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Disagreement on Christchurch article re:settlement definition[edit]

There is a dispute at the article for Christchurch, Dorset over whether, how, and in how much detail, the article should cover Bournemouth Airport – a major employer which was in the now defunct borough of Christchurch, but some distance outside the built-up area in a neighbouring parish. This is essentially a difference of opinion on how to handle the ambiguity around defining settlements. If you think you can help resolve this, join the discussion at Talk:Christchurch,_Dorset#Bournemouth_airport. Thanks, Joe D (t)

Unitary councils[edit]

The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section. A summary of the conclusions reached follows.
The result of this discussion was consensus to combine tier 1 and 2, consensus to go on a case by case basis for tier 3 with a default to split. The issue with unitary districts can be discussed separately. Crouch, Swale (talk) 19:01, 19 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

After Wikipedia talk:WikiProject UK geography/Archive 29#Unitary county councils: separate articles or not? there has been discussion at Talk:Somerset County Council#Merger proposal, Talk:North Yorkshire Council#Merger of North Yorkshire County Council and North Yorkshire Council and Talk:Wiltshire County Council#Merger discussion.

In terms of the differences in geographical and legal continuations I'll divide them into tiers.

  • Tier 1, Cornwall, Durham, Isle of Wight, Northumberland, North Yorkshire, Rutland, Shropshire, Somerset and Wiltshire, all of these kept the same area and the council was renamed rather than abolished and reformed, Rutland appears to tier 1 as while the order mentions about the new county it doesn't discuss the council, most of these also dropped "County" from their name when they became unitary
  • Tier 2, Buckinghamshire, which was abolished and reformed but kept the same area
  • Tier 3, (edit, Cumberland), Dorset, East Riding of Yorkshire and (edit, Herefordshire), these ended up with different boundaries and were legally different entities

Given these subsequent discussions and the possibility of merging tier 2 and 3 I'm looking at getting consensus on what should be done.

Please indicate you're !vote by stating if you support merging/keeping separate for example if you think Wiltshire Council and Wiltshire County Council should be separate articles, one for the council until 2009 and the other for the council from 2009 then write "Separate tier 1" (or "Separate all" since you are likely to want to keep the others). If you think tier 1 and 2 should be merged but tier 3 should be separate write "Combine tier 1 and t, separate tier 3". In terms of the arguments, for merging at least the 1st 2 tiers it can be argued that if the council(s) are legally the same or at least cover/covered the same area then per WP:NOTDIC we shouldn't create separate articles mainly because of a slight name change namely "Somerset County Council" becoming "Somerset Council", noting for example that Durham County Council has it seems never been split. It also gives the impression that for say Somerset the changes in 2023 were significant but not the changes in 1974 (exactly the same name but different legal entity and different boundaries) which is likely to suggest to readers that the 2023 changes were more important while having a single article better helps readers understand the differences. In terms of the arguments for keeping separate, for especially tier 3 it can be argued that if they have different boundaries and were different legal entities its more appropriate to have separate articles and put hatnotes. It can be argued that putting different but similarly names councils also violates WP:NOTDIC by treating different entities in 1 article. Also some of the articles may have enough content that its more appropriate to keep separate. @A.D.Hope, Eopsid, 10mmsocket, JMF, Mhockey, Moonraker, Number 57, Rcsprinter123, Stortford, ValenciaThunderbolt, and Wire723: Crouch, Swale (talk) 17:47, 21 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]

