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Province

A province is almost always an administrative division within a country or state. The term derives from the ancient Roman provincia, which was the major territorial and administrative unit of the Roman Empire's territorial possessions outside Italy. The term province has since been adopted by many countries. In some countries with no actual provinces, "the provinces" is a metaphorical term meaning "outside the capital city".

While some provinces were produced artificially by colonial powers, others were formed around local groups with their own ethnic identities. Many have their own powers independent of central or federal authority, especially in Canada and Pakistan. In other countries, like China or France, provinces are the creation of central government, with very little autonomy.

Etymology

The English word province is attested since about 1330 and derives from the 13th-century Old French province, which itself comes from the Latin word provincia, which referred to the sphere of authority of a magistrate, in particular, to a foreign territory.

A popular etymology is from Latin pro- ("on behalf of") and vincere ("to triumph" or "to take control of"). Thus a "province" would be a territory or function that a Roman magistrate held control of on behalf of his government. In fact, the word province is an ancient term from public law, which means: "office belonging to a magistrate". This agrees with the Latin term's earlier usage as a generic term for a jurisdiction under Roman law.

History and culture

 

In France, the expression en province still means "outside the Paris region". Equivalent expressions are used in Peru (en provincias, "outside the city of Lima"), Mexico (la provincia, "lands outside Mexico City"), Romania (în provincie, "outside the Bucharest region"), Poland (prowincjonalny, "provincial"), Bulgaria (в провинцията, v provincijata, "in the provinces" and провинциален, provincialen, "provincial") and the Philippines (taga-probinsiya, "from outside Metro Manila", sa probinsiya, "in the provinces", or "in the countryside"). Similarly, in Australia "provincial" refers to parts of a state outside of the state capital.

Before the French Revolution, France comprised a variety of jurisdictions (built around the early Capetian royal demesne), some being considered "provinces", though the term was also used colloquially for territories as small as a manor (châtellenie). Most commonly referred to as "provinces", however, were the Grands Gouvernements, generally former medieval feudal principalities, or agglomerations of such. Today the expression en province is regularly replaced in the media by the more politically correct en région, région now being the term officially used for the secondary level of government.

In Italy, in provincia generally means "outside the biggest regional capitals" (like Rome, Milan, Naples, etc.).

For the United Kingdom use of the word is often pejorative, assuming a stereotype of the denizens of the provinces to be less culturally aware than those in the capital.[1]

The historic European provinces—built up of many small regions, called pays by the French and "cantons" by the Swiss, each with a local cultural identity and focused upon a market town—have been depicted by Fernand Braudel as the optimum-size political unit in pre-industrial Early Modern Europe. He asks, "Was the province not its inhabitants' true 'fatherland'?"[2] Even centrally-organized France, an early nation-state, could collapse into autonomous provincial worlds under pressure, as during the sustained crisis of the French Wars of Religion (1562–98).

The British colonies in North America were often named provinces. Most (but not all) of the Thirteen Colonies that eventually formed the United States were called provinces.[3] All declared themselves "states" when they became independent. The Connecticut Colony, the Delaware Colony, Rhode Island and the Colony of Virginia never used the title "province". The British colonies further north, which remained loyal to Britain and later confederated to form the original Canada, retained the title of "province" and are still known as such to the present day.

To 19th- and 20th-century historians, in Europe, centralized government was a sign of modernity and political maturity. In the late 20th century, as the European Union drew nation-states closer together, centripetal forces seemed simultaneously to move countries toward more flexible systems of more localized, provincial governing entities under the overall European Union umbrella. Spain after Francisco Franco has been a "State of Autonomies", formally unitary but in fact functioning as a federation of Autonomous Communities, each exercising different powers. (See Politics of Spain.)

While Serbia, the rump of former Yugoslavia, fought the separatists in the province of Kosovo, the United Kingdom, under the political principle of "devolution", produced (1998) local parliaments in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. In ancient India, unlike the Mauryas, the Gupta Empire gave local areas a great deal of independence and divided the empire into 26 large provinces, styled as Bhukti, Pradesha and Bhoga.

Legal aspects

In many federations and confederations, the province or state is not clearly subordinate to the national or central government. Rather, it is considered to be sovereign in regard to its particular set of constitutional functions. The central- and provincial-government functions, or areas of jurisdiction, are identified in a constitution. Those that are not specifically identified are called "residual powers". In a decentralized federal system (such as the United States and Australia) these residual powers lie at the provincial or state level, whereas in a centralized federal system (such as Canada) they are retained at the federal level.

