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Welcome To the e-travelguide to Hotels, guest houses and attractions in Lincolnshire

Make the most of your time in Lincolnshire, use the information provided on this web site by clicking on the links above to plan your visit.

Lincolnshire is a county in the Midlands of England, and shares borders with Norfolk, Cambridgeshire, Leicestershire, Nottinghamshire and South Yorkshire, as well as England’s smallest county of Rutland. In addition it also has England’s shortest county boundary, with just 20 yards of land joining Lincolnshire to Northamptonshire. It is the second largest county after North Yorkshire and, although it has been divided into 9 separate districts, the ceremonial county of Lincolnshire encompasses the land from The Wash to the River Humber. Largely rural in character, with several notably excepted areas, and exceptionally flat and low-lying (with the exception of the Lincolnshire Wolds), Lincolnshire’s economy for centuries has relied on agriculture, and there are many picturesque market towns and villages dotted around the county.


However the region has also played its part in other areas of industry: the area around Scunthorpe was mined in small amounts for iron ore during the Roman occupation of Britain, but from the 1850s onwards the town became prolific in the production of iron and steel; Grimsby is one of the county’s busiest ports, as well as being one of the UK’s major centres for sea fishing; Gainsborough quickly grew into a key town for boiler making; and the port of Boston became important during the 17 th Century as English immigrants made their way to the New World. Lincolnshire’s county town, Lincoln, is perhaps the most frequently visited place in Lincolnshire, and has been the hub of the local economy for centuries.


There is evidence of pre-historic habitation of the area around Lincoln, but most historians believe that the city’s origins date from the Iron Age, when it was known as ‘Lindun’. In Roman times a settlement and garrison for soldiers was set up here not long after the Roman invasion of the British Isles, and was given the name ‘Lindum Colonia’, indicating that it was a major town. The famous Fosse Way linked the town with Exeter, via Bath and the Cotswolds, but it was under the Normans that two of Lincoln’s best loved landmarks were built: the magnificent castle is remarkably well preserved to this day, while the gothic cathedral is one of the finest examples of Norman architecture in Northern Europe.

Contact: 0118 971 4700

 
 
 
Contact: 0118 971 4700
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