Dictionary Definition
Canterbury n : a town in Kent in southeastern
England; site of the cathedral where Thomas a Becket was martyred
in 1170; seat of the archbishop and primate of the Anglican
Church
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Proper noun
CanterburyTranslations
- Anglo-Saxon: Dorwitceaster
- French: Cantorbéry
- Greek: Κάντερμπερι (Kánderberi)
- Middle English: Caunterbury
- Portuguese: Cantuária
Extensive Definition
Canterbury (pronunciation; ) is a city in eastern Kent in the South
East region of England. It lies on
the River
Stour, and along with the towns of Whitstable and
Herne
Bay is in the local
government district of the City of
Canterbury.
Originally a Celtic settlement, it was renamed
Durovernum Cantiacorum by the Roman conquerors in the first century
AD. After the Kingdom of
Kent's conversion to Christianity in 597, St Augustine
founded an episcopal
see in the city and became the first Archbishop
of Canterbury, a position that now heads the Church of
England and the worldwide Anglican
Communion. Thomas
Becket's murder at Canterbury
Cathedral in 1170 led to the cathedral becoming a place of
pilgrimage for Christians worldwide. This pilgrimage provided the
theme for Geoffery
Chaucer's 14th-century literary classic the Canterbury
Tales. The literary heritage continued with the birth of the
playwright Christopher
Marlowe in the city in the 16th century.
Many historical structures remain in the city,
including a city wall founded in Roman times and rebuilt in the
14th century, the ruins of St
Augustine's Abbey and a Norman castle,
and perhaps the oldest school in England,
The King's School. Modern additions include the University
of Kent,
Canterbury Christ Church University, the Marlowe
Theatre, and the St
Lawrence Ground, home to Kent
County Cricket Club.
History
- History of Canterbury redirects here. For the history of the regional area of this name in New Zealand, see History of Canterbury, New Zealand.
Early history
The Canterbury area has been inhabited since prehistoric times. Lower paleolithic axes, and Neolithic and Bronze Age pots have been found in the area. Canterbury was first recorded as the main settlement of the Celtic tribe, the Cantiaci, which inhabited most of Kent. In the first century AD, the Romans captured the settlement, and named it Durovernum Cantiacorum, meaning "stronghold of the Cantiaci by the alder grove". The Romans rebuilt the town, with new streets in a grid pattern, a theatre, a temple, a forum and public baths. In the late third century, to defend against attack from barbarians, the Romans built around the town an earth bank and a wall with seven gates, which enclosed an area of .After the
Romans left Britain in 410 AD, Durovernum Cantiacorum
was abandoned, apart from a few farmers, and gradually decayed.
Over the next 100 years, a Saxon community
formed within the city walls, as Jutish refugees
arrived and intermarried with the locals. The Saxons named the town
Cantwaraburh, meaning "Kent people's stronghold". In 597 AD,
Pope
Gregory the Great sent Augustine
to convert King Æthelberht
of Kent to Christianity. After the conversion, Canterbury, as a
Roman town, was chosen by Augustine as the centre for an episcopal
see in Kent, and an abbey and cathedral were built. Augustine
thus became the first Archbishop
of Canterbury. The town's new importance led to its revival,
and trades developed in pottery, textiles and leather. By 630, gold
coins were being struck at the Canterbury mint. In 672 the Synod of
Hertford gave the see of Canterbury authority over the entire
English Church. A second wave of Danish attacks began in 991, and
in 1011 the cathedral was burnt and Archbishop Alphege was killed.
Remembering the destruction caused by the Danes, the inhabitants of
Canterbury did not resist William
the Conqueror's invasion in 1066.
After the murder of Archbishop Thomas
à Becket at the cathedral in 1170, Canterbury became one of the
most notable towns in Europe, as pilgrims from all parts of
Christendom came to visit his shrine. This pilgrimage provided the
framework for Geoffrey
Chaucer's 14th-century collection of stories, The Canterbury
Tales.