Some of the enumerated powers can be quite important. For example, Canadian provinces are sovereign in regard to such important matters as property, civil rights, education, social welfare and medical services. The growth of the modern welfare state has resulted in these functions, assigned to the provinces, becoming more important compared to those assigned to the federal government and thus provincial governments have become more important than the Fathers of Confederation originally intended.[citation needed]

Canada's status as a federation of provinces under the Dominion of the British Empire rather than an independent country also had certain legal implications. Provinces could appeal court rulings over the heads of the Supreme Court of Canada to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in London. As well, provinces could bypass the Supreme Court and go directly to London from any Provincial Court. The Canadian Supreme Court tended to support the view that the Canadian Constitution was intended to create a powerful central government, but the Privy Council in London held the distinctly opposite view that the Constitution provided for stronger provincial powers. This provided an opportunity for forum shopping for provinces who opposed federal laws. Until appeals from Canada to the Privy Council were abolished in 1949, in legal disputes the provincial governments tended to win powers at the expense of the federal government.

In addition, while the Canadian federal government has unlimited taxing power while province governments are restricted to imposing direct taxes, the Canadian government introduced an income tax during World War I, and since it is a direct tax it also became a major revenue generator for provinces. In most provinces, the federal government now collects income tax for both levels of government and transfers to the provincial governments whatever surcharge they ask for. The sales tax also become a major revenue generator for provinces, so in 1991 the Canadian government introduced a Goods and Services Tax (GST) to share the revenues, which proved unpopular both with provincial governments and taxpayers. The Canadian government has tried to harmonize the two levels of sales taxes, but three provinces continue to impose a separate sales tax (British Columbia after harmonizing it, and shortly thereafter de-harmonizing it after it was struck down by a referendum), while the province of Alberta still does not impose a provincial sales tax.

The evolution of federations has created an inevitable tug-of-war between concepts of federal supremacy versus states' and provinces' rights. The historic division of responsibility in federal constitutions is inevitably subject to multiple overlaps. For example, when central governments, responsible for foreign policy, enter into international agreements in areas where the state or province is sovereign, such as the environment or health standards, agreements made at the national level can create jurisdictional overlap and conflicting laws. This overlap creates the potential for internal disputes that lead to constitutional amendments and judicial decisions that alter the balance of powers.

Though foreign affairs do not usually fall under a province's or a federal state's competency, some states allow them to legally conduct international relations on their own in matters of their constitutional prerogative and essential interest. Sub-national authorities have a growing interest in paradiplomacy, be it performed under a legal framework or as a trend informally admitted as legitimate by the central authorities.

In unitary states such as France and China, provinces are subordinate to the national, central government. In theory, the central government can create or abolish provinces within its jurisdiction. On the other hand, although Canada is now considered a federal state[4] and not a confederation, in practice it is among the world's more decentralized federations.[5] Canadian Confederation and the Constitution Act, 1867 conferred considerable power on the provincial governments which they often use to pursue their own goals independently of the federal government.

In Canada, local governments have been called "creatures of the province" because the authority of a local government derives solely from the provincial government. Provinces can create, merge, and dissolve local governments without the consent of the federal government or the people in the affected locality.[6] Alberta in particular dissolved and merged hundreds of local governments during the 1940s and 1950s as a consequence of the Great Depression. Other provinces have arbitrarily merged and annexed independent suburbs to major Canadian cities such as Toronto or Montreal without the approval of local voters.

Current provinces

Not all first-level political entities are termed "provinces." In Arab countries, the first administrative level of government—called a muhafazah—is usually translated as a "governorate." In Poland, the equivalent of "province" is "województwo," sometimes rendered in English as "voivodeship."[7]

Historically, New Zealand was divided into provinces, each with its own Superintendent and Provincial Council, and with considerable responsibilities conferred on them. However, the colony (as it then was) never developed into a federation; instead, the provinces were abolished in 1876. The old provincial boundaries continue to be used to determine the application of certain public holidays. Over the years, when the central Government has created special-purpose agencies at a sub-national level, these have often tended to follow or approximate the old provincial boundaries. Current examples include the 16 Regions into which New Zealand is divided, and also the 21 District Health Boards. Sometimes the term the provinces is used to refer collectively to rural and regional parts of New Zealand, that is, those parts of the country lying outside some or all of the "main centres"—Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch, Hamilton and Dunedin.

Modern provinces

 
A map of the Pirkanmaa, the regional province (maakunta) in Finland, with the different colored sub-regions.

In many countries, a province is a relatively small non-constituent level of sub-national government, such as a county in the United Kingdom. In China, a province is a sub-national region within a unitary state; this means that a province can be created or abolished by the national people's congress.

In some nations, a province (or its equivalent) is a first-level administrative unit of sub-national government—as in the Netherlands—and a large constituent autonomous area, as in Argentina, Canada, South Africa, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It can also be a constituent element of a federation, confederation, or republic. For example, in the United States, no state may secede from the federal Union without the permission of the federal government.

In other nations—such as Belgium, Chile, Italy, Peru, the Philippines, and Spain—a province is a second-level administrative sub-division of a region (which is the first-order administrative sub-division of the nation). Italian provinces are mainly named after their principal town and comprise several administrative sub-divisions called comuni (communes). In Chile, they are referred to as comunas. Chile has 15 regions, subdivided into 53 provinces, of which each is run by a governor appointed by the president. Italy has 20 regions, subdivided into 14 metropolitan cities and 96 provinces. Peru has 25 regions, subdivided into 194 provinces. Spain has 17 autonomous communities and 2 autonomous cities, subdivided into 50 provinces.

