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canterbury Hotel accommodation - Best prices, best places. Find the lowest hotel rates guaranteed! From luxury hotels to budget accommodations. We have the best deals and discounts for hotel rooms in canterbury. Make your reservations Online.
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Express by Holiday Inn Canterbury |
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Rooms From: £ 55.25
A2, Canterbury, CT2 9HX
The Express Holiday Inn in Canterbury is great value for money for business travellers and tourists! Our location is ideal location for those on a way to Dover Port and the Eurotunnel.
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The Miller`s Arms Inn |
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Rooms From: £ 70
1 Mill Lane, Canterbury, CT1 2AW
A delightful old pub close to the city centre and its many tourist attractions. The ancient water mill (hence Miller`s Arms) on the River Stour remains alongside the pub.
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Falstaff Corus Hotel |
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Rooms From: £ 69
8-10 St Dunstans Street, Canterbury, CT2 8AF
A traditional beamed Coach Inn centrally located in Canterbury and 20 minutes from Dover and the Channel Tunnel. The 15th Century hotel is in the heart of this beautiful, historic city, home to England`s most impressive cathedral.
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Swallow Canterbury Hotel |
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Rooms From: £ 55
63 Ivy Lane, Canterbury, CT1 1TT
Originally, The Chaucer was a private Georgian House standing opposite Canterburys ancient city walls - close to all Canterbury`s sights and is an ideal base for touring the Garden of England.
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Pilgrims Hotel |
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Rooms From: £ 49
18 The Friars, Canterbury, CT1 2AS
The Pilgrims Hotel is ideal for your stay in Canterbury City Centre. Situated within the roman city walls, this lovely family run hotel offers a warm welcome to all our guests.
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Despite the presence of a university and art college, England's second most visited city is a surprisingly small place with a population of just 35,000. The town centre, ringed by ancient walls, is virtually car-free, but this doesn't stop the High Street seizing up all too frequently with tourists, two million of whom arrive each year. Having said that, the very reason for the city's popularity is its rich tapestry of historical sites, combined with a good selection of places to stay, eat and drink, and no visit to southeast England would be complete without, at the very least, a quick stop here .
Nightlife in Canterbury keeps a low profile - check what's happening in the free The Sticks listings magazine available at the tourist office. Pubs to go for include the Bell & Crown , a cramped medieval hostelry on Palace Street; the even tinier and very popular New Inn , Havelock Street; or the Miller's Arms , good for a riverside pint in summer. At Alberry's wine bar, opposite the tourist office, and Simple Simon's , Radigund's Hall, 3 Church Lane, you can catch the occasional live music act. Also in Northgate, the recently revived Penny Theatre presents local and global live music. The university puts on a good range of arty films , and also houses the Gulbenkian Theatre, a venue which shares the city's more edifying cultural events with the Marlowe Theatre in The Friars.
Canterbury has two railway stations, Canterbury West and Canterbury East. The services from these are operated by Southeastern. Canterbury West is served primarily from London Charing Cross with limited services from London Victoria as well as by trains to Ramsgate and Margate. Services from London Victoria stop at Canterbury East (journey time around 88 minutes) and continue to Dover.
Canterbury West station was the earliest to be built. It was opened by the South Eastern Railway from Ashford on 6 February 1846; on 13 April the line to Ramsgate was completed. Canterbury East is the more central of the two stations, although it came later, being opened by the London, Chatham and Dover Railway on 9 July 1860.
Canterbury was also the terminus of the Canterbury and Whitstable Railway which was a pioneer line, opened in 1830, and finally closed in 1953. Despite claims by the Stockton and Darlington Railway the Canterbury and Whitstable was the first regular passenger steam railway in the world. It included the first significant railway tunnel in the world, which is located at the Archbishop's School and the first railway bridge in the world. The locomotive which originally worked the line, Invicta, is displayed at the museum at Canterbury.
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