What
the Encyclopedia
Britannica says about Brighton:
District (borough), county of East Sussex, England.
It is a seaside resort on the English Channel, 51 miles
(82 km) south of London. With an area of 22 square miles
(58 square km), Brighton spreads over the steep chalk
slopes of the South Downs to the north; to the east
it is fronted by chalk cliffs; to the west it merges
with the residential borough of Hove. Major sea defenses
initiated in 1930 line the shore between Black Rock
and Saltdean. A marina for boating has been created
at Black Rock.
Brighton
was for many centuries nothing more than a tiny fishing
community. The site's modern significance dates from
1754, when Richard Russell, the author of a treatise
on the health benefits of seawater, settled there to
put his theories into practice, thereby initiating the
vogue of sea bathing. In 1783 the Prince of Wales, later
the Prince Regent and then King George IV, made the
first of his many visits to Brighton. His powerful patronage
of the locality extended almost continuously to 1827
and stamped the town with the distinguished character
still reflected in its Regency squares and terraces.
His Royal Pavilion, designed in Indian style with fantastic
Chinese interior decorations, was built on the Old Steine,
where fishing nets were once dried. The pavilion now
houses a museum and art gallery, while the Dome, originally
the royal stables, is used for concerts and conferences.
Maria Fitzherbert, the secret wife of George IV, is
buried in St. John's Roman Catholic church. Victorian
Brighton grew rapidly with the opening of the railway
(1841) connecting it with London.
The
old fishing port, with its houses of black flint, includes
the Lanes, now known for antique shops. The seaward
side of the old port is bounded by the main promenade,
which lies between the Palace and West piers. Brighton
now has more than 7 miles (11 km) of seafront above
its pebbly beach. East of the Palace Pier the first
electric railway in Great Britain (1883) carried tourists
in open coaches.
The
town has the Theatre Royal, a racecourse overlooking
the sea from the downs, an aquarium, golf courses, and
a sports arena. The municipal airport is at Shoreham-by-Sea.
The University of Sussex was founded at nearby Falmer
in 1961. Roedean is a well-known public (independent)
girls' school. The Royal Sussex County Hospital is the
largest of numerous hospitals and sanatoriums in Brighton.
The borough has industrial estates, and their highly
diversified products range from office machinery to
street name plates. Pop. (1985 est.) 143,100.