The island of Ireland is divided into four historic provinces (see Provinces of Ireland), each of which is sub-divided into counties. These provinces are Connacht (in the west), Leinster (in the east), Munster (in the south) and, Ulster (in the north). Nowadays these provinces have little or no administrative function, though they do have sporting significance.

From the 19th century, the Portuguese colonies were considered overseas provinces of Portugal.

Similarly, some overseas parts of the British Empire bore the colonial title of "province" (in a more Roman sense), such as the Province of Canada and the Province of South Australia (the latter, to distinguish it from the penal "colonies" elsewhere in Australia). Likewise, prior to the American Revolution, most of the original Thirteen Colonies in British America were provinces as well, such as the Province of Georgia and the Province of New Hampshire.

Canada

The constituent entities of Canada are known as provinces. Prior to confederation, the term province was used in reference to several British colonies situated in Canada; such as the colonial Province of Quebec. In 1791, Quebec split into two separate colonies, the provinces of Lower Canada, and Upper Canada. The two colonies were later merged in 1841 to form the Province of Canada. From its separation from Nova Scotia in the 18th century, New Brunswick was known as His/Her Majesty's Province of New Brunswick. After Canadian confederation in 1867, the term provinces continued to be used, in reference to the sub-national governments of Canada.

Because Canada is the second-largest country in the world by area, but has only 10 provinces, most Canadian provinces are very large—six of its ten provinces are larger than any country in Europe except Russia, and its largest province Quebec—1,542,056 km2 (595,391 sq mi)—is almost two and a half times as large as France—640,679 km2 (247,368 sq mi). Six provinces, including five of the oldest Canadian provinces—Alberta, Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island—have "counties" as administrative sub-divisions. The actual local government form can vary widely. In New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, and in 9 of the 18 counties of Nova Scotia, county government has been abolished and has been superseded by another form of local government. New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island also have parishes within counties. Since the Canadian Constitution assigns local government to provincial jurisdiction, the various provinces can create, dissolve, and reorganize local governments freely and they have been described as "creatures of the province".

The Western provinces have more varied types of administrative sub-divisions than the Eastern provinces. The province of British Columbia has "regional districts" which function as county-equivalents. Manitoba and Saskatchewan are divided into rural municipalities.

Alberta is also divided into counties, albeit they are officially classified as "municipal districts" by the province, though in regular everyday parlance these entities are referred to as a "county". The province of Alberta has some unique local governance schemes formed in response to local conditions. For instance, Sherwood Park is an unincorporated "urban service area" of 65,465 within Strathcona County, which has most of the oil refining capacity in Western Canada; Fort McMurray was once a city but dissolved itself and became an "urban service area" of 70,964 people within the Regional Municipality (R.M.) of Wood Buffalo, which has several multibillion-dollar oil sands plants; and Lloydminster, a city of 31,483 which sits directly astride the provincial border between Alberta and Saskatchewan. Unlike most such cases, Lloydminster is not a pair of twin cities on opposite sides of a border, but is actually incorporated by both provinces as a single city with a single municipal administration. The residents objected to the federal government splitting the city in two when it created the two provinces, so the two provinces reunified it by declaring it to be a single city in two provinces, thereby bypassing the limitations of federal boundaries.

Pakistan

Pakistan is administratively divided into four provinces, which are:

It also has two autonomous territories:

Russia

The term "province" is sometimes used to refer to the historic governorates (guberniyas) of Russia. This terms also refers to the provinces (провинции), which were introduced as the subdivisions of the governorates in 1719 and existed until 1775. In modern parlance, the term is commonly used to refer to the oblasts and krais of Russia.

