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Shire

Shire is a traditional term for an administrative division of land in Great Britain and some other English-speaking countries such as Australia. It is generally synonymous with county. It was first used in Wessex from the beginning of Anglo-Saxon settlement, and spread to most of the rest of England in the tenth century. In some rural parts of Australia, a shire is a local government area; however, in Australia it is not synonymous with a "county", which is a lands administrative division.

Etymology

 
 
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle mentions locations ending or beginning with 'scire' or 'scira'.

The word shire derives from the Old English sćir, from the Proto-Germanic *skizo (Old High German: sćira), denoting an 'official charge' a 'district under a governor', and a 'care'.[1] In the UK, shire became synonymous with county, an administrative term introduced to England through the Norman Conquest in the later part of the eleventh century. In contemporary British usage, the word counties also refers to shires, mainly in places such as Shire Hall.[2]

In regions with rhotic pronunciation, such as Scotland, the word shire is pronounced /ʃaɪər/; in areas of non-rhotic pronunciation, the final R is silent, unless the next word begins in a vowel sound. In England and Wales, when shire is a place-name suffix, the vowel is unstressed and usually shortened (monophthongized); the pronunciations include /ʃər/ and /ʃɪər/, with the final R pronunciation depending on rhoticity. The vowel is normally reduced to a single schwa, as in Leicestershire /ˈlɛstərʃər/ or /ˈlɛstərʃɪər/ and Berkshire /ˈbɑːrkʃər/ or /ˈbɑːrkʃɪər/.[3]

Origins

The system was first used in the kingdom of Wessex from the beginning of Anglo-Saxon settlement, and spread to most of the rest of England in the tenth century, along with the West Saxon kingdom's political domination. In Domesday (1086) the city of York was divided into shires.[4] The first shires of Scotland were created in English-settled areas such as Lothian and the Borders, in the ninth century. King David I more consistently created shires and appointed sheriffs across lowland shores of Scotland.

The shire in early days was governed by an ealdorman and in the later Anglo-Saxon period by a royal official known as a "shire reeve" or sheriff. The shires were divided into hundreds or wapentakes, although other less common sub-divisions existed. An alternative name for a shire was a "sheriffdom" until sheriff court reforms separated the two concepts. The phrase "shire county" applies, unofficially, to non-metropolitan counties in England, specifically those that are not local unitary authority areas. In Scotland the word "county" was not adopted for the shires. Although "county" appears in some texts, "shire" was the normal name until counties for statutory purposes were created in the nineteenth century. In Ireland "shire" was not used for the counties.

In most cases, the "shire town" is the seat of the shire's government, or was historically. Sometimes the nomenclature exists even where "county" is used in place of "shire" as in, for instance, Kentville in Nova Scotia.[5]

Shires in the United Kingdom

"Shire" also refers, in a narrower sense, to ancient counties with names that ended in "shire". These counties are typically (though not always) named after their county town. The suffix -shire is attached to most of the names of English, Scottish and Welsh counties. It tends not to be found in the names of shires that were pre-existing divisions. Essex, Kent, and Sussex, for example, have never borne a -shire, as each represents a former Anglo-Saxon kingdom. Similarly Cornwall was a British kingdom before it became an English county. The term "shire" is not used in the names of the six traditional counties of Northern Ireland.

 
The historic counties of England — red indicates "-shire" counties, orange indicates where the "-shire" suffix is occasionally used

Shire names in England

Counties in England bearing the "-shire" suffix comprise: Bedfordshire, Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Cambridgeshire, Cheshire, Derbyshire, Gloucestershire, Hampshire, Herefordshire, Hertfordshire, Huntingdonshire, Lancashire, Lincolnshire, Leicestershire, Northamptonshire, Nottinghamshire, Oxfordshire, Shropshire, Staffordshire, Warwickshire, Wiltshire, Worcestershire and Yorkshire. These counties, on their historical boundaries, cover a little more than half the area of England. The counties that do not use "-shire" are mainly in three areas, in the south-east, south-west and far north of England. Several of these counties no longer exist as administrative units, or have had their administrative boundaries reduced by local government reforms. Several of the successor authorities retain the "-shire" county names, such as North Yorkshire, East Yorkshire, South Yorkshire, West Yorkshire, and South Gloucestershire.

