Land district

A land district is a type of administrative territorial entity in some countries.

Australia

The lands administrative divisions of New South Wales refers to the 141 counties within the Colony of New South Wales, that later became the Australian state of New South Wales.

Canada

Land districts are the cadastral system underlying land titles in the province, and used by the provincial gazetteer in descriptions of landforms, administrative areas, and other information. Those on Vancouver Island were established via a Lands Act of the government of the Colony of Vancouver Island, from 1843 onwards; those on the Mainland were established by the Lands Act of 1860 by the Colony of British Columbia.[1]

New Zealand

The land districts of New Zealand are the cadastral divisions of New Zealand, which are used on property titles. There are 12 districts, six in the North Island and six in the South Island. The land districts are similar to, but different from, the 16 local government regions. The current legislation for the land districts is the Land Transfer Act 1952.

  • Land Districts of New Zealand
gollark: Explain?
gollark: Humans simultaneously contain thousands of miracles of engineering and many blatantly insane design decisions.
gollark: They're one of those "human body bad" things.
gollark: That would be right, if it wasn't wrong.
gollark: It would be silly to buy pizza from me, since I don't sell pizza.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.