Vice-county

Vice-counties of Great Britain and the Isle of Man (Orkney and Shetland not shown)
Map showing detailed differences between Derbyshire vice-county (VC57) and the modern administrative county of Derbyshire, England.

A vice-county (vice county or biological vice-county)[1] is a geographical division of the British Isles used for the purposes of biological recording and other scientific data-gathering. It is sometimes called a Watsonian vice-county as vice-counties were introduced for Great Britain, its offshore islands, and the Isle of Man, by Hewett Cottrell Watson who first used them in the third volume of his Cybele Britannica published in 1852.[2] Watson's vice-counties were based on the ancient counties of Britain, but often subdividing these boundaries to create smaller, more uniform units, and considering exclaves to be part of the vice-county in which they locally lie.

In 1901 Robert Lloyd Praeger introduced a similar system for Ireland and its off-shore islands.[1][2]

Vice-counties are the "standard geographical area for county based [...] recording".[3] They provide a stable basis for recording using similarly sized units, and, although National Grid-based reporting has grown in popularity, vice-counties remain a useful mapping boundary, employed in many regional surveys, especially county floras and national lists. This allows data collected over long periods of time to be compared easily. The vice-counties remain unchanged by subsequent local government reorganisations, allowing historical and modern data to be more accurately compared.[4]

In 2002, to mark the 150th anniversary of the introduction of the Watsonian vice-county system, the NBN Trust commissioned the digitisation of the 112 vice-county boundaries for England, Scotland and Wales, based on 420 original one-inch to the mile maps annotated by Dandy in 1947, and held at the Natural History Museum, London. The resulting datafiles were much more detailed than anything readily available to recorders up to that point, and were made freely available (as a beta version). Intended for use with modern GIS and biological recording software, a final 'standard' version was released in 2008.[5] Up until that point, county recorders only had general access to a set of two fold-out vice-county maps covering the entirety of Great Britain, published in 1969.[6]

Vice-county systems

The vice-county system was first introduced by Hewett Cottrell Watson in the third volume of his Cybele Britannica published in 1852. He refined the system in later volumes. The geographical area that Watson called "Britain" consisted of the island of Great Britain with all of its offshore islands, plus the Isle of Man, but excluding the Channel Islands. This area was divided into 112 vice-counties with larger counties divided; for example, Devon into the vice-counties of North Devon and South Devon, and Yorkshire into five vice-counties. Each of these 112 vice-counties has a name and a number. Thus Vice-county 38, often abbreviated to "VC38", is called "Warwickshire".[2]

In 1901, Robert Lloyd Praeger extended the system of vice-counties to Ireland and its off-shore islands, based on an earlier suggestion by C.C. Babington in 1859. The Irish vice-counties were based on the historic 32 counties of Ireland, with the six largest being sub-divided; for example, the county of Cork was divided into three vice-counties. This produced a total of 40 vice-counties for Ireland, which were numbered from H1 to H40 ("H" for "Hibernia"). As with the 112 vice-counties of Britain, each vice-county has a name as well as a number. Thus Vice-county (or VC) H3 is "West Cork".[1][2]

Combining these two systems produces a 152 vice-county system. The exclusion of the Channel Islands from Watson's system for Britain has led to variations between different recording schemes. The geographical area covered by the 152 vice-counties may be described as the "British Isles", as in the 2008 Checklist of Beetles of the British Isles.[7] Other recording schemes regard the "British Isles" as including the Channel Islands. As they are not part of the 152 vice-county system, the Channel Islands may be added as an extra vice-county, making 153 in total, being indicated by letter codes such as "C"[3] or "CI".[8] Less usually, each of the five separate islands may be treated as a vice-county, giving 157 vice-counties in total.[9]

Alternative counts of vice-counties used in different recording schemes are shown in the table below.

