Ebbsfleet is the name of two locations in the English county of Kent Royal motto (French): Dieu et mon droit (Translated: God and my right) Englands location within the UK Official language English de facto Capital London de facto Largest city London Area â Total Ranked 1st UK 130,395 km² Population â Total (mid-2004) â Total (2001 Census) â Density Ranked 1st UK 50. ... Kent is a county in England, south-east of London. ...
Ebbsfleet in Gravesham is to the south-west of Northfleet where a Channel Tunnel Rail Link station is currently being built and is due to open in 2007. During archaeological work undertaken at Ebbsfleet, before construction of the Channel Tunnel Rail Link, an Anglo-Saxon mill and a Roman villa were found. Much of the land was previously owned by the APCM and later Blue Circle and latterly Lafarge.
Ebbsfleet in Thanet is where Saint Augustine landed in 597, to convert England to Christianity. The location of his landing would have been then on the Ebbsfleet peninsula, a spit of land into the former Wantsum Channel. There are prehistoric, Iron Age, Roman and Saxon settlement remains on the peninsula and focusing around Ebbsfleet Farm which may have also been the landing stage for the Roman ferry across the channel to Richborough from Thanet. Traditionally it is also the site of the landings made by the Saxons in the fifth century AD. An entry in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle states that Hengist and Horsa, on the invitation of Vortigern, King of the Britons, landed in 449 at Ypwines fleot, usually assumed to be Ebbsfleet. This landing place is no longer suitable as a landing place due to silting of the surrounding coastline in the intervening centuries.
The Bishop of Ebbsfleet, The Right Reverend Andrew Burnham, is a Provincial Episcopal Visitor to the Province of Canterbury. Gravesham is a local government district and borough in Kent, England. ... Location within the British Isles Northfleet as a name is derived from North creek (or inlet), and the settlement on the shore of the River Thames adjacent to Gravesend was known as Norfluet in the Domesday Book, and Northflet in 1201. ... CTRL redirects here. ... Lafarge (Euronext: LG, NYSE: LAF) is a French industrial company specializing in five major products: Cement, construction aggregates, concrete, gypsum wallboard, and roofing tile. ... William Cobbett in 1827 when he rode to the Island The Isle of Thanet is an area of northeast Kent, England. ... Events Saint Augustine is created Archbishop of Canterbury. ... The Wantsum Channel is the name given to a now silted-up watercourse in the English county of Kent. ... Map sources for Richborough at grid reference TR3361 Richborough is a settlement just north of Sandwich on the east coast of the English county of Kent. ... The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle is a collection of annals narrating the history of the English and their settlement in Britain. ... Hengest or Hengist (d. ... Vortigern, Vortiger, or Vortigen was a fifth century warlord, possibly legendary, traditionally said to have invited the Anglo-Saxons to settle in Britain as mercenaries, who later revolted and established their own kingdoms. ... Events August 3 - The Second Council of Ephesus opens, chaired by Dioscorus, Patriarch of Alexandria. ...
Ebbsfleet International railway station is a railway station in Ebbsfleet, in the borough of Dartford, Kent.
Ebbsfleet International Station is served by Eurostar, with up to four trains per hour in peak time between Ebbsfleet, Paris and Brussels.
"Ebbsfleet International Station" was the name originally proposed for the station, but 'Dartford International Station' was later proposed at the urging of Eurostar, who felt that Dartford was a name with greater national recognition.
‘’Ebbsfleet’’ derives from the name of the River Fleet, which passes through the site: it appears to begin at Spring Head Nursery, immediately north of the A2, passes under the western end of Northfleet station, and flows into the Thames at the same longitudinal point as the latter.
The reserved land was bordered to its west by Southfleet Road, to the north by the North Kent Line, to the east by a flooded chalk pit and the A2260, and finally, to the south by the A2 trunk road.
The whole project in North West Kent was known as the ‘’Ebbsfleet Development’’, which comprised an area of 174 hectares: this expanse was allocated for the station complex, business units, and housing.