Kesteven
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Administration | |
---|---|
Status: | Administrative county |
HQ: | |
History | |
Created: | 1889 |
Abolished: | 1974 |
Succeeded by: | Lincolnshire |
Parts of Kesteven is a traditional subdivision of Lincolnshire, England. This subdivision had long had a separate county administration (Quarter Sessions), along with the other two parts Lindsey and Holland).
The word Kesteven is supposed to have derived from two root words: the Celtic ced meaning wood (cf. Modern Welsh coed) + the Old English stefna, a meeting place. It is pronounced as either IPA: [kəˡstiːvən] or IPA: [ˡkɛstəvən].
The three parts were given separate elected county councils in 1889 by the Local Government Act 1888, and recognised as administrative counties. These separate county councils were abolished in 1974 and Lincolnshire (minus the northern part of Lindsey) had a single county council for the first time, although the name survives in the districts of North Kesteven and South Kesteven. Kesteven lies in the south-west of Lincolnshire. It includes the towns of:
Kesteven was historically divided into the wapentakes of Aswardhurn, Aveland, Beltisloe, Boothby Graffoe, Flaxwell, Langoe, Loveden, Ness, and Winnibriggs and Threo. Grantham and Stamford were administered separately.
Under the Local Government Act 1894 Kesteven was divided into a number of rural district and urban districts based on earlier sanitary districts:
- Bourne Rural District
- Branston Rural District
- Grantham Rural District
- Branston Rural District
- Claypole Rural District
- Sleaford Rural District
- Uffington Rural District
The urban districts and boroughs were:
- Bourne
- Bracebridge
- Grantham (borough)
- Ruskington
- Sleaford
- Stamford (borough)
Bourne urban district was abolished in 1920, with Bourne becoming a parish in Bourne Rural District. Bracebridge became part of the county borough of Lincoln that same year, becoming associated with the Parts of Lindsey.
The rural districts were re-organised by a County Review Order in 1929, to create four new districts named for points of the compass:
- East Kesteven Rural District
- North Kesteven Rural District
- South Kesteven Rural District
- West Kesteven Rural District
Ruskington became part of the East Kesteven district.
There is an extinct barony: Baron Kesteven. Margaret Thatcher took 'of Kesteven' as the territorial designation for her peerage.