Bath ( ) is a city in the ceremonial county of Somerset
in the
south west of England.
It is
situated west of London
and
south-east of Bristol
. The
population of the city is 83,992.
It was
granted city
status by Royal Charter by Queen
Elizabeth I in 1590, and was made a
county borough in 1889 which gave it
administrative
independence from its county, Somerset
. The
city became part of
Avon when that
county was created in 1974.
Since 1996, when Avon was abolished, Bath has been the principal
centre of the
unitary authority of
Bath and North East
Somerset (B&NES).
The city
was first established as a spa resort with the Latin name, Aquae Sulis
("the waters of Sulis") by the Romans in AD 43 although verbal tradition
suggests that Bath was known before then. They built baths
and a temple on the surrounding hills of Bath in
the valley of the River Avon
around hot springs, which are
the only ones naturally occurring in the United Kingdom..
Edgar was crowned king of England at
Bath
Abbey
in 973. Much later, it became popular as a
spa resort during the
Georgian era,
which led to a major expansion that left a heritage of exemplary
Georgian architecture crafted
from
Bath Stone.
As
City of Bath, the city became a
World Heritage Site in 1987. The city
has a variety of theatres, museums, and other cultural and sporting
venues, which have helped to make it a major centre for tourism,
with over one million staying visitors and 3.8 million
day visitors to the city each year. The city has two universities
and several schools and colleges. There is a large service sector,
and growing information and communication technologies and creative
industries, providing employment for the population of Bath and the
surrounding area.
History
Celtic and Roman
Archaeological evidence shows that the site
of the Roman
Baths
' main spring was treated as a shrine by the
Celts,and was dedicated to the goddess
Sulis, whom the
Roman identified with
Minerva; however, the name Sulis continued to be
used after the Roman invasion, leading to the town's
Roman name of
Aquae
Sulis (literally, "the waters of Sulis"). Messages to her
scratched onto metal, known as
curse
tablets, have been recovered from the Sacred Spring by
archaeologists.These curse tablets were written in
Latin, and usually laid curses on people by whom the
writer felt they had been wronged. For example, if a citizen had
his clothes stolen at the baths, he would write a curse, naming the
suspects, on a tablet to be read by the Goddess Sulis
Minerva.
The temple was constructed in 60–70 AD and the bathing complex
was gradually built up over the next 300 years.During the
Roman occupation of Britain, and
possibly on the instructions of
Emperor
Claudius,engineers drove oak piles into the mud to provide a
stable foundation and surrounded the spring with an irregular stone
chamber lined with
lead. In the 2nd century,
the spring was enclosed within a wooden
barrel-vaulted building,which housed the
calidarium (hot bath),
tepidarium (warm bath), and
frigidarium (cold bath).The city was given
defensive walls, probably in the 3rd century.After the Roman
withdrawal in the first decade of the 5th century, the baths fell
into disrepair and were eventually lost due to silting up.
Post-Roman and Saxon
Bath may have been the site of the
Battle of Mons Badonicus (c.
500 AD), where
King Arthur is said
to have defeated the
Saxons, although this is
disputed.
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle mentions Bath
falling to the West
Saxons
in 577 after the Battle of Deorham
. The
Anglo-Saxons called the town Baðum, Baðan or
Baðon, meaning "at the baths," and this was the source of the
present name. In 675,
Osric,
King of the
Hwicce, set up a monastic house
at Bath, probably using the walled area as its precinct. The
Anglo-Saxon poem known as
The Ruin may
describe the appearance of the Roman site about this time.
King Offa of Mercia
gained
control of this monastery in 781 and rebuilt the church, which was
dedicated to St. Peter. By the 9th
century the old Roman street pattern had been lost and Bath had
become a royal possession, with
King
Alfred laying out the town afresh, leaving its south-eastern
quadrant as the abbey precinct.
Edgar
of England was crowned king of England in Bath Abbey in
973.
Norman, Medieval and Tudor

Bath Abbey From The Roman Baths
Gallery
King
William Rufus granted the city to a
royal physician, John of Tours, who
became Bishop of Wells
and Abbot of
Bath in 1088. It was papal policy for bishops to move to
more urban seats, and he translated his own from Wells to Bath. He
planned and began a much larger church as his cathedral, to which
was attached a priory, with the bishop's palace beside it. New
baths were built around the three springs. However, later bishops
returned the episcopal seat to Wells, while retaining the name of
Bath in their title as the
Bishop of Bath and Wells.
By the 15th century, Bath's abbey church was badly dilapidated and
in need of repairs.
