![Subdivisions of England](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly91cGxvYWQud2lraW1lZGlhLm9yZy93aWtpcGVkaWEvY29tbW9ucy90aHVtYi84Lzg4L0VuZ2xhbmRfQWRtaW5pc3RyYXRpdmVfTWFwLnBuZy8xNjAwcHgtRW5nbGFuZF9BZG1pbmlzdHJhdGl2ZV9NYXAucG5n.png )
The subdivisions of England constitute a hierarchy of administrative divisions and non-administrative ceremonial areas.
Subdivisions of England | |||||||||||||||
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![]() Subdivisions of England (as of 1 April 2023) that have a principal local authority: two-tier non-metropolitan counties and their non-metropolitan districts; metropolitan boroughs; unitary authorities; London boroughs; and the sui generis City of London and Isles of Scilly. | |||||||||||||||
Location | England | ||||||||||||||
Subdivisions |
|
Overall, England is divided into nine regions and 48 ceremonial counties, although these have only a limited role in public policy. For the purposes of local government, the country is divided into counties, districts and parishes. In some areas, counties and districts form a two-tier administrative structure, while in others they are combined under a unitary authority. Parishes cover only part of England.
The current system is the result of incremental reform which has its origins in legislation enacted in 1965 and 1972.
ceremonial county boundary
non-metropolitan county boundary
Administrative
England has a non-universal structure of local government subdivisions. There are two tiers of local government subdivision - (administrative) counties and districts (known as boroughs in London).
Different local divisions exist across England:
- Tier structure:
- County tier
- District tier
- Authority structure:
- Combined authority and Greater London Authority
- Unitary authority, Metropolitan borough and London borough
The authority structure is slowly replacing the tier structure and metropolitan boroughs with all the metropolitan boroughs in combined authorities and periodic abolitions of the tier structure councils into unitary authority councils.
Tiers
The 1974 reform of local government established the tier structure throughout England with county authorities in metropolitan and Greater London also existing, 1986 reform abolished these. From the 1996 reform the structure's use has been declining, 21 tiered areas remain out of the original 48. The county tier provides the majority of services, including education and social services while the 164 district-tier councils have a more limited role.
Authorities
As of April 2023, there are 62 unitary authorities. Unitary authorities have control of their areas functioning. There is a general push towards the reorganisation of English local government to the authority structure, often reorganisation is a condition of new devolution powers. 46 unitary authorities were created from the 1996 reform, nine more were created in 2009, followed by further changes in 2019, 2020, 2021 and 2023. The Greater London administrative area was created in 1965 with 32 boroughs, excluding the City of London. Six Metropolitan two-tiered areas were created in 1974, similar to the Greater London model. These county-tier councils had extra devolved powers to others. In 1986, the county-tier was abolished with the London boroughs, Metropolitan boroughs and combined boards remaining. Apart from status these boroughs have the same powers to unitary authorities.
Combined authorities operate the opposite way round to the county in a tier structure, the combined authority acts on what the unitary authorities have agreed upon to focus on and what powers have been given by central government. In 2000, the Greater London Authority was created with an elected Mayor of London and the London Assembly. In 2010, the Greater Manchester Combined Authority was created with a similar modal to the GLA a with further combined authorities based on the GMCA created. As of June 2023[update], 10 combined authorities and the Greater London Authority currently exist.
Other
Sui generis
The Isles of Scilly are governed by a sui generis local authority called the Council of the Isles of Scilly. The authority was established in 1890 as the Isles of Scilly Rural District Council. It was renamed but otherwise unreformed by the changes in local government that occurred in 1974 in the rest of England outside Greater London. Although effectively a unitary authority, for example it is an education authority, the Isles of Scilly are part of the Cornwall ceremonial county and combine with Cornwall Council for services such as health and economic development.
The ancient City of London forms a 33rd division and is governed by the City of London Corporation, a sui generis authority unlike any other in England that has largely avoided any of the reforms of local government in the 19th and 20th centuries.
Civil parishes
The civil parish is the most local unit of government in England. A parish is governed by a parish council or parish meeting, which exercises a limited number of functions that would otherwise be delivered by the local authority. There is one civil parish in Greater London (Queen's Park, in the City of Westminster), and not all of the rest of England is parished. The number of parishes and total area parished is growing.
Non-administrative
Regions
At the highest level, all of England is divided into nine regions that are each made up of a number of counties and districts. These "government office regions" were created in 1994, and from the 1999 Euro-elections up until the UK's exit from the EU, they were used as the European Parliament constituencies in the United Kingdom and in England's European Parliament constituencies.
The regions vary greatly in their areas covered, populations and contributions to the national economy. All have the same status, except London which has substantive devolved powers.
