Misplaced Pages

Sandwich Bay

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
#140859

41-405: Sandwich Bay may refer to: Sandwich Bay, Kent , England Sandwich Bay (Newfoundland and Labrador) , Canada [REDACTED] Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to

82-674: A narrow channel ... [was] called Tanatos from the death of serpents; for while it has none of its own, soil taken from it to any place whatsoever kills snakes there." The Historia Brittonum , written in the 9th century, states that " Tanet " was the name used for the island by the legendary Jutes Hengist and Horsa , while its name in Old Welsh was " Ruoi(c)hin "; this name may be translated as "gift" ( rhwych in Modern Welsh ). Other names used by Britons were " Ruim " and " Ruochim Inis ". Archaeological evidence shows that

123-466: A ticket at the toll house, or online via the Sandwich Bay website when the toll house is closed. The bay closes to visitors half an hour after sun set and re-opens half an hour before sunrise. However, night fishing is allowed if a ticket is bought in advance. Security patrol the estate and seafront 24 hours a day. The road itself runs along on the top of a concealed sea wall separating the beach from

164-571: Is named Thanet (Tanatos) from the death of serpents (cf.“death”)" Following the raids on the Isle of Sheppey commencing in 832, Thanet became a regular target for Viking attacks, its vulnerable coastal monasteries providing convenient targets for the invaders. In 851 and again in 854, the Vikings overwintered in Thanet and continued their raids in spring. In 853 there was a battle in Thanet against

205-529: The A299 , north coast route. The Thanet Coastal Path skirts the coast. There is an airport at Manston , formerly RAF Manston , but since renamed by its commercial operators as Manston Airport . The airport is no longer in operation. Ferry services (predominantly freight and car with passengers) were operated by Transeuropa Ferries to Continental Europe from the Port of Ramsgate but ceased in 2013. A tramway

246-812: The Chatham Main Line through Margate to Ramsgate, and the Ashford to Ramsgate (via Canterbury West) Line . A high-speed rail link from London to Thanet began in December 2009, and forms part of the UK's first true high-speed commuter service, according to the South Eastern Railway Company. The Thanet Loop bus service connects Margate, Ramsgate, and Broadstairs. Main road links are the A28 , which brings traffic from Canterbury and Ashford; and

287-635: The 600-metre-wide (2,000 ft) Wantsum Channel , it is no longer an island. Archaeological remains testify to its settlement in ancient times. Today, it is a tourist destination, and has an active agricultural base. The island of Thanet is mentioned as Tonetic (c. AD 150; the TON- of this form was misread as TOΛI-, hence it appears as Toliatis in the surviving manuscripts of Ptolemy ); Tanat's , Athanatos and Thanatos (in various copies of 3rd C AD, Solinus ); Tanatos (AD 731); Tenid in 679 and Tenet (e.g. charters of AD 679, 689 and thereafter); and

328-652: The Britons , was under attack from other tribes and called for assistance. Among those who came in 449 were the Jutes Hengist and Horsa ; Vortigern is said to have rewarded them with the Isle of Thanet in return for their services. As the following extract from the Historia Brittonum (first written sometime shortly after 833) testifies: Then came three keels, driven into exile from Germany. In them were

369-570: The Channel in 1672. In 597 Augustine of Canterbury is said, by Bede , to have landed with 40 men at Ebbsfleet, in the parish of Minster-in-Thanet , before founding Britain's second Christian monastery in Canterbury (the first was founded fifty years earlier by Columba on Eileach an Naoimh in the Hebrides ): a cross marks the spot. Isidore of Seville wrote c.615-30 A.D. of

410-732: The Isle are the North Foreland, and all the bays around the coastline, the principal ones of which are Minnis Bay , Palm Bay , Botany Bay , Joss Bay , and Pegwell Bay: the latter being part of the estuary of the River Stour. In 2007, seven of those beaches met stringent quality standards and were awarded as Blue Flag beaches : Minnis Bay, Botany Bay (Broadstairs), Margate Main Sands, St Mildreds Bay (Westgate), Stone Bay (Broadstairs), West Bay (Westgate), and Westbrook Bay. In 2008, this had risen to 10 beaches. The rail connections are via

