| Geography | |
| Status | Ceremonial & (smaller) Non-metropolitan county |
|---|---|
| Region | East Midlands |
| Area - Total - Admin. council - Admin. area | Ranked 21st 2,625 km² Ranked 20th 2,547 km² |
| Admin HQ | Matlock |
| GB | GB-DBY |
| ONS code | 17 |
| NUTS 3 | UKF12/13 |
| Demographics | |
| Population - Total () - Density - Admin. council - Admin. pop. | Ranked / km² Ranked |
| Ethnicity | 96.0% White 2.3% S.Asian |
| Politics | |
| Executive | |
| Members of Parliament | |
| Districts | |
It has a two-tier local government, with a county council based in Matlock and eight district councils. Apart from 13 towns with between 10,000 and 100,000 inhabitants, there is a large amount of sparsely populated agricultural upland: 75% of the population live in 25% of the area. Although Derbyshire is generally considered to be in the East Midlands, some parts, such as High Peak, are closer to the northern cities of Manchester and Sheffield.
Before 1998 the administrative county included the city of Derby. Derby is now a unitary authority, but remains part of Derbyshire for ceremonial purposes.
As part of a 2002 marketing campaign, the plant conservation charity Plantlife chose the Jacob's-ladder as the county flower.
Derbyshire was traditionally divided into six hundreds, namely Appletree, High Peak, Morleyston and Litchurch, Repton and Gresley, Scarsdale, Wirksworth. These were based on the seven earlier wapentakes recorded in the Domesday Book, with the merging of Repton and Gresley wapentakes.
Derbyshire had a detached part in north-western Leicestershire, surrounding Measham and Donisthorpe. This escaped regularisation in 1844, and was incorporated into Leicestershire in 1888 when the county councils were set up. The thin strip of Leicestershire between the exclave and Derbyshire, containing Overseal and Netherseal, is now considered part of Derbyshire.
Apart from this, some parishes in historic Derbyshire, including Dore, Norton and Totley, are now in the City of Sheffield in South Yorkshire.
One of the ruling families was the Musart, now known as Musa. They ruled the land as lords of the manor until their separation in the 1200s. The Musa family is still alive today and the most recent family lives in the USA.
| Year | Regional Gross Value Added | Agriculture | Industry | Services |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1995 | 9,341 | 125 | 4,452 | 4,762 |
| 2000 | 11,558 | 98 | 4,945 | 6,515 |
| 2003 | 13,733 | 95 | 5,118 | 8,520 |
includes hunting and forestry
includes energy and construction
includes financial intermediation services indirectly measured
Components may not sum to totals due to rounding
Derbyshire | Derbyshire | Derbyshire | Derbyshire | Derbyshire | Derbyshire | Derbyshire | Derbyshire | Derbyshire | Дербишир | Derbyshire | Derbyshire | Derbyshire
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Derbyshire".
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