Sacred Britain: A Guide to Places that Stir the Soul

Front Cover
Bradt Travel Guides, 2011 - Religion - 240 pages
Britain is packed with places to visit that can be called 'sacred'. Many are mainstream tourist sites, such as Iona, Lindisfarne and Stonehenge. Many more are out-of-the-way pilgrimage destinations, druidic circles, holy wells or obscure islands that few people would find without this book. Some are only recognised as 'sacred' by people with a special interest: Karl Marx's tomb in Highgate cemetery, the island on Althorp where Princess Diana is buried, or Twickenham rugby stadium. This is a travel guidebook to places in England, Scotland and Wales associated with a sense of the sacred. The book journeys from pilgrimage sites with tombs of martyrs and scenes of medieval miracles to the remote islands of Iona, Bardsey and Lindisfarne, as well as to modern Buddhist, Hindu and Islamic shrines. It visits pre-historic stone circles and ancient chalk hill carvings such as the phallic Cerne Abbas giant. As well as sites of myth, legend, and apparition it covers shrines to philosophers and locations revered for their connections with art, music, literature, sport, and crime.
 

Contents

London
1
Southeastern England
21
Southwestern England
45
Central and Eastern England
75
Colour section 2
86
Northern England
105
Wales
147
Scotland
171
Colour section 3
182
A guide to the sacred sites in this guide
206
Index
211
Back cover
215
Back flap
216
Copyright

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About the author (2011)

Martin Symington is a UK-based freelance travel journalist and author. His writing has won many awards, including the British Guild of Travel Writers' Travel Writer of the Year in 2005.

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