Ivo
Established Member
How about restricting city status to a top twenty/ fifty settlements? That way it would have to mean something.
As a suggestion:
* - Places with a population of over 250,000
* - Places with three/four digit telephone codes (e.g. 020 for London, 029 for Cardiff 0141 for Glasgow, 0113 for Leeds)
* - Places with single letter post codes (e.g. B for Birmingham, S for Sheffield)
Population of over
Forget cathedrals (so few people attend regular church services), forget things like Mayors, make being a city something meaningful or forget about it
There's something about "The Town of Bath" that doesn't sound right...
Anyhow, a series of serious responses to your suggestions:
Population of 250,000 or more: An obvious starting point, but how do you define settlements? Does Southampton have a population of 240,000 (local authority) or 300,000 (including suburbs outside the boundary)? When I was in high school, we were told (for some daft reason) that cities always had 250,000 or more - unless your proposal is introduced, bringing disappointment to roughly 50 settlements nationwide, this is wrong

Phone codes: Our system doesn't work. Places with five digit codes are (usually) identifiable by their third and fourth digits, e.g. 01225 for Bath (with 0 being used for zero in the latter case, hence Southend being 01702). Three- and four- digit codes don't follow this, which isn't a problem in itself - but the large number of five-digit locations that are "simmering" (Bournemouth is an obvious one) is alarming. I came with a replacement system once, but I don't know what happened to it - it was done on paper

Postcodes: Maybe I should let 4SRKT do this one (funnily enough I'm meeting him tomorrow). But what happens to Belfast, Leeds, Cardiff, Bristol, Newcastle and Nottingham? All of those have two-letter codes...
In all honesty I think the previous system works better. But the list needs to be reset, and religious importance withdrawn in all but the most extreme of cases (e.g. Canterbury). The modern method of naming cities has diluted the value of City Status somewhat, so why not?
My proposed list of 36 cities:
England: Bath, Birmingham, Brighton, Bristol, Cambridge, Canterbury, Carlisle, Chester, Colchester, Coventry, Hull, Leeds, Leicester, Lincoln, Liverpool, London, Manchester, Milton Keynes, Newcastle, Norwich, Nottingham, Oxford, Plymouth, Portsmouth, Reading, Sheffield, Stoke, Westminster, Winchester, York
Northern Ireland: Belfast; Londonderry
Scotland: Aberdeen; Edinburgh; Glasgow; Inverness
Wales: Cardiff
So, as it turns out, Bath makes my list - JUST. It was the 36th and last addition to the list. It is based on size, historical/religious importance (including status as a "regional capital"), culture and economy. (You will also notice that several current towns are listed.)
And no Southend in sight
