List of cities in the United Kingdom


This is a list of official cities in the United Kingdom as of 2015. It lists those places that have been granted city status by letters patent or royal charter. There are currently a total of 69 such cities in the United Kingdom: 51 in England, seven in Scotland, six in Wales, and five in Northern Ireland. Of these, 23 in England, two in Wales, and one in Northern Ireland have Lord Mayors and four in Scotland have Lord Provosts. In some cases, the area holding city status does not coincide with the built up area or conurbation of which it forms part. In Greater London, for example, the City of London and that of Westminster each hold city status separately but no other neighbourhood has been granted city status, nor has Greater London as a whole. In other cases, such as the Cities of Canterbury and Lancaster, the status extends over a number of towns and rural areas outside the main settlement proper.

History

The initial cities of Britain were the fortified settlements organised by the Romans as the capitals of the Celtic tribes under Roman rule. The British clerics of the early Middle Ages later preserved a traditional list of the "28 Cities" which was mentioned by Gildas and listed by Nennius.
The title of city was initially informal and, into the 20th century, royal charters were considered to recognise city status rather than to grant it. The usual criterion in early modern Britain was the presence of a cathedral, particularly after granted letters patent establishing six new cities when he established a series of new dioceses in the 1540s as part of the English Reformation. No new cities were created between the 16th and 19th centuries, but following the Industrial Revolution and the accompanying population boom and growth in urbanisation, new sees were established at Ripon and Manchester ; their councils began to style them cities immediately. Inverness in Scotland was even refused a charter at the time of the Jubilee honours of 1897, in part because it would have drawn more attention to the other traditional "cities" still not formally chartered as such.
Beginning in the mid-19th century, however, the process became more formal. A visit by Queen Victoria in 1851 prompted Manchester to petition Parliament for recognition of its status. Ripon followed in the 1860s, and a series of hitherto informal "cities" were formally recognised in the 1880s and 1890s. On the basis of its size, importance, and regular government, Belfast was elevated in spite of its lack of a cathedral in 1888; other large municipalities followed, while smaller applicants began to be rejected. and the Home Office established three criteria for future applicants in 1907—a minimum population of, a good record of local government, and a "local metropolitan character"—but these criteria were not made public, and following Leicester's successful elevation in 1919 a series of exceptions were made. The 1972 Local Government Act effectively eliminated all authorities holding city status outside Greater London on 1 April 1974; most of their replacements were confirmed in their predecessor's status—even in cases such as the City of Carlisle, where much of the local authority area is undeveloped countryside—but the Borough of Medway was not permitted to continue Rochester's title. In recent times there have been competitions for new grants of city status. Towns or councils that claim city status or add "city" to their name have been known to be rebuked by the Advertising Standards Authority.
The cities of Scotland and Ireland were treated separately. Scottish towns irregularly applied the description to themselves, but were formally organised as royal burghs; the special rights of these were preserved by Article XXI of the Treaty of Union which established the single state of Great Britain in 1707. Edinburgh and Glasgow were confirmed as cities "by ancient usage" in the 18th century, as was Aberdeen, and this was later reconfirmed in the Act enlarging the burgh in 1891. Dundee was granted letters patent in 1889 and Elgin and Perth were recognised as cities by the Home Office in 1972, before the privilege was removed by the Scottish Local Government Act of 1973.
In Ireland, only the seat of the primate at Armagh was accorded city status by ancient usage, and this status was abolished by the Irish Municipal Corporations Act of 1840. All other cities have been those explicitly recognised as such.

List of cities

In the Cathedral column in the table, only dioceses in England and Wales created up to 1888 had an effect on city status.
CityYear granted
or confirmed
Cathedral City councilNation/RegionImagePopulation
Aberdeen

