Civil parish
A civil parish indicates an administrative subdivision in several countries, States or areas:
- the England, with the the United Kingdom (see Subdivisions of England),
- Antigua-and-Barbuda,
- Asturies in Spain
- the Barbados,
- the Bermuda,
- the Canada in the provinces of the Quebec and the New Brunswick,
- the Dominique,
- the Grenade,
- the Island of Man
- the Jamaica,
- bailliages of Jersey and Guernesey with the islands of Sercq and Aurigny, in the Channel Islands,
- the State of Louisiana, with the the United States of America, where the parish ( parish ) is the equivalent of the subdivision called county ( county ) in the other States,
- Montserrat,
- the State of News-Wales of the South, in Australia,
- the Wales, with the the United Kingdom.
- the Portugal, or the parishes are called Freguesia S
- Saint-Christophe-and-Niévès,
- Saint-Vincent-and-the-Grenadian,
- the Sweden, or the parishes are called Socken.
In all these countries, the administrative subdivision called Paroisse is directly heiress of the religious subdivision.
In addition, until the 19th century, the lowlands of South Carolina, in the United States, were also divided into parishes rather than in counties.
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