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Liverpool (Taken from the Lonely Planet Guide)

Essential to understanding Liverpool's resilient and acid-tongued character is its location on the broad estuary of the River Mersey, a place full of fogs and seagulls. Despite its miserable side - decrepit tenements, boarded-up shops - Liverpool has a kind of shabby grandeur.

It will be forever synonymous with the Fab Four, two football clubs and a famously testing steeplechase, but these days the city is hoping to re-create itself as a premier European city, riding on the back not only of its pop culture cred but of its glorious past as the mercantile hub of an empire.

For 200 years the city ruled the seas as a world-beating port and cornerstone of the British Empire, built on slavery, commerce and emigration. It entered an extended period of decline when container shipping killed off the docks in the 1960s, and signs of degradation are still sadly evident. But Liverpool's sense of identity is as fierce as ever, the grand public buildings are still standing, the Beatles legend grows stronger every year and pride in 'the Pool' remains stubbornly strong.

Area: 44 sq km
Population: 458,000
Country: England
Time Zone: GMT/UTC +0 (GMT/UTC)
Telephone Area Code: 0151

 

Orientation

The west-coast city of Liverpool stretches for 13mi (21km) along the east bank of the River Mersey, from the estuary on the Irish Sea down to the airport on the southern edge of town. Wales lies over the Wirral Peninsula to the southwest, Manchester is 35mi (56km) to the east and the Roman city of Chester is 18mi (29km) south. Albert Dock, Liverpool's prime tourist attraction, is on the Mersey waterfront west of the centre of town. The Pier Head is further north, flanked by the landmark Liver, Cunard and Port of Liverpool buildings. Mathew St (Beatle mecca) is half a km or so east, with Lime Street Station a 10-minute walk away to the northeast. The National Express coach station is a few blocks north of the station, on the corner of Norton Rd and Islington St, and the city's central bus station is in the heart of town on Paradise St.

There's no chance of finding a spare bed when Liverpool or Everton are playing at home - and booking accommodation in August is a must, not least when the Beatles convention comes to town. There's a handily placed group of B&Bs on Mount Pleasant, between the city centre and the Metropolitan Cathedral. The iconic Adelphi, near Lime St, has always been the place to splurge, and there's also a few more-affordable options in the station area. Slater and Bold Sts offer a reasonable choice of eateries, and Chinatown's Berry St restaurants still do a decent fried rice. Liverpool nightlife is as late and loud as ever, with clubs and pubs filling the central area around Mathew, Bold, Seel and Slater Sts. Two of the city's most famous pubs are nearby: the gloriously tiled and gilded Philharmonic in Hardman St and John Lennon's grungy favourite Ye Cracke in Rice St.

 

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Liverpool
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
This article is about the city in England. Did you mean Liverpool, New South Wales or other places called Liverpool?
Liverpool is a city and metropolitan borough in Merseyside in north west England, on the north side of the Mersey estuary.

 
Liverpool's skyline, as seen from the River Mersey.
The city is governed by Liverpool City Council, one of five councils within Merseyside. The population of the city in 2002 was 441,477, and that of the surrounding Merseyside conurbation was 1,362,026. Liverpool is the second largest export port of the United Kingdom. Though not as preeminent as a century ago, it still possesses some manufacturing base, and is internationally famous as a port, as well as for being the city where The Beatles originated, and for its football clubs. In the year 2008, Liverpool will become the European Capital of Culture.

Liverpool runs directly into Bootle in Sefton, and Huyton in Knowsley. It faces Wallasey and Birkenhead across the River Mersey.

Inhabitants of Liverpool are officially known as "Liverpudlians", but more commonly known as "Scousers". They are noted for their distinctive accent, called Scouse. In London and elsewhere Liverpudlians are sometimes known as "Mickey Mousers" (from Cockney rhyming slang Scouse - Mickey Mouse).




City of Liverpool
 
Geography
Status: Metropolitan Borough, City (1880)
Region: North West England
Ceremonial County: Merseyside
Area:
- Total Ranked 232nd
111.84 km²
Admin. HQ: Liverpool
ONS code: 00BY
Map coordinates 53°25' N, 3°0' W
Demographics
Population:
- Total (2002 est.)
- Density Ranked 4th
441,477
3,947 / km²
Ethnicity: 94.3% White
1.1% S.Asian
1.2% Afro-Carib.
1.2% Chinese
Politics
Liverpool City Council
http://www.liverpool.gov.uk/
Leadership: Leader & Cabinet
Executive: Liberal Democrats



History
In 1190 it was known as 'liuerpul', meaning a pool or creek with muddy water. Other origins of the name have been suggest including 'elverpool', a reference to the large number of eels in the Mersey.