  • Combine tier 1 and 2, neutral on tier 3, tier 1 and 2 are the same or almost the same so should probably be combined but I'm less sure on tier 3 are they may be different enough. Crouch, Swale (talk) 18:25, 21 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Separate articles in all cases except where the word count is low (e.g. Rutland County Council). Most readers are looking for the current council and the 19th & 20th century history is better in a separate article, instead of causing a distraction by appearing near the beginning of a combined article. The technical difference between a renamed body and a newly formed council has little weight. Wire723 (talk) 18:50, 21 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
    • I concur with Wire723. BTW, the span of Buckinghamshire County Council originally included the Milton Keynes District Council (along with Aylesbury Vale DC etc), so the boundary is not the same as that of Buckinghamshire Council. Unless of course you mean its 2020 transition (nothing happened in 2009: MK left in 1997). The only thing that has stayed the same is the ceremonial county. It is this kind of complication that makes it wise to have separate articles. JMF
  • Combine tier 1 & 2, apart from nomenclature its all part of the history of a single sub-division. Tier 3 is sufficiemtly different to warrant sperate articles. Going for the purist route of haveing separate articles for every minor change could lead to a mine field, which is what the proposal is trying to avoid Murgatroyd49 (talk) 19:25, 21 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • For the 3 ones it may be better to just consider each on a case by case basis and have no particular rule. If there is a consensus to split tier 1 I will reverse the merges from last year, if there is a consensus to merge tier 2 or 3 I will merge those, if there is no consensus I will leave things as they are and were from last year's discussion. Crouch, Swale (talk) 19:47, 21 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment. Before !voting, one way or the other, it seems a good idea to consider potential implications of these mergers. For example, for Wiltshire there's separate articles for Wiltshire Council elections post-2009 and Wiltshire County Council elections for prior years. Presumably, these two articles would also need to be merged. I haven't so far checked out others. Rupples (talk) 21:42, 21 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
    The way the opening sentence of Wiltshire Council has been written could lead one to think Wiltshire Council has been a unitary authority since 1889! One of the problems of merging is unless clearly defined and written there's a tendency for topics to become confused. Rupples (talk) 22:26, 21 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Combine tier 1 & 2 - I'm concerned that splitting articles every time there's a change of status or boundary fragments the narrative too much, and artificially exaggerates the extent of change and downplays the amount of continuity there was at each reform. We also need to consider how much material there would be for a page on the 'old' version of the council - I can see such articles being basically stubs or heavily overlapping the page for the modern council. I think the key points about the old version of such councils should still be mentioned on the modern council's page anyway, to provide useful context for understanding the current version.
I agree the wording needs to be clearer in places to avoid the impression of unitary authorities having been created in 1889. We do have to bear in mind that "unitary authority" isn't the legal name for these councils, but instead a widely-used shorthand for them. Strictly speaking they are all either county councils which also perform district-level functions, or district councils which also perform county-level functions. Whether or not they include the word "County" in their titles is a matter of branding rather than indicating a legal difference. To be clear:
  • County councils which now also perform district-level functions: Cornwall, County Durham, Isle of Wight, North Yorkshire, Northumberland, Shropshire, Somerset, Wiltshire
  • Councils with the same name as a ceremonial county but which are legally district councils which also perform county-level functions: Buckinghamshire, Dorset, East Riding of Yorkshire, Herefordshire, Rutland
It does seem to be at the whim of the civil servants who drafted the statutory instruments putting the changes into effect which model they followed, and the effect is the same either way. To my mind Buckinghamshire's situation was identical to Shropshire's - a county council which covered the ceremonial county minus one district which had already become unitary, but for some reason Shropshire is legally a county council and Buckinghamshire a district council.
I would keep Cumberland Council separate from the old Cumberland County Council as there are enough differences - notably Cumberland hasn't been reinstated as a ceremonial county and there was a 49 year gap. This follows what we've done in Wales where there are separate articles for Pembrokeshire County Council (the current body established in 1996) and Pembrokeshire County Council, 1889–1974. The time period gap also applies for East Riding of Yorkshire and Herefordshire, so keep them separate. I can see the argument either way on Dorset, so happy to leave that one as it is (split). Stortford (talk) 07:46, 22 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I agree that splitting articles every time there is a change of status or boundary is a bad idea, and for that reason I am opposed to new articles for UA areas which were (and still are) non-metropolitan counties. Buckinghamshire is an example of a non-metropolitan county (legally the "county of Buckinghamshire") which is now also a district and has a district council. But I don't think that the transition of a county council to a UA, however accomplished, can be characterised as a "change of status". I suspect that the reason why the transition was sometimes achieved by repurposing the old county council and sometimes by forming a new entity was more to do with legal efficiency than the whim of civil servants (i.e. which assets needed to be legally transferred). To my mind, the important factor is whether the UA councils are significantly different kinds of local authorities from their predecessor councils. I think they are. Mhockey (talk) 21:04, 22 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
But in the cases of North Yorkshire and Somerset etc apart from the slight name change and gaining the district functions. Yes it may be thought of and sometimes called a new council it was both a geographical and legal continuation unlike Dorset. Having 2 articles on 2 similarly named councils having similar functions and covering exactly the same area doesn't seem helpful and I would have thought the differences would be more effectively covered in a single article. Had North Yorkshire council area had a boundary change when it became unitary then I could see the logic even though I'd be fine with 1 article but when they are exactly the same I don't think its a goo idea, given North Yorkshire Council is not only a geographical continuation but also a legal continuation. Crouch, Swale (talk) 19:34, 24 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Mhockey: But North Yorkshire County Council and North Yorkshire have similar functions as well as covering the same area and the same legal entity. I can see the logic in having separate articles at Municipal Borough of Wisbech and Wisbech Town Council (or Stowmarket Town Council starting at 1974 even though the urban district council has the same boundaries) even though the district/district council and parish/parish council cover/covered the same area because a district/district council is a quite a different entity to a parish/parish council, ones 3rd order and the other is 4th order. Or having separate articles at Dobwalls and Trewidland/Dobwalls where the former was renamed to the latter at the same time as boundary changes even though both are the same legal entity. Yes NYC may sometimes be called a new council (which should probably be discussed in the article like Northumberland County Council) but it isn't either geographically or legally, I would have though a single article would better serve people looking up the council. A unitary authority isn't really much of a different entity, all that happened was the council took on the district functions rather than becoming a completely different authority like a parish council. Crouch, Swale (talk) 22:25, 20 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Separate articles, whether or not the unitary council is legally the same entity as the previous county council. This is a case where substance should take precedence over legal form. WP:NAMECHANGES gives some guidance. In North Yorkshire, North Yorkshire Council is almost always referred to as "the new council", and North Yorkshire County Council is now referred to as "the previous North Yorkshire County Council". See for example this from NYC and from MHCLG. The new council is quite different from the old council - much wider functions (and much larger income), different electoral divisions, different number of councillors, and the fact that it was easier legally to keep the same entity for a changed function does not change that. Everyone knew it was one new council taking over from the previous 8 councils, one of which was NYCC. The old council is history and should be treated in a separate article and not confused with the current council. Generally, in WP when a legal entity significantly changes its functions and characteristics, we have a new article. An extreme example is Arriva Northumbria, which is legally the same entity as Southern National, but no-one would suggest we merge the two articles.
I take a different view of the area administered by the council. Legally the UA area is the same "County of North Yorkshire" as the non-metropolitan county which preceded it, but there was no change in substance or legal form, just a change in governance. Yet we have created a separate article North Yorkshire (district), which I would merge back into North Yorkshire.--Mhockey (talk) 10:58, 22 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Combine tiers 1 & 2. Decide tier 3 case-by-case with a default of separating them - with tier 3 they are different entities but often with much in common and little separating them, so separate articles can lead either to lots of repetition or to several very short articles that are almost permastubs. But they are technically about different subjects so different articles are arguably warranted - subject to WP:GNG of course. WaggersTALK 15:43, 22 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
    Additional comment: councils are not inherently notable - I just need to make sure we're keeping that in mind. The places served by councils will nearly always be notable but the councils themselves need to satisfy WP:ORG if we are to have articles on them. In particular:
    • News coverage of councils being created/changed is often dismissed when considering WP:SIGCOV on the basis of WP:NOTNEWS so we ideally need more than that
    • Multiple passing mentions of councils - e.g. in reports about council decisions etc. - do not constitute significant coverage of the council itself
    As a result I would expect us to have very few articles on councils as opposed to the places they serve(d). WaggersTALK 16:15, 23 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Combine tier 1 and tier 2. A single article suffices in many cases, as there's a degree of continuity between the councils established in 1889 or 1974 and the current councils.
Taking Shropshire as an example, the first county council was established in 1889, then abolished in 1974 and replaced by one with essentially the same boundaries. In 1998 Wrekin District Council became a unitary authority, reducing the area governed by Shropshire County Council, and in 2009 Shropshire County Council became a unitary authority. The above can be explained in a single article, and is arguably more easily explained in a single article than three – Shropshire County Council (1889–1974), Shropshire County Council (1974-2009), and Shropshire Council.
Where there isn't clear continuity we can decide on a case-by-case basis. A.D.Hope (talk) 14:40, 23 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Combine tier 1 and 2 and case-by-case decisions for tier 3. In pretty much all the tier 1 and 2 cases, the new unitary councils are effectively a continuation of the former county council but absorbing the district functions. Re Waggers' comments about notability, I would be amazed if councils are not independently notable. In many cases they are the largest employer in the area, are one of the most important organisations in the area given their powers, and get nearly daily coverage in the local/regional press. Number 57 11:48, 26 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • I would note that Cambridgeshire County Council isn't split between the 1965-1974 gap however Huntingdonshire County Council and Huntingdonshire District Council are separate. Northumberland Council was split years ago but due to the council in the end keeping "County" in the name the articles were merged. It seems at least ignoring the Welsh ones noted by Stortford that the only reason for creating separate articles for unitary authorities seems to be due to dropping "County" from the name which goes against WP:NOTDIC. Yes when it comes down to things like parishes etc we split if the names are different from settlements but if there is a name change we treat it as a continuation not a new topic like Marlingford and Colton. Crouch, Swale (talk) 22:57, 11 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
    @Stortford: Regarding the Welsh county councils I'd point out that Carmarthenshire County Council, 1889–1974 is a short article that may more effectively be merged with Carmarthenshire County Council, Pembrokeshire County Council, 1889–1974 is a bit longer though but could probably easily be merged. Note that Denbighshire County Council and Flintshire County Council don't have separate articles. It look like Carmarthenshire and Pembrokeshire councils unlike Denbighshire and Flintshire cover the same area as the older councils and unlike Wiltshire County Council/Wiltshire Council and Herefordshire County Council/Herefordshire council also have exactly the same name not just similar names. The time gap is anyway far less than Cumberland and probably doesn't have much importance today anyway. If there was a significant amount of info it might be better to keep separate but there isn't. Crouch, Swale (talk) 19:34, 9 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
    • I wouldn't disagree with merging the Welsh ones with the same name but a time gap - the Flintshire and Denbighshire examples show that an article focussed on the modern body but with a paragraph or two on the old iteration for context is perfectly adequate. Stortford (talk) 21:05, 9 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Merge the articles, with a separate section for the old authority, and then redirect the original page to that section so it can easily be found. Unless the page is big enough to fork, then we should keep it separate.Davidstewartharvey (talk) 09:10, 7 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • An interesting point may be if the area the council covers has a separate article or not. In terms of tier 1 only County Durham, North Yorkshire and Shropshire have separate articles however note that although when their councils became unitary authorities they kept the same boundaries they have different boundaries to the ceremonial counties. Tier 2 Buckinghamshire doesn't have a separate article and in terms of tier 3 Cumberland and Dorset have separate articles. In terms of other areas with similar names North Riding of Yorkshire (and North Riding County Council) is separate from North Yorkshire (and North Yorkshire Council) and West Riding of Yorkshire (and West Riding County Council) is separate from West Yorkshire (and West Yorkshire County Council). North Riding of Yorkshire/North Yorkshire have similar boundaries but West Riding of Yorkshire/West Yorkshire are quite different as effectively West Riding of Yorkshire was almost split into West Yorkshire and South Yorkshire while most of the North Riding of Yorkshire became North Yorkshire. I'd suggest however due to at least some difference in boundaries and names its appropriate to keep separate articles for the current/former Yorkshire counties and their councils. One could argue that if we have decided to split the county articles it makes sense to split the council articles due to that suggesting they are distinct. On the other hand it could be argued like UKDISTRICTS that if we split both old and new counties and councils there is more of a risk of duplication and that one of the other should be done similar to the fact most local authorities like Maldon District Council go to the district with the exception of those like Eastbourne Borough Council where there is no separate article on the district from the settlement. I'd argue that the 1st option likely applies that is to say we are more likely to split council articles if the county articles are split. Crouch, Swale (talk) 22:16, 9 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Consensus[edit]