Alternative counts of vice-counties
CountOriginatorDescriptions
112Watson(Great) Britain (including the Isle of Man)
40PraegerIreland
0, 1 or 5 Channel Islands (Jersey, Guernsey, Alderney, Sark and Herm)
152, 153 or 157 British Isles, (Great) Britain and Ireland

The vice-counties of Britain alone may be described as "Watsonian vice-counties",[10] or this term may be used for the combined vice-counties of Britain and Ireland,[3] which may also be described as "Watson-Praeger vice-counties".[11] In all cases, the Channel Islands may be excluded,[10] or included,[11] so that the count of vice-counties varies, as noted in the table above.

List of vice-counties

Great Britain

VCVice county
1West Cornwall with Scilly
2East Cornwall
3South Devon
4North Devon
5South Somerset
6North Somerset
7North Wiltshire
8South Wiltshire
9Dorset
10Isle of Wight
11South Hampshire
12North Hampshire
13West Sussex
14East Sussex
15East Kent
16West Kent
17Surrey
18South Essex
19North Essex
20Hertfordshire
21Middlesex
22Berkshire
23Oxfordshire
24Buckinghamshire
25East Suffolk
26West Suffolk
27East Norfolk
28West Norfolk
29Cambridgeshire
30Bedfordshire
31Huntingdonshire
32Northamptonshire
33East Gloucestershire
34West Gloucestershire
35Monmouthshire
36Herefordshire
37Worcestershire
38Warwickshire
39Staffordshire
40Shropshire
41Glamorganshire
42Breconshire
43Radnorshire
44Carmarthenshire
45Pembrokeshire
46Cardiganshire
47Montgomeryshire
48Merionethshire
49Caernarvonshire
50Denbighshire
51Flintshire
52Anglesey
53South Lincolnshire
54North Lincolnshire
55Leicestershire (with Rutland)
56Nottinghamshire
57Derbyshire
58Cheshire
59South Lancashire
60West Lancashire
61South-east Yorkshire
62North-east Yorkshire
63South-west Yorkshire
64Mid-west Yorkshire
65North-west Yorkshire
66County Durham
67South Northumberland
68North Northumberland
69Westmorland (with Furness)
70Cumberland
71Isle of Man
72Dumfriesshire
73Kirkcudbrightshire
74Wigtownshire
75Ayrshire
76Renfrewshire
77Lanarkshire
78Peeblesshire
79Selkirkshire
80Roxburghshire
81Berwickshire
82East Lothian
83Midlothian
84West Lothian
85Fifeshire
86Stirlingshire
87West Perthshire
88Mid Perthshire
89East Perthshire
90Angus
91Kincardineshire
92South Aberdeenshire
93North Aberdeenshire
94Banffshire
95Moray
96East Inverness-shire
97West Inverness-shire
98Argyllshire
99Dunbartonshire
100Clyde Isles
101Kintyre
102South Ebudes
103Mid Ebudes
104North Ebudes
105West Ross & Cromarty
106East Ross & Cromarty
107East Sutherland
108West Sutherland
109Caithness
110Outer Hebrides
111Orkney
112Shetland

Ireland

VCVice county
H1South Kerry
H2North Kerry
H3West Cork
H4Mid-Cork
H5East Cork
H6Waterford
H7South Tipperary
H8Limerick
H9Clare
H10North Tipperary
H11Kilkenny
H12Wexford
H13Carlow
H14Laois
H15South-east Galway
H16West Galway
H17North-east Galway
H18Offaly
H19Kildare
H20Wicklow
H21Dublin
H22Meath
H23Westmeath
H24Longford
H25Roscommon
H26East Mayo
H27West Mayo
H28Sligo
H29Leitrim
H30Cavan
H31Louth
H32Monaghan
H33Fermanagh
H34East Donegal
H35West Donegal
H36Tyrone
H37Armagh
H38Down
H39Antrim
H40Londonderry