There was a failed attempt to create elected regional assemblies outside London in 2004 and since then the structures of regional governance (regional assemblies, regional development agencies and local authority leaders' boards) have been subject to review. Following the change of government in 2010, these were scheduled for abolition by 2012.[needs update]
Ceremonial and historic counties
For non-administrative purposes, England is wholly divided into 48 ceremonial counties. These are used for the purposes of appointing Lords Lieutenant who are the Crown's representatives in those areas as well as a way of grouping non-metropolitan counties. They are taken into consideration when drawing up Parliamentary constituency boundaries.[citation needed] Ceremonial counties are commonly named after historic counties, the ceremonial county acts as an in between for the administrative boundaries and long established areas used in fields such as sport.
Titles, non-metropolitan and metropolitan counties
County-tier councils and each unitary authority are separate non-metropolitan counties, each non-metropolitan county can be known as a district, city or borough. Berkshire is an anomaly in this arrangement whereby its districts became unitary authorities, the non-metropolitan county remain to keep the title of Royal county, in the same way the metropolitan county remained when the county-tier councils were abolished. Each correspond to an administrative body.
Non-metropolitan districts can also be a borough, city or district. Unitary authority areas are joint non-metropolitan counties and non-metropolitan districts.
Lists
Regions
Type | Region |
---|---|
Set up | 1994 |
No | 9 |
Units |
|
Non-metropolitan (two-tier)
Type | Non-metropolitan county | Non-metropolitan district |
---|---|---|
Set up | 1974 | 1974 |
No | 21 | 164 |
Units |
| List of districts |
Metropolitan
Type | County | Borough |
---|---|---|
Set up | 1974 | 1974 |
No | 6 | 36 |
Units | Greater Manchester |
|
Merseyside |
| |
South Yorkshire |
| |
Tyne and Wear |
| |
West Midlands |
| |
West Yorkshire |
|
London
Type | London borough | Sui generis |
---|---|---|
Set up | 1965 | in antiquity |
No | 32 | 1 |
Units |
| |
Total | 33 |
Unitary authorities
Type | Set up | No | Units |
---|---|---|---|
County gained district functions | 2023 | 2 |
|
District(s) gained county functions | 2023 | 2 |
|
District(s) gained county functions | 2021 | 2 |
|
District(s) gained county functions | 2020 | 1 |
|
District(s) gained county functions | 2019 | 2 |
|
County gained district functions | 2009 | 5 |
|
District(s) gained county functions | 2009 | 4 |
|
District(s) gained county functions | 1998 | 21 |
|
District(s) gained county functions | 1997 | 9 |
|
District gained county functions | 1996 | 13 |
|
County gained district functions | 1995 | 1 |
|
Sui generis | 1890 | 1 |
|
Total | 63 |
Civil parishes
- List of civil parishes in England
Hierarchical list of regions, strategic authorities, counties and districts
Region | Strategic authority | Ceremonial county | Metropolitan or non-metropolitan county | Districts May also hold borough and/or city status |
---|---|---|---|---|
East of England![]() | Essex | 1. Thurrock U.A. | ||
2. Southend-on-Sea U.A. | ||||
3. Essex † | a) Harlow, b) Epping Forest, c) Brentwood, d) Basildon, e) Castle Point, f) Rochford, g) Maldon, h) Chelmsford, i) Uttlesford, j) Braintree, k) Colchester, l) Tendring | |||
4. Hertfordshire † | a) Three Rivers, b) Watford, c) Hertsmere, d) Welwyn Hatfield, e) Broxbourne, f) East Hertfordshire, g) Stevenage, h) North Hertfordshire, i) St Albans, j) Dacorum | |||
Bedfordshire | 5. Luton U.A. | |||
6. Bedford U.A. | ||||
7. Central Bedfordshire U.A. | ||||
Cambridgeshire and Peterborough | Cambridgeshire | 8. Cambridgeshire † | a) Cambridge, b) South Cambridgeshire, c) Huntingdonshire, d) Fenland, e) East Cambridgeshire | |
9. Peterborough U.A. | ||||
