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Brighton and Hove

Brighton and Hove (/ˈbrtən ...ˈhv/ BRY-tən … HOHV) is a unitary authority with city status in East Sussex, England. There are multiple villages alongside the seaside resorts of Brighton and Hove in the district. It is administered by Brighton and Hove City Council, which is currently under Labour majority control.

Brighton and Hove
City of Brighton and Hove
Clockwise, from top: the seafront; the bandstand; Falmer Stadium; the peace statue; Churchill Square
Brighton and Hove shown within East Sussex and England
Brighton and Hove
Location of Brighton and Hove
Brighton and Hove
Brighton and Hove (Europe)
Coordinates: 50°49′40″N 0°09′10″W / 50.82778°N 0.15278°W / 50.82778; -0.15278
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
CountryEngland
RegionSouth East England
Historic countySussex
Ceremonial countyEast Sussex
Administrative seatHove
Established1 April 1997
City status31 January 2001
Government
 • TypeUnitary authority
 • BodyBrighton and Hove City Council
 • GovernanceCommittee system (L)
 • ExecutiveLabour
 • LeaderBella Sankey
 • MayorJackie O’Quinn
 • MPsPeter Kyle (L)
Caroline Lucas (G)
Lloyd Russell-Moyle (L)
Area
 • City and unitary authority33.80 sq mi (82.83 km2)
 • Urban
34.5 sq mi (89.4 km2)
 • Rank211th
Population
 (2021)
 • City and unitary authority276,334
 • Rank59th
 • Density8,640/sq mi (3,336/km2)
 • Urban
474,485 (15th)
 • Urban density13,740/sq mi (5,304/km2)
 • Metro
769,000 (15th)
 • Ethnicity
(2021 Census)
73.9% White British
11.5% Other White
4.8% Mixed Race
3.7% Asian
2.0% Black
1.1% Chinese
1.1% Arab
2.0% Other
Time zoneUTC±0 (Greenwich Mean Time)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+1 (British Summer Time)
Postcode areas
BN (1, 2, 3, 41)
ONS code00ML (ONS)
E06000043 (GSS)
ISO 3166-2GB-BNH
Websitewww.brighton-hove.gov.uk

The two resorts, along with Worthing and Littlehampton in West Sussex, make up the second most-populous built-up area of South East England, after South Hampshire. In 2014, Brighton and Hove City Council and other nearby councils formed the Greater Brighton City Region local enterprise partnership area.[1]

Unification edit

 
The Peace Statue on the seafront marks the border between Brighton and Hove

In 1992, a government commission was set up to conduct a structural review of local government arrangements across England. In its draft proposals for East Sussex, the commission suggested two separate unitary authorities be created for the towns of Brighton and Hove, with the latter authority to include Hove, Worthing and the Adur District.[2] Support within Brighton for its own unitary authority was high, however respondents in Hove expressed reservations towards a merger with Worthing and Adur. A report following consultation noted that more than 25% of respondents in both Brighton and Hove had "unprompted, indicated support for a merger of those two areas." Although this option had not been included in the draft proposals, subsequent polling indicated that the merger was the most popular option among residents.[2]

Nevertheless, the proposal of a merger proved controversial, particularly in Hove. Hove Borough Council opposed the move on the grounds that Brighton would dominate affairs in the city, and the commission acknowledged that residents of Hove "have significant negative feelings towards Brighton" and greater identification towards Sussex.[2] Ultimately, the view was taken that support for a single tier of government in both towns outweighed opposition to unification, and as a result the commission recommended that the borough councils of Brighton and Hove be made a single unitary authority independent of East Sussex County Council. In 1997, Brighton and Hove Borough Council was formed, and assumed responsibility for all matters of local government across both towns.

Twenty years earlier, as part of the Queen's Silver Jubilee celebrations, Brighton had been shortlisted as a candidate for city status, though eventually lost out to larger Derby. Following unification of the towns, Brighton and Hove applied for city status again as part of the Millennium City Status Competition, and was subsequently granted city status on 31 January 2001.[3] As a result, the borough council became a city council.

Although the city now operates as a single entity, locals generally still consider Brighton and Hove to be separate settlements with different identities. Hove is largely residential and has its own distinct seafront and established town centre located around George Street, while Brighton has a higher profile as the country's most popular seaside resort, a significant digital economy, and hosts several festivals of national prominence. Recognition of the city's twin identities is evident from the continued popularity of the local saying "Hove, actually", a phrase which long predates unification.

Some organisations such as the local football club, Brighton and Hove Albion, and the bus company Brighton & Hove, predate the unification of the towns by several decades.

In 2014, Brighton and Hove formed the Greater Brighton City Region with neighbouring local authorities.[1]

Areas edit

 
Downland and seafront areas in Brighton and Hove
 
Brighton and Hove, the downland and coastal city, in one of the most impressive areas of the South Downs National Park

The City of Brighton and Hove consists of many districts, a stretch of coast and some downland areas. Just to the south of Brighton and Hove in the English Channel is the Rampion Wind Farm, which provides renewable energy to the country.

Brighton edit

 
Brighton Town Hall at Bartholomews in The Lanes
 
Brighton beach

Brighton has been the most populous settlement in Sussex since at least the 17th century, and a town hall and evidence of citizen's control over town affairs predates 1580.[4] The original parish of Brighton covered what is today much of central Brighton. The parish border ran from Little Western Street and Boundary Passage in the west, to Whitehawk Road in the east, and roughly followed the Old Shoreham Road and Bear Road to the north.[5] The Great Reform Act of 1832 created the parliamentary constituency of Brighton. Brighton obtained a royal charter for incorporation in 1854 and was organised into six wards: Park, Pavilion, Pier, St Nicholas, St Peter, and West. The ward of Preston was added in 1873, expanding Brighton to the north. In 1889 Brighton attained county borough status.[4]

The Brighton Corporation Act of 1927 added the settlements of Ovingdean and Rottingdean, as well as western parts of Falmer, Patcham and West Blatchington.[4] These reforms expanded the Brighton the north and west dramatically. Between 1920 and 1950 housing estates were developed in Woodingdean, Moulsecoomb, Bevendean, and Whitehawk increasing the population of the town substantially. As a result, the number of wards had by now increased to 19. The rest of Falmer, Coldean and the parish of Stanmer were added to Brighton by the Brighton Extension Act 1951, completing the northward extension of the town.[6] A final expansion of the town's boundaries was approved in 1968, incorporating reclaimed land from the sea for the Brighton Marina project.

Brighton was split into two parliamentary constituencies in 1950. The first, Brighton Pavilion, covers the centre and north of the town. The second, Brighton Kemptown, covers the east of the town. The latter has since expanded further east to include the neighbouring towns of East Saltdean, Telscombe Cliffs, and Peacehaven, all of which are administratively within the adjacent Lewes District. Brighton became a municipal borough as a result of the 1972 Local Government Act, losing unitary control of town affairs to East Sussex County Council.[6] This reform was later followed by a reduction of wards to 16 in 1983. Brighton Borough Council remained under this structure until unification with Hove.

Hove edit

 
Hove Town Hall on Church Road

A small parish at the end of the 18th century, Hove began to expand in the early 19th century alongside the westward development of Brighton, and in 1832 became incorporated into the parliamentary constituency of Brighton.[7] In 1873 commissioners from Hove, West Hove and Brunswick were amalgamated as means to guard against the dominance of Brighton.[8] The first public buildings were completed in the late 19th century, including the original town hall in 1882. The parish of Aldrington was annexed by Hove in 1893.[7] A municipal borough of Hove was formed by royal charter in 1889, granting Hove administrative autonomy. Further expansion took place in 1927, with the addition of the parishes of Preston Rural and Hangleton and westerly sections of West Blatchington and Patcham.[7] Hove gained its own parliamentary constituency in 1950. The Local Government Act 1972 abolished the remaining parishes of Hove, Aldrington and Hangleton and West Blatchington to form the unparished non-metropolitan district of Hove.[9] It also incorporated the nearby town of Portslade-by-Sea into the new district. The new boundaries established by the Act remained largely the same until unification with Brighton a quarter of a century later.

Portslade, Portslade Village, and Mile Oak edit

 
Portslade Station
 
Cockroost Bottom

To the west of Brighton and Hove is Portslade. The area has three distinct centres with different histories, and includes Portslade-by-Sea, Portslade Village and Mile Oak. Each is quite different in character.

Portslade-by-Sea is largely an industrial port, with a busy canal area that opens up to the River Adur and the English Channel. It has a long history of human settlement and the name came from the Roman port, Novus Portus.

Portslade Village has kept more of its antiquity and retains many elements of the downland village it once was. Many of the buildings have their original flint walls, and there are some early manor house ruins, tree-lined parks, a landmark church and a former convent.[10]

Mile Oak is a newer development. Until the 1920s it was only a small group of farm buildings with surrounding corn fields, sheep downs and market gardens. Then, suburban housing started to be built, and there was considerable further development in the 1960s with the construction of bungalows and other private housing. In the 1990s, after the construction of the new A27 road, Mile Oak's access to the Downs was largely blocked, stopping the spread of development.

Portslade downland edit

 
Trigpoint on the approach to Mount Zion
 
Electricity Pylons on Cockroost Hill

To the north of Mile Oak, on the other side of the A27, are a number of downland areas that are still in the Brighton and Hove area. These include the ancient chalk grassland slopes of Cockroost Hill, Cockroost Bottom and Mount Zion. They are all special areas because of the remarkable wildlife still surviving there, including rare downland flowers, orchids, butterflies and rare insects.[11] There is a lot of history on the slopes, including a large 4000 year old Bronze Age settlement, a possible 'henge' (as in Stonehenge), now lost under the A27 bypass, and evidence of Iron Age and Romano-British field systems.[12] To the north of the city boundary is Fulking parish. The final stretch of the Monarch's Way passes through Mile Oak and Porstlade. It is a 625-mile (1,006 km) long-distance footpath that runs from Worcester to Shoreham.

Aldrington, Hangleton and West Blatchington edit

 
Hangleton in the snow

Aldrington sits between Portslade-by-Sea to its west and Hove to its east. For centuries Aldrington was largely countryside, with very few people living there for most of the Middle Ages, but it is now a residential area.[13]

Like Aldrington, West Blatchingham was once primarily down and sheep grazing area, but is now built up. West Blatchington manor had various lords over the centuries, but unlike Adrington and Hangleton, it was always associated with lords in the east such Lewes, Falmer, and Patcham.[14] It is now known for its windmill and secondary school. To the east of West Blatchington is Westdene.

Hangleton is to the north of Aldrington and sits between Portslade Village and West Blatchington. The manors of Hangleton and Aldrington formed part of the Fishersgate Half Hundred, together with the neighbouring manor of Portslade.[15] The lords of the Hangleton manor from 1291 to 1446 were the de Poynings, a Sussex gentry family that gave their name to the present parish of Poynings.[16]

Hangeton was a medieval downland village in the 13th century, and by the early 14th century it had a population of about 200. Later, the village was abandoned for around six hundred years.[17] It started to grow again in the 1950s with other areas of Brighton and is now popular for its views of the sea and green spaces.

Hangleton and West Blatchingham downland edit

 
West Blatchington windmill

Between Hangleton and Westdene, south of the A27, is Toads Hole Valley. Its west slope, below Downland Drive, was once an unspoilt place for wildlife and still home to threatened species such as dormice, hedgehogs, and adders. The valley has been unmanaged for many years and the area has turned to scrub. It has now been designated for development and up to three hundred homes are planned to be built on the site.[18]

To the north of the A27 are two golf courses, the West Hove and Brighton and Hove Golf courses. The two are divided by the Old Dyke Railway Trail which follows part of the route taken by the old Dyke Railway Branch Line. The line opened in September 1887 and took people from Hove to the popular downland beauty spot of Devil's Dyke. When the railway closed in December 1938, the line lay unused until the Dyke Railway Trail was created in 1988. There are a number of ways through Hangleton to a bridge over the A27 bypass where the trail begins, but the original route took you from Aldrington railway station and above the Hove cemetery. Much of the trail across the Downs is on a hard surface.[19]

There are many archaic Down pastures in the area. To the west is Benfield Hill (TQ 261 078), a Local Nature Reserve which is famous for its glowworm displays on midsummer evenings. On the steep east side of the hill there is large thyme, autumn gentian and many butterflies. Bee orchids can be also found in some years.[11] To the north of this area is the Poynings parish and the impressive geography of Devil's Dyke.

To the east is Round Hill where there are many signs of the past from different periods of human history. There are several old barrows in the area. There is an old flint barn (TQ 269 090) called the Skeleton Hovel which is thought to commemorate a prehistoric burial site. Round Hill's eastern slope (TQ 269 085) is the richest chalk grassland site in Hangleton, though it desperately needs grazing management for its many downland flowers such as field fleawort, chalk milkwort, orchids, cowslips, hairy violet, rockrose, crested hair-grass, and devil's bit scabious. There are two rare Forester moth species, fox moth and heath moth, purse-web spider, moss, and pygmy snails.[11] To the north of Round Hill is the Newtimber parish.

