Modern local government in
Scotland,
Wales, Northern
Ireland and a large part of England is based on the concept of
smaller unitary authorities, a system similar to that proposed for
most of Britain in the 1960s.
United States
The term county is used in 48 of the 50
states of the
United
States for a tier of organization immediately below the
statewide tier and above (where created) the municipal or
civil
township tier.
Louisiana has
entities similar to counties but calls them
parishes.
Alaska is divided
into
boroughs, which typically provide fewer local services than do
most U.S. counties, as the state government furnishes many services
directly. Some of Alaska's boroughs have merged geographical
boundaries and administrative functions with their principal (and
sometimes only) cities; these are known as unified city-boroughs
and result in some of Alaska's cities ranking among the
geographically largest "cities" in the world. Nevertheless, Alaska
considers such entities to be boroughs, not cities. Alaska is also
unique in that more than half the geographic area of the state is
in the "
Unorganized
Borough", a legal entity in which the state also functions as
the local government.
In two states and parts of a third, county
government as such has been abolished, and county refers to
geographic regions or districts. In
Connecticut,
Rhode
Island and parts of
Massachusetts
counties exist only to designate boundaries for such state-level
functions as park districts (Connecticut) or judicial offices
(Massachusetts). In states where county government is weak or
nonexistent (eg,
New
Hampshire),
town
government may provide some or all of the local government
services.
Each county has a
county seat
(a center of county administration), usually in an incorporated
municipality.
Independent
cities and census districts are termed county equivalents when
they function as the first jurisdiction below state level but are
not part of any county.
References
counties in Bulgarian: Окръг
counties in Danish: Amt
counties in German: Grafschaft
counties in Spanish: Condado
counties in Esperanto: County
counties in Persian: شهرستان
counties in French: Comté
counties in Croatian: Grofovija
counties in Indonesian: County
counties in Icelandic: Sýsla
counties in Italian: Contea
counties in Latin: comitatus
counties in Hungarian: Megye
counties in Dutch: County
counties in Japanese: 郡
counties in Norwegian: Fylke
counties in Occitan (post 1500): comtat
counties in Polish: Hrabstwo
counties in Portuguese: Condado
counties in Russian: County
counties in Simple English: County
counties in Finnish: Lääni
counties in Swedish: Län
counties in Tok Pisin: kaunti
counties in Chinese: 县