The citation given in the current Wikipedia article is not particularly authoritative, thereby transgressing Wikipedia's own rule regarding verifyiability. If however they used this page, they would have an authoritative source for the name "ceremonial county", even if they themselves invented the description. This tells me that even though the term "ceremonial county" does not carry any legal weight as per an Act of Parliament or a legal judgement, people know what it means by "habit and repute".Steven wrote: ↑Tue Oct 26, 2021 22:49I suggest that you go and read the actual Lieutenancies Act 1997, where the legal term is "County for the purposes of this Act" and so they only exist within the purposes of said Act. Nowhere in the Act does the phrase "ceremonial county" occur.Vierwielen wrote: ↑Tue Oct 26, 2021 22:25Primary destinations are arranged by Ceremonial County in this document (Annex A). This document is a .gov.uk file, not a Wikipedia file.Steven wrote: ↑Tue Oct 26, 2021 22:06
Of course, there actually is no such thing as a "ceremonial county" - it's a Wikipedia invention. What there are are "Counties for the Purposes of Lieutenancy", which are intended solely for that purpose, which are combinations of Administrative Counties which may or may not have a county council. They also change boundaries regularly, and generally aren't where people think they are - for example, Yorkshire still doesn't exist with this idea; which is clearly insane. The former Metropolitan Counties which have been out of any functional existence now for nearly three times longer than they ever existed are also Counties for the Purposes of Lieutenancy; which is again completely insane.
In addition, the document quoted was created in 2012, long after the first use on Wikipedia in 2004, hence the assertion that the term first appeared on Wikipedia is intact; and it is not the legal or correct name for them.
Missing County sign
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Re: Missing County sign
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Re: Missing County sign
Please don't start to accuse me of that sort of thing, you're better than that. I was thinking of public bodies like the Boundary Commission for England, the DLUHC, or even Birmingham City Council or the other examples I actually gave in the post!Chris Bertram wrote: ↑Wed Oct 27, 2021 14:32 "Former" counties don't usually have Lord Lieutenants. Please don't start to believe that what is in the papers is the truth, you're better than that.
So, if Lieutenancy areas are the be-all and end-all, and "former" counties don't have Lord Lieutenants, let's discuss the Lord Lieutenant of Roxburgh, Ettrick and Lauderdale should we? Or maybe the Lord Lieutenant of Berwickshire?
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Re: Missing County sign
As with many matters, viewers in Scotland have their own programmes. As do those in Wales and Northern Ireland.Steven wrote: ↑Thu Oct 28, 2021 09:08Please don't start to accuse me of that sort of thing, you're better than that. I was thinking of public bodies like the Boundary Commission for England, the DLUHC, or even Birmingham City Council or the other examples I actually gave in the post!Chris Bertram wrote: ↑Wed Oct 27, 2021 14:32 "Former" counties don't usually have Lord Lieutenants. Please don't start to believe that what is in the papers is the truth, you're better than that.
So, if Lieutenancy areas are the be-all and end-all, and "former" counties don't have Lord Lieutenants, let's discuss the Lord Lieutenant of Roxburgh, Ettrick and Lauderdale should we? Or maybe the Lord Lieutenant of Berwickshire?
But more seriously, UK local governance, as you yourself have often noted, is full of contradictions, and what is a "former" county in one sense may well be a real county in another. It's not neat and tidy, and if it were ever made so, someone would mess it up again in due course.
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Re: Missing County sign
Indeed, which is why using administrative boundaries as a geographical frame of reference just doesn't work; as you'll regularly find people insisting on using one methodology (or regularly two or three picking and choosing from each) in England, another in Scotland, a third in Wales; though at least most people agree regarding Ireland.Chris Bertram wrote: ↑Thu Oct 28, 2021 13:16 But more seriously, UK local governance, as you yourself have often noted, is full of contradictions, and what is a "former" county in one sense may well be a real county in another. It's not neat and tidy, and if it were ever made so, someone would mess it up again in due course.
Now, if only we had a single set of static geographical reference areas that could be understood by all, all over Great Britain and Ireland. Especially if they'd been mostly static for several hundred years and completely static for getting on for 200 years. And then we could completely decouple administrative boundaries from anything else, and actually run local government in sensible areas...
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Re: Missing County sign
I know what you mean, but the reason they have remained static is that they no longer have any functional significance, so there's no reason to adjust them. In the days when they did have significance, they were adjusted as often as modern boundaries are.Steven wrote: ↑Thu Oct 28, 2021 16:57 Now, if only we had a single set of static geographical reference areas that could be understood by all, all over Great Britain and Ireland. Especially if they'd been mostly static for several hundred years and completely static for getting on for 200 years. And then we could completely decouple administrative boundaries from anything else, and actually run local government in sensible areas...
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