ChatterBank7 mins ago
Countes in GB
Is County Durham the only county in Geat Britain actually called County? Derby County perhaps?
Stewart
Stewart
Answers
Kent
O.E., from L. Canticum, Gk. Kantion (51 B.C.E.), an ancient Celtic name often explained as "coastal district," but possibly "land of the hosts or armies."
Norfolk / Suffolk
Nordfolc (1066) "(Territory of the) Northern/ Southern People (of the East Angles)
county
c.1300, from Anglo-Fr. counte, from L.L. comitatus " jurisdiction of a...
O.E., from L. Canticum, Gk. Kantion (51 B.C.E.), an ancient Celtic name often explained as "coastal district," but possibly "land of the hosts or armies."
Norfolk / Suffolk
c.1300, from Anglo-Fr. counte, from L.L. comitatus "
19:13 Sat 15th Sep 2012
All the counties in Ireland are called counties but Ireland, even Northern Ireland is not part of Great Britain. The United Kingdom includes Northern Ireland. but GB doesn't. Our Olympic remember was Great Britain & Northern Ireland. Derby County and Notts County are football teams but the use of the word county in their name would suggest that the area known as Derbyshire, for example, may have once called County Derby..maybe. Kent, Norfolk and Suffolk for example are usually referred to as Kent, Norfolk and Suffolk while most of the rest are all called shires. How did this originate.
Stewart
Stewart
Kent
O.E., from L. Canticum, Gk. Kantion (51 B.C.E.), an ancient Celtic name often explained as "coastal district," but possibly "land of the hosts or armies."
Norfolk / Suffolk
Nordfolc (1066) "(Territory of the) Northern/Southern People (of the East Angles)
county
c.1300, from Anglo-Fr. counte, from L.L. comitatus "jurisdiction of a count," from L. comes (see count (n.)); replaced O.E. scir "shire."
http:// en.wiki pedia.o ...c_co unties_ of_Engl and
O.E., from L. Canticum, Gk. Kantion (51 B.C.E.), an ancient Celtic name often explained as "coastal district," but possibly "land of the hosts or armies."
Norfolk / Suffolk
Nordfolc (1066) "(Territory of the) Northern/Southern People (of the East Angles)
county
c.1300, from Anglo-Fr. counte, from L.L. comitatus "jurisdiction of a count," from L. comes (see count (n.)); replaced O.E. scir "shire."
http://
It is the only one in Great Britain which is known as 'County [name]' but historically and until quite recently, County Durham was not its proper,official, name. In common with many other counties, the formal, official name was 'County of [name of county town]' as Cambridgeshire is 'the County of Cambridge' not 'The County of Cambridgeshire'. County Durham was what people called 'the County of Durham' but 'County Durham' got official recognition when laws and Statutory Instruments started referring to 'County Durham' from the late 1990s and in one case in 2008, 'the County of County Durham'.
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