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Encyclopedia > City of Preston
This article is about Preston in Lancashire, England. For other uses of the name see Preston (disambiguation).


City of Preston

Shown within Lancashire
Geography
Status: City (2002)
Region: North West England
Admin. County: Lancashire
Area:
- Total
Ranked 215th
142.22 km²
Admin. HQ: Preston
ONS code: 30UK
Demographics
Population:
- Total (2002 est.)
- Density
Ranked 137th
129,991
914 / km²
Ethnicity: 85.5% White
11.6% S.Asian
Politics

Preston City Council
http://www.preston.gov.uk/
Leadership: Leader & Cabinet
Executive: Labour
MPs: Nigel Evans, Mark Hendrick, Michael Jack

Preston is a local government district and city in North West England. It is the county town of Lancashire, and is on the River Ribble.


Preston is famous for, among other things, its large bus station (with 79 gates), St Walburge's Church (the tallest church in England, with the third highest spire at 94 metres), and Preston North End F.C., one of the oldest Football League teams. City status was granted to Preston in 2002.


The Preston By-pass, opened 5 December 1958, became the first stretch of motorway in the UK: it is part of the M6. This was necessary as the town suffered from increasing traffic congestion due its proximity to key tourist destinations The Lake District and Blackpool.


Every 20 years, a famous celebration called the Preston Guild takes place. The last Guild celebration took place in 1992 and the next is due in 2012.


The city is home to the University of Central Lancashire, one of the largest universities in the country.


Twin towns are Almelo in the Netherlands, Nimes in France, Recklinghausen in Germany and Kalisz in Poland.

Contents

Features of Preston

Geography

History

In 1825 Preston was in the hundred of Amounderness, in the deanery of Amounderness and the archdeaconry of Richmond. The name of Amounderness is more ancient than the name of any other Wapentake or hundred in the County of Lancaster, and so Preston is of at least High Saxon antiquity. Served by the River Ribble, Preston was one of the principal ports of Lancaster. As late as the time of Charles I the monarch demanded 1/4 more ship money than Lancaster and double the amount of Liverpool.


During the Roman period the road called Watling Street made by the Conquerors from the Setantian port of Neb of the Nese passed 1 mile north of Preston. The Roman road from Languavallium in Cumberland to Condate in Cheshire intersected in Preston at Tulketh-hall.


In Ripon in 705 Archbishop Wilfrid the lands near the River Ribble were set on a new foundation, and the parish church was probably erected. Later Edward the Elder passed the lands to cathedral at York and then from successive transfers the lands were passed round between churches hence the name Preist's Town or Preston.


Famous people from Preston

See also

External Links



Districts of England - North West England

Allerdale | Barrow_in_Furness | Blackburn with Darwen | Blackpool | Bolton | Burnley | Bury | Carlisle | Chester | Chorley | Congleton | Copeland | Crewe and Nantwich | Eden | Ellesmere Port and Neston | Fylde | Halton | Hyndburn | Knowsley | Lancaster | Liverpool | Macclesfield | Manchester | Oldham | Pendle | Preston | Ribble Valley | Rochdale | Rossendale | St Helens | Salford | Sefton | South Lakeland | South Ribble | Stockport | Tameside | Trafford | Vale Royal | Warrington | West Lancashire | Wigan | Wirral | Wyre

Administrative counties with multiple districts: Cheshire, Cumbria, Greater Manchester, Lancashire, Merseyside







  Results from FactBites:
 
Preston - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1078 words)
Preston was granted the status of a city in 2002, becoming England's 50th city in the 50th year of Queen Elizabeth's reign.
During the Roman period the road from the Setantian port of Neb of the Nese passed one mile north of Preston and intersected the road from Languavallium in Cumberland to Condate in Cheshire in Preston at Tulketh-hall.
Preston is twinned with Almelo in the Netherlands, Nîmes in France, Recklinghausen in Germany and Kalisz in Poland.
Visit Preston (569 words)
Preston, the administrative capital of Lancashire, is the largest and most important commercial centre in the County and it attracts hundreds of thousands of visitors each year.
Moor Park is Preston's largest and oldest Park and was originally common land derived from the Royal Forest of Fulwood by the Charter of Henry III in 1235.
Preston City Council is part of a Lancashire wide initiative to monitor and estimate the value of tourism across the county using a widely accepted model known as Steam.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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