Sussex has a centuries-old reputation for being separate and culturally distinct from the rest of England. and have an aversion to being pushed around, as expressed through the Sussex motto,
We wunt be druv. Sussex is known for its strong tradition of
bonfire celebrations and its proud musical heritage. Sussex in the first half of the 20th century was a major centre for
modernism, and saw many radical artists and writers move to its seaside towns and countryside. The county is home to the
Brighton Festival and the
Brighton Fringe, England's largest arts festival.
Brighton Pride is one of the UK's largest and oldest
gay pride parades and other pride events take place at most other major towns including Crawley, Eastbourne, Hastings and
Worthing. Chichester is home to the
Chichester Festival Theatre and
Pallant House Gallery.
Architecture , Brighton Sussex's building materials reflect its geology, being made of
flint on and near the South Downs and
sandstone in the Weald.
Brick is used across the county. the architecture of Sussex also has elaborate and eccentric buildings rarely matched elsewhere in England including the
Saxon Church of St Mary the Blessed Virgin, Sompting,
Castle Goring, which has a front and rear of entirely different styles and Brighton's
Indo-Saracenic Royal Pavilion.
Dialect Historically, Sussex has had its own dialect with regional differences reflecting its cultural history. It has been divided into variants for the three western rapes of West Sussex, the two eastern rapes of Lewes and Pevensey and an area approximate to the easternmost rape of Hastings. The Sussex dialect is also notable in having an unusually large number of words for mud, in a way similar to the popular belief which exists that the Inuit have an
unusually large number of words for snow.
Literature Writers born in Sussex include the
Renaissance poet
Thomas May and playwrights
Thomas Otway, and
John Fletcher. One of the most prolific playwrights of his day, Fletcher is thought to have collaborated with
Shakespeare. Notable Sussex poets include
William Collins,
William Hayley,
Percy Bysshe Shelley,
Richard Realf,
Wilfrid Scawen Blunt,
Edward Carpenter and
John Scott. Other writers from Sussex include
Sheila Kaye-Smith,
Noel Streatfeild,
Patrick Hamilton,
Rumer Godden,
Hammond Innes,
Angus Wilson,
Maureen Duffy,
Angela Carter,
William Nicholson,
Peter James,
Kate Mosse and
Alex Preston. In addition there are writers, who while they were not born in Sussex had a strong connection. This includes
Charlotte Turner Smith,
William Blake,
Alfred Tennyson,
H. G. Wells,
Hilaire Belloc,
John Cowper Powys,
Arthur Conan Doyle,
Henry James,
E. F. Benson,
John Roman Baker,
James Herbert and
AA Milne, who lived in Ashdown Forest for much of his life and set his Winnie-the-Pooh stories in the forest. Sussex has been home to four winners of the
Nobel Prize in Literature:
Rudyard Kipling spent much of his life in Sussex, living in Rottingdean and later at Burwash. Irishman
W. B. Yeats spent three winters living with American poet
Ezra Pound at Colemans Hatch in the Ashdown Forest and towards the end of his life spent much time at Steyning and Withyham;
John Galsworthy spent much of his life in Bury in the Sussex Downs; and
Harold Pinter lived in Worthing in the 1960s.
Music Sussex's rich musical heritage encompasses folk, classical and popular genres amongst others. Composed by William Ward-Higgs,
Sussex by the Sea is the county's unofficial
anthem.
William Henry Hudson compared the singing of the Sussexians with that of the
Basques and the
Tehuelche people of
Patagonia, both peoples with ancient cultures. The songs sung by the
Copper Family,
Henry Burstow, Samuel Willett, Peter and Harriett Verrall, David Penfold and others were collected by John Broadwood and his niece
Lucy Broadwood,
Kate Lee and composers
Ralph Vaughan Williams and
George Butterworth. Sussex also played a major part in the folk music revival of the 1960s and 1970s with various singers including
George 'Pop' Maynard,
Scan Tester, Tony Wales and the sisters
Dolly and
Shirley Collins. and the
Worthing Symphony Orchestra. In
popular music, Sussex has produced artists including
Leo Sayer,
The Cure,
The Levellers,
Brett Anderson,
Keane,
The Kooks,
The Feeling,
Rizzle Kicks,
Conor Maynard,
Tom Odell,
Royal Blood,
Rag'n'Bone Man,
Celeste,
Architects and
Maisie Peters. In the 1970s, Sussex was home to
Phun City, the UK's first large-scale free music festival and hosted the
1974 Eurovision Song Contest which propelled
ABBA to worldwide fame. Major festivals include
The Great Escape Festival and
Glyndebourne Festival Opera.