As this discussion has been going for over a month and a half it looks like we can now have a look at consensus. There is a consensus that tier 1 should be combined, thus upholding the previous discussion meaning these shouldn't be re split. Its reasonably clear that most agree that splitting when a council becomes a unitary is not helpful due to it essentially being a continuation. Only 1 user clearly supports splitting tier 1, one other (and another appeared to support this) has said about splitting except when the word count is low. We also need to be careful about how we describe the councils to make sure we don't suggest they unitary authorities were formed in 1889, we also need to be careful as was noted in the previous discussion sometimes about how we interpret sources regarding those that say "new councils" as they may mean 'council which is newly unitary' rather than 'a brand new council'. There is also a consensus to combine tier 2 namely that Buckinghamshire should be combined. There is a rough consensus that in most cases tier 3 should be split however they should be considered on a case by case basis. I will take no action with tier 3 and I have no intention at least at the moment on merging tier 3. Therefor users can use the normal procedures for merging namely either bold merges, informal discussions or formal discussions but as noted the weak consensus here is they should normally be split. The issue about if the area the councils covering that was mentioned by the separate tier 1 !voter and myself just above is a different discussion but something I may bring up at this project's talk page at some point.

In terms of the pre v post 1974 councils which was touched on here and at the previous discussion I think we should include it in the guidance that if the name was exactly the same there should only be 1 article even if the council was reformed with different boundaries.

This guidance would also likely apply in Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales.

I therefore suggest adding something to WP:UKCOUNTIES a heading "Local authorities" similar to UKDISTRICTS saying something along the lines of When a council like Lancashire County Council was reformed in 1974 with the same name it should not be split into separate articles for pre 1974 and post 1974. This applies even if there were boundary changes. When a council becomes a unitary authority like Somerset Council but keeps the same boundaries it should be covered in a single article even if like Buckinghamshire the council was abolished and reformed with the same boundaries. If like Dorset County Council/Dorset Council (UK) there were boundary changes it should be considered on a case by case basis if separate articles should exist with the default to having separate articles. Factors that may also be taken into account if separate articles are needed or not as well as the difference in boundaries include the time gap between abolishment and formation, article content, if one council was a 2 tier and the other was a unitary and if the names of the councils are identical of merely similar..

Does this reflect consensus and do we also agree with adding the guidance about 1974? I think the only one that this might change is Cambridgeshire County Council which had a 9 year gap and different boundaries. @ValenciaThunderbolt, Wire723, JMF, Murgatroyd49, Rupples, Stortford, Mhockey, Waggers, A.D.Hope, Number 57, and Davidstewartharvey: Crouch, Swale (talk) 22:23, 11 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Works for me. Murgatroyd49 (talk) 08:40, 12 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I have a niggling worry about including "article content" in the list of factors to consider. The existing contents of an article shouldn't usually be considered when deciding whether a subject is sufficiently notable to have an article of it's own. So I'd suggest switching "article content" for "significant coverage in reliable sources" or similar. We would hope that in most cases the two things are identical (if there's sufficient coverage, it'll be reflected in the article content) but that isn't always the case. Otherwise, all good! WaggersTALK 09:34, 12 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Waggers: I was thinking about how much content the article(s) have but more importantly because articles should normally be judged by potential not just current state about how much appropriate content could be added and along the same lines if sources tend to treat them as the same or different councils. This seemed to be a point Wire723 was suggesting however given the factors about current and potential content are going to be the case in every topic on Wikipedia not just councils per Wikipedia:Article size I wander if we should just exclude this point as it does seem a bit of instruction creep to state something that applies to any topic on Wikipedia. So do you agree on just excluding this point/criteria? Crouch, Swale (talk) 21:29, 16 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Yep, that works for me. WaggersTALK 09:26, 18 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I would say that redirect pages should be created to redirect the reader to the correct page, so articles are not written by editors whom cannot find the older named authority. Davidstewartharvey (talk) 15:52, 12 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Davidstewartharvey: yes redirects should be created for future names and be left behind after renames. If Staffordshire County Council was going to become a unitary in 2026 named "Staffordshire Council" we would create Staffordshire Council as a redirect to Staffordshire County Council and then move Staffordshire County Council to Staffordshire Council once the rename happened leaving the redirect behind from the old title. If a geographically different council was going to be formed, say the new Staffordshire Council didn't cover Newcastle-under-Lyme district due to it being merged with Stoke-on-Trent then we could still redirect the future council to the present one pending a separate article just like Herefordshire County Council redirected to Herefordshire Council until a separate article was created on the old council. Something like "Redirects from future and former names should be created" would seem like a good idea. Crouch, Swale (talk) 21:29, 16 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Broadly yes - I wouldn't single out 1974 though as a large part of the point of this policy tweak is to catch the more recent changes to unitary authorities, plus it's a UK-wide policy so don't forget the equivalent reforms in Northern Ireland were in 1973 and in Scotland were in 1975. "Same name" might also need clarifying - I'd take that to mean same geographic name (e.g. North Yorkshire), but others might interpret it to mean "North Yorkshire Council" is different to "North Yorkshire County Council" because of the extra word, contrary to the consensus above. Stortford (talk) 20:48, 12 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Stortford: The reason for including the 1974 point is that all councils were abolished and reformed (often with different boundaries) so to clarify that they like unitaries should not be split. This helps to clarify to users who think that Somerset County Council that existed from 1889 to 1974 and Somerset County Council that "existed" from 1974-2023 were not very different while Somerset Council that has "existed" since 2023 is very different and needs a separate article. Having the point about 1974 may help clarify to users who think this is the case. In terms of Northern Ireland and Scotland we could just put in brackets 1973 for Northern Ireland and 1975 for Scotland. That said it doesn't seem like users splitting pre 1970s and post 1970s councils has been a problem but it would be here if this does become a problem. Do you think it would be better to just remove this point? or maybe reword. I was interpreting "identical" to mean exactly the same name namely "Northumberland County Council" (pre 2009) has the same name as "Northumberland County Council" (post 2009) and "similar name" to mean "North Yorkshire County Council" (pre 2023) and "North Yorkshire Council" (post 2023) but not "North Riding County Council" (pre 1974) that it seems everyone agrees should stay separate even though the name of the county and council are essentially variants in a geographical sense. Luckily this doesn't seem to be a problem currently as there aren't any unitaries that have kept exactly the same name as the previous council but have different boundaries to it. Maybe we should just remove this point and look at re adding it in the future if this happens. Crouch, Swale (talk) 21:29, 16 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • This now has been added to UKCOUNTIES with the suggested modifications, I'll leave this open for a little while longer to see if people agree. Crouch, Swale (talk) 22:54, 19 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
    • I would suggest that if we are treating the council of an administrative county, which was replaced by the council of a non-metropolitan county and then became the council of a unitary authority, as the same continuing council, it seems very odd to treat the area governed by that council as changing (e.g. from Dorset, Shropshire or North Yorkshire) when its council became a UA (to Dorset (district), Shropshire (district) or North Yorkshire (district)) - even though neither the geography nor the legal status of that area changed. --Mhockey (talk) 23:19, 23 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
      • @Mhockey: Perhaps we need to look at having a similar rule for splitting unitary districts but I'd point out that while Shropshire and North Yorkshire districts cover the same area as the 2 tier county council areas they don't have the same area as the ceremonial county. No one is suggesting that Northumberland (district) should be created as its the same area as the ceremonial county as well as the 2 tier county council area. Even though I pushed to have separate articles years ago for unitary districts with a different area to the ceremonial counties I'm wandering if it might just be better to do what we have for Somerset and have 1 article for both the ceremonial county and unitary district with the same boundaries as the 2 tier county even though the boundaries are not the same as the ceremonial county, thoughts? Crouch, Swale (talk) 19:05, 29 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
        I agree that it would be better to have a single article for cases like Somerset or North Yorkshire, where the legal county (now a UA district) covers a smaller area than the lieutenancy area (aka ceremonial county). We had that for years under the two-tier system and I don't remember any push for separate articles then, and I don't think the change in governance should change that. Mhockey (talk) 10:15, 5 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

