翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ List of the largest ships hit by U-boats in World War I
・ List of the largest Sites of Special Scientific Interest in England
・ List of the largest software companies
・ List of the largest stations in Australia
・ List of the largest townships in New Jersey
・ List of the largest trading partners of Canada
・ List of the largest trading partners of China
・ List of the largest trading partners of Germany
・ List of the largest trading partners of India
・ List of the largest trading partners of Russia
・ List of the largest trading partners of the European Union
・ List of the largest trading partners of the Netherlands
・ List of the largest trading partners of the United States
・ List of the largest United States colleges and universities by enrollment
・ List of the largest urban agglomerations in North America
List of the largest villages in England
・ List of The Larry Sanders Show characters
・ List of The Larry Sanders Show episodes
・ List of The Last Blade characters
・ List of The Last Leg episodes
・ List of The Last Man on Earth episodes
・ List of the last monarchs in Africa
・ List of the last monarchs in Europe
・ List of the last monarchs in the Americas
・ List of The Last of Us characters
・ List of The Last Ship episodes
・ List of The Late Late Show episodes
・ List of The Late Late Show episodes (2015 guest hosts)
・ List of The Late Late Show guests
・ List of The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson episodes


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

List of the largest villages in England : ウィキペディア英語版
List of the largest villages in England

Several places claim to be the largest village in England. This title is disputed as there is no standard definition of a village as distinct from a town and 'largest' can refer to population or area.
A typical contender is Lancing in West Sussex with a population of around 19,000. Whilst Lancing might be described as a town in colloquial use, it has not formally taken on this status and, in this case with three tiers of local government, it has a parish council rather than a town council. All claimants must avoid having had a town charter or licence to hold a market from the Crown. Many other villages are in a similar position. Some of the claimants below, such as Cottingham, Lancing and Rawmarsh, are part of larger urban areas and it can be contended that such claimants are suburbs or 'suburban villages' rather than 'standalone villages' which have a clear surrounding open space buffer zone.
The old simple definitions of 'towns' were settlements with:
*town charters (see the list of towns in England); or
*with a regular market.
These two features have been long surpassed by large 'New towns' on former villages such as Harlow which have neither feature yet have virtually no claimants that they are villages.
The claim is therefore complicated by disputes over what renders a village a ''town'', the usual trichotomy in current use of British English being village, town or city.〔
;Typical factors
Definitions can refer to history of population growth or popular formulae based on types and quantities of key buildings (e.g. schools, retailers, railway/tram station, more than one church or community hall), limited business parks and maximum limits to the density of housing. The few large dispersed settlements, historically tied to one church community, and major changes to boundaries allow more elaborate claims. A third common criterion is simply stating it is a 'village' in a nameplate or whole community organisation, which leads to city district such as Blackheath, London having a strong claim.
;Impact of postal towns and boroughs
The country is split up into postal towns: settlements from village to city scale that can contrast markedly, but are carefully cited by some village contenders to rule out other villages. Others point to the fact that a rival village is in a borough.
;Parish criterion
The typical English local government district contains a variety of settlements and, while planning law encourages the existence of buffers, the term village has no formal use and wards are not permanently fixed. Civil parishes exist in many such districts to add an extra rung to local government, with fewer major changes — they can contain divorced villages, neighbourhoods hamlets, often based on old ties to what was one community, an ecclesiastical parish which may be lost, such as by the building of a motorway.
;Popular definitions and changes
Popularly, many settlements are described both as a town and a village by different people and/or can change over small areas. For example, Hebden Bridge in West Yorkshire is widely considered a "town"〔As described in their articles according to WP:CONSENSUS and WP:UKCITIES guidelines〕 yet its population is half that of Birstall in the same county, most organisations of which and writers about which describe it as a village.
Furthermore, settlements have a tendency to become denser and/or expand wider and, when they do, many residents may prefer to think of their home as a village rather than a town, and institutions such as a village green or village hall will tend to retain the name that they were given when the settlement was smaller. Since 1974, separation of rural settlements from urban settlements has not been important for local authorities themselves, and became less so with the new top-level authorities created that year〔Local Government Act 1974〕 e.g. Bessacarr, South Yorkshire was not part of the City of Doncaster before 1974; it is often spoken of as a suburb of Doncaster now, but, where described as a village today, then it as a ward with Cantley had 14,408 people in 2011.
;Consensus
Such difficulties in measurement, and desires for different organisations to be called a town or a village, mean that the media has been free to pick whichever criteria it sees fit when choosing whether to describe a settlement as a town or a village.〔("City's Green Belt is at Risk Like Never Before" ) The Oxford Mail. 7 November 2013〕
==Contenders==
Places for which this claim has been made, and the reported population in the 2011 census (most recent all households census) include:


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「List of the largest villages in England」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.