10. Norfolk † | a) Norwich, b) South Norfolk, c) Great Yarmouth, d) Broadland, e) North Norfolk, f) Breckland, g) King's Lynn and West Norfolk | |||
11. Suffolk † | a) Ipswich, b) East Suffolk, c) Babergh, d) Mid Suffolk, e) West Suffolk | |||
East Midlands![]() | East Midlands | Derbyshire | 1. Derbyshire † | a) High Peak, b) Derbyshire Dales, c) South Derbyshire, d) Erewash, e) Amber Valley, f) North East Derbyshire, g) Chesterfield, h) Bolsover |
2. Derby U.A. | ||||
Nottinghamshire | 3. Nottinghamshire † | a) Rushcliffe, b) Broxtowe, c) Ashfield, d) Gedling, e) Newark and Sherwood, f) Mansfield, g) Bassetlaw | ||
4. Nottingham U.A. | ||||
Lincolnshire (part only) | 5. Lincolnshire † | a) Lincoln, b) North Kesteven, c) South Kesteven, d) South Holland, e) Boston, f) East Lindsey, g) West Lindsey | ||
Leicestershire | 6. Leicestershire † | a) Charnwood, b) Melton, c) Harborough, d) Oadby and Wigston, e) Blaby, f) Hinckley and Bosworth, g) North West Leicestershire | ||
7. Leicester U.A. | ||||
8. Rutland U.A. | ||||
Northamptonshire | 9. West Northamptonshire U.A. | |||
10. North Northamptonshire U.A. | ||||
London ![]() | Greater London Authority | 1. Greater London | none | a) City of Westminster, b) Kensington and Chelsea, c) Hammersmith and Fulham, d) Wandsworth, e) Lambeth, f) Southwark, g) Tower Hamlets, h) Hackney, i) Islington, j) Camden, k) Brent, l) Ealing, m) Hounslow, n) Richmond, o) Kingston upon Thames, p) Merton, q) Sutton, r) Croydon, s) Bromley, t) Lewisham, u) Greenwich, v) Bexley, w) Havering, x) Barking and Dagenham, y) Redbridge, z) Newham, aa) Waltham Forest, ab) Haringey, ac) Enfield, ad) Barnet, ae) Harrow, af) Hillingdon |
2. City of London | none | City of London | ||
North East![]() | North East | 1. Northumberland U.A. | ||
2. Tyne and Wear * | a) Newcastle upon Tyne, c) North Tyneside | |||
b) Gateshead, d) South Tyneside, e) Sunderland | ||||
Durham | 3. County Durham U.A. | |||
Tees Valley | 4. Darlington U.A. | |||
5. Hartlepool U.A. | ||||
6. Stockton-on-Tees U.A. | ||||
North Yorkshire (part only) | ||||
7. Redcar and Cleveland U.A. | ||||
8. Middlesbrough U.A. | ||||
North West![]() | ||||
Cumbria | 1. Cumberland U.A. | |||
2. Westmorland and Furness U.A | ||||
Lancashire | 3. Lancashire † | a) West Lancashire, b) Chorley, c) South Ribble, d) Fylde, e) Preston, f) Wyre, g) Lancaster, h) Ribble Valley, i) Pendle, j) Burnley, k) Rossendale, l) Hyndburn | ||
4. Blackpool U.A. | ||||
5. Blackburn with Darwen U.A. | ||||
Greater Manchester | 6. Greater Manchester * | a) Bolton, b) Bury, c) Manchester, d) Oldham, e) Rochdale, f) Salford, g) Stockport, h) Tameside, i) Trafford, j) Wigan | ||
Liverpool City Region | 7. Merseyside * | a) Knowsley, b) Liverpool, c) St. Helens, d) Sefton, e) Wirral | ||
Cheshire | 8. Halton U.A. | |||
9. Warrington U.A. | ||||
10. Cheshire West and Chester U.A. | ||||
11. Cheshire East U.A. | ||||
South East![]() | 1. Berkshire ‡ | a) West Berkshire U.A., b) Reading U.A., c) Wokingham U.A., d) Bracknell Forest U.A., e) Windsor and Maidenhead U.A., f) Slough U.A. | ||
Buckinghamshire | 2. Buckinghamshire U.A. | |||
3. Milton Keynes U.A. | ||||
East Sussex | 4. East Sussex † | a) Hastings, b) Rother, c) Wealden, d) Eastbourne, e) Lewes | ||
5. Brighton & Hove U.A. | ||||
Kent | 6. Kent † | a) Dartford, b) Gravesham, c) Sevenoaks, d) Tonbridge and Malling, e) Tunbridge Wells, f) Maidstone, g) Swale, h) Ashford, i) Folkestone and Hythe, j) Canterbury, k) Dover, l) Thanet | ||
7. Medway U.A. | ||||
8. Oxfordshire † | a) Oxford, b) Cherwell, c) South Oxfordshire, d) Vale of White Horse, e) West Oxfordshire | |||
9. Surrey † | a) Spelthorne, b) Runnymede, c) Surrey Heath, d) Woking, e) Elmbridge, f) Guildford, g) Waverley, h) Mole Valley, i) Epsom and Ewell, j) Reigate and Banstead, k) Tandridge | |||
10. West Sussex † | a) Worthing, b) Arun, c) Chichester, d) Horsham, e) Crawley, f) Mid Sussex, g) Adur | |||
Hampshire | 11. Hampshire † | a) Fareham, b) Gosport, c) Winchester, d) Havant, e) East Hampshire, f) Hart, g) Rushmoor, h) Basingstoke and Deane, i) Test Valley, j) Eastleigh, k) New Forest | ||