451-627: The Isle of Thanet has formed the major part of the District of Thanet . The Isle is formed almost wholly of chalk , a soft pure white limestone of Cretaceous age, specifically the Margate Chalk Member (Santonian to Campanian) traditionally referred to simply as the 'Margate Chalk', and sometimes as the ‘Margate Member’. It is a sub-division of the Newhaven Chalk Formation. Beneath this and outcropping around

SECTION 10

#1732776149141

492-551: The Isle of Thanet: "Tanatos insula Oceani freto Gallico, a Brittania aestuario tenui separata, frumentariis campis et gleba uberi. Dicta autem Tanatos a morte serpentum, quos dum ipsa nesciat, asportata inde terra quoquo gentium vecta sit, angues ilico perimit" Which translates as: "Thanet is an island in the Ocean in the Gallic (i.e. English) channel, separated from Britannia by a narrow estuary, with fruitful fields and rich soil. It

533-586: The Italian Tanedo (Lombardy, Tanetum , Tite-Live ). A third theory suggests that the origin of the toponym is the name of the Punic goddess Tanit . The 7th-century Archbishop Isidore of Seville recorded an apocryphal folk-etymology in which the island's name is fancifully connected with the Greek word for death ( Thanatos/Θάνατος ), stating that Thanet, "an island of the ocean separated from Britain by

574-600: The Old Welsh forms Tanet and Danet , found in the Historia Brittonum (c. AD 829/30) and Armes Prydein (c. AD 930). Standard reference works for English place-names (such as Eilert Ekwall 's Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-Names ) state the name Tanet is known to be Brythonic in origin. Commonly the original meaning of Thanet is thought to be "fire" or "bright island" ( tân in Modern Welsh and tan in Breton means fire), and this has led to speculation

615-609: The SSSI. The bay is also home to the Sandwich Bay Bird Observatory Trust and the Monk's Wall nature reserve . The sand dunes at the top of the beach give way to the private road leading through Sandwich Bay estate. There is a 24-hour toll on this road for non-resident motorists of £9.00 per car or £5.00 per motorcycle (2024) but cyclists and pedestrians pass for free. Charges apply 24 hours a day and you buy

656-677: The Sandwich Bay Special Area of Conservation (SAC), the Thanet Coast and Sandwich Bay Special Protection Area for birds (SPA), and the Thanet Coast and Sandwich Bay Ramsar Site . The southern emerald damselfly ( Lestes barbarus ) was found here in 2003, only the second site in Great Britain at which this vagrant species had occurred. There are several Geological Conservation Review sites within

697-536: The Seventh . Until the mid 18th century there was a ferry between Sandwich and the island; in 1755 a wooden drawbridge was built, and the ferry was closed. Today the Isle is an island no longer and the erstwhile channel is now flat marshland criss-crossed by drainage ditches. Meanwhile, the exposed chalk cliffs are gradually being worn down by the sea, particularly at the North Foreland . Much else of

738-537: The Stour. There was also previously a stream called the Nethergong on the western side that had its outlet at Northmouth (Yenlade) about 1.8 km (1.1 mi) to the east of Reculver . Bede , in the 8th century, said that the Channel was then three furlongs wide (660 yards (600 m)). A map of 1414 showed a ferry crossing at Sarre . The first wooden bridge over the channel was built there in reign of Henry

779-707: The Vikings and both Elcherel the leader of the men from Kent, and Huda the leader of the men from Surrey were killed. Thanet's monasteries were subsequently used by the Danes as feasting halls or general headquarters. In 865, the Great Heathen Army encamped in Thanet and was promised by the people of Kent danegeld in exchange for peace. Regardless, the Vikings did not abide by this agreement and proceeded to rampage across eastern Kent. Some time between 978 and 989 (sources differ) raiders entirely destroyed Minster Abbey by arson together with those sheltering in

820-417: The abbey-manors of St. Mildred's (larger) and Monocatune (Monkton, Monks-town). Households of 239 villeins , 71 others and 3 knights were mentioned. The land of these two abbey-manors was separated by a strip of land called a balk and known as Cursus Cerve or St Mildred’s Lynch. It is documented on an early map of Thanet and is associated with the hind symbol used in Thanet and the path of a hind that defined

