KingBrian2 wrote: » Not entirely certain about this but correct me if I am wrong that Tipperary was originally North Tipperary Co & South Tipperary Co.
RobbingBandit wrote: » Wikipedia say between 1838 and 2014 there were indeed two Tipps.
KingBrian2 wrote: » Hold on if that was the case that means their was 33 counties in Ireland & 27 in the Republic.
4ensic15 wrote: » Counties in Ireland up to 1898 were judicial, not administrative. Tipperary was divided into 2 judicial Counties and so had 2 grand juries. The Local Government Act of 1898 created the current administrative counties. That Act specifically declared that Tipperary was to be one county but that it could consist of 2 ridings and the administrative functions could be performed as if they were being performed on behalf of a county.
KingBrian2 wrote: » Their was originally a Queens county in modern day Laoise. I believe Queens county were composed of Offaly & Laoise.
4ensic15 wrote: » Laois was Queens County and Offaly was Kings County.
tabbey wrote: » Larger counties were traditionally divided into ridings. Most people just think of Yorkshire, which had three ridings - East, West and North prior to 1974 local government reorganisation. Many people forget that Cork, Galway and Tipperary were historically divided into ridings; Cork - East and West. Galway - East and West. Tipperary - North and South. These were large counties by area, and pre - famine, by population also, Tipp was almost half a million in 1841. For policing purposes, each riding had a County Inspector (Chief Superintendent). When the county councils were created under the 1898 Act, only Tipperary got two county councils, but Cork had a County Council and a City Council.
4ensic15 wrote: » All of this begs the question, is Fingal a county?
panchosanza wrote: » Tipperary's ridings had separate assizes, which were the closest thing to a county council. Galway and Cork's ridings were only for the less important "general sessions of the peace". The post-1898 county borough of Cork corresponded to the pre-1898 County of the City of Cork, which was separated from the County of Cork under its 1608 charter. That's why Cork had both a City Gaol (now a museum) and a County Gaol (on the site of UCC).
KingBrian2 wrote: » I'd have to say yes . . .
tabbey wrote: » Yes. Under the 1993 act, it is an administrative county.
Peregrinus wrote: » Depends on what you mean by "county". As tabbey point out, under the Local Government (Dublin) Act 1993 Fingal is an "administrative county". But, then, so are Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown and South Dublin. And, under the Local Government Act 1898 so are Dublin City, Limerick City, Cork City and Waterford City. (Also Belfast and Derry, though NI local government has since been radically restructured and counties no longer play any role.) Galway City also became an administrative county in 1986. The were all "county boroughs", and under the local government legislation every county borough was an administrative county.
panchosanza wrote: » The 1898 act had "administrative county" and "county borough". The 2001 act renamed these "county" and "city" (which was confusing as Kilkenny was previously a city but not a county borough, and Dublin was previously a county but not an administrative county). The 2014 act merged Limerick city and county (likewise Waterford) into a single unit, which even more confusing is termed a "city and county". Therefore the state currently is divided into 26 counties and 3 cities and 2 cities and counties.
Peregrinus wrote: » Belfast is in County Down, etc.
Peregrinus wrote: » So, while the term "county" might have a specialist technical definition when used in the context of local government legislation, and a different specialist technical definition for the purposes of parliamentary elections, I think it also has a common definition when used as a geographical unit, or as a unit commanding local allegiance, identity, etc, and for most of us this is in fact the dominant meaning of the word.
laoch na mona wrote: » Belfast is in Antrim