Dunbartonshire
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Dunbartonshire (
Siorrachd Dhùn Bhreatainn in
Gaelic) or the
County of Dumbarton, is a
lieutenancy area and a
registration county of
Scotland. Between 1890 and 1975 it was a
county. The area had been previously been part of the historic district of
Lennox, which was a
duchy in the
Peerage of Scotland, see
Duke of Lennox.
Dumbarton was formerly the county town. Dumbartonshire County Council was set up in 1889/90, and at the beginning of the 20th century, some influential councillors had spelling of the County name changed from
Dumbartonshire to
Dunbartonshire. The justification was that that Dumbarton derives from the Gaelic
Dùn Breatainn, but the town stuck with the name Dumbarton, and some people continue to refer to the county as Dumbartonshire. The county retained a large
exclave despite the boundary changes in the
1890s elsewhere in Scotland, containing
Kirkintilloch and
Cumbernauld, between
Stirlingshire and
Lanarkshire.
The county council disappeared in 1974/5 when local government in Scotland was reorganised. The council area was then divided into
Dumbarton District Council,
Bearsden and Milngavie District Council,
Clydebank District Council and
Strathkelvin District Council, the latter also containing a small part of the former
Lanarkshire. For some major functions such as education, police, etc., the old County Council of Dunbarton was absorbed at the same time into the much larger
Strathclyde Regional Council.
The Regional identity was retained for some major functions such as fire service and police at the next reorganisation of local government in
1996, but for most purposes the area then found itself served by three new councils:
Argyll and Bute Council (which took over the
Helensburgh and Lomond part of Dumbarton District),
West Dunbartonshire Council and
East Dunbartonshire Council.