LANGDON BAY, KENT
'Langdon Bay' is a bay in east Kent, England. It is named after the nearby villages of Langdon, East Langdon and West Langdon. The cliffs around it are known as the 'Langdon Cliffs'.
The bay is known for a hoard of Bronze Age scrap metal found nearby in 1974. This includes bronze axes of a French type and is thought to represent the cargo of a boat that was caught in a storm just after leaving the English coast, either jettisoned to lighten and save the boat or sunk with it (if there was a wreck, it is now lost). This demonstrates that cross-channel trade was already occuring in the Bronze Age, if not earlier. It is owned by the British Museum but on long-term loan and display in Dover Museum in Market Square, Dover.
Three searchlight batteries - known as the Langdon Lights - were built into the base of the bay's cliffs during World War II, so that any ship trying to enter the bay could be illuminated while it was checked, though one has been destroyed by a cliff fall.[1]
The area above the cliffs is now a chalk downland nature reserve owned by the National Trust, looking down on Dover Harbour and the Channel, and centred around the 'Gateway to the White Cliffs' Visitor Centre. Large parts of this reserve, and of this section of clifftop in general, is an SSSI, AONB and Heritage Coast.[2] Another nearby historic site is the South Foreland Lighthouse, also an NT property.
1. http://www.undergroundkent.co.uk/langdon_lights.htm
2. National Trust website
★ http://www.dover-kent.co.uk/places/langdon_cliffs.htm
★ http://www.geog.sussex.ac.uk/BAR/images/Kent/langdon_stairs/Page.html
★ Hourly Met office weather observations from the Bay
| Contents |
| History |
| Notes |
History
The bay is known for a hoard of Bronze Age scrap metal found nearby in 1974. This includes bronze axes of a French type and is thought to represent the cargo of a boat that was caught in a storm just after leaving the English coast, either jettisoned to lighten and save the boat or sunk with it (if there was a wreck, it is now lost). This demonstrates that cross-channel trade was already occuring in the Bronze Age, if not earlier. It is owned by the British Museum but on long-term loan and display in Dover Museum in Market Square, Dover.
Three searchlight batteries - known as the Langdon Lights - were built into the base of the bay's cliffs during World War II, so that any ship trying to enter the bay could be illuminated while it was checked, though one has been destroyed by a cliff fall.[1]
The area above the cliffs is now a chalk downland nature reserve owned by the National Trust, looking down on Dover Harbour and the Channel, and centred around the 'Gateway to the White Cliffs' Visitor Centre. Large parts of this reserve, and of this section of clifftop in general, is an SSSI, AONB and Heritage Coast.[2] Another nearby historic site is the South Foreland Lighthouse, also an NT property.
Notes
1. http://www.undergroundkent.co.uk/langdon_lights.htm
2. National Trust website
★ http://www.dover-kent.co.uk/places/langdon_cliffs.htm
★ http://www.geog.sussex.ac.uk/BAR/images/Kent/langdon_stairs/Page.html
★ Hourly Met office weather observations from the Bay
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