Australia 2011 (K)
- Location
- Das Böse ist immer und überall
- Pronouns
- he/him
It was part of the "Deutsch-Südtirol" constituency, most of which couldn't hold elections as it was under Italian control. It wouldn't be re-merged into Tirol proper until 1923, two elections after this.Was Osttirol counted separately then?
I think even they would think twice before including it in a map of the Edo period.Ballsy move not to recognize Mimana. Might well piss off some Japanese nationalists.
Please do not show this to anyone from the traditional counties movement or they might die from sheer orgasmic joy.England's administrative structure as of circa 1830 - in case anyone thinks France and the HRE had a monopoly on weird boundaries.
View attachment 25290
Black lines - county boundaries
Darkest grey - highest-level county subdivisions (ridings in Yorkshire, Parts in Lincolnshire, the Isle of Ely in Cambridgeshire, the Lathes of Kent and the Rapes of Sussex)
Medium grey - boundary of hundreds or equivalent units (wapentakes in Yorkshire, Lincolnshire and Nottinghamshire, wards in Northumberland, Durham, Cumberland and Westmoreland)
Lightest grey - boundary of sub-hundred units where available (divisions in most counties, parishes in Lancashire)
Lightest colouring - hundreds or equivalent
Medium colouring - liberties (basically special areas where the local landlord had jurisdiction instead of the quarter sessions)
Darkest colouring - boroughs
Red - counties corporate (boroughs administratively separate from their counties, most of which also had their own lords-lieutenants and sheriffs)
Now, a couple of big, fat asterisks should go with this. I've based it on whatever maps Wikimedia Commons has of the relevant county's ancient subdivisions, some of which are full dated maps with boroughs as well as hundreds, and others not. So for about half of this map, I don't know what the boroughs were or if the hundreds are actually accurate for circa 1830. I do know they're not in Wales, which is the fattest asterisk of them all - the map I've based it on shows hundreds/cantrefs during the Tudor era, just after the counties were established. It also doesn't show any boroughs, so I've based those off Wikipedia's list, which I suspect isn't quite exhaustive. For one, I doubt a majority of Welsh boroughs were in Ceredigion.
I sort of figured it might be useful to spread it around as a warning, "are you sure this is really what you want", but you know the English people better than I.Please do not show this to anyone from the traditional counties movement or they might die from sheer orgasmic joy.
Please do not show this to anyone from the traditional counties movement or they might die from sheer orgasmic joy.
Some BC stuff, then.
<SNIP>
a theocratic sect that believes Roald Dahl is the Antichrist