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  1. e. The historic counties of Wales ( Welsh: siroedd hynafol) were the thirteen sub-divisions used in Wales from either 1282 and 1535, up to their abolishment in 1974, being replaced by eight counties. They were used for various functions for several hundred years, [1] but for administrative purposes have been superseded by contemporary sub ...

  2. List of counties of England and Wales in 1964 by highest point.In 1964 they are more or less the ancient counties, with the addition of the County of London and a number of historic divisions in place as administrative counties: Cambridgeshire into the Isle of Ely and Cambridgeshire; Hampshire into the Isle of Wight and Hampshire; Lincolnshire into the Parts of Holland, Kesteven and Lindsey ...

  3. Historic counties of England. 0 references. topic's main category. ... Wikipedia (27 entries) astwiki Condaos históricos d'Inglaterra; bgwiki Историческо ...

  4. Cheshire, including Halton and Warrington. City of London. Cornwall, including Isles of Scilly. Cumbria. Chester. Derbyshire, including Derby. Devon, including Plymouth and Torbay. Dorset, including Bournemouth and Poole. County Durham, including Darlington, Hartlepool, and Stockton-on-Tees north of the River Tees.

  5. Map of the Historic Counties. This is a large-scale map of the historic counties of the United Kingdom. This map is based on Definition A of the Historic Counties Standard whereby detached parts of counties are associated with their host county. It uses county border data from the Historic County Borders Project. A printable A3-size map is also ...

  6. Historic and Administrative counties have been diverging since as long ago as 1888 (creation of the County of London, various boundary changes). ABC's views are entirely consistent. They adhere to the historic Counties - not administrative areas, whether created in the 19th century or in 1974.

  7. Administrative counties were subnational divisions of England used for local government from 1889 to 1974. They were created by the Local Government Act 1888, which established an elected county council for each area. Some geographically large historic counties were divided into several administrative counties, each with its own county council.