1891
not applicable
Scotland
Armagh
1994not applicableNone. Represented on Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon Borough CouncilNorthern Ireland
Bangor Cathedral Church of St DeiniolCommunityWales
Bath 1090Abbey Church of SS Peter & PaulCharter trusteesSouth West, England
97,311
Belfast
1888not applicableLocal government districtNorthern Ireland
Birmingham 1889not applicable
West Midlands, England
Bradford 1897not applicableLocal government district
Yorkshire and the Humber, England
Brighton & Hove 2000not applicableLocal government district
South East, England
Bristol 1542Cathedral Church of the Holy & Undivided TrinityLocal government district
South West, England
Cambridge 1951not applicableLocal government district
East, England
Canterbury time immemorialCathedral & Metropolitical Church of
Christ
Local government district
South East, England
Cardiff
1905not applicable
Wales
Carlisle 1133Cathedral Church of the Holy & Undivided TrinityLocal government district
North West, England
Chelmsford 2012not applicableLocal government district
East, England
Chester 1541Cathedral Church of Christ & the Blessed Virgin MaryCharter trusteesNorth West, England
Chichester 1075Cathedral Church of the Holy TrinityCivil parishSouth East, England
Coventry 1102St Michael's CathedralLocal government district
West Midlands, England
Derby 1977not applicableLocal government district
East Midlands, England
Derry
1604not applicableNone. Represented on Derry City and Strabane District CouncilNorthern Ireland
Dundee
1889
not applicableLocal government district
Scotland
Durham time immemorialCathedral Church of Christ, St Mary the Virgin and St CuthbertCharter trusteesNorth East, England
Edinburgh
18th century
not applicableLocal government district
Scotland
Ely 1109Cathedral Church of the Holy & Undivided TrinityCivil parishEast, England
Exeter time immemorialCathedral Church of St PeterLocal government district
South West, England
Glasgow
18th century
not applicableLocal government district
Scotland
Gloucester 1541Cathedral Church of St Peter & the Holy and Indivisible TrinityLocal government district
South West, England
Hereford time immemorialCathedral Church of SS Mary the Virgin & Ethelbert the KingCivil parishWest Midlands, England
Inverness
2000not applicablenoneScotland
Kingston upon Hull 1897not applicableLocal government district
Yorkshire and the Humber, England
Lancaster 1937not applicableLocal government district
North West, England
Leeds 1893not applicableLocal government district
Yorkshire and the Humber, England
Leicester 1919not applicableLocal government district
East Midlands, England
Lichfield time immemorialCathedral Church of SS Mary & ChadCivil parishWest Midlands, England
Lincoln 1072Cathedral Church of St MaryLocal government district
East Midlands, England
Lisburn
2002not applicableNone. Represented on Lisburn and Castlereagh City CouncilNorthern Ireland
Liverpool 1880Cathedral Church of ChristLocal government district
North West, England
City of London time immemorialSt Paul's CathedralLocal government district
London
Manchester 1853Manchester CathedralLocal government district
North West, England
Newcastle upon Tyne 1882Cathedral Church of St NicholasLocal government district
North East, England
Newport
2002not applicableLocal government district
Wales
Newry
2002not applicableNone. Represented on Newry, Mourne and Down District CouncilNorthern Ireland
Norwich 1094Cathedral Church of the Holy & Undivided TrinityLocal government district
East, England
Nottingham 1897not applicableLocal government district
East Midlands, England
Oxford 1542Cathedral Church of ChristLocal government district
South East, England
Perth
2012
not applicablenoneScotland
Peterborough 1541Cathedral Church of
St Peter, St Paul, & St Andrew
Local government district
East, England
Plymouth 1928not applicableLocal government district
South West, England
Portsmouth 1926not applicableLocal government district
South East, England
Preston 2002not applicableLocal government district
North West, England
Ripon 1836Cathedral Church of SS Peter & WilfridCivil parishYorkshire and the Humber, England
St Albans 1877Cathedral & Abbey Church of St AlbanLocal government district
East, England
St Asaph
2012not applicableCommunityWales
St Davids
1994St DavidsCommunityWales
Salford 1926not applicableLocal government district
North West, England
Salisbury 1227Cathedral Church of St MaryCivil parishSouth West, England
Sheffield 1893not applicableLocal government district
Yorkshire and the Humber, England
Southampton 1964not applicableLocal government district
South East, England
Stirling
2002not applicablenoneScotland
Stoke-on-Trent 1925not applicableLocal government district
West Midlands, England
Sunderland 1992not applicableLocal government district
North East, England
Swansea
1969not applicableLocal government district
Wales
Truro
1877Cathedral Church of St MaryCivil parishSouth West, England
Wakefield 1888Cathedral Church of All SaintsLocal government district
Yorkshire and the Humber, England
Wells time immemorialCathedral Church of St AndrewCivil parishSouth West, England
Westminster 1540Westminster Abbey Local government district
London
Winchester time immemorialCathedral Church of the Holy TrinityLocal government district
South East, England
Wolverhampton 2000not applicableLocal government district
West Midlands, England
Worcester time immemorialCathedral Church of Christ & St MaryLocal government district
West Midlands, England
York time immemorialCathedral & Metropolitical Church of St PeterLocal government district
Yorkshire and the Humber, England

Map of the cities

British Overseas Territories

There are a number of cities in the British Overseas Territories, such as the City of James Town on Saint Helena.