Oliver King, Bishop
of Bath and Wells, decided in 1500 to rebuild it on a smaller
scale. The new church was completed just a few years before Bath
Priory was
dissolved
in 1539 by
Henry VIII. The
abbey church was allowed to become derelict before being restored
as the city's parish church in the
Elizabethan period, when the city
experienced a revival as a
spa.
The baths
were improved and the city began to attract the
aristocracy. Bath was granted
city status by
Royal Charter by Queen
Elizabeth I in 1590.
Early modern
During
the English Civil War, the
Battle of
Lansdown
was fought on 5 July 1643 on the northern outskirts
of the city. Thomas
Guidott, who had been a student of chemistry and medicine at
Wadham
College
Oxford
, moved to
Bath and set up practice in 1668. He became interested in
the curative properties of the waters and he wrote
A discourse
of Bathe, and the hot waters there. Also, Some Enquiries
into the Nature of the water in 1676. This brought the
health-giving properties of the hot mineral waters to the attention
of the country and soon the aristocracy started to arrive to
partake in them.
Several areas of the city underwent development during the
Stuart period, and this increased during
Georgian times in response to the
increasing number of visitors to the spa and resort town who
required accommodation. The architects
John Wood the elder and his son
John Wood the younger laid
out the new quarters in streets and squares, the identical façades
of which gave an impression of palatial scale and classical
decorum.
Much of the creamy gold Bath stone which was used for construction
throughout the city, was obtained from the limestone Combe Down
and Bathampton Down Mines
, which were owned by Ralph
Allen (1694–1764). Allen, in order to advertise the quality of
his quarried limestone, commissioned the elder John Wood to build
him a country house on his Prior Park
estate between the city and the mines. He
was also responsible for improving and expanding the postal service
in western England, for which he held the contract for over forty
years. Though not fond of politics, Allen was a civic-minded man,
and served as a member of the Bath Corporation for many years. He
was elected Mayor of the city for a single term, in 1742, at age
50.
The early
18th century saw Bath acquire its first purpose-built theatre, the
Theatre
Royal
, along with the Grand Pump Room
attached to the Roman Baths and assembly
rooms
. Master of
Ceremonies Beau Nash, who presided
over the city's social life from 1705 until his death in 1761, drew
up a code of behaviour for public entertainments.
Late modern
The population of the city had reached 40,020 by the time of the
1801 census, making it one of the largest cities in Britain.
William Thomas Beckford bought a
house in Lansdown
Crescent
in 1822, eventually buying a further two houses in
the crescent to form his residence. Having acquired all
the land between his home and the top of Lansdown Hill
, he created a garden over half a mile in length and
built Beckford's
Tower
at the top.
Emperor
Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia
spent the four years of his exile, from 1936 to
1940, at Fairfield
House
in Bath. During World War
II, between the evening of 25 April and the early morning of 27
April 1942, Bath suffered three air raids in reprisal for RAF raids on the German cities of Lübeck
and Rostock
, part of the Luftwaffe
campaign popularly known as the Baedeker
Blitz. Over 400 people were killed, and more than 19,000
buildings were damaged or destroyed.
Houses in the
Royal
Crescent
, Circus
and Paragon were burnt out
along with the Assembly Rooms, while part of the south side of
Queen
Square
was destroyed.
A postwar review of inadequate housing led to the clearance and
redevelopment of large areas of the city in a postwar style, often
at variance with the Georgian style of the city.
In the 1950s the
nearby villages of Combe
Down
, Twerton
and Weston
were
incorporated into Bath to enable the development of further
housing, much of it council
housing. In the 1970s and 1980s it was recognised that
conservation of historic buildings was inadequate, leading to more
care and reuse of buildings and open spaces. In 1987 the city was
selected as a
UNESCO World
Heritage Site, recognising its international cultural
significance.
Since
2000, developments have included the Bath Spa
, SouthGate and the
Bath Western Riverside project.
Governance

Coat of arms of the City of Bath
Historically part of the county
of Somerset
, Bath was made a county
borough in 1889 and hence independent of the newly created
administrative
Somerset county council. Bath
became part of
Avon when that
non-metropolitan county was created
in 1974. Since the abolition of Avon in 1996, Bath has been the
main centre of the
unitary
authority of
Bath and
North East Somerset (B&NES). Bath remains, however, in the
ceremonial county of Somerset,
though not within the administrative
non-metropolitan county of
Somerset.
The City of Bath's ceremonial functions, including the
mayoralty – which can be traced back to
1230 – and control of the
coat of arms,
are now maintained by the
Charter
Trustees of the City of Bath. The coat of arms includes
two silver strips, which represent the
River Avon and the hot springs.
The sword
of St. Paul is a link to Bath Abbey
. The supporters, a
lion
and a
bear, stand on a bed of
acorns, a link to
Bladud, the
subject of the Legend of Bath. The knight's helmet indicates a
municipality and the
crown is that
of
King Edgar.
