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Quiet charms: Hugo Brown enjoys exploring the peaceful streets of Battle (pictured) Daniel Defoe, the author of Robinson Crusoe, wrote more than 300 works while also being a merchant, journalist, pamphleteer, social critic and spy: a stellar career

Quiet charms: Hugo Brown enjoys exploring the peaceful streets of Batt…

Cory 1 413 2023.06.05 22:05

Quiet charms: Hugo Brown enjoys exploring the peaceful streets of Battle (pictured)
Daniel Defoe, the author of Robinson Crusoe, wrote more than 300 works while also being a merchant, journalist, pamphleteer, social critic and spy: a stellar career.
But the early 18th-century writer did get one thing wrong when, in 1722, he described Battle in East Sussex as ‘remarkable for little now'.
Clearly, he thought the tide had gone out on this town some six miles from the coast — but he underestimated the weight of history. 
Because today, 957 years after the Battle of Hastings, its bloody 1066 origins are central to its relative prosperity.
Mind you, peace reigns as my girlfriend and I wander the streets, admiring its antique shops, independent cafes and regional producers, from bakers to brewers.
The town of Battle lies six miles from the coast in East Sussex
A walk around the ruins of the 11th-century Abbey, built by William the Conqueror and now looked after by English Heritage, is essential.

The visitor centre offers a 15-minute film which recreates the battle, explaining each site and what happened on any particular day.
On our visit, the battlefield itself is closed due to mud, but it is open for most of the year.
The English might have fared better had they been able to use the same excuse on Saturday, October 14, 1066, when Harold Godwinson, who had rallied south from Yorkshire, met William, Duke of Normandy.

King Harold, on the throne for just nine months, had been defending his kingdom from the forces of Norwegian King Harald Hardrada.
Battle is best known for being the site of the Battle of Hastings in 1066, which is being re-enacted above 
At Hastings, Harold's ragged army stood firm atop the hill for most of the afternoon, until the Norman false retreat tactic broke the English shield wall.
The story is that Harold took an arrow in the eye that evening.

William commissioned the abbey to atone for the blood he had spilt and the site of the high altar marks that of Harold's death.
Out of that chaos, the town was born. The abbey gave it influence until 1538, when Henry VIII's wandering eye resulted in the Act of Supremacy and the Dissolution of the Monasteries.
'A walk around the ruins of the 11th-century Abbey (above), built by William the Conqueror and now looked after by English Heritage, is essential,' writes Hugo 
View of the town from the Abbey exit.

Hugo says that Battle is 'proud of its history but not dependent on it'
Antique Chiming Pocket Watches, you could call us at the webpage.

Comments

doeon 2023.07.31 19:36
It is a very long story!

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