
Britain
Until
recently England was generally thought of as a gentle,
fabled land freeze-framed sometime in the 1930s, home
of the post office, country pub and vicarage. It's now
better known for vibrant cities with great nightlife
and attractions, contrasted with green and pleasant
countryside.
From
Stonehenge and Tower Bridge to Eton and Oxford, England
is loaded with cherished icons of a past era. But it
also does modernity with a confidence and panache left
over from its days in the never-setting sun. Fashion,
fine dining, clubbing, shopping - England's rates with
the world's best.
England
is looking forward into the new century while trying
to forget many of the developments of the previous 100
years. That period witnessed the fall of the empire,
the loss of the trading base and the nation's inability
to adjust to a diminished role in the modern world -
from colonial empire to member of the EC. But while
the Family may have taken a right Royal battering, many
of the other august institutions at the cornerstone
of British life have muddled their way through with
a stiff upper lip and a strong sense of protocol.
Attractions
of Travel
London
England's capital city, London, brims with culture and
is filled with artistic and architectural triumphs.
It is a bustling, growing and varied metropolis with
magical museums, great galleries, gourmet restaurants,
clubs, nightlife and a diverse range of outstanding
theater and music--all waiting for you, all year round.
London,the grand resonance of its very name suggests
history and might. Its opportunities for entertainment
by day and night go on and on and on. It's a city that
exhilarates and intimidates, stimulates and irritates
in equal measure, a grubby Monopoly board studded with
stellar sights.
London
is one of the favourite urban haunts of visitors to
Europe because of landmark sights like Big Ben, St Paul's
Cathedral and the historically rich Westminster Abbey.
The city also boasts some of the world's greatest museums
and art galleries, and more parkland than most other
capitals.
Canterbury
Cathedral
The most impressive and evocative, if not the most beautiful,
cathedral in England is the seat of the Archbishop of
Canterbury, the Primate of All England. Like most cathedrals,
it evolved in stages and reflects a number of architectural
styles, but the final result is one of the world's great
buildings.
The
ghosts of saints, soldiers and pilgrims fill the hallowed
air, and not even baying packs of French children can
completely destroy the atmosphere. After the martyrdom
of Archbishop Thomas ¨¤ Becket in 1170, the
cathedral became the centre of one of the most important
medieval pilgrimages in Europe, a pilgrimage that was
immortalised by Geoffrey Chaucer in the Canterbury Tales.
Canterbury itself was severely damaged by bombing in
WWII and parts of the town have been insensitively rebuilt,
but it still attracts flocks of tourists, just as it
has for the past 800 years - though numbers may decrease
now pilgrims are charged a fee to enter the cathedral.
Durham
Durham is the most dramatic cathedral city in Britain.
It straddles a bluff surrounded on three sides by the
River Wear and is dominated by the massive Norman cathedral
which sits on a wooded promontory, looking more like
a time-worn cliff than a house of worship. The cathedral
may not be the most refined in the land, but no other
British cathedral has the same impact. The cathedral
shares the dramatic top of the bluff with a Norman castle
and the University College, while the rest of the picturesque
town huddles into the remaining space on the teardrop-shaped
promontory.
Lake
District
The most green and pleasant corner of a green and pleasant
land, the landscapes of the Lake District are almost
too perfect for their own good: 10 million visitors
can't be wrong, but they can sure cause a few traffic
jams.
The
area is a combination of luxuriant green dales, modest
but precipitous mountains and multitudinous lakes. Be
prepared to hike into the hills, or visit on weekdays
out of season if you have any desire to emulate the
bard and wander lonely as a cloud.
Oxford
Arguably the world's most famous university town, Oxford
is graced by superb college architecture and oozes questing
youthfulness, scholarship and bizarre high jinks. The
views across the meadows to the city's golden spires
are guaranteed to appear in 30% of English period dramas,
but they manage to remain one of the most beautiful
and inspiring of sights. Back in the real world, Oxford
is not just the turf of toffs and boffs: it was a major
car-manufacturing centre until the terminal decline
of the British car industry and is now a thriving centre
of service industries. The pick of the colleges are
Christ Church, Merton and Magdalen, but nearly all them
are drenched in atmosphere, history, privilege and tradition.
Don't kid yourself, you wouldn't have studied any harder
in such august surroundings.
Stonehenge
It's the most famous site in prehistoric Europe, and
is both a tantalising mystery and a hackneyed tourist
experience: tantalising because no one knows why the
stones were dragged up from South Wales 5000 years ago;
hackneyed because tourists are processed through Stonehenge
like cans on a conveyor belt.
Five-thousand-year-old
Stonehenge is the most famous prehistoric site in Europe,
but it remains both a tantalising mystery and a hackneyed
tourist experience. It consists of a ring of enormous
stones topped by lintels, an inner horseshoe, an outer
circle and a ditch. Although aligned to the movements
of the celestial bodies, little is known about the site's
purpose. What leaves most visitors gobsmacked is not
the site's religious significance but the tenacity of
the people who brought some of the stones all the way
from South Wales. It's estimated that it would take
600 people to drag one of these 50-ton monsters more
than half an inch. The downside of Stonehenge is that
it's fenced off like a dog compound; there are two main
roads slicing past the site; entry is via an incongruous
underpass; and clashes between new age hippies and police
at summer solstice have become a regular feature of
the British calendar. Each year New Age Druids celebrate
the summer solstice, but closer access at other times
is strictly limited.
The
Cotswolds
This limestone escarpment overlooking the Severn Vale
is an upland region of stunningly pretty, gilded stone
villages and remarkable views. Unfortunately, the soft,
mellow stone and the picturesque Agatha Christie charm
have resulted in some villages being overrun by coach
tourists and commercialism.
York
For nearly 2000 years York has been the capital of the
north, and it played a central role in British history
under the Romans, Saxons and Vikings. Its spectacular
Gothic cathedral, medieval city walls, tangle of historic
streets and glut of teashops and pubs make it a great
city for ambling around.
York
is a fascinating city of extraordinary cultural and
historical wealth. Its medieval spider's web of narrow
streets is enclosed by a magnificent circuit of thirteenth-century
walls. The city is thick with museums tracing its long
history, and, especially in summer, is a tourist honeypot.
|