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www.lets-discover.com/Lets_Discover_Denmark.htm
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Let's Discover England -
your travel guide to England with useful information for
visitors and local residents alike. Make the most of your
time in England with our information on travel,
tours, sightseeing, hotels, and holidays. |
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All photos on this website by
Jack Cox -
Travel & Nature Photographer -
Assignments welcome |
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Do you love England? Then you have come to the right
website ! There is so much to love, the people, the
history, the literature, the comedy, the countryside,
even the weather! We moan when it rains but without all
that water England would not be the green and luscious
country she is. We should be grateful for the rain and
for the mist that rises from the watercourses in early
morning, and the fog which covers our rolling hills.
These things, though sometimes inconvenient, give
England its special character. This certainly is a
magical land, a place of much legend and mystery. |
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Here is a
little bit of background for those who may need it.
England became a unified country during the 10th century
and takes its name from the Angles, the largest of a
number of Germanic tribes who settled in England in the
fifth and sixth centuries, and who are believed to have
originated in the peninsula of Angeln, in what is now
Denmark and northern Germany. (The further etymology of
this tribe's name remains uncertain, although a popular
theory holds that it need be sought no further than the
word angle itself, and refers to a fish-hook-shaped
region of Holstein). The early 8th century historian
Bede, in his
Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum
(Ecclesiastical History of the English People), refers
to the English people as Angelfolc (in English) or Angli
(in Latin).[ |
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England occupies a total area of 50,346 sq miles /
130,395 square kilometres and currently supports a
population of somewhere between 49,138,831 (2001
census) and 50,714,000 (as estimated by the Office for
National Statistics). This is about 84% of the UK's
total. |
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The capital
of England is London, which is the largest urban area in
Great Britain. England is one of the world's most
influential and far-reaching centres of cultural
development. It is the place of origin of both the
English language and the Church of England. England was
the world's first parliamentary democracy and
consequently many constitutional, governmental and legal
innovations that had their origin in England have been
widely adopted by other nations. Indeed English law
forms the basis of the legal systems of many counties.
London is the centre of the British Empire. As if that
wasn't enough, the country was the birthplace of the
Industrial Revolution and England was the first country
in the world to industrialise. England is home to the
Royal Society, which laid the foundations of modern
experimental science. |
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The Kingdom of England was a separate from the rest of
the UK until 1st May 1707, when the Acts of Union
resulted in a political union with the Kingdom of
Scotland. The Principality of Wales was already annexed
to England by the Statute of Rhuddlan in 1284, and it
was legally incorporated into England by the Wales and
Berwick Act 1746, making laws passed in England
automatically applicable to Wales. This was reversed by
the Welsh Language Act 1967, which gave Wales a separate
identity from England. Since then, legal and political
terminology refers to "England and Wales". |
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England
comprises the central and southern two-thirds of the
island of Great Britain, plus offshore islands of which
the largest is the Isle of Wight. It is bordered to the
north by Scotland and to the west by Wales. It is closer
to continental Europe than any other part of Britain,
divided from France only by a 24 mile / 52 km sea
crossing. The Channel Tunnel, near Folkestone, directly
links England to the European mainland. The
English/French border is halfway along the tunnel. |
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Most of England consists of rolling hills, but it is
more mountainous in the north with a chain of low
mountains, the Pennines, dividing east and west. The
dividing line between terrain types is usually
considered to be in a line between the Rivers Tees and
Exe. There is also an area of flat, low-lying marshland
in the east, the Fens, much of which has been drained
for agricultural use. |
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The list of England's largest cities is much debated
because in English the normal meaning of city is "a
continuously built-up urban area"; these are hard to
define and various other definitions are preferred by
some people to boost the ranking of their own city. Some
people insist that a city must have a cathedral. Of
course London is by far the largest urban area in
England and one of the largest and busiest cities in the
world. Birmingham is the second largest, both in terms
of the city itself and its urban conurbation. A number
of other cities, mainly in central and northern England
and the Midlands, are of substantial size and influence.