12. Southampton U.A. | ||||
13. Portsmouth U.A. | ||||
14. Isle of Wight U.A. | ||||
South West![]() | Dorset | 1. Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole U.A. | ||
2. Dorset U.A. | ||||
Somerset | 3. North Somerset U.A. | |||
4. Somerset U.A. | ||||
West of England | 5. Bath and North East Somerset U.A | |||
6. Bristol U.A. | ||||
Gloucestershire | 7. South Gloucestershire U.A. | |||
8. Gloucestershire † | a) Gloucester, b) Tewkesbury, c) Cheltenham, d) Cotswold, e) Stroud, f) Forest of Dean | |||
Wiltshire | 9. Swindon U.A. | |||
10. Wiltshire U.A. | ||||
Devon | 11. Devon † | a) Exeter, b) East Devon, c) Mid Devon, d) North Devon, e) Torridge, f) West Devon, g) South Hams, h) Teignbridge | ||
12. Torbay U.A. | ||||
13. Plymouth U.A. | ||||
Cornwall | none | 14. Isles of Scilly sui generis U.A. | ||
15. Cornwall U.A. | ||||
West Midlands![]() | 1. Herefordshire U.A. | |||
Shropshire | 2. Shropshire U.A. | |||
3. Telford and Wrekin U.A. | ||||
Staffordshire | 4. Staffordshire † | a) Cannock Chase, b) East Staffordshire, c) Lichfield, d) Newcastle-under-Lyme, e) South Staffordshire, f) Stafford, g) Staffordshire Moorlands, h) Tamworth | ||
5. Stoke-on-Trent U.A. | ||||
6. Warwickshire † | a) North Warwickshire, b) Nuneaton and Bedworth, c) Rugby, d) Stratford-on-Avon, e) Warwick | |||
West Midlands | 7. West Midlands * | a) Birmingham, b) Coventry, c) Dudley, d) Sandwell, e) Solihull, f) Walsall, g) Wolverhampton | ||
8. Worcestershire † | a) Bromsgrove, b) Malvern Hills, c) Redditch, d) Worcester, e) Wychavon, f) Wyre Forest | |||
Yorkshire and the Humber![]() | South Yorkshire | 1. South Yorkshire * | a) Sheffield, b) Rotherham, c) Barnsley, d) Doncaster | |
West Yorkshire | 2. West Yorkshire * | a) Wakefield, b) Kirklees, c) Calderdale, d) Bradford, e) Leeds | ||
York and North Yorkshire | North Yorkshire (part only) | 3. North Yorkshire U.A. | ||
4. York U.A. | ||||
East Riding of Yorkshire | 5. East Riding of Yorkshire U.A. | |||
6. Kingston upon Hull U.A. | ||||
Lincolnshire (part only) | 7. North Lincolnshire U.A. | |||
8. North East Lincolnshire U.A. | ||||
Combined authority | † Two-tier non-metropolitan county | Non-metropolitan district | ||
‡ Royal non-metropolitan county (no county council) | Unitary authority district that is not a county | |||
U.A. Unitary authority area (non-metropolitan county and district) | ||||
* Metropolitan county (no county council) | Metropolitan district | |||
Greater London Authority | London borough or City of London |
See also
- Combined authority
Notes
- Metropolitan (36); non-metropolitan two-tier (164); unitary authority (62); London borough (32); sui generis (2)
- Also a ceremonial county covering a larger area
- A new district was created, merging previous districts, to form the basis of the unitary authority
- Also a ceremonial county of identical area
- merged into Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole in 2019
References
- Jones, B., Kavanagh, D., Moran, M. & Norton, P., Politics UK, (2004), Pearson Longman.
- "Local government structure and elections". GOV.UK. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
- "Local Government Act 1992". Office of Public Sector Information. 1992. Retrieved 8 August 2010.
- "The political and governance implications of unitary reorganisation | Local Government Association". www.local.gov.uk. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
- Travers, T., The Politics of London, (2004), Palgrave
- "Local Government Act 1972". Office of Public Sector Information. 1972. Retrieved 9 August 2010.
- "Education and Learning". Council of the Isles of Scilly. Archived from the original on 4 June 2009. Retrieved 9 August 2010.
- "About Us". Cornwall and Isles of Scilly Primary Care Trust. Retrieved 9 August 2010.
- "The Cornwall and Isles of Scilly Enterprise Partnership". Cornwall Council. 30 July 2010. Retrieved 9 August 2010.