Westdene, Withdean, and Patcham edit

 
Northward view along Warmdene Road, Patcham

Patcham, Westdene, and Withdean are divided by the London Road. Of the three, Patcham (TQ 301 090), has much the longest history of human settlement and retains much from its agricultural past. It was one of the bigger settlements in Sussex at the time of Domesday book, with 10 shepherds and six slaves and a medieval Archbishop of Canterbury came from the village.[20] The area still has many old flint cottages, big allotment sites and winding twittens. There is Patcham Place and Park. The best cluster of buildings comprise its Norman church (which has kept part of its medieval wall paintings) and the old buildings of Patcham Court Farm, with a 17th-century flint farmhouse and dovecot.

The areas of Withdean and Westdene were historically farmland but have been developed, mainly in the 1920s and 1930s, with a mix of detached, semi-detached and mid-rise flats. The Withdean manor was originally the property of the great Cluniac Priory of St. Pancras at Lewes, until 1537. This was then given to Anne of Cleves in 1541 by Henry VIII. The manor was demolished in 1936.[21] Westdene sits to the north of Brighton, east of West Blatchington and north of Withdean.

Withdean Park is to the east of the London Road, and is home to the national collection of lilacs with over 250 varieties. Collections of berberis, cotoneaster and viburnum can also be found here.[22] Withdean Woods is next to Withdean stadium and is a wooded hillside nature reserve approximately 2.47 acres (1 ha) in size. It is the home of several woodland birds including the great spotted woodpecker, tawny owl, goldcrest, firecrest, and in winter the stinking hellebore.[23]

Waterhall downland edit

 
Sweet Hill, near Patcham, Brighton, The old farm house
 
Varncombe Hill

To the west of the A23 and north of Westdene and the A27 is Waterhall (TQ 284 087), and its lost 18th century farm is now the site of football and rugby pitches. The Waterhall Golf Course has just been given over to a version of rewilding which involves the restoration of species-rich chalk grassland[24] There is still a significant population of adders. By the bridlepath just downhill of the old clubhouse there are the damaged remains of a Bronze Age round barrow (TQ 283 087) which has long acted as a marker on the old parish boundaries. Since the cessation of golf play harebell, scabious, cowslip, rockrose, betony, Sussex rampion and horseshoe vetch have flowered ebulliently. There are large old anthills and chalkhill, small and adonis blue and brown argus butterflies, and all three species of Forester moth. At the corner of the Saddlescombe Road and the turn-off to the golf clubhouse, there is a sarsen stone (TQ 278 090) marking this point in the medieval boundary between Patcham and West Blatchington parishes.[11]

To the north is Varncombe Hill, which borders the Newtimber parish. Its south-west facing slope(TQ 280 099) is heavily scrubbed-up, though lovely old pasture glades survive. Rockrose is one of the commonest flowers here, with some of its associated fungi. The west facing slopes of Varncombe Hill (TQ 279 105) were sold by Brighton Council with the rest of Saddlescombe Farm to the National Trust, but the Trust did not dedicate them as Access land, though they qualified and the National Trust had the power to do so.[11]

To the east of Waterhall is Sweet Hill. The Hill has a flowery bank on its western slope (TQ 286 091), a bushy lynchet and an old dewpond site on its brow. The Sussex Border Path takes you north to Pangdean Bottom and the Pyecombe parish. Pangdean Bottom is the west of the A23 and is rented by a tenant farmer from Brighton and Hove City Council, who have owned it since 1924. It includes ancient chalk grassland slopes where there are still chalkland flowers and butterflies. In late summer, the valley's north side has one of the largest populations of autumn ladies-tresses orchid has been recorded, together with a large population of the white variety of the self heal violet. The scrub at the head of the valley is old and diverse, with wayfaring tree, old man's beard, honeysuckle, hazel, and gorse.[11]

In July 2021 the Sussex-based 'Landscapes of Freedom' group, together with Nick Hayes and Guy Shrubsole of the 'Right to Roam' network, organised a mass trespass in protest against the lack of public access to this valley and its management for game bird shooting, which has badly affected its chalk grassland wildlife.[25] Over 300 people walked from Waterhall, Brighton, to Pangdean Bottom in protest.[26] The public are actively discouraged from walking in the area and scrub has been allowed to grow on the pristine downland, whilst other parts have been ploughed out.[27]

To the north of the city boundary in this area is the Pycombe parish.

Patcham downland edit

 
Ewe Bottom from the Sussex Border Path
 
Sheep on Tegdown Hill
 
Southwestward view along Ladies Mile, Patcham

The Downland to the north of Patcham leads up to Ditchling Beacon and the western end of the Clayton to Offham Escarpment. Tegdown Hill is the next hill to the west of the downland Ditchling Road. A remarkable "ring barrow" survives (TQ 313 101) on its brow, together with the slight mounds of two other bowl barrows. Tegdown ring barrow has been described as "probably the best of this type in the county".[28] It consists of a circular bank with a ditch and a flattish interior. It lies just south of a big dried up dew pond. From Tegdown you can see the three Iron Age camps of Hollingbury Castle, Ditchling Beacon, and the Devil's Dyke. To the north of the city boundary is the long Ditchling parish.

The Mid Sussex track of the Sussex Border Path starts at the A27 roundabout and the eastern track takes you up Ewebottom Hiil leaving Scare Hill to its west, passing the Chattri to the east and on to Holt Hill and the Pyecombe parish. The western track takes you to Waterhall across the A23.

Those walking from Patcham towards Standean farm descend the hill into Ewe Bottom and have the pleasure of the intact, old Tegdown pastures to their right, where the steepest slope and the lynchets have fine chalk downland flowers. Opposite the slope is the mouth of Deep Bottom (TQ 303 105), the southerly slope of which is a colourful old pasture site with abundant rockrose and which rises up to the Chattri. In autumn there are boletes and several old meadow waxcaps and a fairy club fungus.[11]

To the south of the A27 and on the western edge of Patcham is Ladies Mile Down (TQ 318 093), which has designated as a Local nature reserve. The area is a remarkable survival of plateau chalk grassland on Downland, where almost all such flattish sites have been destroyed by modern farming. The ancient turf has preserved lots of odd linear banks, which are surviving fragments of an Iron Age and Romano-British lynchetted field system. The banks once stretched across the line of the A27 bypass, beyond which one or two more fragments also survive. At the eastern end of the Down, is a Bronze Age burial mound recognisable as a low, grassy tump. The area is rich with summer flowers. Harebell, Sussex rampion flower, rockrose, and yellow rattle are enjoyed by locals here and at midsummer there are still good numbers of glowworms. Later in the summer months, the violet-blue of devil's-bit scabious and the powder-blue lesser scabious radiate.

The Chattri edit

 
Chattri Brighton from the West

The Chattri (TQ 304 110) is a place of memorial and a destination for walks. It can be accessed from the Sussex Border Path to its west or by scrambling through the thickets of Deep Bottom. It is a solemn place where the bodies of First World War Indian Sikh and Hindu soldiers who died from wounds whilst being nursed at the Brighton Pavilion "passed through the fire", for this was their "ghat", or place of cremation. Its white Sicilian marble dome is in good condition, but the surrounding memorial garden is often unkept.[11]

Hollingbury and Hollingdean edit

 
Northeastward view along Hollingbury Crescent, Hollingdean

What is now considered to be Hollingbury is the slope facing west, east of Patcham and north of Fiveways. However, old Hollingbury was the crest of the hill by the hillfort, Hollingbury Park and even the east-facing slope. Until the 1930s the area was open downland with farms, small-holdings and piggeries. After World War Two, Hollingbury was used for a factory estate with the housing for the workforce.

Hollingdean is in the combe east of Ditchling Road and rising up to the north-facing slope to Roedale allotments, the golf course and hillfort. It is now mainly a residential area, with many council houses to the east and low-rise flats in the central part, with late 19th- and early 20th-century terraced houses towards Fiveways.

Hollingbury Castle, Hollingbury Woods, and Wild Park edit

 
View from Hollingbury Hill, Brighton

There is an oasis of undeveloped green space at the peak of the Down between Hollingbury, Hollingdean, and Coldean. At its centre is Hollingbury Castle or Hillfort (TQ 322 078).This Iron Age hillfort is a scheduled ancient monument,[29] of Iron Age date, whilst the four mounded round barrows within its ramparts are made by Bronze Age people, who held this place sacred.[30] There are thickets of gorse which shine yellow in spring and are home to linnets and goldfinch. European stonechat is a familiar bird, too, and the rarer whinchat and redstart are seen regularly on passage to and from their breeding grounds. The soil within and around the camp has a layer of superficial acidity, with sorrel, bent-grass, and tormentil growing there.[11]

To the south is Hollingbury Golf Course, the Roedale allotments and Hollingbury Park (TQ 314 075). The park was originally part of the golf course. Its Edwardian pavilion was the original (circa 1908) clubhouse. East of the Park is the two-century-old Hollingbury Woods, now full of the rotting carcasses of beech giants toppled in the 1987 gale. It is a popular walk, with Fittleworth Stone walks, glades, and benches. It has received the loving care of a local "Friends" group for many years now.[11]

 
Footpath towards Moulsecoomb Wild Park

To the west of Moulsecoombe is Wild Park (TQ 327 080). The park is a valley/coombe which runs down from Hollingbury Castle and was opened in 1925. In the 1850s the valley, then known as Hollingbury Coombe, was one of the most famous of Sussex sites for lepidopterists (butterfly and moth experts), but dark green and silver-washed fritillary and silver-spotted skipper, once present in numbers, are rarely seen there now. Despite this, there are parts which are still rich in diversity and it is still good for butterflies. In spring one may still see the green hairstreak or orange-tip or find the wacky small bloody-nosed beetle and there are still adonis, chalkhill and common blues and brown argus and glowworms in midsummer. There are also orchids, harebells, sheets of rockrose, Sussex rampion, devil's-bit, and carline thistle. In autumn there are fungi too, including penny-bun bolete, collared earthstar, stinkhorn, and shaggy inkcap in the circling woods.[11]

Coldean, Moulsecoomb, and Bevendean edit

Coldean, Moulsecoomb, and Bevendean are suburbs developed by Brighton Corporation in the 1950s necessitated by the acute housing shortage in the area after World War II. The districts are all in beautiful downland areas.

Coldean occupies a deep valley on the historic boundary of Falmer and Stanmer parishes and is only separated from Hollingbury Hillfort by Wild Park. It has recently been approved to build over two hundred new homes in green land adjoining the South Downs and Stanmer Estate that ten years ago had been proposed to be a Local Nature Reserve.[31]

Bevendean is in a valley nestled between Bevendean Down and Heath Hill.

Moulsecoomb is on the other side of the Lewes Road and backs on to Falmer Hill, and is home to the University of Brighton's Moulsecoomb campus and Moulsecoomb Place. North of Moulsecoomb is the Falmer train station, University of Brighton's Falmer campus, and Falmer Stadium.

Stanmer village and Stanmer park edit

 
Stanmer Park
 
Stanmer Village

In this area to the north east of Coldean are two further valleys. The first is occupied by Stanmer village (TQ 33 09), a village with much historical value. The upper village street has eighteen flint cottages, with colourful gardens. The church was reconstructed in 1838, but the date of the original church can be guessed from the two huge and knotty yews in the churchyard. Next to the church is a pond, which although often unkempt, is probably the reason why Stanmer is so called, as "stan mere" is likely to derive from the Saxon "stony pool".[32]:312 Between the church and the barn is a Tudor well 252 feet deep and a wooden donkey wheel, like that at Saddlescombe, contained within a flint well-house. The well was in use until mains water was installed in 1900.[33]

Stanmer Woods were transformed in the 18th century after the Pelhams, later Earls of Chichester, had bought them. They planted a circle of woods along the hill-tops surrounding the dry valley in which the village lay and more shaws and clumps were scattered within. In 2007 the City Council took the initiative after the recent retirement of the Park's farming tenant and opened up all the closed woods and pasture fields to public access.[33] The paths, gates and benches the council made are all popular with Brighton residents and beyond.

The largest plantation is called the Great Wood (TQ 335 090) and has acquired many of the plants of ancient woodland, some by planting and some have made their own way there. Under the council's control there has been much imaginative new planting too: "The trees are laid out alphabetically, with Acer and Betula at the lower east end and Ulmus and Zelkova high up to the west".,[34] and on the lawns behind the House is a gigantic Blue Atlas Cedar with several slighter companions.

The next valley is occupied by the University of Sussex, which opened in 1961. In 2021, it is the place of study of over 16,000 students.[35] The Brighton and Hove City border is surrounded by the large Falmer parish in this area.

