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Newcastle upon Tyne

Newcastle upon Tyne, or simply Newcastle (/njˈkæsəl/ new-KASS-əl, RP: /ˈnjkɑːsəl/ NEW-kah-səl),[8] is a city and metropolitan borough in Tyne and Wear, England. It is England's northernmost metropolitan borough, located on the River Tyne's northern bank opposite Gateshead to the south. It is the most populous settlement in the Tyneside conurbation and North East England.[9]

Newcastle upon Tyne
Nickname: 
The Toon
Motto(s): 
Latin: Fortiter Defendit Triumphans, lit.'Triumphing by Brave Defence'
Newcastle shown within Tyne and Wear
Newcastle upon Tyne
Location within England
Newcastle upon Tyne
Location within the United Kingdom
Newcastle upon Tyne
Location in Europe
Coordinates: 54°58′41″N 1°36′37″W / 54.9780°N 1.6102°W / 54.9780; -1.6102[1]
OS grid referenceNZ 2504 6489[1]
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
CountryEngland
RegionNorth East
City regionNorth of Tyne
Ceremonial countyTyne and Wear
Historic countyNorthumberland
Founded2nd century AD
City status1882
Metropolitan borough1 April 1974
Administrative HQNewcastle Civic Centre
Government
 • TypeMetropolitan borough with leader and cabinet
 • BodyNewcastle City Council
 • ControlLabour
 • LeaderNick Kemp (L)
 • Lord MayorVeronica Dunn
 • Chief ExecutivePam Smith
 • House of Commons
Area
 • City and metropolitan borough44 sq mi (115 km2)
 • Land43.8 sq mi (113.5 km2)
 • Rank182nd
Population
 (2021)[5]
 • City and metropolitan borough298,264
 • Rank47th
 • Density6,810/sq mi (2,629/km2)
 • Urban
286,445[4]
Demonyms
Ethnicity (2021)
 • Ethnic groups
List
Religion (2021)
 • Religion
List
Time zoneUTC+0 (GMT)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+1 (BST)
Postcode area
  • NE1–7
  • NE12–20
  • NE27–29
  • NE82–99
Dialling code0191
ISO 3166 codeGB-NET
GSS codeE08000021
ITL codeTLC22
GVA2021 estimate[7]
 • Total£9.5 billion
 • Per capita£31,700
GDP (nominal)2021 estimate[7]
 • Total£10.5 billion
 • Per capita£35,070
Websitenewcastle.gov.uk

Newcastle developed around a Roman settlement called Pons Aelius.[10] The settlement became known as Monkchester before taking on the name of a castle built in 1080 by William the Conqueror's eldest son, Robert Curthose. It was one of the world's largest ship building and repair centres during the industrial revolution.[11] Newcastle is historically part of the county of Northumberland but was governed as a county corporate after 1400.[12][13][14][15] In 1974, Newcastle became part of Tyne and Wear. Since 2018, the city council has been part of the North of Tyne Combined Authority.

History edit

Roman edit

The first recorded settlement in what is now Newcastle was Pons Aelius ("Hadrian's bridge"), a Roman fort and bridge across the River Tyne. It was given the family name of the Roman Emperor Hadrian, who founded it in the 2nd century AD. This rare honour suggests Hadrian may have visited the site and instituted the bridge on his tour of Britain. The population of Pons Aelius then is estimated at 2,000. Fragments of Hadrian's Wall are visible in parts of Newcastle, particularly along the West Road. The course of the "Roman Wall" can be traced eastwards to the Segedunum Roman fort in Wallsend – the "wall's end" – and to the separate supply fort of Arbeia in South Shields, across the river from Hadrian's Wall.[16]

The extent of Hadrian's Wall was 73 miles (117 km), spanning the width of Britain; the Wall incorporated the Vallum, a large rearward ditch with parallel mounds,[17] and was built primarily for defence and to prevent the incursion of Pictish tribes from the north, and probably not as a fighting line for a major invasion. However, it seems that the Vallum stopped just west of Newcastle, where its role as a secondary line of defence was performed by the River Tyne.[18]

 
Newcastle Castle Keep is the oldest structure in the city, dating back to at least the 11th century.

Anglo-Saxon and Norman edit

After the Roman departure from Britain, completed in 410, Newcastle became part of the powerful Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Northumbria, and was known throughout this period as Munucceaster (sometimes modernised as Monkchester).[19]

Conflicts with the Danes in 876 left the settlements along the River Tyne in ruins.[20] After the conflicts with the Danes, and following the 1088 rebellion against the Normans, Monkchester was all but destroyed by Odo of Bayeux.[21]

Because of its strategic position, Robert Curthose, son of William the Conqueror, erected a wooden castle there in the year 1080.[20] The town was henceforth known as Novum Castellum or New Castle.[20] The wooden structure was replaced by a stone castle in 1087.[20] The castle was rebuilt again in 1172 during the reign of Henry II. Much of the keep which can be seen in the city today dates from this period.[20]

Middle Ages edit

Throughout the Middle Ages, Newcastle was England's northern fortress. In 1400 Newcastle was separated from Northumberland for administrative purposes[12][13][14][15] and made a county of itself by Henry IV.[12][13][14][15] Newcastle was given the title of the county of the town of Newcastle upon Tyne.[22] The town had a new charter granted by Elizabeth I in 1589.[23] A 25-foot-high (7.6 m) stone wall was built around the town in the 13th century,[24] to defend it from invaders during the Border war against Scotland. The Scots king William the Lion was imprisoned in Newcastle in 1174, and Edward I brought the Stone of Scone and William Wallace south through the town. Newcastle was successfully defended against the Scots three times during the 14th century.[12][15]

16th to 19th centuries edit

 
An engraving by William Miller of Newcastle in 1832, as seen from Gateshead

From 1530, a royal act restricted all shipments of coal from Tyneside to Newcastle Quayside, giving a monopoly in the coal trade to a cartel of Newcastle burgesses known as the Hostmen. This monopoly, which lasted for a considerable time, helped Newcastle prosper and develop into a major town. The phrase taking coals to Newcastle was first recorded contextually in 1538.[25] The phrase itself means a pointless pursuit.[26] In the 18th century, the American entrepreneur Timothy Dexter, regarded as an eccentric, defied this idiom. He was persuaded to sail a shipment of coal to Newcastle by merchants plotting to ruin him; however, his shipment arrived on the Tyne during a strike that had crippled local production, allowing him to turn a considerable profit.[27][28]

 
Victoria Tunnel, built to transport coal[29]

In the Sandgate area, to the east of the city, and beside the river, resided the close-knit community of keelmen and their families.[30] They were so called because they worked on the keels, boats that were used to transfer coal from the river banks to the waiting colliers, for export to London and elsewhere. In the 1630s, about 7,000 out of 20,000 inhabitants of Newcastle died of plague, more than one-third of the population.[31] Specifically within the year 1636, it is roughly estimated with evidence held by the Society of Antiquaries that 47% of the then population of Newcastle died from the epidemic; this may also have been the most devastating loss in any British city in this period.[32]