People categories and places[edit]

Requesting comment on a cross-discipline categorisation dispute at Talk:Crook o' Lune#Queen categories; may have wider application than this project (suggestions welcome), but I thought I'd ask here first. Dave.Dunford (talk) 23:07, 5 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Have to say I agree with you, these are definitely trivia at best. Give there appears to be no reliable sources that say the events mentioned actually happened, its unverifiable. Murgatroyd49 (talk) 11:52, 6 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Dimadick: The same user is again adding what seem to me like peculiar categories to another place article on my watchlist, adding Port Meadow, Oxford to Category:Lewis Carroll and Category:Alice Liddell. There are associations between the place and the people, sure, but they are far from defining (Port Meadow is famous for lots of other things) and furthermore, Port Meadow is not mentioned in either of the articles Lewis Carroll or Alice Liddell. I simply don't think this is how categories are supposed to be used – wikilinks from the Port Meadow article (which already exist) are sufficient. Is it just me? I've tried talking to the user but got nowhere. Any thoughts? Dave.Dunford (talk) 22:18, 8 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I think your definition of categories is absurd, and hinters our ability to locate relevant articles. Dimadick (talk) 22:20, 8 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I think your definition of categories is absurd. And I think yours is too, and I think you are the outlier, which is why I'm here requesting a second opinion. If a category such as Category:Places visited by Lewis Carroll existed, then Port Meadow would belong in it. But, by your method, what are you going to do about somewhere like London? Are you going to put the London article in every category of every person with an article who's ever lived in (or visited) London, or even whose ouevre is particularly connected with London – and if not, why not? I challenge you to define what makes an association between a person and a place sufficient for you to put that place in that person's category, and what is insufficient. Your use of categories is subjective and illogical. If you really, genuinely want a list of "things that are peripherally associated with Lewis Carroll" you can find it at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:WhatLinksHere/Lewis_Carroll Dave.Dunford (talk) 08:00, 9 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Dimadick: I've been thinking about why I think your use of categories is illogical and inappropriate, and I've concluded that it comes down to my understanding that categories must have an aspect of "inclusion" and "direction", and your interpretation of them ignores that element. There is a clear hierarchy, a direction of inclusion, in valid category chains such as Category:OxfordshireCategory:OxfordCategory:Areas of OxfordPort Meadow, or Category:British male writersCategory:Lewis CarrollCategory:Works by Lewis CarrollAlice's Adventures in Wonderland (where "⊆" means "is a superset of", or "contains"). Conversely, there is no such directed or inclusive relationship between Lewis Carroll and Port Meadow: there are lots of aspects of Lewis Carroll that are nothing to do with Port Meadow, and there are lots of things about Port Meadow that are unrelated to Lewis Carroll. You could just as well have placed Lewis Carroll in a (hypothetical) Category:Port Meadow. This may not be the right forum to debate your interpretation of categories, but I don't know where is. Dave.Dunford (talk) 11:57, 9 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Dimadick: A further thought: the only logical way to reflect the association between Lewis Carroll and Port Meadow (or Elizabeth I and Crook o' Lune, for that matter) using categories, while preserving the hierarchical requirement, would be to create intermediary categories such as Category:Places visited by Lewis Carroll and Category:People associated with Port Meadow, and put Port Meadow in the former, and Lewis Carroll in the latter. This is rather analogous to a many-to-many relationship in data theory. But both categories would be deleted for being non-defining, if nothing else. These are loose relationships, and these are not a job for categories – which is effectively the point I've been trying to make all along. Dave.Dunford (talk) 13:09, 9 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
– "which is effectively the point I've been trying to make all along" The job of categories is to help concentrate articles relevant to a topic.Dimadick (talk) 14:05, 9 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Dimadick: That's a very loose, subjective and individual interpretation of the purpose of categories, and ignores all the nuances I've explained above. Categories, by definition, imply inclusion: a one-to-many relationship. Port Meadow is not a subcategory of Lewis Carroll, since you could just as easily reverse the categorisation. If you drew a Venn diagram to illustrate the relationship it would show, at best, an intersection. Dave.Dunford (talk) 14:34, 9 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Dimadick and Dave.Dunford: As far as I know the previous "ping" won't have worked, because it needs to be added in an edit which includes a signature in the same edit. Adding this one instead. PamD 21:41, 10 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Dave.Dunford: AFAIAA, Carroll nor Liddell, did not create Port Meadow? Merely rowed on it, with one sentence in the article. So don't seem to be a WP:DEFINING aspect of the subject, and are WP:OVERCAT for WP:NOTDEFINING. So agree these are overcats, noticed Sean Connery at Balmoral Hotel, looking for an outlandish example, seems this isn't recent.
In the end, templates (if needed) or the actual article can serve for navigation. DankJae 23:02, 8 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
This discussion is reminiscent of a problem at Mnemonic verses of monarchs in England, discussed at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Categories#What constitutes a "Cultural representation"?, where @Dimadick: had added "Category:Cultural representations of [every single monarch]": I maintain that a mention in such a verse is not a "cultural depiction".
On Alice: it's noticeable that although the article on Port Meadow, Oxford says "This is where the Reverend Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (Lewis Carroll) and the Reverend Robinson Duckworth rowed up the river on 4 July 1862 with three young girls — Lorina, Alice, and Edith Liddell. While journeying slowly from Folly Bridge to near Godstow, Dodgson began at their request to make up a story that later was expanded into Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.", the article on Alice's Adventures in Wonderland says "The journey began at Folly Bridge, Oxford, and ended 5 miles (8 km) upstream at Godstow, Oxfordshire.", so Port Meadow is merely one of the places they passed through. The categorisation is not helpful to anyone.
It begins to look as if Dimadick is in a minority of one in their interpretation of categorisation policy. PamD 13:56, 9 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Just to throw my +1 into the ring here, I'm with Dave.Dunford - categories aren't for tenuous/spurious links. This kind of association might fit better as Wikidata relationships but even then, "places visited by a person" doesn't seem to be a sufficiently notable property for inclusion (visited by and visitor of are for insects visiting species of plants, there's no equivalent property for humans visiting places). WaggersTALK 13:04, 9 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