Bevendean Down and Falmer Hill edit

 
Bevendean Down (Local Nature Reserve)
 
Bridleway, Falmer Hill

Bevendean Down (TQ 33 06) is a local nature reserve. Its hot, south-facing slopes and as a result is home to lizards and many butterflies. The area is well looked after by local people in cooperation with the tenant farmer and the Council rangers. There is a dew pond where swallows and house martins skim the water. Chalkhill and adonis blue and brown argus butterflies are found in numbers in the area.[36] Hogtrough Bottom (TQ 340 070) has a mixture of taller grassland, short sheep's fescue turf, and scrub. On the shorter ground some years are large swarms of autumn ladies tresses. There are lots of scarce species such as bastard toadflax, waxcap, and webcap fungi, four-spot orb-weaver and purseweb spiders, but the tapestry of summer colours is the main delight which come from the purple knapweed and felwort, blue scabious, yellow hawkbit, and rockrose.[11]

On the southern side of Bevendean is Heath Hill which runs up to Warren Road and two horse pasture smallholdings, Southdown Riding Stables (TQ 335 058) and Inglesíde Stables to the east. Neither receive any agro-chemicals and consequently have gathered rich wildlife in the past half century. Swallows and swifts, bats and dung beetles, rooks and woodpecker and the hornet robberfly all survive on the rich supply of insects attracted by the pony dung.[11] Both the farmsteads of Southdown's and Ingleside Stables are targeted for housing development within Brighton and Hove City Council's draft City Plan Part 2. The loss of these two farmsteads, which organise the grazing of these nature-rich pastures, would put them at risk.

Falmer Hill (TQ 365 076) gives great views across to Hollingbury Castle and Stanmer Park and the higher Downs beyond. The Hill's top remained unploughed till the last World War. It had a cluster of about ten probably Saxon barrows and a couple of round barrows. Nothing remains now except white smears of chalk and flint on the ploughed earth, where the barrows were.[11] To the west of the Hill is City boundary which borders the Kingston near Lewes parish.

Kemptown, Whitehawk and Roedean edit

 
1–14 Chichester Terrace, Kemp Town

Kemp Town is a district to east of Brighton. It was designed by Thomas Read Kemp (1782–1844). It includes the elegant Grade I listed buildings such as those of Sussex Square, Lewes Crescent, Arundel, and Chichester Terraces, and the less prestigious areas such as Rock Gardens to the east. The area includes the Royal Sussex Hospital. The beach south of Kemp Town is known as Black Rock. To the east of Kemp Town is Roedean gap. There is some housing and Roedean school, a public girls school that faces the sea.

To the north of Kemp Town is Whitehawk, a district of Brighton that has been built since 1931. On the saddle between Whitehawk Hill and Race Hill is Whitehawk Camp which is a Neolithic causewayed camp, one of eight causewayed camps known to have existed in the Sussex Downs. The camp is a scheduled ancient monument. To the northwest of Whitehawk is Brighton Race Course. Horse racing started on the Hill in the late 18th century next to the causewayed camp.

Whitehawk Hill, Sheepcote Valley, and East Brighton Golf Course edit

 
Sheepcote Valley
 
Westward view across Brighton from Whitehawk Hill

Whitehawk Hill's lower slopes have large allotment sites, and there is a transmitting station on its top. To the north of the hilltop is the neolithic Whitehawk Camp.

To the east of Whitehawk is Sheepcote Valley (TQ 341 045). Here over 90 hectares (220 acres) are open to the public. In the 1870s there was a rifle range for volunteer soldiers sited here. The park was acquired in 1913 and laid out with plants and sports pitches in 1925. The northern part of the Valley served for many years as a municipal rubbish dump. When that purpose was completed, however, a kilometre and more of the upper Valley was terraced with six giant steps, which have now softened further with the cover of grass and low scrub. Now many birds breed in the area and many more pass through and stop extended periods on migration. Uncommon bird species are often seen there, such as rare warblers, wryneck, and redstarts. Sheepcote's lower valley has a caravan park where the first municipal site in the country was opened in 1938. There are playing fields embraced by the valley slopes and a café in East Brighton Park.[37]

To its east is East Brighton Golf Course (TQ 346 042) with extensive roughs, scrub thickets, and woodland. In winter, short-eared owls often reside in the area. Below the course is Roedean Bottom (TQ 349 033). It sits between Roedean School and a pitch and putt golf course. On the east slope of the Bottom there is a little piece of aboriginal Downland turf, where in late summer autumn ladies tresses orchid grow, with carline thistle and hairy violet. Tiny moss snail in the turf demonstrates the site's antiquity. East again from the Golf Course (and southwest of Woodingdean) is Wick Bottom (TQ 35 04). This peaceful dean takes its name from the medieval farm on the Falmer Road, now long-gone. The name 'wick' may denote a far more ancient, perhaps Roman, farmstead. In modern times it has been a place of arable stubbles, but there be a good array of chalk loving plants such as night flowering catchfly, henbit deadnettle, field madder, round-leaved fluellen, and common fumitory.[11]

Woodingdean, Ovingdean, and Rottingdean edit

 
St Wulfran, Ovingdean

Ovingdean (TQ 355 035) is east of Brighton and slightly set back from the sea. It is a historic settlement that has existed since at least the Iron Age

about 600 BC. In ancient documents, the area is described as "Ofamn-inge-denu" or "the valley of the enclosure of Ofa's people".[32] The Domesday book of 1086 records that the manor of 'hovingedene'. At that time the population of Ovingdean was about 90 people who included the lord of the manor and his family.

By 2020 there were nearer 1,200 inhabitants and many new buildings, but the old core of Ovingdean still exists and many flint walls, old cottages, barns (converted) and gentry houses have been retained. The Norman church of St Wulfran's is the oldest surviving building in the village and has lots of surviving early details. North of the church the stonewalled paddock is full of humps and hollows that mark where a Saxon thane had his manor house. To the south of the village in front of the sea is one of Blind Veterans UK's rehabilitation centres. On the beach is a cafe and beach for rock pooling at low tide.

Rottingdean is east of Ovingdean and has more history still. The first settled inhabitants of Rottingdean were the Neolithic people, arriving around 2500 BC. It later became famed for sea faring activities and primarily a centre for smuggling. Rottingdean is its own parish despite being with the Brighton and Hove boundary. Beacon Hill is a Local Nature Reserve (LNR) set up because of its pristine chalk grassland and archaeological features. A historic windmill is at the centre of the nature reserve.[38]

Woodingdean is north of Ovingdean and east of the Brighton Racecourse. It was extensively developed during the 1950s and 1960s when most of the roads in the north-eastern and southern ends of the village were built. The name Woodingdean came from Woodendean (i.e. wooded valley) Farm which was situated in the south end of what is now Ovingdean.[39] This farm existed from before 1714 until 1979. Perhaps the earliest farming settlement to be identified in the area was situated in Wick Bottom. It was here that the Wick Farm, later Warren Farm was situated.

East Brighton Downland and undercliff path edit

 
Undercliff path East of Brighton
 
Happy Valley, Woodingdean
 
Track at The Bostle

Between the Brighton Marina and Saltdean is the undercliff path. It passes cafes at Ovingdean and Rottingdean. Many people use the path to walk, run or cycle either for amusement or to reach their destinations avoiding the up and down of the busy road above. The entire stretch of beach provides excellent home to rock pool loving species and sea and wading birds take advantage. Fulmars, peregrine falcons, ravens and rock pipits are just some of the bird life that nest in the chalk cliffs. This area is the only place on these southern cliffs that sea stock is native. Sea lavender also clings to the cliff ledges. Occasionally one can find samphire, too.[11]

To the west of the Falmer Road from Woodingdean is Happy Valley (TQ 357 047), a bushy, cattle-grazed slope with old Down pasture herbs, bits of gorse, and thorn. Further south is Mount Pleasant (TQ 354 045). The west slope looks over Wick Bottom and is a small triangle of rich chalk grassland. It's rough and derelict, but special wildlife clings on. There's big swarms of Pride of Sussex rampion, dropwort, horseshoe vetch, and hairy violet. European stonechat frequent its thorn and bramble.[11]

Just east of Woodingdean, is the Bostle barrow field (TQ 371 054). There is a cluster of at least twenty-seven small low grassy mounds, which are probably Saxon, and three larger, probably Bronze Age barrows on the top of the hill just south of the bridleway fence line. The barrow field is a 'precious fragment' of antiquity surrounded by agricultural fields. The Bostle combe slope (TQ 371 048) is an ancient Down pasture slope with the softest sheep's fescue turf, just south of the barrow field.[11]

East a little further there is one of the most special natural sites in the Brighton area, Castle Hill (TQ 376 065). The area is known for its early spider orchids, Roesel's bush-cricket, wart-biter grasshopper, and dramatic butterfly displays that include dark green fritillary, adonis blue, and thousands of chalkhill blues.[40]

The Brighton and Hove boundary edit

 
The Patcham Pylons mark the border of Brighton and Hove on the A23

From west to east the administrative boundary of Brighton and Hove begins on the coast at Gate 4 of Shoreham Port. It crosses the Southwick Ship Canal and the A259 between Brambledean Road and St Richard's Road in Portslade. From here, the border joins Eastbrook Road, and runs north up St Aubrey's Crescent. It then runs along the Sussex Border Path, through Fishersgate Station, separating Portslade from the neighbouring town of Southwick. Running west of Mile Oak, the border crosses the A27 skirting Mile Oak Farm and continues towards Devil's Dyke, before turning east over the Downs. The border then extends north from Tydell Farm to the outskirts of Pyecombe – its most northerly point. It crosses the A23 at the Patcham Pylons, which signifies the border for incoming traffic.

Continuing east, the border runs north of the Chattri and Standean Farm, before crossing Ditchling Road at the Upper Lodges and running along the northerly limits of Stanmer Park and Stanmer Village. At this point, the border turns south and runs to the eastern edge of the University of Sussex campus, re-crossing the A27 along The Drove and passing east of Falmer Stadium. It continues along The Drove and Falmer Road to Woodingdean. Running north of Woodingdean, the border then heads southeast through Balsdean before adjoining to a footpath which enters Saltdean at the top of Longridge Avenue. The border runs down Longridge Avenue to the junction with Lynwood Road, where it turns south over houses and back across the A259 before returning the coastline at the eastern end of Saltdean Beach.

Governance edit

 
Corporate logo of the council

As a unitary authority, Brighton and Hove City Council provides local government services, combining the functions of a non-metropolitan county and district council. Elections to the council are held every four years, with the most recent taking place in 2019.[41] Councillors annually elect a Mayor of Brighton and Hove – a ceremonial position. The current mayor is Councillor Jackie O’Quinn.[42] A proposal to introduce a directly elected mayor to the city was rejected by referendum in 2001. As a result, the council uses a cabinet system to form its executive. Geoff Raw is the current chief executive.[43] Both Brighton Town Hall in The Lanes, and Hove Town Hall on Church Road are used as meeting places for council.

 
The council is currently composed of 38 Labour, 7 Green, 6 Conservative and 3 independent councillors

The council was under Labour majority control until 2003, when it fell into no overall control until 2023. During this period the council has been controlled by minority administrations of all three major parties in Brighton and Hove: Labour, the Conservatives and the Greens. The first Green administration, elected in 2011, was the first time any Green Party had run a council in the UK, highlighting the city as the party's primary area of support. A Labour administration was elected in 2015, and the party narrowly retained a plurality in 2019, however expulsions from the Labour group led to the Greens regaining control of the administration in 2020. At the 2023 local elections, Labour regained control of the council.[44] Bella Sankey is the current Leader of the council.[45]

Three constituencies cover Brighton and Hove in the UK Parliament. Hove is represented by Labour MP Peter Kyle. Brighton Pavilion, which covers central and northern Brighton, is represented by Green MP Caroline Lucas – the UK's first and only MP from the Green Party. Brighton Kemptown, which covers East Brighton, as well as areas outside of Brighton and Hove, such as Telscombe Cliffs and Peacehaven, is represented by Labour MP Lloyd Russell-Moyle.

Wards edit

Ward Location Population[46] Ward Location Population
Brunswick and Adelaide   11,475 Preston Park   15,263
Central Hove   9,831 Queens Park   16,284
East Brighton   14,138 Regency   11,986
Goldsmid   16,571 Rottingdean Coastal   14,325
Hangleton and Knoll   14,848 South Portslade   9,836
Hanover and Elm Grove   17,673 St Peter's and North Laine   20,670
Hollingdean and Stamner   18,121 Westbourne   10,360
Hove Park   11,081 Wish   10,031
Moulsecoombe and Bevendean   18,772 Withdean   15,196
North Portslade   9,968 Woodingdean   9,968
Patcham   14,606

Economy and demography edit

 
Population pyramid of Brighton and Hove in 2021

The economy of the city is service-based with a strong emphasis on creative, digital and electronic technologies. Tourism and entertainment are important sectors for the city, which has many hotels and amusements, as well as Brighton Pier and Shoreham/Portslade Harbour.

