How Many Counties In England End With Shire _hot_ 【PREMIUM】
But some lists exclude Yorkshire because it’s not “-shire” as a suffix? Actually, “Yorkshire” does end with “shire.” So it counts.
Let’s settle it:
if we exclude Rutland (doesn’t end in shire) and Middlesex (ends in “sex,” not shire). But my list above gave 25. The error: Devonshire and Dorsetshire are still historic, but sometimes counted as Devon and Dorset. So to avoid double-counting, the accepted number among historians is 24 historic shire counties . Final Clear Answer | Type of county | Number ending in “-shire” | |----------------|---------------------------| | Ceremonial (modern) | 22 | | Historic (traditional) | 24 | how many counties in england end with shire
The most common answer given in quizzes and general knowledge is , referring to the historic counties. The discrepancy arises because some ceremonial counties like Devon and Dorset dropped the “-shire,” while historic ones retain it. Why “-shire”? The suffix comes from Old English scir , meaning an administrative district. Shires were originally governed by a sheriff ( shire reeve ). Most shires were named after their county town (e.g., Gloucester → Gloucestershire), but some (like Devon, Cornwall, Kent) never used the suffix or dropped it. But some lists exclude Yorkshire because it’s not
Actually, Yorkshire is one ceremonial county (split into North, East, South, West for administrative purposes, but as a ceremonial county it’s still “Yorkshire” for lieutenancy — no, that’s wrong: since 1974, Yorkshire is divided into East Riding of Yorkshire, North Yorkshire, South Yorkshire, West Yorkshire. Only “North Yorkshire” ends in -shire. East Riding does not. South and West Yorkshire do not.) But my list above gave 25