The Great Tours – England, Scotland & Wales
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Where do you begin with so many gorgeous and intriguing locations to visit? What are the most recognized attractions to see, and where are the hidden jewels that many travelers overlook? Allow us to assist you in making the most of your journey around this magnificent island.
Whatever you want to explore in this spectacular area, The Great Tours: England, Scotland, and Wales is the ideal companion. These 36 riveting lectures, taught by respected Professor Patrick Allitt, a British-born researcher who teaches at Emory University, give you an insider’s perspective on traveling across Great Britain. Whether you’re planning a week-long vacation, a month-long grand tour, or simply want to see England, Scotland, and Wales from afar, this visually immersive course pulls Great Britain into your living room and provides you with all the information you need to plan the trip of a lifetime.
Go above and beyond the Guidebook
Learn the historical and cultural background required to appreciate some of Britain’s most popular attractions, such as:
Stonehenge
Buckingham Palace is located in London.
St. Paul’s Cathedral and the Houses of Parliament
The Lake District in England
Edinburgh is a city in Scotland.
Cardiff, Wales, and many more places
Professor Allitt takes you to worthwhile places that are frequently overrun with visitors and long queues, providing you access to these attractions without the crowds while also demonstrating which of these spots are truly worth seeing in person. Perhaps more importantly, he shows you to numerous missed or little-known treasures in Britain that will surprise and amaze even the most seasoned tourist. This is the insider information that travel guides and tour programs cannot provide. Consider Avebury, a stunning complex of stone structures usually neglected in favor of the more famous Stonehenge, as Professor Allitt walks you around Great Britain:
Visit Quarry Bank Mill in Cheshire, the greatest destination in the UK to learn about the history of the Industrial Revolution.
Visit the gorgeous (and terrible) Scottish valley of Glencoe, as well as a ring of UNESCO World Heritage Site castles in Wales.
Explore the intriguing history of the often-overlooked English Midlands, see East Anglia’s country homes, and trek across Cornwall’s untamed moorlands.
Everything in the World Is a Stage
One of the great joys of travel is visiting locations you’ve only read about in novels or seen in passing on television. Similarly, knowing anything about a location before visiting it enhances your experience of seeing it in person. With that in mind, Professor Allitt’s first assignment in this course is to study Britain’s more than 1,000-year history.
A succession of invasions influenced Britain’s early history significantly. The Romans were the first to arrive, and you can see the limit of the Roman Empire at Hadrian’s Wall, on the Anglo-Scottish boundary. Following the Roman departure, the Anglo-Saxons, Vikings, and Normans all raided and finally settled on the shore. Early British history was characterized by war, which led in the creation of many of the medieval castles that must be near the top of any tourist’s itinerary. Lindisfarne, a monastery that was the site of a major Viking attack; The Tower of London, with its remarkable stone keep and outer wall; Dover Castle, overlooking the great cliffs; and Warwick Castle, a must-see crowd-pleaser in the heart of the kingdom, are among the many monuments and fortifications you will encounter.
Christianity was the other big force in early British history, which you will learn about via its magnificent churches. Consider Norwich Cathedral, Canterbury, and, most notably, Westminster Abbey.
Following the multiple invasions of the Middle Ages, Britain saw many hundred years of political transformation, with conflict between the kings and Parliament, the English and the Scots, Catholics and Anglicans, and a variety of other fights. Professor Allitt tells the events from the Battle of Bosworth Field in 1485 to Queen Victoria’s reign and into the twentieth century.
Professor Allitt shows you the communities, mills, quarries, canals, and railroad lines that made Great Britain the powerhouse it is today, in addition to the famed monasteries, government buildings, country mansions, and battles where history was made.
The Untraveled Path
A tourist to London may spend a year and yet not see everything worth seeing. The city has a plethora of museums, monuments, parks, and vibrant districts. The beautiful Victoria and Albert Museum, the British Museum, Trafalgar Square, Kensington, Piccadilly Circus, and, of course, Buckingham Palace, Big Ben, and the Houses of Parliament are among the highlights of Professor Allitt’s London trip.
However, as Professor Allitt points out, London is in many respects the least representative region of the United Kingdom. To truly comprehend this country, you must go outside the metropolis, and this course takes you throughout the island region by region, including four substantial lectures dedicated to Scotland and Wales. You’ll see the Royal Mile in Edinburgh, take a train to the top of Mount Snowden in Wales, and much more.
In England, you’ll visit the West Country to trace Arthurian legends at iconic locations such as Tintagel Castle and Glastonbury Tor; spend time in the northern industrial cities of Manchester and Liverpool; walk through Nottinghamshire’s Robin Hood’s Sherwood Forest; and explore the gentle, rustic, and often remote land of East Anglia. Any of these areas is worth a day trip or a longer stay.
Though this course does not cover particular transportation alternatives, Professor Allitt does provide many intriguing morsels on the history of Britain’s canals and railroads, the London underground, and the island’s major roadways. For his part, he promotes walking as an excellent means of transportation, and hikers will find chances throughout the country, from the peaceful Cotswolds to the spectacular coastal pathways of Southwest England.
From Baker Street to the Lighthouse, Great Britain has practically every aesthetic and cultural interest you can think of. Literature fans will be able to connect several locations with their favorite writers, from the gorgeous Lake District favored by Wordsworth to the Oxford haunts of C. S. Lewis and J. R. R. Tolkien—and, of course, Sherlock Holmes’ famed Baker Street. Professor Allitt takes you to locations linked with hundreds of years of great writers, including: Chaucer and Shakespeare, national bards Novelists Wordsworth, Keats, Shelley, and Byron Austen, Dickens, the Bront sisters, Woolf, and George Orwell
He also introduces you to the rich visual arts legacy and artists. You’ll learn about some of the top art museums in the country while reflecting on the lives and works of painters including William Hogarth, Joseph Turner, and Thomas Gainsborough.
London’s National Gallery
The National Portrait Gallery is a museum in London.
Tate Modern is a museum in London.
Edinburgh’s Scottish National Gallery
Cardiff’s National Museum
Great Britain has a rich literary and cultural legacy, but its centuries-long gardening tradition is equally impressive. The island’s moderate and moist climate makes it a great place for flower displays, and the gardens in England, Scotland, and Wales are possibly unrivaled in the world. Professor Allitt brings you to some of the best, including the following:
Wiltshire’s Stourhead Estate
Oxford University’s Botanic Garden
London’s Kew Gardens
Wales’ Bodnant Garden and more
An Island Nation’s Ode
There is no replacement for travel. Some things you simply must witness for yourself. The Great Tours: England, Scotland, and Wales, on the other hand, is the next best thing. You will see all of the sights Professor Allitt describes—and, owing to the assistance of a professional accent specialist in some of the courses, you will also be able to hear the sounds of the Scottish brogue, the Welsh voice, the Cockney dialect, and more.
If you are planning a vacation to the United Kingdom, you will be well-prepared to enjoy a rich experience, with knowledge of where to go, what to do, and what it all means. Even if you only intend to visit Great Britain from the comfort of your own home, Professor Allitt will root you in the history, people, terrain, and cultural touchstones that will enrich your understanding of this powerful nation. Every lecture in The Great Tours: England, Scotland, and Wales provides an immersive experience and astounding insight into this little island that has had a disproportionate impact on the international stage.
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