This picture of Cerdic was drawn by Juliet Davey & is her copywrite |
Hail My Subjects and My Visitors
Im Cerdic, First King of Wessex. The Royal Family of
England descends from me. I landed in Briton in 497AD
and my Kingdom became the most powerful in the land -
it was called Wessex. (West Saxons) and Chard was my
first capital. Wessex became England with the
amalgamation of Mercia & Northumbria. After the
Norman Conquest Wessex was divided up into eight
different counties: Berkshire, Devon, Dorset,
Gloucestershire, Hampshire, Oxfordshire, Somerset and
Wiltshire. My site covers the attractions & Events
in those eight Counties plus the four GREATER WESSEX
counties of Cornwall, Kent, Surrey & Sussex.
Visit the Attractions in the ancient kingdom of Wessex .Tarry a
while. Stay in our hotels, guesthouses ,caravans or
campsites We thank the many hotels, Guest Houses,
Caravan camping sites, internet cafes, visitor
centres, tourist offices,magazines, newspapers and
County shows for freely advertising our sites.
Our sister site
www.merciatouristboard.org.uk
(The Mercia Tourist Board) will be covering a further 12
counties. Those counties now online are listed below.
WASSAIL
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SO NOW WELCOME TO THE LANDS OF THE WESSAXENS, SOUTH SAXONS and ANGLES
Eventually my descendants captured the whole of England
and amalgamated Mercia & Northumbria. It is my
ambition to eventually cover all the attractions of
England. So far we have covered Wessex under the website
www.wessextouristboard.org.uk (Formerly www.chardnet.co.uk) and now we have
started to cover Mercia under
www.merciatouristboard.org.uk. Click on to the county you require on the table to
the left.So far 20 counties + London have been prepared-
slowly the rest will follow. Further we have a multitude of reference pages which were created some time ago and are now under reconstruction. So on here you will find dedicated pages to specialist activities in Wessex & Mercia. These include a list of Agricultural ,Horse Shows etc, The Wessex Hall of Fame, Michelin starred restaurants in Wessex,Seaside Resorts, Theatres in Wessex & the UK, List of Films made in Wessex, Wessex Names, Golf Clubs, Football Clubs, Rugby Clubs, Ice Skating and Racetracks . Campers & Caravanners have their own dedicated section too. I have even got my own page for readers letters and news snippets, mainly from my ancient capital Chard. There is also a full A-Z list of shops services in Chard, Crewkerne & Ilminster. All about Chard & The History of Wessex are also included. A special section on the County Town TAUNTON is also online
As we bring each one of those Counties on-line you will
be able to click through to it on the map of Britain to
the left. If you think there is anything that should be
added do contact me on Contact Us or call up on0207 183 4978or fax on 0845 862 1954.