Before the
Reform Act 1832 Bath
elected two members to the
unreformed House of Commons.
Bath now
has a single parliamentary constituency
, with Liberal
Democrat Don Foster as
Member of Parliament.
His election was a notable result of the
1992 general election,
as
Chris Patten, the previous Member
(and a
Cabinet
Minister) played a major part, as
Chairman of the Conservative
Party, in getting the government of
John
Major re-elected, but failed to defend his marginal seat in
Bath. Don Foster has been re-elected as the MP for Bath in every
election since. His majority was significantly reduced from over
9,000 in both the 1997 and 2001 general elections to 4,638 in
2005.
The
electoral wards of the Bath and North East Somerset
unitary authority within Bath are the central Abbey, Kingsmead and
Walcot
wards, and
the more outlying Bathwick
, Combe
Down
, Lambridge, Lansdown
, Lyncombe, Newbridge
, Odd Down, Oldfield, Southdown, Twerton
, Westmoreland, Weston
and Widcombe
wards.
Geography
Physical geography
Bath is
at the bottom of the Avon Valley, and near the southern edge of the
Cotswolds
, a range of limestone
hills designated as an Area of Outstanding Natural
Beauty. The hills that surround and make up the city
have a maximum altitude of on the Lansdown
plateau. Bath has an area of .
The surrounding hills give Bath its steep streets and make its
buildings appear to climb the slopes. The
flood plain of the River Avon, which runs
through the centre of the city, has an altitude of about above sea
level . The river, once an unnavigable series of
braided streams broken up by
swamps and
ponds, has been managed
by
weirs into a single channel. Nevertheless,
periodic flooding, which shortened the life of many buildings in
the lowest part of the city, was normal until major flood control
works in the 1970s.
The water
which bubbles up from the ground, as geothermal springs, previously fell as
rain on the Mendip
Hills
. It percolates down through limestone
aquifers to a depth of between 2700 and 4300 metres (c. 9000-14,000
ft) where geothermal energy raises the water temperature to between
64 and 96 °C (c. 147-205°F). Under pressure, the heated water rises
to the surface along fissures and faults in the limestone. This
process is similar to an artificial one known as
Enhanced Geothermal System which
also makes use of the high pressures and temperatures below the
Earth's crust. Hot water at a temperature of rises here at the rate
of every day, from a geological fault (the Pennyquick fault). In
1983 a new spa water bore-hole was sunk, providing a clean and safe
supply of spa water for drinking in the Pump Room. There is no
universal definition to distinguish a
hot
spring from another
geothermal spring, though by several
definitions, the Bath springs
can be considered the only hot springs in the UK.
Three of these
springs feed the thermal
baths
.
Climate
Along with the rest of
South West
England, Bath has a temperate climate which is generally wetter
and milder than the rest of England. The annual mean temperature is
about . Temperature has a seasonal and a
diurnal variation, but due to the modifying
effect of the sea the range is less than in most other parts of the
UK. January is the coldest month with mean minimum temperatures
between 1° and 2°C (34°-36°F). July and August are the warmest
months, with mean daily maxima around .
South West England has a favoured
location with respect to the
Azores High
when it extends its influence north-eastwards towards the UK,
particularly in summer.
Convective cloud
often forms inland however, especially near hills, reducing the
number of hours of sunshine. The average annual sunshine totals
between 1,400 and 1,600 hours.
Rainfall tends to be associated with Atlantic
depressions or with convection. The
Atlantic depressions are more vigorous in autumn and winter and
most of the rain which falls in those seasons in the south-west is
from this source. Average rainfall for the Bath-Bristol area is
around . November to March have the highest mean wind speeds, with
June to August having the lightest winds. The predominant wind
direction is from the south-west.
Demography
The city of Bath has a
population of
83,992.
According to the UK Government's 2001 census, Bath, together with
North East Somerset, which includes areas around Bath as far as the
Chew
Valley
, has a population of 169,040, with an average age
of 39.9 (the national average being 38.6). Demographics shows according to the same
statistics, the district is overwhelmingly populated by people of a
white ethnic background at 97.2% – significantly higher than the
national average of 90.9%. Other ethnic groups in the district, in
order of population size, are
multiracial at 1%, Asian at 0.5% and black at
0.5% (the national averages are 1.3%, 4.6% and 2.1%,
respectively).
The district is largely
Christian
at 71%, with no other religion reaching more than 0.5%. These
figures generally compare with the national averages, though the
non-religious, at 19.5%, are
significantly more prevalent than the national 14.8%. 7.4% of the
population describe themselves as "not healthy" in the last
12 months, compared with a national average of 9.2%;
nationally 18.2% of people describe themselves as having a
long-term illness, in Bath it is 15.8%.
