- This page is about the county of Somerset in the United Kingdom. For other meanings of Somerset, see Somerset (disambiguation).
| Somerset |
| |
| Geography |
| Status: |
Ceremonial & (smaller) Administrative County |
| Region: |
South West England |
Area:
- Total
- Admin. council
- Admin. area |
Ranked
7th
4,171 kmē
Ranked 12th
3,451 kmē |
| Admin HQ: |
Taunton |
| ISO 3166-2: |
GB-SOM |
| ONS code: |
40 |
| NUTS 3: |
UKK23 |
| Demographics |
Population:
- Total (2002 est.)
- Density
- Admin. council
- Admin. pop. |
Ranked 22nd
862,476
207 / kmē
Ranked 25th
503,424 |
| Ethnicity: |
98.5% White |
| Politics |
Somerset County Council
http://www.somerset.gov.uk/ |
| Executive: |
Liberal Democrat |
| Members of Parliament |
| Brian Cotter, Adrian John Flook, Don Foster, Liam Fox, David Heath, David Heathcoat-Amory, David Laws, Ian Liddell-Grainger, Dan Norris |
| Districts |
|
- South Somerset
- Taunton Deane
- West Somerset
- Sedgemoor
- Mendip
- Bath and North East Somerset
(Unitary)
- North Somerset (Unitary)
|
Somerset is a county in the south-west of
England. Its county town was historically Somerton but is today Taunton.
The traditional northern boundary of the county was the River Avon, but this has gradually crept southwards, with the creation and expansion of the City of Bristol. In 1974 a large chunk
of northern Somerset was removed to form the southern half of the County of
Avon. Avon has now been abolished, and North Somerset and Bath and North East Somerset have reverted to
Somerset for ceremonial purposes, but are now independent counties in their own right for local government purposes.
The name is pronounced as though spelt Summerset but some local people pronounce it Zummerzet with a
distinct rolled R, showing two characteristics of the strong local accent.
Somerset adjoins Gloucestershire to the north east, Wiltshire to the east, Dorset to the south east
and Devon to the southwest. Much of its northern edge is the shoreline of the Bristol Channel. Somerton was
the original county town, but in recent years that role has been transferred to Taunton. The only city is Wells, which is
the smallest in England, with a population of around 10,000.
Other important towns include Bridgwater, Glastonbury and Yeovil.
The latter town is important in the manufacture of helicopters. Glastonbury is
famous for its open-air rock festivals and many mythical associations.
Much of the county is very scenic and relatively unspoilt. The Cheddar
Gorge is famous for caves open to visitors. Apple orchards were plentiful and to this day Somerset is linked
to the production of strong cider, arguably more so than any other part of the world.
Somerset contains England's oldest prison
that is still in use, in the small town of Shepton Mallet.
Tourist attractions include its coastal towns, part of the Exmoor National Park, the West
Somerset Railway (a heritage railway), and the museum of the
Fleet Air Arm at RNAS
Yeovilton.
Towns and villages
- Abbas Combe, Adsborough, Alcombe, Alhampton, Aller, Alford, Angersleigh, Ansford,
Appley, Ash, Somerset, Ash Priors, Ashbrittle, Ashcott, Ashill, Ashington, Ashwick, Athelney, Axbridge.
- Bath, Bishops Lydeard,Blue Anchor Bridgwater, Broomfield, Burnham-on-Sea
- Carhampton,
Chard, Cheddar,Chinnock, Crowcombe , Compton Dundon, Crewkerne
- Dean, Donniford, Drayton, Dunster, Dulverton
- Easton
- Fulford
- Glastonbury
- Henley,Highbridge, Horton, Hurst
- Ilchester, Ilminster
- Kingsbridge
- Laverton,
Luxborough
- Maperton, Marston Magna, Maundown, Meare, Mells, Merriott, Minehead
- Nether Stowey
- Porlock
- Shepton Mallet, Somerton, Street
- Taunton
- Washford, Watchet, Wellington, Wells, Weston-super-Mare, Westonzoyland, Williton
- Yeovil
Places of interest
External links
|