TOWN

Ronda, Spain


A 'town' is a community of people ranging from a few hundred to several thousands, although it may be applied loosely even to huge metropolitan areas. Generally, a "town" is thought of as larger than a village but smaller than a "city". The words "city" and "village" came into English from Latin via French. "Town" and "borough" (also "burrow", "burgh", "bury", etc.) are of native Germanic origin, from Old English ''burg'', a fortified settlement, and ''tūn'', an enclosed piece of land.[1]

Contents
Origin and use around the world
Australia
References
Austria
Chile
France
Germany
Hungary
India
Netherlands
Poland
Russia
Sweden
United Kingdom
England and Wales
Republic of Ireland
United States
References
See also
External links

Origin and use around the world


In Old English and Old Scots, "Town" (or "toun", "ton", etc.) originally meant a fortified municipality, whereas a borough was not fortified. But that distinction did not last long, and "Edina Burgh" or "Edinburgh" - modernly called a "city" - was a fortified "town" from its founding.
In American English, a 'town' is usually a municipal corporation that is smaller than a city but larger than a village. In some cases, "town" is an alternate name for "city" or "village" (especially a larger village). Sometimes, the word "town" is short for "township."
In general, towns can be differentiated from townships, villages, or hamlets on the basis of their economic character, in that most of a town's population will tend to derive their living from manufacturing industry, commerce, and public service rather than primary industry such as agriculture or related activities.
A place's population size is not a reliable determinant of urban character. In many areas of the world, as in India at least until recent times, a large village might contain several times as many people as a small town.
The modern phenomenon of extensive suburban growth, satellite urban development, and migration of city-dwellers to villages have further complicated the definition of towns, creating communities urban in their economic and cultural characteristics but lacking other characteristics of urban localities.
Some forms of non-rural settlement, such as temporary mining locations, may be clearly non-rural, but have at best a questionable claim to be called a town.
The distinction between a town and a city similarly depends on the approach adopted: a city may strictly be an administrative entity which has been granted that designation by law, but in informal usage, the term is also used to denote an urban locality of a particular size or importance: whereas a medieval city may have possessed as few as 10,000 inhabitants, today some consider an urban place of fewer than 100,000 as a town, even though there are many officially designated cities that are very, very much smaller than that.

Australia


In Australia, the status of a town is formally applied in only a few states. Most states do define cities, and towns are commonly understood to be those centres of population not formally declared to be cities and usually with a population in excess of about 250 people.
The creation and delimitation of Local Government Areas is the responsibility of the state and territory Governments. In all states and the Northern Territory each incorporated area has an official status. The various LGA status types currently in use are:

New South Wales: Cities (C) and Areas (A)

Victoria: Cities (C), Rural Cities (RC), Boroughs (B) and Shires (S)

Queensland: Cities (C), Shires (S), Towns (T) and Island Councils (IC)

South Australia: Cities (C), Rural Cities (RC), Municipalities/Municipal Councils (M), District Councils (DC), Regional Councils (RegC) and Aboriginal Councils (AC)

Tasmania: Cities (C) and Municipalities (M)

Western Australia: Cities (C), Towns (T) and Shires (S)

Northern Territory: Cities (C), Towns (T), Community Government Councils (CGC) and Shires (S).
References


Australian Bureau of Statistics: Australian Standard Geographical Classification (ASGC) 2005

Austria


In Austria designations are similar to those in southern Germany with a trichotomy in ''Gemeinde'', ''Markt(gemeinde)'' and ''Stadt''.

Chile


In Chile towns are defined by the National Statistics Institute (INE) as an urban entity with a population from 2001 to 5000 or an area with a population from 1001 to 2000 and an established economic activity.

France


The town of Salins les Bains, France
From an administrative standpoint, the smallest level of local authorities are all called “communes”. However, some laws do treat these authorities differently based on the population and specific rules apply to the three main cities Paris, Lyon and Marseille. For historical reasons, six communes in the Meuse département still exist as independent entities despite having no inhabitant at all.
For statistical purposes, the national statistical institute (INSEE) operates a distinction between urban areas with fewer than 2,000 inhabitants and bigger communes, the latter being called “villes”. Smaller settlements are usually called “villages”. In any case, the French language does not commonly make a difference between towns and cities.

