United Kingdom
Bath and North East Somerset

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    • Day 3

      The Bath Abbey 🕊️🕊️

      June 30, 2023 in England ⋅ ☁️ 64 °F

      The Bath Abbey was nothing short of stunning!!! The inside and outside were works of art in the details within the architecture of the building! There was an amazing quiet and reverent feeing within the Abbey that made you feel connected with the sacredness of the site!! 🙏🏽Read more

    • Day 31

      Romans, Georgians and Jane Austen

      September 26, 2022 in England ⋅ ⛅ 14 °C

      Today, we were up early and ready to drive to Bath. It's not far from Bristol, maybe 50 minutes by car, so we had a leisurely drive, only challenged by finding the right place to park and how to pay for it. We did not get this last part quite correct and ended up with a £50 fine which I have disputed on good grounds. I await the verdict.

      Bath is amazing. What a day! We had an 11am walking tour of the city already booked and we met our fabulous guide, Charlotte, from Newcastle upon Tyne, in the square, just along from the Pump Room at the front door of Bath Abbey.

      Charlotte's tour took us around the outside of the Abbey to a statue of Blodad, a mythical king of Britain who supposedly found the healing properties of the spring waters that come up through the earth in Bath. It was a great story; leprosy, herd of pigs, mud, waters, healing, bang let's build a city here.

      From here we saw the Pulteney Bridge, one of four in Europe, that has shops either side of it. It actually looks better from the side rather than down it, as you wouldn't even know you were crossing a bridge by going over it. It just looks like the street either side of it. But from the side, it is beautiful arched stone bridge. The River Avon runs underneath and is just lovely to watch.

      Our tour then took us into the heart of the old city to look at different architecture, especially by a fellow called John Wood, then ultimately up to the Circus, the famous circle of homes around a park. Wood set all manner of Masonic emblems into the layout. The centre of the little wood in the middle of the Circus allows a single clap to be echoed in a magical way so that it comes back almost as loud as when it went forth. I tried it and gained the approbation of the nodding participants of our tour who were clearly impressed with my echo adroitness.

      Just around from the Circus, we went to the even more famous Royal Crescent. Its Georgian mansions stand tall in a majestic semi-circle, seeming to say, "You dare knock on my door, Urchin? Be off with you." The Royal Crescent is always used for movies set in Bath so you've probably seen it in some of the Jane Austen adaptations. We walked back down to the city via the special gravel path that the Georgian high society requested so they would have an easier way back down the hill to the city. It is exactly where Captain Wentworth proposed to Anne Elliot in Austen's novel Persuasion which I only just re-read prior to our coming to the UK. In fact, the recent movie filmed the proposal on the actual gravel path here in Bath. And I was standing on it. So touristy! But pretty cool huh.

      Our guided tour was over but for one last look at at an Austenian place of interest. In Trim Street, Jane Austen and family lived as their last base in Bath. Apparently, she did not like the city. Too noisy, too rambunctious. Still, it was nice to see where she lived for a while.

      After our tour ended, our ticket price included the Roman Baths. Now I have to say that I was not prepared to be as blown away by the Roman Bath as I was. Its antiquity goes back to Roman Britain, Britannia, and it was used by the Romans as not only a major bath house, but its adjacent temple to Sulis Minerva served as part of their religion too. The Temple is gone, but the bath remains in all its Roman glory.

      You step out firrst up on the upper floor, a surrounding walkway, and gaze down upon it beneath you. All around you are statues of Roman emperors, starting with Julius Caesar, not quite an emperor, and ending down the other end of this vast rectangle with Hadrian and Constantine.

      Ultimately, you make your way down various stairs and through various rooms with museum treasures and explanations down to the level where the Romans would walk into the water. You can't bathe in it today, but the water is very warm and bubbles up from a natural spring from rain that fell ten thousand years ago. You can see the natural spring and you can see the engineering prowess of the Romans to have it pumped through into the bath and some of the heat into sauna-type rooms. Simply amazing. I must say the Roman Baths are not just very clever, they are also very beautiful to look at. I ended up buying a water-colour of them in the shop.

      A quick look through the Abbey followed. Beautiful, old, interesting, lots of people just sitting around in there looking and thinking. The vaulted ceilings, a vanilla coloured light spectacular. Angel statues playing musical instruments. Lunch in a Bath cafe called Rosarios, then home to Bristol where we had a walk, Chris had a barber's appointment, then we had a drink at the Bank Tavern, a little out of the way pub down one of the side-streets before treating ourselves tonight to our first real take-away meal since arriving, KFC. A delicious and familiar taste. A wonderful day I will never forget.
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    • Day 18

      Day Trip to Bath Spa (aka Bath)

      July 24, 2023 in England ⋅ ☁️ 15 °C

      Up early and on the 8:55 train from Llandaf to Bath, being a journey of just under 90 minutes in total each way.

      Bath is very unusual in that all the houses are built from Bath stone which gives it a unique look of being similar but different at the same time.Read more

