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BRIGHTON |
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Recorded as the tiny fishing village of Brithelmeston in the Domesday Book,
BRIGHTON
seems to have slipped unnoticed through history until the mid-eighteenth-century sea-bathing trend established a resort that has never looked back. The fad received royal approval in the 1770s when the decadent Prince Regent, later George IV, began patronizing the town in the company of his mistress, thus setting a precedent for the "dirty weekend", Brighton's major contribution to the English collective consciousness. Trying to shake off this blowsy reputation, Brighton now highlights its Georgian charm, its upmarket shops and classy restaurants and its thriving conference industry. Yet, however much Brighton tries to present itself as a comfortable middle-class town, the essence of its appeal is its faintly bohemian vitality, a buzz that comes from a mix of English holiday-makers, thousands of young foreign students from the town's innumerable language schools, a thriving gay community and an energetic local student population from the art college and two universities.
The Town
Any visit to Brighton inevitably begins with a visit to its two most famous landmarks - the exuberant
Royal Pavilion
and the wonderfully tacky
Palace Pier
, a few minutes away - followed by a stroll along the seafront promenade or...
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