A county town is the 'capital' of a county in Republic of Ireland or the United Kingdom. County towns are usually the location of administrative or judicial functions, or established over time as the de facto main town of a county. The concept of a county town eventually became detached from its original meaning of where the county administration is based (see County halls below). In fact, many county towns are no longer part of "their" administrative county e.g. Nottingham is administered by a unitary authority entirely separate from the rest of Nottinghamshire. Many county towns are in fact cities, but all are referred to as county towns irrespective of whether city status is held or not.
Note that in Eastern Canada and the United States of America, the term county seat is usually used for the same purpose. However, in the state of Louisiana the term parish seat is used instead. In both instances a county seats or parish seats throughout the US or Eastern Canada range from large cities of 1,000,000 or more residents to towns with fewer than 200 residents and county populations of around 200.
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This list shows county towns prior to the reforms of 1889. For 1889 and later see the "County Halls" section below
This list shows county towns prior to the reforms of 1889. For 1889 and later see the "County Halls" section below
| County | County town |
|---|---|
| Anglesey | Llangefni (formerly Beaumaris) |
| Brecknockshire | Brecon |
| Caernarfonshire | Caernarfon |
| Cardiganshire | Cardigan |
| Carmarthenshire | Carmarthen |
| Denbighshire | Ruthin (formerly Denbigh) |
| Flintshire | Mold (formerly Flint) |
| Glamorgan | Cardiff |
| Merionethshire | Dolgellau |
| Montgomeryshire | Montgomery |
| Monmouthshire 1 | Monmouth 1 |
| Pembrokeshire | Haverfordwest (formerly Pembroke) |
| Radnorshire | Presteigne (formerly New Radnor) |
| County | County town |
|---|---|
| County Antrim | Antrim |
| County Armagh | Armagh |
| County Down | Downpatrick |
| County Fermanagh | Enniskillen |
| County Londonderry | Derry |
| County Tyrone | Omagh |
Note - Despite the fact that Belfast is the capital of Northern Ireland, it is not the county town of any county. Greater Belfast straddles two counties (Antrim and Down).
The term county capital is also used.
| County | County town |
|---|---|
| County Carlow | Carlow |
| County Cavan | Cavan |
| County Clare | Ennis |
| County Cork | Cork |
| County Donegal | Lifford |
| County Dublin | Dublin |
| County Galway | Galway |
| County Kerry | Tralee |
| County Kildare | Naas |
| County Kilkenny | Kilkenny |
| County Laois (formerly Queen's County) | Portlaoise (formerly known as Maryborough) |
| County Leitrim | Carrick-on-Shannon |
| County Limerick | Limerick |
| County Longford | Longford |
| County Louth | Dundalk |
| County Mayo | Castlebar |
| County Meath | Trim (Navan - de facto) |
| County Monaghan | Monaghan |
| County Offaly (formerly King's County) | Tullamore (since 1835), originally Philipstown |
| County Roscommon | Roscommon |
| County Sligo | Sligo |
| County Tipperary | Previously Cashel and Clonmel. Since 1898 shared between Clonmel (south) and Nenagh (north). Tipperary Town has never been county town. |
| County Waterford | Dungarvan (previously Waterford). |
| County Westmeath | Mullingar |
| County Wexford | Wexford |
| County Wicklow | Wicklow |
| County | County town |
|---|---|
| Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown | Dún Laoghaire |
| Fingal | Swords |
| North Tipperary | Nenagh |
| South Dublin | Tallaght |
| South Tipperary | Clonmel |
Over time, the location of administrative headquarters (County Halls) have moved away from the traditional county town. Furthermore, in 1965 and 1974 there were major administrative boundary changes in England and Wales and administrative counties were replaced with new metropolitan and non-metropolitan counties. The boundaries underwent more major alterations between 1995 and 1998 to create unitary authorities and some of the ancient counties and county towns were restored for administrative purposes. (Note: not all headquarters are or were called County Halls or Shire Halls eg: Cumbria County Council's HQ is called The Courts). Before 1974 many of the county halls were located in towns and cities that had the status of a county borough ie: a borough outside of the county council's jurisdiction.
