Lancaster, England



         


This article is about an English town. For other meanings of "Lancaster", see Lancaster.

Lancaster (pop. 1991 c.44,500) is a town in Lancashire, North West England. It is the main settlement in the City of Lancaster. The city is located on the River Lune (from which it derives its name) and the Lancaster Canal. It was the administrative centre of Lancashire until 1974. Lancaster Castle, partly built in the 13th century and enlarged by Elizabeth I, stands on the site of a Roman garrison. Lancaster Castle is well-known as the site of the Pendle Witches' trial in 1612.

Lancaster gained its first charter in 1193 as a market town and borough, but was not given the status of a city until 1937. Many buildings in the city centre and along St. George's Quay date from the 1800s, built during a period when the port became one of the busiest in England. However, Lancaster's role as a major port was short lived, as the river began to silt up.

On a campus a short distance south of the city is Lancaster University, a respected national university. The A6 road joins the University and city. The city is also home to St Martin's College, primarily a college for teacher training.

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Geography

North-West: Morecambe Bay

North: Slyne, Hest Bank, Bolton-le-Sands, Carnforth

North-East: Caton, Morecambe, Heysham Lancaster East: Forest of Bowland
South: Lancaster University, Galgate, Garstang, Preston

The M6 motorway passes nearby Lancaster.

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Features of Lancaster

See also

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