Polities translated

Country Local name(s) Language Number of entities
Provinces of Afghanistan wilayat Pashto, Dari 34
Provinces of Algeria wilaya Arabic 48
Provinces of Angola província Portuguese 18
Provinces of Argentina provincia Spanish 23
Provinces of Armenia marz Armenian 11
Provinces of Belarus voblast Belarusian 7
Provinces of Belgium (Flemish Region) provincie Dutch 5
Provinces of Belgium (Walloon Region) province French 5
Provinces of Bolivia provincia Spanish 100
Provinces of Bulgaria oblast Bulgarian 28
Provinces of Burkina Faso province French 45
Provinces of Burundi province French 17
Provinces of Cambodia khaet (ខេត្ត) Khmer 24 + 1[8]
Provinces of Canada province English, French 10
Provinces of Chile provincia Spanish 54
Provinces of China shěng (省) Standard Chinese 23 + 35[9]
Provinces of Costa Rica provincia Spanish 7
Provinces of Cuba provincia Spanish 15
Provinces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo province French 25
Provinces of the Dominican Republic provincia Spanish 33
Provinces of Ecuador provincia Spanish 24
Provinces of Equatorial Guinea provincia Spanish 7
Provinces of Fiji yasana Fijian 14
Provinces of Finland läänit or län Finnish, Swedish 6
Provinces of Gabon province French 9
Provinces of Georgia mkhare (მხარე) Georgian, Abkhazian 12
Provinces of Greece επαρχία (eparchia) Greek 73
Provinces of Indonesia provinsi Indonesian 38
Provinces of Iran ostan Persian 31
Provinces of Ireland cúige Irish 4
Provinces of Italy provincia Italian 110
Provinces of Kazakhstan oblys (облыс) Kazakh 14
Provinces of Kenya province English 8
Provinces of Kyrgyzstan oblus (облус) Kyrgyz 7
Provinces of Laos khoueng (ແຂວງ) Lao 16
Provinces of Madagascar faritany Malagasy 6
Provinces of Mongolia aimag or aymag (Аймаг) Mongolian 21
Provinces of Mozambique província Portuguese 10
Provinces of Nepal pradesh or pranta (प्रदेश/प्रान्त) Nepali 7
Provinces of the Netherlands provincie Dutch 12
Provinces of North Korea do or to (도) Korean 10
Administrative divisions of Norway provins Norwegian 18
Provinces of Oman wilaya Arabic 62
Provinces of Pakistan sûba(صوبہ); plural: sûbé (صوبے) Urdu 7
Provinces of Panama provincia Spanish 9
Provinces of Papua New Guinea province English 19
Provinces of Peru provincia Spanish 195
Provinces of the Philippines lalawigan or probinsya, provincia, province Filipino, Spanish, English 82
Provinces of Poland województwa Polish 16
Provinces of Romania provincii Romanian 41
Provinces of Rwanda intara Kinyarwanda 5
Provinces of Saudi Arabia mintaqah Arabic 13
Provinces of Sierra Leone province English 4
Provinces of the Solomon Islands 9
Provinces of South Africa province English 9
Provinces of South Korea do or to (도/道) Korean 10
Provinces of Spain provincia Spanish 50
Provinces of Sri Lanka පළාත/palaatha,மாகாணம்/maahaanam & province Sinhala, Tamil, English 9
Provinces of Suriname provincie Dutch 10
Provinces of Tajikistan viloyat (вилоят), from Arabic wilaya Tajik 3
Provinces of Thailand changwat (จังหวัด) Thai 76 + 1[10]
Provinces of Tonga 5
Provinces of Turkey il Turkish 81
Provinces of Turkmenistan welayat (plural: welayatlar) from wilaya Turkmen 5
Provinces of Ukraine oblast Ukrainian 24 + 3[11]
Provinces of Uzbekistan viloyat (plural: viloyatlar) from Arabic wilaya 12
Provinces of Vanuatu 6
Provinces of Vietnam tỉnh Vietnamese 58
Provinces of Zambia province English 9
Provinces of Zimbabwe province English 8

Historic provinces

Ancient, medieval and feudal

Colonial and early modern

See also

References

  1. ^ . Lexico. Archived from the original on August 7, 2019. Retrieved August 7, 2019.
  2. ^ The Perspective of the World, 1984, p. 284.
  3. ^ "A chorographical map of the Province of New-York in North America, divided into counties, manors, patents and townships; exhibiting likewise all the private grants of land made and located in that Province". Library of Congress. Retrieved December 4, 2017.
  4. ^ . .parl.gc.ca. Archived from the original on April 5, 2011. Retrieved May 8, 2012.
  5. ^ . Pco-bcp.gc.ca. April 22, 1999. Archived from the original on March 15, 2012. Retrieved May 8, 2012.
  6. ^ "Municipalities as creatures of the provinces".
  7. ^ Also spelled "voivodship," "voievodship," "voievodeship".
  8. ^ 76 provinces + 1 special governed district (Phnom Penh). However, Cambodian usually presume Phnom Penh as another province for convenience.
  9. ^ The People's Republic of China (PRC) claims it has 23 provinces, one of them being Taiwan, which the PRC does not have control. The Republic of China (frequently referred to as "Taiwan" or ROC) claims all 35 provinces but it only controls all of Taiwan Province and several small islands of Fujian and Hainan Province.
  10. ^ 76 provinces + 1 special governed district (Bangkok). However, Thai people usually presume Bangkok as another province for convenience.
  11. ^ 24 oblasts, one autonomous republic, and two "cities with special status".