 
Newcastle was once a major industrial centre particularly for coal and shipping

During the English Civil War, the North declared for the King.[33] In a bid to gain Newcastle and the Tyne, Cromwell's allies, the Scots, captured the town of Newburn. In 1644, the Scots then captured the reinforced fortification on the Lawe in South Shields following a siege and the city was besieged for many months. It was eventually stormed ("with roaring drummes") and sacked by Cromwell's allies. The grateful King bestowed the motto "Fortiter Defendit Triumphans" ("Triumphing by a brave defence") upon the town. Charles I was imprisoned in Newcastle by the Scots in 1646–7.[34]

 
Newcastle city centre, 1917, with St James' Park football ground above and left of centre

Newcastle opened its first lunatic asylum in 1767.[35] The asylum catered for people from the counties of Newcastle, Durham and Northumberland.[35]

The Newcastle Eccentrics of the 19th century were a group of unrelated people who lived in and around the centre of Newcastle and its Quayside between the end of the 18th and early/mid 19th century. These were characters who were described as "Worthies", "Props" or "Eccentrics" and would later be more gently described as "unfortunates". All had some form of physical or mental disability, but were looked upon as "unfortunates" and generally liked, respected and looked after by the population of hard working inhabitants.[citation needed]

Newcastle was the country's fourth largest print centre after London, Oxford and Cambridge,[36] and the Literary and Philosophical Society of 1793,[36] with its erudite debates and large stock of books in several languages, predated the London Library by half a century.[36] Some founder members of the Literary and Philosophical Society were abolitionists.[37] Newcastle also became a glass producer with a reputation for brilliant flint glass.[38]

A permanent military presence was established in the city with the completion of Fenham Barracks in 1806.[39]

The great fire of Newcastle and Gateshead was a tragic and spectacular series of events starting on Friday 6 October 1854, in which a substantial amount of property in the two North East of England towns was destroyed in a series of fires and an explosion which killed 53 and injured hundreds.[40]

The status of city was granted to Newcastle on 3 June 1882.[41] In the 19th century, shipbuilding and heavy engineering were central to the city's prosperity; and the city was a powerhouse of the Industrial Revolution.[42] This revolution resulted in the urbanisation of the city.[43] In 1817 the Maling company, at one time the largest pottery company in the world, moved to the city.[44] The Victorian industrial revolution brought industrial structures that included the 2+12-mile (4 km) Victoria Tunnel, built in 1842, which provided underground wagon ways to the staithes.[45] On 3 February 1879, Mosley Street in the city, was the first public road in the world to be lit up by the incandescent lightbulb.[46][47] Newcastle was one of the first cities in the world to be lit up by electric lighting.[48] Innovations in Newcastle and surrounding areas included the development of safety lamps, Stephenson's Rocket, Lord Armstrong's artillery, Be-Ro flour,[49] Lucozade,[50] Joseph Swan's electric light bulbs, and Charles Parsons' invention of the steam turbine, which led to the revolution of marine propulsion and the production of cheap electricity. In 1882, Newcastle became the seat of an Anglican diocese, with St. Nicholas' Church becoming its cathedral.[51]

20th and 21st centuries edit

Newcastle's public transport system was modernised in 1901 when Newcastle Corporation Tramways electric trams were introduced to the city's streets, though these were replaced gradually by trolley buses from 1935, with the tram service finally coming to an end in 1950.[52]

The city acquired its first art gallery, the Laing Art Gallery in 1904, so named after its founder Alexander Laing, a Scottish wine and spirit merchant[53] who wanted to give something back to the city in which he had made his fortune. Another art gallery, the Hatton Gallery (now part of Newcastle University), opened in 1925.[54]

With the advent of the motor car, Newcastle's road network was improved in the early part of the 20th century, beginning with the opening of the Redheugh road bridge in 1901[55] and the Tyne Bridge in 1928.[56]

Efforts to preserve the city's historic past were evident as long ago as 1934, when the Museum of Science and Industry opened,[57] as did the John G Joicey Museum in the same year.[58]

Council housing began to replace inner-city slums in the 1920s, and the process continued into the 1970s, along with substantial private house building and acquisitions.[59]

Unemployment hit record heights in Newcastle during the Great Depression of the 1930s. The city's last coal pit closed in 1956,[60] though a temporary open cast mine was opened in 2013.[61] The temporary open cast mine shifted 40,000 tonnes of coal, using modern techniques to reduce noise, on a part of the City undergoing redevelopment.[61] The slow demise of the shipyards on the banks of the River Tyne happened in the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s.[62]

 
View northwards from the Castle Keep, towards Berwick-on-Tweed in 1954
 
Panorama from Newcastle castle keep across the River Tyne to Gateshead in 1954

During the Second World War, the city and surrounding area were a target for air raids as heavy industry was involved in the production of ships and armaments. The raids caused 141 deaths and 587 injuries.[63] A former French consul in Newcastle called Jacques Serre assisted the German war effort by describing important targets in the region to Admiral Raeder who was the head of the German Navy.[64]

The public sector in Newcastle began to expand in the 1960s. The federal structure of the University of Durham was dissolved. That university's college in Newcastle, which had been known as King's College, became the University of Newcastle upon Tyne (now known as Newcastle University), which was founded in 1963,[65] followed by Newcastle Polytechnic in 1969; the latter received university status in 1992 and became the University of Northumbria at Newcastle (now known as Northumbria University).[66]

Further efforts to preserve the city's historic past continued in the later 20th century, with the opening of Newcastle Military Vehicle Museum in 1983 and Stephenson Railway Museum in 1986. The Military Vehicle museum closed in 2006.[67] New developments at the turn of the 21st century included the Life Science Centre in 2000 and Millennium Bridge in 2001.[68]

Based at St James' Park since 1886, Newcastle United F.C. became Football League members in 1893.[69] They have won four top division titles (the first in 1905 and the most recent in 1927), six FA Cups (the first in 1910 and the most recent in 1955) and the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup in 1969.[70] They broke the world transfer record in 1996 by paying £15 million for Blackburn Rovers and England striker Alan Shearer, one of the most prolific goalscorers of that era.[71]

In 2017, Newcastle was the venue for the 2017 Freedom City festival. The 2017 Freedom City festival commemorated the 50 years since Dr Martin Luther King's visit to Newcastle, where King received his honorary degree from Newcastle University.[72][73][74] In 2018 Newcastle hosted the Great Exhibition of the North, the largest event in England in 2018. The exhibition began on 22 June with an opening ceremony on the River Tyne, and ended on 9 September with the Great North Run weekend. The exhibition describes the story of the north of England through its innovators, artists, designers and businesses.[75][76]

In 2019, various travel sites named Newcastle to be the friendliest city in the UK.[77]

Geography edit

 
Side, a street in Newcastle near the Tyne Bridge

Since 1974, Newcastle has been a part of the metropolitan county of Tyne and Wear in North East England. The city is located on the north-western bank of the River Tyne, approximately 46 miles (74 km) south of the border with Scotland.

The ground beneath the city is formed from Carboniferous strata of the Middle Pennine Coal Measures Group — a suite of sandstones, mudstones and coal seams which generally dip moderately eastwards. To the west of the city are the Upper Pennine Coal Measures and further west again the sandstones and mudstones of the Stainmore Formation, the local equivalent of the Millstone Grit.[78]

In large parts, Newcastle still retains a medieval street layout. Narrow alleys or 'chares', most of which can only be traversed by foot, still exist in abundance, particularly around the riverside. Stairs from the riverside to higher parts of the city centre and the extant Castle Keep, originally recorded in the 14th century, remain intact in places. Close, Sandhill and Quayside contain modern buildings as well as structures dating from the 15th–18th centuries, including Bessie Surtees House, the Cooperage and Lloyds Quayside Bars, Derwentwater House and House of Tides, a restaurant situated at a Grade I-listed 16th century merchant's house at 28–30 Close.