The origins of the city are usually dated from August 1207 when Liverpool was proclaimed a borough and a port. Initially it served as a dispatch point for troops sent to Ireland. For four centuries, Liverpool was relatively unimportant. In the middle of the 16th century the population of Liverpool was only around 500, and the area was regarded as subordinate to Chester until the 1650s. A number of battles for the town were waged during the English Civil War, including an eighteen day siege in 1644.

Liverpool Castle was built in the 13th century and was removed in 1726.

In the year 1571 the inhabitants of Liverpool sent a memorial to Queen Elizabeth, praying relief from a subsidy which they thought themselves unable to bear, wherein they styled themselves "her majesty's poor decayed town of Liverpool." Some time towards the close of this reign, Henry Stanley, 4th Earl of Derby, in his way to the Isle of Man, stayed at his house at Liverpool called the Tower; at which the corporation erected a handsome hall or seat for him in the church, where he honoured them several times with his presence.

Liverpool, from this time till the end of the next century, made but a slow progress either in the extent of its trade or in the number of its inhabitants; nor is there any remarkable occurrence recorded of it, except the siege of it by Prince Rupert, in the English Civil Wars in 1644; some traces of which were discovered, when the foundation of the Liverpool Infirmary was sunk, particularly the marks of the trenches thrown up by the prince, and some cartouches, &c. left behind by the besiegers.

About the year 1698 an act of parliament was obtained, empowering the inhabitants to build a new church. From that time may be traced the rapid progress of population and commerce, until Liverpool had become the second metropolis of Great Britain:

In the 18th century, as trade from the West Indies was added to that of Ireland and Europe, Liverpool began to grow. The first wet dock in Britain was built in Liverpool in 1715. Substantial profits from the slave trade helped the town grow and prosper. Liverpool's Black community dates from this period and grew rapidly, reaching a population of 10,000 within five years. By the beginning of the 19th century, 40% of the world's trade was passing through the docks at Liverpool.

 
Albert Dock
Far as the eye can trace the prospect round
The splendid tracts of opulence are found;
Yet scarce a hundred annual rounds have run.
Since first the fabric of this power begun;
His noble stream, inglorious, Mersey roll'd,
Nor felt his waves by lab'ring art controll'd:
Along his side a few small cots were spread,
His finny brood their humble tenants fed;
At op'ning dawn with fraudful nets supply'd
The padding skiff would brave his specious tide,
Ply round the shores, nor tempt the dangerous main,
But seek ere night the friendly port again.
Liverpool expanded significantly in the nineteenth century and a number of major buildings were constructed (St. George's Hall, Lime Street Station etc.). Liverpool was granted city status in 1880.

During the first part of the twentieth century Liverpool continued to expand, pulling in emmigrants from Europe. It has been claimed, that Adolf Hitler stayed in Upper Stanhope street in Liverpool, with his sister, in the 1910s, but this claim is not considered reliable by most historians (see website ( http://www.btinternet.com/~m.royden/mrlhp/local/hitlerinliverpool/hitlerinliverpool.htm)).

The area of Gerard, Hunter, Lionel and Whale streets, off of Scotland road, was refered to as Little Italy. Inspired by an old Venetian custom Liverpool was 'married to the sea' in September 1928. Liverpool was also home to a large Welsh population and was sometimes referred to as the Capital of North Wales. In 1884, 1900 and 1929 Eisteddfod was held in Liverpool. The population of the city exceeded 850,000 in 1930.

During World War II there were eighty air-raids on Merseyside, with an especially concentrated series of raids in May 1941 which interrupted operations at the docks for almost a week. Although only 2,500 people were killed, almost half the homes in the metropolitan area sustained some damage and 11,000 were totally destroyed.

Significant rebuilding followed the war, including massive housing estates and the Seaforth Dock, the largest dock project in Britain. However, the city has been suffering since the 1950s with the loss of numerous employers. By 1985 the population had fallen to 460,000. Declines in manufacturing and dock activity struck the city particularly hard.

 
German 1880 map
Historically Liverpool was part of the traditional county of Lancashire, Liverpool had become independent of Lancashire in 1888 when it became a county borough. In 1974, it became a metropolitan district within the newly created metropolitan county of Merseyside.