The United Kingdom Census 2011 showed a substantial fall in the proportion of the population claiming Jobseeker's Allowance or Income Support, from 10.1% of the resident population in 2001, to 4.5% of the resident population in 2011.[47]

Demography edit

The first census of Brighton was in 1801.[48]

The resident population of Brighton and Hove at the 2011 census was 273,369 persons, 50% male and 50% female.[49]

The 2011 census found the ethnic composition of Brighton and Hove to be 89.1% white (80.5% white British, 1.4% white Irish, 7.1% other white), 4.1% Asian (1.1% Chinese, 1.1% Indian, 0.5% Bangladeshi, 1.2% other Asian), 3.8% mixed race (1.5% mixed black/white, 1.2% mixed white/Asian, 1.0% other mix), 1.5% black, and 0.8% Arab.[50]

The 2011 census found the religious composition to be 42.90% Christian, 42.42% nonreligious, 2.23% Muslim, 1.00% Buddhist, and 0.98% Jewish. 1.66% were adherents of some other religion, while 8.81% did not state their religion.[50]

In the 2001 census, Brighton and Hove had the highest percentage of citizens indicating their religion as Jedi among all principal areas of England and Wales.[51]

Ethnicity edit

Ethnic Group Year
1991[52] 2001[53] 2011[54] 2021[55]
Number % Number % Number % Number %
White: Total 221,767 96.9% 233,582 94.3% 243,512 89.1% 236,571 85.4%
White: British 218,134 88% 220,018 80.5% 204,831 73.9%
White: Irish 3,965 3,772 3,944 1.4%
White: Gypsy or Irish Traveller 198 197 0.1%
White: Roma 787 0.3%
White: Other 11,483 4.6% 19,524 7.1% 26,812 9.7%
Asian or Asian British: Total 3,845 1.7% 5,844 2.4% 11,278 4.1% 13,217 4.7%
Asian or Asian British: Indian 1,241 2,106 2,996 3,633 1.3%
Asian or Asian British: Pakistani 283 540 649 929 0.3%
Asian or Asian British: Bangladeshi 465 975 1,367 1,729 0.6%
Asian or Asian British: Chinese 965 1,305 2,999 3,065 1.1%
Asian or Asian British: Other Asian 891 918 3,267 3,861 1.4%
Black or Black British: Total 1,343 0.6% 1,992 0.8% 4,188 1.5% 5,458 2%
Black or Black British: African 562 1,380 2,893 3,949 1.4%
Black or Black British: Caribbean 323 468 879 988 0.4%
Black or Black British: Other Black 458 144 416 521 0.2%
Mixed or British Mixed: Total 4,799 1.9% 10,408 3.8% 13,228 4.7%
Mixed: White and Black Caribbean 834 2,182 2,410 0.9%
Mixed: White and Black African 961 2,019 2,334 0.8%
Mixed: White and Asian 1,582 3,351 4,198 1.5%
Mixed: Other Mixed 1,422 2,856 4,286 1.5%
Other: Total 2,017 1% 1,600 0.6% 3,983 1.5% 8,629 3.1%
Other: Arab 2,184 0.8% 3,049 1.1%
Other: Any other ethnic group 2,017 1% 1,600 0.6% 1,799 0.6% 5,580 2.0%
Total 228,972 100% 247,817 100% 273,369 100% 277,103 100%

Religion edit

Religion 2001[56] 2011[57] 2021[58]
Number % Number % Number %
No religion 66,955 27.0 115,954 42.4 152,966 55.2
Holds religious beliefs 158,849 64.1 133,326 48.8 104,377 37.7
  Christian 146,466 59.1 117,276 42.9 85,629 30.9
  Buddhist 1,747 0.7 2,742 1.0 2,455 0.9
  Hindu 1,300 0.5 1,792 0.7 2,100 0.8
  Jewish 3,358 1.4 2,670 1.0 2,455 0.9
  Muslim 3,635 1.5 6,095 2.2 8,500 3.1
  Sikh 237 0.1 342 0.1 378 0.1
Other religion 2,106 0.8 2,409 0.9 2,860 1.0
Religion not stated 22,013 8.9 24,089 8.8 19,760 7.1
Total population 247,817 100.0 273,369 100.0 277,103 100.0

Freedom of the City edit

The following have received the Freedom of the City of Brighton and Hove.

Individuals edit

  • Sir Peter Field: 15 July 2021.[59]
  • Tony Bloom: 18 May 2017.[60]
  • Chris Hughton: 18 May 2017.[60]

Military units edit

Organisations and groups edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "City Deal; The beginning of a great city region". Brighton and Hove City Council. 2014. Retrieved 31 May 2020.
  2. ^ a b c (PDF). Local Government Commission For England. December 1994. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 June 2012. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
  3. ^ "Page 1431 | Issue 56109, 5 February 2001 | London Gazette | the Gazette".
  4. ^ a b c Salzman, L.F. (1940). A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 7, the Rape of Lewes. British History Online. pp. 244–263. Retrieved 13 May 2021.
  5. ^ "Boundaries". My Brighton and Hove. Retrieved 13 May 2021.
  6. ^ a b "Administration". Brighton History. Retrieved 13 May 2021.
  7. ^ a b c Salzman, L.F. (1940). A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 7, the Rape of Lewes. British History Online. pp. 265–268. Retrieved 12 May 2021.
  8. ^ "Records of Hove Borough Council and its predecessors". National Archives. Retrieved 12 May 2021.
  9. ^ "HOVE REGISTRATION DISTRICT". UK BMD. Retrieved 12 May 2021.
  10. ^ Mile Oak & Portslade Village: neighbourhood context. Brighton and Hove Council. Accessed on 29 September 2021
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Bangs, Dave (2008). A freedom to roam Guide to the Brighton Downs : from Shoreham to Newhaven and Beeding to Lewes. Brighton: David Bangs. ISBN 978-0-9548638-1-4. OCLC 701098669.
  12. ^ Wilkinson, K.N., 2003. Colluvial deposits in dry valleys of southern England as proxy indicators of paleoenvironmental and land‐use change. Geoarchaeology: An International Journal, 18(7), pp.725–755.
  13. ^ A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 7, the Rape of Lewes. Originally published by Victoria County History, London, 1940.
  14. ^ 'Parishes: West Blatchington', in A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 7, the Rape of Lewes, ed. L F Salzman (London, 1940), pp. 242–244. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/sussex/vol7/pp242-244 [accessed 1 October 2021].
  15. ^ "Medieval Building Hangleton – Weald & Downland Museum". Weald & Downland Living Museum. Retrieved 30 September 2021.
  16. ^ A P Baggs, C R J Currie, C R Elrington, S M Keeling and A M Rowland, 'Fishersgate Half-Hundred', in A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 6 Part 1, Bramber Rape (Southern Part), ed. T P Hudson (London, 1980), pp. 130–131. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/sussex/vol6/pt1/pp130-131 [accessed 30 September 2021].
  17. ^ Syed, Yasmin; Burton, Martin (24 March 2021). "The medieval Hove suburb once abandoned for 600 years". sussexlive. Retrieved 30 September 2021.
  18. ^ "Toads Hole Valley plans remain a cause for concern". Brighton and Hove News. 8 January 2021. Retrieved 17 October 2021.
  19. ^ Dyke Railway Trail. Easy Access Trails. South Downs Join Committee. Accessed on 21 October 2021
  20. ^ "Domesday Book: In PRESTON Hundred". The National Archives. from the original on 21 February 2015. Retrieved 17 October 2021.
  21. ^ "First record of Withdean c12th century". My Brighton and Hove. Retrieved 17 October 2021.
  22. ^ "Withdean Park boasts a famous lilac collection". My Brighton and Hove. from the original on 17 October 2021. Retrieved 17 October 2021.
  23. ^ "Withdean Woods | Sussex Wildlife Trust". sussexwildlifetrust.org.uk. Retrieved 17 October 2021.
  24. ^ "'Wild cats to elephants, hippopotamus and wolves' – rewilding a golf course". The Argus. 22 September 2020. Retrieved 1 October 2021.
  25. ^ Bangs, David (2018). Land of the Brighton line : a field guide to the Middle Sussex and South East Surrey Weald. [Brighton]. ISBN 978-0-9548638-2-1. OCLC 1247849975.
  26. ^ "Hundreds attend mass trespass for the right to roam". The Argus. 26 July 2021. Retrieved 6 September 2021.
  27. ^ "'Mass Trespass' tradition given new lease of life". Morning Star. 30 July 2021. Retrieved 5 September 2021.
  28. ^ Grinsell, L.V. (1934). "Sussex Barrows". Sussex Archaeological Collections. 75: 224. doi:10.5284/1086699.
  29. ^ "Hillfort, the possible remains of a Romano-Celtic temple and a group of three bowl barrows at Hollingbury, Non Civil Parish – 1014526 | Historic England". historicengland.org.uk. Retrieved 4 October 2021.
  30. ^ "Hillfort, the possible remains of a Romano-Celtic temple and a group of three bowl barrows at Hollingbury, Non Civil Parish – 1014526 | Historic England". Historic England. from the original on 22 December 2018. Retrieved 17 October 2021.
  31. ^ Doherty-Cove, Jody (29 September 2020). "'Final stand' to save green land from development". The Argus. from the original on 28 October 2020. Retrieved 19 October 2021.
  32. ^ a b Mawer, Allen (2001). The place-names of Sussex. Frank Merry Stenton, John Eric Bruce Gover. Nottingham: English place-name Society. ISBN 0-904889-64-5. OCLC 495468780.
  33. ^ a b Stanmer Conservation Area: Appraisal (2015) Brighton And Hove Council. Accessed on 13 October 2021
  34. ^ Johnson, Owen (1998). The Sussex Tree Book. Pomegranate Press, page 91.
  35. ^ "Facts and figures : Rankings and figures". University of Sussex. from the original on 15 February 2017. Retrieved 18 October 2021.
  36. ^ Pawsey, Tessa; Stevens, Geoff. "Bevendean LNR". Butterfly Conservation – Sussex Branch. from the original on 10 August 2020. Retrieved 15 October 2021.
  37. ^ "A special place for birds". Friends of Sheepcote Valley. from the original on 7 April 2005. Retrieved 17 October 2021.
  38. ^ "Beacon Hill". Rottingdean Parish Council. Retrieved 31 August 2023.
  39. ^ "History of Woodingdean". My Brighton and Hove. from the original on 7 August 2020. Retrieved 21 October 2021.
  40. ^ "East Sussex's National Nature Reserves". Corporate report: East Sussex's National Nature Reserves. from the original on 1 January 2015. Retrieved 17 October 2021.
  41. ^ "Brighton & Hove local elections results 2019". 3 May 2019. from the original on 4 May 2019. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  42. ^ "The Mayor of Brighton & Hove". Brighton & Hove City Council. Retrieved 25 September 2023.
  43. ^ "Chief executive". Brighton and Hove City Council. Retrieved 3 December 2015.
  44. ^ "Labour win overall majority in Brighton & Hove local elections". Brighton and Hove City Council. 5 May 2023. Retrieved 6 June 2023.
  45. ^ "New council roles confirmed at Annual Council Meeting". Brighton and Hove City Council. 30 May 2023. Retrieved 6 June 2023.
  46. ^ "UNITED KINGDOM: South East England Local Authority Districts and Wards". City Population. Retrieved 11 May 2020.
  47. ^ Key Statistics: Population; Quick Statistics: Economic indicators 11 February 2003 at the Wayback Machine. (2011 census and 2001 census) Retrieved 2015-02-27.
  48. ^ "Census records". East Sussex County Council. from the original on 28 January 2021. Retrieved 17 October 2021.
  49. ^ "Brighton & Hove City Snapshot – Summary of Statistics 2014" (PDF). Brighton & Hove City Council. (PDF) from the original on 6 May 2016. Retrieved 3 September 2017.
  50. ^ a b UK Census (2011). "Local Area Report – Brighton and Hove Local Authority (1946157280)". Nomis. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  51. ^ . statistics.gov.uk. Archived from the original on 9 January 2007.
  52. ^ Data is taken from United Kingdom Casweb Data services of the United Kingdom 1991 Census on Ethnic Data for England, Scotland and Wales (Table 6)
  53. ^ "Office of National Statistics; 2001 Census Key Statistics". webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Retrieved 7 September 2021.
  54. ^ "2011 Census: Ethnic Group, local authorities in England and Wales". webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Retrieved 15 December 2021.
  55. ^ "Ethnic group - Office for National Statistics". www.ons.gov.uk. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  56. ^ "KS007 - Religion - Nomis - 2001". www.nomisweb.co.uk. Retrieved 18 October 2022.
  57. ^ "KS209EW (Religion) - Nomis - 2011". www.nomisweb.co.uk. Retrieved 18 October 2022.
  58. ^ "Religion - 2021 census". Office of National Statistics. 29 November 2022. from the original on 29 November 2022. Retrieved 16 December 2022.
  59. ^ "Queen's man on the ground to be given 'freedom of the city'". Brighton and Hove News. 13 July 2021. Retrieved 13 July 2021.
  60. ^ a b "Brighton & Hove Albion manager and chairman receive city freedom". BBC News. 18 May 2017. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
  61. ^ "The Royal West Sussex Regiment" (PDF). West Sussex County Council. Retrieved 13 July 2021.
  62. ^ "Freedom of the Borough – Corporation and Council – Topics – My Brighton and Hove". mybrightonandhove.org.uk.
  63. ^ "Freedom of the city march". My Brighton and Hove. 22 June 2011. from the original on 14 October 2012.
  64. ^ "Albion awarded Freedom of the City". Brighton & Hove Albion Football Club. 20 September 2023. Retrieved 22 September 2023.
  65. ^ "Brighton & Hove Albion in line for Freedom of the City". BBC News Sussex. 21 September 2023. Retrieved 22 September 2023.

