Cumberland | |||
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Historic county | |||
| |||
Area | |||
• 1831 | 969,490 acres (3,923.4 km2)1831 Census cited in Vision of Britain – Ancient county data | ||
• 1911 | 973,086 acres (3,937.94 km2) | ||
• 1961 | 973,146 acres (3,938.18 km2) | ||
Population | |||
• 1911 | 265,746 Vision of Britain – Cumberland population (density and area) | ||
• 1961 | 294,303 | ||
Density | |||
• 1911 | 0.27/acre (0.67/ha) | ||
• 1961 | 0.3/acre (0.74/ha) | ||
History | |||
• Origin | Historic | ||
• Created | 12th Century | ||
Status |
| ||
Chapman code | CUL | ||
Government | Cumberland County Council (1889–1974) | ||
• HQ | Carlisle | ||
Arms of Cumberland County Council | |||
Subdivisions | |||
• Type | Wards | ||
• Units | |||
Cumberland is a historic county in North West England. It was an administrative entity and then was included into Cumbria. In April 2023, Cumbria's County Council was removed and two unitary authorities replaced it.
Cumberland is bordered by Northumberland to the north-east, County Durham to the east, Westmorland to the south-east, Lancashire to the south, and the Scottish counties of Dumfriesshire and Roxburghshire to the north.[1]