The county of Devon was historically known as Devonshire, although this is no longer the official name.[6] Indeed, it was retained by the Devonshire and Dorset Regiment until amalgamation in 2007. Similarly, Dorset, Rutland and Somerset were formerly known as Dorsetshire, Rutlandshire and Somersetshire, but these terms are no longer official, and are rarely used outside the local populations.

Hexhamshire was a county in the north-east of England from the early 12th century until 1572, when it was incorporated into Northumberland.

Shire names in Scotland

In Scotland, barely affected by the Norman conquest of England, the word "shire" prevailed over "county" until the 19th century. Earliest sources have the same usage of the "-shire" suffix as in England (though in Scots this was oftenmost "schyr"). Later the "Shire" appears as a separate word.

"Shire" names in Scotland comprise Aberdeenshire, Ayrshire, Banffshire, Berwickshire, Clackmannanshire, Cromartyshire, Dumfriesshire, Dunbartonshire, Inverness-shire, Kincardineshire, Kinross-shire, Kirkcudbrightshire, Lanarkshire, Morayshire, Nairnshire, Peeblesshire, Perthshire, Renfrewshire, Ross-shire, Roxburghshire, Selkirkshire, Stirlingshire, and Wigtownshire.

In Scotland four shires have alternative names with the "-shire" suffix: Angus (Forfarshire), East Lothian (Haddingtonshire), Midlothian (Edinburghshire) and West Lothian (Linlithgowshire).

Sutherland is occasionally still referred to as Sutherlandshire. Similarly, Argyllshire, Buteshire, Caithness-shire and Fifeshire are sometimes found. Also, Morayshire was previously called Elginshire. There is debate about whether Argyllshire was ever really used.

Shire names in Wales

Shires in Wales bearing the "-shire" suffix (Sir preceding the name in Welsh) comprise: Brecknockshire (or Breconshire), Caernarfonshire (historically Carnarvonshire), Cardiganshire (in Welsh- Ceredigion), Carmarthenshire, Denbighshire, Flintshire, Monmouthshire, Montgomeryshire, Pembrokeshire, and Radnorshire. In Wales, the counties of Merioneth and Glamorgan are occasionally referred to with the "shire" suffix. The only traditional Welsh county that never takes "shire" in English is Anglesey; in Welsh it is referred to as 'Sir Fôn'.

Non-county "shires"

The suffix "-shire" could be a generalised term referring to a district. It did not acquire the strong association with county until later. Other than these, the term was used for several other districts. Bedlingtonshire, Craikshire, Norhamshire and Islandshire were exclaves of County Durham, which were incorporated into Northumberland or Yorkshire in 1844. The suffix was also used for many hundreds, wapentakes and liberties such as Allertonshire, Blackburnshire, Halfshire, Howdenshire, Leylandshire, Powdershire, Pydarshire, Richmondshire, Riponshire, Salfordshire, Triggshire, Tynemouthshire, West Derbyshire and Wivelshire, counties corporate such as Hullshire, and other districts such as Applebyshire, Bamburghshire, Bunkleshire, Carlisleshire, Coldinghamshire, Coxwoldshire, Cravenshire, Hallamshire, Mashamshire and Yetholmshire. Richmondshire is today the name of a local government district of North Yorkshire.

Non-county shires were very common in Scotland. Kinross-shire and Clackmannanshire are arguably survivals from such districts. Non-county "shires" in Scotland include Bunkleshire, Coldinghamshire and Yetholmshire.

Shires in Australia

"Shire" is the most common word in Australia for rural local government areas (LGAs). New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, Western Australia and the Northern Territory use the term "shire" for this unit; the territories of Christmas Island and Cocos Island are also shires. In contrast, South Australia uses district and region for its rural LGA units, while Tasmania uses municipality. Shires are generally functionally indistinguishable from towns, borough, municipalities, or cities.