External links

province, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, provence, province, almost, always, administrative, division, within, country, state, term, derives, from, ancient, roman, provincia, which, major, territorial, administrative, unit, roman, empire, territo. For other uses see Province disambiguation Not to be confused with Provence A province is almost always an administrative division within a country or state The term derives from the ancient Roman provincia which was the major territorial and administrative unit of the Roman Empire s territorial possessions outside Italy The term province has since been adopted by many countries In some countries with no actual provinces the provinces is a metaphorical term meaning outside the capital city While some provinces were produced artificially by colonial powers others were formed around local groups with their own ethnic identities Many have their own powers independent of central or federal authority especially in Canada and Pakistan In other countries like China or France provinces are the creation of central government with very little autonomy Contents 1 Etymology 2 History and culture 3 Legal aspects 4 Current provinces 4 1 Modern provinces 4 2 Canada 4 3 Pakistan 4 4 Russia 4 5 Polities translated 5 Historic provinces 5 1 Ancient medieval and feudal 5 2 Colonial and early modern 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksEtymology EditThe English word province is attested since about 1330 and derives from the 13th century Old French province which itself comes from the Latin word provincia which referred to the sphere of authority of a magistrate in particular to a foreign territory A popular etymology is from Latin pro on behalf of and vincere to triumph or to take control of Thus a province would be a territory or function that a Roman magistrate held control of on behalf of his government In fact the word province is an ancient term from public law which means office belonging to a magistrate This agrees with the Latin term s earlier usage as a generic term for a jurisdiction under Roman law History and culture Edit The Roman Empire and its administrative divisions c 395 In France the expression en province still means outside the Paris region Equivalent expressions are used in Peru en provincias outside the city of Lima Mexico la provincia lands outside Mexico City Romania in provincie outside the Bucharest region Poland prowincjonalny provincial Bulgaria v provinciyata v provincijata in the provinces and provincialen provincialen provincial and the Philippines taga probinsiya from outside Metro Manila sa probinsiya in the provinces or in the countryside Similarly in Australia provincial refers to parts of a state outside of the state capital Before the French Revolution France comprised a variety of jurisdictions built around the early Capetian royal demesne some being considered provinces though the term was also used colloquially for territories as small as a manor chatellenie Most commonly referred to as provinces however were the Grands Gouvernements generally former medieval feudal principalities or agglomerations of such Today the expression en province is regularly replaced in the media by the more politically correct en region region now being the term officially used for the secondary level of government In Italy in provincia generally means outside the biggest regional capitals like Rome Milan Naples etc For the United Kingdom use of the word is often pejorative assuming a stereotype of the denizens of the provinces to be less culturally aware than those in the capital 1 The historic European provinces built up of many small regions called pays by the French and cantons by the Swiss each with a local cultural identity and focused upon a market town have been depicted by Fernand Braudel as the optimum size political unit in pre industrial Early Modern Europe He asks Was the province not its inhabitants true fatherland 2 Even centrally organized France an early nation state could collapse into autonomous provincial worlds under pressure as during the sustained crisis of the French Wars of Religion 1562 98 The British colonies in North America were often named provinces Most but not all of the Thirteen Colonies that eventually formed the United States were called provinces 3 All declared themselves states when they became independent The Connecticut Colony the Delaware Colony Rhode Island and the Colony of Virginia never used the title province The British colonies further north which remained loyal to Britain and later confederated to form the original Canada retained the title of province and are still known as such to the present day To 19th and 20th century historians in Europe centralized government was a sign of modernity and political maturity In the late 20th century as the European Union drew nation states closer together centripetal forces seemed simultaneously to move countries toward more flexible systems of more localized provincial governing entities under the overall European Union umbrella Spain after Francisco Franco has been a State of Autonomies formally unitary but in fact functioning as a federation of Autonomous Communities each exercising different powers See Politics of Spain While Serbia the rump of former Yugoslavia fought the separatists in the province of Kosovo the United Kingdom under the political principle of devolution produced 1998 local parliaments in Scotland Wales and Northern Ireland In ancient India unlike the Mauryas the Gupta Empire gave local areas a great deal of independence and divided the empire into 26 large provinces styled as Bhukti Pradesha and Bhoga Legal aspects EditIn many federations and confederations the province or state is not clearly subordinate to the national or central government Rather it is considered to be sovereign in regard to its particular set of constitutional functions The central and provincial government functions or areas of jurisdiction are identified in a constitution Those that are not specifically identified are called residual powers In a decentralized federal system such as the United States and Australia these residual powers lie at the provincial or state level whereas in a centralized federal system such as Canada they are retained at the federal level Some of the enumerated powers can be quite important For example Canadian provinces are sovereign in regard to such important matters as property civil rights education social welfare and medical services