I agree that the relationship between Port Meadow and Lewis Carroll is rather tenuous, but it's not really the weakness of the association that bothers me, on reflection, it's the hierarchy of the associations. In a straightforward categorical relationship between two concepts, everything in the subcategory is associated with the supercategory. Everything within Alice in Wonderland pertains to Lewis Carroll, but not the other way round: Lewis Carroll wrote many books, but Alice in Wonderland has only one author. That hierarchical relationship doesn't apply here: Lewis Carroll is associated with lots of places, and Port Meadow is (or could be) associated with lots of people. Dave.Dunford (talk) 15:08, 9 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Wards[edit]

There has been some discussion on the inclusion criteria for wards, see User talk:Davidstewartharvey#Westborough Ward as well as Wikipedia talk:WikiProject UK geography/Archive 29#Wards v settlements, Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Politics of the United Kingdom/Archive 10#Proposed deletion of all articles on local government subdivisions wards, divisions etc. and Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Chalkwell Ward. @Davidstewartharvey, Onel5969, Keith D, Eopsid, Sparkle1, Editing with Eric, Rjensen, RexxS, DuncanHill, Sionk, Mutt Lunker, Elmidae, Crowsus, Doktorbuk, Pigsonthewing, Ralbegen, Peter James, MapReader, Barkeep49, Mccapra, DELETEDUSER4562910, and Number 57: from these discussions.

The question is if wards are notable or not and if they should have separate articles from settlements or parishes of the same name. As we know counties have articles and are always notable like Essex, districts are always notable and generally have separate articles from the settlement of the same name like Maldon/Maldon District and parishes are always notable (except perhaps pre 1974 urban parishes) but are combined with a settlement of the same name like Waltham Abbey. However wards may not be considered notable like these per WP:GEOLAND as they don't have their own local government but to preform electoral roles. GEOLAND excludes things like census tracts but as was pointed out in the proposal to delete all wards that wards are not census tracts. I'll propose the list of options below about inclusion. Sometimes it may be best to decide on a case by case basis due to article size etc.

  • A, wards are treated as notable under WP:GEOLAND and considered legally recognized and should have separate articles from settlements of the same name namely Speke and Speke (Liverpool ward) are separate articles. This is similar to Parliament constituencies which always have separate articles even if the have the same name as a settlement or boundaries as a district.
    Arguments in favour, wards like constituencies have electoral roles and thus are likely to be considered legally recognized, the wards have census data and will often have an order to create or reform them. Because they tend to have contrived boundaries and change frequently unlike parishes which tend to remain stable for long periods and correspond to natural boundaries it may make them unsuitable to combine with settlements.
    Arguments against, many sources for them are primary sources and it doesn't appear they have the same importance as constituencies. Sources discussing the area etc that is more than trivial mentions may be hard come by. For urban ones in unparished areas often there is no census data or other formal boundaries for suburbs that were newly built as part of the larger town as opposed to villages that were absorbed into the town.
  • B, wards are treated as notable but should be combined with settlements of the same name namely Chalkwell deals with the ward of the same name with the exception of those that have a parish of the same name with different boundaries for example Boxford parish[1] and Boxford ward[2] have different areas so should be split. This may also cover cases like Wampool where a ward is named after a hamlet which thus only has a tiny population compared to the ward.
    In favour, the more rural areas with parishes are more distinct and already have data for the parish which suggests splitting may be a good idea. As noted for recently built suburbs there may be no other formal boundaries etc so using the ward boundaries even if unstable or they exclude part of the suburb may be more effective.
    Against, it may still be more effective to cover wards in governance or "ward" sections of parish articles.
  • C, wards are treated as notable but should be combined with settlements of the same name namely Chalkwell deals with the ward of the same name. Unlike B this also includes those with parishes with the same name but different boundaries. Like with Scotforth/Scotforth (parish) we would create separate articles if the ward excludes all of the suburb of which Brockley may fall into.
    In favour, as mentioned it may be more effective to cover wards in settlement/parish articles especially if there isn't much content in the articles.
    Against, as mentioned in the Castle Hill discussion ward facts may be unsuitable due to the instability and arbitrary nature of boundaries.
  • D, wards are not presumed notable and must pass WP:GNG in order to be notable and otherwise should be merged into related articles or deleted.
    In favour, as mentioned many independent sources that would show notability are often difficult to find.
    Against, as noted wards like constituencies have electoral roles and thus are likely to be considered notable.

Discussion[edit]

Please case you're !votes and other discission here. Crouch, Swale (talk) 00:05, 7 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

