Tuesday, July 14, 2009

City to pay Jackson memorial bill

Los Angeles to pay 1.4m dollars in costs related to Michael Jackson's memorial service

Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said the city of Los Angeles will pick up an estimated 1.4 million US dollars (£861,000) in costs related to last week's Michael Jackson memorial service.

He also lambasted a city website set up to request donations.

"This is a world-class city, and we provide fire and police protection, period," Mr Villaraigosa said.

"The idea that we would charge the family for a funeral is nonsensical."

Mr Villaraigosa said he will not ask the Jackson family, AEG Live, owner of the Staples Centre where the event was held, or the public to help pick up the tab for police overtime, traffic control and sanitation crews.

He noted that such major events occur frequently in Los Angeles and other big cities. New York and Chicago do not ask others to cough up cash, he said.

The mayor called the city's donation website "ridiculous". As of last week, some 1,800 fans had donated 35,000 US dollars (£21,500) - so many fans responded that the site, which has since closed, crashed several times. It was unclear whether the money would be refunded.

Meanwhile, a Los Angeles coroner's official said toxicology reports that may determine the cause of Jackson's death could be completed this week.

Assistant Chief Coroner Ed Winter said that some results from tests to determine what substances Jackson had in his body when he died are in. The remaining results are expected at the end of this week or early next week.

Authorities are investigating claims the pop star consumed large amounts of prescription medications. The powerful sedative Diprivan, normally only administered in hospitals, was among items found in his home. Jackson died on June 25.

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Jacko's body whereabouts a mystery

Jacko's body whereabouts a mystery

The coffin is seen during a memorial service for Michael Jackson in Los Angeles

pa.press.net

Mystery is still surrounding the whereabouts of Michael Jackson's body.

The King of Pop's gold-plated coffin was removed from the Staples Centre in Los Angeles on Tuesday after a memorial event which saw stars and his 11-year-old daughter pay emotional tributes to the late singer.

But Jackson's final resting place hasn't been announced by the family, with speculation ranging from a private cemetery in LA to his sprawling Neverland ranch in Santa Barbara.

A private memorial was held at Forest Lawn in Hollywood Hills prior to the public memorial, but it's not thought that Jackson will be buried among the other Hollywood stars interred at the graveyard.

Likewise there is doubt over whether the family will be allowed to bury the Thriller singer at Neverland, his former home.

On Tuesday, followers of the singer were given the opportunity to celebrate his life and music during a star-studded public memorial. The event, billed as the biggest celebrity send-off in history, ran at least 30 minutes longer than scheduled.

The emotional eulogies were capped by Jackson's daughter Paris, who outshone the stars with a tearful tribute to the "best father you could ever imagine".

Comforted by the Jackson family, she sobbed as she made her public debut in front of 17,000 fans at the venue.

More than 30 million people across the US watched the service and it's estimated that a billion tuned in worldwide.

Friday, July 3, 2009

British wonders: a Top 50 Countdown

We rate the nation’s most beautiful and fascinating sights and ask - how many have you actually visited?
We consider ourselves a pretty patriotic nation. And why not? We have enough history, natural beauty and quirky corners packed into these fair isles to keep us busily exploring for several lifetimes.
Yet, according to a recent survey, twice as many of us Brits have visited the Eiffel Tower than Stonehenge.
Are we so obsessed with overseas holidays that we are overlooking our own national treasures? And if so, surely now is the time – with spiralling travel costs, the credit crunch and the weakening pound – to rediscover the best that Britain has to offer.
So, we have grilled our travel experts, polled you our readers and agonised over the options to bring you our countdown of Britain’s very best 50 sights.
Take a look. You might be surprised. And then tell us here - honestly - how many of our nation’s wonders have you actually visited?

British wonders: 49 Carrick-a-Rede Rope BridgeCarrick-a-Rede Rope Bridge (Image © Britainonview/Martin Brent)

Location: Ballintoy, County Antrim, Northern Ireland
What’s the damage? £3.70
Extreme vertigo sufferers are excused from visiting this national wonder. But anyone with even half a head for heights should keep it on their lists, as the British Isles have few more thrilling and windswept spots than the Carrick-a-Rede Rope Bridge on the rugged Northern Irish coast.
Just 1m wide and 20m long, the bridge is strung precariously across a chasm between the sea cliffs and a small island with excellent views of Rathlin Island and Fair Head. Fishermen have been rigging the rope bridge up every spring for 200 years.
Even on a calm day, the bridge sways in the sea breeze, so try not to pay too much attention to the 30m drop to jagged rocks and crashing surf below. You risk joining the many visitors who have been too scared to return across the bridge and have had to be ferried back by boat.

