The island of Ireland is divided into 32 counties (Irish language contae or condae, pronounced "cun-day"), the Republic of Ireland is made up of 26 of these; Northern Ireland is comprised of the remaining six. The counties are subdivisions of the ancient Provinces of Ireland, made up, in general, from smaller territories. While the provinces have existed in some form for many centuries, the counties developed under the Norman and British administrations and also from the Christian dioceses.
The counties were subsequently adopted by sporting and cultural organisations such as the Gaelic Athletic Association, which organises its activities on county lines and today they attract strong loyalties, particularly in the sporting field.
The strict definition of what constitutes a county in Ireland has been slightly blurred by a growing association of some of the population to their respective administrative county, most prominently noticeable (due to historical influences) in the counties of North Tipperary, South Tipperary and in more recent times the divisions of County Dublin, Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown, Fingal and South Dublin. Currently the "traditional" 32 counties remain in use as the basis of local identity and sporting loyalties.
| Republic of Ireland |
In the sixth century, Ireland was divided into cúigí or fifths (sing. cúige). The four current provinces of Ireland were named after four of these cúigí, Uladh (Ulster), Laighean (Leinster), Connachta (Connacht) and Mumha (Munster). The fifth cúige, Mídh (Meath), corresponded to the present-day counties of Meath, Westmeath, Longford and Offaly in present-day Leinster (Louth was considered to be part of Ulster). In bardic lore, the "fifths of Ireland" corresponded to the five provinces: learning was in the west, war in the north, wealth in the east, music or art in the south and kinship in the centre (Meath).
In 1111, the Synod of Rathbreasail established the Catholic dioceses of Ireland, which vaguely resemble the later counties. In the 12th century, the Kings of England began their first of many invasions (commonly referred to in Ireland as the Norman Invasion). The English governed Ireland in a like structure as they did themselves, by dividing the country into shires or counties in the late 12th and early 13th centuries. To correspond with the subdivisions of the English shires into honors or baronies, Irish counties were granted out to the Angle-Norman noblemen in cantreds, later known as baronies, which in turn were subdivided, as in England, into manors or townlands. (However, in many cases, both baronies and townlands correspond to earlier, pre-Norman, divisions.) While there are 331 baronies in Ireland, divided first into civil parishes, there are around 60,000 townlands that range in size from one to several thousand acres. Townlands were often traditionally divided into smaller units called quarters, but these subdivisions are not legally defined.
The original pattern of 32 counties evolved over many years from the original Norman conquest of Ireland.
The Local Government (Ireland) Act 1898 was a significant milestone in the framing of the counties and their status. Some of the 32 counties are no longer the main basis for local government, planning and community development purposes, although unlike the counties in Great Britain, the Republic's traditional county boundaries are still respected for other purposes (counties on occasion being sub-divided).
In the Republic of Ireland, six of the original 26 counties have more than one local authority area, producing a total of 34 "county-level" authorities. County Tipperary has been split into North Tipperary and South Tipperary since 1898 and the formal adoption of the county system for local government. In 1994 County Dublin was split into Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown, Fingal, and South Dublin. By 2002 however, upon the establishment of County Development Boards, the definition of "local government" expanded to include the need for a proper identity in each of the new counties; the development of which is ongoing. Of the administrative structures established under the 1898 Local Government Act, the only type to have been completely abolished were the Rural Districts, which were rendered void in the early years of the Irish Free State amidst widespread allegations of corruption. On the other hand, administrative structures such as Town Councils and Regional Authorities (created to comply with requirements of the EU) exist in parallel with the county system.
In Northern Ireland, a major re-organisation of local government in 1973 replaced the six traditional counties and two county boroughs (Belfast and Londonderry) by 26 "single-tier" districts for local government purposes, and these cross the traditional county boundaries. The six counties and two county-boroughs remain in use for some purposes, including Lords Lieutenant, number plates, and the Royal Mail Postcode Address File.
The Institute of Technology system was organised on the committee areas or "functional areas", these still remain legal but are not as important as originally envisioned as the institutes are now more national in character and are only really applied today when selecting governing councils, similarly Dublin Institute of Technology was originally a group of several colleges of the City of Dublin committee.
Flags
Baronies, Civil Parishes and Townlands
Representatives of local government
Subnational entities in Europe | Counties of Ireland | Local government in the Republic of Ireland
Condaos d'Irlanda | Gliederung Irlands | Condados de Irlanda | Comtés d'Irlande | Contaetha na hÉireann | Contaetha na h-Eireann | Contee d'Irlanda | Graafschappen van Ierland | アイルランドの地方行政区画 | Grevskap i Irland | Hrabstwa Irlandii | Subdivisões da Irlanda | Comitatele Irlandei | Графства Ирландии | Irlands grevskap
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"Counties of Ireland".
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