This northwestern port city is universally famous for being the birthplace of The Beatles.
What is Liverpool?
Due to its massive industrial output during the 19th century, Sheffield became globally known by this sharp nickname
What is the "Steel City"?
Founded by the Romans as Londinium around 43 AD, this settlement grew to become England's modern capital.
What is London?
This coastal town in Kent is famous for its iconic, towering white chalk cliffs facing the English Channel.
What is Dover?
King Arthur’s legendary knights supposedly gathered at a round table located in this historic Hampshire city, which served as the ancient capital of Wessex.
What is Winchester?
You can visit the birthplace and gravesite of William Shakespeare in this historic Warwickshire town.
What is Stratford-upon-Avon?
Famous for its texturing, spinning, and mills, Manchester earned this global, fabric-inspired nickname during the Industrial Revolution.
What is "Cottonopolis"?
This Somerset city is famous for its remarkably well-preserved ancient bathing complex, constructed over natural hot springs by the Romans.
What is Bath?
The majestic Windsor Castle, an official residence of the British monarch, sits on the banks of this famous English river.
What is the River Thames?
King Henry VIII famously divorced Catherine of Aragon in this historic Kent city, which serves as the main seat of the Church of England.
What is Canterbury?
The Bronte sisters wrote their classic novels while living in Haworth, a village located in this northern English county.
What is Yorkshire?
This major West Midlands hub is frequently referred to as England’s "Second City."
What is Birmingham?
Known to the Romans as Eboracum, this walled northern city features a massive Gothic cathedral and served as a base for Roman Emperors.
What is York?
Newcastle shares its name with the river it sits directly alongside; name this waterway.
What is the River Tyne? (Full name is Newcastle upon Tyne).
This modern-day landlocked county town boasts a castle where King Richard III was buried under a parking lot before being rediscovered in 2012.
What is Leicester?
Legendary scientist Sir Isaac Newton studied and later taught at this city’s famous university, where he developed his laws of motion.
What is Cambridge?
Northampton historically dominated the British market in the manufacturing of this specific everyday item, a legacy still reflected in its local football team's nickname, "The Cobblers."
What are shoes (or boots)?
This ancient settlement in Essex was originally named Camulodunum and holds the title of being Britain's first recorded town and its first Roman capital.
What is Colchester?
Located in the southwest, this is the only English city contained entirely within a national park (Dartmoor).
In 1215, King John signed the Magna Carta at Runnymede, a water-meadow located near this town in Surrey.
What is Egham (or Windsor)?
This south-coast port town was the final European departure point for the Pilgrim Fathers on the Mayflower in 1620, and it later named a Massachusetts city after it.
What is Plymouth?
Stoke-on-Trent is known globally by the collective nickname "The Potteries" because it is comprised of how many distinct towns amalgamated together?
What is six? (Tunstall, Burslem, Hanley, Stoke, Fenton, and Longton).
If an English town or city name ends in the suffix "-caster", "-chester", or "-cester", it indicates the location was originally a Roman what?
What is a military camp or fort? (From the Latin castra).
Boasting a total population of fewer than 400 people, this tiny settlement in Kent is officially recognized as the smallest town by population in the UK.
What is Fordwich?
During the English Civil War in the 1640s, King Charles I rejected London and established his alternative royalist capital in this university city.
What is Oxford?