Television Due to the size of the county, it is covered by more than one TV station: •
BBC South East covers
Brighton & Hove and
East Sussex, and also
Haywards Heath,
East Grinstead,
Burgess Hill and
Shoreham-by-Sea in
West Sussex. •
BBC South covers the remainder of
West Sussex. •
ITV Meridian is another regional news which covers the county. •
Crawley is covered by both regions, but receives a better TV signal from
BBC London and
ITV London.
Religion Christianity is the predominant religion in Sussex with 57.8 per cent of the population identifying as Christian in the
2011 census. Other results from the 2011 census are: 1.4 per cent as
Muslim, 0.7 per cent as
Hindu and 30.5 per cent as having
no religion. In contrast,
Protestant non-conformity was historically strongest in areas furthest from diocesan authorities in Chichester, in the south-west. This included in the Weald and in the east, where there were also links to Protestant northern Europe. Groups include the
Church of Scientology at
Saint Hill Manor,
Opus Dei, the
Rosicrucian Order, the
Pagan Federation and the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the Mormons).
Science Pell's equation and the
Pell number are both named after 17th century mathematician
John Pell. Pell is sometimes credited with inventing the division sign, ÷, which has also been attributed to Swiss mathematician
Johann Heinrich Rahn, one of his students. In the 19th century, geologist and palaeontologist
Gideon Mantell began the scientific study of dinosaurs. In 1822 he was responsible for the discovery and eventual identification of the first fossil teeth, and later much of the skeleton of
Iguanodon.
Braxton Hicks contractions are named after
John Braxton Hicks, the Sussex doctor who in 1872 first described the uterine contractions not resulting in childbirth. from 1925 to 1946. In the 20th century,
Frederick Soddy won the
Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work on
radioactive substances, and his investigations into the origin and nature of
isotopes.
Frederick Gowland Hopkins shared the
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1929 with
Christiaan Eijkman, for discovering the growth-stimulating
vitamins.
Martin Ryle shared the
Nobel Prize for Physics in 1974 with Cornishman
Antony Hewish, the first Nobel prize awarded in recognition of astronomical research. While working at the University of Sussex,
Harold Kroto won the 1996
Nobel Prize in Chemistry with
Richard Smalley and
Robert Curl from
Rice University in the US for the discovery of
fullerenes.
David Mumford is a mathematician known for distinguished work in algebraic geometry and then for research into vision and pattern theory. He won the
International Mathematical Union's
Fields Medal in 1974 and in 2010 was awarded the United States
National Medal of Science. In the
social sciences, Sussex was home to
economist John Maynard Keynes from 1925 to 1946. The founding father of
Keynesian economics, he is widely considered to be one of the founders of modern macroeconomics and the most influential economist of the 20th century.
David Pilbeam won the 1986
International Prize from the
Fyssen Foundation. In the early 20th century, Sussex was at the centre of one of what has been described as 'British archaeology's greatest hoax'. Bone fragments said to have been collected in 1912 were presented as the fossilised remains of a previously unknown early human, referred to as
Piltdown Man. In 1953 the bone fragments were exposed as a forgery, consisting of the lower jawbone of an
orangutan deliberately combined with the skull of a fully developed modern human. From 1967 to 1979, Sussex was home to the
Isaac Newton Telescope at the
Royal Greenwich Observatory in
Herstmonceux Castle.
Sport Sussex has a centuries-long tradition of sport. Sussex has played a key role in the early development of both
cricket and
stoolball. Cricket is recognised as having been formed in the
Weald and Sussex is where cricket was first recorded as being played by men (in 1611), and by women (in 1677), as well as being the location of the first reference to a
cricket bat (in 1622) Founded in 1839,
Sussex CCC is England's oldest county cricket club and is the oldest professional sports club in the world.
Slindon Cricket Club dominated the sport for a while in the 18th century. The cricket ground at
Arundel Castle traditionally plays host to a
Duke of Norfolk's XI which plays the national
test sides touring England. Founded in 1971, the
Sussex Cricket League is believed to be the largest adult cricket league in the world, with 335 teams in 2018. Referred to as Sussex's
'national' sport and a Sussex game or pastime, Sussex may be where the sport of
stoolball originated and is where the sport was formalised in the 19th century and its revival took place in the early 20th century. Sussex is represented in the
Premier League by
Brighton & Hove Albion and in the
Football League by
Crawley Town. Brighton has been a League member since 1920, whereas Crawley was promoted to the League in 2011.
