COUNTIES IN ENGLAND.
In universal means, County is a land area of local
government within a country. In United Kingdom, county is divided into a number of metropolitan and non –
metropolitan counties. Most non-metropolitan counties in England are run by
county council and divided into non metropolitan district with
its own council. The name 'county' was introduced by the Normans , and was
derived from a Norman term for an area administered by a Count (lord). The counties
in of England have changed little for time and time. In the meddle century, a
number of important cities were granted the status of counties, such as London
, Bristol and Coventry , and numerous small exclaves such as Islandshire were
created. But the next major changed in
1844, when many of these exclaves were re-merged with their around counties
(for example Coventry was re-merged with Warwickshire).
When Northern Ireland merger to England
The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
(commonly known as the United Kingdom. Was the formal name
and the state form of the United Kingdom from
1 January 1801 until 12 April 1927. The part of the island
of Ireland that remained seceded from
the United Kingdom in 1922 was succeeded by the state of Ireland in 1937.
George III , the
first king of the new United Kingdom. George III, Under
the terms of the Act of Union , the separate
Parliament of Great Britain
and the Parliament of Ireland were
abolished and replaced by a united Parliament of the United Kingdom
. The new House of Commons consisted
of all Members of Great Britain's
18th Parliament and
100 Irish MPs co-opted in a special election in 1801
. The new House of Lords consisted
of all members of Great Britain's House of Lords, as well as four Lords Spiritual and
twenty-eight Lords Temporal from the Irish House of Lords . The
new Parliament met in the Palace of Westminster ,
formerly the home of the Parliament of Great Britain and, until 1707, the Parliament of England .
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