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United Kingdom, Britain. April
18, 2005.
Towns and cities, villages, stately
homes, attractions and open spaces all over the
country are holding festivals and events with
a watery theme this year. SeaBritain 2005 is a
year-long celebration of the nation's special
relationship with the sea and its maritime heritage.
The inspiration is the bicentenary of the Battle
of Trafalgar and the death of Admiral Lord Nelson.
So there are commemorations and re-enactments
of Nelson's finest - and last - hour as he led
the British fleet to victory in October, 1805.
There'll be pomp, ceremony and
pageantry aplenty, but if you are focused on fun
or maybe travelling with children, there are also
festivals, exhibitions, shows and activities that
are bound to appeal, for all ages and interests.
In North-West England, Easter sees Lancaster staging
its Maritime Festival and Trafalgar Victory Fair
- this historic town will go mad for shanty-singing
(folk music by seafarers) and ships-in-a-bottle,
ornamental ropework and other maritime traditions.
But beware the costumed 'Press Gangs' roaming
the streets, forcing unsuspecting civilians to
serve in the king's navy!
Barrow-in-Furness in Cumbria has a summer-long
Festival of the Sea, with concerts, events, family
fun days, regattas and boat shows, culminating
in the celebrations and bonfires for the Trafalgar
Weekend of October 21-23, when the whole country
joins in with street parties and commemorations.
In London, Tate Britain opens
its Turner and the Sea exhibition this weekend
too, running until November 6, and the National
Maritime Museum in Greenwich - part of the World
Heritage Site - stages a blockbuster Nelson &
Napoléon exhibition from (July 7 - November
6), celebrating these two influential heroes and
the impact of the Battle of Trafalgar on the course
of European history. The museum also has a National
Trust/Magnum Photography exhibition, The Coast
Exposed, from March until January 2006: this can
also be seen at The Waterfront in Belfast, Northern
Ireland (May 30 - June 24); Trelissick Gallery
in Cornwall (July 30 - September 4) and the Lowry
in Salford near Manchester (September 24 - January
6).
Brouhaha is the name of a festival
in Liverpool, in North-West England (May 1 - July
31), a spectacle of dance, acrobatics, puppetry,
music and drama by international groups at venues
across the city: theme - experiencing the sea.
The Vikings 'invade' Whitby, on the Yorkshire
coast, on May 28 for Fire and Fury - a spectacular
of sagas, stargazing and boat-burning under the
night sky, while during the long light days of
June the Orkney Islands, to the north of Scotland,
stage the music, drama and art of the sea. On
June 18, Poole Harbour on the South Coast encourages
visitors to Go Boating! - a street- and water-festival
with the chance to get afloat and to enjoy the
sounds, sights and seafood of this ferry port
and one of the world's largest natural harbours.
Portsmouth, South Coast home
of the Royal Navy, stages its annual festivities
from June 18-25. This year it focuses on Trafalgar
200, the anniversary, with a son-et-lumière
and firework display. The largest gathering of
ships for decades takes part in an International
Fleet Review - with navies and ships from more
than 40 countries - plays, concerts and exhibitions
on the theme of Trafalgar; culminating in the
International festival of the Sea (June 30 - July
3). This is a rallying of tall ships from all
over the world and exhibitions and activities
based on seafaring tradition.
On June 25-26, Whitehaven in Cumbria has its Maritime
Festival with seafood, fireworks, tall ships,
exploring local culture and its relationship with
the water while SeaGuernsey conjures up some Midsummer
Magic, a multimedia festival which expands across
all the Channel islands.
During July, a Traditional Boat
Rally takes place (July 2-3) at Tarbet on Loch
Fyne in Scotland; Southwold on England's East
Coast holds its Festival of the Sea from the 14th-17th
with traditional games and activities on the pier
and promenade and in the historic old town, with
traditional vessels racing to Lowestoft and around
Sole Bay. Dorset remembers pirates (July 15 -17),
as Portland brings to life the 16th-century heyday
of these buccaneering folk; and there's seafood
galore, shanties, street-theatre and music aboard
vessels of all kinds in the harbour and in the
old town as Scarborough in Yorkshire holds its
Seafest celebrating its fishing heritage. Bristol
Harbour Festival recalls the launching of the
SS Great Britain with flotillas of all kinds of
vessels, circus, street markets and costumed characters
strolling the streets (July 23-24). Cardiff Bay,
in South Wales, holds a Regatta on July 28 - 29,
ending with a Caribbean-style carnival.
Weekends in August see castles
across the country - Scarborough, Pendennis near
Falmouth and Tynemouth among them - staging a
'Tribute to Trafalgar' with recreations of the
battle, children's activities, music of 1805 and
much more. On August 27, Portrush in Co. Antrim,
Northern Ireland, shows off traditional Irish
boats as part of its Festival of the Sea - and
there's the chance to win a swimming or angling
competition.
Chatham Historic Dockyard in
Kent holds the Medway Maritime Festival (August
28 - September 4), featuring concerts of the music
of the sea, re-enactments and a chance to sample
seafaring activities from across the centuries,
its high-spot a son-et-lumière at Rochester
Castle.
September sees most Trafalgar
Festival commemorations taking place, with a re-enactment
of Nelson's waterborne funeral procession on September
16 along the Thames as part of the Mayor of London's
river festival. Nelson's home county of Norfolk,
Eastern England, stages a maritime festival in
Great Yarmouth (Sept. 10-11), with homage to its
hero and sea-shanties, street theatre and seafood
fresh from the local fishing fleet.
October has the 200th anniversary
of Trafalgar, with the Trafalgar Weekend giving
every town, village and community in the country
the chance to join in with parties, music and
dance. Trafalgar Night Dinners on or around the
Oct. 21 will allow people across the world to
remember the heroism and seamanship of those afloat
in the age of sail and of the participants, drawn
from many nations, in the battle itself.
Events continue to the end of
the year: one of the final ones being a Christmas
Day charity swim across the harbour in the South
Coast resort of Weymouth. That dozens of foolhardy
swimmers volunteer to brave the elements in the
depths of winter proves that English eccentricity
is alive and well and playing its part in SeaBritain
2005
Source : europeetravel.net
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