Germany


Germans do not, in general, differentiate between ''city'' and ''town''. The German word for both is "Stadt" as it is in many other languages that do not make any difference between the Anglo-Saxon concepts. A town with more than 100,000 inhabitants is called a ''Großstadt'', which is the most adequate equivalence for ''city''. In Germany also the historical importance (many settlements became a ''Stadt'' by being awarded a ''Stadtrecht'' in medieval times), the centrality and the population density of an urban place might be taken as characteristics of a "city". The word for a ''village'', as a smaller settlement, is ''Dorf''.
In southern German states the word ''Markt'' or ''Marktflecken'' designates a town-like residential community between village and city.
The current local government organisation is subject to ''Landesrecht'' (state law of a ''Bundesland'') and the related denomination of a specific settlement may differ from its common designation (e. g. ''Samtgemeinde'' - a Lower Saxony legal term for a group of villages (''Dorf'', pl. ''Dörfer'') with common local government). Designations in different ''Bundesländern'' are as diverse as for example in Australian States and Territories and differ from ''Bundesland'' to ''Bundesland''.

Hungary


In Hungary, a village can gain the status of "város" (town), if it meets a set of diverse conditions for quality of life and development of certain public services and utilities (e.g. having a local secondary school or installing full-area sewage collection pipe network). Every year the Minister of Internal Affairs selects candidates from a committee-screened list of applicants, whom the President of Republic usually affirms by issuing a bill of town's rank to them. Since being a town carries extra fiscal support from the government, many relatively small villages try to win the status of "városi rang" nowadays.
Before the fall of communism in 1990, Hungarian villages under 10,000 residents were not allowed to become towns. Recently some settlements as small as 2,500 souls have received the rank of town (e.g. Zalakaros or Gönc) and meeting the conditions of development are often disregarded to quickly elevate larger villages into towns. As of early 2007, there are 289 towns in Hungary, encompassing some 65% of the entire population.
Towns of more than 50,000 people are able to gain the status of "megyei jog" (town with the rights of a county), which allows them to maintain own courts and a higher degree of autonomy. As of early 2007, there are only 23 such towns in Hungary.

India


In India, under most state laws, no village or settlement can be classified as a town unless its population crosses 20,000 inhabitants. On the basis of population and other issues, the state government notifies a larger community (over 10,000) as a ''notified area'', and its administration is under the locally elected ''notified area committee''. A settlement over 20,000 population would be classified, with a charter from the state government as a ''town'', with a ''town area committee''. Some laws distinguish only towns and villages from each other, but by usage, settlement with larger populations, such as those having a ''municipal committee'' or ''municipal corporation'' would be called cities. The recent Census of India classified all settlements above 5000 population (subject to some other rules) as urban areas for the sake of census. [1]

Netherlands


In the Netherlands no distinction is made between "city" and "town", both translate as "stad".
Before 1848 there was a legal distinction between stad and non-stad parts of the country, but nowadays the word has no legal significance any more. About 220 places got "stadsrechten" (city rights) and are still called so for historical and traditional reasons, but the word is used for large urban areas, which never got such rights, as well. The contrastive word for a ''village'' as a smaller settlement is ''dorp''.

Poland


Similarly to Germany, in Poland there is no difference between ''city'' and ''town''. Polish word for city is ''miasto'' and the only difference between a very big village (in Polish ''wieś'') and a small city is the administrative status of the latter one. Many Polish villages are older than some relatively ''young'' cities. For example ''wieś'' is nearly 100 years older than the closely located town of Częstochowa.

Russia


Sweden


Sweden cancelled the official legal term Town (in Swedish: Stad) in the year 1971. Only the word Municipality (in Swedish: Kommun. In US English approximately County) was used, making no legal difference between Stockholm and a countryside municipality. Before that there were a number of terms like "stad"/Town, "köping"/large village etc. The definition of Town (stad) was that it was given such a title. Since the 1980s some municipalities (13 out of 290) call themselves town (stad) meaning the same thing as municipality. This has no legal or administrative significance whatsoever, and they have to use the word "kommun" in laws. In other cases the seat of the municipality is called "town". There is no difference between city and town, both translates to stad in Swedish.

United Kingdom


England and Wales

A traditional English town centre at Rugby

In England and Wales, a ''town'' traditionally was a settlement which had a charter to hold a market or fair and therefore became a "market town". Market towns were distinguished from villages in that they were the economic hub of a surrounding area, and were usually larger and had more facilities.

