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pedderwo | 23:27 Tue 27th Jun 2006 | People & Places
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I have a friend who says he lives in a City; there is a Cathedral but no University. Is he misinformed or a pathological liar? Does anyone know which City is the smallest in the UK?
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St Davids is the smallest and this should explain everything:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_status_in_th e_United_Kingdom
I haven't read Gary's link but have no basis to dispute it. It used to be said that City status was dependent on having a cathedral. How accurate this was is anybody's guess. I do know that the likes of Sunderland and Brighton have been granted city status in the last decade, and neither of these cities has a cathedral.
Could this be St.Asaph in North Wales ?
I believe it has a small cathedral and was originally a cathedral city,but this status was taken away for some reason.
ONCE A CATHEDRAL CITY ALWAYS A CATHEDRAL CITY, I'd say, unless the cathedral has disappeared or something.
Wells in Somerset often is given as the answer in pub quizzes. Don't know how accurate this is.

Yes, pedants, I do know that it is either accurate or not!
Beg pardon, it seems Gary is correct. Must have been thinking about England rather than UK.
I always thought the smallest city was a trick question,with the answer technically being "The City of London" which is only one square mile.
Other than that I always thought it was St.Davids.
I always thought ELY was the smallest city
Lancaster is a city without an Anglican cathedral (though there is a Roman Catholic one), and its university only came into being in the 1960's.
Whilst running the risk of repeating myself St Davids is the smallest city in the UK.
Dont take my word for it:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smallest_cities_i n_the_United_Kingdom
Please read Gary's link, because it really does tell all. I live in a city and I never knew half of this.
gary baldy - you can't expect a little thing like solid evidence to stop people having a different opinion. BTW, is the answer Chichester? ;-) (easy gary, I'm just joshing).

As to the first question, there is the matter of Guildford. Odd place - it has a cathedral, it has a university, it even used to have a (now defunct) football team called Guildford City, but I understand it is still technically a town. Not sure what else it has to do...
How about Letchworth Garden City? no cathedral, no university, still a town, but called a city!!
also, MK is a city now, but no cathedral.
And do 7000-odd people actually live in the City of London?
The Cathedral on the Scottish Island of Cumbrae (population 1434) is the smallest in Europe located in Milllport on the island.

http://www.millport.org.uk/cpm/thumbnails.php? album=6
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Thanks all. I think Starbar my be as deluded as my friend, St Asaph in North Wales, a City? Passed through there once......just kept on driving.
He may live in Truro, unquestionably a city, unquestionably with a cathedral, unquestionably without a university. \it's not the smallest city in the UK though.
Or Wakefield, for that matter.
i was always led to believe that lichfield was the smallest city in the uk??
What's MK got so it qualifies as a city ?
I think in these days of progress, it must be a similar process changing from town to city status as it is getting one of those OBE, MBE badges.
Milton Keynes has a Cathedral and a university (albeit the Open University) and it even now has a league division football team which is more than some of these johnny-come-lately cities can claim.
ugly_bob the 7,000 people who live in the City of London are not odd! lol :o)

and mighty WBA, Did you know that there are no
roads in the City of London?

What about Welwyn Garden City?

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