  • I think wards come under WP:GEOLAND 2. Populated places without legal recognition are considered on a case-by-case basis in accordance with the GNG. Examples may include subdivisions, business parks, housing developments, informal regions of a state, unofficial neighborhoods, etc. – any of which could be considered notable on a case-by-case basis, given non-trivial coverage by their name in multiple, independent reliable sources. If a Wikipedia article cannot be developed using known sources, information on the informal place should be included in the more general article on the legally recognized populated place or administrative subdivision that contains it. The smallest British legally recognised division is a parish. Wards are just sub divisions, unless they meet GNG and meet Wikipedia:V, should be either deleted or merged into the main article (i.e. parish). In the case of Westborough Ward and Milton Ward both are primary sourced, and without any secondary refs, in fact all the election data is unreferenced. In the case of Westborough this can easily fit into the Westcliff-on-Sea article as it is within its legally recognised borders defined in the local plan, however Milton falls within both Southend on Sea and Westcliff-on-Sea. Therefore I would vote d based on the above.Davidstewartharvey (talk) 00:35, 7 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • D. First of all thank you User:Crouch, Swale for setting out a number of options. Obviously wards are populated but I wouldn't describe them "settlements" as such. A ward might cover a single settlement; some might cover more than one settlement; others might cover part of a settlement. Ward names and boundaries can frequently change. In most cases they are names given to areas containing roughly an equal number of voters within a local government district or parish and used for local government elections. They are not areas used for local governance, so my interpretation is they do not have the legal recognition required for presumed notability under GEOLAND. There are articles that have election results going back over many years, which some readers likely find of interest. The problem is they largely consist of data i.e. the election result and boundary changes, though there could be commentary but it hasn't been included in the article. The problem with these is they would not make a suitable merge to the same-named article on the settlement because of UNDUE weight e.g. Allerton (Liverpool ward) and Allerton, Liverpool. I think it's preferable wards are treated on a case-by-case basis under the GNG. Although we're discussing the UK here, I think we also need to consider that wards exist in other countries and ask ourselves why UK wards should have presumed notability, when those in other countries appear not to have. Rupples (talk) 20:12, 7 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • D, but the whole topic of wards seems to be distinctly inconsistent at present. If wards are of interest to readers, I would think a list of wards for any given council would be an asset. Looking at the two cities cited above, there is no list of the wards of Southend, as far as I can see, while there is a list at Liverpool_City_Council#Council_wards. Do we expect readers to look for wards? There is an article Dingle (Liverpool ward), but it is not mentioned in Dingle (disambiguation). There is City Centre North (Liverpool ward), but no redirect from City Centre North. There is no entry for Lancaster Rural North, in which I vote. It would be helpful if it was a redirect to Lancashire County Council, and if there was a list of wards there. Ah, I now find List of electoral wards in Lancashire (by following a link at the bottom of the "Council elections in Lancashire" navbox): why isn't it mentioned in the article on the council, which just tells me there are 82 divisions? Why aren't there redirects from the ward names? PamD 22:08, 7 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
    Hi Pam. Definitely agree if we were to have wards, Lists are probably the way forward. Someone started to think about it, as there are Categories set up Category:Electoral wards of Southend-on-Sea but as some wards have not been set up, they don't appear.
    Davidstewartharvey (talk) 06:37, 8 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
    I've now linked List of electoral wards in Lancashire#County council as a "See also" from Lancashire County Council#Elections, which seems a useful connection. PamD 16:32, 10 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
D. Not independently notable, much too subject to change, often retaining the same name but with different CPs, even neighbourhoods. Belong as subsections in the relevant LA page. --𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 23:28, 7 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
D. I've noticed a few wards pages as I've been working on the pages for districts and elections, and I've always thought they're an odd thing to have pages for. Whilst not census tracts in terms of WP:GEOLAND, they are analogous to them. The boundaries are reviewed every few years because the overarching objective is electoral equality, not community identity. Even where they share a name with a geographic community (village / suburb etc.), the ward will only rarely and co-incidentally be a good fit for the community. A page about a ward is therefore inherently contrived - there's not much you can say about it other than the election results, which can be quite adequately covered on the local authority elections pages. Stortford (talk) 20:57, 9 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • A As the policy states, populated, legally recognised places are notable. Wards are established by acts of Parliament/Statutory Instruments so they are legally recognised. If consensus is against independent notability, then GEOLAND would need to be changed to reflect that. I agree a lot with what Pam says re lists of wards. That would probably be the most useful focus before seeking to develop individual articles which may well become redundant depending on list quality. This isn't just an issue for the UK though. There are wards articles for Brisbane City Council, Ottawa City Council and Toronto City Council (these are ones that I know of, there may well be others). Stevie fae Scotland (talk) 15:28, 10 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • D Wards are subject to change at Boundary Commission reviews. As the Boundary Commission's boilerplate text says in their consultations and recommendations, When carrying out an electoral review the Commission has three main considerations: • Improving electoral equality by equalising the number of electors that each councillor represents. • Ensuring that the recommendations reflect community identity. • Providing arrangements that support effective and convenient local government. Our task is to strike the best balance between these three considerations when making our recommendations. To do this the BC will adjust boundaries and the numbers of councillors for wards, and even listen to local opinions about ward names, but it's impossible to find an appropriate number of communities of suitable sizes to satisfy all three considerations. As a result, communities and wards are not coterminous and though residents may engage with their councillors, it's questionable whether they feel any identity with their ward, see it as defining their community, or regard the boundaries as anything but arbitrary and changeable. The significance of the wards is that they return councillors, of which there are about 20,000 in England alone[3] - those councillors are not inherently notable and neither are the wards that elect them. NebY (talk) 16:21, 10 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • D Wards are arbitrary and keep changing. So articles would not be particularly useful and would require a lot of maintenance. JonH (talk) 14:02, 11 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • D - GNG trumps everything and I'm generally against notability criteria for different types of subjects in general on the basis of WP:INSTRUCTIONCREEP. WaggersTALK 15:52, 11 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • A - having read GEOLAND again properly, and checked Geographical feature to make sure wards conform to the definition, I find Stevie fae Scotland's rationale above compelling. Wards should be assumed notable. On that basis I'm happy with option B but I think the encyclopaedic information about a ward (e.g. past elections, councillors, etc.) would interfere with the flow of an article about a settlement or parish, so A it is. WaggersTALK 07:53, 17 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Weak C they don't appear to be census tracts and can be useful for merging other NN articles to like what seems to have been done for the wards in Bristol which is a county, district and single unparished area. In larger unparished areas especially if they are the same as a district wards may be a useful breakdown however I agree they change a lot and aren't like parishes etc so I'm not strongly saying they are inherently notable and it looks like consensus is against it anyway. Crouch, Swale (talk) 21:44, 12 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Lists of wards[edit]

The wife of the MP elected today is a councillor for Tyldesley ward. Not Tyldesley town, nor Tyldesley (ward) which is a Wigan ward, but Tyldesley ward of the Borough of Blackpool. In each election article such as 2023 Blackpool Council election there is a list of the results, ward by ward, such as 2023 Blackpool Council election#Tyldesley. But there is no list of wards in the Borough of Blackpool article, though I have just now added a section "Wards" in order to make a useful link to List of electoral wards in Lancashire#Blackpool, and also made a link from Blackpool Council#Elections, and added this ward to the Tyldesley dab page even though it only gets that list entry (with sources). It would be useful to have a list of wards, and, ideally a map of them, in each article on an admin unit which has wards (should it be the borough/district/county, or the council?). But we don't seem to do this very systematically (of course). PamD 16:47, 3 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]

County flags: discussion 1[edit]

This discussion is primarily about which flags we include in the county articles. 'County articles' can be interpreted broadly to include the various county-level administrative subdivisions and the ceremonial/lieutenancy divisions across the United Kingdom. The overarching purpose is to decide whether we can create a consistent inclusion criteria for county flags, and if so whether this should be formalised as a guideline.

There are two issues which we could do with clarifying. The first is what to do about flags which have some recognition, but which are not in widespread use. This is closely related to the Flag Institute and its UK Flag Registry, which is our source for many county flags; although it has registered flags for many counties, they're not all widely used. Does a county flag belong in a given county article if it isn't actually flown in that county?

The second issue is how to handle flags which represent a different area to that which the article is about, for example where an English ceremonial county article also covers the historic county. Flag Institute flags, in particular, explicitly represent the historic counties rather than the current ones. The solution seems obvious – just specify the type of county a flag represents in the body text and image caption – but it would be good to gain consensus on this.

Let the discussion begin! A.D.Hope (talk) 10:47, 10 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Discussion A: flag inclusion[edit]

  • Comment, I think there should be two criteria on whether to include a flag. A verifiable source of a flag's design, in which a source like the Flag Institute can verify the flag's design (most flag images here are USERGEN, so needs verification) very clearly as they provide a detailed image of it, and another source showing what the flag is used for and if it is in public use. The Flag Institute alone is not enough, nor are some flag databases. Considering many flags have articles of their own, we could use those as a basis to see if these flags meet GNG. So if it has an article, use the flag (similar in how people are "notable"). Although many flag articles are barebones, and may not actually meet GNG. DankJae 09:25, 17 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
    A 'double test' such as that could work well, yes. Giving the current flag articles an audit to see which meet GNC using the above criteria may be a good place to start. A.D.Hope (talk) 13:15, 21 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Discussion B: flag areas[edit]

General discussion[edit]

I see flags as relatively harmless, and I'd give them attention appropriate to the level of local adoption they have. In areas where you often see the flag when out and about (e.g. Cornwall, Devon, Northumberland) they probably warrant a bit more discussion. In other areas (I'm regularly in Berkshire but don't think I've ever seen its flag flying in the wild), less attention is probably due, although I'd still mention it briefly and include an image if there was some involvement from locals in producing it. I haven't looked into the background to all the county flags, but if there are any modern creations which have only been adopted by an unofficial enthusiasts' body like the Flag Institute, perhaps not worth mentioning.