In modern usage the term ''town'' is used either for old market towns, or for settlements which have a Town Council, or for settlements which elsewhere would be classed a city, but which do not have the legal right (by Letters Patent) to call themselves such. Any parish council can decide to describe itself as a Town Council, but this will usually only apply to the smallest "towns" (because larger towns will be larger than a single civil parish).
Not all settlements which are commonly described as towns have a "Town Council" or "Borough Council". In fact, because of many successive changes to the structure of local government, there are now few large towns which are represented by a body closely related to their historic borough council. These days, a smaller town will usually will be part of a local authority which covers several towns. And where a larger town 'is' the seat of a local authority, the authority will usually cover a much wider area than the town itself (either a large rural hinterland, or several other, smaller towns).
Alternatively there are also "new towns" which were created during the 20th century, such as Basildon, Redditch and Telford. Milton Keynes was designed to be a "new city" but legally it is still a town despite its size.
Curiously some settlements which describe themselves as towns (e.g. Shipston-on-Stour, Warwickshire) are smaller than some large villages (e.g. Kidlington, Oxfordshire).
Main articles: City status in the United Kingdom

The status of a ''city'' is reserved for places that have Letters Patent entitling them to the name, historically associated with the possession of a cathedral.
Some large municipalities (such as Northampton) are legally boroughs but not cities, whereas some cities are quite small — such as Ely or St David's for instance.
It appears that a city may become a town, though perhaps only through administrative error: Rochester (Kent) has been a city for centuries but, when in 1998 when the Medway district was created, a bureaucratic blunder meant that Rochester lost its official City status and it is now technically a town.
It is often thought that towns with bishops' seats rank automatically as cities: however, Chelmsford remains a town despite being the seat of the diocese of Chelmsford. St. Asaph, which is the seat of the diocese of St Asaph, is another such town. In reality, the pre-qualification of having a cathedral of the established Church of England, and the formerly established Church in Wales or Church of Ireland, ceased to apply from 1888.
The word ''town'' can also be used as a general term for urban areas, including cities. In this usage, a city is a type of town — a large one, with a certain status. For example, Greater London is a city, but is sometimes referred to affectionately as "London town". (The "City of London" is the historical nucleus, informally known as the "Square Mile", and is a London borough in its own right, the City of Westminster is also a city and London borough). Also, going from the suburbs to central London is to "go into town".

★ 'See Also'


List of towns in England


List of towns in Wales

Republic of Ireland


The expression “Town” in Ireland has a similar history as in England and Wales and is surrounded by a simililar penumbra of ambiguity. However it is used officially in several different contexts as follows
'The Local Government act 2001' provides that from January 1, 2002 (section 10 subsection (3)
''Within the county in which they are situated and of which they form part, there continue to be such other local government areas as are set out in Schedule 6 which—
(a) in the case of the areas set out in Chapter 1 of Part 1 of that Schedule, shall be known as boroughs, and
(b) (b) in the case of the areas set out in Chapter 2 of Part 1 and Part 2 of that Schedule, shall be known as towns,
and in this Act a reference to a town shall include a reference to a borough."''
These provisions effect the replacement of the boroughs, Towns and urban districts which existed before then. Similar reforms in the nomeclature of local authorities ( but not their functions) are effected by section 11
part 17 of the act includes provision (section 185(2))
''Qualified electors of a town having a population of at least 7,500 as ascertained at the last preceding census or such other figure as the Minister may from time to time prescribe by regulations, and not having a town council, may make a proposal in accordance with paragraph (b) for the establishment of such a council''
and contains provisions enabling the establishment of new town councils and provisions enabling the dissolution of existing or new town councils in certain circumstances
The reference to ''town having a population of at least 7,500 as ascertained at the last preceding census'' hands much of the power relating to defining what is in fact a town over to the Central Statistics Office and their criteria are published as part of each census
'Planning and Development act 2000'
Another reference to the Census and its role in determuining what is or is not a town for some administrative purpose is in the Planning and Development act 2000 (part II chapter I which provides for Local area plans)
'' A local area plan shall be made in respect of an area which—
(i) is designated as a town in the most recent census of population, other than a town designated as a suburb or environs in that census,
(ii) has a population in excess of 2,000, and
(iii) is situated within the functional area of a planning authority which is a county council.
'''Central Statistics Office Criteria'
These are set out in full at http://www.cso.ie/census/documents/census_2006_Appendices.pdf
In short they speak of “ towns with legally defined boundaries” ( ie those established by the Local Government Act 2001) and the remaining 664 as “census towns", defined by themselves since 1971 as ''a cluster of 50 or more occupied dwellings in which within a distrance of 800 metres there is a neucleus of 30occupied houses on both sides of the road or twenty occupued houses on one side of the road'' there is also a ''200 metre criterion'' for determining whether a house is part of a census town.