Culture
Bath became the leading centre of fashionable life in England
during the 18th century.
It was during this time that Bath's Theatre
Royal
was built, as well as architectural developments such as Lansdown
Crescent
, the Royal Crescent
, The Circus
and Pulteney Bridge
.
Today,
Bath has five theatres – Bath Theatre Royal, Ustinov
Studio
, the
egg
, the Rondo Theatre
, and the Mission Theatre
– and attracts internationally renowned companies
and directors, including an annual season by Sir Peter Hall. The city also has a
long-standing musical tradition; Bath Abbey
is home to the Klais Organ
and is the largest concert venue in the city, with
about 20 concerts and 26 organ recitals each year. Another
important concert venue is the Forum, a 1,700-seat
art deco building which originated as a cinema. The
city holds the
Bath
International Music Festival and Mozartfest every year. Other
festivals include the annual
Bath
Film Festival,
Bath
Literature Festival (and its
counterpart for
children), the
Bath Fringe
Festival and the
Bath Beer
Festival, and the Bach Festivals which occur at two and a half
year intervals.
The city
is home to the Victoria Art Gallery
, the Museum of East Asian Art
, and Holburne Museum of Art
, numerous commercial art galleries and antique
shops, as well as numerous museums, among them Bath Postal
Museum
, the Fashion Museum
, the Jane Austen Centre
, the Herschel Museum of Astronomy
and the Roman Baths
. The
Bath Royal
Literary and Scientific Institution, now in Queen Square, and
founded in 1824 on the base of a 1777 Society for the encouragement
of Agriculture, Planting, Manufactures, Commerce and the Fine Arts,
has an important collection and holds a programme of talks and
discussions.
Bath in the arts
During the 18th century
Thomas
Gainsborough and Sir
Thomas Lawrence lived and worked
in Bath.
John Maggs, a painter best known
for his coaching scenes, was born and lived in Bath with his
artistic family.
William
Friese-Greene began experimenting with celluloid and motion
pictures in his studio in Bath in the 1870s, developing some of the
earliest movie camera technology there. He is credited as the
inventor of cinematography.
Jane Austen lived in the city from 1801
with her father, mother and sister Cassandra, and the family
resided in the city at four successive addresses until 1806.
However, Jane Austen never liked the city, and wrote to her sister
Cassandra, "It will be two years tomorrow since we left Bath for
Clifton, with what happy feelings of escape."
Despite these
feelings, Bath has honoured her name with the Jane Austen
Centre
and a city walk. Austen's later
Northanger Abbey and
Persuasion are largely set in the city and
feature descriptions of taking the waters, social life, and music
recitals.
Taking the waters is also described in
Charles Dickens' novel The Pickwick Papers in which
Pickwick's servant, Sam
Weller, comments that the water has "a very strong flavour o'
warm flat irons", while the Royal Crescent
is the venue for a chase between two of the
characters, Dowler and Winkle. Moyra Caldecott's novel
The Waters of
Sul is set in Roman Bath in 72 AD.
Richard Brinsley Sheridan's play
The Rivals takes place in the
city, as does
Roald Dahl's chilling
short-story,
The Landlady.
Many films and television programmes have been filmed using the
architecture of Bath as the backdrop including: the 2004
film of
Thackeray's
Vanity Fair,
The Duchess (2008),
The Elusive Pimpernel (1950) and
The Titfield
Thunderbolt (1953).
In August
2003 the Three Tenors sang at a special
concert to mark the opening of the Thermae Bath Spa
, a new hot water spa in Bath
City Centre; delays to the project meant the spa actually opened
three years later on 7 August 2006.
Parks

Parade Gardens in July after a rain
shower
The city
has several public parks, the main one
being Royal
Victoria Park
, which is a short walk from the centre of the
city. It was opened in 1830 by an 11-year-old
Princess Victoria, and was
the first park to carry her name.
The park is overlooked by the Royal
Crescent
and is in
area. It has a variety of attractions. including a
skateboard ramp,
tennis
courts,
bowling, a putting green and a 12-
and 18-hole
golf course, a pond, open air
concerts, and a popular children's play area.
Much of its area is
lawn; a notable feature is the way in which a
ha-ha segregates it from the Royal
Crescent
, while
giving the impression to a viewer from the Crescent of a greensward
uninterrupted across the Park down to Royal Avenue. It has
received a "
Green Flag award", the
national standard for parks and green spaces in England and Wales,
and is registered by
English
Heritage as a
Park of
National Historic Importance. The botanical gardens were formed
in 1887 and contain one of the finest collections of plants on
limestone in the
West Country .
