What to see in Bath
Bath museums, monuments, churches, ruins, and other top attractions
Bath museums, monuments, churches, ruins, and other top attractions
The first house but on the Royal Crescent is now a Museum of Georgian Life
Bath's small public art museum has a nice collection including Gainsborough oil pantings
A museum dedicated to Bath's most famous resident author and the Regency period in which she lived
A museum devoted to fashion in the gorgeous Georgian Assembly Rooms
The western border of early Roman Briton made a beeline from Lincoln to Exeter, never deviating more than 6 miles from its centerline (those Romans). It later became a road, known as the Fosse Way after the original fossa, or defensive ditch, it followed.
The road crossed the River Avon at the spa town of Aquae Sulis (modern-day Bath), but along much of its route Roman military encampments sprang up many Roman military encampments, known as castrum. This devolved into the Old English cæster, then to the modern "-cester" at the end of many a British city or town (Leicester, Cirencester, Dorcester, etc.).
Want more? The Fosse Way was the main paved road, or "strata" through the region. This became the Old English strǣt, which became not only the word "street," but along the etymyological way gave us "strat" and "stret" variants, like Stratford-upon-Avon, or my favorite: Strettford-on-Fosse.