Perthshire is an historic county in central
Scotland, which extends from
Strathmore[?] in the east, to the
Pass of Drumochter[?] in the north,
Rannoch Moor[?] and
Ben Lui[?] in the west, and
Aberfoyle[?] in the south. Perthshire is known as the "big county" and has a wide variety of landscapes, from the rich agricultural
straths[?] in the east, to the high mountains of the southern
Highlands. Perthshire was an unitary local government area until 1974, when the old counties were replaced by a two-tier system of local government. During the 1974 re-organisation, some administrative boundaries were changed, and West Perthshire (the area of west and south of
Killin[?] including
Callander[?],
Crianlarich[?] and
Aberfoyle[?]) was transferred to the neighbouring administrative area of
Stirlingshire[?]. The smaller
1974 boundary was retained in
1995 when the two-tier system was abandoned, and the unitary council of
Perth and Kinross replaced
Perth and Kinross District Council[?] and
Tayside Region[?]. However, the original Perthshire county boundary is still used for the purposes of land registration, and for postal addresses. Perthshire extends to
5300 km2.
Besides Perth, other towns in Perthshire include:
Famous places:
Famous people:
Main Industries:
Rivers:
Mountains:
Glens and straths:
See Perth and Kinross, Highland Perthshire[?], Stirling, Trossachs[?] and Scottish Highlands.
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