The replica of a Roman Temple was used at
the British Empire
Exhibition at Wembley
in 1924. In 1987 the gardens were extended
to include the Great Dell, a disused quarry that was formally part
of the park, which contains a large collection of
conifers.
Other parks in Bath include: Alexandra Park, which crowns a hill
and overlooks the city; Parade Gardens, along the river front near
the Abbey in the centre of the city; Sydney Gardens, known as a
pleasure-garden in the 18th century; Henrietta Park; Hedgemead
Park; and Alice Park. Jane Austen wrote of Sydney Gardens that "It
would be pleasant to be near the Sydney Gardens. We could go into
the Labyrinth every day." Alexandra, Alice and Henrietta parks were
built into the growing city among the housing developments.
There is
also a linear park following the old Somerset and Dorset Joint
Railway line, and, in a green area adjoining the River Avon, Cleveland Pools
were built around 1815. It is now the oldest
surviving public outdoor
lido in England, and
plans have been submitted for its restoration.
Food

Sally Lunn's, home of the Sally Lunn
Bun
Bath is linked to a variety of foods that are distinctive in their
association with the city. The
Sally
Lunn buns (a type of
teacake) have
long been baked in Bath. They were first mentioned by that name in
verses printed in a local newspaper, the
Bath Chronicle, in 1772. At that time they
were eaten hot at public breakfasts in the city's Spring Gardens.
They can be eaten with sweet or savoury toppings. These are
sometimes confused with
Bath buns
which are smaller, round, very sweet, very rich buns that were
associated with the city following
The Great Exhibition. Bath buns were
originally topped with crushed
comfits
created by dipping
caraway seeds repeatedly
in boiling sugar; but today seeds are added to a 'London Bath Bun'
(a reference to the bun's promotion and sale at the Great
Exhibition). The seeds may be replaced by crushed sugar granules or
'nibs'.
Bath has
also lent its name to one other distinctive recipe – Bath Olivers – the dry baked biscuit
invented by Dr William Oliver, physician to the Mineral Water Hospital
in 1740. Oliver was an early anti-obesity
campaigner and the author of a
"Practical Essay on the Use and
Abuse of warm Bathing in Gluty Cases". In more recent years,
Oliver's efforts have been traduced by the introduction of a
version of the biscuit with a plain chocolate coating. The
Bath
Chap, which is the salted and smoked cheek and jawbones of the
pig, takes its name from the city. It is still available from a
stall in the daily covered market.
Although there is a brewery named
Bath
Ales
, located a few miles away in Warmley
, Abbey Ales are
brewed in the city.
Sport
Bath Rugby is a
rugby union team which is currently in the
Guinness Premiership league and
coached by Steve Meehan.
It plays in black, blue and white kit at the
Recreation
Ground
in the city, where it has been since the late
19th century, following its establishment in 1865. The
team's first major honour was winning the
John Player Cup four years consecutively
from 1984 until 1987. The team then led the
Courage league for six consecutive
seasons, from 1988/1989 until 1995/1996, during which time it also
won the
Pilkington Cup in 1989, 1990,
1992, 1994, 1995 and 1996. It finally won the
Heineken Cup in the 1997/1998 season, and
topped the Zürich Premiership (now Guinness Premiership) in
2003–2004. The team's current
squad includes
several members who also play in the
English national team
including:
Lee Mears,
David Flatman.
Nick
Abendanon and
Matt Banahan.
Colston's
Collegiate School
, Bristol
has had a
large input in the team over the past decade, providing several
current 1st XV squad members. The former England Rugby Team
Manager
Andy Robinson used to play for
Bath Rugby team and was captain and later coach. Both of Robinson's
predecessors,
Clive Woodward and
Jack Rowell, were also former Bath
coaches and managers as well as his successor
Brian Ashton.
Bath City F.C. and
Team Bath F.C. (affiliated with the
University
of Bath
) are the major football teams. Both teams play
in the
Conference South - in 2007,
Bath City became champions of the Southern Football League, and
were promoted, whilst Team Bath were promoted the following year
after winning the
Southern
League Premier Division playoffs. In 2002, Team Bath became the
first university team to enter the
FA Cup in
120 years, and advanced through four qualifying rounds to the
first round proper. The university's team was established in 1999,
while the city team has existed since before 1908 (when it entered
the
Western League).
Bath City F.C. play their games at Twerton Park
.
