STRATHCLYDE

:''This article is about the former administrative region. For other uses see Strathclyde (disambiguation).''
'Strathclyde' (''Srath Chluaidh'' in Gaelic, meaning "valley of the River Clyde") is a historic subdivision of Scotland, and was one of the regional council areas of Scotland from 1975 to 1996.

Contents
The Region
Sub-regions and Districts
The modern unitary authorities in the former Strathclyde Region
Notes
The Region

Strathclyde Region was named after the Kingdom of Strathclyde, which covered broadly the same area (with the significant exceptions of Argyll and the islands of Bute and Arran.1)
It was the region with the largest land area in the country, with a population in excess of 2 million and an area stretching from the Highlands to the Southern Uplands. The politics of the region were by and large dominated by the Labour Party. The first convener was the Rev Geoff Shaw, who died in 1978. The largest city was Glasgow, the rest of the Region comprised the former counties of Ayr, Argyll (with the exception of the far north of the county), Bute, Dunbartonshire, Lanark and Renfrew.
The system of regions and districts (replacing the former county and burgh councils) were created by the Local Government (Scotland) Act 1973 and entered into effect in May 1975.
Sub-regions and Districts

There were 19 districts within Strathclyde Region which lay within 6 sub-regions:
'Argyll Sub-region '(also known as' ''Argyll and Bute''')'

Argyll (also known as ''Argyll and Bute'')
'Ayr Sub-region'

Cumnock and Doon Valley

Cunninghame

Kilmarnock and Loudoun

Kyle and Carrick
'Dumbarton Sub-region'

Bearsden and Milngavie

Clydebank

Cumbernauld and Kilsyth

Dumbarton

Strathkelvin
'Glasgow Sub-region'

Glasgow
'Lanark Sub-region'

Clydesdale

East Kilbride

Hamilton

Monklands

Motherwell
'Renfrew Sub-region'

Eastwood

Renfrew

Inverclyde
The modern unitary authorities in the former Strathclyde Region

The regional tier of government was abolished in 1996 and its responsibilities merged with the District Councils to create unitary authorities (of which there are 32 in Scotland). The following Unitary Authorities cover parts of the former Strathclyde Region:

Argyll and Bute

East Ayrshire

East Dunbartonshire

East Renfrewshire

City of Glasgow

Inverclyde

North Ayrshire

North Lanarkshire

Renfrewshire

South Ayrshire

South Lanarkshire

West Dunbartonshire
Some local services which used to be run by the regional council are now run jointly by its successor authorities. These include the Strathclyde Partnership for Transport Authority, the Strathclyde Police Force, and the Strathclyde Fire Brigade.

Notes



Note 1: Strathclyde was a Brythonic kingdom, while Argyll was the heartland of the Gaelic kingdom of Dál Riata having been taken over, probably from Picts. Bute and Arran were Brythonic until appropriated by Dál Riata, then by Scandinavians. See Scottish people.

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