United States


The tiny farming community of Wyatt, Indiana.
In the United States of America, the meaning of the term ''town'' varies from state to state. In some states, a town is an incorporated municipality, that is, one with a charter received from the state, similar to a city (see incorporated town). In others, a town is unincorporated.
The types of municipalities in U.S. states include cities, towns, boroughs, villages, and townships (in the sense of Pennsylvania townships and New Jersey townships; for the meaning in other states, see civil township), although most states do not have all five types. Many states do not use the term "town" for incorporated municipalities. In some states, for example Wisconsin, "town" is used in the same way that civil township is used in elsewhere. In other states, such as Michigan, the term "town" has no official meaning and is simply used informally to refer to a populated place, whether incorporated or not.
In the six New England states, a town is a municipality and a more important unit than the county. In Connecticut, Rhode Island and 7 out of 14 counties in Massachusetts, in fact, counties only exist as map divisions and have no legal functions; in the other three states, counties are primarily judicial districts, with other functions primarily in New Hampshire and Vermont. In all six, towns perform functions that in most states would be county functions. The defining feature of a New England town, as opposed to a city, is that a town meeting and a board of selectmen serve as the main form of government for a town, while cities are run by a mayor and a city council. For example, Brookline, Massachusetts is a town, even though it is fairly urban, because of its form of government.
In New York, a town is similarly a division of the county, but with less importance than in New England. Of some importance is the fact that, in New York, a town provides a closer level of governance than its enclosing county, providing almost all municipal services to unincorporated areas, called hamlets and selected services to incorporated areas, called villages. In New York, a town typically contains a number of such hamlets and villages. However, due to the independent nature of Incorporated Villages, they may exist in two towns or even two counties. Everyone in New York State who does not live in an Indian reservation or a city lives in a town and possibly in one of the town's hamlets or villages. (Some other states have similar entities called .) In New York, "town" is essentially short for "township."
In Pennsylvania, there is only one municipality which is incorporated as a "town": Bloomsburg. Most of the rest of the state is incorporated as townships (there are also boroughs and cities), which function in much the same way as the towns of New York or New England, although they may have different forms of government.
In Virginia, a town is an incorporated municipality similar to a city (though with a smaller required minimum population), but while cities are by Virginia law independent of counties, towns are contained within a county.
In Nevada, a town has a form of government, but is not considered to be incorporated. It generally provides a limited range of services, such as land use planning and recreation, while leaving most services to the county. Many communities have found this "semi-incorporated" status attractive; the state has only 20 incorporated cities, and towns as large as Paradise (186,020 in 2000 Census), home of the Las Vegas Strip. Most county seats are also towns, not cities.
In California, the words "town" and "city" are synonymous by law (see Cal. Govt. Code Secs. 34500-34504). There are two types of city in California - charter and general law. Cities organised as charter cities derive their authority from a charter that they draft and file with the state, and which, among other things, states the municipality's name as "City of (Name)" or "Town of (Name)." Government Code Sections 34500-34504 applies to cities organised as general law cities, which differ from charter cities in that they do not have charters but instead operate with the powers conferred them by the pertinent sections of the Government Code. Like charter cities, general law cities may incorporate as "City of (Name)" or "Town of (Name)." Some cities change their minds as to how they want to be called. The sign in front of the municipal offices in Colma, California, for example, reads "City of Colma", but the words engraved on the building above the front entrance when the city hall was build read "Town of Colma." There are also signs at the municipal corporation limit, some of which welcome visitors to the "City of Colma" while older, adjacent signs welcome people to the "Town of Colma." Meanwhile, the village does not exist in California, either in colloquial speech or as a municipal corporation. Instead, the word "town" is commonly used to indicate any unincoporated community that might otherwise be known as an unincoporated village. Additionally, some people may still use the word "town" as shorthand for "township", which is not an incorporated municipality but an administrative division of a county.
Acording to the 2006 United States Census Gilbert, Arizona (a suburb of Phoenix) is the largest town in the United States. Gilbert ranked as the 115th largest incorporated place with 191,517 residents.

References


1. The New Oxford American Dictionary, Second Edition, Erin McKean (Editor), 2096 pages, May 2005, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-517077-6

See also



List of towns

Company town

Town Hall

Township

Town square

Town privileges

Town charter

Townland

Town limits

Site

External links



Open-Site Regional — Contains information about towns in numerous countries.

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