British wonders: 50 Falkirk WheelThe Falkirk Wheel, Scotland (Image © Ben Curtis/PA)

Location: Near Falkirk, Scotland
What’s the damage? Boat trip £8
A recent – and for some surprising – inclusion in the list of Britain’s top attractions is this ambitious rotating boatlift mid-way between Edinburgh and Glasgow. The Falkirk Wheel was designed as an innovative solution to an old problem: how to join the Forth & Clyde Canal with the Union Canal, which lay 35m – about the height of a 10-storey building – below.
It was designed as a working beast, but has also taken on an iconic status since opening in 2002 – and is now one of Scotland’s biggest tourist draws. You can take a whirl on the huge contraption by hopping aboard a boat that takes you up to the higher level, out through the aqueduct and under the ancient Antonine Wall, itself a World Heritage site.

British wonders: 46 Brighton Royal Pavilion

Brighton Royal Pavilion (Image © Britainonview)

Location: Brighton, South-East England
What’s the damage? Adult £8.50
If you thought all of England’s stately homes were dry and dusty, a visit to Brighton's outlandish Royal Pavilion is overdue. This flamboyantly exotic palace, built between 1787 and 1815, was the seaside playpad of the young King George IV before he ascended to the throne.
One of the country’s most self-indulgent buildings, its exterior is thick with Mogul-style domes and minarets, while the interior is slathered with vivid colour and lavish oriental-themed decor. Golden dragons coil around elephantine chandeliers, while bejewelled snakes slither down columns and every inch of wall and ceiling is alive with gilt, crystal or exotic hues.
The Prince Regent was notorious for entertaining his aristocratic mates and their floosies with wildly hedonistic parties here.

British wonders: 47 XscapeSimulated skydiving at Xscape (Image © Rex Features)

Location: Milton Keynes, central England
What’s the damage? Varies
Then again, if history isn’t your bag, how about some indoor real-snow skiing and simulated skydiving to liven things up?
According to research by VisitBritain, the Xscape entertainment complex in Milton Keynes was one of the nation’s most-visited attractions last year, drawing 6.9m people – that’s over three times as many as the Tower of London.
A striking modern building, the second-tallest in Milton Keynes, Xscape contains a real-snow ski slope, a climbing wall and even a new wind tunnel that imitates the experience of freefall skydiving, as well as the obligatory cinemas, shops and restaurants.
There are two more Xscape complexes in Castleford, Yorkshire and Braehead, near Glasgow.

British wonders: 48 ConwyConwy Castle (Image © Britainonview)

Location: Conwy, Snowdonia, Northern Wales
What’s the damage? £4.70
Conwy is one of Wales’s most impressive castles – and a World Heritage site to boot – yet many young Brits have never heard of it.
Its exterior is dramatic to the point of theatricality, with eight vast drum towers, chunky battlements and an epic mountain backdrop to Snowdonia. And the well-preserved walled town below is filled with a pretty mix of medieval and Victorian buildings.
The castle, built in the late 13th century, formed part of Edward I's plan to surround Wales with an iron ring of castles to subdue the unruly populace.

British wonders: 43 Callanish Standing Stones

(Image © Britainonview)

Location: Isle of Lewis, Outer Hebrides, Scotland
What’s the damage? Free
The windswept island of Lewis off the west coast of Scotland is home to one of Britain’s most-complete stone circles: the Callanish Standing Stones, which date back to the time of the pyramids some 3,800-5,000 years ago.
While it may not get the press of its brawnier southern cousins Stonehenge or Avebury, this ring of 13 monoliths and a central block is their equal for mystery; it also claims an especially atmospheric location on a wild, secluded promontory. Around 40 smaller stones radiate outward in ceremonial avenues.
There are many other megalithic sites in the vicinity, as well as Iron Age brochs –round stone towers.


British wonders: 44 Cheddar GorgeCheddar Gorge (Image © Britainonview/McCormick McAdam)

Location: Somerset, south-west England
What’s the damage? Caves & gorge £15; gorge only, £4
The largest ravine in Britain, Cheddar Gorge is a spectacular rift through the Mendip Hills of Somerset. The area is also riddled with colourful limestone caves bristling with stalactites and stalagmites. Excavators found Britain's oldest complete human skeleton, 9,000-year-old Cheddar Man, here in 1903.
You can drive through the gorge or investigate the 5km-long walking circuit around its sheer cliffs – which reach 113m high – with views to Glastonbury Tor and Exmoor.

British wonders: 45 Cerne AbbasThe Cerne Giant (Image © Geoff Moore/Rex Features)

Location: Dorset, south-west England
What’s the damage? Free
The scandalously well-endowed Cerne Giant (aka the “Rude Man”) stands to attention on a hillside outside Dorchester, in Dorset. This 55m-high hill figure is one of the largest in Britain and certainly the most instantly recognisable.
He is carved from the underlying chalk bedrock and carries a huge knobbled club that has led many people to theorise that he represents Hercules and dates from the days of Roman occupation. The true age of the giant is uncertain, however, as little evidence remains earlier than the 17th century. Some even argue that he was dug as a parody of Oliver Cromwell in the English civil war.
The giant is one of only two human hillside figures in Britain, the other being the more respectable Long Man of Wilmington in East Sussex.