| County council | Date | Headquarters |
|---|---|---|
| Avon | 1974 to 1996 | Bristol |
| Bedfordshire | 1889 to 2009 | Bedford |
| Berkshire | 1889 to 1998 | Reading (county borough until 1974) |
| City and County of Bristol | 1996 onwards | Bristol |
| Buckinghamshire | 1889 onwards | Aylesbury |
| Cambridgeshire | 1889 to 1965 1974 onwards |
Cambridge |
| Cambridgeshire and Isle of Ely | 1965 to 1974 | Cambridge |
| Cheshire | 1889 to 2009 | Chester |
| Cleveland | 1974 to 1996 | Middlesbrough |
| Cornwall | 1889 onwards | Truro |
| Cumberland | 1889 to 1974 | Carlisle (county borough from 1914) |
| Cumbria | 1974 onwards | Carlisle |
| Derbyshire | 1889 onwards | Matlock (moved from Derby, county borough 1958)[13] |
| Devon | 1889 onwards | Exeter (county borough until 1974). In 1963 the Devon County Buildings Area was transferred from the county borough of Exeter to the administrative county of Devon, of which it formed an exclave until 1974.[14] |
| Dorset | 1889 onwards | Dorchester |
| Durham | 1889 onwards | Durham |
| Essex | 1889 onwards | Chelmsford |
| Gloucestershire | 1889 onwards | Gloucester (county borough until 1974) |
| Greater London | 1965 to 1986 2002 onwards |
County Hall, Lambeth (Greater London
Council) City Hall, Southwark (Greater London Authority) |
| Greater Manchester | 1974 to 1986 | Manchester |
| Hampshire | 1889 onwards | Winchester |
| Herefordshire | 1889 to 1974 1998 onwards |
Hereford |
| Hereford and Worcester | 1974 to 1998 | Worcester |
| Hertfordshire | 1889 onwards | Hertford |
| Humberside | 1974 to 1996 | Beverley |
| Huntingdonshire | 1889 to 1965 | Huntingdon |
| Huntingdon and Peterborough | 1965 to 1974 | Huntingdon |
| Isle of Ely | 1889 to 1965 | March, although geographically considered part of Cambridgeshire |
| Isle of Wight | 1890 onwards | Newport |
| Kent | 1889 onwards | Maidstone |
| Lancashire | 1889 onwards | Preston (moved from Lancaster, County Hall opened in 1882, county borough until 1974) |
| Leicestershire | 1889 onwards | Glenfield (moved from county borough of Leicester in 1967) |
| Lincolnshire, Parts of Lindsey | 1889 to 1974 | Lincoln (county borough) |
| Lincolnshire, Parts of Holland | 1889 to 1974 | Boston |
| Lincolnshire, Parts of Kesteven | 1889 to 1974 | Sleaford |
| Lincolnshire | 1974 onwards | Lincoln |
| London | 1889 to 1965 | Spring Gardens, Westminster until 1922, County Hall at Lambeth thereafter. |
| Merseyside | 1974 to 1986 | Liverpool |
| Middlesex | 1889 to 1965 | Middlesex Guildhall at Westminster in County of London |
| Norfolk | 1889 onwards | Norwich (county borough until 1974) |
| Northamptonshire | 1889 onwards | Northampton (county borough until 1974) |
| Northumberland | 1889 onwards | Newcastle upon Tyne 1889 - 1981:
Northumberland County Hall was situated within an exclave of
Northumberland (Moot Hall Precincts) within the county
borough of Newcastle 1889 - 1974; the area became part of the
county of Tyne and Wear in 1974 and was thus extraterritorial Morpeth since 1981[15] |
| Nottinghamshire | 1889 onwards | West Bridgford (moved from county borough of Nottingham in 1959) |
| Oxfordshire | 1889 onwards | Oxford (county borough until 1974) |
| Soke of Peterborough | 1889 to 1965 | Peterborough, although geographically considered part of Northamptonshire |
| Rutland | 1889 to 1974 1997 onwards |
Oakham |
| Shropshire | 1889 onwards | Shrewsbury |
| Somerset | 1889 onwards | Taunton |
| Staffordshire | 1889 onwards | Stafford |
| East Suffolk | 1889 to 1974 | Ipswich (county borough) |
| West Suffolk | 1889 to 1974 | Bury |
| Suffolk | 1974 onwards | Ipswich |
| Surrey | 1889 onwards | Inner London Sessions House, Newington, until County Hall, Kingston upon Thames opened in 1893 (Kingston has been in Greater London since 1965) |
| East Sussex | 1889 onwards | Lewes |
| West Sussex | 1889 onwards | Chichester (originally jointly with Horsham)[9] |
| Tyne and Wear | 1974 to 1986 | Newcastle upon Tyne |
| Warwickshire | 1889 onwards | Warwick |
| West Midlands | 1974 to 1986 | Birmingham |
| Westmorland | 1889 to 1974 | Kendal |
| Wiltshire | 1889 onwards | Trowbridge |
| Worcestershire | 1889 to 1974 1998 onwards |
Worcester (county borough until 1974) |
| Yorkshire, East Riding | 1889 to 1974 1996 onwards |
Beverley (later HQ of Humberside) |
| Yorkshire, North Riding | 1889 to 1974 | Northallerton |
| North Yorkshire | 1974 onwards | Northallerton |
| South Yorkshire | 1974 to 1986 | Barnsley |
| Yorkshire, West Riding | 1889 to 1974 | Wakefield (county borough from 1915) |
| West Yorkshire | 1974 to 1986 | Wakefield |
| County council | Date | Headquarters |
|---|---|---|
| Anglesey | 1889 to 1974 1996 onwards |
Llangefni |
| Brecknockshire | 1889 to 1974 | Brecon |
| Caernarvonshire | 1889 to 1974 | Caernarfon |
| Carmarthenshire | 1889 to 1974 1996 onwards |
Carmarthen |
| Cardiganshire | 1889 to 1974 | Aberaeron |
| Clwyd | 1974 to 1996 | Mold |
| Denbighshire | 1889 to 1974 | Denbigh |
| Dyfed | 1974 to 1996 | Carmarthen |
| Flintshire | 1889 to 1974 | Mold |
| Glamorgan | 1889 to 1974 | Cardiff (county borough) |
| Gwent | 1978 to 1996 | Cwmbran |
| Gwynedd | 1974 to 1996 | Caernarfon |
| Mid Glamorgan | 1974 to 1996 | Cardiff (extraterritorial) |
| Merionethshire | 1889 to 1974 | Dolgellau |
| Montgomeryshire | 1889 to 1974 | Welshpool |
| Monmouthshire | 1889 to 1974 | Newport (county borough from 1891) |
| Pembrokeshire | 1889 to 1974 1996 onwards |
Haverfordwest |
| Radnorshire | 1889 to 1974 | Llandrindod Wells |
| Powys | 1974 onwards | Llandrindod Wells |
| South Glamorgan | 1974 to 1996 | Cardiff |
| West Glamorgan | 1974 to 1996 | Swansea |
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A county town is the most important town of any county in Britain and Ireland. In the United States the town is called the county seat.
It can be the place where the headquarters of the county council is based, or the place where the courts are. It has usually been the county town for hundreds of years. It could also be the biggest or most important town in the county. There is often a university in or near the county town. Cities can also be county towns, such as Hereford, or Durham City.
Some examples of county towns today in England:
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