External links edit

  • "Brighton & Hove City Council". Retrieved 20 August 2007.
  •   Brighton travel guide from Wikivoyage

brighton, hove, brighton, hove, redirects, here, company, brighton, hove, company, tən, hohv, unitary, authority, with, city, status, east, sussex, england, there, multiple, villages, alongside, seaside, resorts, district, administered, city, council, which, c. Brighton amp Hove redirects here For the bus company see Brighton amp Hove bus company Brighton and Hove ˈ b r aɪ t en ˈ h oʊ v BRY ten HOHV is a unitary authority with city status in East Sussex England There are multiple villages alongside the seaside resorts of Brighton and Hove in the district It is administered by Brighton and Hove City Council which is currently under Labour majority control Brighton and Hove City of Brighton and HoveCity and unitary authorityClockwise from top the seafront the bandstand Falmer Stadium the peace statue Churchill SquareBrighton and Hove shown within East Sussex and EnglandBrighton and HoveLocation of Brighton and HoveShow map of the United KingdomBrighton and HoveBrighton and Hove Europe Show map of EuropeCoordinates 50 49 40 N 0 09 10 W 50 82778 N 0 15278 W 50 82778 0 15278Sovereign stateUnited KingdomCountryEnglandRegionSouth East EnglandHistoric countySussexCeremonial countyEast SussexAdministrative seatHoveEstablished1 April 1997City status31 January 2001Government TypeUnitary authority BodyBrighton and Hove City Council GovernanceCommittee system L ExecutiveLabour LeaderBella Sankey MayorJackie O Quinn MPsPeter Kyle L Caroline Lucas G Lloyd Russell Moyle L Area City and unitary authority33 80 sq mi 82 83 km2 Urban34 5 sq mi 89 4 km2 Rank211thPopulation 2021 City and unitary authority276 334 Rank59th Density8 640 sq mi 3 336 km2 Urban474 485 15th Urban density13 740 sq mi 5 304 km2 Metro769 000 15th Ethnicity 2021 Census 73 9 White British11 5 Other White4 8 Mixed Race3 7 Asian2 0 Black1 1 Chinese1 1 Arab2 0 OtherTime zoneUTC 0 Greenwich Mean Time Summer DST UTC 1 British Summer Time Postcode areasBN 1 2 3 41 ONS code00ML ONS E06000043 GSS ISO 3166 2GB BNHWebsitewww wbr brighton hove wbr gov wbr ukThe two resorts along with Worthing and Littlehampton in West Sussex make up the second most populous built up area of South East England after South Hampshire In 2014 Brighton and Hove City Council and other nearby councils formed the Greater Brighton City Region local enterprise partnership area 1 Contents 1 Unification 2 Areas 2 1 Brighton 2 2 Hove 2 3 Portslade Portslade Village and Mile Oak 2 3 1 Portslade downland 2 4 Aldrington Hangleton and West Blatchington 2 4 1 Hangleton and West Blatchingham downland 2 5 Westdene Withdean and Patcham 2 5 1 Waterhall downland 2 5 2 Patcham downland 2 5 3 The Chattri 2 6 Hollingbury and Hollingdean 2 6 1 Hollingbury Castle Hollingbury Woods and Wild Park 2 7 Coldean Moulsecoomb and Bevendean 2 7 1 Stanmer village and Stanmer park 2 7 2 Bevendean Down and Falmer Hill 2 8 Kemptown Whitehawk and Roedean 2 8 1 Whitehawk Hill Sheepcote Valley and East Brighton Golf Course 2 9 Woodingdean Ovingdean and Rottingdean 2 9 1 East Brighton Downland and undercliff path 2 10 The Brighton and Hove boundary 3 Governance 3 1 Wards 4 Economy and demography 4 1 Demography 4 2 Ethnicity 4 3 Religion 5 Freedom of the City 5 1 Individuals 5 2 Military units 5 3 Organisations and groups 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksUnification edit nbsp The Peace Statue on the seafront marks the border between Brighton and HoveIn 1992 a government commission was set up to conduct a structural review of local government arrangements across England In its draft proposals for East Sussex the commission suggested two separate unitary authorities be created for the towns of Brighton and Hove with the latter authority to include Hove Worthing and the Adur District 2 Support within Brighton for its own unitary authority was high however respondents in Hove expressed reservations towards a merger with Worthing and Adur A report following consultation noted that more than 25 of respondents in both Brighton and Hove had unprompted indicated support for a merger of those two areas Although this option had not been included in the draft proposals subsequent polling indicated that the merger was the most popular option among residents 2 Nevertheless the proposal of a merger proved controversial particularly in Hove Hove Borough Council opposed the move on the grounds that Brighton would dominate affairs in the city and the commission acknowledged that residents of Hove have significant negative feelings towards Brighton and greater identification towards Sussex 2 Ultimately the view was taken that support for a single tier of government in both towns outweighed opposition to unification and as a result the commission recommended that the borough councils of Brighton and Hove be made a single unitary authority independent of East Sussex County Council In 1997 Brighton and Hove Borough Council was formed and assumed responsibility for all matters of local government across both towns Twenty years earlier as part of the Queen s Silver Jubilee celebrations Brighton had been shortlisted as a candidate for city status though eventually lost out to larger Derby Following unification of the towns Brighton and Hove applied for city status again as part of the Millennium City Status Competition and was subsequently granted city status on 31 January 2001 3 As a result the borough council became a city council Although the city now operates as a single entity locals generally still consider Brighton and Hove to be separate settlements with different identities Hove is largely residential and has its own distinct seafront and established town centre located around George Street while Brighton has a higher profile as the country s most popular seaside resort a significant digital economy and hosts several festivals of national prominence Recognition of the city s twin identities is evident from the continued popularity of the local saying Hove actually a phrase which long predates unification Some organisations such as the local football club Brighton and Hove Albion and the bus company Brighton amp Hove predate the unification of the towns by several decades In 2014 Brighton and Hove formed the Greater Brighton City Region with neighbouring local authorities 1 Areas edit nbsp Downland and seafront areas in Brighton and Hove nbsp nbsp Brighton and Hove the downland and coastal city in one of the most impressive areas of the South Downs National Park The City of Brighton and Hove consists of many districts a stretch of coast and some downland areas Just to the south of Brighton and Hove in the English Channel is the Rampion Wind Farm which provides renewable energy to the country Brighton edit nbsp Brighton Town Hall at Bartholomews in The Lanes nbsp Brighton beachSee also Brighton and History of Brighton Brighton has been the most populous settlement in Sussex since at least the 17th century and a town hall and evidence of citizen s control over town affairs predates 1580 4 The original parish of Brighton covered what is today much of central Brighton The parish border ran from Little Western Street and Boundary Passage in the west to Whitehawk Road in the east and roughly followed the Old Shoreham Road and Bear Road to the north 5 The Great Reform Act of 1832 created the parliamentary constituency of Brighton Brighton obtained a royal charter for incorporation in 1854 and was organised into six wards Park Pavilion Pier St Nicholas St Peter and West The ward of Preston was added in 1873 expanding Brighton to the north In 1889 Brighton attained county borough status 4 The Brighton Corporation Act of 1927 added the settlements of Ovingdean and Rottingdean as well as western parts of Falmer Patcham and West Blatchington 4 These reforms expanded the Brighton the north and west dramatically Between 1920 and 1950 housing estates were developed in Woodingdean Moulsecoomb Bevendean and Whitehawk increasing the population of the town substantially As a result the number of wards had by now increased to 19 The rest of Falmer Coldean and the parish of Stanmer were added to Brighton by the Brighton Extension Act 1951 completing the northward extension of the town 6 A final expansion of the town s boundaries was approved in 1968 incorporating reclaimed land from the sea for the Brighton Marina project Brighton was split into two parliamentary constituencies in 1950 The first Brighton Pavilion covers the centre and north of the town The second Brighton Kemptown covers the east of the town The latter has since expanded further east to include the neighbouring towns of East Saltdean Telscombe Cliffs and Peacehaven all of which are administratively within the adjacent Lewes District Brighton became a municipal borough as a result of the 1972 Local Government Act losing unitary control of town affairs to East Sussex County Council 6 This reform was later followed by a reduction of wards to 16 in 1983 Brighton Borough Council remained under this structure until unification with Hove Hove edit nbsp Hove Town Hall on Church RoadSee also Hove A small parish at the end of the 18th century Hove began to expand in the early 19th century alongside the westward development of Brighton and in 1832 became incorporated into the parliamentary constituency of Brighton 7 In 1873 commissioners from Hove West Hove and Brunswick were amalgamated as means to guard against the dominance of Brighton 8 The first public buildings were completed in the late 19th century including the original town hall in 1882 The parish of Aldrington was annexed by Hove in 1893 7 A municipal borough of Hove was formed by royal charter in 1889 granting Hove administrative autonomy Further expansion took place in 1927 with the addition of the parishes of Preston Rural and Hangleton and westerly sections of West Blatchington and Patcham 7 Hove gained its own parliamentary constituency in 1950 The Local Government Act 1972 abolished the remaining parishes of Hove Aldrington and Hangleton and West Blatchington to form the unparished non metropolitan district of Hove 9 It also incorporated the nearby town of Portslade by Sea into the new district The new boundaries established by the Act remained largely the same until unification with Brighton a quarter of a century later Portslade Portslade Village and Mile Oak edit Main articles Portslade and Mile Oak nbsp Portslade Station nbsp Cockroost BottomTo the west of Brighton and Hove is Portslade The area has three distinct centres with different histories and includes Portslade by Sea Portslade Village and Mile Oak Each is quite different in character Portslade by Sea is largely an industrial port with a busy canal area that opens up to the River Adur and the English Channel It has a long history of human settlement and the name came from the Roman port Novus Portus Portslade Village has kept more of its antiquity and retains many elements of the downland village it once was Many of the buildings have their original flint walls and there are some early manor house ruins tree lined parks a landmark church and a former convent 10 Mile Oak is a newer development Until the 1920s it was only a small group of farm buildings with surrounding corn fields sheep downs and market gardens Then suburban housing started to be built and there was considerable further development in the 1960s with the construction of bungalows and other private housing In the 1990s after the construction of the new A27 road Mile Oak s access to the Downs was largely blocked stopping the spread of development Portslade downland edit nbsp Trigpoint on the approach to Mount Zion nbsp Electricity Pylons on Cockroost HillTo the north of Mile Oak on the other side of the A27 are a number of downland areas that are still in the Brighton and Hove area These include the ancient chalk grassland slopes of Cockroost Hill Cockroost Bottom and Mount Zion They are all special areas because of the remarkable wildlife still surviving there including rare downland flowers orchids butterflies and rare insects 11 There is a lot of history on the slopes including a large 4000 year old Bronze Age settlement a possible henge as in Stonehenge now lost under the A27 bypass and evidence of Iron Age and Romano British field systems 12 To the north of the city boundary is Fulking parish The final stretch of the Monarch s Way passes through Mile Oak and Porstlade It is a 625 mile 1 006 km long distance footpath that runs from Worcester to Shoreham Aldrington Hangleton and West Blatchington edit Main articles Aldrington Hangleton and West Blatchington nbsp Hangleton in the snowAldrington sits between Portslade by Sea to its west and Hove to its east For centuries Aldrington was largely countryside with very few people living there for most of the Middle Ages but it is now a residential area 13 Like Aldrington West Blatchingham was once primarily down and sheep grazing area but is now built up West Blatchington manor had various lords over the centuries but unlike Adrington and Hangleton it was always associated with lords in the east such Lewes Falmer and Patcham 14 It is now known for its windmill and secondary school To the east of West Blatchington is Westdene Hangleton is to the north of Aldrington and sits between Portslade Village and West Blatchington The manors of Hangleton and Aldrington formed part of the Fishersgate Half Hundred together with the neighbouring manor of Portslade 15 The lords of the Hangleton manor from 1291 to 1446 were the de Poynings a Sussex gentry family that gave their name to the present parish of Poynings 16 Hangeton was a medieval downland village in the 13th century and by the early 14th century it had a population of about 200 Later the village was abandoned for around six hundred years 17 It started to grow again in the 1950s with other areas of Brighton and is now popular for its views of the sea and green spaces Hangleton and West Blatchingham downland edit Main article Benfield Hill nbsp West Blatchington windmillBetween Hangleton and Westdene south of the A27 is Toads Hole Valley Its west slope below Downland Drive was once an unspoilt place for wildlife and still home to threatened