British wonders: 40 Edinburgh Castle

Edinburgh Castle at dusk (Image © David Cheskin/PA)

Location: Edinburgh, Scotland
What’s the damage? Adult £10
Topping a black volcanic crag looming over the city at large, Edinburgh Castle is a defiant symbol of the nation, as well as being one of Scotland’s top tourist draws and a World Heritage site. Its position makes it visible from nearly everywhere in the city, but just in case your attention wanders, it reminds everyone of its presence with an almighty cannon blast from the battlements at 1 o’clock daily.
Most of the castle dates to the 16th century but St Margaret's Chapel has survived since the 12th century – making it the city’s oldest structure.


British wonders: 41 Seven SistersSeven Sisters (Image © Britainonview/Tourism South-East/Rod Edwards)

Location: Near Eastbourne, south-east England
What’s the damage? Free
Move over, Dover. While many people think of the White Cliffs of that southern port city as being the most beautiful series of chalk rock faces in Britain, the Seven Sisters cliffs can actually claim to be purer, whiter and just plain prettier than their easterly neighbours.
Indeed they are often used as stand-ins for Dover’s cliffs in film and television because they are less blighted by modern development.
The Seven Sisters rollercoaster their way along the English Channel below the South Downs of East Sussex. The highest clifftop point in the area is Beachy Head, a site of intoxicating beauty but notorious for being one of the nation’s top suicide spots.

British wonders: 42 LongleatPlaying with the Lemurs at Longleat Safari Park (Image © Britainonview/Rod Edwards)

Location: Wiltshire, South-West England
What’s the damage? Adult £10
One of the south-west’s more eccentric family attractions, Longleat is part stately home, part safari park and part showcase for its owner’s quirkier whims. Open to the public longer - since 1946 - than any other ancestral home, it claims to be the oldest safari park outside Africa.
The park, which has had its own BBC TV programme about it, is set amid grounds designed by the legendary landscape artist Capability Brown. Other attractions include a narrow-gauge railway, a maze, the Elizabethan mansion and some truly trippy murals by the present day owner, Lord Bath.

British wonders: 37 Blackpool Pleasure Beach

A ride at Blackpool Pleasure Beach (Image © Britainonview)

Location: Lancashire, North-West England
What’s the damage? £15
The disarming seaside resort of Blackpool claims to be England’s second most-visited town after London, and a large part of its appeal is down to the giddy, nostalgia-riddled delights of its 112-year-old funfair.  Opened way back in 1896 and still boasting many of its age-old rides (nicknamed the “woodies”), the pleasure park nonetheless has its fair share of the latest pulse-juddering rides, too.
It represents the kind of unselfconscious, unadulterated fun that even the most cynical of Brits finds hard to resist – as evidenced by the astonishing 5.5 million visitors it received last year.
If that’s not enough of a nostalgia fix for you, catch a tram or a donkey ride or stroll along the beachside promenade to Blackpool Tower, where you can indulge Strictly Come Dancing fantasies in the ornate Victorian ballroom.

British wonders: 38 Whitby AbbeyWhitby Abbey, North Yorkshire (Image © Britainonview)

Location: Whitby, Yorkshire, North-East England
What’s the damage? Adult £5
In an impressive case of split identity, Whitby manages to be both a Goth’s dream and a delightfully quaint little seaside resort. Lying on Yorkshire’s scenic coastline, its main claim to fame is its eerily imposing abbey, which features so prominently in Bram Stoker’s classic horror story Dracula.
The abbey, glowering over the town from its clifftop perch and founded in 657, has also served as a kings’ burial place and was home to the saintly poet Caedmon. The town as a whole is a tangle of narrow medieval lanes leading down to a busy little harbour and – reputedly – some of the best fish and chips shops in Britain.

British wonders: 39 Pembrokeshire Coast National ParkWhitesands Bay, Pembrokeshire (Image © Britainonview/Caravan Club/Rod Edwards)

Location: Pembrokeshire, Western Wales
What’s the damage? No charge
Stretching out along the far-flung southwest coast of Wales, the Pembrokeshire coastline does not court or get the attention of other British national parks – but that makes its wild, untamed beauty all the rarer.
Its wave-battered shoreline of soaring cliffs and secluded golden beaches makes for irresistible walking, not to mention rock-climbing, kayaking, surfing, coasteering and diving. Boat trips run to offshore islands alive with squawking seabirds – including puffins – and grey seal. Also keep an eye out for dolphins and minke whale.
Pretty seaside towns including St Davids – Britain’s smallest “city” – pepper the coastline. St Davids’ fragile cathedral is among Wales’s holiest sites.

British wonders: 34 Caernarfon Castle

Caernarfon Castle at dusk (Image © Britainonview/David Angel)

Location: Caernarfon, Northern Wales
What’s the damage? Adult £5.10
Caernarfon is Wales’s most celebrated castle and a World Heritage site. You can see why – built, as it is, on a truly commanding scale, designed to leave the rebellious Welsh in no doubt as to who was boss back in the 13th century. Its polygonal towers and intimidating battlements loom over the walled town below.
Constructed as the final chapter in Edward I’s conquest of Wales, the fortress also served as his palace and seat of government.

