Travel Guide:

United Kingdom Destinations to Visit

Find Cheap Hotels:


Top Contributors
Writer for United Kingdom Travel Guide - Hotels & Restaurants
Canterbury, United Kingdom
Like Oxford and Cambridge, Canterbury is an easy little train ride away from central London. Canterbury is a charming English cathedral city, with a delightful old-town, and best of all, Chaucer's poetic pilgramage to read along the way. The Archbishop of Canterbury is actually the Primate of the Anglican church. That sounds more simean than it is. The Anglican's, as fake Catholics, have a...
 
High Wycombe, United Kingdom
High Wycombe is a town in South Buckinghamshire, England
 
Wales, United Kingdom
Wales is one of the constituent countries of the United Kingdom. It's on a peninsula in central-west Great Britain.
 
Scotland, United Kingdom
"In the year of our lord 1314, patriots of Scotland, starving and outnumbered charged the fields of Bannockburn, they fought like warrior poets, they fought like Scotsmen, and won their freedom...forever." Iconic Braveheart quotes are a standard introduction to this rugged and beautiful highland nation, this misty and plaided clan of proud men and prouder woman, this cornucopic table full of...
 
England, United Kingdom
England is a tricky concept for most non Brits. Is it analogous to the United Kingdom? Is a Scottish person English? Why is Catherine Zeta Jones Welsh? Does she have some kind of T-mobile cross promotion with grape juice? Today's tutorial will clear up England's confusing socio-political condition, as well as expound upon one of earth's most influential and powerful little corners of the...
 
Glasgow, United Kingdom
Glasgow (pronounced /ˈglæsgoʊ/) is the largest city in Scotland and third most populous in the United Kingdom. Fully named as the City of Glasgow, it is the most populous of Scotland's 32 unitary authority areas. The city is situated on the River Clyde in the country's west central lowlands, and a person from Glasgow is known as a Glaswegian. Glaswegian is also the name of the local dialect....
 
Kidderminster, United Kingdom
Kidderminster is a town in the Wyre Forest district of Worcestershire, England. It is located approximately seventeen miles south-west of Birmingham city centre. The 2001 census recorded a population of 55,182 in the town. The town is twinned with the town of Husum, Germany. The town centre area has undergone substantial redevelopment in recent years, with the commercial retail area of 'Weaver's...
 
Kilmarnock, United Kingdom
Kilmarnock (Cill Meàrnaig in Scottish Gaelic, and Killie locally) is a large burgh in East Ayrshire, Scotland, with a population of 44,170.[1] It is roughly between Glasgow and Ayr. The River Irvine runs through its eastern section and the Kilmarnock Water passes through it, giving rise to the name 'Bank Street'
 
Leamington Spa, United Kingdom
Leamington Spa, properly Royal Leamington Spa but commonly just Leamington (pronounced /ˈlɛmɪŋtən/ Lemmington), listen (help·info) or even "Leam" to locals, is a spa town in central Warwickshire, England. According to the 2001 census the town had a population of 45,114 making it the third largest town in the county after Nuneaton and Rugby. It is named after the River Leam which flows through the...
 
Leeds, United Kingdom
Leeds is a city of around 750,000, and situated in the poorer North of England. Despite beautiful buildings like the town hall and corn exchangein in the center of the city, Leeds has a very grimy and clostraphobic feel, the new developments in the city are quite typical of most British cities at the moment with some looking rather dated already. Shopping in Leeds is much the same as any large UK...