861-563: The abbey. In 969, King Edgar ordered all of Thanet to be plundered. In 980, Thanet was over run by the Vikings. In 1047, those in Thanet successfully resisted a Viking raid of 25 ships that had plundered elsewhere including Sandwich. The 1085 survey of the Domesday Book revealed that Thanet had as tenants-in-chief the See of Canterbury and the Abbey of St Augustine, separated into

SECTION 20

#1732776149141

902-637: The area now known as the Isle of Thanet was one of the major areas of Stone Age settlement. A large hoard of Bronze Age implements has been found at Minster-in-Thanet ; and several Iron Age settlements have also come to light. Julius Caesar made two attempts to invade Britain , in both 55 and 54 BC. In 2017 archaeologists from the University of Leicester excavated a Roman fort covering up to 49 acres (20 ha) at Ebbsfleet , and dated it to around 55–50 BC. They further linked it to Caesar's invasion of Britain in 54 BC, and suggested that

943-428: The beach are a small toilet block and areas at the edges of the dunes for parking. Sandwich bay also has a sea wall, which has a road built on top to stop the waves from reaching the low-lying land behind. Every spring, beach replenishment is carried out, taking materials from the north of the bay, which has travelled up due to long shore drift, and is piled up against this wall to prevent any damage that may be caused by

984-656: The broader Chalk Group . Overlying the chalk both within the Wantsum Channel and in patches on the surface of the Isle itself are the 100 m (330 ft) thick sands , silts and clays of the Palaeogene age Thanet Formation (formerly the Thanet Beds). The area gives its name to the internationally recognised Thanetian , descriptive of rocks of this particular part of the Palaeocene throughout

1025-725: The brothers Horsa and Hengest ... Vortigern welcomed them, and handed over to them the island that in their language is called Thanet, in British Ruoihm. This story, however, is possibly an example of non-historical founding myths , though one constructed with political objectives in mind. It has been noted that Alfred's version of the Saxon Chronicles omitted the death of Horsa. In reality, it appears to have been settled by Jutes under Visigothic authority between 476-517 AD, though they may have been present earlier as Foederati . These were followed by Ingaevones in

1066-543: The coast is a built-up area. The Wantsum area is still liable to flooding: during the North Sea flood of 1953 Thanet was cut off for a few days, but the sea defences have been strengthened since then. The soil and equable climate of the Isle have always encouraged arable farming. "... a garden indeed, a county of corn but the labourers' houses all along, beggarly in the extreme. The people dirty, poor-looking, but particularly dirty." Today there are still farms inland, but

1107-443: The coast is nearly all covered in settlements, most of which have come into being in the 19th and 20th centuries. As the popularity of the seaside resort grew, so did that of the Isle of Thanet. At first the holidaymakers came by boat from London; after the coming of the railways in the mid-1840s, that became the preferred mode of transport. The population grew, as the following population statistics show: The principal landmarks on

1148-564: The dunes and golf-course, but the road route takes only 10 minutes by bicycle. The beach at Sandwich Bay is largely shingle, and relatively steep in profile at points along its width, but the receding tide reveals some areas of sand. Towards the northern end of the beach Sandwich Bay is separated from the Isle of Thanet by the River Stour estuary , where the Pegwell Bay nature reserve and salt marsh can be found. The only facilities on

1189-515: The east coast of Kent , England . The coastal area consists of sand flats with their associated salt marshes and coastal sand dunes. The Sandwich Flats stretch for about five miles (8 km) along the coast. The coastal habitats are of high ecological importance. Most of the bay bears national and international nature conservation designations. These include the Sandwich Bay to Hacklinge Marshes Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI),

1230-400: The end of that century refer to turreted walls beneath the cliffs needing maintenance. Coastal erosion has long since destroyed these structures. Counted households had increased to 532 when reported during the reign of Elizabeth I . The first Earl of Thanet was created in 1628. By 1807 the island roads were deemed to be good infrastructure for the time without turnpikes although one

