Jump to content

Hundred of Jutland

Coordinates: 34°42′07″S 139°08′02″E / 34.702°S 139.134°E / -34.702; 139.134
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Hundred of Wiltowonga South)

Jutland
South Australia
Jutland is located in South Australia
Jutland
Jutland
Coordinates34°42′07″S 139°08′02″E / 34.702°S 139.134°E / -34.702; 139.134
Established7 August 1851
Area250 km2 (98 sq mi)[1]
CountySturt
Lands administrative divisions around Jutland:
Barossa
Moorooroo
Moorooroo
Jellicoe
Jellicoe
Para Wirra Jutland Angas
Talunga Tungkillo Finniss

The Hundred of Jutland is a hundred of the County of Sturt in South Australia. It is located on the east Mount Lofty Ranges foothills. The Hundred of South Rhine was proclaimed in 1851[1] but the name was changed in 1918 to the current, after the Battle of Jutland which took place off the coast of Denmark in 1916. The name change was part of a process to remove "names of enemy origin" at the time of World War I.[1]

The Hundred of Jutland includes the township and most of the locality of Eden Valley at its north, and Taunton and Springton at the centre. It also includes portions of Mount Pleasant, Cambrai, Sanderston and Milendella on the south and east.[1]

The original name "South Rhine" is in reference to the Marne River (formerly known as South Rhine).[2] The North Rhine flows southwards through the hundred from its source at the north western boundary between Moculta and Keyneton (part of the western boundary between the Hundred of Moorooroo and Jellicoe) to join the Marne east of Eden Valley.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d "Hundred of Jutland". Property Location Browser. Government of South Australia. 15 March 2010. SA0033357. Retrieved 25 October 2017. Previous Name: Hundred of South Rhine; Derivation of Name: Naval Battle of Jutland WW1; Other Details: Area 98 square miles. Originally proclaimed as the Hundred of South Rhine on 7/8/1851. Name alteration originally proposed as Wiltowong South Hundred by Nomenclature Committee during the move to alter "names of enemy origin" in 1916.
  2. ^ "1917 Nomenclature Act" (PDF), South Australian Government Gazette, 10 January 1918