- Hebbert, Michael (1998). London: More by fortune than design. John Wiley & Sons.
- "Queen's Park parish council gets go-ahead". BBC News London. 29 May 2012. Retrieved 2 August 2014.
- Atkinson, H. & Wilks-Heeg, S. (2000). Local Government from Thatcher to Blair. Polity.
- Collins, S., Colville, I & Pengelly, S., A Guide to the Greater London Authority, (2000), Sweet and Maxwell
- "Lieutenancies Act 1997". Office of Public Sector Information. 1997. Retrieved 8 August 2010.
- "The Berkshire (Structural Change) Order 1996". National Archives(legislation.gov.uk). 1996. Retrieved 13 September 2012.
External links
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2Wlc0dmRHaDFiV0l2TkM4MFlTOURiMjF0YjI1ekxXeHZaMjh1YzNabkx6TXdjSGd0UTI5dGJXOXVjeTFzYjJkdkxuTjJaeTV3Ym1jPS5wbmc=.png)
- Map of the UK counties and unitary administrations
- Map of all UK local authorities
The subdivisions of England constitute a hierarchy of administrative divisions and non administrative ceremonial areas Subdivisions of EnglandSubdivisions of England as of 1 April 2023 that have a principal local authority two tier non metropolitan counties and their non metropolitan districts metropolitan boroughs unitary authorities London boroughs and the sui generis City of London and Isles of Scilly LocationEnglandSubdivisionsTypeNumberRegion9Ceremonial county48Metropolitan county6Two tier non metropolitan county21District296Civil parish10 449 Overall England is divided into nine regions and 48 ceremonial counties although these have only a limited role in public policy For the purposes of local government the country is divided into counties districts and parishes In some areas counties and districts form a two tier administrative structure while in others they are combined under a unitary authority Parishes cover only part of England The current system is the result of incremental reform which has its origins in legislation enacted in 1965 and 1972 metropolitan county two tier non metropolitan county unitary authority non metropolitan county and district non metropolitan county with multiple unitary authorities which are not counties Greater London sui generis areas City of London and Isles of Scilly regional boundary ceremonial county boundary non metropolitan county boundary AdministrativeEngland has a non universal structure of local government subdivisions There are two tiers of local government subdivision administrative counties and districts known as boroughs in London Different local divisions exist across England Tier structure County tier District tier Authority structure Combined authority and Greater London Authority Unitary authority Metropolitan borough and London borough The authority structure is slowly replacing the tier structure and metropolitan boroughs with all the metropolitan boroughs in combined authorities and periodic abolitions of the tier structure councils into unitary authority councils Tiers The 1974 reform of local government established the tier structure throughout England with county authorities in metropolitan and Greater London also existing 1986 reform abolished these From the 1996 reform the structure s use has been declining 21 tiered areas remain out of the original 48 The county tier provides the majority of services including education and social services while the 164 district tier councils have a more limited role Authorities As of April 2023 there are 62 unitary authorities Unitary authorities have control of their areas functioning There is a general push towards the reorganisation of English local government to the authority structure often reorganisation is a condition of new devolution powers 46 unitary authorities were created from the 1996 reform nine more were created in 2009 followed by further changes in 2019 2020 2021 and 2023 The Greater London administrative area was created in 1965 with 32 boroughs excluding the City of London Six Metropolitan two tiered areas were created in 1974 similar to the Greater London model These county tier councils had extra devolved powers to others In 1986 the county tier was abolished with the London boroughs Metropolitan boroughs and combined boards remaining Apart from status these boroughs have the same powers to unitary authorities Combined authorities operate the opposite way round to the county in a tier structure the combined authority acts on what the unitary authorities have agreed upon to focus on and what powers have been given by central government In 2000 the Greater London Authority was created with an elected Mayor of London and the London Assembly In 2010 the Greater Manchester Combined Authority was created with a similar modal to the GLA a with further combined authorities based on the GMCA created As of June 2023 update 10 combined authorities and the Greater London Authority currently exist Other