Three LGAs in outer metropolitan Sydney and four in outer metropolitan Melbourne have populations exceeding that of towns or municipalities, but retain significant bushlands and/or semi-rural areas, and most have continued to use "shire" in their titles whilst others have dropped it from theirs. These "city-shires" are:

Sydney:

Melbourne:

Shires in the United States

Virginia

In 1634, eight "shires" were created in the Virginia Colony by order of Charles I, King of England. They were renamed as counties only a few years later. They were:

Today, the concept of a "Shire" still exists in Virginia code. It is defined as a semi-autonomous subdivision of a consolidated City-County. Currently no Shires exist in the commonwealth and the administrative provision is largely unknown. [7]

New York and New England

Before the Province of New York was granted county subdivisions and a greater royal presence in 1683, the early ducal colony consisted of York Shire, as well as Albany and Ulster, after the three titles held by Prince James: Duke of York, Duke of Albany, Earl of Ulster. While these were basically renamed Dutch core settlements, they were quickly converted to English purposes, while the Dutch remained within the colony, as opposed to later practice of the Acadian Expulsion. Further Anglo-Dutch synthesis occurred when Prince James enacted the Dominion of New England and later when William III of England took over through the Glorious Revolution.

The word also survives in the name of the state of New Hampshire, whose co-founder, John Mason, named his Province of New Hampshire after the English county of Hampshire.

See also

References

  1. ^ Harper, Douglas. "Shire". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 18 July 2021.
  2. ^ The Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology (1991) C.T. Onions, Ed., p. 821.
  3. ^ The Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology (1991) C.T. Onions, Ed., p. 821.
  4. ^ Gareth Dean, Medieval York 2008:21.
  5. ^ Coleman, Ed (19 May 2015). "How Kentville became the shiretown". Annapolis Valley Register. SaltWire. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  6. ^ "RootsWeb.com Home Page". freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com. from the original on 3 June 2016.
  7. ^ "§ 15.2-3534. Optional provisions of consolidation agreement". law.lis.virginia.gov. Retrieved 5 October 2021.