The city has an extensive neoclassical centre referred to as Tyneside Classical,[79] largely developed in the 1830s by Richard Grainger and John Dobson. More recently, Newcastle architecture considered to be Tyneside classical has been extensively restored. Broadcaster and writer Stuart Maconie described Newcastle as England's best-looking city[80][81] and the German-born British scholar of architecture, Nikolaus Pevsner,[82] describes Grey Street as one of the finest streets in England. In 1948 the poet John Betjeman said of Grey Street, "As for the curve of Grey Street, I shall never forget seeing it to perfection, traffic-less on a misty Sunday morning."[83] The street curves down from Grey's Monument towards the valley of the River Tyne and was voted England's finest street in 2005 in a survey of BBC Radio 4 listeners.[84][85] In the Google Street View awards of 2010, Grey Street came 3rd in the British picturesque category.[86] A portion of Grainger Town was demolished in the 1960s to make way for the Eldon Square Shopping Centre, including all but one side of the original Eldon Square itself.

 
360° panoramic shot taken from the top of the Keep

Immediately to the north-west of the city centre is Leazes Park, first opened to the public in 1873[87] after a petition by 3,000 working men of the city for "ready access to some open ground for the purpose of health and recreation". Just outside one corner of this is St James' Park, the stadium home of Newcastle United FC which dominates the view of the city from all directions.

 
View of St James' Park on the skyline and surrounding buildings, as seen from Gateshead

Another major green space in the city is the Town Moor, lying immediately north of the city centre. It is larger than London's Hyde Park and Hampstead Heath put together[88][89] and the freemen of the city have the right to graze cattle on it.[88][89] The right extends to the pitch of St. James' Park, Newcastle United Football Club's ground; this is not exercised, although the Freemen do collect rent for the loss of privilege. Honorary freemen include Bob Geldof,[90] King Harald V of Norway,[91] Bobby Robson,[92] Alan Shearer,[93] the late Nelson Mandela[94] and the Royal Shakespeare Company.[95] The Hoppings funfair, said to be the largest travelling funfair in Europe, is held here annually in June.[96]

In the south-eastern corner of the Town Moor is Exhibition Park, which contains the only remaining pavilion from the North East Coast Exhibition of 1929. From the 1970s until 2006 this housed the Newcastle Military Vehicle Museum; which closed in 2006. The pavilion is now being used as a microbrewery and concert venue for Wylam Brewery.[97]

Ouseburn edit

The wooded gorge of the Ouseburn in the east of the city is known as Jesmond Dene and forms another recreation area, linked by Armstrong Park and Heaton Park to the Ouseburn Valley, where the river finally reaches the River Tyne.

The springtime dawn chorus at 55 degrees latitude has been described as one of the best in the world.[98] The dawn chorus of the Jesmond Dene green space has been professionally recorded and has been used in various workplace and hospital rehabilitation facilities.[98]

Quayside edit

 
Quayside architecture

The area around the Tyne Gorge, between Newcastle on the north bank and Gateshead on the south bank, is the famous Newcastle-Gateshead Quayside. It is famed for its series of dramatic bridges, including the Tyne Bridge of 1928 which was built by Dorman Long of Middlesbrough, Robert Stephenson's High Level Bridge of 1849, the first road/rail bridge in the world, and the Swing Bridge of 1876.[99]

Large-scale regeneration efforts have led to the replacement of former shipping premises with modern new office developments; an innovative tilting bridge - the Gateshead Millennium Bridge - integrated the Quayside more closely with the Gateshead Quayside, home to the BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art (the venue for the Turner Prize 2011)[100] and the Norman Foster-designed The Sage Gateshead music centre. The Newcastle and Gateshead Quaysides are now a thriving, cosmopolitan area with bars, restaurants, hotels and public spaces.

 
Seen here in 2008 on the Quayside are the Tyne Salmon Cubes; a celebration of the River Tyne salmon[101]

Grainger Town edit

 
Grainger Street, circa 1906

The historic heart of Newcastle is the Grainger Town area. Established on classical streets built by Richard Grainger, a builder and developer, between 1835 and 1842, some of Newcastle upon Tyne's finest buildings and streets lie within this area of the city centre including Grainger Market, Theatre Royal, Grey Street, Grainger Street and Clayton Street.[102] These buildings are predominantly four stories high, with vertical dormers, domes, turrets and spikes. Richard Grainger was said to 'have found Newcastle of bricks and timber and left it in stone'.[103] Of Grainger Town's 450 buildings, 244 are listed, of which 29 are grade I and 49 are grade II*.

 
Grey's Monument

Grey's Monument, which commemorates Prime Minister Earl Grey and his Reform Act of 1832, stands above Monument Metro Station and was designed and built by Edward Hodges Baily and Benjamin Green. Hodges, who also built Nelson's Column, designed and built the statue,[104] and the monument plinth was designed and built by Benjamin Green.[105]

The Grainger Market replaced an earlier market originally built in 1808 called the Butcher Market.[106] The Grainger Market itself, was opened in 1835 and was Newcastle's first indoor market.[107] At the time of its opening in 1835 it was said to be one of the largest and most beautiful markets in Europe.[107] The opening was celebrated with a grand dinner attended by 2000 guests, and the Laing Art Gallery has a painting of this event.[107] With the exception of the timber roof which was destroyed by a fire in 1901 and replaced by latticed-steel arches the Market is largely in its original condition.[107] The Grainger Market architecture, like most in Grainger Town, which are either grade I or II listed, was listed grade I in 1954 by English Heritage.[106]

The development of the city in the 1960s saw the demolition of part of Grainger Town as a prelude to the modernist rebuilding initiatives of T. Dan Smith, the leader of Newcastle City Council. A corruption scandal was uncovered involving Smith and John Poulson, a property developer from Pontefract, West Yorkshire, and both were imprisoned. Echoes of the scandal were revisited in the late 1990s in the BBC TV mini-series, Our Friends in the North.[108]

Chinatown edit

 
Newcastle's Chinatown arch

Newcastle's thriving Chinatown lies in the north-west of Grainger Town, centred on Stowell Street. A new Chinese arch, or paifang, providing a landmark entrance, was handed over to the city with a ceremony in 2005.[109]

Housing edit

The Tyneside flat was the dominant housing form constructed at the time when the industrial centres on Tyneside were growing most rapidly. They can still be found in areas such as South Heaton in Newcastle but once dominated the streetscape on both sides of the Tyne.[110] Tyneside flats were built as terraces, one of each pair of doors led to an upstairs flat while the other led into the ground-floor flat, each of two or three rooms. A new development in the Ouseburn valley has recreated them; Architects Cany Ash and Robert Sakula were attracted by the possibilities of high density without building high and getting rid of common areas.[111]