British wonders: 35 Imperial War Museum, DuxfordA pilot in second world war dress at the Imperial War Museum (Image © John Stillwell/PA)

Location: Cambridgeshire, Eastern England
What’s the damage? Adult £16
The rip-roaring Imperial War Museum at Duxford, just south of Cambridge, is a magnet to aeroplane-obsessed kids, Biggles-raised grown-ups and misty-eyed grandparents.
Europe's biggest aviation museum, it is home to around 200 winged war machines, from dive-bombers to biplanes and Spitfire to Concorde.
The enormous airfield around which its vast hangars are spread played a crucial role in the Battle of Britain, during the second world war.
No surprise, then, that Duxford airshows are reckoned the most spectacular in Europe, if not the world.

British wonders: 36 Kelvingrove Art GalleryA spitfire on show at the Kelvingrove Art Gallery (Image © Danny Lawson/PA)

Location: Glasgow, Scotland
What’s the damage? Free
Recently reopened following years of restoration, the Kelvingrove is Scotland’s top museum and gallery, chock-a-block with famous names and fascinating artefacts. Dali, Botticelli, Monet and Van Gogh are all represented in the gallery – deemed by experts to be one of the best civic art collections in Europe. And the gallery’s stash of weapons, armoury and natural history is also rated as one of the best in the country.
But best of all – entry is free. Little wonder, then, that this is one of the most-visited museums in Britain outside London.

British wonders: 31 Brecon Beacons National Park

Waterfall in Brecon Beacons National Park (Image © Barry Batchelor/PA)

Location: South-Eastern Wales and Herefordshire
What’s the damage? Free
A rippling blanket of moors, valleys and uplands laid out over east Wales and a sliver of England, the Beacons tempt many a walker on to its two long-distance paths - Offa’s Dyke, along the border with England - and the Taff Trail. Some of Britain’s longest and deepest caves are hidden beneath its mountains. There are also long-distance pedals for cyclists and plenty of opportunities for horse-riding, cycling, caving, canoeing and hang-gliding.

British wonders: 32 West Belfast’s murals

A wall mural in Belfast (Image © McCullou/PA)

Location: Belfast, Northern Ireland
What’s the damage? Free
They are surely one of Britain’s more unlikely tourist attractions, but the murals of West Belfast continue to draw huge numbers of visitors every year. Born of sectarian hatred and violence, the paintings - daubed over houses, businesses and walls – reflect the bloody history and politics of their Loyalist and Republican creators.
They can make an intimidating sight, with masked gunmen, paramilitary symbols and martyrs all featuring heavily. However, many of the more hard-edged murals are to be replaced under a government-funded scheme and new murals symbolising peace and tolerance are springing up across the city.

British wonders: 33 Shakespeare’s GlobeA drama student outside the Globe (Image © Samantha Pearce/PA)

Location: Bankside, London
What’s the damage? Tour £10.50
You need not be a fan of the bard to appreciate the labour of love that is this theatre. Faithfully reconstructed in all its thatched and timbered glory, the Globe sits on the site of the original playhouse built in 1599. It was rebuilt in the 1990s as a celebration of the greatest dramatic poet in the English language, whose freshly inked plays were played here in Elizabethan times.
To experience it fully, you will need to attend in a play in the summer months. But a year-round tour includes plenty of lurid tales from the Globe’s heyday, from where the audience went to the toilet, in the absence of loos (yes, you guessed it) to which types of people sat or stood where. The building also houses an exhibition on Shakespeare, the original Globe and its reconstruction.

British wonders: 28 Warwick Castle

Guy's Tower in the background at family-friendly Warwick Castle (Image © britainonview)

Location: Warwickshire, The Midlands
What’s the damage? Adult £15.95
Warwick is a real humdinger of a castle, with magnificent turrets, sprawling gardens and a remarkably well-preserved interior. It’s also a tourist honeypot of epic proportions, with long summer queues and a souvenir industry to rival the GDP of a small country. Run more as a medieval amusement park than a heritage site, its waxwork-inhabited rooms, torture chamber and “ghost tower” are little short of gaudy Madame Tussauds.
But you can’t argue with its mighty, don’t-mess-with-us construction or its stunning location on a cliff overlooking the River Avon. The castle’s oldest features were constructed in 1068, following the Norman invasion.

British wonders: 29 Angel of the NorthAngel of the North (Image © Britainonview/Martin Brent)

Location: Near Newcastle, north-east England
What’s the damage? Free
The Angel of the North (aka the Gateshead Flasher) is one of Britain’s most recognisable and talked-about works of art, despite being only 10 years old. The steel structure, the creation of the artist Antony Gormley, spreads its wings beside the A1(M) in Gateshead, near Newcastle in north-east England.
Britain’s largest sculpture, it has a wingspan wider than that of a Boeing 767 and weighs approximately 200 tonnes.

