In 55 BC, in the earliest recorded mention of the cliffs, Julius Caesar described them in his "
Commentarii de Bello Gallico" as rising steeply from the sea and defended by armed Britons, preventing his forces from landing. A possible Iron Age
hillfort has been discovered at Dover, on the site of the later castle. The area was also inhabited during the Roman period when Dover was used as a port.
A lighthouse survives from this era, one of a pair at Dover which helped shipping navigate the port. It is likely the area around the surviving lighthouse was inhabited in the early medieval period as archaeologists have found a Saxon cemetery here, and the church of
St Mary in Castro was built next to the lighthouse in the 10th or 11th century. It is thought that the name
Albion, an ancient or poetic term referring to
Great Britain, was derived from the Latin
albus (meaning 'white') as an allusion to the white cliffs.
Dover Castle Dover Castle, the largest castle in England, was founded in the 11th century. It has been described as the "Key to England" owing to its defensive significance throughout history. The castle was founded by
William the Conqueror in 1066 and rebuilt for
Henry II,
King John, and
Henry III. This expanded the castle to its current size, taking its curtain walls to the edge of the cliffs. During the
First Barons' War the castle was held by King John's soldiers and besieged by the French between May 1216 and May 1217. The castle was also besieged in 1265 during the
Second Barons' War. In the 16th century, cannons were installed at the castle, but it became less important militarily as
Henry VIII had built artillery forts along the coast. Dover Castle was captured in 1642 during the Civil War when the townspeople climbed the cliffs and surprised the royalist garrison, giving a symbolic victory against royal control. Towards the end of the war many castles were
slighted, but Dover was spared. The castle had renewed importance in the 1740s as the development of heavy artillery made capturing ports an important part of warfare. During the Napoleonic Wars, in particular, the defences were remodelled and a series of tunnels were dug into the cliff to act as barracks, adding space for an extra 2,000 soldiers. The tunnels mostly lay abandoned until the Second World War.
South Foreland Lighthouse South Foreland Lighthouse is a Victorian-era lighthouse on the South Foreland in
St. Margaret's Bay, which was once used to warn ships approaching the nearby
Goodwin Sands. Goodwin Sands is a sandbank at the southern end of the
North Sea lying off the
Deal coast. Because crossing at Dover was the primary route to the continent before the advent of air travel, the white line of cliffs also formed the first or last sight of Britain for travellers. During the Second World War, thousands of allied troops on the
little ships in the
Dunkirk evacuation saw the welcoming sight of the cliffs. In the summer of 1940, reporters gathered at Shakespeare Cliff to watch aerial
dogfights between German and British aircraft during the
Battle of Britain.
Vera Lynn, known as "The Forces' Sweetheart" for her 1942 wartime classic "
(There'll Be Bluebirds Over) The White Cliffs of Dover" celebrated her 100th birthday in 2017. That year she led a campaign for donations to buy of land atop Dover's cliffs when it was feared that they might be sold to developers; the campaign met its target after only three weeks. The National Trust, which owns the surrounding areas, plans to return the land to a natural state of chalk grassland and preserve existing military structures from the Second World War. In June 2021, a wildflower meadow on White Cliffs of Dover was named in honour of Dame Vera Lynn.
Post-war The cliffs have featured on commemorative postage stamps issued by the
Royal Mail, including in their
British coastline series in 2002 and
UK A-Z series in 2012. A section of coastline encompassing the cliffs was purchased by the
National Trust in 2016. ==Attractions==