In terms of housing stock, the authority is one of few authorities to see the proportion of detached homes rise in the 2010 Census (to 7.8%), in this instance this was coupled with a similar rise in flats and waterside apartments to 25.6%, and the proportion of converted or shared houses in 2011 renders this dwelling type within the highest of the five colour-coded brackets at 5.9%, and on a par with Oxford and Reading, greater than Manchester and Liverpool and below a handful of historic densely occupied, arguably overinflated markets in the local authorities: Harrogate, Cheltenham, Bath, inner London, Hastings, Brighton and Royal Tunbridge Wells.[112]

Significant Newcastle housing developments include Ralph Erskine's the Byker Wall designed in the 1960s, and now Grade II* listed. It is on UNESCO's list of outstanding 20th-century buildings.[113]

Climate edit

Newcastle has an oceanic climate (Köppen: Cfb). Data in Newcastle was first collected in 1802 by the solicitor James Losh.[114] Situated in the rain shadow of the North Pennines, Newcastle is amongst the driest cities in the UK. Temperature extremes recorded at Newcastle Weather Centre include 37.0 °C (98.6 °F) set in July 2022[115] down to −14.0 °C (6.8 °F) on 29 December 1995.[116] Newcastle can have cool to cold winters, though usually warmer than the rural areas around it, and the winters are often compensated for by warm summers, with very long daylight hours in the summer months, longer than all other major English cities. Newcastle upon Tyne shares the same latitude as Copenhagen and southern Sweden.

The nearest weather station to provide sunshine statistics is at Durham, about 14 miles (23 km) south of Newcastle City Centre. Durham's inland, less urbanised setting results in night-time temperature data about 1 degree cooler than Newcastle proper throughout the year.

Climate data for Newcastle (Met Office Durham) Extremes Newcastle
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 14.0
(57.2)
14.0
(57.2)
21.0
(69.8)
21.0
(69.8)
25.0
(77.0)
26.0
(78.8)
37.0
(98.6)
32.5
(90.5)
21.0
(69.8)
20.0
(68.0)
18.0
(64.4)
15.0
(59.0)
37.0
(98.6)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 6.6
(43.9)
7.2
(45.0)
9.5
(49.1)
11.9
(53.4)
15.0
(59.0)
17.6
(63.7)
20.1
(68.2)
19.8
(67.6)
17.2
(63.0)
13.3
(55.9)
9.4
(48.9)
6.7
(44.1)
12.9
(55.2)
Daily mean °C (°F) 3.8
(38.8)
4.1
(39.4)
5.9
(42.6)
7.8
(46.0)
10.6
(51.1)
13.3
(55.9)
15.6
(60.1)
15.4
(59.7)
13.1
(55.6)
9.8
(49.6)
6.4
(43.5)
3.9
(39.0)
9.2
(48.6)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 0.9
(33.6)
0.9
(33.6)
2.3
(36.1)
3.7
(38.7)
6.1
(43.0)
9.0
(48.2)
11.1
(52.0)
11.0
(51.8)
9.0
(48.2)
6.3
(43.3)
3.4
(38.1)
1.1
(34.0)
5.4
(41.7)
Record low °C (°F) −12.6
(9.3)
−3.0
(26.6)
−9.0
(15.8)
−2.0
(28.4)
−1.0
(30.2)
1.0
(33.8)
6.0
(42.8)
3.0
(37.4)
0.0
(32.0)
−5.0
(23.0)
−11.0
(12.2)
−14.0
(6.8)
−14.0
(6.8)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 52.3
(2.06)
41.8
(1.65)
44.6
(1.76)
52.7
(2.07)
44.2
(1.74)
55.4
(2.18)
54.0
(2.13)
60.8
(2.39)
55.4
(2.18)
60.9
(2.40)
72.0
(2.83)
57.0
(2.24)
651.1
(25.63)
Average rainy days (≥ 1.0 mm) 11.4 9.3 9.7 9.5 9.2 9.7 9.0 9.6 9.3 11.3 12.3 11.7 122
Mean monthly sunshine hours 58.6 80.3 115.5 150.3 181.7 164.8 172.3 167.3 134.5 102.8 66.4 51.2 1,445.4
Source: Met Office[117]
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 8.2
(46.8)
8.5
(47.3)
10.2
(50.4)
12.1
(53.8)
14.9
(58.8)
17.2
(63.0)
19.1
(66.4)
18.9
(66.0)
17.0
(62.6)
13.8
(56.8)
10.6
(51.1)
8.5
(47.3)
13.3
(55.9)
Daily mean °C (°F) 5.4
(41.7)
5.4
(41.7)
6.8
(44.2)
8.2
(46.8)
10.7
(51.3)
13.2
(55.8)
15.1
(59.2)
15.0
(59.0)
13.2
(55.8)
10.5
(50.9)
7.6
(45.7)
5.7
(42.3)
9.7
(49.5)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 2.5
(36.5)
2.3
(36.1)
3.3
(37.9)
4.2
(39.6)
6.5
(43.7)
9.2
(48.6)
11.1
(52.0)
11.0
(51.8)
9.4
(48.9)
7.1
(44.8)
4.5
(40.1)
2.9
(37.2)
6.2
(43.1)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 106.6
(4.20)
74.8
(2.94)
80.4
(3.17)
63.2
(2.49)
66.8
(2.63)
68.3
(2.69)
60.5
(2.38)
81.8
(3.22)
73.6
(2.90)
100.0
(3.94)
105.3
(4.15)
101.9
(4.01)
983.2
(38.72)
Average rainy days 14.2 10.6 12.7 10.4 11.2 10.1 10.0 11.3 10.0 13.0 13.4 13.2 140.1
Source: WMO[118]

Environment edit

The city is located within the centre of the North East Green Belt, also known as the Tyne and Wear Green Belt.[119]

The green belts stated aims[120] are to:

  • Prevent the merging of settlements
  • Safeguard the countryside from encroachment
  • Check unrestricted urban sprawl
  • Assist in urban regeneration in the city-region by encouraging the recycling of derelict and other urban land

The green belt surrounds Brunswick Village, Dinnington, Callerton, Hazlerigg, Throckley, Walbottle, and Woolsington. Popular locations such as Ryton Island, Tyne Riverside Country Park, the city's golf courses, Newcastle Racecourse, and Newcastle International Airport fall inside the green belt.

The city has been recognised for its commitment to environmental issues, with a programme planned for Newcastle to become "the first carbon neutral city"[121] however, those plans have been revised and they now hope to be carbon neutral by 2050.[122]

Culture edit

Nightlife edit

 
The Gate complex on Newgate Street is a nightlife destination

The Rough Guide to Britain placed Newcastle upon Tyne's nightlife as Great Britain's number one tourist attraction.[123] In the Tripadvisor Travellers' Choice Destination Awards for Nightlife destinations, Newcastle was awarded third place in Europe (behind London and Berlin)[124] and seventh place in the world.[125] In July 2023 Newcastle was voted the best city in the UK for food, fashion and nightlife.[126]

There are many bars on the Bigg Market and its adjoining streets. Other areas popular for nightlife include Collingwood Street (commonly referred to as the 'Diamond Strip' due to its concentration of high-end bars). Neville Street, the Central Station area, Osborne Road in Jesmond and the wider Ouseburn area are home to a variety of younger metropolitan bars. "The Gate", located on Newgate Street, has become a popular venue for late-night entertainment in the past decade and a half.[127] Newcastle's 'pink triangle' is concentrated on Times Square, surrounded by the Centre for Life.[128][129]

 
Bigg Market

Food edit

Bakery chain Greggs was founded, and is headquartered, in Newcastle and has the greatest number of Greggs stores per capita in the world.[130] Local delicacies include pease pudding and stottie cake.

