Guide to England
Must See England
- Brighton Royal Pavilion
- Canterbury Cathedral
- Durham
- Highgate Cemetery
- Isles of Scilly
- Lake District
- New Forest
- Northumberland
- Oxford
- Richmond Castle
- Roman Baths Museum
- Shakespeare's Globe
- Shropshire
- Stonehenge
- Tate Modern
- The Cotswolds
- Westminster Abbey
- Yorkshire Dales National Park
Places in England
In association with:
At a glance
Until recently England was generally thought of as a gentle, fabled land freeze-framed sometime in the 1930s, home of the post office, country pub and vicarage. It's now better known for vibrant cities with great nightlife and attractions, contrasted with green and pleasant countryside.
From Stonehenge and Tower Bridge to Eton and Oxford, England is loaded with cherished icons of a past era. But it also does modernity with a confidence and panache left over from its days in the never-setting sun. Fashion, fine dining, clubbing, shopping - England's rates with the world's best.
When to go
Anyone who spends any extended period of time in England will sympathise with the locals' obsession with the weather, although in relative terms the climate is mild and the rainfall is not spectacular. The least hospitable months for visitors are November to February - it's cold and the days are short. March and October are marginal - there's more daylight but it can still be pretty chilly. April to September are undoubtedly the best months, and this is, unsurprisingly, when most sights are open, and when most people visit. However, July and August are the busiest months, and best avoided if at all possible. The crowds on the coast, at the national parks, in London and popular towns like Oxford, Bath and York have to be seen to be believed.
Fast Facts
- Full name:
- England
- Capital city:
- London
- Area:
- 129,720 sq km / 50,085 sq miles
- Population:
- 51,000,000
- Time Zone:
- GMT/UTC 0 (Greenwich Mean Time)
- Language:
- English (official)
Perhaps England's greatest cultural export has been the English language, the current lingua franca of the international community. There are astonishing regional variations in accents, and it is not unusual to find those in southern England claiming to need an interpreter to communicate with anyone living north of Oxford.
- Religion:
- Church of England, Catholic, Methodist, Muslim, Jewish, Sikh and Hindu.
- Currency:
- pound sterling
- Electricity:
- 240V 50Hz
- Electric plug details:
- British-style plug with two flat blades and one flat grounding blade