Wassail |
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If you listen to Wessex FM, travel on Wessex Trains
and use Wessex Water, you may be surprised to learn
that Wessex no longer exists. Established in the 6th
century, the tribal kingdom of Wessex changed shape
repeatedly during its 300-year life. At its greatest,
it stretched from Cornwall to Kent, with Winchester at
its heart and Alfred as its king. The name Wessex is a
shortened version of "West Saxony", although the
region's early inhabitants included Jutes and Celts as
well as Saxons. Since its demise in the 9th century, there have been several attempts to resurrect the region, most famously by Thomas Hardy in the 19th century, who used Wessex as the setting for his novels. (Wessex was also the name Hardy gave to his bad-tempered dog.) Today, organisations bearing the name Wessex serve counties as far-ranging as Devon, Gloucestershire, Berkshire, Oxfordshire, Herefordshire and Hampshire. Some base their definition on archaeological and historical sources, some on where the Wessex dialect was spoken, and some on Thomas Hardy's map, while others have simply defined Wessex to suit themselves. In the spirit of "invent your own Wessex" this article focuses on the (arguably) core counties of Dorset, Wiltshire, Somerset and South Gloucestershire. HOME TO EDWARD AND SOPHIE? The Earl and Countess of Wessex actually live in Bagshot in Surrey. Prince Edward is the third Earl of Wessex, following on from Godwin, to whom King Canute first gave the title, and his son Harold Godwinson, later Harold II of England. When the Normans invaded in 1066 they abolished local earldoms, and the office of Earl of Wessex was abandoned for 1,000 years until Prince Edward adopted it on his marriage to Sophie Rhys-Jones. However, as the historian David Starkey points out, "The title itself is a total fiction. There is nowhere called Wessex." ISN'T IT WORZEL GUMMIDGE COUNTRY? The traditional view of Wessex is that of a region full of yokels; people who call you "my lover", and decline the verb to be "I be, you be, he be, we be, you be, they be" while conversing in a West Country burr about "them apples" and sipping a pint of scrumpy. This is, of course, far from the whole story, and today's inhabitants are more likely to be commuters than dairymaids. The region's landscape varies from rolling hills and hedgerows to trout streams and healing waters; from milk-and-honey valleys to chalk downland and bleak plains; from sacred sites to smugglers' coves, and from seaside resorts to suburban sprawl. Incidentally, Scatterbrook Farm in the TV series of Worzel Gummidge, was actually Pucknell Farm in the Test Valley in Hampshire (which may or may not be in Wessex). WHAT ABOUT THOMAS HARDY COUNTRY? The first guide to Thomas Hardy country was published in 1904, starting a trend in tracking down the sites featured in Hardy's novels. This pursuit is complicated by the fact that many of the places the author mentions have been condensed or expanded, while buildings have been transposed or amalgamated. If you want to follow the Hardy trail, take Fred Pitfield's Hardy's Wessex Locations as your guide (Dorset Publishing Company, pounds 9.95). Perhaps the most-visited Hardy site is his own thatched cottage in Higher Bockhampton, Dorset (01305 262366, open 1 April-4 November, daily except Friday and Saturday, 11am-5pm; pounds 2.60 per person). It was built by his great-grandfather in 1800. Sitting in the window- seat here, Hardy wrote Under The Greenwood Tree and Far From The Madding Crowd. Nature trails through neighbouring Thorncombe woods, a wildlife sanctuary, are especially enchanting during the bluebell season, and from here you can also walk to Stinsford Church where Hardy's heart is buried. The rest of his body is interred in Poets' Corner in Westminster Abbey. You can stay in cottages converted from barns built by Hardy's father at Greenwood Grange, a short distance from Hardy's Cottage (0870 585 1111; www.english-country-cottages.co.uk). The cottages have a communal indoor swimming pool, sauna and solarium. Each cottage sleeps four; and costs pounds 666 for a week in August. |
ANY OTHER LITERARY CONNECTIONS? Loads. On the Cobb (an artificial breakwater) in the historic Dorset seaside town of Lyme Regis, John Fowles' French Lieutenant's Woman stood hooded and windswept, and Louisa Musgrove jumped and fell in Jane Austen's Persuasion. After Charmouth, Lyme also boasts one of the best fossiling beaches on the south coast, and it was here that 11-year-old Mary Anning astonished the scientific community in the early 19th century by finding the skeleton of an icthyosaurus. A two- bedroom thatched cottage on the sea-front can be rented from Lyme Bay Holidays (01297 443363; www.lymebayholidays.co.uk) for pounds 525 per week in August or pounds 400 per week in September.
J Meade Faulkner was a contemporary of Thomas
Hardy's and author of the much-loved smuggling
story, Moonfleet. The Fleet is a lagoon separating
Chesil Beach, an 18-mile ridge of shingle stretching
from the Isle of Portland to Bridport, from the
mainland. On the far side of the Fleet many vessels
foundered, causing the lee shore to be known as
"Deadman's Bay", or in John Meade Faulkner's story,
"Moonfleet Bay". Fleet Old Church is where John
Trenchard is supposed to have been trapped in
Blackbeard's vault. Moonfleet Manor (01305 786948;
www.moonfleetmanor.com) on The Fleet is situated at the end of a two-mile
winding lane. It has a pleasantly ramshackle, old-
colonial feel and superb sea views over to Portland
Bill. A single room for one night starts from pounds
80.