The growth of the modern welfare state has resulted in these functions assigned to the provinces becoming more important compared to those assigned to the federal government and thus provincial governments have become more important than the Fathers of Confederation originally intended citation needed Canada s status as a federation of provinces under the Dominion of the British Empire rather than an independent country also had certain legal implications Provinces could appeal court rulings over the heads of the Supreme Court of Canada to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in London As well provinces could bypass the Supreme Court and go directly to London from any Provincial Court The Canadian Supreme Court tended to support the view that the Canadian Constitution was intended to create a powerful central government but the Privy Council in London held the distinctly opposite view that the Constitution provided for stronger provincial powers This provided an opportunity for forum shopping for provinces who opposed federal laws Until appeals from Canada to the Privy Council were abolished in 1949 in legal disputes the provincial governments tended to win powers at the expense of the federal government In addition while the Canadian federal government has unlimited taxing power while province governments are restricted to imposing direct taxes the Canadian government introduced an income tax during World War I and since it is a direct tax it also became a major revenue generator for provinces In most provinces the federal government now collects income tax for both levels of government and transfers to the provincial governments whatever surcharge they ask for The sales tax also become a major revenue generator for provinces so in 1991 the Canadian government introduced a Goods and Services Tax GST to share the revenues which proved unpopular both with provincial governments and taxpayers The Canadian government has tried to harmonize the two levels of sales taxes but three provinces continue to impose a separate sales tax British Columbia after harmonizing it and shortly thereafter de harmonizing it after it was struck down by a referendum while the province of Alberta still does not impose a provincial sales tax The evolution of federations has created an inevitable tug of war between concepts of federal supremacy versus states and provinces rights The historic division of responsibility in federal constitutions is inevitably subject to multiple overlaps For example when central governments responsible for foreign policy enter into international agreements in areas where the state or province is sovereign such as the environment or health standards agreements made at the national level can create jurisdictional overlap and conflicting laws This overlap creates the potential for internal disputes that lead to constitutional amendments and judicial decisions that alter the balance of powers Though foreign affairs do not usually fall under a province s or a federal state s competency some states allow them to legally conduct international relations on their own in matters of their constitutional prerogative and essential interest Sub national authorities have a growing interest in paradiplomacy be it performed under a legal framework or as a trend informally admitted as legitimate by the central authorities In unitary states such as France and China provinces are subordinate to the national central government In theory the central government can create or abolish provinces within its jurisdiction On the other hand although Canada is now considered a federal state 4 and not a confederation in practice it is among the world s more decentralized federations 5 Canadian Confederation and the Constitution Act 1867 conferred considerable power on the provincial governments which they often use to pursue their own goals independently of the federal government In Canada local governments have been called creatures of the province because the authority of a local government derives solely from the provincial government Provinces can create merge and dissolve local governments without the consent of the federal government or the people in the affected locality 6 Alberta in particular dissolved and merged hundreds of local governments during the 1940s and 1950s as a consequence of the Great Depression Other provinces have arbitrarily merged and annexed independent suburbs to major Canadian cities such as Toronto or Montreal without the approval of local voters Current provinces EditSee also Administrative divisions Not all first level political entities are termed provinces In Arab countries the first administrative level of government called a muhafazah is usually translated as a governorate In Poland the equivalent of province is wojewodztwo sometimes rendered in English as voivodeship 7 Historically New Zealand was divided into provinces each with its own Superintendent and Provincial Council and with considerable responsibilities conferred on them However the colony as it then was never developed into a federation instead the provinces were abolished in 1876 The old provincial boundaries continue to be used to determine the application of certain public holidays Over the years when the central Government has created special purpose agencies at a sub national level these have often tended to follow or approximate the old provincial boundaries Current examples include the 16 Regions into which New Zealand is divided and also the 21 District Health Boards Sometimes the term the provinces is used to refer collectively to rural and regional parts of New Zealand that is those parts of the country lying outside some or all of the main centres Auckland Wellington Christchurch Hamilton and Dunedin Modern provinces Edit A map of the Pirkanmaa the regional province maakunta in Finland with the different colored sub regions In many countries a province is a relatively small non constituent level of sub national government such as a county in the United Kingdom In China a province is a sub national region within a unitary state this means that a province can be created or abolished by the national people s congress In some nations a province or its equivalent is a first level administrative unit of sub national government as in the Netherlands and a large constituent autonomous area as in Argentina Canada South Africa and the Democratic Republic of the Congo It can also be a constituent element of a federation confederation or republic