Home Towns Worth Seeing - by station Paddington

Avebury & Silbury Hill - Day Trip

(7 votes, average 4.43 out of 5)

Although Stonehenge was started before Avebury, it was a major earthworks with a bank. Some 500 years Great Avenue - Avebury Ring. As well as stone circles there are a series of 'avenues' lined with stonesbefore stones were transported to Stonehenge, they were collected and erected at Avebury. The first phase began around 2,600 BC and involved erecting an enormous henge - huge ditches with the spoil piled into banks. These were dug using antlers and cattle shoulder bones. Once this back-breaking phase was complete, stones were selected from the nearby Marlborough Downs.

Some, such as the Swindon Stone weigh fifty tons. Huge teams would have been needed to attach the leather straps and 'rollers' created from rounded logs. In addition and something which is little mentioned is the cost of the effort. In early farming communities, it was and is essential to obtain food at a lower cost to the energy expended in getting it. The amount of sustained effort required to build these monuments would have taken vital workers away from agricultural efforts and put them into calorie-sapping, never-ending heavy lifting and hauling. It's this aspect of their construction which interests me most. Their will and desire to create enormous monuments (like the nearby long barrow at West Kennet, and the jaw-dropping Silbury Hill) is difficult to comprehend when you consider that they were boring into chalk with antlers and bones. It would take hours of effort to make a small indentation and none of it was putting food on the table. I understand that farming improvements and the introduction of pottery and food storage techniques allowed greater freedoms, but these were brave and risky undertakings.

 

Truro and Nearby

(1 vote, average 5.00 out of 5)
Truro is a 4 hour train ride from Paddington in West London. For some, that will simply be too far to consider, but if you're enjoying your trip to London and want to experience the UK from the other end of the spectrum, then a trip to Cornwall can be an eye-opening contrast.
Perranporth Beach in North Cornwall - sandy and with lots of space to lay out your towel
London is pacey, people will streak past you, tutting, no matter how fast you move around stations, but Cornwall couldn't be more different. Better to allow extra time when getting to destinations, as people are inclined to engage you in conversation, especially if they've never seen you before. The automatic and initial 'big city' reaction to this, can be snorting derision. But this eventually dissolves after a day or two, and a real affection for the different pace of life replaces it. I can't promise the weather will be good, but when it is, the local scenery is hard to beat. It's worth noting too, that 'Devon and Cornwall' (the two neighbouring counties are often lumped together - much to the chagrin of one another) is the most popular holiday destination for Brits, despite jetting abroad being an option for the last 30 years.


History

Cornwall (or 'Kernow' to the Cornish) used to be a separate kingdom in its own right, with its own language and there's still a minority who lament its inclusion in England and the UK. You'll also see the Cornish flag (of Saint Pirran - a white cross on a black background) stuck to the back of local cars. To The Helford Passage, on the South Coast of Cornwall was 'the' place to smuggle goods and behave like a piratebe fair though, most of these are on cars belonging to people who've retired here, and actually hail from Redcar, or Nuneaton. Cornwall was also the most mineral-rich area of mainland Britain, blessed with significant deposits of Copper and especially Tin, but both of these were exhausted by the 1970s and Cornwall's mining heritage went into inevitable decline. It's still a major source of China Clay, which is the UK's second largest export, being used in everything from toothpaste to magazines (it's the additive which makes glossy magazines, 'glossy'). Far and away the largest industry and employer in the county however, is tourism.

 

Oxford

Oxford is home to the University which bears its name. Along with Cambridge, the two universities The City of Oxford in Oxfordshire, 78 miles from London is home to the renowned University of Oxfordare the oldest in the English-speaking world, with Oxford being founded first - in the late 11th century. Cambridge was formed as an offshoot by disenfranchised Oxford students, who left after a dispute with townsfolk in 1209. The two are closely linked (famously by their 'boat race' rivalry) and top the performance tables for universities in the United Kingdom - sometimes referred to as 'Oxbridge' collectively.


The City of Oxford is in the county of Oxfordshire and became an important military town in the 10th century, with citizens granted the same rights as those in the capital, London. Shortly afterwards the university began teaching, but frictions began to emerge between local residents and the undergraduate population; who were seen to do and say as they pleased. To quell the possibility of rioting, students were required to live in 'halls' (a tradition which persists in universities to this day), which were later superseded by colleges (University College was the first in 1249). The relationship between 'town and gown' has always been uneasy and a riot in 1355 claimed 93 student and townsfolk lives.

 
Late Rooms
Advertise Here
Featured Links:
Inside Guide
The Inside Guide to London - honest and insightful
Advertise
Advertise on this portal and reach people visiting London. Text, picture or Flash advert banners can be designed and displayed.
London Visitors
London visitors can be reached directly through the Inside Guide to London
London Rooms
Visitors to this site may need a room for their trip to London.
About                                          Contact                                          Terms & Conditions                                          Site Map                                          Advertise                                          Copyright