In 1967, London based Smith's Crisps created Salt & Vinegar flavour crisps which were first produced by their Newcastle based subsidiary Tudor Crisps and tested in Tudor's home market of north-east England before being launched nationally.[131]

In 2010, Osborne Road in Jesmond was awarded fourth place in the UK Google Street View awards for the "foodie" category.[86] Newcastle has its own Chinatown.

Additionally, the city has a wide variety of cuisines available including Greek, Mexican, Spanish, Indian, Italian, Persian, Japanese, Malaysian, French, American, Mongolian, Moroccan, Thai, Polish, Vietnamese and Lebanese. There has also been a noticeable growth in Newcastle's gourmet restaurant industry in recent years.[132][133][134]

Theatre edit

The city has a proud history of theatre. Stephen Kemble of the well-known Kemble family managed the original Theatre Royal, Newcastle for fifteen years (1791–1806). He brought members of his famous acting family such as Sarah Siddons and John Kemble out of London to Newcastle. Stephen Kemble guided the theatre through many celebrated seasons. The original Theatre Royal in Newcastle was opened on 21 January 1788 and was located on Mosley Street.[135] It was demolished to make way for Grey Street, where its replacement was built.

 
The Theatre Royal, Grey Street

The city still contains many theatres. The largest, the Theatre Royal on Grey Street, first opened in 1837, designed by John and Benjamin Green.[136] It has hosted a season of performances from the Royal Shakespeare Company for over 25 years, as well as touring productions of West End musicals.[137] The Mill Volvo Tyne Theatre hosts smaller touring productions, whilst other venues feature local talent. Northern Stage, formally known as the Newcastle Playhouse and Gulbenkian Studio, hosts various local, national and international productions in addition to those produced by the Northern Stage company.[138] Other theatres in the city include the Live Theatre, the People's Theatre, Gosforth Civic Theatre, and the Jubilee Theatre. NewcastleGateshead was voted in 2006 as the arts capital of the UK in a survey conducted by the Artsworld TV channel.[139]

Literature and libraries edit

 
Avison Library on New Bridge Street West.
 
Literary and Philosophical Society of Newcastle upon Tyne.

Newcastle has a strong reputation as a poetry centre. The Morden Tower, run by poet Tom Pickard, is a major venue for poetry readings in the North East, being the place where Basil Bunting gave the first reading of Briggflatts in 1965.[140]

The Literary and Philosophical Society of Newcastle upon Tyne (popularly known as the 'Lit & Phil') is the largest independent library outside London, housing more than 150,000 books. Its music library contains 8,000 CDs and 10,000 LPs.[141][142] The current Lit and Phil premises were built in 1825 and the building was designed by John and Benjamin Green.[136] Operating since 1793 and founded as a 'conversation club,' its lecture theatre was the first public building to be lit by electric light, during a lecture by Joseph Swan on 20 October 1880.[141]

The old City library designed by Basil Spence,[143] was demolished in 2006[143] and replaced. The new building opened on 21 June 2009[144] and was named after the 18th-century local composer Charles Avison; the building was first opened by Dr Herbert Loebl.[144] Later that year it was officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II.

Seven Stories, the National Centre for Children's Books, opened in 2005 in the Ouseburn Valley.[145][146]

Festivals and fairs edit

In either January or February, Newcastle's Chinatown becomes the focus point of celebrations for the Chinese New Year with carnivals and parades.

The Newcastle Science Festival, now called Newcastle ScienceFest, returns annually in early March.[147]

The Newcastle Beer Festival, organised by CAMRA takes place in April each year.[148] Evolution Festival, a music festival that attracted tens of thousands of attendees, took place in May from 2002 until 2013 and was described as "the biggest festival Tyneside has ever staged".[149][150] The This Is Tomorrow festival now takes place over the spring bank holiday and is in the same location. The biennial AV Festival of international electronic art, featuring exhibitions, concerts, conferences and film screenings, is held in March. The North East Art Expo, a festival of art and design from the regions professional artists, is held in late May.[151][152]

The Hoppings, the largest annual collection of travelling fairs in Europe, comes together on Newcastle Town Moor every June. The event has its origins in the Temperance Movement during the early 1880s, and coincides with the annual race week at High Gosforth Park.[153] Newcastle Community Green Festival, which claims to be the UK's biggest free community environmental festival, also takes place every June, in Leazes Park.[154] The Cyclone Festival of Cycling takes place within, or starting from, Newcastle in June.[155][156] The Northern Pride Festival and Parade is held in Leazes Park and in the city's Gay Community in mid July. The Ouseburn Festival, a family oriented weekend festival near the city centre, incorporating a "Family Fun Day" and "Carnival Day", is held in late July.[157]

Newcastle Mela, held on the late August Bank Holiday weekend, is an annual two-day multicultural event that blends drama, music and food from Punjabi, Pakistani, Bengali and Hindu cultures.[158] NewcastleGateshead also holds an annual International Arts Fair. The 2009 event will be in the Norman Foster designed Sage Gateshead Music and Arts Centre in September.[159] In October, there is the Design Event festival—an annual festival providing the public with an opportunity to see work by regional, national and international designers.[160] The SAMA Festival, an East Asian cultural festival is also held in early October.[161]

Music edit

 
Sting, principal songwriter, lead singer and bassist for English rock band The Police.

Newcastle's vernacular music was a mixture of Northumbrian folk music and nineteenth-century songs with dialect lyrics, by writers such as George "Geordie" Ridley, whose songs include one which became an unofficial Tyneside national anthem, "Blaydon Races".

The 1960s saw the internationally successful rock group The Animals emerge from Newcastle night spots such as Club A-Go-Go[162] on Percy Street. Other well-known acts with connections to the city include Sting,[163] Bryan Ferry,[164] Dire Straits[165] and more recently Maxïmo Park.[166] There is also a thriving underground music scene that encompasses a variety of styles, including drum and bass, doom metal and post-rock.

Lindisfarne are a folk-rock group with a strong Tyneside connection. Their most famous song, "Fog on the Tyne" (1971), was covered by Geordie ex-footballer Paul Gascoigne in 1990. Venom, reckoned by many to be the originators of black metal and extremely influential to the extreme metal scene as a whole, formed in Newcastle in 1979. Folk metal band Skyclad, often regarded as the first folk metal band, also formed in Newcastle after the break-up of Martin Walkyier thrash metal band, Sabbat. Andy Taylor, former lead guitarist of Duran Duran was born here in 1961. Brian Johnson was a member of local rock band Geordie before becoming the lead vocalist for Australian band AC/DC.[167]

 
Dire Straits frontman Mark Knopfler. His song "Local Hero" is played at St. James Park before the start of every Newcastle United home game.[168]

Newcastle is the home of Kitchenware Records (c. 1982),[169] previously home to acclaimed bands such as Prefab Sprout, Martin Stephenson and the Daintees and The Fatima Mansions. The members of Lighthouse Family met at Newcastle University; the music video for their hit single "High" features the city's Tyne Bridge.[170]

The 1990s boom in progressive house music saw the city's Global Underground record label publish mix CDs by the likes of Sasha, Paul Oakenfold, James Lavelle, and Danny Howells recording mix compilations. The label is still going strong today with offices in London and New York, and new releases from Deep Dish and Adam Freeland.[171]

Newcastle's leading classical music ensemble is the Royal Northern Sinfonia, which was founded in 1958 and performed regularly at Newcastle City Hall until 2004. Nowadays it is based at The Sage, Gateshead.