Neolithic man certainly made his mark here. The
greatest concentration of prehistoric monuments in
Britain occurs in Wiltshire, which is home to burial
mounds, hill forts and henge monuments. The most
famous is Stonehenge (open 1 June-31 August, 9am-
7pm; 1 September-15 October from 9.30am-6pm; pounds
4 per adult, pounds 2 per child). The site is about
to get a pounds 57m revamp designed to improve
public access to the stones, to take away traffic
and to create a visitor centre. Not far away is
Avebury, the largest of the 900 or so surviving
stone circles in Britain. Fourteen times larger than
Stonehenge, the Avebury circle is also more than 500
years older. Access to the Avebury stones is free
and unrestricted. Also in the vicinity are West
Kennet Long Barrow, one of the longest Neolithic
burial chambers in Britain; Silbury Hill, the
largest artificial mound in Europe dating back to
around 2700bc; and Windmill Hill, the site of the
earliest Neolithic farming culture in England.
You can explore Wiltshire's Neolithic world on a new
four-day walking tour run by Foot Trails (01747
861851;
www.foottrails.co.uk). The trail crosses the open countryside of the
Vale of Pewsey and the northern tip of Salisbury
Plain, taking in at Windmill Hill, Avebury, Silbury
Hill, West Kennet Long Barrow and Stonehenge. The
cost is pounds 375 per person with a single person
supplement of pounds 15 per night. Accommodation is
at the two- star Lamb Inn, an old country hotel in
the idyllic Wiltshire village of Hindon. You will
walk about eight miles each day at a relaxed pace.
Foot Trails also offers one- day six-mile guided
walks around Stonehenge. The price of pounds 19.95
per person includes a picnic lunch. I WANT TO STAY ON THE BEATEN TRACK Two of the best-loved walks that pass through Wessex are the Macmillan Way and the Monarch's Way. The 290-mile Macmillan Way actually starts in Lincolnshire, but passes through Wiltshire and ends on the Dorset coast at Abbotsbury. It was originally devised as a charity walk to raise money for the Macmillan Cancer Relief and is now fully waymarked. The walk has its own website at www.macmillanway.org. The Monarch's Way follows the flight of Charles II after his defeat at the Battle of Worcester in 1651. It is more than 600 miles long in its entirety, but the section within Wessex runs from Bristol via Wells to Yeovil in Somerset, through Charmouth and Bridport in Dorset, then to Wincanton in Somerset and just north of Salisbury in Wiltshire before passing on into Hampshire and Sussex. The Monarch's Way website is at www.monarchsway.50megs.com. Wycheway Country Walks (01886 833828; www.wychewaycountrywalks.co.uk) offers a series of guided walking holidays following the Monarch's Way. The price for a one-week guided walk is pounds 395 per person, including accommodation in small hotels, guesthouses or farmhouses, breakfast and packed lunch. The average daily walking distance is 10 miles. |
WHAT ABOUT THE SEASIDE? Wessex has two patches of coastline; in the west the Severn Estuary stretches from Avonmouth in the north to Porlock in the south, while the south Dorset coast extends from Lyme Regis in the west to Christchurch in the east. The most popular seaside resorts include Weymouth and Bournemouth in Dorset and Weston-super-Mare in Somerset. Weymouth became a fashionable seaside resort after King George III went to bathe there every summer. If modern royals feel over-exposed, they may like to remember that every time the king bathed, crowds cheered and played the national anthem.
As Weymouth became increasingly popular, Bournemouth
was developed as a more exclusive alternative.