shire, this, article, about, administrative, unit, other, uses, disambiguation, look, shire, wiktionary, free, dictionary, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, un. This article is about the administrative unit For Other uses see Shire disambiguation Look up shire in Wiktionary the free dictionary This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Shire news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Shire is a traditional term for an administrative division of land in Great Britain and some other English speaking countries such as Australia It is generally synonymous with county It was first used in Wessex from the beginning of Anglo Saxon settlement and spread to most of the rest of England in the tenth century In some rural parts of Australia a shire is a local government area however in Australia it is not synonymous with a county which is a lands administrative division Contents 1 Etymology 2 Origins 3 Shires in the United Kingdom 3 1 Shire names in England 3 2 Shire names in Scotland 3 3 Shire names in Wales 3 4 Non county shires 4 Shires in Australia 5 Shires in the United States 5 1 Virginia 5 2 New York and New England 6 See also 7 ReferencesEtymology Edit The Anglo Saxon Chronicle mentions locations ending or beginning with scire or scira The word shire derives from the Old English scir from the Proto Germanic skizo Old High German scira denoting an official charge a district under a governor and a care 1 In the UK shire became synonymous with county an administrative term introduced to England through the Norman Conquest in the later part of the eleventh century In contemporary British usage the word counties also refers to shires mainly in places such as Shire Hall 2 In regions with rhotic pronunciation such as Scotland the word shire is pronounced ʃ aɪer in areas of non rhotic pronunciation the final R is silent unless the next word begins in a vowel sound In England and Wales when shire is a place name suffix the vowel is unstressed and usually shortened monophthongized the pronunciations include ʃ er and ʃ ɪer with the final R pronunciation depending on rhoticity The vowel is normally reduced to a single schwa as in Leicestershire ˈ l ɛ s t er ʃ er or ˈ l ɛ s t er ʃ ɪer and Berkshire ˈ b ɑːr k ʃ er or ˈ b ɑːr k ʃ ɪer 3 Origins EditThe system was first used in the kingdom of Wessex from the beginning of Anglo Saxon settlement and spread to most of the rest of England in the tenth century along with the West Saxon kingdom s political domination In Domesday 1086 the city of York was divided into shires 4 The first shires of Scotland were created in English settled areas such as Lothian and the Borders in the ninth century King David I more consistently created shires and appointed sheriffs across lowland shores of Scotland The shire in early days was governed by an ealdorman and in the later Anglo Saxon period by a royal official known as a shire reeve or sheriff The shires were divided into hundreds or wapentakes although other less common sub divisions existed An alternative name for a shire was a sheriffdom until sheriff court reforms separated the two concepts The phrase shire county applies unofficially to non metropolitan counties in England specifically those that are not local unitary authority areas In Scotland the word county was not adopted for the shires Although county appears in some texts shire was the normal name until counties for statutory purposes were created in the nineteenth century In Ireland shire was not used for the counties In most cases the shire town is the seat of the shire s government or was historically Sometimes the nomenclature exists even where county is used in place of shire as in for instance Kentville in Nova Scotia 5 Shires in the United Kingdom Edit Shire also refers in a narrower sense to ancient counties with names that ended in shire These counties are typically though not always named after their county town The suffix shire is attached to most of the names of English Scottish and Welsh counties It tends not to be found in the names of shires that were pre existing divisions Essex Kent and Sussex for example have never borne a shire as each represents a former Anglo Saxon kingdom Similarly Cornwall was a British kingdom before it became an English county The term shire is not used in the names of the six traditional counties of Northern Ireland The historic counties of England red indicates shire counties orange indicates where the shire suffix is occasionally used Shire names in England Edit Counties in England bearing the shire suffix comprise Bedfordshire Berkshire Buckinghamshire Cambridgeshire Cheshire Derbyshire Gloucestershire Hampshire Herefordshire Hertfordshire Huntingdonshire Lancashire Lincolnshire Leicestershire Northamptonshire Nottinghamshire Oxfordshire Shropshire Staffordshire Warwickshire Wiltshire Worcestershire and Yorkshire These counties on their historical boundaries cover a little more than half the area of England The counties that do not use shire are mainly in three areas in the south east south west and far north of England Several of these counties no longer exist as administrative units or have had their administrative boundaries reduced by local government reforms Several of the successor authorities retain the shire county names such as North Yorkshire East Yorkshire South Yorkshire West Yorkshire and South Gloucestershire The county of Devon was historically known as Devonshire although this is no longer the official name 6 Indeed it was retained by the Devonshire and Dorset Regiment until amalgamation in 2007 Similarly Dorset Rutland and Somerset were formerly known as Dorsetshire Rutlandshire and Somersetshire but these terms are no longer official and are rarely used outside the local populations Hexhamshire was a county in the north east of England from the early 12th century until 1572 when it was incorporated into Northumberland Shire names in Scotland Edit In Scotland barely affected by the Norman conquest of England the word shire prevailed over county until the 19th century Earliest sources have the same usage of the shire suffix as in England though in Scots this was oftenmost schyr Later the Shire appears as a separate word Shire names in Scotland