Vice-counties of Great Britain listed by historic county

Historic countyVice counties
BedfordshireBedfordshire
BerkshireBerkshire
BuckinghamshireBuckinghamshire
Cambridgeshire, incorporating the Isle of ElyCambridgeshire
CheshireCheshire
CornwallWest Cornwall with Scilly, East Cornwall
CumberlandCumberland
DerbyshireDerbyshire
DevonSouth Devon, North Devon
DorsetDorset
County DurhamDurham
EssexSouth Essex, North Essex
GloucestershireEast Gloucestershire, West Gloucestershire
HampshireSouth Hampshire, North Hampshire, Isle of Wight
HerefordshireHerefordshire
HertfordshireHertfordshire
HuntingdonshireHuntingdonshire
KentEast Kent, West Kent
Lancashire less FurnessSouth Lancashire, West Lancashire
Leicestershire and RutlandLeicestershire with Rutland
LincolnshireSouth Lincolnshire, North Lincolnshire
Middlesex & the City of LondonMiddlesex
NorfolkEast Norfolk, West Norfolk
Northamptonshire, incorporating the Soke of PeterboroughNorthamptonshire
NorthumberlandSouth Northumberland, North Northumberland (Cheviotland)
NottinghamshireNottinghamshire
OxfordshireOxfordshire
ShropshireShropshire
SomersetSouth Somerset, North Somerset
StaffordshireStaffordshire
SuffolkEast Suffolk, West Suffolk
SurreySurrey
SussexWest Sussex, East Sussex
WarwickshireWarwickshire
Westmorland and FurnessWestmoreland with Furness
WiltshireNorth Wiltshire, South Wiltshire
WorcestershireWorcestershire
YorkshireSouth-east Yorkshire, North-east Yorkshire, South-west Yorkshire, Mid-west Yorkshire, North-west Yorkshire
AngleseyAnglesey
BrecknockshireBrecknockshire
CaernarvonshireCaernarvonshire
CardiganshireCardiganshire
CarmarthenshireCarmarthenshire
Denbighshire and English MaelorDenbighshire
Flintshire less English MaelorFlintshire
GlamorganGlamorgan
MerionethshireMerionethshire
MonmouthshireMonmouthshire
MontgomeryshireMontgomeryshire
PembrokeshirePembrokeshire
RadnorshireRadnorshire
AberdeenshireSouth Aberdeenshire, North Aberdeenshire
ArgyllshireMain Argyll, Kintyre, Mid Ebudes, South Ebudes
AyrshireAyrshire
BanffshireBanffshire
BerwickshireBerwickshire
ButeshireClyde Isles
CaithnessCaithness
DumbartonshireDumbartonshire
DumfriesshireDumfriesshire
EdinburghshireEdinburghshire
ElginshireMoray
Fife and Kinross-shireFife
ForfarshireAngus
HaddingtonshireHaddingtonshire
Inverness-shire and Nairnshire less Outer HebridesEasterness, Westerness, North Ebudes
KincardineshireKincardineshire
KirkcudbrightshireKirkcudbrightshire
LanarkshireLanarkshire
LinlithgowshireLinlithgowshire
OrkneyOrkney
PeeblesshirePeeblesshire
Perthshire and ClackmannanshireWest Perth, Mid Perth, East Perth
RenfrewshireRenfrewshire
Ross and Cromarty less Outer HebridesEast Ross, West Ross
RoxburghshireRoxburghshire
SelkirkshireSelkirkshire
StirlingshireStirlingshire
SutherlandEast Sutherland, West Sutherland
WigtownshireWigtownshire
ShetlandShetland