14th–17th centuries
The Black Death hit Canterbury in 1348. At 10,000, Canterbury had the 10th largest population in England; by the early 16th century, the population had fallen to 3,000. In 1363, during the Hundred Years' War, a Commission of Inquiry found that disrepair, stone-robbing and ditch-filling had led to the Roman wall becoming eroded. Between 1378 and 1402, the wall was virtually rebuilt, and new wall towers were added. In 1381, during the Peasants' Revolt, the castle and Archbishop's Palace were sacked, and Archbishop Sudbury was beheaded in London. Sudbury is still remembered annually by the Christmas mayoral procession to his tomb at Canterbury Cathedral. In 1413 Henry IV became the first and only sovereign to be buried at the cathedral. In 1448 Canterbury was granted a City Charter, which gave it a mayor and a high sheriff; the city still has a Lord Mayor and Sheriff. In 1504 the cathedral's main tower, the Bell Harry Tower, was completed, ending 400 years of building.During the
Dissolution of the Monasteries, the city's priory, nunnery and three friaries were closed. St
Augustine's Abbey, the 14th richest in England at the time, was
surrendered to the Crown, and its church and cloister were levelled. Thomas
Becket's shrine was demolished and all the gold, silver and jewels
were removed to the Tower of London, and Becket's images, name and
feasts were obliterated throughout the kingdom, ending the
pilgrimages. The rest of the abbey was dismantled over the next
15 years, although part of the site was converted to a
palace.
By the 7th century, Canterbury's population was
5,000; of whom, 2,000 were French-speaking Protestant Huguenots, who
had begun fleeing persecution and war in the Spanish
Netherlands in the mid-16th century. The Huguenots introduced
silk weaving into the city, which by 1676 had outstripped wool
weaving.
In 1647, during the English
Civil War, riots broke out when Canterbury's puritan mayor
banned church services on Christmas Day. The rioters' trial the
following year led to a Kent revolt against the Parliamentarian
forces, contributing to the start of the second
phase of the war. However, Canterbury surrendered peacefully to
the Parliamentarians after their victory at the Battle
of Maidstone.
18th century–present
By 1770 the castle had come into disrepair, and many parts of the castle were demolished during the late 18th century and early 19th century. In 1787 all the gates in the city wall, except for Westgate the city jail, were demolished as a result of a commission that found them impeding to new coach travel. By 1820 the city's silk industry had been killed by imported Indian muslins. The Canterbury and Whitstable Railway, the world's first passenger railway, was opened in 1830. Between 1830 and 1900, the city's population grew from 15,000 to 24,000. During the Second World War, 10,445 bombs dropped during 135 separate raids destroyed 731 homes and 296 other buildings in the city, including the Simon Langton Grammar Schools, and 115 people were killed. The most devastating raid was on 1 June 1942 during the Baedecker Blitz.Before the end of the war, architect Charles
Holden drew up plans to redevelop the city centre, but locals
were so opposed that the Citizens' Defence Association was formed
and swept to power in the 1945 municipal elections. Post-war
rebuilding of the city centre eventually began 10 years
after the war. A ring-road was constructed outside the city walls
some time after in stages to alleviate growing traffic problems in
the city centre, which was later pedestrianised. The biggest
expansion to the city occurred in the 1960s, with the arrival of
the
University of Kent at Canterbury and
Christ Church College. Between 1999 and 2005, the Whitefriars
shopping centre underwent major redevelopment. In 2000, during the
redevelopment, a major archaeological project took place, known as
the Big Dig, which was supported by Channel
Four's Time
Team.
Governance
Since 1987, the Member of Parliament for the Canterbury constituency, which includes Whitstable, has been the Conservative Julian Brazier. At the 2005 general election, the Conservatives won a majority of 7,471 and 44.4% of the vote in the Canterbury constituency. Labour won 28.7% of the vote, Liberal Democrats 21.1%, the Green Party 3.2%, United Kingdom Independence Party 1.9%, and the Legalise Cannabis Alliance 0.7%.Canterbury, along with Whitstable and Herne Bay,
is in the City of
Canterbury local
government district. The city's urban area consists of the six
electoral wards of
Barton, Harbledown, Northgate, St Stephens, Westgate, and Wincheap.
These wards have fifteen of the fifty seats on the Canterbury
City Council. As of May 2008, eleven of those seats were held by
the Liberal
Democrats, three by the Conservatives
and one was vacant.
The city became a county
corporate in 1461, and later a county
borough under the
Local Government Act 1888. In 1974 it lost its status as the
smallest county borough in England, after the
Local Government Act 1972, and came under the control of
Kent
County Council.
Geography
Canterbury is located at (51.275, 1.087) in east Kent, about east-southeast of London. The coastal towns of Herne Bay and Whitstable are to the north, and Faversham is to the northwest. Nearby villages include Rough Common, Sturry and Tyler Hill. The civil parish of Thanington Without is to the southwest; the rest of the city is unparished. Harbledown, Wincheap and Hales Place are suburbs of the city.The city is on the River Stour
or Great
Stour, flowing from its source at Lenham north-east
through Ashford to
the English
Channel at Sandwich.