British wonders: 30 Alton TowersNemesis ride at Alton Towers (Image © Britainonview/Martin Brent)

Location: Derbyshire, Central England
What’s the damage? Adult £29
Before Eurodisney, this was Europe’s premier theme park – and it’s still Britain’s No 1, drawing millions of visitors each year thanks to its sheer size and cutting-edge rides. Indeed it would be higher in our countdown, were it not for its skyrocketing prices and relative inaccessibility to those without their own wheels.
Still, few theme parks can compete when it comes to variety. Aside from the rides and play areas, there are an indoor waterpark and a spa for the grown-ups, as well as a hotel and extensive gardens for people needing time out.

British wonders: 25 St Michael’s Mount

St Michael’s Mount at dusk (Image © Britainonview)

Location: Mount’s Bay, Cornwall
What’s the damage? £6.60
This island-abbey forms Cornwall’s best-known landmark, marooned on its own rocky islet with only a low-tide causeway to connect it to the mainland. It is the Cornish counterpart of the renowned fort of Mont Saint Michel in France and served as a fortress during the English civil war.
Time your visit right and you can make your way 366m across the slippery man-made causeway on foot or, less perilously, catch a boat at high tide.



British wonders: 26 Rosslyn ChapelIntricate carvings at Rosslyn Chapel (Image © Gordon Fraser/AP/PA)

Location: Near Edinburgh, Scotland
What’s the damage? Adults £7.50
Da Vinci Code fever may have shone a spotlight on Rosslyn Chapel in recent years, but this uniquely beautiful and fascinating little church has been a highlight of Edinburgh’s hinterland for centuries.
What really marks the chapel out is its collection of painstakingly executed decorative carvings, which are loaded with the kind of obscure symbolism that could – and has – kept scholars happy for a lifetime.
These carvings include ancient pagan symbols and mysterious “musical boxes” - a string of 213 patterned cubes protruding from the stonework that some believe may represent a coded message or a musical score.
Founded in 1456, the chapel is linked to the medieval religious order the Knights Templar.

British wonders: 27 Loch NessRuined Urquhart Castle, on the shores of Loch Ness (Image © David Cheskin/PA)

Location: Scottish Highlands
What’s the damage? Free
Forget Nessie for a moment and consider Scotland’s most famous lake for what it is: a breathtakingly lovely expanse that is not only Britain’s longest body of water, at over 23 miles, but also the country’s deepest, to the tune of some 129 fathoms. Plenty of murky water for the legendary beast to lurk in.
Outdoor enthusiasts will be in their element here, with superb walking and horse-riding trails, sailing and fishing opportunities, beaches and wildlife. History lovers can make for the picturesque loch-side ruin of Urquhart Castle, blown up in 1692, and the Caledonian Canal, a vast 19th-century construction bearing ships through the country’s heartlands.

British wonders: 22 Windsor Castle

Windsor Castle in winter (Image © Britainonview)

Location: Windsor, Berkshire, south-east England
What’s the damage? Adult £8-14.80
Arguably the largest and longest-occupied castle in the world, Windsor is an immense pile of castellated ramparts and bastions. Begun in 1070 by William the Conqueror, it soon became his royal hunting pad and is still the royal weekend retreat almost a thousand years later.

You can nose around the Queen’s lavish state apartments and admire works of art by the likes of Leonardo da Vinci, Van Dyck, Holbein, Rembrandt and Rubens. Then count off kings and queens by the dozen in the royal mausoleum. Among its illustrious corpses are Henry VIII and Charles I (reunited with his severed head) and, most recently, the Queen Mum was buried here in 2002.
Travellers have even been known to bump into HRH in her weekend togs in the castle’s sprawling parkland. Also nearby are the elite public school Eton and the preteen’s favourite Legoland Windsor.

British wonders: 23 Shakespeare housesShakespeare Centre engraved glass panel, Stratford Upon Avon (Image © Britainonview)

Location: Stratford-upon-Avon, the Midlands
What’s the damage? Varies
Shakespeare’s childhood home may be a national treasure but it is also an obligatory spot on the international tour bus circuit. So expect to fight for space in the five half-timbered Tudor homes linked to the bard and his family. The most important is Will’s presumed birthplace. A tourist spot for three centuries now, its guestbook bears the signatures of many a famous English writer.
Shakespeare’s mother’s childhood home and Anne Hathaway’s cottage are both similarly preserved, as is his daughter’s luxurious residence. Little remains of the house in which Shakespeare died, but its foundations stud a commemorative garden.
To remind yourself what all the fuss is about, catch a play by the Royal Shakespeare Company while you are here. The company attracts many big stars to perform in Stratford.