    • Day 21

      Bath

      October 6, 2023 in England ⋅ ☁️ 16 °C

      Five of us stayed in a nice Airbnb in the old section of Bath for two nights. Jo, Asher, Steve, Fiona and myself all walked into town for an English breakfast. Then we walked around the old town to locate the Roman baths, right next to the imposing cathedral. We bought tickets to enter the Roman Bath compex and were issued with an audio guide to listen to a description of the history of what we were seeing. It is a staggering complex of hot, warm, tepid and cold baths which takes several hours to go through. The complex was buried by the Anglo Saxon town for many years and was only discovered a couple of hundred years ago. As archaeologists gradually dug it out, there was a progressive understanding of what a huge Roman bath complex was built here. The reason the Romans built the complex in this location was because there is a unique source of hot mineral springs here bubbling up from deep underground.
      The ancients believed the water was good for healing diseases so there were not only baths here for washing, but temples and religious structures for worship of the pagan gods.
      The Romans built the baths in around 60 AD, about 100 years after Julius Caesar had conquered Britain in 44 BC.
      There were many fascinating artifacts dug up as part of the excavations which reveal a great deal about the life and culture of the ancient people who lived in this advanced civilisation in Bath.
      There were several layers of history here apart from the ancient Roman, and Anglo-Saxon. There was also the more modern English period of Jane Austens books when the aristocracy came to Bath to take the waters. The Pump Room, which is a location in her books, is still there and is a refined place to have a high tea while overlooking the baths.
      We also went into the amazing cathedral which is 800 years old and a significant structure in the centre of town.
      We then visited the Bath Circus, as it is known, which is a circular range of 30 residential townhouses built in a circle around a roundabout with five large 200yo Plane Trees in the green space in the middle of the roundabout. We also went to see the Royal Crescent, a beautiful semicircular range of 30 houses which overlook Royal Victoria Park. Famous and very expensive townhouses. On is on the market for 10 million.
      We then walked to the Bath Christadelphian Hall, which was understandably closed on a Friday. We had dinner in an Italian restaurant before I went to a play in the Peter Ustinov Theatre in Bath. The play was Voyage Round My Father by John Mortimer who wrote the Rumpole series.
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    • Day 3

      Bath! 🇬🇧 Thai, Fudge, and Butcombe!

      June 30, 2023 in England ⋅ ☁️ 64 °F

      After parking our car and taking the bus down into Bath, our next stop was lunch!!! 🍽️ the restaurant we found was a cute Thai food restaurant 🇹🇭 we of course got Massaman curry (this one had hints of cinnamon though), it was delicious 😋 we then proceeded to tour around the city of Bath, visiting the Royal Crescent, Bath Circus (the panoramic with the tree in the middle, St. Michaels Cathedral, an amazing homemade fudge factory (the bronze bowl is them making some fresh fudge, you know we got some 😋), and we visited the Bath Abbey in the center of town!! View next footprint for more on the Abbey 😉Read more

    • Day 6

      Adventure golf

      June 15, 2023 in England ⋅ ⛅ 22 °C

      We went for a change of pace this morning and decided to play a round of golf. It was a close fought battle and Danielle even lost her ball in the rough (is that even possible in putt putt golf?), but everyone was a winner in the end.Read more

    • Day 34

      Bath

      September 8, 2023 in England ⋅ ☁️ 21 °C

      The Circus is a historic ring of large townhouses in the city of Bath, Somerset, England, forming a circle with three entrances. Designed by architect John Wood, the Elder, it was built between 1754 and 1769, and is regarded as a pre-eminent example of Georgian architecture

      The Royal Crescent, one of Bath's most iconic landmarks, was built between 1767 and 1775 and designed by John Wood the Younger. This impressive landmark is arranged around a perfect lawn overlooking Royal Victoria Park and forms a sweeping crescent of 30 Grade I Listed terrace houses.
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    • Day 34

      Bath

      June 5, 2023 in England ⋅ ⛅ 13 °C

      Today we drove back into England, with the town of Bath, in the county of Somerset, our first stop. Bath is a UNESCO world heritage site on the River Avon.
      It is famous for its Roman Baths, built by the Romans, of course, with artefacts found on the site dating it back to at least 76AD.

      The Royal Crescent in Bath is also a famous photo stop. It is a row of Georgian townhouses and was used extensively in the TV series 'Bridgerton'.

      The Pulteney Bridge on the River Avon is also another well recognised construction from Roman times.

      After Bath we had a stop in Wells. We were here a few weeks ago on our 'Backroads Corners of Cornwall' tour, so didn't need to visit the cathedral again. Instead, we walked the town and had an ice cream. But we did get a good photo of the cathedral, as last time we were here the village green in front of it was being used for the kings coronation party, so it was full of people.

      Our destination for the next two nights is Plymouth, in Devon.
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    • Day 5

      A room with a view

      June 14, 2023 in England ⋅ ☀️ 15 °C

      Our lovely little apartment in Bath is up on the hill with lovely views out over Bath. The living room is sun-drenched in the morning, making it a lovely place to linger over breakfast while we make our plans for the day.Read more

    • Day 3

      Annabelle's Day

      June 12, 2023 in England ⋅ ☁️ 23 °C

      When we first got to Windsor we had to find some food. So that means we had to walk and walk. After breakfast we discovered a church with old graves including a famous knight. Next we were walking around discovering new things and we found a tourist shop. I bought Junior P, which means Junior Paddington. He is the bear in the photo. Then we were walking up the alley and we saw a grand castle, so we wandered up to it and we saw that you could go in so we asked the person what time we could go in and they said 12 o'clock. Then daddy said how do you buy tickets and the girl said online. So we bought tickets and a couple of hours later we lined up to go in. After 26 minutes of lining up we got past security then we got our digital tour guide which gave facts about all the rooms we could explore, with headphones of course. We were exploring the palace and we got food and we saw where the Queen was buried and we got a book all about the palace. Once we got out we took off to Bath and found out the roads are small, steep, twisty, turny, and tiny.Read more

    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Bath and North East Somerset, BAS, Бат и Североизточен Съмърсет, Bath ha Biz Somerset, باث و سامرست شمال‌شرقی, バース・アンド・ノース・イースト・サマセット, Bath an Nordost Somerset, Бат и Северо-Восточный Сомерсет, Бат і Північно-Східний Сомерсет, باتھ اور شمال مشرقی سامرسیٹ, 巴斯和東北薩默塞特

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