unitary authority, geographic and historic county of Somerset, southwestern England. It lies southeast of the city of Bristol and encompasses the city of Bath, several small urban areas between Bath and Bristol, and the countryside stretching to the southwest. Bath, noted for its architecture and antiquities, is the main urban centre and the unitary authority's only city. It was founded as Aquae Sulis by the Romans, who had been attracted by the hot mineral springs on the site. The city thrived as a centre of the wool and cloth trades during the Middle Ages and as a fashionable resort during the 18th and 19th centuries. Many remains of Roman villas and related structures in the unitary authority are probably associated with the Roman spa at Bath. The unitary authority is also the site of the Wansdyke, a now mostly obliterated trenched embankment that was probably built as a fortification to keep out Saxon invaders from the north. The unitary authority is an area of gently rolling hills and valleys that incorporates a section of the River Avon and the southernmost of the limestone Cotswold Hills in the north; the limestone Mendip Hills rise to 1,000 feet (305 metres) in the southwest. The quaint historical villages of Claverton, Freshford, and Monkton Combe east of Bath have numerous buildings constructed of locally quarried Cotswold limestone, much of which is also used in modern road construction. Dairy and some beef cattle graze the fertile valley pasturelands; cereals and fodder crops are extensively grown there. The light industrial town of Norton-Radstock in the south is a former centre of the exhausted Somerset coalfield. Keynsham, between Bath and Bristol, produces chocolates, soap, and paper products. Keynsham and Bath both serve as administrative centres. Area 136 square miles (351 square km). Pop. (1998 est.) 167,300.
BATH AND NORTH EAST SOMERSET
Meaning of BATH AND NORTH EAST SOMERSET in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012