Many
cricket clubs are based in the city,
including
Bath Cricket Club, who
are based at the North Parade Ground and play in the
West of England Premier
League. Cricket is also played on the Recreation Ground, just
across from where the Rugby is played. The Rec's cricket ground is
the venue for the annual
Bath
Cricket Festival which sees
Somerset County Cricket Club
play several games. The Recreation Ground is also home to Bath
Croquet Club, which was re-formed in 1976 and is affiliated with
the South West Federation of
Croquet
Clubs.
The
Bath Half Marathon is run
annually through the city streets, with over 10,000 runners.
Bath also
has a thriving cycling community, with
places for biking including Royal Victoria Park
, 'The Tumps' in Odd Down/east, the jumps on top
of Lansdown
, and Prior Park. Places for biking
near Bath include Brown's
Folly
in Batheaston
and Box Woods, in Box
.
Bath is also the home of the Bath American Football Club, which has
been playing
American Football in
the city since 2001.
TeamBath is the umbrella name for all of the
University
of Bath
sports teams, including the aforementioned football
club. Other sports for which TeamBath is noted are
athletics,
badminton,
basketball,
bob skeleton,
bobsleigh,
hockey,
judo,
modern
pentathlon,
netball,
rugby union,
swimming,
tennis,
triathlon and
volleyball. The City of Bath Triathlon takes
place annually at the university.
Industry
Bath once had an important manufacturing sector, led by companies
such
Stothert and Pitt. Nowadays
manufacturing is in decline in the city, but it boasts strong
software, publishing and service-oriented industries, being home to
companies such as
Future Publishing and
London & Country mortgage brokers. The city's attraction to
tourists has also led to a significant number of jobs in
tourism-related industries. Important economic sectors in Bath
include education and health (30,000 jobs), retail, tourism and
leisure (14,000 jobs) and business and professional services
(10,000 jobs).
Its main employers are the National Health Service, the two
universities and the Bath and North East Somerset Council, as well
as the Ministry of
Defence, although a number of MOD offices formerly in Bath have
now moved to Bristol
.
Growing employment sectors include information and communication
technologies and creative and cultural industries where Bath is one
of the recognised national centres for publishing, with the
magazine publisher
Future
Publishing employing around 650 people. Others include the
Helphire Group, an accident management company specialising in
non-fault motor accidents (800 jobs),
Buro
Happold (400) and
IPL Information Processing
Limited (250). The city contains over 400 retail shops, 50%
being run by independent specialist retailers, and around 100
restaurants and cafes which are primarily supported by
tourism.
Tourism
One of Bath's principal industries is
tourism, with more than one million staying visitors
and 3.8 million day visitors to the city on an annual basis.
The visits mainly fall into the categories of
heritage tourism and
cultural tourism. aided by the city's
selection in 1987 as a
UNESCO
World Heritage Site, recognising its international cultural
significance.
All significant stages of the history of England are represented within
the city, from the Roman Baths
(including their significant Celtic presence), to Bath Abbey
and the Royal Crescent
, to Thermae Bath Spa
in the 2000s. The size of the tourist
industry is reflected in the almost 300 places of accommodation –
including over 80
hotels, and over 180
bed and breakfasts – many of which
are located in
Georgian
buildings.
The history of the city is displayed at the
Building of
Bath Museum
which is housed in a building which was built in
1765 as the Trinity Presbyterian
Church. It was also known as the
Countess of
Huntingdon's Chapel, as she lived in the attached house from
1707 to 1791. Two of the hotels have 'five-star' ratings. There are
also two campsites located on the western edge of the city. The
city also contains about 100 restaurants, and a similar number of
public houses and
bars. Several companies offer
open-top bus tours around the city, as well as
tours on foot and on the river. Since 2006, with the opening of
Thermae Bath Spa, the city has attempted to recapture its
historical position as the only town in the United Kingdom offering
visitors the opportunity to bathe in naturally heated spring
waters.
Twinned towns
Bath has five
twinned towns:
Bath also
has a partnership agreement with Manly, New South Wales
, Australia.
Transport
Bath is
approximately south-east of the larger city and port of Bristol
, to which it
is linked by the A4 road
, and is a similar distance south of the M4 motorway. In an attempt to reduce the
level of car use
Park and Ride schemes
have been introduced, with sites at Odd Down, Lansdown and
Newbridge, with a Saturdays-only site at the University of Bath. In
addition a
Bus Gate scheme in Northgate
aims to reduce private car use in the city centre.
National Express operates coach services from Bath Bus
Station
to a number of cities. Internally, Bath has
a network of bus routes run by
First
Group, with services to surrounding towns and cities. There is
one other company running open top double-decker bus tours around
the city.
The city is connected to Bristol and the sea by the
River Avon, navigable via
locks by small boats.
The river was
connected to the River Thames and
London by the Kennet and Avon Canal
in 1810 via Bath Locks
; this waterway – closed for many years, but
restored in the last years of the 20th century – is now popular
with narrowboat users.