species such as dormice hedgehogs and adders The valley has been unmanaged for many years and the area has turned to scrub It has now been designated for development and up to three hundred homes are planned to be built on the site 18 To the north of the A27 are two golf courses the West Hove and Brighton and Hove Golf courses The two are divided by the Old Dyke Railway Trail which follows part of the route taken by the old Dyke Railway Branch Line The line opened in September 1887 and took people from Hove to the popular downland beauty spot of Devil s Dyke When the railway closed in December 1938 the line lay unused until the Dyke Railway Trail was created in 1988 There are a number of ways through Hangleton to a bridge over the A27 bypass where the trail begins but the original route took you from Aldrington railway station and above the Hove cemetery Much of the trail across the Downs is on a hard surface 19 There are many archaic Down pastures in the area To the west is Benfield Hill TQ 261 078 a Local Nature Reserve which is famous for its glowworm displays on midsummer evenings On the steep east side of the hill there is large thyme autumn gentian and many butterflies Bee orchids can be also found in some years 11 To the north of this area is the Poynings parish and the impressive geography of Devil s Dyke To the east is Round Hill where there are many signs of the past from different periods of human history There are several old barrows in the area There is an old flint barn TQ 269 090 called the Skeleton Hovel which is thought to commemorate a prehistoric burial site Round Hill s eastern slope TQ 269 085 is the richest chalk grassland site in Hangleton though it desperately needs grazing management for its many downland flowers such as field fleawort chalk milkwort orchids cowslips hairy violet rockrose crested hair grass and devil s bit scabious There are two rare Forester moth species fox moth and heath moth purse web spider moss and pygmy snails 11 To the north of Round Hill is the Newtimber parish Westdene Withdean and Patcham edit Main articles Westdene Patcham and Withdean nbsp Northward view along Warmdene Road PatchamPatcham Westdene and Withdean are divided by the London Road Of the three Patcham TQ 301 090 has much the longest history of human settlement and retains much from its agricultural past It was one of the bigger settlements in Sussex at the time of Domesday book with 10 shepherds and six slaves and a medieval Archbishop of Canterbury came from the village 20 The area still has many old flint cottages big allotment sites and winding twittens There is Patcham Place and Park The best cluster of buildings comprise its Norman church which has kept part of its medieval wall paintings and the old buildings of Patcham Court Farm with a 17th century flint farmhouse and dovecot The areas of Withdean and Westdene were historically farmland but have been developed mainly in the 1920s and 1930s with a mix of detached semi detached and mid rise flats The Withdean manor was originally the property of the great Cluniac Priory of St Pancras at Lewes until 1537 This was then given to Anne of Cleves in 1541 by Henry VIII The manor was demolished in 1936 21 Westdene sits to the north of Brighton east of West Blatchington and north of Withdean Withdean Park is to the east of the London Road and is home to the national collection of lilacs with over 250 varieties Collections of berberis cotoneaster and viburnum can also be found here 22 Withdean Woods is next to Withdean stadium and is a wooded hillside nature reserve approximately 2 47 acres 1 ha in size It is the home of several woodland birds including the great spotted woodpecker tawny owl goldcrest firecrest and in winter the stinking hellebore 23 Waterhall downland edit nbsp Sweet Hill near Patcham Brighton The old farm house nbsp Varncombe HillTo the west of the A23 and north of Westdene and the A27 is Waterhall TQ 284 087 and its lost 18th century farm is now the site of football and rugby pitches The Waterhall Golf Course has just been given over to a version of rewilding which involves the restoration of species rich chalk grassland 24 There is still a significant population of adders By the bridlepath just downhill of the old clubhouse there are the damaged remains of a Bronze Age round barrow TQ 283 087 which has long acted as a marker on the old parish boundaries Since the cessation of golf play harebell scabious cowslip rockrose betony Sussex rampion and horseshoe vetch have flowered ebulliently There are large old anthills and chalkhill small and adonis blue and brown argus butterflies and all three species of Forester moth At the corner of the Saddlescombe Road and the turn off to the golf clubhouse there is a sarsen stone TQ 278 090 marking this point in the medieval boundary between Patcham and West Blatchington parishes 11 To the north is Varncombe Hill which borders the Newtimber parish Its south west facing slope TQ 280 099 is heavily scrubbed up though lovely old pasture glades survive Rockrose is one of the commonest flowers here with some of its associated fungi The west facing slopes of Varncombe Hill TQ 279 105 were sold by Brighton Council with the rest of Saddlescombe Farm to the National Trust but the Trust did not dedicate them as Access land though they qualified and the National Trust had the power to do so 11 To the east of Waterhall is Sweet Hill The Hill has a flowery bank on its western slope TQ 286 091 a bushy lynchet and an old dewpond site on its brow The Sussex Border Path takes you north to Pangdean Bottom and the Pyecombe parish Pangdean Bottom is the west of the A23 and is rented by a tenant farmer from Brighton and Hove City Council who have owned it since 1924 It includes ancient chalk grassland slopes where there are still chalkland flowers and butterflies In late summer the valley s north side has one of the largest populations of autumn ladies tresses orchid has been recorded together with a large population of the white variety of the self heal violet The scrub at the head of the valley is old and diverse with wayfaring tree old man s beard honeysuckle hazel and gorse 11 In July 2021 the Sussex based Landscapes of Freedom group together with Nick Hayes and Guy Shrubsole of the Right to Roam network organised a mass trespass in protest against the lack of public access to this valley and its management for game bird shooting which has badly affected its chalk grassland wildlife 25 Over 300 people walked from Waterhall Brighton to Pangdean Bottom in protest 26 The public are actively discouraged from walking in the area and scrub has been allowed to grow on the pristine downland whilst other parts have been ploughed out 27 To the north of the city boundary in this area is the Pycombe parish Patcham downland edit Main article Ladies Mile Brighton nbsp Ewe Bottom from the Sussex Border Path nbsp Sheep on Tegdown Hill nbsp Southwestward view along Ladies Mile PatchamThe Downland to the north of Patcham leads up to Ditchling Beacon and the western end of the Clayton to Offham Escarpment Tegdown Hill is the next hill to the west of the downland Ditchling Road A remarkable ring barrow survives TQ 313 101 on its brow together with the slight mounds of two other bowl barrows Tegdown ring barrow has been described as probably the best of this type in the county 28 It consists of a circular bank with a ditch and a flattish interior It lies just south of a big dried up dew pond From Tegdown you can see the three Iron Age camps of Hollingbury Castle Ditchling Beacon and the Devil s Dyke To the north of the city boundary is the long Ditchling parish The Mid Sussex track of the Sussex Border Path starts at the A27 roundabout and the eastern track takes you up Ewebottom Hiil leaving Scare Hill to its west passing the Chattri to the east and on to Holt Hill and the Pyecombe parish The western track takes you to Waterhall across the A23 Those walking from Patcham towards Standean farm descend the hill into Ewe Bottom and have the pleasure of the intact old Tegdown pastures to their right where the steepest slope and the lynchets have fine chalk downland flowers Opposite the slope is the mouth of Deep Bottom TQ 303 105 the southerly slope of which is a colourful old pasture site with abundant rockrose and which rises up to the Chattri In autumn there are boletes and several old meadow waxcaps and a fairy club fungus 11 To the south of the A27 and on the western edge of Patcham is Ladies Mile Down TQ 318 093 which has designated as a Local nature reserve The area is a remarkable survival of plateau chalk grassland on Downland where almost all such flattish sites have been destroyed by modern farming The ancient turf has preserved lots of odd linear banks which are surviving fragments of an Iron Age and Romano British lynchetted field system The banks once stretched across the line of the A27 bypass beyond which one or two more fragments also survive At the eastern end of the Down is a Bronze Age burial mound recognisable as a low grassy tump The area is rich with summer flowers Harebell Sussex rampion flower rockrose and yellow rattle are enjoyed by locals here and at midsummer there are still good numbers of glowworms Later in the summer months the violet blue of devil s bit scabious and the powder blue lesser scabious radiate The Chattri edit Main article Chattri Brighton nbsp Chattri Brighton from the WestThe Chattri TQ 304 110 is a place of memorial and a destination for walks It can be accessed from the Sussex Border Path to its west or by scrambling through the thickets of Deep Bottom It is a solemn place where the bodies of First World War Indian Sikh and Hindu soldiers who died from wounds whilst being nursed at the Brighton Pavilion passed through the fire for this was their ghat or place of cremation Its white Sicilian marble dome is in good condition but the surrounding memorial garden is often unkept 11 Hollingbury and Hollingdean edit Main articles Hollingbury and Hollingdean nbsp Northeastward view along Hollingbury Crescent HollingdeanWhat is now considered to be Hollingbury is the slope facing west east of Patcham and north of Fiveways However old Hollingbury was the crest of the hill by the hillfort Hollingbury Park and even the east facing slope Until the 1930s the area was open downland with farms small holdings and piggeries After World War Two Hollingbury was used for a factory estate with the housing for the workforce Hollingdean is in the combe east of Ditchling Road and rising up to the north facing slope to Roedale allotments the golf course and hillfort It is now mainly a residential area with many council houses to the east and low rise flats in the central part with late 19th and early 20th century terraced houses towards Fiveways Hollingbury Castle Hollingbury Woods and Wild Park edit Main article Hollingbury Castle nbsp View from Hollingbury Hill BrightonThere is an oasis of undeveloped green space at the peak of the Down between Hollingbury Hollingdean and Coldean At its centre is Hollingbury Castle or Hillfort TQ 322 078 This Iron Age hillfort is a scheduled ancient monument 29 of Iron Age date whilst the four mounded round barrows within its ramparts are made by Bronze Age people who held this place sacred 30 There are thickets of gorse which shine yellow in spring and are home to linnets and goldfinch European stonechat is a familiar bird too and the rarer whinchat and redstart are seen regularly on passage to and from their breeding grounds The soil within and around the camp has a layer of superficial acidity with sorrel bent grass and tormentil growing there 11 To the south is Hollingbury Golf Course the Roedale allotments and Hollingbury Park TQ 314 075 The park was originally part of the golf course Its Edwardian pavilion was the original circa 1908 clubhouse East of the Park is the two century old Hollingbury Woods now full of the rotting carcasses of beech giants toppled in the 1987 gale It is a popular walk with Fittleworth Stone walks glades and benches It has received the loving care of a local Friends group for many years now 11 nbsp Footpath towards Moulsecoomb Wild ParkTo the west of Moulsecoombe is Wild Park TQ 327 080 The park is a valley coombe which runs down from Hollingbury Castle and was opened in 1925 In the 1850s the valley then known as Hollingbury Coombe was one of the most famous of Sussex sites for lepidopterists butterfly and moth experts but dark green and silver washed fritillary and silver spotted skipper once present in numbers are rarely seen there now Despite this there are parts which are still rich in diversity and it is still good for butterflies In spring one may still see the green hairstreak or orange tip or find the wacky small bloody nosed beetle and there are still adonis chalkhill and common blues and brown argus and glowworms in midsummer There are also orchids harebells sheets of rockrose Sussex rampion devil s bit and carline thistle In autumn there are fungi too including penny bun bolete collared earthstar stinkhorn and shaggy inkcap in the circling woods 11 Coldean Moulsecoomb and Bevendean edit Main articles Coldean Moulsecoomb and Bevendean Coldean Moulsecoomb and Bevendean are suburbs developed by Brighton Corporation in the 1950s necessitated by the acute housing shortage in the area after World War II The districts are all in beautiful downland areas Coldean occupies a deep valley on the historic boundary of Falmer and Stanmer parishes and is only separated from Hollingbury Hillfort by Wild Park It has recently been approved to build over two hundred new homes in green land adjoining the South Downs and Stanmer Estate that ten years ago had been proposed to be a Local Nature Reserve 31 Bevendean is in a valley nestled between Bevendean Down and Heath Hill Moulsecoomb is on the other side of the Lewes Road and backs on to Falmer Hill and is home to the University of Brighton s Moulsecoomb campus and Moulsecoomb Place North of Moulsecoomb is the Falmer train station University of Brighton s Falmer campus and Falmer Stadium Stanmer village and Stanmer park edit Main articles Stanmer Stanmer Park and University of Sussex nbsp Stanmer Park nbsp Stanmer VillageIn this area to the north east