For example in the United States no state may secede from the federal Union without the permission of the federal government In other nations such as Belgium Chile Italy Peru the Philippines and Spain a province is a second level administrative sub division of a region which is the first order administrative sub division of the nation Italian provinces are mainly named after their principal town and comprise several administrative sub divisions called comuni communes In Chile they are referred to as comunas Chile has 15 regions subdivided into 53 provinces of which each is run by a governor appointed by the president Italy has 20 regions subdivided into 14 metropolitan cities and 96 provinces Peru has 25 regions subdivided into 194 provinces Spain has 17 autonomous communities and 2 autonomous cities subdivided into 50 provinces The island of Ireland is divided into four historic provinces see Provinces of Ireland each of which is sub divided into counties These provinces are Connacht in the west Leinster in the east Munster in the south and Ulster in the north Nowadays these provinces have little or no administrative function though they do have sporting significance From the 19th century the Portuguese colonies were considered overseas provinces of Portugal Similarly some overseas parts of the British Empire bore the colonial title of province in a more Roman sense such as the Province of Canada and the Province of South Australia the latter to distinguish it from the penal colonies elsewhere in Australia Likewise prior to the American Revolution most of the original Thirteen Colonies in British America were provinces as well such as the Province of Georgia and the Province of New Hampshire Canada Edit The constituent entities of Canada are known as provinces Prior to confederation the term province was used in reference to several British colonies situated in Canada such as the colonial Province of Quebec In 1791 Quebec split into two separate colonies the provinces of Lower Canada and Upper Canada The two colonies were later merged in 1841 to form the Province of Canada From its separation from Nova Scotia in the 18th century New Brunswick was known as His Her Majesty s Province of New Brunswick After Canadian confederation in 1867 the term provinces continued to be used in reference to the sub national governments of Canada Because Canada is the second largest country in the world by area but has only 10 provinces most Canadian provinces are very large six of its ten provinces are larger than any country in Europe except Russia and its largest province Quebec 1 542 056 km2 595 391 sq mi is almost two and a half times as large as France 640 679 km2 247 368 sq mi Six provinces including five of the oldest Canadian provinces Alberta Ontario Quebec New Brunswick Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island have counties as administrative sub divisions The actual local government form can vary widely In New Brunswick Prince Edward Island and in 9 of the 18 counties of Nova Scotia county government has been abolished and has been superseded by another form of local government New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island also have parishes within counties Since the Canadian Constitution assigns local government to provincial jurisdiction the various provinces can create dissolve and reorganize local governments freely and they have been described as creatures of the province The Western provinces have more varied types of administrative sub divisions than the Eastern provinces The province of British Columbia has regional districts which function as county equivalents Manitoba and Saskatchewan are divided into rural municipalities Alberta is also divided into counties albeit they are officially classified as municipal districts by the province though in regular everyday parlance these entities are referred to as a county The province of Alberta has some unique local governance schemes formed in response to local conditions For instance Sherwood Park is an unincorporated urban service area of 65 465 within Strathcona County which has most of the oil refining capacity in Western Canada Fort McMurray was once a city but dissolved itself and became an urban service area of 70 964 people within the Regional Municipality R M of Wood Buffalo which has several multibillion dollar oil sands plants and Lloydminster a city of 31 483 which sits directly astride the provincial border between Alberta and Saskatchewan Unlike most such cases Lloydminster is not a pair of twin cities on opposite sides of a border but is actually incorporated by both provinces as a single city with a single municipal administration The residents objected to the federal government splitting the city in two when it created the two provinces so the two provinces reunified it by declaring it to be a single city in two provinces thereby bypassing the limitations of federal boundaries Pakistan Edit Main article Provinces of Pakistan Pakistan is administratively divided into four provinces which are Punjab Sindh Khyber Pakhtunkhwa BalochistanIt also has two autonomous territories Azad Jammu and Kashmir Gilgit BaltistanRussia Edit The term province is sometimes used to refer to the historic governorates guberniyas of Russia This terms also refers to the provinces provincii which were introduced as the subdivisions of the governorates in 1719 and existed until 1775 In modern parlance the term is commonly used to refer to the oblasts and krais of Russia Polities translated Edit Country Local name s Language Number of entitiesProvinces of Afghanistan wilayat Pashto Dari 34Provinces of Algeria wilaya Arabic 48Provinces of Angola provincia Portuguese 18Provinces of Argentina provincia Spanish 23Provinces of Armenia marz Armenian 11Provinces of Belarus voblast Belarusian 7Provinces of Belgium Flemish Region provincie Dutch 5Provinces of Belgium Walloon Region province French 5Provinces of Bolivia provincia Spanish 100Provinces of Bulgaria oblast Bulgarian 28Provinces of Burkina Faso province French 45Provinces of Burundi province French 17Provinces of Cambodia khaet ខ ត ត Khmer 24 1 8 Provinces of Canada province English French 10Provinces of Chile provincia Spanish 54Provinces of China sheng 省 Standard Chinese 23 35 9 Provinces of Costa Rica provincia Spanish 7Provinces of Cuba provincia Spanish 15Provinces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo province French 25Provinces of the Dominican Republic provincia Spanish 33Provinces of Ecuador