Sui generis The Isles of Scilly are governed by a sui generis local authority called the Council of the Isles of Scilly The authority was established in 1890 as the Isles of Scilly Rural District Council It was renamed but otherwise unreformed by the changes in local government that occurred in 1974 in the rest of England outside Greater London Although effectively a unitary authority for example it is an education authority the Isles of Scilly are part of the Cornwall ceremonial county and combine with Cornwall Council for services such as health and economic development The ancient City of London forms a 33rd division and is governed by the City of London Corporation a sui generis authority unlike any other in England that has largely avoided any of the reforms of local government in the 19th and 20th centuries Civil parishes The civil parish is the most local unit of government in England A parish is governed by a parish council or parish meeting which exercises a limited number of functions that would otherwise be delivered by the local authority There is one civil parish in Greater London Queen s Park in the City of Westminster and not all of the rest of England is parished The number of parishes and total area parished is growing Non administrativeRegions East of England London South East South West East Midlands West Midlands Yorkshire and the Humber North East North WestRegions of England At the highest level all of England is divided into nine regions that are each made up of a number of counties and districts These government office regions were created in 1994 and from the 1999 Euro elections up until the UK s exit from the EU they were used as the European Parliament constituencies in the United Kingdom and in England s European Parliament constituencies The regions vary greatly in their areas covered populations and contributions to the national economy All have the same status except London which has substantive devolved powers There was a failed attempt to create elected regional assemblies outside London in 2004 and since then the structures of regional governance regional assemblies regional development agencies and local authority leaders boards have been subject to review Following the change of government in 2010 these were scheduled for abolition by 2012 needs update Ceremonial and historic counties For non administrative purposes England is wholly divided into 48 ceremonial counties These are used for the purposes of appointing Lords Lieutenant who are the Crown s representatives in those areas as well as a way of grouping non metropolitan counties They are taken into consideration when drawing up Parliamentary constituency boundaries citation needed Ceremonial counties are commonly named after historic counties the ceremonial county acts as an in between for the administrative boundaries and long established areas used in fields such as sport Titles non metropolitan and metropolitan counties County tier councils and each unitary authority are separate non metropolitan counties each non metropolitan county can be known as a district city or borough Berkshire is an anomaly in this arrangement whereby its districts became unitary authorities the non metropolitan county remain to keep the title of Royal county in the same way the metropolitan county remained when the county tier councils were abolished Each correspond to an administrative body Non metropolitan districts can also be a borough city or district Unitary authority areas are joint non metropolitan counties and non metropolitan districts ListsRegions Type RegionSet up 1994No 9Units East of England East Midlands London North East North West South East South West West Midlands Yorkshire and the HumberNon metropolitan two tier Type Non metropolitan county Non metropolitan districtSet up 1974 1974No 21 164Units Cambridgeshire Derbyshire Devon East Sussex Essex Gloucestershire Hampshire Hertfordshire Kent Lancashire Leicestershire Lincolnshire Norfolk Nottinghamshire Oxfordshire Staffordshire Suffolk Surrey Warwickshire West Sussex Worcestershire List of districtsMetropolitan Type County BoroughSet up 1974 1974No 6 36Units Greater Manchester Bolton Bury Manchester Oldham Rochdale Salford Stockport Tameside Trafford WiganMerseyside Knowsley Liverpool Sefton St Helens WirralSouth Yorkshire Barnsley Doncaster Rotherham SheffieldTyne and Wear Gateshead Newcastle upon Tyne North Tyneside South Tyneside SunderlandWest Midlands Birmingham Coventry Dudley Sandwell Solihull Walsall WolverhamptonWest Yorkshire Bradford Calderdale Kirklees Leeds WakefieldLondon Type London borough Sui generisSet up 1965 in antiquityNo 32 1Units Barking and Dagenham Barnet Bexley Brent Bromley Camden City of Westminster Croydon Ealing Enfield Greenwich Hackney Hammersmith and Fulham Haringey Harrow Havering Hillingdon Hounslow