Portrayed as Sandbourne in Tess Of The
d'Urbervilles, Bournemouth has not changed much
since Hardy described it as a "fashionable watering
place... with its piers, its groves of pines, its
promenades and its covered gardens", and still likes
to think of itself as a cut above its rivals,
Blackpool and Brighton. More fun on piers is to be
had at Weston-super-Mare in Somerset. Weston is also
a good base from which to explore Wookey Hole Caves,
Cheddar Caves and Gorge, Longleat, Bath and
Bristol. WHERE'S THE BEST PORT IN A STORM? The thousand-year-old port of Bristol. This summer from 22 August- 22 September you can visit the "Dance Live! Bristol" festival. Spanning venues across the city, the festival features World Dance Day (Lloyds TSB Amphitheatre, 25 August) and "Dance Bites" introducing the Autumn Fashion Shows with Jeff Banks (the Mall at Cribbs Causeway, 19-21 September), among other events. For more information go to www.visitbristol.co.uk. For gentler entertainment, attend a series of free Friday lunchtime and early evening jazz performances in Queen Square throughout August; take a boat trip from Bristol Industrial Museum around the Floating Harbour on the newly-restored John King, a 1935 motor tug; or explore Bristol's Georgian village, Clifton, on a guided walk any Saturday or Sunday in August at 12pm, 1pm or 2pm. A VILLAGE AFFAIR POETIC, PICTURESQUE AND PERFECT FOR TV John Betjeman was a regular visitor to Dorset and loved the sounds of the names of the villages. His poem "Dorset" begins "Rime Intrinsica, Fontmell Magna, Sturminster Newton and Melbury Bubb..." Other Wessex towns and villages worth a visit include: Lacock in Wiltshire. This National Trust village dates from the 13th century. Its lime-washed, half-timbered and stone houses made it the ideal setting for Meryton in the most recent BBC dramatisation of Pride and Prejudice. The medieval Lacock Abbey also featured in the film of Harry Potter (01249 730501; www.nationaltrust.org.uk). The museum, cloisters & garden are open 16 March -3 November daily, 11am- 5.30pm; closed Good Friday; the abbey is open 30 March-3 November, daily 1pm-5.30pm (closed Tuesdays and Good Friday). Entrance to all costs pounds 6.20 per adult, pounds 3.40 per child or pounds 16.80 for a family ticket. In contrast, Poundbury, an extension of Dorchester, has been used as a model for urban development. This highly modern village has been designed, with input from the Prince of Wales, to be energy efficient, to create a sense of community, and so that people with different incomes live next door to one another. Midsomer Norton in Somerset is ITV's murder capital of the country, while Golden Hill in Shaftesbury is featured in the famous Hovis advert, accompanied by Dvorak's "New World Symphony" and out- of-place Yorkshire accents.
The picturesque village of Corfe on the Isle of
Purbeck in Dorset offers easy access to sandy
beaches at Studland, Swanage and Sandbanks, the
steam Swanage Railway, riding, golf and great walks.
The ruin of Corfe Castle (01929 481294;
www.nationaltrust.org.uk) towering above the village on a conical hill in a
gap in the Purbeck ridge is visible for miles around
(open daily all year, except 25, 26 December and one
day in mid-March; April to October 10am-6pm; pounds
4.30 per adult, pounds 2.15 per child, pounds 10.80
per family - two adults and three children). |
![]() ![]() Have FUN on the Internet - We Do |
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It has
requested
we do
not
mention
the name
of the
traffic
lady on
BBC
radio 2,
instead
we are
happy to
introduce
our
traffic
lady
"Stormy
Front".
