Britain

HILLTOP HAVENS

In the late 17th century, London was a dangerous place to be. The Great Fire of 1666, hot on the heels of the Great Plague of 1665, were the last straw for many of the city’s noble families, who opted to flee the stench, dirt and disease in favour of the tranquility and clean air of the nearby hilltop villages to the north.

The highwaymen that once preyed on carriages heading to the hills are long gone, but the fresh air and open spaces remain. Hampstead Heath, an old, rambling park, covers some 800 acres of north London with grassy meadows, shady glades and swathes of

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Britain

Britain6 min read
On the Whisky Trail
Wedged between the shimmering waters of the Moray Firth in the north and the brooding bulk of the Cairngorm Mountains in the south, Speyside is characterised by the wide, meandering River Spey that lends its name to the area. Skinny-legged trees line
Britain7 min read
Story Of An Island
Tucked into the Bay of Saint-Malo, the Channel Islands may sit tête-à-tête with the coast of France, but these magical islands are resolutely British. The archipelago became part of the Anglo-Norman realm when William the Conqueror became King of Eng
Britain2 min read
Your Letters
I love your magazine and look forward to every copy. As an expat who has lived in California for over 40 years I eagerly await every edition and many of your articles evoke happy memories of times gone by. But this one in particular brought to mind a

Related Books & Audiobooks