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Historic Dover
must start with Dover Castle but there is so much history you need to
come and stay in the Town of Dover to be able absorb all that is on
offer.
Dover Castle
One of English Heritage's premier sites. strategically placed on the
famous White Cliffs of Dover it is rightfully named the "Key of England".
Two thousand years of history, from the Roman Lighthouse, the Iron Age
Fort, a Saxon Church to the secret Wartime Tunnels, make this a must for
your itinary. The Norman Keep houses the latest exhibitions: Preparations
for the visit of Henry VIII & the Seige of 1216. Deep inside the White
Cliffs see where wartime personnel were stationed during World War II.
The evacuation of Dunkirk was masterminded here.
No fortress in England can boast a longer history than Dover Castle.
Commanding the shortest sea crossing between England and the continent,
the site has served from the Iron Age onwards as a vital strategic
centre.
Henry II's keep
There has been a castle in Dover since the defences of an Anglo-Saxon
fortress were strengthened by William of Normandy, who built the first
earthwork castle in 1066 before moving on to London.
Under Henry II, the castle was rebuilt, including the monumental keep
constructed in the 1180s by his great architect, Maurice the Engineer,
which stands at the heart of a concentric ring of defences.
The key to England
Unlock Dover and you unlock England. Two exhibitions highlight the
Castle's role when the country was threatened with invasion.
The first is a presentation using the latest light, film and sound to
retrace how, in 1216, a group of rebel barons invited the French Dauphin
to invade England and seize the throne from King John. It was not long
before the whole of the south east, including London and the Tower, was
under the control of Prince Louis. Only two castles in the area, Windsor
and Dover, defied the French.
But Louis had not bargained for Hubert de Burgh's resolute defence of
Dover. The Castle held for several months while English forces gathered
to face the Dauphin. After the French defeat at Lincolnhe was obliged to
raise the siege and return to London. It was de Burgh's ship that led the
English fleet to a decisive victory off the coast in August 1217.
The second exciting exhibition offers a tableau of the preparations for
Henry VIII's visit to Dover. After his divorce from Catherine of Aragon
in 1533, Henry felt himself to be isolated in Europe. With an alliance
formed between Francis I of France and Rome, and all trade suspended with
the Continent, war seemed inevitable and Henry was desperate to build up
England's defences in preparation. Coastal forts were being erected at
Deal and Walmer, and a large harbour was already under construction at
Dover.
In 1539, Henry came to Dover to inspect the work. The exhibition invites
visitors into the King's chambers to witness the preparation for Henry's
arrival. Hundreds of locked strong boxes preceded him, containing
everything that a King of England could possibly need from provisions and
hunting equipment, chests full of plans and documents, to desks,
furniture and decorations.
Dover's secret tunnels
The White Cliffs are among England's most celebrated sights, yet hidden
inside them is a fascinating and secret world.
Below, deep underground, is an extensive network of tunnels first made in
the Napoleonic Wars. Seven tunnels were dug as barracks for the soldiers
and officers which could hold up to 2,000 troops. They are the only
underground barracks ever built in Britain.
Operation Dynamo
At 18:57 hours on 26 May 1940, the signal was received to start Operation
Dynamo the evacuation of the British Expeditionary Force and Belgian and
French troops from Dunkirk's beaches on the north coast of France.
As France fell before the German advance, and with less than a week to
prepare, it was the responsibility of Vice-Admiral Ramsay to plan the
evacuation of tens of thousands of troops. The cliff tunnels became the
nerve centre of the operation. The best estimate was that only 45,000 of
the troops could be brought back, yet Winston Churchill announced to the
House of Commons on 4 June that 338,000 troops had been saved, despite
the operation coming under attack.

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