of Coldean are two further valleys The first is occupied by Stanmer village TQ 33 09 a village with much historical value The upper village street has eighteen flint cottages with colourful gardens The church was reconstructed in 1838 but the date of the original church can be guessed from the two huge and knotty yews in the churchyard Next to the church is a pond which although often unkempt is probably the reason why Stanmer is so called as stan mere is likely to derive from the Saxon stony pool 32 312 Between the church and the barn is a Tudor well 252 feet deep and a wooden donkey wheel like that at Saddlescombe contained within a flint well house The well was in use until mains water was installed in 1900 33 Stanmer Woods were transformed in the 18th century after the Pelhams later Earls of Chichester had bought them They planted a circle of woods along the hill tops surrounding the dry valley in which the village lay and more shaws and clumps were scattered within In 2007 the City Council took the initiative after the recent retirement of the Park s farming tenant and opened up all the closed woods and pasture fields to public access 33 The paths gates and benches the council made are all popular with Brighton residents and beyond The largest plantation is called the Great Wood TQ 335 090 and has acquired many of the plants of ancient woodland some by planting and some have made their own way there Under the council s control there has been much imaginative new planting too The trees are laid out alphabetically with Acer and Betula at the lower east end and Ulmus and Zelkova high up to the west 34 and on the lawns behind the House is a gigantic Blue Atlas Cedar with several slighter companions The next valley is occupied by the University of Sussex which opened in 1961 In 2021 it is the place of study of over 16 000 students 35 The Brighton and Hove City border is surrounded by the large Falmer parish in this area Bevendean Down and Falmer Hill edit Main article Bevendean Down nbsp Bevendean Down Local Nature Reserve nbsp Bridleway Falmer HillBevendean Down TQ 33 06 is a local nature reserve Its hot south facing slopes and as a result is home to lizards and many butterflies The area is well looked after by local people in cooperation with the tenant farmer and the Council rangers There is a dew pond where swallows and house martins skim the water Chalkhill and adonis blue and brown argus butterflies are found in numbers in the area 36 Hogtrough Bottom TQ 340 070 has a mixture of taller grassland short sheep s fescue turf and scrub On the shorter ground some years are large swarms of autumn ladies tresses There are lots of scarce species such as bastard toadflax waxcap and webcap fungi four spot orb weaver and purseweb spiders but the tapestry of summer colours is the main delight which come from the purple knapweed and felwort blue scabious yellow hawkbit and rockrose 11 On the southern side of Bevendean is Heath Hill which runs up to Warren Road and two horse pasture smallholdings Southdown Riding Stables TQ 335 058 and Ingleside Stables to the east Neither receive any agro chemicals and consequently have gathered rich wildlife in the past half century Swallows and swifts bats and dung beetles rooks and woodpecker and the hornet robberfly all survive on the rich supply of insects attracted by the pony dung 11 Both the farmsteads of Southdown s and Ingleside Stables are targeted for housing development within Brighton and Hove City Council s draft City Plan Part 2 The loss of these two farmsteads which organise the grazing of these nature rich pastures would put them at risk Falmer Hill TQ 365 076 gives great views across to Hollingbury Castle and Stanmer Park and the higher Downs beyond The Hill s top remained unploughed till the last World War It had a cluster of about ten probably Saxon barrows and a couple of round barrows Nothing remains now except white smears of chalk and flint on the ploughed earth where the barrows were 11 To the west of the Hill is City boundary which borders the Kingston near Lewes parish Kemptown Whitehawk and Roedean edit Main articles Kemptown Brighton Whitehawk and Roedean East Sussex nbsp 1 14 Chichester Terrace Kemp TownKemp Town is a district to east of Brighton It was designed by Thomas Read Kemp 1782 1844 It includes the elegant Grade I listed buildings such as those of Sussex Square Lewes Crescent Arundel and Chichester Terraces and the less prestigious areas such as Rock Gardens to the east The area includes the Royal Sussex Hospital The beach south of Kemp Town is known as Black Rock To the east of Kemp Town is Roedean gap There is some housing and Roedean school a public girls school that faces the sea To the north of Kemp Town is Whitehawk a district of Brighton that has been built since 1931 On the saddle between Whitehawk Hill and Race Hill is Whitehawk Camp which is a Neolithic causewayed camp one of eight causewayed camps known to have existed in the Sussex Downs The camp is a scheduled ancient monument To the northwest of Whitehawk is Brighton Race Course Horse racing started on the Hill in the late 18th century next to the causewayed camp Whitehawk Hill Sheepcote Valley and East Brighton Golf Course edit Main article Whitehawk Hill nbsp Sheepcote Valley nbsp Westward view across Brighton from Whitehawk HillWhitehawk Hill s lower slopes have large allotment sites and there is a transmitting station on its top To the north of the hilltop is the neolithic Whitehawk Camp To the east of Whitehawk is Sheepcote Valley TQ 341 045 Here over 90 hectares 220 acres are open to the public In the 1870s there was a rifle range for volunteer soldiers sited here The park was acquired in 1913 and laid out with plants and sports pitches in 1925 The northern part of the Valley served for many years as a municipal rubbish dump When that purpose was completed however a kilometre and more of the upper Valley was terraced with six giant steps which have now softened further with the cover of grass and low scrub Now many birds breed in the area and many more pass through and stop extended periods on migration Uncommon bird species are often seen there such as rare warblers wryneck and redstarts Sheepcote s lower valley has a caravan park where the first municipal site in the country was opened in 1938 There are playing fields embraced by the valley slopes and a cafe in East Brighton Park 37 To its east is East Brighton Golf Course TQ 346 042 with extensive roughs scrub thickets and woodland In winter short eared owls often reside in the area Below the course is Roedean Bottom TQ 349 033 It sits between Roedean School and a pitch and putt golf course On the east slope of the Bottom there is a little piece of aboriginal Downland turf where in late summer autumn ladies tresses orchid grow with carline thistle and hairy violet Tiny moss snail in the turf demonstrates the site s antiquity East again from the Golf Course and southwest of Woodingdean is Wick Bottom TQ 35 04 This peaceful dean takes its name from the medieval farm on the Falmer Road now long gone The name wick may denote a far more ancient perhaps Roman farmstead In modern times it has been a place of arable stubbles but there be a good array of chalk loving plants such as night flowering catchfly henbit deadnettle field madder round leaved fluellen and common fumitory 11 Woodingdean Ovingdean and Rottingdean edit Main articles Woodingdean Ovingdean and RottingdeanMain article Beacon Hill East Sussex nbsp St Wulfran OvingdeanOvingdean TQ 355 035 is east of Brighton and slightly set back from the sea It is a historic settlement that has existed since at least the Iron Ageabout 600 BC In ancient documents the area is described as Ofamn inge denu or the valley of the enclosure of Ofa s people 32 The Domesday book of 1086 records that the manor of hovingedene At that time the population of Ovingdean was about 90 people who included the lord of the manor and his family By 2020 there were nearer 1 200 inhabitants and many new buildings but the old core of Ovingdean still exists and many flint walls old cottages barns converted and gentry houses have been retained The Norman church of St Wulfran s is the oldest surviving building in the village and has lots of surviving early details North of the church the stonewalled paddock is full of humps and hollows that mark where a Saxon thane had his manor house To the south of the village in front of the sea is one of Blind Veterans UK s rehabilitation centres On the beach is a cafe and beach for rock pooling at low tide Rottingdean is east of Ovingdean and has more history still The first settled inhabitants of Rottingdean were the Neolithic people arriving around 2500 BC It later became famed for sea faring activities and primarily a centre for smuggling Rottingdean is its own parish despite being with the Brighton and Hove boundary Beacon Hill is a Local Nature Reserve LNR set up because of its pristine chalk grassland and archaeological features A historic windmill is at the centre of the nature reserve 38 Woodingdean is north of Ovingdean and east of the Brighton Racecourse It was extensively developed during the 1950s and 1960s when most of the roads in the north eastern and southern ends of the village were built The name Woodingdean came from Woodendean i e wooded valley Farm which was situated in the south end of what is now Ovingdean 39 This farm existed from before 1714 until 1979 Perhaps the earliest farming settlement to be identified in the area was situated in Wick Bottom It was here that the Wick Farm later Warren Farm was situated East Brighton Downland and undercliff path edit nbsp Undercliff path East of Brighton nbsp Happy Valley Woodingdean nbsp Track at The BostleBetween the Brighton Marina and Saltdean is the undercliff path It passes cafes at Ovingdean and Rottingdean Many people use the path to walk run or cycle either for amusement or to reach their destinations avoiding the up and down of the busy road above The entire stretch of beach provides excellent home to rock pool loving species and sea and wading birds take advantage Fulmars peregrine falcons ravens and rock pipits are just some of the bird life that nest in the chalk cliffs This area is the only place on these southern cliffs that sea stock is native Sea lavender also clings to the cliff ledges Occasionally one can find samphire too 11 To the west of the Falmer Road from Woodingdean is Happy Valley TQ 357 047 a bushy cattle grazed slope with old Down pasture herbs bits of gorse and thorn Further south is Mount Pleasant TQ 354 045 The west slope looks over Wick Bottom and is a small triangle of rich chalk grassland It s rough and derelict but special wildlife clings on There s big swarms of Pride of Sussex rampion dropwort horseshoe vetch and hairy violet European stonechat frequent its thorn and bramble 11 Just east of Woodingdean is the Bostle barrow field TQ 371 054 There is a cluster of at least twenty seven small low grassy mounds which are probably Saxon and three larger probably Bronze Age barrows on the top of the hill just south of the bridleway fence line The barrow field is a precious fragment of antiquity surrounded by agricultural fields The Bostle combe slope TQ 371 048 is an ancient Down pasture slope with the softest sheep s fescue turf just south of the barrow field 11 East a little further there is one of the most special natural sites in the Brighton area Castle Hill TQ 376 065 The area is known for its early spider orchids Roesel s bush cricket wart biter grasshopper and dramatic butterfly displays that include dark green fritillary adonis blue and thousands of chalkhill blues 40 The Brighton and Hove boundary edit nbsp The Patcham Pylons mark the border of Brighton and Hove on the A23From west to east the administrative boundary of Brighton and Hove begins on the coast at Gate 4 of Shoreham Port It crosses the Southwick Ship Canal and the A259 between Brambledean Road and St Richard s Road in Portslade From here the border joins Eastbrook Road and runs north up St Aubrey s Crescent It then runs along the Sussex Border Path through Fishersgate Station separating Portslade from the neighbouring town of Southwick Running west of Mile Oak the border crosses the A27 skirting Mile Oak Farm and continues towards Devil s Dyke before turning east over the Downs The border then extends north from Tydell Farm to the outskirts of Pyecombe its most northerly point It crosses the A23 at the Patcham Pylons which signifies the border for incoming traffic Continuing east the border runs north of the Chattri and Standean Farm before crossing Ditchling Road at the Upper Lodges and running along the northerly limits of Stanmer Park and Stanmer Village At this point the border turns south and runs to the eastern edge of the University of Sussex campus re crossing the A27 along The Drove and passing east of Falmer Stadium It continues along The Drove and Falmer Road to Woodingdean Running north of Woodingdean the border then heads southeast through Balsdean before adjoining to a footpath which enters Saltdean at the top of Longridge Avenue The border runs down Longridge Avenue to the junction with Lynwood Road where it turns south over houses and back across the A259 before returning the coastline at the eastern end of Saltdean Beach Governance edit nbsp Corporate logo of the councilSee also Brighton and Hove City Council and Brighton and Hove local elections As a unitary authority Brighton and Hove City Council provides local government services combining the functions of a non metropolitan county and district council Elections to the council are held every four years with the most recent taking place in 2019 41 Councillors annually elect a Mayor of Brighton and Hove a ceremonial position The current mayor is Councillor Jackie O Quinn 42 A proposal to introduce a directly elected mayor to the city was rejected by referendum in 2001 As a result the council uses a cabinet system to form its executive Geoff Raw is the current chief executive 43 Both Brighton Town Hall in The Lanes and Hove Town Hall on Church Road are used as meeting places for council nbsp The council is currently composed of 38 Labour 7 Green 6 Conservative and 3 independent councillorsThe