I'd also bear in mind that most of the county pages are in fact multi-purpose - the Essex page covers the various definitions of the county, including its historic, non-metropolitan and ceremonial definitions, despite there being territorial differences between those definitions. (I don't like how prominently the article insists on it being a "ceremonial county" in the lead when the article also covers the other definitions - sounds like we're having to use the qualifier because it isn't any other kind of county, which isn't true - but that's a wider discussion.) For such multi-purpose articles, I'd be happy to see the flag included even if it strictly speaking was only adopted for one of the definitions, with appropriate caption or footnote to clarify. If it's only the Flag Institute who says it doesn't apply to a particular definition, I'd treat that restriction as being their view but not binding - in my own home county of Hertfordshire the county flag is routinely flown outside County Hall, and I suspect the county council would be non-plussed at a suggestion that it needs a footnote under it saying ignore this if you're from Potter Bar or the northern bits of Royston. Stortford (talk) 20:44, 13 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

I'd generally agree with Stortford above. The constant addition and removal of the flags from the few county articles I follow a bit tiresome, to be honest, and I'm not really convinced by the argument that "the article is about this particular definition of the county, whereas the flag applies to this definition" – the articles generally cover all definitions of the county in question. For the record, the Derbyshire flag (where I live) is fairly well known and well used. Dave.Dunford (talk) 09:28, 14 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
On your first paragraph, it's worth mentioning that a lot of the county flags are modern creations; some only really exist in the Flag Institute's registry, others have been adopted more widely. The dates they were created can usually be found through the Flag Institute itself or British County Flags. I am a bit sceptical of some of the Institute's dates, but their veracity can be considered on an article-by-article basis; we're more concerned with the overall principle.
I broadly agree with your second paragraph, which echoes what I wrote above. When a flag is included we should clarify the area it's supposed to represent. For Hertfordshire, I believe this would mean explaining that the flag is the county council's banner of arms, which it has released for general use. This presumably means that it represents the area of the non-metropolitan county governed by Hertfordshire County Council. A.D.Hope (talk) 11:31, 14 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

City population support[edit]

Just to check something. When reviewing the Liverpool page I could see that Liverpool 4th largest city in England (per List of towns and cities in England by population) which appears to be using BUA, so I did a head-count that it would be the 5th in the UK. However according to List of cities in the United Kingdom, if we ignore City of London/Westminster as we often do, it is the 9th largest in UK as it is vaulted by other cities because the list is measured by Local Authority area. Are we authoritatively saying that this is the specific size of the city? I ask because over on City of Leeds the wording is toe-ing the line of a technicality per making it technically the second largest city in England by population behind Birmingham, since London is not a single local government entity (as does Sheffield), while Birmingham is going for It is the second-largest city in Britain (never mind the "Second City" claim which includes a sterling source discussing the "Second City Derby" never mentioned within the article), Glagow confidently just states the third-most populous city in the United Kingdom while Bradford vaguely shakes a fist at the fourth-most populous metropolitan district and the sixth-most populous local authority district in England, Edinburgh meanwhile apparently can't count making it the second-most populous city in Scotland and the seventh-most populous in the United Kingdom (it's 8th). Can we agree a few things:

  • such technicalities are not warranted in leads
  • we should just use the List of cities in the United Kingdom methodology, and List of towns and cities in England by population should be changed to match it?
  • phrases like "by population" / "most populous" are not required where "largest" would suffice
  • city is clearer than diluting to met district / authority district (especially when one "City" is specifically, technically, "not a singly local government entity")
  • the List of cities in the United Kingdom probably needs a numbering system to help Edinburgh and readers in general (and I'll stop the ribbing now, honest) with two number 1 slots (or a wider definition of "London" in a numbered list)

Just in case of any confusion, the "Top 10" list should be:

  1. London
  2. Birmingham
  3. Leeds
  4. Glasgow
  5. Manchester
  6. Sheffield
  7. Bradford
  8. Edinburgh
  9. Liverpool
  10. Bristol

Thanks all. Koncorde (talk) 00:25, 5 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

