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Chester, the ancient walled City is on England's North West frontier with Wales. The national boundary is only two miles from Chester City Centre. To the east lies the prominent Cheshire Sandstone Ridge, which rises from the Cheshire Plain and follows closely the Sandstone Trail.
Chester is the county town of Cheshire, and is centrally located within the UK in the North West region. Its excellent concentration of motorways, roads and railways makes most areas of the UK within easy travelling distance and is well served by Liverpool and Manchester Airports. Private aircraft can be accommodated at Hawarden Airport, four miles form the City.
One of the most popular places to visit is the Cathedral, which attracts over one million visitors each year. Entry is free of charge but donations are invited from all who wish to help support the work of the Dean and Chapter to maintain the fabric and develop the ministry of this beautiful Cathedral.
All who visit will be made most welcome, and encouraged to share in the rich beauty of this, the most complete medieval monastic complex still standing in the UK. With records of a church on this site since the early tenth century, it was founded as a Benedictine Monastery dedicated to St Werburgh on 1092. In 1541, following the dissolution of the monasteries, it was rededicated as the Cathedral Church of Christ and the Blessed Virgin Mary in Chester, the mother church of the Church of England Diocese of Chester. |