British wonders: 24 Leeds Castle
Leeds Castle (Image © Gareth Fuller/PA)

Location: Near Maidstone, Kent, south-east England
What’s the damage? £15
This enormous moated fortress is often described as one of the world’s most romantic castles. Hardly a reputation to strike fear into the enemy’s heart - but then Leeds Castle has seen very little military action, despite formidable defences and a fine location straddling two islands in a large lake.
Indeed it is characterised as something of a “lady’s castle”, having housed a veritable who’s who of queens throughout its 1,000-year history - most famously being home to Henry VIII's first wife, Catherine of Aragon. For much of the 20th century it was the lavish country pad of the high-society hostess Lady Baillie, who entertained the likes of Errol Flynn, Douglas Fairbanks and JFK here.
The huge estate also has country walks, a maze complete with surreal grotto at its centre, an extensive aviary and falconry demonstrations.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

British wonders: 19 Bath

A Bath bath (Image © Jerry Driendl/Getty)

Location: Bath, Somerset, south-west England
What’s the damage? Adult £10.50
The whole of this genteel, and ever-so-English, city falls within a designated World Heritage site. It claims more listed buildings than almost anywhere else in Britain, with honey-coloured town houses and parades in every direction.
Of particular fame is the glorious half-moon of Georgian houses named the Royal Crescent and – highlight of the whole city and principal reason for its high position on our countdown – its ancient Roman bathhouse. This extravagant building, which sits within splashing distance of the medieval abbey, is one of the best-preserved Roman spas in the world.


British wonders: 20 Snowdonia National ParkLlanberis, near Snowdonia (Image © Britainonview)

Location: Northern Wales
What’s the damage? Free
In a country brimming with mountainous beauty spots, this national park surely takes the crown. Snowdonia has the highest mountains and steepest valleys of anywhere in Wales, England or Northern Ireland. It’s a delight for anyone with a half-decent pair of hiking boots to explore.
Mt Snowdon itself is 1,085m high (its peak accessible on foot or by mountain railway), and numerous other jagged peaks invite ascent. The rock-climbing, white-water rafting, mountain biking and pony trekking are also excellent.
And when you have had it with physical exertion, the surrounding coastline features a string of World-Heritage listed medieval castles, vintage mining railways and beautiful sandy beaches to collapse upon.

British wonders: 21 Neolithic OrkneyRing of Brodgar stone circle (Image © Britainonview)

Location: Orkney Islands, northern Scotland
What’s the damage? Varied
If you thought the Pyramids were inconceivably old, you might be surprised to learn that the wild and windswept Orkney Islands - off the north coast of Scotland – are home to prehistoric wonders that predate them. Now a World Heritage site, the heart of neolithic Orkney in the West Mainland encompasses several thrilling sites of tremendous archaeological significance.
For starters, the bulbous, 5,000-year-old burial bound of Maes Howe is the finest chambered tomb in Western Europe. During the winter solstice, the sun sets along its stone passageway, striking a cairn in the central chamber with astonishing precision. Nearby are the standing stones of Stenness, erected around 2500BC, and the Ring of Brodgar, a stone circle of 20 monoliths, some over 5m high. And then there is Skara Brae, a staggeringly well-preserved 4,500-year-old prehistoric village, complete with stone furniture.

British wonders: 16 Lincoln Cathedral

Lincoln Cathedral illuminated at night (Image © Britainonview)

Location: Lincolnshire, eastern England
What’s the damage? £4
Of all of England’s stunning Gothic cathedrals, Lincoln has to be one of the finest. Grotesque and roguish carvings adorn the exterior and interior, with maniacal devils, kings, dragons and hunters leering over the Great West Door and quirky characters hiding out in the choir screen and rafters of the interior.
The Norman cathedral was largely reconstructed during the 12th and 13th-centuries. It’s perched smugly atop a hill steep enough to challenge the most ardent pilgrim, amid a tangle of cobbled Tudor streets thick with half-timbered buildings. Opposite it is an unusual Norman castle – the site of ferocious civil war battles and home to a rare copy of the Magna Carta.


British wonders: 17 GreenwichA curator at work on a 17th-century clock at Greenwich observatory (Image © Johnny Green/PA)

Location: south-east London
What’s the damage? Free
You can actually hop between hemispheres in this charming, village-like little enclave of London. For this fascinating World Heritage site has played a pivotal role in how we make sense of the world today: specifically, in how the world at large perceives time and place. It was here in the Royal Observatory that the riddle of longitude was solved, the universal measurement of standard time Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) was born and, yes - the Meridian Line that splits eastern and western hemispheres was fixed.
Greenwich is also home to one of the capital’s loveliest parks and some exceptionally grandiose architecture by Sir Christopher Wren at the Old Royal Naval College – not to mention cosy pubs, a bustling market and the melancholy remains of the Cutty Sark, once the fastest ship in the world – now being rebuilt following a devastating fire.


British wonders: 18 Cambridge University Kings College, Cambridge (Image © britainonview/Ingrid-Rasmussen)

Location: Cambridgeshire, Eastern England
What’s the damage? Varied
This venerable 800-year-old brains trust is a must not only for its academic history but its all-round beauty – packed as it is with exquisite architecture, serene gardens and beautiful river “backs” along which punters wobble and glide.
But what makes Cambridge such an irresistible national treasure, so deserving of its place in our list, is its incredible wealth of stories – recalling everything from the discovery of DNA in a local pub to the birth of the childhood favourite Winnie the Pooh. The university has spawned 83 Nobel Prize winners (more than any other academic institution), 13 British prime ministers and a who’s who of British writers.