1271-465: The golf courses which back onto it. Via the toll road the beach is only 3–5 minutes from the historic Cinque port town of Sandwich. There are also scenic footpaths leading from the quay in Sandwich, along the river and over the golf course on the dunes to the bay, which can take anything from 30 minutes to 1 hour to walk. Cycling over this route is not advisable due to the length of the path situated upon

Sandwich Bay - Misplaced Pages Continue

1312-437: The intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sandwich_Bay&oldid=933108451 " Category : Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Sandwich Bay, Kent Sandwich Bay is a long sweeping inlet of the sea between Ramsgate and Deal , on

1353-478: The invading force arrived in nearby Pegwell Bay . Nearly a century later, in 43 AD, Claudius sent four legions to Britain, where the Romans were to remain for the next 400 years. During that time the port of Richborough , on the opposite side of the Wantsum Channel , became one of the chief ports of Roman Britain . According to the eighth-century ecclesiastical historian Bede , Vortigern , King of

1394-626: The island was home to an ancient beacon or lighthouse. Another theory states that Tanet is a common European toponymic creation of Celtic origin, based on the Celtic word *tanno- meaning " holm oak " (compare Breton tann "sort of oak", Cornish glastannen "holm oak") and the Celtic suffix *-etu , to mean a collection of trees. Thanet would mean "place of the holm oaks", such as the Northern French Thenney (Eure, Thaneth ab. 1050); Tennie (Sarthe, Tanida 9th century) or

1435-606: The land assigned to St. Mildred's in the Kentish Royal Legend . By 1334–1335 Thanet had the highest population density in Kent according to King Edward III's lay subsidy rolls . Margate is mentioned in 1349, in a dispute about the land of Westgate Manor. Thanet acted as a granary for Calais , whose governor for Edward III was so assigned to administer. Edward III also required local fortifications to be constructed where boats and ships could land. Documents towards

1476-548: The margins of the Isle is the Seaford Chalk Formation which contains relatively more flint nodules and seams. It has also been referred to as the ‘Broadstairs Member’. The Seaford Chalk is of Coniacian to Santonian age whilst the Margate Chalk is of Santonian to Campanian age. Both were traditionally referred to the ‘Upper Chalk’ but are now classed as parts of the ‘White Chalk Subgroup’ as part of

1517-617: The sea broke through river valleys in the North Downs to the south (Middle Chalk) and finally today's English Channel was opened up. The proto- River Stour then formed part of the intervening water, with a new tributary, the River Wantsum , completing it; it became known as the Wantsum Channel. The Wantsum Channel gradually narrowed as pebble beaches built up at the southern end of the strait, blocking silt coming down

1558-401: The sixth century. Throughout this time the Isle remained an island. The Wantsum Channel allowed ships to sail between the mainland and the island in calm waters. The Saxon Chronicle recounts that in 1052 Earl Godwin after obtaining hostages and provisions from Sandwich sailed through the "Wantsume" towards "Northmuth" and "Lundene". Gradually this silted up, and the last ship sailed through

1599-409: The waves. The northernmost end of the beach is frequently used as an unofficial naturist beach. 51°18′21″N 1°22′33″E  /  51.30571°N 1.37591°E  / 51.30571; 1.37591 Isle of Thanet The Isle of Thanet ( / ˈ θ æ n ɪ t / ) is a peninsula forming the easternmost part of Kent , England . While in the past it was separated from the mainland by

1640-577: The world. Brickearth head deposits lie within many of the shallow chalk valleys and across some areas of flatter ground within the Isle. The Isle of Thanet formed when sea levels rose after the last glacial period , around 5000 BC . The North Sea encroached on the land which is now the estuary of the River Thames , and southwards to reach the higher land of the North Downs , leaving behind an island composed of chalk in its wake. Eventually

1681-415: Was soon established at Ramsgate. The wheat crop was excellent helped with sea weed fertiliser processes. Margate was incorporated as a municipal borough in 1857 and Ramsgate in 1884. Broadstairs and St Peter's Urban District and the Isle of Thanet Rural District covered the rest of the island from 1894 until 1974. By 1974, however, all these boroughs and districts had been abolished, and since that year

Sandwich Bay - Misplaced Pages Continue

#140859