Home Counties
The phrase "
Home Counties" is used to designate the group of
English counties which border or surround
London. The term originated with the "Home Circuit" of the itinerant
Assize Court. This was the circuit of the counties closest to London, or
Westminster, where the court had its more or less permanent seat. With time the expression has lost its legal connotation, and now refers primarily to the counties in their capacity as the
London Commuter Belt or the
London Metropolitan Area. The Home Counties are sometimes also called
London and the South-East.
If the definition is taken as those which border London, the scope has changed over time. In 1888, with the laying down of London's formal borders and the creation of the
County of London, these prescriptively became that of
Kent,
Surrey,
Middlesex and
Essex with sections of what had been Kent, Surrey and Middlesex used to make up the new county.
In 1965, when London's borders expanded further into parts of those counties and
Hertfordshire to become
Greater London, the list grew to include
Buckinghamshire and Hertfordshire. At this stage, the remainder of
Middlesex became absorbed into London with small sections ceded to Surrey and Hertfordshire. A minor boundary change in 1995 brought about by the Berkshire, Buckinghamshire and Surrey (County Boundaries) Order 1994 gave
Berkshire a border with Greater London. [
1]
In common usage, the phrase 'Home Counties' is not necessarily applied with such geographical precision, and any county in the surrounding area, within a given distance, may be considered one of the Home Counties. However, being part of the
Midlands,
West Country or
South West England would be mutually exclusive to being one of the Home Counties, and presents a definite barrier to its scope.
*
London commuter belt*
Shire Counties