British wonders: 13 Canterbury Cathedral

Fan vaulting at Canterbury Cathedral (Image © Britainonview/Martin Brent)

Location: Kent, south-east England
What’s the damage? Adult £7
It is hard to conceive of a more majestic mother church for Anglicanism than this splendid early Gothic cathedral. A reservoir of more than a 1,000 years of Christian history, it resonates with spellbinding stories and is crammed with imposing architecture – although its walls also whisper audibly of warfare and bloodshed.
One of England's most notorious warmongers, Edward the Black Prince, was buried here in 1376. And as every schoolchild knows, the gruesome murder of Archbishop Thomas Becket happened right here at the altar – propelling him to sainthood and converting the cathedral into one of Europe's top pilgrimage sites.
The cathedral is the centrepiece of the city's World Heritage site, but there’s plenty more to see beyond its walls – not least the 1,400-year-old remains of St Augustine's Abbey and some of the region’s finest pubs.


British wonders: 14 St Paul’s CathedralSt Paul's Cathedral at dusk (Image © Britainonview/McCormick McAdam)

Location: Central London
What’s the damage? Adult £10
With a dome second only in magnitude to St Peters in Rome, St Paul’s Cathedral is not only one of London’s most striking architectural gems but also one of the most enduring symbols of Great British grit.
Sir Christopher Wren rebuilt it from the ashes of its predecessor in 1675, following the Great Fire of 1666. Then it miraculously dodged the bombs of the WWII blitz, making it a national icon of resilience.
Climb to the dome for fabulous views outside, and while inside test out the so-called Whispering Gallery, where if you talk to the wall on one side, your words should carry 32m to the opposite side.

British wonders: 15 National GalleryA Rembrandt self-portrait at the National Gallery (Image © PA Archive)

Location: Central London
What’s the damage? Free
With more than 2,300 European masterpieces, dating back around 800 years, the National Gallery must fall near the top of every art-lover’s list. Situated in the heart of London’s tourist district, above Trafalgar Square and a short walk from Buckingham Palace, its star attractions include works by da Vinci, Van Gogh, Turner, Monet, Seurat, Botticelli, Constable, Cézanne, Raphael, Rembrandt and Michelangelo …  the list goes on and on.

British wonders: 10 Portsmouth Historic Dockyard

Lord Nelson's warship HMS Victory at Portsmouth Historic Dockyard (Image © Britainonview/Rod Edwards)

Location: Hampshire, south coast
What’s the damage? Unlimited admission £17.50
The brawny port of Portsmouth is the principal base of Britain's Royal Navy, and its historic dockyard is one of England's most enthralling military centres.
You can hop aboard Lord Nelson's triumphant flagship HMS Victory, which won the day at Trafalgar in 1805 and was the scene for his “Kiss me, Hardy ...” dying words. Then skip next door to see what remains of Henry VIII's beloved 16th-century warship the Mary Rose, which sank off Portsmouth in 1545. Its vast bulk was salvaged from its watery grave in 1982 and is now kept in a ghostly mist of seawater to prevent disintegration.
Other highlights of the dockyard are the handsome 19th-century HMS Warrior and an interactive wargames museum to inspire young recruits.


British wonders: 11 Ironbridge GorgeIronbridge Gorge reflected (Image © David Jones/PA)

Location: Shropshire, the Marches
What’s the damage? £14.95 for all 10 museums
Though it is hard to imagine today, the Industrial Revolution was dramatically jump-started in this sleepy river gorge 300 years ago. The story began modestly in 1709 when a young Abraham Darby set himself the challenge of smelting iron ore using coke. His success was a breakthrough that would irreversibly change the world by allowing mass-production of iron. Innovative forging methods swiftly followed, allowing Abraham Darby III to dumbfound the world with its very first cast iron bridge, built here in 1779 and still standing to this day.
Ten superb museums tell the Ironbridge story and aim to inspire the younger generation with an interactive science museum, an astonishingly faithful reconstructed Victorian town and more.


British wonders: 12 Westminster
Inner view of Westminster Cathedral (Image © Britainonview)

Location: Central London
What’s the damage? Adult £12
Swamped by more than 1,000 years of history, Westminster Abbey has seen the coronation of almost every sovereign since 1066 and is the final resting place of 17 of them – not to mention a sizeable population of other national luminaries, from poets to prime ministers and scientists to soldiers.
The present church, rebuilt by Henry III in 1245, is one of the finest examples of Early English Gothic in existence. Together with nearby Westminster Palace and St Margaret’s Church, it forms one of three World Heritage sites in the capital.
If that’s not already enough to earn an elevated position in our countdown, the ever-popular tourist attractions of Big Ben and the Houses of Parliament lie alongside, plus the London Eye is a short hop across the river.

