|
|||||||||||
|
ISLE OF WIGHT |
|||||||||||
|
find what your looking for on the Isle of Wight hotels dating camping |
|||||||||||
|
CAMPSITES CARAVAN SITES STATIC PARKS
|
HOTELS B & Bs HOSTELS
|
PUBS BARS NIGHTCLUBS
|
RESTAURANTS TAKE AWAYS CAFES
|
CAR BOOTS MARKETS ANTIQUE FAIRS
|
DAYS OUT THINGS TO DO email us
|
||||||
|
History of the Isle of Wight. Much of the land now making up the Isle
of Wight was deposited during the late Cretaceous, at times part of a
large river valley complex which consisted of much of the current
southern coast of England. The swamps and ponds of the region at that
time made the island excellent for the preservation of fossils, and
means that it is now one of the richest locations for finding dinosaurs
in Europe (for more information see the dinosaurs of the Isle of Wight
article). The Isle of Wight became an
island sometime after the end of the last Ice Age when post-glacial
rebound caused the land level to sink, the Solent flooding and
separating the island from the mainland. The island was part of Celtic
Britain and known to the Romans as Vectis, captured by Vespasian in the
Roman invasion. After the Roman era the Isle of Wight was settled by the
Jutes, a Germanic tribe, in the early stages of the Anglo-Saxon
invasions. The latter's corruption of Vectis into Wiht (the Latin v was
pronounced [w]) is the root of the island's name. Memorial to Charles I at
Carisbrooke CastleThe Norman Conquest created the position of Lord of
the Isle of Wight. Carisbrooke Priory and the fort of Carisbrooke Castle
were founded. The island did not come under full control of the crown
until it was sold by the dying last Norman Lord, Lady Isabella de
Fortebus, to Edward I in 1293. The Lordship thereafter became a Royal
appointment with a brief interruption when Henry de Beauchamp, 1st Duke
of Warwick was crowned King of the Isle of Wight, King Henry VI
assisting in person at the ceremony, placing the crown on his head. He
died in 1445, aged 22. With no male heir, his regal title expired with
him. Henry VIII, who developed the
Royal Navy and its permanent base at Portsmouth, fortified the island at
Yarmouth, East & West Cowes and Sandown, sometimes re-using stone
from dissolved monasteries as building material. Sir Richard Worsley,
Captain of the Island at this time, successfully commanded the
resistance to the last of the French attacks in 1545. Much later on
after the Spanish Armada in 1588 the threat of Spanish attacks remained,
and the outer fortifications of Carisbrooke Castle were built between
1597 and 1602. During the English Civil War King Charles fled to the
Isle of Wight believing he would receive sympathy from the governor
Robert Hammond. Hammond was appalled, and incarcerated the king in
Carisbrooke Castle. Osborne House and its magnificent grounds are now open to the publicQueen Victoria made Osborne House on the Isle of Wight her summer home for many years, and as a result it become a major holiday resort for members of European royalty, whose many houses could later claim descent from her through the widely flung marriages of her offspring. During her reign in 1897 the World's first radio station was set up by Marconi at the Needles battery at the western tip of the Island. In 1904 a mysterious illness began to
kill honeybee colonies on the island, and had nearly wiped out all hives
by 1907 when the disease jumped to the mainland, and decimated
beekeeping in the British Isles. Called the Isle of Wight Disease, the
cause of the mystery ailment was not identified until 1921 when it was
traced to the mite Acarapis woodi. The disease (now called Acarine
Disease) frightened many other nations because of the importance of bees
in pollination of many food plants. Laws against importation of
honeybees were passed, but this merely delayed the eventual spread of
the parasite to the rest of the world. The
Isle of Wight Festival could describe several events, but usually the
term refers to one very large rock festival that took place near Afton
Down, West Wight in 1970, following two smaller concerts in 1968 and
1969. The 1970 show was notable for being the last public performance by
Jimi Hendrix before his death and the number of attendees reaching, by
many estimates 600,000[2] despite only 50,000 tickets being sold and
overtaking the attendance at Woodstock in the previous year. The
festival was revived in 2002 and is now an annual event - with other,
smaller musical events of many different genres across the Island
becoming associated with it Places of interest Alum Bay Appuldurcombe House
Blackgang Chine Carisbrooke Castle
Dinosaur Isle
Golden Hill Fort
Fort Victoria
Isle of Wight Steam Railway
Osborne House
The Needles
Robin Hill Yarmouth Castle
Quarr Abbey |
|||||||||||
| other places of interest | |||||||||||
| bedfordshire berkshire buckinghamshire cambridgeshire cornwall cumbria devon dorset durham essex gloucs hampshire | |||||||||||
| herefordshire hertfordshire isle of wight kent leicestershire london norfolk northants nottinghamshire oxfordshire shropshire | |||||||||||
| somerset staffordshire suffolk sussex wales warwickshire west midlands wiltshire worcestershire yorkshire | |||||||||||
|
Adgestone
Afton Alverstone
Apse Heath Arreton Barton
Bathingbourne Bembridge
Bierley Binstead
Blackgang Blackwater
Bonchurch Borthwood
Bouldnor Bowcombe
Brading Branstone
Brighstone Brook
Calbourne Carisbrooke Chale
Chale Green Chillerton
Cowes Cranmore
Cross Lane Culver
Down
Downend East Cowes
Easton
Fishbourne Forest
Side Freshwater
Freshwater Bay
Gatcombe Godshill Gunville
Gurnard Hale Common
Hamstead Havenstreet
Horringford Hulverstone
Hunny Hill
Kingston Lake
Limerstone Little
Atherfield Littletown
Locksgreen Luccombe
Village
Mark's Corner Merstone
Moortown Morton
Mottistone
Nettlecombe Nettlestone Newbridge
Newchurch Newport
Newtown Ningwood
Niton Niton
Undercliff Northwood
Norton Norton Green
Nunwell
Oakfield Osborne
Parkhurst Parkhurst
Forest Porchfield Quarr Hill
Queen's Bower
Rew Street Rookley
Rookley Green Roud
Rowridge Ryde
Sandford Sandown
Seaview Shalcombe
Shalfleet Shanklin
Shide Shorwell
St Helens St
Lawrence Staplers
Steephill
Thorley Thorley
Street Thorncross Totland
Bay
Ventnor
Wellow Whippingham Whiteley
Bank Whitwell Winford Wootton
Wootton Bridge Wootton Common Wroxall
|
|||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||