Islington Kensington and Chelsea Kingston upon Thames Lambeth Lewisham Merton Newham Redbridge Richmond upon Thames Southwark Sutton Tower Hamlets Waltham Forest Wandsworth City of LondonTotal 33Unitary authorities Type Set up No UnitsCounty gained district functions 2023 2 North Yorkshire SomersetDistrict s gained county functions 2023 2 Cumberland Westmorland and FurnessDistrict s gained county functions 2021 2 North Northamptonshire West NorthamptonshireDistrict s gained county functions 2020 1 BuckinghamshireDistrict s gained county functions 2019 2 Bournemouth Christchurch and Poole DorsetCounty gained district functions 2009 5 Cornwall Durham Northumberland Shropshire WiltshireDistrict s gained county functions 2009 4 Bedford Central Bedfordshire Cheshire East Cheshire West and ChesterDistrict s gained county functions 1998 21 Blackburn with Darwen Blackpool Bracknell Forest Halton Herefordshire Medway Nottingham Peterborough Plymouth Reading Slough Southend on Sea Stoke on Trent Swindon Telford and Wrekin Thurrock Torbay Warrington West Berkshire Windsor and Maidenhead WokinghamDistrict s gained county functions 1997 11 9 Bournemouth Brighton and Hove Derby Darlington Leicester Luton Milton Keynes Poole Portsmouth Rutland SouthamptonDistrict gained county functions 1996 13 Bath and North East Somerset Bristol East Riding of Yorkshire Hartlepool Kingston upon Hull Middlesbrough North East Lincolnshire North Lincolnshire North Somerset Redcar and Cleveland South Gloucestershire Stockton on Tees YorkCounty gained district functions 1995 1 Isle of WightSui generis 1890 1 Isles of ScillyTotal 63Civil parishes List of civil parishes in EnglandHierarchical list of regions strategic authorities counties and districts Region Strategic authority Ceremonial county Metropolitan or non metropolitan county Districts May also hold borough and or city statusEast of England Essex 1 Thurrock U A 2 Southend on Sea U A 3 Essex a Harlow b Epping Forest c Brentwood d Basildon e Castle Point f Rochford g Maldon h Chelmsford i Uttlesford j Braintree k Colchester l Tendring4 Hertfordshire a Three Rivers b Watford c Hertsmere d Welwyn Hatfield e Broxbourne f East Hertfordshire g Stevenage h North Hertfordshire i St Albans j DacorumBedfordshire 5 Luton U A 6 Bedford U A 7 Central Bedfordshire U A Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Cambridgeshire 8 Cambridgeshire a Cambridge b South Cambridgeshire c Huntingdonshire d Fenland e East Cambridgeshire9 Peterborough U A 10 Norfolk a Norwich b South Norfolk c Great Yarmouth d Broadland e North Norfolk f Breckland g King s Lynn and West Norfolk11 Suffolk a Ipswich b East Suffolk c Babergh d Mid Suffolk e West SuffolkEast Midlands East Midlands Derbyshire 1 Derbyshire a High Peak b Derbyshire Dales c South Derbyshire d Erewash e Amber Valley f North East Derbyshire g Chesterfield h Bolsover2 Derby U A Nottinghamshire 3 Nottinghamshire a Rushcliffe b Broxtowe c Ashfield d Gedling e Newark and Sherwood f Mansfield g Bassetlaw4 Nottingham U A Lincolnshire part only 5 Lincolnshire a Lincoln b North Kesteven c South Kesteven d South Holland e Boston f East Lindsey g West LindseyLeicestershire 6 Leicestershire a Charnwood b Melton c Harborough d Oadby and Wigston e Blaby f Hinckley and Bosworth g North West Leicestershire7 Leicester U A 8 Rutland U A Northamptonshire 9 West Northamptonshire U A 10 North Northamptonshire U A London Greater London Authority 1 Greater London none a City of Westminster b Kensington and Chelsea c Hammersmith and Fulham d Wandsworth e Lambeth f Southwark g Tower Hamlets h Hackney i Islington j Camden k Brent l Ealing m Hounslow n Richmond o Kingston upon Thames p Merton q Sutton r Croydon s Bromley t Lewisham u Greenwich v Bexley w Havering x Barking and Dagenham y Redbridge z Newham aa Waltham Forest ab Haringey ac Enfield ad Barnet ae Harrow af Hillingdon2 City of London none City of LondonNorth East North East 1 Northumberland U A 2 Tyne and Wear a Newcastle upon Tyne c North Tynesideb Gateshead d South Tyneside e SunderlandDurham 3 County Durham U A Tees Valley 4 Darlington U A 5 Hartlepool U A 6 Stockton on Tees U A North Yorkshire part only 7 Redcar and Cleveland U A 8 Middlesbrough U A North WestCumbria 1 Cumberland U A 2 Westmorland and Furness U ALancashire 3 Lancashire a West Lancashire b Chorley c South Ribble d Fylde e Preston f Wyre g Lancaster h Ribble Valley i Pendle j Burnley k Rossendale l Hyndburn4 Blackpool U A 5 Blackburn with Darwen U A Greater Manchester 6 Greater Manchester a Bolton b Bury c Manchester d Oldham e Rochdale f Salford g Stockport h Tameside i Trafford j WiganLiverpool City Region 7 Merseyside a Knowsley b Liverpool c St Helens d Sefton e WirralCheshire 8 Halton U A 9 Warrington U A 10 Cheshire West and Chester U A 11 Cheshire East U A South East 1 Berkshire a West Berkshire