Introduction
90km (56 miles) SE of London
Under the arch of the ancient West Gate journeyed Chaucer's knight, solicitor, nun, squire, parson, merchant, miller, and others -- spinning tales. They were bound for the shrine of Thomas à Becket, archbishop of Canterbury, who was slain by four knights of Henry II on December 29, 1170. (The king later walked barefoot from Harbledown to the tomb of his former friend, where he allowed himself to be flogged in penance.) The shrine was finally torn down in 1538 by Henry VIII, as part of his campaign to destroy the monasteries and graven images. But Canterbury, by then, had already become an attraction.
The medieval Kentish city on the River Stour is the ecclesiastical capital of England. Once completely walled, many traces of its old fortifications remain. Canterbury was inhabited centuries before the birth of Jesus Christ. Although its most famous incident was the murder of Becket, the medieval city witnessed other major events in English history,...
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St. Augustine's Abbey
One of the most historic religious centers in the country, only its ruins remain, mostly at ground level. Augustine was buried here. (Augustine...
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Canterbury Cathedral
The foundation of this splendid cathedral dates from A.D. 597, but the earliest part of the present building is the great Romanesque crypt built...
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Canterbury Roman Museum
This museum is located beneath street level and is constructed around actual archaeological excavations. Interactive computer shows and the actual...
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- Museums
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