Architecture Kent's geographical location between the Straits of Dover and London has influenced its architecture, as has its
Cretaceous geology and its good farming land and fine building clays. Kent's countryside pattern was determined by a
gavelkind inheritance system that generated a proliferation of small settlements. There was no open-field system, and the large tracts were owned by the two great abbeys,
Christ Church, Canterbury and
St Augustine's Abbey, that did not pass into the hands of the king during the
Reformation.
Canterbury Cathedral is the United Kingdom's
metropolitan cathedral; it was founded in AD 598 and displays architecture from all periods. There are nine Anglo-Saxon churches in Kent.
Rochester Cathedral is England's second-oldest cathedral, the present building built in the Early English Style. The sites of
Richborough Castle and
Dover Castle, along with two strategic sites along Watling Street, were fortified by the Romans and the Dukes of Kent. Other important sites include
Canterbury city walls and
Rochester Castle.
Deal Castle,
Walmer Castle,
Sandown Castle (whose remains were eroded by the sea in the 1990s) were constructed in late mediaeval times, and
HM Dockyard, at Chatham and its surrounding castles and forts—
Upnor Castle,
Great Lines, and
Fort Amherst since then. Kent has three unique vernacular architecture forms: the
oast house, the
Wealden hall house, and
Kentish peg-tiles. Kent has bridge trusts to maintain its bridges. The great bridge (1387) at
Rochester was replaced. There are medieval structures at
Aylesford,
Yalding and
Teston. With the motorways in the late twentieth century came the
M2 motorway bridge spanning the Medway and the Dartford tunnel and the
Dartford Bridge spanning the Thames.
Literature and publishing Kent has provided inspiration for several notable writers and artists. It has been suggested that Kent inspired many settings in Shakespeare's plays, and he described it in the line 'Sweet is the country, and is full of riches / The people liberal, active, valiant, worthy.' Canterbury's religious role gave rise to
Chaucer's
Canterbury Tales, a key development in the English language. The father of novelist
Charles Dickens worked at the
Chatham Dockyard; in many of his books, the celebrated novelist featured the scenery of Chatham, Rochester, and the
Cliffe marshes. During the late 1930s, Nobel Prize-awarded novelist
William Golding worked as a teacher at
Maidstone Grammar School, where he met his future wife Ann Brookfield.
William Caxton, who first introduced the
printing press to England, was born in Kent; the recent invention was key in helping many
Kent dialect words and spellings to become standard in
English.
Lord Northbourne hosted a
biodynamic agriculture conference on his estate at
Betteshanger in the summer of 1939, he coined the term '
organic farming' and published his
manifesto of
organic agriculture the following year spawning a global movement for
sustainable agriculture and food.
Classical music Many notable musicians have been associated with Kent.
Walter Galpin Alcock, composer and organist, who played the organ at the coronations of Edward VII, George V and George VI, was born at
Edenbridge in 1861.
Richard Rodney Bennett, composer and pianist, was born at
Broadstairs in 1936.
Alfred Deller, counter-tenor singer, was born at Margate in 1912.
Orlando Gibbons, composer and organist, died in Canterbury on 5 June 1625 and is buried in the cathedral.
George Frideric Handel took the waters at Royal Tunbridge Wells in 1734 and 1735.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, together with his father, mother and sister, stayed at
Bourne Park House near Canterbury, 25–30 July 1765. The nights of 24 and 30 July were spent in Canterbury, where they also went to the horse races.
Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, then an 18-year-old sea cadet, was anchored at Gravesend from November 1862 to February 1863; while there, he completed the slow movement of his First Symphony.
Malcolm Sargent, conductor, was born at Ashford in 1895.
Thomas Tallis, composer and organist, was a
lay clerk of
Canterbury Cathedral around 1541–2.
Peter Warlock, composer and writer on music, and
Ernest John Moeran, composer, resided at
Eynsford from 1925 to 1928;
Arnold Bax,
William Walton and
Constant Lambert visited them here.
Percy Whitlock, organist and composer, was born at Chatham in 1903.
Visual arts A number of significant artists came from Kent, including
Thomas Sidney Cooper, a painter of landscapes, often incorporating farm animals,
Richard Dadd, a maker of faery paintings, and
Mary Tourtel, the creator of the children's book character,
Rupert Bear. The artist
Clive Head was also born in Kent. The landscape painter
J. M. W. Turner spent part of his childhood in the town of
Margate in East Kent, and regularly returned to visit it throughout his life. The East Kent coast inspired many of his works, including some of his most famous seascapes. Kent has also been the home to artists including
Frank Auerbach,
Tracey Emin and
Stass Paraskos. Kent was also the location of the largest number of art schools in the country during the nineteenth century, estimated by the art historian David Haste, to approach two hundred. This is believed to be the result of Kent being a front line county during the
Napoleonic Wars. At this time, before the invention of photography, draughtsmen were used to draw maps and topographical representations of the fields of battle, and after the wars ended many of these settled permanently in the county in which they had been based. Once the idea of art schools had been established, even in small towns in Kent, the tradition continued, although most of the schools were very small one-man operations, each teaching a small number of daughters of the upper classes how to draw and make watercolour paintings. Nonetheless, some of these small art schools developed into much larger organisations, including Canterbury College of Art, founded by Thomas Sidney Cooper in 1868, which is today the
University for the Creative Arts.
Blean near
Canterbury was home to
Smallfilms, the production company founded by
Oliver Postgate and
Peter Firmin and responsible for children's TV favourites
Noggin the Nog,
Ivor the Engine and
Bagpuss. Filmmaker
Derek Jarman maintained a home,
Prospect Cottage, on the coast in
Dungeness from 1987 until his death in 1994;
Creative Folkestone now serves as its custodians.
Performing arts The county's largest theatre is the
Marlowe Theatre in the centre of Canterbury.
Music festivals that take place in Kent include
Chilled in a Field Festival,
Electric Gardens,
Hop Farm Festival,
In the Woods Festival,
Lounge On The Farm and the annual
Smugglers Festival near Deal. Other venues for live music include
Leas Cliff Hall in Folkestone and the
Assembly Hall in Tunbridge Wells. ==Transport==