Brighton & Hove Albion play in the
FA Women's Super League and
Lewes play in the
FA Women's Championship. Sussex has had its own
football association, since 1882 and its own
football league, which has since expanded into Surrey, since 1920. In horse racing, Sussex is home to
Goodwood, Fontwell Park,
Brighton and
Plumpton. The
All England Jumping Course show jumping facility hosts the
British Jumping Derby and the
Royal International Horse Show.
Eastbourne Eagles speedway team race in the
SGB Championship.
Cuisine The historic county is known for its "seven good things of Sussex". These seven things are Pulborough eel, Selsey cockle, Chichester lobster, Rye herring, Arundel mullet, Amberley trout and Bourne
wheatear. Sussex is also known for Ashdown Partridge Pudding,
Chiddingly Hot pot, Sussex Bacon Pudding, Sussex Hogs' Pudding, Huffed Chicken, Sussex Churdles, Sussex Shepherds Pie,
Sussex Pond Pudding, Sussex Blanket Pudding, Sussex Well Pudding, and Chichester Pudding. Sussex is also known for its cakes and biscuits known as Sussex Plum Heavies and Sussex Lardy Johns, while
banoffee pie was first created in 1972 in
Jevington. The county has vineyards and a long history of
brewing of beer. It is home to the 18th century beer brewers,
Harveys of Lewes as well as many more recently established breweries. There are also many cider makers in Sussex, Hunts Sussex Cider and SeaCider are the largest cider producers. With 138 vineyards in 2023, Sussex has a quarter of the UK's vineyards. In 2022, Sussex wine gained
Protected Designation of Origin status following decades of international acclaim with Sussex wines winning awards around the world. Many vineyards make wines using traditional
Champagne varieties and methods, of Sussex downland and that of the
Champagne region which lies on a latitude to the south.
Visual arts is Europe's largest representation of the human form. Some of the earliest known art in Sussex is the carvings in the galleries of the
Neolithic flint mines at
Cissbury on the South Downs near Worthing. From the Roman period, the palace at
Fishbourne has the largest in situ collection of
mosaics in the UK, while the villa at
Bignor contains some of the best preserved
Roman mosaics in England. Dating from around the 12th century, the 'Lewes Group' of
wall paintings can be found in several churches across the centre of Sussex, some of which are celebrated for their age, extent and quality. Of uncertain origin, the
Long Man of Wilmington is Europe's largest representation of the human form. In the late 18th century three men commissioned important works of the county which ensured that its landscapes and daily life were captured onto canvas.
William Burrell of
Knepp Castle commissioned Swiss-born watercolourist
Samuel Hieronymus Grimm to tour Sussex, producing 900 watercolours of the county's buildings.
George Wyndham, 3rd Earl of Egremont of
Petworth House was a patron of painters such as
J. M. W. Turner and
John Constable.
John 'Mad Jack' Fuller also commissioned Turner to make a series of paintings which resulted in thirteen finished watercolours of Fuller's house at
Brightling and the area around it. '', 1828, by
J. M. W. Turner In the 19th century landscape watercolourist
Copley Fielding lived in Sussex and illustrator
Aubrey Beardsley and painter and sculptor
Eric Gill were born in Brighton. Gill went on to found an
art colony in Ditchling known as
The Guild of St Joseph and St Dominic, which survived until 1989. The 1920s and 1930s saw the creation of some of the best-known works by
Edward Burra who was known for his work of Sussex, Paris and Harlem and
Eric Ravilious who is known for his paintings of the South Downs. In the early 20th century
Vanessa Bell and
Duncan Grant, both members of the
Bloomsbury Group, lived and worked at
Charleston Farmhouse near
Firle. Sussex also became a major centre for
surrealism in the early 20th century. At
West Dean,
Edward James was patron to artists including
Salvador Dalí and
René Magritte while at
Farley Farm House near
Chiddingly the home of
Roland Penrose and
Lee Miller was frequented by artists such as
Pablo Picasso,
Man Ray,
Henry Moore,
Eileen Agar,
Jean Dubuffet,
Dorothea Tanning and
Max Ernst. Both collections form one of the most important bodies of Surrealist art in Europe. ==Notable people==