The river divides south east of the city, one branch flowing though
the city, the other around the position of the former walls. The
two branches rejoin or are linked several times, but finally
recombine around the town of Fordwich, on the
edge of the marshland north east of the city. The Stour is
navigable on the tidal section to Fordwich, although above this
point canoes and other small craft can be used. Punts are available
for hire in Canterbury.
The geology of the area consists
mainly of brickearth
overlying chalk. Tertiary sands
overlain by London clay
form St. Thomas's Hill and St. Stephen's Hill about a mile
northwest of the city centre.
Demography
As of the 2001 UK census, the total population of the city's urban area wards was 43,432.Residents of the city had an average age of
37.1 years, younger than the 40.2% average throughout the
district and the 38.6 average for England. Of the 17,536
households, 35% were one-person households, 39% were couples, 10%
were lone parents, and 15% other. Of those aged 16–74 in
the city, 27% had a higher
education qualification, higher than the 20% national
average.
Compared with the rest of England, the city had
an above-average proportion of foreign-born residents, at around
12%. Ninety-five percent of residents were recorded as white; the
largest minority group was recorded as Asian, at 1.8% of the
population. Religion was recorded as 68.2% Christian, 1.1% Muslim,
0.5% Buddhist, 0.8% Hindu, 0.2% Jewish, and 0.1% Sikh. The rest
either had no religion, an alternative religion, or did not state
their religion.
Economy
Canterbury district retains approximately 4,761 businesses, up to 60,000 full- and part-time employees and worth £1.3 billion in 2001. This makes the district the second largest economy in Kent. In April 2008, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, controversially demanded that salary caps should be implemented to curb the pay of the rich in an attempt to manage to growth of the economy. The city's economy benefits mainly from significant economic projects such as the Canterbury Enterprise Hub, Lakesview International Business Park and the Whitefriars retail development.Surviving structures from the Roman times include
Queningate, a blocked gate in the city wall, and the Dane John
Mound, once part of a Roman cemetery. The Dane John Gardens were
built beside the mound in the 18th century, and a memorial was
placed on the mound's summit. A windmill
was on the mound between 1731 and 1839.
The ruins of the Norman Canterbury
Castle and St Augustine's Abbey are both open to the public.
The medieval St Margaret's Church now houses the "The Canterbury
Tales", in which life-sized character models reconstruct Geoffrey
Chaucer's stories. The Westgate is now a museum relating to its
history as a jail, and the medieval church of St Alphege is now the
Canterbury Environment Centre. The
Old Synagogue at Canterbury, now the King's School Music Room,
is one of only two Egyptian
Revival synagogues still standing. The city centre contains
many timber-framed 16th- and 17th -century houses, including the
"Old Weaver's House" used by the Hugenots.
St Martin's Mill is the only surviving mill out of the six
known to have stood in Canterbury. It was built in 1817 and worked
until 1890; it is now a house conversion.
Theatres
The town's theatre and concert hall is the Marlowe Theatre named after Christopher Marlowe who was born in the city in Elizabethan times. He was baptised in the city's St George's Church, which was destroyed during the Second World War. The old Marlowe Theatre was located in St Margaret's Street and housed a repertory theatre. Another theatre – the Gulbenkian – also serves the city and can be found at the University of Kent. Theatrical performances take place at several areas of the city, for instance the Cathedral and St Augustine's Abbey. The premiere of Murder in the Cathedral by T. S. Eliot took place at Canterbury Cathedral. The oldest surviving Tudor theatre in Canterbury is now Casey's Bar, formerly known as The Shakespeare Pub. There are several theatre groups based in Canterbury, including the University of Kent Students' Union's T24 Drama Society.Music
The city gave its name to a musical genre known as the Canterbury Sound or Canterbury Scene, a group of progressive rock, avant-garde and jazz musicians based around the city during the late 1960s and early 1970s. The two most notable Canterbury bands were Soft Machine and Caravan. Over the years, with band membership changes and new bands evolving, the term has been used to describe a musical style or subgenre, rather than a regional group of musicians.The University of Kent has hosted concerts by
bands including Led Zeppelin
and The
Who. During the late seventies and early eighties the
Canterbury Odeon hosted a number of major acts, including The Cure and
Joy
Division. The Marlowe Theatre is also used for many musical
performances, such as Don McLean in
2007, and Fairport
Convention in 2008.
