Watership Down, Hampshire
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Watership Down is a hill, or down, in Hampshire, England. It rises fairly steeply on its northern flank, but to the south the slope is much gentler (an escarpment). grid reference SU497570.
The Down is best known as the setting for Richard Adams' 1972 novel about rabbits, also called Watership Down. The area is popular with walkers and cyclists[citation needed] — a bridleway runs along the ridge of the Down — and it lies at the south-eastern edge of the North Wessex Downs Area of Natural Beauty. Other nearby features include ancient tumuli and earthworks, including Beacon Hill.
Watership Down is accessible via the village of Kingsclere. There are no signposts nor guide boards on the Down itself, and there is no official guide or visitor information. This is partly because much of the area is privately owned (by Lord Lloyd-Webber), and partly because one of the main themes of the book itself was against development, building and roads[citation needed].
[edit] External links
Richard Adams' Watership DownEdit |
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Novels: Watership Down - Tales from Watership Down |
Adaptations: Feature film - TV series |
Characters: Bigwig - Blackavar - Blackberry - Campion - Cowslip - Dandelion - Fiver - General Woundwort - Hazel - Kehaar - Vervain - Minor characters |
Mythical/story creatures: El-ahrairah |
Locations: Efrafa - River Enborne - Railway line - Redstone - River Test - Watership Down |
Other: Chief Rabbit - Concepts in Watership Down - Lapine - Owsla |