Dean | The Little Book of Bath | E-Book | sack.de
E-Book

E-Book, Englisch, 192 Seiten

Dean The Little Book of Bath


1. Auflage 2017
ISBN: 978-0-7509-8200-9
Verlag: The History Press
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark

E-Book, Englisch, 192 Seiten

ISBN: 978-0-7509-8200-9
Verlag: The History Press
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark



Did you Know? - The first postage stamp in the world was issued in Bath - by mistake! - Bath's Royal Victoria Park contains two stone vases originally intended as gifts from Napoleon Bonaparte to Josephine, who became his first wife. - The thermal waters of Bath are the only truly hot springs in Britain. - According to legend, the healing springs of Bath were discovered by pigs. Bath is one of the most visited cities in the world and countless books have told the history of its beautiful buildings and parks - yet the chances are that this fact-packed compendium will enhance your knowledge further. From ancient Roman curses to the discovery of a planet from a back garden, and from the arrest of Jane Austen's aunt to the pub visited by Charles Dickens, The Little Book of Bath is full of surprises. Perfect for dipping into as well as reading cover to cover, here is the Bath few people get to know!

MIKE DEAN is a retired primary school teacher and has many years' experience as a professionally registered Blue Badge Tour Guide, specialising in the West Country. A graduate of Bristol University, his hobbies include reading, walking, music and travel. He is passionately interested in sailing ships, history and folklore. He is the author of The Little Book of Bath and The Little Book of Somerset, both published by The History Press. He lives between Bristol and Bath.
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SOME FACTS AND FIGURES


WHERE IS BATH?


Bath stands at Latitude N 51° 23´, W 02° 22´, and at its centre is 192ft (58.5m) above sea level. The major cities in the world with the closest co-ordinates to Bath are Bristol, England, and Leipzig, Germany. Bath’s population is currently (2017) around 89,000, and it lies within the unitary authority of Bath and North East Somerset (B&NES), in the historic county of Somerset. It stands near the southern edge of the Cotswolds in the valley of the river Avon and covers an area of about 11 square miles (approx. 28.5 sq. km.)

It has formal status as a city, and has a mayor who is chosen annually by the elected councillors. Bath is one of the oldest parliamentary constituencies in the country, having existed since 1295, and sends one member to Parliament.

Bath’s principal industry is heritage and cultural tourism, and in 1987 it was designated a World Heritage Site by UNESCO. The city welcomes almost 4 million day-visitors per year, and over 1 million who stay for longer. Other major employers include the National Health Service, B&NES Council and the two universities, Bath and Bath Spa. Bath has more than 400 retail shops and several theatres. Its local newspaper is the Bath Chronicle, published weekly.

BY ANY OTHER NAME


During its long history Bath has been known by a variety of names. The Romans called it Aquae Sulis (the ‘Waters of Sulis’) after the deity who was regarded as the guardian of the springs by the Celtic Dobunni tribe who occupied the area before the Romans came. It was also sometimes known by the name of Aquae Calidae (‘Hot Waters’).

During Saxon times there were several names: Akemanceaster (which may derive from the ‘aquae’ part of Bath’s Roman name; the Roman road named Akeman Street ran nearby and may originally have linked with Bath). Later in the Saxon period the name was changed to Bathanceaster and then to Hat Batha (or Bathum).

Bath is also a serious candidate for being the ‘Badon’ or ‘Caer Badon’ where the semi-mythical King Arthur is said to have fought his most famous battle, in which he defeated the Saxons. In his Historia Brittonum (c. 830) the Welsh monk Nennius mentions ‘the Baths of Badon’.

The sixteenth/seventeenth-century writer and topographer William Camden (1551–1623), in his great work Britannia, the first systematic survey of Great Britain and Ireland, quotes several historical names for Bath, including Badiza, Bathonia, Yr Ennaint Twymin (‘the city in the warm vale’) and Caer Palladur (‘the City of Pallas’). ‘Pallas’ was a name, or title, sometimes given to the goddess Athena, who is, of course, the Greek equivalent of the Roman goddess Minerva, firmly linked to Bath.

THE POPULATION OF BATH


The following figures are approximate, but indicate how Bath’s population has grown over the centuries:

1300

800

1400

1,000

1500

1,200

1600

2,000

1700

3,000

1800

32,000

1900

65,000

2000

83,000

2011

88,000

TOWNS THAT ARE TWINNED WITH BATH


Aix-en-Provence: A city-commune in the south of France, about 19 miles (30km) north of Marseilles. It has its own springs and the Romans called it ‘Aquae Sextiae’. The fact that it is also a spa town led to its twinning with Bath.

Alkmaar: A city in the province of north Holland, it is well-known for its traditional cheese market. John Lennon’s first guitar was made here and there is a museum to The Beatles. The twinning connection came about because the citizens of Bath held fundraising events to support the people of Alkmaar who had suffered during the German occupation.