Sport
St Lawrence Ground is notable as one of the two grounds used regularly for first-class cricket that have a tree within the boundary (the other is Pietermaritzburg cricket ground in South Africa). It is the home ground of Kent CCC and has hosted several England games.Canterbury
City F.C. reformed in 2007 as a Community
interest company and the mens team competed in the Kent
County League Division Two (East) in 2007/08. The previous
incarnation of the club folded in 2001. Canterbury's Rugby Football
Club were founded in 1926 and became the first East Kent club to
achieve National League status when they were promoted to the
National League Division 3 South in 2006.
The Tour de
France has visited the city twice. In 1994 the tour passed
through, and in 2007 it held the finish for Stage 1. Canterbury
Hockey Club
is one of the largest clubs in the country, often succeeding to top
the English leagues in all age and sex categories. Former Olympic
gold medal winner Sean Kerly is
one of their coaches.
Sporting activities for the public are provided
at the Kingsmead Leisure Centre, which has a swimming pool and a
sports hall for football, basketball, and badminton.
Transport
Railway
Canterbury was the terminus of the Canterbury and Whitstable Railway (known locally as the Crab and Winkle line) which was a pioneer line, opened on 3 May 1830, and finally closed in 1953. Despite claims by the Stockton and Darlington Railway, the Canterbury and Whitstable was the first regular passenger steam railway in the world. The first station in Canterbury was at North Lane.Today, Canterbury has two railway
stations,
Canterbury West and
Canterbury East, both operated by
Southeastern. Canterbury West station, on the
South Eastern Railway from Ashford,
was opened on 6 February
1846, and on
13 April
the line to Ramsgate was
completed. Canterbury West is served primarily from
London Charing Cross with limited services from Victoria as
well as by trains to Ramsgate and
Margate.
Canterbury East, the more central of the two stations, was opened
by the
London, Chatham and Dover Railway on 9 July 1860. Services from
London
Victoria stop at Canterbury East (journey time around
88 minutes) and continue to Dover. A fourth
station in Canterbury was
Canterbury South on the Elham
Valley Railway, which opened in 1890 and closed in 1947. Faster
services are promised from 2009 with the introduction of high speed
trains. It is expected the journey time will be reduced by
35-40 minutes when travelling to London.
Road
Canterbury is by-passed by the A2 London to Dover Road. It is about from the M25 London orbital motorway, and from central London. The other main road through Canterbury is the A28 from Ashford to Ramsgate and Margate. The City Council has invested heavily in Park-and-Ride systems around the City's outskirts and there are three sites: at Wincheap, New Dover Road and Sturry Road. There are plans to build direct access sliproads to and from the London directions of the A2 where it meets the congested Wincheap (at present there are only slips from the A28 to and from the direction of Dover) to allow more direct access to Canterbury from the A2, but these are currently subject to local discussion. The hourly National Express coach service to and from Victoria Coach Station, which leaves from the main bus station, is typically scheduled to take two hours.Education
The city has many students as it is home to several Higher Education institutions and colleges; at the 2001 census, 22% of the population aged 16–74 were full-time students, compared with 7% throughout England. Canterbury Christ Church University was founded as a teacher training college in 1962 by the Church of England. In 1978 its range of courses began to expand into other subjects, and in 1995 it was given the power to become a University college. In 2005 it was granted full university status, and as of 2007 it had around 15,000 students. The University College for the Creative Arts has a campus at Canterbury, and near the University of Kent is the Franciscan International Study Centre, a place of study for the worldwide Franciscan Order. Chaucer College is an independent college for Japanese and other students within the campus of the University of Kent. There is also the Further Education institution, Canterbury College.Independent secondary
schools include St
Edmund's School, Kent
College, and what is often described as the oldest school in
England,
The King's School. St. Augustine established a school shortly
after his arrival in Canterbury in 597, and it is from this that
some claim The King’s School grew. Although, the documented history
of the school only began after the
Dissolution of the Monasteries in the 16th century, when the
school acquired its present name, referring to Henry
VIII.
