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Heritage

Crook Hall & Gardens
DLI Museum and Art Gallery
Durham Cathedral. Credit: Durham Cathedral and Jarrold Publishing 2005
Durham Cathedral, St. Cuthbert Wall Painting

Durham Cathedral a World Heritage Site shelters the body of one of England's most revered saints St Cuthbert and has attracted pilgrims for over 900 years. The adjacent imposing Durham Castle was seat of the Prince Bishops for nearly 800 years who ruled the the Palatinate of Durham as an independent state. The Prince Bishops had their own courts, coinage, armies and taxes and negotiated truces with the Scots.

The Norman Cathedral is widely regarded as one of the world's finest buildings as well as being voted Britain's Best Building by BBC Radio 4 listeners.

 

The neighbouring Castle, one of Britain's largest and best preserved Norman strongholds, towers above the City on its defensive site.  Seat of the Prince Bishops until 1832, it now houses University College, the foundation college of Durham University, England's oldest university after Oxford and Cambridge. 

 

Durham Medieval layout can still be traced in the narrow winding streets and vennels of the bustling City centre.  There are colourful outdoor and Victorian indoor markets as well as two modern shopping developments.  The recent Millennium City complex has also added a new theatre with large format cinema.  Attractive riverbanks offer you a peaceful retreat with woodland walks and boat trips on the River Wear in the heart of the City.

 

Other attractions range from Medieval Crook Hall and Gardens and the University's Botanic Garden to the DLI Museum & Durham Art Gallery and the University's Oriental Museum, so there is plenty to keep you busy on a visit to the City.

For more information click here for the official Durham visitor website: www.visitcountydurham.com