council was under Labour majority control until 2003 when it fell into no overall control until 2023 During this period the council has been controlled by minority administrations of all three major parties in Brighton and Hove Labour the Conservatives and the Greens The first Green administration elected in 2011 was the first time any Green Party had run a council in the UK highlighting the city as the party s primary area of support A Labour administration was elected in 2015 and the party narrowly retained a plurality in 2019 however expulsions from the Labour group led to the Greens regaining control of the administration in 2020 At the 2023 local elections Labour regained control of the council 44 Bella Sankey is the current Leader of the council 45 Three constituencies cover Brighton and Hove in the UK Parliament Hove is represented by Labour MP Peter Kyle Brighton Pavilion which covers central and northern Brighton is represented by Green MP Caroline Lucas the UK s first and only MP from the Green Party Brighton Kemptown which covers East Brighton as well as areas outside of Brighton and Hove such as Telscombe Cliffs and Peacehaven is represented by Labour MP Lloyd Russell Moyle Wards edit Ward Location Population 46 Ward Location PopulationBrunswick and Adelaide nbsp 11 475 Preston Park nbsp 15 263Central Hove nbsp 9 831 Queens Park nbsp 16 284East Brighton nbsp 14 138 Regency nbsp 11 986Goldsmid nbsp 16 571 Rottingdean Coastal nbsp 14 325Hangleton and Knoll nbsp 14 848 South Portslade nbsp 9 836Hanover and Elm Grove nbsp 17 673 St Peter s and North Laine nbsp 20 670Hollingdean and Stamner nbsp 18 121 Westbourne nbsp 10 360Hove Park nbsp 11 081 Wish nbsp 10 031Moulsecoombe and Bevendean nbsp 18 772 Withdean nbsp 15 196North Portslade nbsp 9 968 Woodingdean nbsp 9 968Patcham nbsp 14 606Economy and demography editMain article Brighton Economy nbsp Population pyramid of Brighton and Hove in 2021The economy of the city is service based with a strong emphasis on creative digital and electronic technologies Tourism and entertainment are important sectors for the city which has many hotels and amusements as well as Brighton Pier and Shoreham Portslade Harbour The United Kingdom Census 2011 showed a substantial fall in the proportion of the population claiming Jobseeker s Allowance or Income Support from 10 1 of the resident population in 2001 to 4 5 of the resident population in 2011 47 Demography edit The first census of Brighton was in 1801 48 The resident population of Brighton and Hove at the 2011 census was 273 369 persons 50 male and 50 female 49 The 2011 census found the ethnic composition of Brighton and Hove to be 89 1 white 80 5 white British 1 4 white Irish 7 1 other white 4 1 Asian 1 1 Chinese 1 1 Indian 0 5 Bangladeshi 1 2 other Asian 3 8 mixed race 1 5 mixed black white 1 2 mixed white Asian 1 0 other mix 1 5 black and 0 8 Arab 50 The 2011 census found the religious composition to be 42 90 Christian 42 42 nonreligious 2 23 Muslim 1 00 Buddhist and 0 98 Jewish 1 66 were adherents of some other religion while 8 81 did not state their religion 50 In the 2001 census Brighton and Hove had the highest percentage of citizens indicating their religion as Jedi among all principal areas of England and Wales 51 Ethnicity edit Ethnic Group Year1991 52 2001 53 2011 54 2021 55 Number Number Number Number White Total 221 767 96 9 233 582 94 3 243 512 89 1 236 571 85 4 White British 218 134 88 220 018 80 5 204 831 73 9 White Irish 3 965 3 772 3 944 1 4 White Gypsy or Irish Traveller 198 197 0 1 White Roma 787 0 3 White Other 11 483 4 6 19 524 7 1 26 812 9 7 Asian or Asian British Total 3 845 1 7 5 844 2 4 11 278 4 1 13 217 4 7 Asian or Asian British Indian 1 241 2 106 2 996 3 633 1 3 Asian or Asian British Pakistani 283 540 649 929 0 3 Asian or Asian British Bangladeshi 465 975 1 367 1 729 0 6 Asian or Asian British Chinese 965 1 305 2 999 3 065 1 1 Asian or Asian British Other Asian 891 918 3 267 3 861 1 4 Black or Black British Total 1 343 0 6 1 992 0 8 4 188 1 5 5 458 2 Black or Black British African 562 1 380 2 893 3 949 1 4 Black or Black British Caribbean 323 468 879 988 0 4 Black or Black British Other Black 458 144 416 521 0 2 Mixed or British Mixed Total 4 799 1 9 10 408 3 8 13 228 4 7 Mixed White and Black Caribbean 834 2 182 2 410 0 9 Mixed White and Black African 961 2 019 2 334 0 8 Mixed White and Asian 1 582 3 351 4 198 1 5 Mixed Other Mixed 1 422 2 856 4 286 1 5 Other Total 2 017 1 1 600 0 6 3 983 1 5 8 629 3 1 Other Arab 2 184 0 8 3 049 1 1 Other Any other ethnic group 2 017 1 1 600 0 6 1 799 0 6 5 580 2 0 Total 228 972 100 247 817 100 273 369 100 277 103 100 Religion edit Religion 2001 56 2011 57 2021 58 Number Number Number No religion 66 955 27 0 115 954 42 4 152 966 55 2Holds religious beliefs 158 849 64 1 133 326 48 8 104 377 37 7 nbsp Christian 146 466 59 1 117 276 42 9 85 629 30 9 nbsp Buddhist 1 747 0 7 2 742 1 0 2 455 0 9 nbsp Hindu 1 300 0 5 1 792 0 7 2 100 0 8 nbsp Jewish 3 358 1 4 2 670 1 0 2 455 0 9 nbsp Muslim 3 635 1 5 6 095 2 2 8 500 3 1 nbsp Sikh 237 0 1 342 0 1 378 0 1Other religion 2 106 0 8 2 409 0 9 2 860 1 0Religion not stated 22 013 8 9 24 089 8 8 19 760 7 1Total population 247 817 100 0 273 369 100 0 277 103 100 0Freedom of the City editThe following have received the Freedom of the City of Brighton and Hove This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items July 2021 Individuals edit Sir Peter Field 15 July 2021 59 Tony Bloom 18 May 2017 60 Chris Hughton 18 May 2017 60 Military units edit The Royal Sussex Regiment 27 October 1944 Borough of Brighton The Royal Sussex Regiment 1958 Borough of Hove 61 The Queen s Regiment 31 December 1966 Borough of Brighton 62 The Princess of Wales s Royal Regiment 1996 63 Organisations and groups edit Brighton amp Hove Albion Football Club 28 November 2023 64 65 See also editHealthcare in Sussex Pipe organs of Brighton and Hove Brighton HoveReferences edit a b City Deal The beginning of a great city region Brighton and Hove City Council 2014 Retrieved 31 May 2020 a b c Final Recommendations for the Future Local Government of East Sussex PDF Local Government Commission For England December 1994 Archived from the original PDF on 4 June 2012 Retrieved 19 May 2021 Page 1431 Issue 56109 5 February 2001 London Gazette the Gazette a b c Salzman L F 1940 A History of the County of Sussex Volume 7 the Rape of Lewes British History Online pp 244 263 Retrieved 13 May 2021 Boundaries My Brighton and Hove Retrieved 13 May 2021 a b Administration Brighton History Retrieved 13 May 2021 a b c Salzman L F 1940 A History of the County of Sussex Volume 7 the Rape of Lewes British History Online pp 265 268 Retrieved 12 May 2021 Records of Hove Borough Council and its predecessors National Archives Retrieved 12 May 2021 HOVE REGISTRATION DISTRICT UK BMD Retrieved 12 May 2021 Mile Oak amp Portslade Village neighbourhood context Brighton and Hove Council Accessed on 29 September 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Bangs Dave 2008 A freedom to roam Guide to the Brighton Downs from Shoreham to Newhaven and Beeding to Lewes Brighton David Bangs ISBN 978 0 9548638 1 4 OCLC 701098669 Wilkinson K N 2003 Colluvial deposits in dry valleys of southern England as proxy indicators of paleoenvironmental and land use change Geoarchaeology An International Journal 18 7 pp 725 755 A History of the County of Sussex Volume 7 the Rape of Lewes Originally published by Victoria County History London 1940 Parishes West Blatchington in A History of the County of Sussex Volume 7 the Rape of Lewes ed L F Salzman London 1940 pp 242 244 British History Online http www british history ac uk vch sussex vol7 pp242 244 accessed 1 October 2021 Medieval Building Hangleton Weald amp Downland Museum Weald amp Downland Living Museum Retrieved 30 September 2021 A P Baggs C R J Currie C R Elrington S M Keeling and A M Rowland Fishersgate Half Hundred in A History of the County of Sussex Volume 6 Part 1 Bramber Rape Southern Part ed T P Hudson London 1980 pp 130 131 British History Online http www british history ac uk vch sussex vol6 pt1 pp130 131 accessed 30 September 2021 Syed Yasmin Burton Martin 24 March 2021 The medieval Hove suburb once abandoned for 600 years sussexlive Retrieved 30 September 2021 Toads Hole Valley plans remain a cause for concern Brighton and Hove News 8 January 2021 Retrieved 17 October 2021 Dyke Railway Trail Easy Access Trails South Downs Join Committee Accessed on 21 October 2021 Domesday Book In PRESTON Hundred The National Archives Archived from the original on 21 February 2015 Retrieved 17 October 2021 First record of Withdean c12th century My Brighton and Hove Retrieved 17 October 2021 Withdean Park boasts a famous lilac collection My Brighton and Hove Archived from the original on 17 October 2021 Retrieved 17 October 2021 Withdean Woods Sussex Wildlife Trust sussexwildlifetrust org uk Retrieved 17 October 2021 Wild cats to elephants hippopotamus and wolves rewilding a golf course The Argus 22 September 2020 Retrieved 1 October 2021 Bangs David 2018 Land of the Brighton line a field guide to the Middle Sussex and South East Surrey Weald Brighton ISBN 978 0 9548638 2 1 OCLC 1247849975 Hundreds attend mass trespass for the right to roam The Argus 26 July 2021 Retrieved 6 September 2021 Mass Trespass tradition given new lease of life Morning Star 30 July 2021 Retrieved 5 September 2021 Grinsell L V 1934 Sussex Barrows Sussex Archaeological Collections 75 224 doi 10 5284 1086699 Hillfort the possible remains of a Romano Celtic temple and a group of three bowl barrows at Hollingbury Non Civil Parish 1014526 Historic England historicengland org uk Retrieved 4 October 2021 Hillfort the possible remains of a Romano Celtic temple and a group of three bowl barrows at Hollingbury Non Civil Parish 1014526 Historic England Historic England Archived from the original on 22 December 2018 Retrieved 17 October 2021 Doherty Cove Jody 29 September 2020 Final stand to save green land from development The Argus Archived from the original on 28 October 2020 Retrieved 19 October 2021 a b Mawer Allen 2001 The place names of Sussex Frank Merry Stenton John Eric Bruce Gover Nottingham English place name Society ISBN 0 904889 64 5 OCLC 495468780 a b Stanmer Conservation Area Appraisal 2015 Brighton And Hove Council Accessed on 13 October 2021 Johnson Owen 1998 The Sussex Tree Book Pomegranate Press page 91 Facts and figures Rankings and figures University of Sussex Archived from the original on 15 February 2017 Retrieved 18 October 2021 Pawsey Tessa Stevens Geoff Bevendean LNR Butterfly Conservation Sussex Branch Archived from the original on 10 August 2020 Retrieved 15 October 2021 A special place for birds Friends of Sheepcote Valley Archived from the original on 7 April 2005 Retrieved 17 October 2021 Beacon Hill Rottingdean Parish Council Retrieved 31 August 2023 History of Woodingdean My Brighton and Hove Archived from the original on 7 August 2020 Retrieved 21 October 2021 East Sussex s National Nature Reserves Corporate report East Sussex s National Nature Reserves Archived from the original on 1 January 2015 Retrieved 17 October 2021 Brighton amp Hove local elections results 2019 3 May 2019 Archived from the original on 4 May 2019 Retrieved 4 May 2019 The Mayor of Brighton amp Hove Brighton amp Hove City Council Retrieved 25 September 2023 Chief executive Brighton and Hove City Council Retrieved 3 December 2015 Labour win overall majority in Brighton amp Hove local elections Brighton and Hove City Council 5 May 2023 Retrieved 6 June 2023 New council roles confirmed at Annual Council Meeting Brighton and Hove City Council 30 May 2023 Retrieved 6 June 2023 UNITED KINGDOM South East England Local Authority Districts and Wards City Population Retrieved 11 May 2020 Key Statistics Population Quick Statistics Economic indicators Archived 11 February 2003 at the Wayback Machine 2011 census and 2001 census Retrieved 2015 02 27 Census records East Sussex County Council Archived from the original on 28 January 2021 Retrieved 17 October 2021 Brighton amp Hove City Snapshot Summary of Statistics 2014 PDF Brighton amp Hove City Council Archived PDF from the original on 6 May 2016 Retrieved 3 September 2017 a b UK Census 2011 Local Area Report Brighton and Hove Local Authority 1946157280 Nomis Office for National Statistics Retrieved 14 March 2018 2001 Census statistics gov uk Archived from the original on 9 January 2007 Data is taken from United Kingdom Casweb Data services of the United Kingdom 1991 Census on Ethnic Data for England Scotland and Wales Table 6 Office of National Statistics 2001 Census Key Statistics webarchive nationalarchives gov uk Retrieved 7 September 2021 2011 Census Ethnic Group local authorities in England and Wales webarchive nationalarchives gov uk Retrieved 15 December 2021 Ethnic group Office for National Statistics www ons gov uk Retrieved 29 November 2022 KS007 Religion Nomis 2001 www nomisweb co uk Retrieved 18 October 2022 KS209EW Religion Nomis 2011 www nomisweb co uk Retrieved 18 October 2022 Religion 2021 census Office of National Statistics 29 November 2022 Archived from the original on 29 November 2022 Retrieved 16 December 2022 Queen s man on the ground to be given freedom of the city Brighton and Hove News 13 July 2021 Retrieved 13 July 2021 a b Brighton amp Hove Albion manager and chairman receive city freedom BBC News 18 May 2017 Retrieved 7 March 2022 The Royal West Sussex Regiment PDF West Sussex County Council Retrieved 13 July 2021 Freedom of the Borough Corporation and Council Topics My Brighton and Hove mybrightonandhove org uk Freedom of the city march My Brighton and Hove 22 June 2011 Archived from the original on 14 October 2012 Albion awarded Freedom of the City Brighton amp Hove Albion Football Club 20 September 2023 Retrieved 22 September 2023 Brighton amp Hove Albion in line for Freedom of the City BBC News Sussex 21 September 2023 Retrieved 22 September 2023 External links edit Brighton amp Hove City Council Retrieved 20 August 2007 nbsp Brighton travel guide from Wikivoyage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brighton and Hove amp oldid 1184323073, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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