| Bedfordshire | |
|---|---|
| Geography | |
| Status: | Ceremonial & (smaller) Non-metropolitan county |
| Region: | East of England |
| Area: - Total - Admin. council - Admin. area | Ranked 41st 1,235 km² Ranked 34th 1,192 km² |
| Admin HQ: | Bedford |
| GB: | GB-BDF |
| ONS code: | 09 |
| NUTS 3: | UKH22 |
| Demographics | |
| Population - Total () - Density - Admin. council - Admin. pop. | Ranked / km² Ranked |
| Ethnicity: | 86.3% White 8.3% S.Asian 2.9% Afro-Carib. |
| Politics | |
| Executive: | |
| Members of Parliament | |
| Alistair Burt, Nadine Dorries, Patrick Hall, Kelvin Hopkins, Margaret Moran, Andrew Selous | |
| Districts | |
Its county town is Bedford. It borders Cambridgeshire, Northamptonshire, Buckinghamshire (with the Borough of Milton Keynes) and Hertfordshire.
The highest elevation point is 243 metres (797 feet), on the Dunstable Downs in the Chilterns. The county motto is "Constant Be."
John Marius Wilson, Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales (1870-72) notes that the highest point in Bedfordshire is Kensworth, at 904 feet.
Kensworth was, until 1897, a part of Hertfordshire.
As part of a 2002 marketing campaign, the plant conservation charity Plantlife chose the Bee Orchid as the county flower. County flowers in Britain www.plantlife.org.uk.
Most English counties have nicknames for people from that county, such as a Tyke from Yorkshire and a Yellowbelly from Lincolnshire; the traditional nickname for people from Bedforshire is 'Bedfordshire Bulldogs' or 'Clangers', this last deriving from the popular local dish comprising a suet crust dumpling filled with meat or jam or both.
The first recorded use of the name was in 1011 as "Bedanfordscir," meaning "Beda's ford" (river crossing).
Bedfordshire was historically divided into the nine hundreds: Barford, Biggleswade, Clifton, Flitt, Manshead, Redbournestoke, Stodden, Willey, Wixamtree, along with the liberty and borough of Bedford.
Luton was part of Bedfordshire until 1997, when it was made a unitary authority. However, it remains part of the ceremonial county of Bedfordshire, with a single Lord Lieutenant representing the sovereign throughout this entire area. Except where otherwise indicated, this article relates to the whole Ceremonial County of Bedfordshire, including Luton.
Most of Bedfordshire's rocks are clays and sandstones from the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods, with some limestone. Local clay has been used for brick-making at Fletton. Glacial erosion of chalk has left the hard flint nodules deposited as gravel — this has been commercially extracted in the past at pits which are now lakes, at Priory Country Park, Wyboston and Felmersham.
| Year | Regional Gross Value Added | Agriculture | Industry | Services |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1995 | 4,109 | 81 | 1,584 | 2,444 |
| 2000 | 4,716 | 53 | 1,296 | 3,367 |
| 2003 | 5,466 | 52 | 1,311 | 4,102 |
includes hunting and forestry
includes energy and construction
includes financial intermediation services indirectly measured
Components may not sum to totals due to rounding
To these were added in 1959 the M1 motorway London to Yorkshire motorway. This has three junctions around Luton, and one serving Bedford and Milton Keynes.
There are rural services also running between Bedford and Bletchley along the Marston Vale Line.
Bedfordshire is well served by a large number of taxi companies, in particular, Luton is noted for having the highest amount of taxi cabs per head of population in the United Kingdom with companies such as Cabco, Britannia cars and Five twos competing for work in the town and from London Luton Airport
Bedfordshire | Bedfordshire | Bedfordshire | Bedfordshire | Bedfordshire | Bedfordshire | ベッドフォードシャー州 | Bedfordshire | Bedfordshire | Бедфордшир | Bedfordshire | Bedfordshire
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Bedfordshire".
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