Our first full day in the UK was spent in Bath (no, not in the bath). What a magnificent place it
is. The problem with kicking off your tour in a place like this is that you run
the very real risk of everything which follows being, well, a disappointment
(I’m sure that won’t happen). It really is the home of Georgian architecture.
Fortunately, we really love Georgian buildings – the Georgians really knew what
elegance and style was all about (not to mention pomposity).
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| The Circus, Bath |
Bath, or Aquae Sullis, as it was known in Roman times, is
perhaps best known for its Roman baths. A visit to these baths is about as
close as you can get to life in Roman Britannia. It a nutshell, they are simply
amazing. Those Roman’s certainly knew how to live (except, of course, if you
were unfortunate enough to be a slave). The baths were built atop a natural
heated spring, the water being as much as 10,000 years old.
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| The Roman Baths |
The other great stand out today, apart from the four pack of
ice-creams from Waitrose for 2 pounds, was the Bath Abbey (or the Yabby, which
I kept calling it until I saw it written). This beautiful abbey dates back to
1499, but it was actually built on the site of an even older Norman church
which predates it by at least a couple of centuries (over here, what’s a few
hundred years between friends). Even for an atheist like me, it was a pretty
awe inspiring experience.
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| The Abbey |
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| Typical Bath Street |
So, it’s goodbye to Bath and on to Bristol,
well, it’s really only a 15 minute drive. Tomorrow, we visit what Bristol has
to offer, including the Avon River (which we also walked along in Bath), the
famous Brunel suspension bridge, and probably lots more – hmmm, I wonder if
they have a Waitrose there?
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| Pulteney Street Bridge |
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What have the Romans ever done for us? Well, baths obviously. Fantastic photos you guys. Keep it up. Love Neil and Gill.
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