In the 1980s several councils in Merseyside including Liverpool City Council were taken over by the far-left wing Militant group, under the de facto leadership of Derek Hatton (although Hatton was formally only Deputy Leader). This was one of the reasons for the abolition of the Merseyside county council in 1986.

In 1989 96 Liverpool fans died or were severely injured in the Hillsborough disaster at a football game in Sheffield. This had a traumatic effect on people in both cities, and resulted in legally imposed changes in the way in which football fans have been accommodated in football stadiums since. A similar outpouring of grief and shock occurred in 1993 when two year-old James Bulger was killed by two ten year-old boys, Jon Venables and Robert Thompson.

The city has emphasized its cultural attractions, winning the accolade of European City of Culture for 2008. Capitalising on the popularity of the 1960s pop group "the Beatles" and other groups of the Merseybeat era, tourism has also become a significant factor in Liverpool's economy.


Culture
Liverpool has a vibrant artistic life. Several pre-Raphaelites are among the important paintings of the Walker Art Gallery. With more to be found in the Sudley and Lady Lever Galleries. [1] (http://www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/) The Tate Liverpool gallery houses the modern art collection of the Tate in the north of England. The Liverpool Biennial is a festival of arts held (as the name implies) every two years. The festival generally runs from mid september to late november and comprises three main sections; the International, The Independants and New Contemporaries although many fringe events are timed to coincide.[2] (http://www.biennial.org.uk/)

A flourishing orchestra, the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra performs in its own hall, the Philharmonic Hall. The city also became well known for the Liverpool poets, of whom Adrian Henri and Roger McGough are among the best known. The city is also home to several successful theatre companies - The Everyman & Playhouse [3] (http://www.everymanplayhouse.com/) as well as The Unity Theatre [4] (http://www.unitytheatreliverpool.co.uk/).

In 2003, Liverpool became European Capital of Culture for 2008 and started a £750 million regeneration of the city centre. In addition to the money being invested in the city centre, a tram system is being developed, which will hopefully complement the city's train and bus services.

Liverpool has two Premier division football clubs - Liverpool F.C. at Anfield and Everton F.C. at Goodison Park. Over the water at Tranmere are Tranmere Rovers F.C.


Important landmarks and buildings
 
Pier Head area, seen from the Albert Dock
The built environment of Liverpool (over 2,500 listed buildings) is the inheritance of high-minded public spirit since the later 18th century, largely with Dissenter impetus, that has resulted in more public sculpture than in any UK city aside from Westminster, more listed buildings than any city apart from London and, surprisingly, more Georgian houses than the City of Bath.

In 2004 Liverpool was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage site, the justifcation is Liverpool's importance in the development of world trading system and dock technology.

Amongst its superlatives: Liverpool has the largest panel of stained glass in the world (in Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral), the largest brick building in the world, and the first enclosed integrated dock system in the world. The Anglican Cathedral has the longest nave, largest organ and heaviest and highest peal of bells in the world. Architects well represented in Liverpool: Giles Gilbert Scott, Peter Ellis, Harvey Lonsdale Elmes, and John Foster. Sir Edwin Lutyens is represented by the completed crypt of his projected Metropolitan Cathedral, which was built to a simpler design by Frederick Gibberd.

Albert Dock
Bluecoat Arts Centre
Cast Iron Shore
Cunard Building
Lime Street Station
Royal Liver Building
Liverpool John Moores University
Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine
Liverpool University
Merseyside Maritime Museum
Museum of Liverpool Life
Oriel Chambers design by Peter Ellis.
The Philharmonic Dining Rooms
Pier Head
Port of Liverpool Building
Quiggins
St. George's Hall
Stanley Dock Tobacco Warehouse
The Beatles Story
Town-Hall
Walker Art Gallery
William Brown Library

Theatres

Everyman
Philharmonic Hall
The Playhouse
Royal Court
Empire
Neptune
Unity

Ritual sites

Greek Orthodox Church of St Nicholas
Gustav Adolfus Kyrka The Swedish Seamen's Church.
Liverpool Cathedral (Anglican)
Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral of Christ the King (Roman Catholic),
Princes Road Synagogue
St. Luke's Church
St. Nicholas's Church the seafarers church

Education

In Liverpool primary education is available in various forms suported by the state include secular, Church of England, Islamic, Jewish and Roman Catholic. Currently no specific Islamic secondary education is provided.

One of Liverpool important early schools was The Liverpool Blue Coat School was founded in 1708 as a charitable school, it continues today. Liverpool College[5] (http://www.liverpoolcollege.org.uk/) is the leading private school.