The city's secondary grammar
schools are
Barton Court Grammar School,
Simon Langton Grammar School for Boys and
Simon Langton Girls' Grammar School; all of which in 2007 had
over 96% of their pupils gain five or more GCSEs at grades A* to
C, including English and maths. The non-selective state secondary
schools are
The Canterbury High School,
St Anselm's Catholic School, the Church of England's Archbishop's
School, and Chaucer
Technology School; all of which in 2007 had less than 30% of
their pupils gain five or more GCSEs at grades A* to
C including English and maths, except for the Archbishop's School
which achieved 55%. The Canterbury KM Extra is owned by the
Kent
Messenger Group and also has a circulation of about 55,000. The
Kentish Gazette, based in Canterbury, is a paid-for newspaper owned
by the Kent Messenger Group, which provides news on the east Kent
area and has a circulation of about 25,000.
YourCanterbury is published by KOS Media, which
also prints the popular county paper Kent on
Sunday. It also runs a webside www.yourcanterbury.co.uk giving
daily updated news and events for the city.'
kmfm for
Canterbury, Whitstable and Herne Bay is a radio station based in
Canterbury, broadcasting on 106FM. It was formerly known as kmfm
106, and before the Kent
Messenger Group took control it was known as CTFM, based on the
local postcode being CT.
CSR FM, an acronym
for "Canterbury Student Radio", broadcasts on 97.4FM from studios
at both the University
of Kent and
Canterbury Christ Church University. The station is run by a
collaboration of education establishments in the city including the
three universities. The transmitter is based at the University of
Kent, offering a good coverage of the city. CSR replaced two
existing radio stations: C4 Radio, which served Canterbury Christ
Church University, and UKC Radio,
which served the University of Kent.
Canterbury Hospital Radio (CHR) serves the
patients of the Kent and Canterbury Hospital, and Simon Langton
Boys School has a radio station, SLBSLive, which can only be picked
up on the school grounds.
Notable people
People born in Canterbury include Christopher Marlowe, TV presenter Fiona Phillips, airline entrepreneur Sir Freddie Laker, boy singer and actor Joseph McManners and actor Orlando Bloom. Mary Tourtel, the creator of Rupert Bear, lived in the town. Cricketer David Gower, physician William Harvey, writer W. Somerset MaughamSee also
References
Sources
- Lyle, Marjorie. Canterbury: 2000 Years of History. Tempus, (2002). ISBN 075241948X.
- Butler, Derek. A Century of Canterbury. WHSmith, (2002). ISBN 0750932430.
- Tellem, Geraint. Canterbury and Kent. Jarrold Publishing, (2002). ISBN 0711720797.
External links
- Canterbury City Council
- Canterbury Tourism
- Canterbury Cathedral
- Canterbury Buildings website - Archaeological and heritage site of Canterbury's buildings.
- Canterbury Archaeological Trust - Whitefriars excavations
- TimeTeam: Canterbury Big Dig
- Virtual tour
- UNESCO World Heritage Centre - World Heritage profile for Canterbury.
Canterbury in Old English (ca. 450-1100):
Dorwitceaster
Canterbury in Arabic: كانتربيري
Canterbury in Bulgarian: Кентърбъри
Canterbury in Catalan: Canterbury
Canterbury in Czech: Canterbury
Canterbury in Welsh: Caergaint
Canterbury in Danish: Canterbury
Canterbury in German: Canterbury
Canterbury in Spanish: Cantorbery
Canterbury in Esperanto: Canterbury
Canterbury in French: Cantorbéry
Canterbury in Galician: Canterbury
Canterbury in Korean: 캔터베리
Canterbury in Ido: Canterbury
Canterbury in Indonesian: Canterbury
Canterbury in Icelandic: Kantaraborg
Canterbury in Italian: Canterbury (Regno
Unito)
Canterbury in Hebrew: קנטרברי
Canterbury in Latin: Cantuaria
Canterbury in Dutch: Canterbury (Engeland)
Canterbury in Japanese: カンタベリー
Canterbury in Norwegian: Canterbury (Kent)
Canterbury in Norwegian Nynorsk:
Canterbury
Canterbury in Narom: Cantorbéry
Canterbury in Polish: Canterbury
Canterbury in Portuguese: Cantuária
Canterbury in Romanian: Canterbury
Canterbury in Russian: Кентербери
Canterbury in Simple English: Canterbury
Canterbury in Slovak: Canterbury
Canterbury in Finnish: Canterbury
Canterbury in Swedish: Canterbury
Canterbury in Vietnamese: Canterbury
Canterbury in Turkish: Canterbury
Canterbury in Volapük: Canterbury
Canterbury in Chinese: 堪特伯雷