|
Click on a city, town or village on the map to view holiday accommodation in that place
and the surrounding area. Or to view all listed places in this area, click
here.
|
||||||
| County
Town: Stafford County Population: 1,200,000 (estimate) |
||||||
|
Situated
on a plain drained by the River Trent, Staffordshire is a large rural
county, with a concentration of industry around Stoke-on-Trent. The county
is bounded on the north by the Pennine Hills and the Peak District National
Park, and on the south by Cannock Chase, a forest with some heathland
areas. The Trent is the third-longest river in England, and it rises on
Biddulph Moor in the north of the county, before flowing south-east until
it reaches Burton upon Trent, where it becomes navigable.
|
||||||
|
Stone
Age burial grounds and a number of Iron Age hill forts are known in the
county. Roman villa remains have also been identified, and from the 7th
to the 9th centuries Staffordshire was part of the Saxon Kingdom of Mercia.
The Danes plundered the area from the 9th to 11th century, and during
this period the town of Stafford was founded. The Industrial Revolution
of the 18th century saw the county becoming the home of English porcelain
and pottery-makers, including the Wedgwood, Spode and Minton factories.
|
||||||
|
The
Staffordshire economy is now mainly supported by agriculture with new
light industries taking over from historic trades set up during the Industrial
Revolution. Stoke-on-Trent is still England's pottery centre however,
and Burton upon Trent, famous for its beer, is a major centre for brewing.
|
||||||
|
By clicking on an icon below, you can return to the home page, request help or move to the top of this page respectively.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||