ICMuS, Newcastle University's music department, has been a driving force for music in the region, producing innovative work, organising concerts and festivals, instigating the first degree programme in folk music in the British Isles, and engaging creatively with communities in the region.

Concert venues edit

 
Metro Radio Arena

The largest venue used for music concerts is St James Park, home of Newcastle United, which has also previously been used for Rugby League games and the Olympic Games. The second largest music venue in Newcastle is the 11,000-seat Utilita Arena Newcastle, which opened in 1995 and hosts major pop and rock concerts.[172][173] Newcastle City Hall is one of the oldest venues in the region and "attracts big names who are often legends of the past".[172] Both of the city's universities have venues that mainly host indie and alternative bands.[172]

On 14 October 2005, the 2,000 capacity O2 Academy Newcastle opened. It had previously been a music venue in the 1960s, hosting concerts by The Beatles and The Who.[174] The new venue was headlined by The Futureheads on the opening night and known as the Carling Academy for a number of years. Since opening the venue has hosted performances by major bands and solo musicians including Adele, Arctic Monkeys, Katy Perry, The Libertines, Blondie and Amy Winehouse.[175]

 
O2 Academy Newcastle

The Riverside music venue on Melbourne Street, open from 1985 until 1999, notably hosted Nirvana's first European show in 1989.[176] The venue also welcomed Oasis, David Bowie and The Stone Roses and was named Best Regional Venue by NME in 1993.[177] Riverside has also been the subject of a book, Riverside: Newcastle's Legendary Alternative Music Venue.[178]

In 2016 open-air concerts took place at Times Square for the first time, including performances from Maxïmo Park, Ocean Colour Scene and Catfish and the Bottlemen.[179][180][181]

The small music venue Think Tank? was a nominee for Best Small Venue in NME in 2015.[182] The Cluny in Ouseburn Valley is "one of the most important venues for breaking bands in the region".[183] Trillians Rock Bar is well-noted for its rock and metal shows,[172] and The Head of Steam is a 90-capacity basement venue described as "one of Newcastle's staple venues".[184]

Independent cinema edit

 
Tyneside Cinema, designed and built by Dixon Scott, great uncle of Ridley and Tony Scott.[185]

Newcastle has multiple independent cinemas, including the famous Tyneside Cinema,[186] located on Pilgrim Street. It originally opened as the 'Bijou News-Reel Cinema' in 1937, and was designed and built by Dixon Scott, great-uncle of film directors Ridley Scott[185] and Tony Scott. The Pilgrim Street building was refurbished between November 2006 and May 2008; during the refurbishment works, the cinema relocated to the Old Town Hall, Gateshead. In May 2008 the Tyneside Cinema reopened in the restored and refurbished original building.[187] The site currently houses three cinemas, including the restored Classic[188] —the United Kingdom's last surviving news cinema still in full-time operation—alongside two new screens, and dedicated education and teaching suites.

As well as this, the city is home to The Side Cinema and Star and Shadow Cinema which are both small venues which have built up cult audiences of film fans.

Landmarks edit

Its landmarks include the Tyne Bridge; the Swing Bridge; Newcastle Castle; Newcastle Cathedral, St Mary's Cathedral, St Thomas' Church; Grainger Town including Grey's Monument and the Theatre Royal; the Millennium Bridge; St James' Park; Chinatown; and Fernwood House.

Media edit

TV and film edit

The earliest known film featuring some exterior scenes filmed in the city is On the Night of the Fire (1939),[189] though by and large the action is studio-bound. Later came The Clouded Yellow (1951) and Payroll (1961), both of which feature more extensive scenes filmed in the city. The gangster thriller Get Carter (1971) was shot on location in and around Newcastle and offers an opportunity to see what Newcastle looked like in the early 1970s.[190] The city was also backdrop to another gangster film, the film noir Stormy Monday (1988), directed by Mike Figgis and starring Tommy Lee Jones, Melanie Griffith, Sting and Sean Bean.[191] As well as this, Newcastle was used as the location for I, Daniel Blake (2016) which won the Palme d'Or award at Cannes Film Festival as well as the BAFTA for Outstanding British Film.

The city has been the setting for films based around football; films such as Purely Belter (2000),[192] The One and Only (2002)[193] and Goal![194] have all been focused around Tyneside. The comedy School for Seduction (2004), starring Kelly Brook was also filmed in Newcastle.[195]

The Bollywood film Hum Tum Aur Ghost (2010) was shot on location in Newcastle's city centre and features key scenes in and around Grainger Town.[196] The film Public Sex (2009) was shot in and around Newcastle, and features several scenes under and around the Tyne Bridge.

Crime drama Harrigan (2013) was filmed in the city as well as Gateshead and Teesside.[197]

Print media edit

Local newspapers that are printed in Newcastle include Trinity Mirror's Evening Chronicle and The Journal, the Sunday Sun as well as the Metro freesheet. The Crack is a monthly style and listings magazine similar to London's Time Out. The adult comic Viz originated in Jesmond and includes many references to Newcastle, and The Mag is a fanzine for Newcastle United supporters.

Television edit

BBC North East and Cumbria is based to the north of the city on Barrack Road, Spital Tongues, in a building known as the Pink Palace.[198] It is from here that the Corporation broadcasts the Look North television regional news programme and local radio station BBC Radio Newcastle.

 
Two converted warehouses provided the base for Tyne Tees on City Road until 2005

ITV Tyne Tees was based at City Road for over 40 years after its launch in January 1959.[199] In 2005 it moved to a new facility on The Watermark business park next to the MetroCentre in Gateshead.[200] The entrance to studio 5 at the City Road complex gave its name to the 1980s music television programme, The Tube.[199]

Radio edit

Independent Local Radio stations include Metro Radio and sister station Greatest Hits Radio North East, which are both based on the north side of the Tyne Bridge. Capital North East broadcasts across Newcastle and the North East England region from its studios in Wallsend.[201] Heart North East and Smooth North East also broadcast from studios in the city.

 
BBC Newcastle

NE1fm launched on 8 June 2007, the first full-time community radio station in the area.[202]

Newcastle Student Radio is run by students from both of the city's universities, broadcasting from Newcastle University's students' union building during term time.[203] Radio Tyneside[204] has been the voluntary hospital radio service for most hospitals across Newcastle and Gateshead since 1951, broadcasting on Hospedia [205] online, and also on 93.6 FM since July 2018[206] also under a community radio licence.[207] The city also has a Radio Lollipop station based at the Great North Children's Hospital in the Newcastle Royal Victoria Infirmary.