British wonders: 7 Giants Causeway

Giants Causeway, a World Heritage site (Image © Britainonview/Martin Brent)

Location: North Antrim, Northern Ireland
What’s the damage? Free
Another World Heritage site, the Giants Causeway on Northern Ireland’s Atlantic coastline is one of Britain’s most distinctive sights. A geological freak, it is formed of tens of thousands of great hexagonal columns of volcanic rock that fit together in unnerving symmetry. The tallest are 12m high and the solidified lava in the cliffs is up to 28m thick.
The more romantic explanation for this quirk of nature is that it is the work of the ancient Irish giant Finn McCool, who fell in love with a lady giant living on a Hebridean island, and thus he built a causeway to bring her back to Ulster.
The surrounding cliffs also afford dramatic views, and long walks beckon along the surrounding coastline.


British wonders: 8 Hadrian’s Wall
A hiker follows Hadrian's Wall (Image © Rod Edwards/Britainonview)

Location: Cumbria-Tyne & Wear, northern England
What’s the damage? Free
An astounding, 73-mile testament to ambition and sheer bloody-minded tenacity, Hadrian’s Wall is Britain’s biggest Roman monument– and the largest ancient monument in northern Europe.
Running from the western Solway Firth almost to the mouth of the Tyne in the east, this 1,900-year-old World Heritage site is estimated to have been about 5m high and 3m thick and took at least three legions more than six years to build – including an accompanying string of 16 forts. Contrary to popular belief, it wasn’t built to keep the hairy Scottish barbarians out: rather it was a down-to-earth territorial marker and handy customs post.
But whatever its backstory, Hadrian’s Wall is one of northern England’s great hikes, through lush hills and over windswept basalt ridges to Northumberland National Park and Newcastle.

British wonders:  9 The Tate Galleries of LondonSculpture outside Tate Modern Museum (Image © Britainonview/Jasmine Teer)

Location: Central London
What’s the damage? Free
We have the inventor of the sugar cube – Henry Tate – to thank for two of our nation’s top free-entry treasures: Tate Britain, and its upstart sibling, Tate Modern. If we are sticking strictly to British treasures, then the original gallery is our winner: founded in 1897, it is now devoted entirely to national art, from the likes of Blake, the Hogarths, Bacon, Gainsborough, Whistler, Spencer and Turner right up to his namesake modern art competition, the Turner Prize.
But the tremendous Tate Modern can claim the crown as the largest modern art gallery in the world – and one of the most outstanding. Expect to see work by international superstars such as Monet, Picasso, Dalí, Warhol and Pollock for starters – and to be awestruck by this former power station’s cavernous Turbine Hall, thought to be the world’s largest indoor sculpture space.

British wonders: 4 Lake District

Wastwater, in the Lake District (Image © Britainonview)

Location: Cumbria, north-east England
What’s the damage? Free
This is the closest thing England has to the breathtaking landscapes of the Alps – a sweeping panorama of bulging mountains, razor-sharp crags, scree-covered slopes and huge, glassy lakes. Few places in England can rival it for sheer scenic charm. It is also home to rare wildlife including England’s only golden eagles and the endangered red squirrel.
Little surprise, then, that the Lake District is one of Britain’s favourite spots to enjoy the great outdoors, but there are also plenty of historical and cultural attractions for rainy days - from slate mines and a ruined abbey to the homes of the famous scribblers William Wordworth and Beatrix Potter.

British wonders: 5 British MuseumBritish Museum Great Court (Image © Chris Young/PA)

Location: central London
What’s the damage? Free
Nowhere in Britain can rival the British Museum for sheer cultural clout. One of the nation’s top free attractions, it is also Britain’s biggest museum and one of the world’s oldest collections, boasting immense Egyptian, Greek, Oriental and Roman galleries among other booty. Such wonders as the Rosetta stone, the Parthenon sculptures and treasures of the Sutton Hoo burial ship reside here.
But before you even reach the exhibitions, prepare to be awestruck by the luminescent Great Court, revamped in a spectacle of glass and steel by Norman Foster for the new millennium. In its heart is the Central Reading Room, in which Karl Marx wrote The Communist Manifesto.

British wonders: 6 Tower HillYeoman warder Moira Cameron - the first female Beefeater in the 522-year history of the British guard corps - patrols the Tower of London (Image © AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)

Location: Central London
What’s the damage? Tower of London admission £16.50
There is simply no more storied building in Britain than the infamous Tower of London. This World Heritage site has never been far from the bloody heart of English history since William the Conqueror laid its first stones in 1078. A former royal residence, treasury, mint, prison and arsenal, it is quite simply saturated by national history.
The site of many a royal decapitation, murder and imprisonment – it’s also home to the Crown Jewels, London’s oldest church, the famous ravens and a small army of Tudor-costumed Beefeaters. And of course, the tower’s famous neighbour is the suitably pompous but comparatively modern Tower Bridge, built in 1894.