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Township Information

The word township is used to refer to different kinds of settlements in different countries. Township is generally associated with an urban area.

Contents

Australia

See also: Suburbs and localities (Australia)

In Australia the designation of "township" traditionally refers to a small town—a small community in a rural district: such a place in Britain might qualify as a village or a hamlet. The term refers purely to the settlement; it does not refer to a unit of government. Townships are governed as part of a larger (e.g. shire or city) council.

Canada

Main article: Township (Canada)

In Canada, two kinds of township occur in common use.

China

Main article: Township (China)

In China, townships are found at the fourth level of the administrative hierarchy, together with ethnic townships, towns and subdistricts.

New Zealand

In local government in New Zealand there are no longer towns or townships. All land is part of either a "city" (mostly urban) or a "district" (mostly rural). The term "municipality" has become rare in New Zealand since about 1979 and has no legal status.

South Africa

Main article: Township (South Africa)

In South Africa, under Apartheid, the term township (or location) in everyday usage, came to mean a residential development that confined non-whites (Blacks, "coloureds," and Indians) living near or working in white-only communities. Soweto ("SOuth-WEstern TOwnships") furnishes a well-known example. However, the term township also has a precise legal meaning, and is used on land titles (in all areas, not only traditionally non-white areas).

United Kingdom

In the United Kingdom the term township is no longer in official use, but the term still has some meaning.

Main article: Township (England)
This use became obsolete at the end of the nineteenth century when local government reform converted many townships that, up to then, had been subdivisions of ancient parishes into the newer civil parishes in their own right. This formally separated the connection between the ecclesiastical functions of ancient parishes and the civil administrative functions that had been started in the sixteenth century. Recently, some councils, normally in the north of England, have revived the term. Municipalities as a term lived on longer until the local government reforms of 1974. A municipal council was the name given to a type of local government council administering a Municipal Borough that could contain civil parishes or could be unparished.[2]
Main article: township (Scotland)
In parts of north west Scotland (Highlands and Islands), a "township" is a crofting settlement.

United States

Main article: Township (United States)

There are two types of townships in the United States. A state may have one or both types. In states that have both, the boundaries usually coincide.

Zimbabwe

In Zimbabwe the term township was used for segregated parts of suburban areas. During colonial years of Rhodesia, the term township referred to a residential area reserved for black citizens within the boundaries of a city or town, and is still commonly used colloquially. This reflected the South African usage. In modern Zimbabwe it is also used to refer to a residential area within close proximity of a rural growth point.

CIS countries

In the context of Russian Empire, the Soviet Union, and CIS states, the term is sometimes used to denote a small semi-urban, sometimes industrial, settlement and used to translate the terms поселок городского типа (townlet), посад (posad), местечко (mestechko, from Polish "miasteczko", a small town; in the cases of predominant Jewish population the latter is sometimes translated as shtetl).

See also

Look up township in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

References

  1. ^ Winchester, A. (2000), Discovering parish boundaries, Princes Risborough, UK.: Shire Publications, pp. 21–29, ISBN 0747804702
  2. ^ Youngs, F. A. (1991), Guide to the local administrative units of England. Volume II: Northern England, London: Royal Historical Society, pp. i–xx, ISBN 0861931270
Types of administrative country subdivisions
Smallcaps indicate a type used by ten or more countries.
Current English terms
Current non-English and loanword terms
Defunct and historical English terms
Defunct and historical non-English terms
See also
Census division
Electoral district
Political division
Table of administrative divisions by country

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Noun

Township Wikipedia township (plural townships)
  1. The territory of a town; a subdivision of a county.
  2. (South African, Pre 1994) An area set aside for non-white occupation.
  3. (South African, Post 1994) A non-white (usually sub-economic) area attached to a city.
    • 1972, Daily Dispatch: "In addition, the council has completed the planning of a new Coloured township on the site of the existing African township"
Related terms squatter camp
from: Wiktionary: township,
Mon Apr 9 10:11:11 2012

Matching Results for Township:

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from: Wikiquote: township,
Mon Mar 19 06:43:42 2012