Matt N
TS Member
- Favourite Ride
- Shambhala (PortAventura Park)
Hi guys. Over in the Flamingo Land thread, a debate recently ensued with regard to whether Yorkshire was part of the North East or not, and this seems to have triggered a wider conversation about the categorisation of UK regions. With this in mind, I thought it might be an interesting topic to discuss on its own, so as not to detract from the Flamingo Land thread.
For those not aware, the ONS splits England into 9 different statistical regions (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regions_of_England). These regions, along with the counties they contain, are as follows:
Do you agree with these categorisations? Is there anything you’d change? Most divisively, where do you feel the UK’s north-south divide lies? And how exactly do you categorise regions?
Now some of these categorisations are up for debate. For instance, I live in the Forest of Dean in Gloucestershire, which the ONS classifies as South West England, but some consider my county to be more Midlands than South. I live nearly as far from Land’s End in Penzance, which is technically in the same ONS region as me, as I do from the Scottish border at Gretna Green, and the northernmost tip of Gloucestershire, Chipping Campden in the Cotswolds (which I live a fair amount southwest of), is exactly halfway between these places!
In terms of where I’d place the UK’s north-south divide; to me, the Greater Birmingham area has always mentally felt like a dividing line between south and north. Even though I know “the North” doesn’t technically start until Cheshire or South Yorkshire, anything notably higher than Birmingham has always felt like “the North” to me. For instance, Alton Towers, despite being in the West Midlands under the ONS definitions, mentally feels like the North to me; it’s a fair amount north of Birmingham, and the local accent begins to sound really quite Northern by the time you’ve reached Stoke-on-Trent. “Up” becomes “oop”, the hard a comes in (pronouncing “bath” as bath rather than bar-th, for instance), and by the time you reach Stoke, “book” is pronounced “bewk”, which I’ve always thought of as quite a Northern speech trait.
That’s another reason why I’d place the UK’s north-south dividing line in Birmingham; to me, that’s where the local accent begins to sound more northern than southern.
Come to think of it, I actually think local accent is quite possibly a fair metric of categorising regions, as many of the ONS regions do have subtly differing accents to the others.
But do you agree with me? Or do you disagree? Do you have any other thoughts about the categorisation of regions in the UK?
I know it sounds like a random topic, but it was generating discussion in the Flamingo Land thread, and I think there are many interesting aspects you could discuss!
For those not aware, the ONS splits England into 9 different statistical regions (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regions_of_England). These regions, along with the counties they contain, are as follows:
- North East England: County Durham, Northumberland, Tyne and Wear, parts of North Yorkshire (the Tees Valley Combined Authority)
- North West England: Cheshire, Cumbria, Greater Manchester, Lancashire, Merseyside
- Yorkshire and the Humber: East Riding of Yorkshire, South Yorkshire, West Yorkshire, most of North Yorkshire, parts of Lincolnshire (North Lincolnshire and North East Lincolnshire)
- East Midlands: Derbyshire, Leicestershire, Northamptonshire, Nottinghamshire, Rutland, most of Lincolnshire
- West Midlands: Herefordshire, Shropshire, Staffordshire, Warwickshire, West Midlands, Worcestershire
- East of England: Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Essex, Hertfordshire, Norfolk, Suffolk
- London: Greater London, City of London
- South East England: Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, East Sussex, Hampshire, Isle of Wight, Kent, Oxfordshire, Surrey, West Sussex
- South West England: Bristol, Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, Gloucestershire, Somerset, Wiltshire
Do you agree with these categorisations? Is there anything you’d change? Most divisively, where do you feel the UK’s north-south divide lies? And how exactly do you categorise regions?
Now some of these categorisations are up for debate. For instance, I live in the Forest of Dean in Gloucestershire, which the ONS classifies as South West England, but some consider my county to be more Midlands than South. I live nearly as far from Land’s End in Penzance, which is technically in the same ONS region as me, as I do from the Scottish border at Gretna Green, and the northernmost tip of Gloucestershire, Chipping Campden in the Cotswolds (which I live a fair amount southwest of), is exactly halfway between these places!
In terms of where I’d place the UK’s north-south divide; to me, the Greater Birmingham area has always mentally felt like a dividing line between south and north. Even though I know “the North” doesn’t technically start until Cheshire or South Yorkshire, anything notably higher than Birmingham has always felt like “the North” to me. For instance, Alton Towers, despite being in the West Midlands under the ONS definitions, mentally feels like the North to me; it’s a fair amount north of Birmingham, and the local accent begins to sound really quite Northern by the time you’ve reached Stoke-on-Trent. “Up” becomes “oop”, the hard a comes in (pronouncing “bath” as bath rather than bar-th, for instance), and by the time you reach Stoke, “book” is pronounced “bewk”, which I’ve always thought of as quite a Northern speech trait.
That’s another reason why I’d place the UK’s north-south dividing line in Birmingham; to me, that’s where the local accent begins to sound more northern than southern.
Come to think of it, I actually think local accent is quite possibly a fair metric of categorising regions, as many of the ONS regions do have subtly differing accents to the others.
But do you agree with me? Or do you disagree? Do you have any other thoughts about the categorisation of regions in the UK?
I know it sounds like a random topic, but it was generating discussion in the Flamingo Land thread, and I think there are many interesting aspects you could discuss!
Last edited: