The purpose of this map is to give a reasonably accurate large-scale representation of the 86 'traditional' counties of Britain as they existed before 1974. No claim to small-scale planimetric accuracy is made. For the sake of convenience and practicality only the greatest detached parts (exclaves) are shown (in descending size order, those of Lancashire (i.e. Furness), Flintshire (3), Dunbartonshire and Worcestershire (2)). All other detached parts are shown as part of the county surrounding them. Due to the fragmentary nature of Cromartyshire, it is shown as a single geographical area with Ross-shire, the combined area being labelled "Ross-shire and Cromartyshire".
The map may be copied and used freely. However, the Association of British Counties would appreciate an acknowledgement and a link to our site.
Copied from the Swedish Wikipedia, there uploaded by Rudolf 1922 11 april 2004 kl. 18.35.
Licensing
The copyright holder of this work allows anyone to use it for any purpose including unrestricted redistribution, commercial use, and modification.
Please check the source to verify that this is correct. In particular, note that publication on the Internet, like publication by any other means, does not in itself imply permission to redistribute. Files without valid permission should be tagged with {{subst:npd}}.
Usage notes:
If the work requires attribution, use {{Attribution}} instead.
If this is your own work, please use {{Cc-zero}} instead.
Historical map of Great Britain, originally from [http://www.abcounties.co.uk/ www.abcounties.co.uk] The purpose of this map is to give a reasonably accurate large-scale representation of the 86 Counties of Britain. No claim to small-scale planimetric ac