Braunschweig (Brunswick): A city in Lower Saxony, Germany, it is a major centre for scientific research and development. The link between the two cities was established shortly after the Second World War as part of a government initiative designed to bring together young people from England and Germany.

Kaposvár: A city in south western Hungary, its name means ‘castle of gates’. Thermal waters were discovered here in the 1960s and the two cities were twinned in 1989.

Beppu: A city in the Oita Prefecture on the island of Kyushu, Japan, like Bath, it is famous for its hot springs (‘onsen’ in Japanese).

Bath also has a historic partnership agreement with Manly, a seaside suburb of Sydney, Australia. It was given its name by (then) Captain Arthur Phillip, first Governor of New South Wales, who declared that the ‘confidence and manly bearing’ of the local population led to his naming the place Manly Cove.

In addition, the suburbs of Batheaston and Bathford are twinned with Oudun and Artannes-sur-Indre (both in France) respectively.

PLACES IN THE USA NAMED AFTER BATH


Bath, California

Bath, Illinois

Bath, Indiana

Bath, Maine

Bath, Michigan

Bath, New Hampshire

Bath, New York State

Bath, North Carolina

Bath, Pennsylvania

Bath, South Carolina

Bath, South Dakota

Bath, West Virginia

Bath County, Kentucky

Bath County, Virginia

THE SEVEN HILLS OF BATH


Rome is built on seven hills; Bath is surrounded by seven hills. They are:

1. Beechen Cliff, with its heavily wooded slopes, provides a dramatic backdrop to the view to the south of the city. Immortalised by Jane Austen in Northanger Abbey as the place where Catherine Morland takes her walk with Tilneys, it gives superb views over the city and is part of Bath’s Skyline Walk.

2. Southdown has much interwar and post-war development. The area is dominated by High Barrow Hill (known locally as Round Hill), which has been kept as an open recreational area.

3. Lansdown (meaning ‘the long hill’) lies to the north east. In 1643 the Battle of Lansdown, between Royalist and Parliamentarian forces, was fought here, and there is a monument to the Royalist commander Sir Bevil Grenville. Today the area has football fields and a famous racecourse.

4. Kelston Round Hill to the west of the city, crowned with trees, is a landmark which can be seen for miles around. It is also known locally as ‘Kelston Tump’ (‘tump’ is an old dialect word meaning a small rounded hill or mound).

5. Solsbury Hill (or Little Solsbury Hill, as it is sometimes known) is small, flat-topped and the site of an Iron Age hillfort. At 625ft (191m) it stands above the village of Batheaston. It inspired the song ‘Solsbury Hill’, written by rock musician Peter Gabriel and recorded in 1977 as his first solo single.

6. Bathampton Down is a flat limestone plateau that overlooks the city from the north west. It has evidence of human occupation dating back to prehistoric times. On its southern slopes is Claverton Manor, an 1820s mansion that is now the home of the American Museum in Britain.

7. Bathford Hill lies to the east and there was once an ancient ford close by. In the days of horse-drawn traffic, extra horses, needed to pull carriages up the hill, were kept in a nearby field.

LONGEST, SHORTEST, OLDEST, TALLEST …


Bath’s widest street is Great Pulteney Street, at 100ft (30m). It is also the longest, at 1,100ft (335m). (Broad Street, which sounds as if it ought to be one of the widest, is in fact quite narrow. It takes its name from the broadcloth that used to be woven there.) The shortest street in the city is Sunderland Street, at only 75ft (23m) long.

The narrowest alley in the city can be found in Northgate Street, near to the Podium Shopping Centre. This was the medieval Alford Lane, otherwise known as ‘Slippery Lane’. Bath’s widest pavement is the pedestrianised Duke Street, with a width of 50ft (15m) between the houses.

The tallest church spire is that of St John the Evangelist in South Parade, at 222ft (68m).

For many years it was thought that the oldest surviving house in Bath was Sally Lunn’s in North Parade Passage; in fact a plaque on the outside proclaims this, giving a date of 1482. However, in 2000, renovations to Nos 21 and 22 High Street revealed details of a late medieval wattle-and-daub construction that is almost certainly older.

The oldest bridge in Bath is (oddly enough) New Bridge, which dates from 1734. It carries the A4 Bristol road across the river Avon to the west of Bath.

Bath’s most expensive building to date is the Thermae Bath Spa, opened in August 2006 at a cost of around £45 million. The original estimate in 1996 had been £13 million! However, it has been a huge success and contributes over £15 million a year to Bath’s economy.

Bath’s largest park is the Royal Victoria Park on the west side of the city. It covers an area of some 57 acres (23 hectares).

Bath’s oldest public house is probably the Coeur de Lion in Northumberland Place (see p.138).

Bath’s deepest canal lock is located on the Kennet and Avon Canal at Widcombe. At 19ft 5in (5.92m) deep it is the second deepest lock on the British waterways system. Bath Deep Lock, as it is called, was formed when two locks were combined in...



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