So
Find local news, sport and entertainment near you
with your local BBC Where I Live website. Choose your nearest location in Wessex &
Cornwall:
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CLICK ON THE AREA OF SOMERSET OR AVON
YOU REQUIRE |
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CASTLE CARY
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FROME | GLASTONBURY | ILMINSTER | ||||
STREET | TAUNTON | WATCHET | WELLINGTON | WELLS |
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Other Town websites in Britain |
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Axminster | Beer | Birmingham | Bournemouth | Dorchester | Edinburgh | Exeter |
Glasgow | Honiton | London | Lyme Regis | Manchester | Paignton | Poundbury |
Plymouth | Seaton | Sidmouth | Torquay | Weymouth |
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CLICK HERE FOR ICE SKATING & Skiing REFERENCE UK |
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For a full list of theatres in the UK. Click on
to
Showtime |
Read This Month's Feature in Somerset Life : 48 Hours in
Frome - Click Here
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Bordeaux Managed Wine Investment Plan |
www.ukinformedinvestor.co.uk |
www.merciatouristboard.org.uk |
Old Truman Brewery
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Something Different |
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The weather and conditions in
Taunton at this time are shown on the left. Enter other towns
to find the weather conditions there |
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Web Directory |
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We try and include as many click throughs as possible. We do
not charge for our services but would be obliged if the
owners of the attraction sites would reciprocate by
including our banner above and aim it at
www.wessextouristboard.org.uk Simtropolis Pictures of Camelot City. Capital of Wessex 2008 ![]() Created by Ginger Blokey - Simtropolis Geek Trixie Winner 2007 http://www.simtropolis.com/forum/messageview.cfm?catid=36&threadid=92707
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Location of National Trusts Sites in Wessex |
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![]() Click here for www.nationaltrust.org.uk |
Transport click on blue to visit the sites |
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Address | Telephone |
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![]() www.berrys coaches.co.uk |
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Cornishway West, New Wellington Road, Taunton, TA1
5NA |
Tel : 01823 331356 Fax : 01823 331356 |
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![]() Bristol International Airport www.bristol airport.co.uk |
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FROM NORTH M5 Leave the M5 at junction 18 (signposted A4 Bristol & Airport). Take the A4 towards Bristol following signs for the airport. Go past Bristol City Football ground and connect with the A38 towards Taunton, the airport is situated 8 miles South of Bristol on the A38. |
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FROM SOUTH M5 Leave the M5 at Junction 22, at roundabout take 3rd exit signposted A38. At East Brent roundabout joining the A370 take 2nd exit signposted A38 & airport. Continue on this road for approx 11 miles, airport is on the left. |
![]() Poole to Cherbourg Plymouth to Roscoff & Santander www.brittany- ferries.co.uk |
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![]() Weymouth to St.Malo & Channel Islands www.condor ferries.co.uk |
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![]() www.eclipse.co.uk/ exeterair |
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Exeter International Airport is situated off the A30, five
miles from the City of Exeter. From the M5 motorway junction
29, travel 1 mile eastbound on the A30.
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![]() Taunton Station Paddington(London) to Plymouth Line www.firstgreat western.co.uk |
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Plymouth, PL4 6YD
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08457 000 125 Tel : Enquiries: 08457 48 49 50 Fax : 0845 600 8363 |
firstgroup.com |
![]() First Southern National Bus Company run buses in Somerset and Dorset www.firstsouthern national. co.uk |
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Taunton Bus Station Tower Street, Taunton |
Tel : 01823 272033 | |
![]() or Yeovil www.gobycoach.com |
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4 Vicarage Road, Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 3ES |
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![]() to Crewkerne Waterloo(London) to Exeter Line www.southwest trains.co.uk |
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SO15 1GW |
tel:0845 6000 650 or 0845 6050 441 Fax : 023 8072 8187 |
swtrains.co.uk |
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We found this Interesting Tour of
Literary LITERARY WESSEX by World Tours
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List of Interesting Sites
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Get Your Cerdic Merchandise and show your connection
with the Ancient Kingdom of Wessex |
![]() Cerdic postcards |
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![]() Cerdic's Crown |
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Cerdic's Kids Jousting Shirt
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