Bath is
on National Cycle Route 4,
with one of Britain's first cycleways, the
Bristol & Bath
Railway Path, to the west, and an eastern route toward London
on the canal
towpath. Although Bath does not have an airport, the
city is about from Bristol International Airport
.
Bath is
served by the Bath Spa railway station
(designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel), which has
regular connections to London
Paddington
, Bristol
Temple
Meads
, Cardiff Central
, Exeter
, Plymouth
and Penzance
(see Great
Western Main Line), and also Westbury
, Warminster
, Salisbury
, Southampton
, Portsmouth
and Brighton
(see Wessex Main
Line). Services are provided by
First Great Western.
There is a suburban
station on the main line, Oldfield Park
, which has a limited commuter service to Bristol as
well as other destinations. Green Park
Station
was once the terminus of the Midland Railway, and junction for the
Somerset and Dorset
Joint Railway, whose line, always steam hauled, went under
Bear
Flat
through the Combe Down Tunnel
and climbed over the Mendips
to serve many towns and villages on its run to
Bournemouth
. This example of an English rural line was
closed by
Beeching in March 1966. Its
Bath station building, now restored, houses shops, small
businesses, the Saturday Bath Farmers Market and parking for a
supermarket, while the route of the Somerset and Dorset within Bath
is to be reused for the
Two Tunnels
Greenway, a shared use path that will extend
National Cycle Route 24 into the
city.
A tram system was introduced in the late 19th century opening on 24
December 1880. The gauge cars were horse-drawn along a route from
London Road to the Bath Spa railway station, but the system closed
in 1902. It was replaced by electric tram cars on a greatly
expanded gauge system that opened in 1904.
This eventually
extended to with routes to Combe Down
, Oldfield Park, Twerton
, Newton St
Loe
, Weston
and Bathford
. There was a fleet of 40 cars, all but 6
being double deck. The first line to close was replaced by a bus
service in 1938, and the last went on 6 May 1939.
Architecture
There are many Roman
archaeological sites
throughout the central area of the city, but the baths themselves
are about below the present city street level. Around the hot
springs, Roman foundations, pillar bases, and baths can still be
seen, however all the
stonework above the
level of the baths is from more recent periods.
Bath Abbey
was a Norman
church built on earlier foundations, although the present building
dates from the early 16th century and shows a late Perpendicular style with flying buttresses and crocketed pinnacles
decorating a crenellated and pierced
parapet. The choir and transepts have
a
fan vault by
Robert and
William
Vertue. The nave was given a matching vault in the 19th
century. The building is lit by 52 windows.

The Abbey seen from the east
Most buildings in Bath are made from the local, golden-coloured
Bath Stone, and many date from the 18th
and 19th century. The dominant style of architecture in Central
Bath is
Georgian; this evolved
from the
Palladian revival
style which became popular in the early 18th century. Many of the
prominent architects of the day were employed in the development of
the city. The original purpose of much of Bath's architecture is
concealed by the honey-coloured classical façades; in an
era before the advent of the luxury
hotel, these apparently elegant residences were
frequently purpose-built lodging houses, where visitors could hire
a room, a floor, or (according to their means) an entire house for
the duration of their visit, and be waited on by the house's
communal
servants. The masons
Reeves of Bath were prominent in the
city from the 1770s to 1860s.
"The
Circus
" consists of three long, curved terraces designed
by the elder John Wood to form
a circular space or theatre intended for civic functions and
games. The games give a clue to the design, the
inspiration behind which was the Colosseum
in Rome
.
Like the Colosseum, the three façades have a different order of
architecture on each floor:
Doric on the
ground level, then
Ionic on the
piano nobile and finishing with
Corinthian on the upper floor, the style of
the building thus becoming progressively more ornate as it rises.
Wood never lived to see his unique example of town planning
completed, as he died five days after personally laying the
foundation stone on 18 May 1754.
The best
known of Bath's terraces is the Royal Crescent
, built between 1767 and 1774 and designed by the
younger John Wood. But
all is not what it seems; while Wood designed the great curved
façade of what appears to be about 30 houses with Ionic
columns on a rusticated ground floor, that was the
extent of his input. Each purchaser bought a certain length of the
façade, and then employed their own architect to build a house to
their own specifications behind it; hence what appears to be two
houses is sometimes one. This system of town planning is betrayed
at the rear of the crescent: while the front is completely uniform
and symmetrical, the rear is a mixture of differing roof heights,
juxtapositions and fenestration. This "
Queen Anne fronts and
Mary-Anne backs" architecture occurs repeatedly in Bath.