Public City WiFi edit

Newcastle was one of the first cities in the UK to have its city centre covered by free wireless internet access. It was developed and installed at the end of 2006 and went active in March 2007.[208]

Economy edit

The city's economy is diverse with major economic output in science, finance, retail, education, tourism, and nightlife. Newcastle is one of the UK Core Cities, as well as part of the Eurocities network.[209][210][211]

Newcastle played a major role during the 19th-century Industrial Revolution, and was a leading centre for coal mining, shipbuilding, engineering, munitions and manufacturing. Heavy industries in Newcastle declined in the second half of the 20th century; with office, service and retail employment now becoming the city's staples.

Today, Newcastle's economy contributes around £13 billion to the UK GVA.[212] This figure is mostly produced by corporate activity in the city centre.

The city's thriving nightlife is estimated to be worth £340 million per year, and consequently is seen as a major contributor to Newcastle's economy.[213]

The UK's first biotechnology village, the Centre for Life, is located by Central Station. The village is the first step in the City Council's plans to transform Newcastle into a science city.[214]

Retail edit

 
South entrance of Northumberland Street, now pedestrianised
 
Old Eldon Square, the Eldon Square Shopping Centre is built around it and takes its name from it.

In 2010, Newcastle was positioned ninth in the retail centre expenditure league of the UK.[215] There are several major shopping areas in Newcastle City Centre. The largest of these is the Eldon Square Shopping Centre, one of the largest city centre shopping complexes in the UK.[216] It has one of the largest John Lewis & Partners stores in the UK. This John Lewis branch was formerly known as Bainbridge, established in 1838, often cited as the world's first department store.[217] Emerson Bainbridge (1817–1892),[218] a pioneer and the founder of Bainbridge,[219] sold goods via department, a new arrangement of trade for that time. The Bainbridge official ledgers reported revenue by department, giving birth to the name department store.[218][219] Eldon Square is currently undergoing a full redevelopment. A new bus station, replacing the old underground bus station, was officially opened in March 2007.[220] The wing of the centre, including the undercover Green Market, near Grainger Street was demolished in 2007 so that the area could be redeveloped.[221] This was completed in February 2010 with the opening of a Debenhams department store as well as other major stores including Apple, Hollister and Guess.[222]

 
Central Arcade, Newcastle upon Tyne

The main shopping street in the city is Northumberland Street. In a 2004 report, it was ranked as the most expensive shopping street in the UK for rent, outside London.[223] It is home to two major department stores including the first and largest Fenwick department store, which houses some of the most luxurious designer labels, and one of the largest Marks and Spencer stores outside London. Both stores have entrances into Eldon Square Shopping Centre.

Other shopping destinations in Newcastle include Grainger Street and the area around Grey's Monument, the relatively modern Eldon Garden and Monument Mall complexes, Central Arcade and the traditional Grainger Market. On Blackett Street can be found the silversmith Reid & Sons which was established in the city in 1788.[224] Outside the city centre, the largest suburban shopping areas are Gosforth and Byker. From 2007, inside Kingston Park, on the edge of Newcastle, the Tesco store was the largest Tesco hypermarket in the UK[225] — for a period of time. Close to Newcastle, the largest indoor shopping centre in Europe, the MetroCentre, is located in Gateshead.

Population edit

 
Newcastle upon Tyne population pyramid in 2021
 
Jesmond has become an affluent area and is popular with students.
 
Stanhope Street in Arthur's Hill is home to one of the largest Asian communities in North East England.
 
Gosforth High Street in the north of the city.

According to the ONS, Newcastle had a population of 293,000 in 2015.[226] Tyneside (made up of Newcastle and the surrounding metropolitan boroughs of Gateshead, North Tyneside and South Tyneside) has a population of approximately 880,000, making it the eighth most populous urban area in the UK.[227] The wider metropolitan area of Tyneside-Wearside has a population of approximately 1,122,000.

Additionally, Newcastle is home to a large temporary population of students from Newcastle and Northumbria universities. Areas of suburban Newcastle with significant student populations include Jesmond, Shieldfield, Gosforth, Sandyford, Spital Tongues and Heaton.[228]

Year Population
1801 33,322 33322
 
1851 80,184 80184
 
1901 246,905 246905
 
1911 293,944 293944
 
1921 309,820 309820
 
1931 326,576 326576
 
1941 333,286 333286
 
1951 340,155 340155
 
1961 323,844 323844
 
1971 308,317 308317
 
1981 272,923 272923
 
1991 277,723 277723
 
2001 259,573 259573
 
2011 292,200 292200
 
2019[229] 302,820 302820
 

Demographics edit

Age edit

According to the same statistics, the average age of people living in Newcastle is 37.8 years, compared to the national average being of 38.6 years.

Religion edit

From the 2011 Census, two significant religions could be identified in the city: Christian and Muslim. 56.6% of Newcastle identified as Christian and 6.3% as Muslim.[230] Over 28% stated they have no religious affiliation.

Ethnicity and nationality edit

According to the 2011 census,[231] the metropolitan borough of Newcastle upon Tyne was predominately white, representing 85.3% of the population (including non-British white). Asians made up 9.8% of the population (2.3% Pakistani, 1.7% 'Bangladeshi', 1.8% 'Indian', 2.2% 'Chinese', 1.8% 'Asian other'). Black people make up a small proportion of the population (1.7% 'Black African', 0.1% 'Black Caribbean' and 0.1% 'Black other'), as do mixed race groups at 1.6% (0.6% 'Asian and White', 0.3% 'White and Caribbean', 0.3% 'White and African', 0.4% 'White and Other'). The last significantly sized ethnic community in Newcastle is 'Arab' at 0.9%. The remainder of the population, 0.5%, represent other ethnicities.

Large populations of ethnic minorities can be found in areas such as Elswick, Wingrove and Arthurs Hill.[232]

According to the 2011 UK Census, those born outside the UK were mainly from India (3,315), China (3,272), Pakistan (2,644), Bangladesh (2,276), Poland (1,473), Germany (1,357), Nigeria (1,226), Iran (1,164), Hong Kong (1,038) and Ireland (942).[232] In the North East, Newcastle was the most ethnically diverse district followed by Middlesbrough.

There are also small but significant Chinese, Jewish and Eastern European populations. The International Organization for Migration states there are estimated to be between 500 and 2,000 Bolivians in Newcastle, one of the largest populations in any city in the UK.[233][234]

Ethnic Group Year
1991[235] 2001[236] 2011[237] 2021[238]
Number % Number % Number % Number %
White: Total 248,990 96% 241,684 93.1% 239,533 85.5% 240,002 80%
White: British 235,259 90.6% 229,520 81.9% 223,567 74.5%
White: Irish 1,733 1,826 1,895 0.6%
White: Gypsy or Irish Traveller 163 332 0.1%
White: Roma 1,031 0.3%
White: Other 4,692 8,024 13,177 4.4%
Asian or Asian British: Total 8,610 3.3% 13,243 5.1% 27,107 9.7% 34,128 11.3%
Asian or Asian British: Indian 2,198 3,098 5,072 7,304 2.4%
Asian or Asian British: Pakistani 2,920 4,842 6,364 8,753 2.9%
Asian or Asian British: Bangladeshi 1,300 2,607 4,692 7,248 2.4%
Asian or Asian British: Chinese 1,213 1,871 6,037 5,382 1.8%
Asian or Asian British: Other Asian 979 825 4,942 5,441 1.8%
Black or Black British: Total 950 0.4% 959 0.4% 5,160 1.8% 9,921 3.3%
Black or Black British: Caribbean 196 133 217 340 0.1%
Black or Black British: African 496 738 4,664 8,555 2.9%
Black or Black British: Other Black 258 88 279 1,026 0.3%
Mixed or British Mixed: Total 2,290 0.9% 4,279 1.5% 6,920 2.4%
Mixed: White and Black Caribbean 398 830 915 0.3%
Mixed: White and Black African 403 859 1,378 0.5%
Mixed: White and Asian 912 1,609 2,600 0.9%
Mixed: Other Mixed 577 981 2,027 0.7%
Other: Total 991 0.4% 1,360 0.5% 4,098 1.5% 9,156 3.1%
Other: Arab 2,602 4,175 1.4%
Other: Any other ethnic group 991 0.4% 1,360 0.5% 1,496 4,981 1.7%
Total 259,541 100% 259,536 100% 280,177 100% 300,127 100%

