Labels

Aberdeenshire (21) Angus (4) antiquities (87) Argyll and Bute (35) Arran (7) art (37) birds (231) bridge (9) Caithness (12) Carmarthenshire (5) castle (165) Ceredigion (9) Channel Islands (13) Cheshire West and Cheshire (1) City and County of Swansea (1) City of Bristol (2) City of Edinburgh (4) Conwy (8) Cornwall (74) County Antrim (19) County Down (23) County Durham (3) County Londonderry (4) Cumbria (19) Denbighshire (2) Devon (48) diving (9) Dorset (18) Dumfries and Galloway (22) Dundee City (2) East Lothian (6) East Sussex (16) East Yorkshire (6) English Riviera (3) Essex (17) Fife (19) Flintshire (1) food (13) fossils (14) gardens (28) Ghosts (35) Glamorgan (1) Gower (7) Guernsey (4) Gwent (1) Gwynedd (19) Hampshire (13) Highland (72) Inner Hebrides (42) Inverclyde (5) Islay (8) Isle of Anglesey (14) Isle Of Man (7) Isle Of Wight (10) Isles of Scilly (3) Jersey (7) Kent (22) Lancashire (8) Lewis and Harris (7) lighthouse (62) Lincolnshire (8) Merseyside (8) Mid Glamorgan (1) mining (23) Moray (10) Mull (8) Norfolk (21) North Ayrshire (13) North Yorkshire (12) Northern Ireland (45) Northumberland (17) Orkney (10) Outer Hebrides (14) Pembrokeshire (27) pubs (47) Ross and Cromarty (20) Scotland (300) Scottish Borders (3) Shetland (14) shipwrecks (42) Skye (12) smuggling (48) Somerset (9) South Ayrshire (6) South Glamorgan (5) South Gloucestershire (1) Suffolk (18) surfing (84) Sutherland (16) Tyne and Wear (10) Wales (93) wartime (75) webcams (232) West Dunbartonshire (3) West Glamorgan (9) West Sussex (9)

Monday 6 June 2011

SEAFORD

Seaford has a long history stretching back to at least Roman times. The remains of Roman villas have been found in the locality, a reminder that there was once a Roman station here, and that there was a large Roman camp on the hill above the town. Moving forward to Saxon times, King Alfred The Great had a palace at nearby West Dean, and it is thought he used the area as a base for his fleet in his quest to mount a defence against the Vikings. Seaford subsequently became an important trading port, for exporting wool and importing wine. However, the combined evils of the Hundred Years War and the Black Death led to a serious decline. Nowadays, Seaford is a quiet coastal town whose attractions include the view eastwards towards the Seven Sisters. One of the best places for viewing them is Cuckmere Haven at the mouth of the Cuckmere Valley, an area of downland within the Seven Sisters Country Park which is looked after by the National Trust and visited by a wide variety of birds and over-wintering wildfowl. There is also an array of marine life to be found in the rock pools of Cuckmere Haven.

Webcam view of Seaford Beach.

Map of the area.

File:Seaford beach, East Sussex (2003).jpg
Seaford beach, East Sussex (2003). Photo by Peter Jordan, via Wikimedia Commons





No comments:

Post a Comment