Vice-counties of Ireland listed by county, province and jurisdiction

VCVice countyCountyProvinceJurisdiction
H1South KerryCounty KerryMunsterRepublic of Ireland
H2North KerryCounty KerryMunsterRepublic of Ireland
H3West CorkCounty CorkMunsterRepublic of Ireland
H4Mid-CorkCounty CorkMunsterRepublic of Ireland
H5East CorkCounty CorkMunsterRepublic of Ireland
H6WaterfordCounty WaterfordMunsterRepublic of Ireland
H7South TipperaryCounty TipperaryMunsterRepublic of Ireland
H8LimerickCounty LimerickMunsterRepublic of Ireland
H9ClareCounty ClareMunsterRepublic of Ireland
H10North TipperaryCounty TipperaryMunsterRepublic of Ireland
H11KilkennyCounty KilkennyLeinsterRepublic of Ireland
H12WexfordCounty WexfordLeinsterRepublic of Ireland
H13CarlowCounty CarlowLeinsterRepublic of Ireland
H14LaoisCounty LaoisLeinsterRepublic of Ireland
H15South-east GalwayCounty GalwayConnachtRepublic of Ireland
H16West GalwayCounty GalwayConnachtRepublic of Ireland
H17North-east GalwayCounty GalwayConnachtRepublic of Ireland
H18OffalyCounty OffalyLeinsterRepublic of Ireland
H19KildareCounty KildareLeinsterRepublic of Ireland
H20WicklowCounty KildareLeinsterRepublic of Ireland
H21DublinCounty DublinLeinsterRepublic of Ireland
H22MeathCounty MeathLeinsterRepublic of Ireland
H23WestmeathCounty WestmeathLeinsterRepublic of Ireland
H24LongfordCounty LongfordLeinsterRepublic of Ireland
H25RoscommonCounty RoscommonConnachtRepublic of Ireland
H26East MayoCounty MayoConnachtRepublic of Ireland
H27West MayoCounty MayoConnachtRepublic of Ireland
H28SligoCounty SligoConnachtRepublic of Ireland
H29LeitrimCounty LeitrimConnachtRepublic of Ireland
H30CavanCounty CavanUlsterRepublic of Ireland
H31LouthCounty LouthLeinsterRepublic of Ireland
H32MonaghanCounty MonaghanUlsterRepublic of Ireland
H33FermanaghCounty FermanaghUlsterNorthern Ireland
H34East DonegalCounty Donegal,
County Londonderry[fn 1]
UlsterRepublic of Ireland,
Northern Ireland
H35West DonegalCounty DonegalUlsterRepublic of Ireland
H36TyroneCounty TyroneUlsterNorthern Ireland
H37ArmaghCounty ArmaghUlsterNorthern Ireland
H38DownCounty DownUlsterNorthern Ireland
H39AntrimCounty AntrimUlsterNorthern Ireland
H40LondonderryCounty LondonderryUlsterNorthern Ireland

See also

Notes

  1. The part of County Londonderry west of the River Foyle forms part of the H34 (East Donegal) vice-county.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Webb, D.A. (1980), "The Biological Vice-Counties of Ireland", Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, 80B: 179–196, JSTOR 20494359
  2. 1 2 3 4 Vincent, Peter J. (1990), "Recording species distributions", A Biogeography of the British Isles: an Introduction, Routledge, pp. 48–73, ISBN 978-0-415-03471-5
  3. 1 2 3 Vice-county map of Britain and Ireland, British Bryological Society, retrieved 31 May 2016
  4. Stace, C.A.; Ellis, R.G.; Kent, D.H. & McCosh, D.J. (2003), Vice-county Census Catalogue of The Vascular Plants of Great Britain, London: Botanical Society of the British Isles, ISBN 0 901158 30 5
  5. Sharing Information about Wildlife: Useful Things, National Biodiversity Network, retrieved 8 August 2014
  6. Dandy, J.E. (1969), Watsonian vice-counties of Great Britain, Publication no. 146, Ray Society, London
  7. Duff, A.G., ed. (2008), Checklist of Beetles of the British Isles, retrieved 10 August 2011
  8. Stace, Clive (2010), New Flora of the British Isles (3rd ed.), Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-70772-5 , inside back cover
  9. Baroni Urbani, C. & Collingwood, C.A. (1976), "A numerical analysis of the distribution of British Formicidae (Hymenoptera, Aculeata)" (PDF), Verhandlungen der Naturforschenden Gesellschaft in Basel, 85: 51–91
  10. 1 2 Browse Watsonian Vice County, National Biodiversity Network, 2011, retrieved 10 August 2011
  11. 1 2 Merritt, R.; Moore, N.W. & Eversham, B.C. (1996), Atlas of the dragonflies of Britain and Ireland : ITE research publication no. 9 (PDF), London: HMSO, ISBN 978-0-11-701561-6, retrieved 10 August 2011
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