Canterbury

Canterbury, in E. Kent, on the Stour, by rail 62 m. SE. of London; is the ecclesiastical capital of England; the cathedral was founded A.D. 597 by St. Augustin; the present building belongs to various epochs, dating as far back as the 11th century; it contains many interesting monuments, statues, and tombs, among the latter that of Thomas à Becket, murdered in the north transept, 1170; the cloisters, chapter-house, and other buildings occupy the site of the old monastic houses; the city is rich in old churches and ecclesiastical monuments; there is an art gallery; trade is chiefly in hops and grain. Kit Marlowe was a native.

Population (circa 1900) given as 23,000.

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Cantarini, Simone * Canterbury
Canopus
Canosa
Canossa
Canova, Antonio
Canrobert, François
Cant
Cant, Andrew
Cantabri
Cantacuze`nus, John
Cantarini, Simone
Canterbury
Canterbury
Canterbury Tales
Canticles
Canton
Canton, John
Cantù, Cæsare
Canute
Cape Breton
Cape Coast Castle
Cape Colony