Liverpool has three universities - the University of Liverpool, Liverpool John Moores University, and Liverpool Hope University. Liverpool JMU is one of the polytechnics given university status in 1992 and is named after the owner of the Littlewoods retail group. The Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine was founded to address some of the problems created by trade, today it continues as a post graduate school.

The Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts which was set up by Sir Paul McCartney in 1996, to train artistes and technicians, in the building which formerly housed the Liverpool Institute for Boys.


Transport
There are three tunnels under the River Mersey: one railway tunnel, the Mersey Railway Tunnel, and two road tunnels, Queensway Tunnel and Kingsway Tunnel. There is also the Mersey Ferry, made famous by the song Ferry Cross the Mersey by Gerry and the Pacemakers. In fact the song is now played on the ferryboats themselves every time they prepare to dock at Liverpool.

In 2001, Speke Airport was renamed Liverpool John Lennon Airport, in honour of the late Beatle John Lennon. The airport's logo consists of a sketch that Lennon had drawn of himself, and the words "Above us only sky", lyrics from his legendary song "Imagine". In 2002 716,000 passengers used the Port of Liverpool. The Isle of Man and Ireland being the two most important passenger routes.

Liverpool has a train system called Merseyrail, the sections in the city centre are mostly underground. The lines terminate at Southport, Ormskirk, Kirkby, Hunts Cross, Ellesmere Port and Chester. The inner loop from Edge Hill station to Kirkdale, no longer carries passenger services and Liverpool Overhead Railway has long since disapeared. Liverpool once possesed a very integrated transports transport system. Only now is a Tram system, MerseyTram being planned to replace the one destroyed in the 1950's.


Famous Liverpudlians
Many famous names have been associated with Liverpool for a list, see List of famous people from Liverpool.


Media
The city's has two daily newspapers, Liverpool Daily Post in the morning and the evening Liverpool Echo both published by the same company. The Daily Post, especially, serves a wider area, inluding north Wales. Broadcast media include BBC Radio Merseyside, Juice 107.6 and Radio City as well as Magic 1548, which are both based in St. John's Beacon which dominates the Liverpool skyline, all broadcast to the city and beyond.


Economy
The economy of Liverpool is begining to recover from it's long post WWII decline. Between 1995 and 2001 GVA per head grew at 6.3% annum. This compared with 5.8% for inner London and 5.7% for Bristol. The rate of Jobs growth was 9.2% compared with a national average of 4.9% for the same period, 1998-2002.

Like the rest of the United Kingdom the city has seen a large growth in service industries and has several major call centers. The activities of the port have left the site with a communications infrastructure that had for a long time exceded requirments. Growth in the areas of New Media has been helped by the existance of a relativly large Computer game development community.

Tourism is a major factor in the economy and will be of increasing importance in the run up to the Liverpool years as European Capital of Culture. This has led to a great increase in the provision of high quality services such as Hotels, resturants and clubs. The buildings of Liverpool not only attract tourist but also film makers, who regularly use Liverpool to double for many cities around the worlds and making it the second most filmed city in the UK.






Districts of Liverpool

Aigburth Allerton, England Anfield Childwall
Clubmoor Cressington/Grassendale Crosby Croxteth
Dingle Edge Hill Everton Fairfield
Fazakerley Garston, Merseyside Gateacre Hunts Cross
Kirkdale Knotty Ash Litherland Mossley Hill
Netherley Norris Green Old Swan Seaforth
Sefton Park Speke St Michael's Hamlet Toxteth
Tuebrook Walton Wavertree West Derby
Woolton


External links

Liverpool Pictorial (http://www.liverpoolpictorial.co.uk/index.htm)
xasa Directory



Districts of England - North West England
 
Allerdale | Barrow-in-Furness | Blackburn with Darwen | Blackpool | Bolton | Burnley | Bury | Carlisle | Chester | Chorley | Congleton | Copeland | Crewe and Nantwich | Eden | Ellesmere Port and Neston | Fylde | Halton | Hyndburn | Knowsley | Lancaster | Liverpool | Macclesfield | Manchester | Oldham | Pendle | Preston | Ribble Valley | Rochdale | Rossendale | St Helens | Salford | Sefton | South Lakeland | South Ribble | Stockport | Tameside | Trafford | Vale Royal | Warrington | West Lancashire | Wigan | Wirral | Wyre
 
Administrative counties with multiple districts: Cheshire, Cumbria, Greater Manchester, Lancashire, Merseyside
 
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liverpool"

 

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