City status (at least in England and Wales) is held by an defined territory. Because in some cases this clashes with how ordinary language prefers to consider an urban area to be a city, we have to use our wording carefully. We can either do lists based on built-up areas, or we can do lists by areas that hold city status, but mixing and matching to our own bespoke policy makes for a mess and would need more explanation on too many pages, rather than sticking to the more objective "this place is Xth largest built-up area" / "Yth largest place holding city status". I agree, it sounds intuitively perverse to describe Leeds as the second largest city, but it is the second most populous territory to hold city status - perhaps it's a point to explain more carefully further down the article rather than prominently in the lead, but it is correct. Your "top 10" list looks like it's built-up areas from the 2021 census plus London first, but I would add a significant note of caution there - we have the new built-up area statistics from the 2021 census, but we're still waiting for the "built-up conglomerations" to be published. (The built-up conglomerations will be more directly comparable to the old built-up areas from the 2011 census - the built-up areas for 2021 are more like the discontinued built-up area subdivisions from the 2011 census.) I fully expect when the conglomerations data is published it will include London (whereas the published built-up areas so far don't) and we'll see a rather different ranking to the list based purely on built-up areas, at which point we can update articles accordingly. Stortford (talk) 17:06, 8 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I agree with Stortford that we need to word things carefully, generally I'd prefer settlement population over districts I terms of preference for which is the best I'd use (1) BUASD, (2) BUA, (3) parish (or unparished area) and (4) district, see User:Crouch, Swale/Populations. I'd mention all 4 figures in an article (though not necessarily all in the lead) even if there are separate articles for districts or BUAs. Crouch, Swale (talk) 18:47, 8 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Don't disagree with either of you, I raise it because at the moment it seems a mixed bag of what is being used as the definitive source. For example the Leeds & Sheffield articles pipe "second / third largest city" to the List of English districts by population. This is obviously highly questionable as the list of districts is neither a list of cities, and conflates cities with districts, and has a lot of districts in there that are Unitary Authorities representing (largely) whole counties which would be confusing to any reader. Birmingham appears to be using this website whose population figures differ from those on any wiki list, so unclear what source is being used. Others use the List of cities in the United Kingdom, while places like Bradford decide every possible measure of size is required in the first paragraph.
Waiting for "built-up conglomerations" to come is fine, but are we agreed "BUC" will be the definitive version? How long do we wait while wikipedia is a mess of "technically" in the lead? Can we not just say "Leeds is the 3rd biggest city"? Koncorde (talk) 16:16, 9 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Only if you can find reliable source which say it is. If it's only true if you see things through the prism of a certain set of assumptions and modifications to what sources actually say then I'm afraid that falls foul of WP:SYNTH. Leeds is the second most populous built-up area on a list which expressly excludes London. However, you can't just choose to put London first and add one to all the other scores, because that isn't what the source says. If you look back to the 2011 built-up areas, which are the last official set that include London, the largest four were Greater London BUA (9.8m), Greater Manchester BUA (2.6m), West Midlands BUA (2.4m) and West Yorkshire BUA (1.8m). City Populations has tried pre-empting the 2021 built-up conglomerations with its own version that it's called agglomerations, which similarly has the three largest being London, Manchester and Birmingham, with Leeds/Bradford in fourth.
You also can't use the unqualified word 'city' and expect readers to automatically understand you're using it to mean urban areas, given that the official definition of city is something else. The Office for National Statistics carefully avoids using the terms 'city' and 'town' in its published datasets for urban areas and opts instead for 'built-up area' or 'built-up conglomeration' instead, so as to avoid ambiguity. We should not therefore introduce that very ambiguity by attaching different names to its data. Stortford (talk) 07:07, 10 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Yet our articles use a mix of unqualified, qualified, and the source is.... piped wikipedia articles using mixed datasets. Koncorde (talk) 20:58, 11 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Following on from the above I think that List of towns and cities in England by population article is full of WP:SYNTH. Its source explicitly excludes London but the article includes it and the source also doesnt refer to the areas as towns or cities. Eopsid (talk) 10:30, 10 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
List of towns and cities in England by population:
I have removed London from the table and you can remove the ranking if you want. Probably by the time you read this the town or city fields will be renamed to BUA. For other uses of town and city, I’d keep since you only need to go to the places article to see if it is a town or city.
Recommendations:
I recommend these to read up on town and city status and how to refer to places for the broader discussion. Maybe these answers some questions.
My opinion:
Use BUA for town and city articles when comparing size since the corresponding district article uses the other figure which tends to include other towns or parishes in the district. At least we have the word borough otherwise we would have the same disambiguation problem for towns that we do for cities. Chocolateediter (talk) 15:45, 10 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I fear the general reader will find it hard to understand why London's not in Wikipedia's List of towns and cities in England by population, the more so as the ONS does publish a census figure for London, and why if London's not counted as a whole, the larger towns and cities in London aren't included instead. I follow the reasoning that we have chosen to use only one ONS publication as our source, but that seems to have created an article which should be called List of towns and cities in England outside London by population. NebY (talk) 16:34, 10 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Note that London is now a BUA. Crouch, Swale (talk) 21:47, 10 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Crouch, Swale, Not exactly sure where citypopulation.de gets that. It doesn't appear on ONS Custom Profiles while Birmingham, Liverpool, Manchester BUAs etc do, and apparently London has 33 BUAs, although ONS state they release data only on the 32 boroughs + City, so that's what the 33 likely refers to. So ONS seem to state there isn't a London BUA, and doubt citypopulation.de is as reliable than the source it claims its data is from. DankJae 22:51, 10 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Ironically, the ONS provide inner, outer, city and greater London figures. I guess I’d be blamed for WP:Synth if Inner London figures were used (only City of London puts London below Birmingham out of the four). I assume the London Authority uses inner and outer so that is why they appear in the authority figure tables. Chocolateediter (talk) 23:44, 10 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
We shouldn't mix different kinds of district/area in one list, sure; we don't need WP:SYNTH to tell us that. We could have two sections in List of towns and cities in England by population. One would be for London, which could be broken down by borough, inner/outer, or (as the ONS often does) both; the other would contain all the existing tables for anywhere but London. NebY (talk) 21:00, 11 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@DankJae: It appears that the definition of BUAs changed in 2022, see the 1st "news" entry of the top left of the UK page though we haven't got to 2022 data yet. And the ONS maps you've linked appear to show things that aren't BUAs and don't correspond to parishes. Crouch, Swale (talk) 07:19, 11 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Crouch, Swale Confused, what I linked is for exactly the 2021 census. Searching Birmingham on the map gives "Birmingham Built-up area" as a option which produces a figure the same (but rounded) in the exact article. Nonetheless, I don't trust citypopulation.de's explanation of the situation more than the ONS itself, something from them is preferred. DankJae 08:47, 11 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@DankJae: OK I see, I was trying clicking on areas without searching and yes there is a Birmingham BUA but no London but indeed as I mentioned it appears it was only recently (according to City Population) that the definitions changed, see Kingswood, South Gloucestershire#Demography where although it makes reference to the 2021 census the data is from City Population which as I noted recently included the definition update. Crouch, Swale (talk) 20:34, 11 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Help requested to resolve a dispute[edit]

Chocolateediter and I are engaged in an edit war at List of towns and cities in England by population, specifically over how the statistical area that the ONS calls "Milton Keynes" should be represented, and more generally whether the basic premise of the list is sound. We have both reached 3RR so we appear to be at an impasse. Is there a Solomon in the house? 𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 00:26, 11 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Type=Town in infoboxes[edit]

I note there is an increasing tendency to replace the link to the wikipedia article Town in infoboxes with a link to List of towns in England. Surely this defeats the point of of the parameter? Murgatroyd49 (talk) 10:11, 20 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

"Modern history of defining metropolitan areas in the United Kingdom"[edit]

Can I propose an article called something along the lines of "Modern history of defining metropolitan areas in the United Kingdom". I only know 2001 and 2011 statistic info for the other nations and bits about London’s story so anybody knowing more can you please point me to some information that could fit.

This proposed article could have a section about and linking to England’s metropolitan counties, maybe starting that with a bit on the Redcliffe-Maud Report then about the abolition of county councils. Then the article moves on to 2001 with ONS urban areas and ESPON metropolitan areas. It then moves on to 2011 ONS built-up areas, it is then pointed out that 2021 ONS didn’t/haven’t yet released an equivalent to 2011 urban areas and 2011 built-up areas, only opting for only the equivalent to the smaller defined areas used in 2011. The article could then go on about the start of combined authorities with metro mayors. Then a section about progression of combined authority devolution with new legislation introduced for combined county authorities which haven’t started to be created yet.

Please put agree, disagree and or comment in bold as to what you think if you would like to share your thoughts. Chocolateediter (talk) 13:17, 28 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

A discussion is taking place as to whether the article List of ONS built-up areas in England by population is suitable for inclusion in Wikipedia according to Wikipedia's policies and guidelines or whether it should be deleted.

The article will be discussed at Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/List of ONS built-up areas in England by population until a consensus is reached, and anyone, including you, is welcome to contribute to the discussion. The nomination will explain the policies and guidelines which are of concern. The discussion focuses on high-quality evidence and our policies and guidelines.

Users may edit the article during the discussion, including to improve the article to address concerns raised in the discussion. However, do not remove the article-for-deletion notice from the top of the article until the discussion has finished.

𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 16:31, 1 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]

New GSS template[edit]

Would there be much support for a combined GSS template to replace the separate English, Scottish, Welsh and NI district and county templates listed here?

Having just updated them all, it's driven home what a pain in the bum they are to maintain. They draw their information from the same source.[1] But process it in needlessly different ways.

And a combined template also has the flexibility to include any area with a GSS code which the ONS includes in its population stats, including the UK, the nations, regions, and perhaps the city regions if/when the ONS eventually includes them.

My suggested fields would be:

  • GSS population
  • GSS area
  • GSS density
  • GSS year
  • GSS reference

For the rank fields, we can either keep them separate or else have combined fields but separate the data within the template. The latter is straight forward enough if you're familiar with the templates. The GSS codes are helpfully separated first by letter (E for England, S for Scotland etc.) And then use different codes depending on the type of area e.g. E12 is a region, E08 is a metropolitan borough etc.

It wouldn't be necessary to go through and remove all the old template references. The old templates can be updated to point at the new GSS templates. E.g. | E09000016 = {GSS population|E09000016}

The ceremonial county templates would need to stay as they're not included the ONS publication. Dgp4004 (talk) 10:41, 4 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]

  1. ^ "Mid-Year Population Estimates, UK, June 2022". Office for National Statistics. 26 March 2024. Retrieved 3 May 2024.