comprise Aberdeenshire Ayrshire Banffshire Berwickshire Clackmannanshire Cromartyshire Dumfriesshire Dunbartonshire Inverness shire Kincardineshire Kinross shire Kirkcudbrightshire Lanarkshire Morayshire Nairnshire Peeblesshire Perthshire Renfrewshire Ross shire Roxburghshire Selkirkshire Stirlingshire and Wigtownshire In Scotland four shires have alternative names with the shire suffix Angus Forfarshire East Lothian Haddingtonshire Midlothian Edinburghshire and West Lothian Linlithgowshire Sutherland is occasionally still referred to as Sutherlandshire Similarly Argyllshire Buteshire Caithness shire and Fifeshire are sometimes found Also Morayshire was previously called Elginshire There is debate about whether Argyllshire was ever really used Shire names in Wales Edit Shires in Wales bearing the shire suffix Sir preceding the name in Welsh comprise Brecknockshire or Breconshire Caernarfonshire historically Carnarvonshire Cardiganshire in Welsh Ceredigion Carmarthenshire Denbighshire Flintshire Monmouthshire Montgomeryshire Pembrokeshire and Radnorshire In Wales the counties of Merioneth and Glamorgan are occasionally referred to with the shire suffix The only traditional Welsh county that never takes shire in English is Anglesey in Welsh it is referred to as Sir Fon Non county shires Edit The suffix shire could be a generalised term referring to a district It did not acquire the strong association with county until later Other than these the term was used for several other districts Bedlingtonshire Craikshire Norhamshire and Islandshire were exclaves of County Durham which were incorporated into Northumberland or Yorkshire in 1844 The suffix was also used for many hundreds wapentakes and liberties such as Allertonshire Blackburnshire Halfshire Howdenshire Leylandshire Powdershire Pydarshire Richmondshire Riponshire Salfordshire Triggshire Tynemouthshire West Derbyshire and Wivelshire counties corporate such as Hullshire and other districts such as Applebyshire Bamburghshire Bunkleshire Carlisleshire Coldinghamshire Coxwoldshire Cravenshire Hallamshire Mashamshire and Yetholmshire Richmondshire is today the name of a local government district of North Yorkshire Non county shires were very common in Scotland Kinross shire and Clackmannanshire are arguably survivals from such districts Non county shires in Scotland include Bunkleshire Coldinghamshire and Yetholmshire Shires in Australia Edit Shire is the most common word in Australia for rural local government areas LGAs New South Wales Victoria Queensland Western Australia and the Northern Territory use the term shire for this unit the territories of Christmas Island and Cocos Island are also shires In contrast South Australia uses district and region for its rural LGA units while Tasmania uses municipality Shires are generally functionally indistinguishable from towns borough municipalities or cities Three LGAs in outer metropolitan Sydney and four in outer metropolitan Melbourne have populations exceeding that of towns or municipalities but retain significant bushlands and or semi rural areas and most have continued to use shire in their titles whilst others have dropped it from theirs These city shires are Sydney Sutherland Shire which is locally referred to as The Shire The Hills Shire The Garden Shire previously Baulkham Hills Shire Hornsby Shire The Bushland Shire Melbourne Shire of Nillumbik The Green Wedge Shire Shire of Yarra Ranges Shire of Cardinia Shire of Mornington Peninsula which is locally known as The Peninsula Shire of Pakenham 1862 1994 Shires in the United States EditVirginia Edit In 1634 eight shires were created in the Virginia Colony by order of Charles I King of England They were renamed as counties only a few years later They were Accomac Shire since 1642 Northampton County Virginia Charles City Shire since 1637 Charles City County Virginia Charles River Shire since 1643 York County Virginia Elizabeth City Shire became Elizabeth City County Virginia in 1643 Henrico Shire later became Henrico County Virginia James City Shire about 1642 43 James City County Virginia Warwick River Shire became consolidated with the City of Newport News Virginia Warrosquyoake Shire became Isle of Wight County Virginia Today the concept of a Shire still exists in Virginia code It is defined as a semi autonomous subdivision of a consolidated City County Currently no Shires exist in the commonwealth and the administrative provision is largely unknown 7 New York and New England Edit Before the Province of New York was granted county subdivisions and a greater royal presence in 1683 the early ducal colony consisted of York Shire as well as Albany and Ulster after the three titles held by Prince James Duke of York Duke of Albany Earl of Ulster While these were basically renamed Dutch core settlements they were quickly converted to English purposes while the Dutch remained within the colony as opposed to later practice of the Acadian Expulsion Further Anglo Dutch synthesis occurred when Prince James enacted the Dominion of New England and later when William III of England took over through the Glorious Revolution The word also survives in the name of the state of New Hampshire whose co founder John Mason named his Province of New Hampshire after the English county of Hampshire See also EditComarca Comarcas of Spain Comarques of Catalonia Counties of England Counties of Scotland Counties of Wales Counties of the United Kingdom GauReferences Edit Harper Douglas Shire Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 18 July 2021 The Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology 1991 C T Onions Ed p 821 The Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology 1991 C T Onions Ed p 821 Gareth Dean Medieval York 2008 21 Coleman Ed 19 May 2015 How Kentville became the shiretown Annapolis Valley Register SaltWire Retrieved 3 November 2020 RootsWeb com Home Page freepages genealogy rootsweb ancestry com Archived from the original on 3 June 2016 15 2 3534 Optional provisions of consolidation agreement law lis virginia gov Retrieved 5 October 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shire amp oldid 1130406772, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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