These include: Manchester, Leeds, Liverpool, Newcastle,
Sheffield, Bristol, Coventry, Bradford, Leicester and
Nottingham. |
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The largest natural harbour in England is at Poole, on
the south coast. Some regard it as the second largest
harbour in the world, after Sydney, Australia, although
this fact is disputed. |
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England has
a temperate climate, with plentiful rainfall all year
round, though the seasons are quite variable in
temperature. However, temperatures rarely fall below −5
°C (23 °F) or rise above 30 °C (86 °F). The prevailing
wind is from the south-west, bringing mild and wet
weather to England regularly from the Atlantic Ocean. It
is driest in the east and warmest in the south, which is
closest to the European mainland. Snowfall can occur in
winter and early spring, though it is not that common
away from high ground. |
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The highest temperature ever recorded in England is 38.5
°C (101.3 °F) on August 10, 2003 at Brogdale, near
Faversham, in Kent. The lowest temperature ever recorded
in England is −26.1 °C (−15.0 °F) on January 10, 1982 at
Edgmond, near Newport, in Shropshire. |
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The major rivers of England are the Severn (the longest
river basin in Great Britain), Tees, Thames, Trent,
Humber (Until 1998, the Humber Bridge was the longest
suspension bridge in the world), Tyne, Wear, Ribble,
Ouse, Mersey, Dee, Aire, and Avon.
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England has
a vast and influential culture that encompasses elements
both old and new. The modern culture of England is
sometimes difficult to identify and separate clearly
from the culture of the wider United Kingdom, so
intertwined are its composite nations. However, the
traditional and historic culture of England is more
clearly defined. |
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English Heritage is a governmental body with a broad
remit of managing the historic sites, artefacts and
environments of England. London's British Museum,
British Library and National Gallery contain some of the
finest collections in the world. |
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Potty, Fartwell and Knob:
From Luke Warm to Minty Badger -
Extraordinary But True Names of British People
by
Russell Ash |
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The English
have played a significant role in the development of the
arts and sciences. Many of the most important figures in
the history of modern western scientific and
philosophical thought were either born in, or at one
time or other resided in or we educated in England.
Major English thinkers of international significance
include scientists such as Sir Isaac Newton, Francis
Bacon, Charles Darwin and New Zealand-born Ernest
Rutherford, philosophers such as John Locke, John Stuart
Mill, Bertrand Russell and Thomas Hobbes, and economists
such as David Ricardo and John Maynard Keynes. Karl Marx
wrote most of his important works, including Das Kapital,
whilst in exile in Manchester, and the team that
developed the first atomic bomb began their work in
England, under the wartime codename tube alloys. |
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| If you are doing anything
interesting please do
get in
touch. |
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Articles about England: |
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See also -
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Let's Discover Spain |
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Let's Discover
Ireland |
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Recommended Books
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£ |
Denmark (DK Eyewitness Travel Guide) |
$ |
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£ |
Copenhagen (DK Eyewitness Travel Guide) |
$ |
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£ |
Denmark
(Lonely Planet Country Guide)
by
Andrew Stone et al |
$ |
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£ |
A History of Denmark
(Palgrave Essential Histories Series)
by
Knud J.V. Jespersen |
$ |
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£ |
Denmark GeoCenter Euro Map
by
Mairs |
$ |
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£ |
Denmark National Flag 5ft x 3ft |
$ |
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£ |
The Oxford Illustrated History of the Vikings
by
Peter Sawyer |
$ |
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£ |
Norse Mythology:
A Guide to the Gods, Heroes, Rituals and Beliefs
by
John Lindow |
$ |
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£ |
Norse Mythology A to Z
by
Kathleen Daly |
$ |
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£ |
A Devotional: Honoring Thor and Family
by
Robert James Etter |
$ |
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£ |
Norse Mythology or the Religion of Our Forefathers
Containing All the Myths of the Eddas
by
R. R. Anderson |
$ |
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£ |
Asgard and the Gods the Tales and Traditions of Our Northern
Ancestors
Forming a Complete Manual of Norse Mythology
by
W. Wagner |
$ |
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£ |
From Asgard to Valhalla:
The Remarkable History of the Norse Myths
by
Heather O'Donoghue |
$ |
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Other Useful Websites
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| Wild camping in Ireland:
http://rutgerbooy.nl/Wildcamping_page_2.htm |
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