provincia Spanish 24Provinces of Equatorial Guinea provincia Spanish 7Provinces of Fiji yasana Fijian 14Provinces of Finland laanit or lan Finnish Swedish 6Provinces of Gabon province French 9Provinces of Georgia mkhare მხარე Georgian Abkhazian 12Provinces of Greece eparxia eparchia Greek 73Provinces of Indonesia provinsi Indonesian 38Provinces of Iran ostan Persian 31Provinces of Ireland cuige Irish 4Provinces of Italy provincia Italian 110Provinces of Kazakhstan oblys oblys Kazakh 14Provinces of Kenya province English 8Provinces of Kyrgyzstan oblus oblus Kyrgyz 7Provinces of Laos khoueng ແຂວງ Lao 16Provinces of Madagascar faritany Malagasy 6Provinces of Mongolia aimag or aymag Ajmag Mongolian 21Provinces of Mozambique provincia Portuguese 10Provinces of Nepal pradesh or pranta प रद श प र न त Nepali 7Provinces of the Netherlands provincie Dutch 12Provinces of North Korea do or to 도 Korean 10Administrative divisions of Norway provins Norwegian 18Provinces of Oman wilaya Arabic 62Provinces of Pakistan suba صوبہ plural sube صوبے Urdu 7Provinces of Panama provincia Spanish 9Provinces of Papua New Guinea province English 19Provinces of Peru provincia Spanish 195Provinces of the Philippines lalawigan or probinsya provincia province Filipino Spanish English 82Provinces of Poland wojewodztwa Polish 16Provinces of Romania provincii Romanian 41Provinces of Rwanda intara Kinyarwanda 5Provinces of Saudi Arabia mintaqah Arabic 13Provinces of Sierra Leone province English 4Provinces of the Solomon Islands 9Provinces of South Africa province English 9Provinces of South Korea do or to 도 道 Korean 10Provinces of Spain provincia Spanish 50Provinces of Sri Lanka පළ ත palaatha ம க ணம maahaanam amp province Sinhala Tamil English 9Provinces of Suriname provincie Dutch 10Provinces of Tajikistan viloyat viloyat from Arabic wilaya Tajik 3Provinces of Thailand changwat cnghwd Thai 76 1 10 Provinces of Tonga 5Provinces of Turkey il Turkish 81Provinces of Turkmenistan welayat plural welayatlar from wilaya Turkmen 5Provinces of Ukraine oblast Ukrainian 24 3 11 Provinces of Uzbekistan viloyat plural viloyatlar from Arabic wilaya 12Provinces of Vanuatu 6Provinces of Vietnam tỉnh Vietnamese 58Provinces of Zambia province English 9Provinces of Zimbabwe province English 8Historic provinces EditAncient medieval and feudal Edit The Roman Empire was divided into provinces provinciae this is from which the term originated Later Eastern Half see Exarchate thema Caliphate and subsequent sultanates see Emirate Khanate can also mean a province as well as an independent state as either can be headed by a Khan Pharaonic Egypt see nome Egypt Frankish Carolingian re founded Holy Roman Empire see gau and county In the Habsburg territories the traditional provinces are partly expressed in the Lander of 19th century Austria Hungary Mughal Empire subah The provinces of the Ottoman Empire had various types of governors generally a pasha but mostly styled vali hence the predominant term vilayet generally subdivided often in beyliks or sanjaks sometimes grouped under a governor general styled beylerbey Achaemenid Persia and probably before in Media again after conquest and further extension by Alexander the Great and in the larger Hellenistic successor states see satrapy In the Tartar Khanate of Kazan the five daruga direction Colonial and early modern Edit Spanish empire at several echelons viceroyalty above intendencia The former Republic of the Seven United Provinces The Netherlands British colonies American Southern Colonies Province of Carolina 1629 1712 Province of North Carolina 1712 1776 Province of South Carolina 1712 1776 Province of Maryland 1632 1776 Province of Georgia 1732 1777 American Middle Colonies Province of New Jersey 1664 1776 Province of New York 1664 1783 Province of Pennsylvania 1681 1783 American New England Colonies Province of New Hampshire 1680 1686 1692 1783 Province of Massachusetts Bay 1692 1776 Province of Maine various dates Canada New France Province of Quebec 1763 1791 Province of Lower Canada 1791 1841 Province of Upper Canada 1791 1841 United Province of Canada 1841 1867 Provinces of India Provinces of the Philippines Provinces of New Zealand 1841 1876 Provinces of Nigeria Province of South Australia now an Australian state The former provinces of Brazil The former provinces of France The former provinces of Ireland The former provinces of Japan The provinces of Prussia a former German kingdom republic The provinces of the Republic of New Granada The former provinces of Sweden The former United Provinces of Central America The former United Provinces of the Rio de la PlataSee also EditGovernor Region Provincialism Regionalism politics Rise The Vieneo Province stanReferences Edit Definition of the word Province including the British English derivation Lexico Archived from the original on August 7 2019 Retrieved August 7 2019 The Perspective of the World 1984 p 284 A chorographical map of the Province of New York in North America divided into counties manors patents and townships exhibiting likewise all the private grants of land made and located in that Province Library of Congress Retrieved December 4 2017 How Canadians Govern Themselves 7th ed parl gc ca Archived from the original on April 5 2011 Retrieved May 8 2012 Collaborative Federalism in an era of globalization Pco bcp gc ca April 22 1999 Archived from the original on March 15 2012 Retrieved May 8 2012 Municipalities as creatures of the provinces Also spelled voivodship voievodship voievodeship 76 provinces 1 special governed district Phnom Penh However Cambodian usually presume Phnom Penh as another province for convenience The People s Republic of China PRC claims it has 23 provinces one of them being Taiwan which the PRC does not have control The Republic of China frequently referred to as Taiwan or ROC claims all 35 provinces but it only controls all of Taiwan Province and several small islands of Fujian and Hainan Province 76 provinces 1 special governed district Bangkok However Thai people usually presume Bangkok as another province for convenience 24 oblasts one autonomous republic and two cities with special status External links EditEtymology Online Frazer James George 1911 Province In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 22 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 513 514 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Province amp oldid 1143735624, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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