Around
1770 the neoclassical architect
Robert Adam designed Pulteney
Bridge
, using as the prototype for the three-arched bridge
spanning the Avon an original, but unused, design by Palladio for the Rialto Bridge
in Venice
. Thus, Pulteney Bridge became not just a
means of crossing the river, but also a shopping arcade. Along with
the Rialto Bridge, is one of the very few surviving bridges in
Europe to serve this dual purpose. It has been substantially
altered since it was built. The bridge was named after Frances and
William Pulteney,
the owners of the Bathwick estate for which the bridge provided a
link to the rest of Bath.
The heart
of the Georgian city was the Pump Room
, which, together with its associated Lower Assembly
Rooms, was designed by Thomas
Baldwin, a local builder responsible for many other buildings
in the city, including the terraces in Argyle Street, and the
Guildhall
. Baldwin rose rapidly, becoming a leader in
Bath's architectural history. In 1776 he was made the chief
City Surveyor, and in 1780 became
Bath City Architect.
Great
Pulteney Street
, where he eventually lived, is another of his
works: this wide boulevard, constructed
circa 1789 and over long and wide, is lined on both sides by
Georgian terraces.
In the 1960s and early 1970s some parts of Bath were
unsympathetically redeveloped, resulting in the loss of some 18th-
and 19th-century buildings. This process was largely halted by a
popular campaign which drew strength from the publication of Adam
Fergusson's
The Sack of Bath..
Controversy has
continued in recent years with the demolition of the 1930s
Churchill House, a neo-Georgian municipal building originally
housing the Electricity Board, to make way for the new Bath Bus
Station
. The was part of the
Southgate redevelopment begun in 2007 in
which the central 1960s shopping precinct, bus station and
multi-story carpark were demolished and a new area of mock-Georgian
shopping streets is being constructed. As a result of the changes
the city's status as a
World
Heritage Site was reviewed by Unesco in 2009. The decision was
made let Bath keep its status, but Unesco has asked to be consulted
on future phases of the Riverside development, saying that the
density volume of buildings in the second and third phases of the
development need to be reconsidered.It also says that Bath must do
more to attract world-class architecture to any new
developments.
Education
Bath has two
universities.
The University
of Bath
was established in 1966. The university is
known, academically, for the physical sciences, mathematics,
architecture, management and technology.
Bath Spa
University
was first granted degree-awarding powers in 1992 as
a university college, before
being granted university status in August
2005. It has schools in the following subject areas: Art and
Design, Education, English and Creative Studies, Historical and
Cultural Studies, Music and the Performing Arts, Science and the
Environment and Social Sciences.
The city
contains one further education
college, City of
Bath College
, and several sixth forms
as part of both state and independent school.
Media
Bath has two main local newspapers, the
Bath Chronicle and the
Bath Times. The Bath Chronicle, published
since 1760, was a daily newspaper until mid-September 2007, when it
became a weekly.The Bath Times is a
free weekly newspaper, largely based
around
advertising. Both newspapers are
owned by
Northcliffe Media.
The
BBC's
Where I Live website for
Somerset has featured coverage of news and events within Bath since
2003.
For
television, Bath is served by the BBC West
studios based in Bristol
, and by
ITV West (formerly HTV) with
studios similarly in Bristol.
Radio stations broadcasting to the city include
Bath FM and
heart Bath as
well as The University of Bath's
1449AM
URB, a student-focused radio station available on campus and
also online, and
Classic Gold
1260 a networked commercial radio station with local
programmes.
See also
References
- Bath and North East Somerset District Council :
Population Statistics
- (2005) History of Bath's Spa Bath Tourism Plus
- A L Rowse, Heritage of Britain, 1995, Treasure of
London, ISBN 0907407587, 184 pages, Page 15
- Huscroft Ruling England p. 128
- Contaminated Land Inspection of the area
surrounding Bath
-
http://idox.bathnes.gov.uk/WAM/doc/BackGround%20Papers-92552.pdf?extension=.pdf&id=92552&location=VOLUME1&contentType=application/pdf&pageCount=1
Bath Western Riverside Outline Planning Application Design
Statement, April 2006, Section 2.0, Site Analysis
-
http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/climate/uk/location/southwestengland/rainfall.html
Met Office, Southwest England, Rainfall
- "Visit Bath & Beyond"
-
http://www.bathnes.gov.uk/BathNES/environmentandplanning/parksandopenspaces/Royal+Victoria+Park.htm
-
http://www.bathnes.gov.uk/BathNES/environmentandplanning/parksandopenspaces/Botanic.htm
measurement given in acres
- Bristol and Bath Railway Path : The Midland
Railway Retrieved on 2009-08-08
External links