U A b Reading U A c Wokingham U A d Bracknell Forest U A e Windsor and Maidenhead U A f Slough U A Buckinghamshire 2 Buckinghamshire U A 3 Milton Keynes U A East Sussex 4 East Sussex a Hastings b Rother c Wealden d Eastbourne e Lewes5 Brighton amp Hove U A Kent 6 Kent a Dartford b Gravesham c Sevenoaks d Tonbridge and Malling e Tunbridge Wells f Maidstone g Swale h Ashford i Folkestone and Hythe j Canterbury k Dover l Thanet7 Medway U A 8 Oxfordshire a Oxford b Cherwell c South Oxfordshire d Vale of White Horse e West Oxfordshire9 Surrey a Spelthorne b Runnymede c Surrey Heath d Woking e Elmbridge f Guildford g Waverley h Mole Valley i Epsom and Ewell j Reigate and Banstead k Tandridge10 West Sussex a Worthing b Arun c Chichester d Horsham e Crawley f Mid Sussex g AdurHampshire 11 Hampshire a Fareham b Gosport c Winchester d Havant e East Hampshire f Hart g Rushmoor h Basingstoke and Deane i Test Valley j Eastleigh k New Forest12 Southampton U A 13 Portsmouth U A 14 Isle of Wight U A South West Dorset 1 Bournemouth Christchurch and Poole U A 2 Dorset U A Somerset 3 North Somerset U A 4 Somerset U A West of England 5 Bath and North East Somerset U A6 Bristol U A Gloucestershire 7 South Gloucestershire U A 8 Gloucestershire a Gloucester b Tewkesbury c Cheltenham d Cotswold e Stroud f Forest of DeanWiltshire 9 Swindon U A 10 Wiltshire U A Devon 11 Devon a Exeter b East Devon c Mid Devon d North Devon e Torridge f West Devon g South Hams h Teignbridge12 Torbay U A 13 Plymouth U A Cornwall none 14 Isles of Scilly sui generis U A 15 Cornwall U A West Midlands 1 Herefordshire U A Shropshire 2 Shropshire U A 3 Telford and Wrekin U A Staffordshire 4 Staffordshire a Cannock Chase b East Staffordshire c Lichfield d Newcastle under Lyme e South Staffordshire f Stafford g Staffordshire Moorlands h Tamworth5 Stoke on Trent U A 6 Warwickshire a North Warwickshire b Nuneaton and Bedworth c Rugby d Stratford on Avon e WarwickWest Midlands 7 West Midlands a Birmingham b Coventry c Dudley d Sandwell e Solihull f Walsall g Wolverhampton8 Worcestershire a Bromsgrove b Malvern Hills c Redditch d Worcester e Wychavon f Wyre ForestYorkshire and the Humber South Yorkshire 1 South Yorkshire a Sheffield b Rotherham c Barnsley d DoncasterWest Yorkshire 2 West Yorkshire a Wakefield b Kirklees c Calderdale d Bradford e LeedsYork and North Yorkshire North Yorkshire part only 3 North Yorkshire U A 4 York U A East Riding of Yorkshire 5 East Riding of Yorkshire U A 6 Kingston upon Hull U A Lincolnshire part only 7 North Lincolnshire U A 8 North East Lincolnshire U A Combined authority Two tier non metropolitan county Non metropolitan district Royal non metropolitan county no county council Unitary authority district that is not a county U A Unitary authority area non metropolitan county and district Metropolitan county no county council Metropolitan district Greater London Authority London borough or City of LondonSee alsoCombined authorityNotesMetropolitan 36 non metropolitan two tier 164 unitary authority 62 London borough 32 sui generis 2 Also a ceremonial county covering a larger area A new district was created merging previous districts to form the basis of the unitary authority Also a ceremonial county of identical area merged into Bournemouth Christchurch and Poole in 2019ReferencesJones B Kavanagh D Moran M amp Norton P Politics UK 2004 Pearson Longman Local government structure and elections GOV UK Retrieved 27 February 2022 Local Government Act 1992 Office of Public Sector Information 1992 Retrieved 8 August 2010 The political and governance implications of unitary reorganisation Local Government Association www local gov uk Retrieved 27 February 2022 Travers T The Politics of London 2004 Palgrave Local Government Act 1972 Office of Public Sector Information 1972 Retrieved 9 August 2010 Education and Learning Council of the Isles of Scilly Archived from the original on 4 June 2009 Retrieved 9 August 2010 About Us Cornwall and Isles of Scilly Primary Care Trust Retrieved 9 August 2010 The Cornwall and Isles of Scilly Enterprise Partnership Cornwall Council 30 July 2010 Retrieved 9 August 2010 Hebbert Michael 1998 London More by fortune than design John Wiley amp Sons Queen s Park parish council gets go ahead BBC News London 29 May 2012 Retrieved 2 August 2014 Atkinson H amp Wilks Heeg S 2000 Local Government from Thatcher to Blair Polity Collins S Colville I amp Pengelly S A Guide to the Greater London Authority 2000 Sweet and Maxwell Lieutenancies Act 1997 Office of Public Sector Information 1997 Retrieved 8 August 2010 The Berkshire Structural Change Order 1996 National Archives legislation gov uk 1996 Retrieved 13 September 2012 External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Subdivisions of England Map of the UK counties and unitary administrations Map of all UK local authorities