Shire county
A
shire county or
non-metropolitan county in
England, is a
county level entity which is not a
metropolitan county. The names of most, but not all, shire counties end in the suffix "-
shire"; for example,
Kent is a shire county. The counties typically have populations of 300,000 to 1.4 million.
The term is sometimes used in a restricted sense to refer only to the administrative counties that have a two-tier structure, of a
county council and
district councils. It therefore excludes the various
unitary districts, including
Herefordshire and
Rutland. The
Isle of Wight is a non-metropolitan county, but is also a unitary area, as its district councils have been abolished.
The term "shire county" is actually a
tautology, the word
county coming from
French and
shire from
Saxon.
There are 34 non-metropolitan counties in England:
Bedfordshire,
Buckinghamshire,
Cambridgeshire,
Cheshire,
Cornwall,
Cumbria,
Derbyshire,
Devon,
Dorset,
County Durham,
East Sussex,
Essex,
Gloucestershire,
Hampshire,
Hertfordshire,
Kent,
Lancashire,
Leicestershire,
Lincolnshire,
Norfolk,
Northamptonshire,
Northumberland,
North Yorkshire,
Nottinghamshire,
Oxfordshire,
Shropshire,
Somerset,
Staffordshire,
Suffolk,
Surrey,
Warwickshire,
West Sussex,
Wiltshire,
WorcestershireTechnically, most unitary authorities in England are also non-metropolitan counties.
The term 'non-metropolitan county' is also sometimes used to refer to the eight Welsh counties created by the
Local Government Act 1972. Although the Act does not use the term specifically when referring to Wales, neither does it in general parts of the act distinguish between the Welsh entities and the English non-metropolitan counties, referring to both as non-metropolitan counties. The
Local Government (Wales) Act 1994 amends the Local Government Act 1972 such that the new
Welsh principal areas which have the status of counties are not implied to be non-metropolitan counties.