Geordies edit

The regional nickname for people from Newcastle and the surrounding area is Geordie. The Latin term Novocastrian can equally be applied to residents of any place called Newcastle, although it is most commonly used for ex-pupils of the city's Royal Grammar School.[239]

Dialect edit

The dialect of Newcastle is also referred to as Geordie. It contains a large amount of vocabulary and distinctive words and pronunciations not used in other parts of the United Kingdom. The Geordie dialect has much of its origins in the language spoken by the Anglo-Saxon populations who migrated to and conquered much of England after the end of Roman Imperial rule. This language was the forerunner of Modern English; but while the dialects of other English regions have been heavily altered by the influences of other foreign languages—particularly Latin and Norman French—the Geordie dialect retains many elements of the old language. An example of this is the pronunciation of certain words: "dead", "cow", "house" and "strong" are pronounced "deed", "coo", "hoos" and "strang"—which is how they were pronounced in the Anglo-Saxon language. Other Geordie words with Anglo-Saxon origins include: "larn" (from the Anglo-Saxon "laeran", meaning "teach"), "burn" ("stream") and "gan" ("go").[240]

According to the British Library, "Locals insist there are significant differences between Geordie and several other local dialects, such as Pitmatic and Mackem. Pitmatic is the dialect of the former mining areas in County Durham and around Ashington to the north of Newcastle upon Tyne, while Mackem is used locally to refer to the dialect of the city of Sunderland and the surrounding urban area of Wearside".[241]

"Bairn" and "hyem", meaning "child" and "home", respectively, are examples of Geordie words with origins in Scandinavia;[242] barn and hjem are the corresponding modern Norwegian and Danish words. Some words used in the Geordie dialect are used elsewhere in the Northern United Kingdom. The words "bonny" (meaning "pretty") and "stot" ("bounce") are used in Scots; "aye" ("yes") and "nowt" (IPA:/naʊt/, rhymes with out, "nothing") are used elsewhere in Northern England. Many words, however, appear to be used exclusively in Newcastle and the surrounding area, such as "canny" (a versatile word meaning "good", "nice" or "very"), "hacky" ("dirty"), "netty" ("toilet"), "hockle" ("spit").[243]

Health edit

 
Royal Victoria Infirmary

According to research from 2011, public health and levels of deprivation in Newcastle upon Tyne was generally worse than average in England.[244] As levels of deprivation is considerably higher than the nationwide average, sociologists argue that as a result, the life expectancy for both men and women is lower than the nationwide average. There is significant discrepancy between life expectancies in wealthy areas and deprived areas, with life expectancy up to 14.3 years lower for men and 11.1 years lower for women in deprived areas than in wealthy areas.[245] From 2015 to 2019 Newcastle became relatively more deprived according to the Index of Multiple Deprivation.[246]

From 2001 to 2011, as with all UK cities all-cause mortality rates have fallen, life expectancy has increased. Early death rates from cancer and from heart disease and stroke have fallen but remain worse than the England average.

Almost 21.9% of Year 6 children are clinically obese. In 2014/5, 35.9% of 10 to 11-year-olds were classified as overweight or obese, in comparison to a national average of 33.2%.[247] 54.9% of pupils meet the recommendation of at least three hours each week on school sport. Levels of teenage pregnancy are higher than the nationwide average. In 2011, GCSE attainment amongst school children was worse than the England average.[248] Estimated numbers of adults 'healthy eating' are lower than the England average.[249] Rates of smoking-related deaths[250] and hospital stays for alcohol-related harm are higher than average.[251]

Newcastle remains one of the few major cities in England to supply fluoridated water; this scheme is directed by Northumbria Water plc.[252]

Newcastle has two large teaching hospitals: the Royal Victoria Infirmary and the Freeman Hospital, which is also a pioneering centre for transplant surgery.

In a report, published in early February 2007 by the Ear Institute at the University College London and Widex, Newcastle was named as the noisiest city in the whole of the UK with an average noise level of 80.4 decibels. The report claimed that these noise levels would have a negative long-term impact on the health of the city's residents.[253] The report was criticised, however, for attaching too much weight to readings at arbitrarily selected locations, which in Newcastle's case included a motorway underpass without pedestrian access.[254] As well as numerous parks, open spaces, and extensive riverside areas, puzzlingly the report also overlooked the 1000-acre Town Moor at the heart of the city. Larger than London's Hyde Park and Hampstead Heath combined,[255] and even larger than New York's Central Park, the town moor dates back to the 12th century, with the land tenure and its use being regulated by an Act of Parliament.

Sport edit

 
St James' Park during a match between Newcastle United and Manchester United

The city has a strong sporting tradition. Football club Newcastle United has been based at St James' Park since the club was established in 1892, although any traces of the original structure are now long gone as the stadium now holds more than 52,000 seated spectators, being England's seventh largest football stadium.[256] The city also has non-League football clubs, Newcastle Benfield, West Allotment Celtic, Team Northumbria and Heaton Stannington.

There is a women's football team, Newcastle United Women's Football Club, founded in 1989. Newcastle United W.F.C. currently has 40 ladies aged between 16 and 29 years signed or associated with the club, and plays in the FA Women's Premier League (North).[257]

The Newcastle Falcons are the only rugby union team in north-east England to have played in the Aviva Premiership. They play at Kingston Park Stadium in the northern suburb of Kingston Park. 1996 Pilkington Shield winners Medicals RFC are also based in Newcastle.

Newcastle Thunder (formerly Gateshead Thunder) are a professional rugby league club based in the city who now also play at Kingston Park Stadium. They currently play in the Kingstone Press League 1. Since 2015, the Super League Magic Weekend has been played annually in the city at St James' Park.

Newcastle has a horse racing course at Gosforth Park.[258] The city is also home to the Newcastle Eagles basketball team who play their home games at the new Sport Central complex at Northumbria University.[259] The Eagles are the most successful team in the history of the British Basketball League (BBL).[260] The city's speedway team Newcastle Diamonds are based at Brough Park in Byker, a venue that is also home to greyhound racing. Newcastle also hosts the start of the annual Great North Run, the world's largest half-marathon[261] in which participants race over the Tyne Bridge into Gateshead and then towards the finish line 13.1 miles (21.1 km) away on the coast at South Shields.[262] Another athletic event is the 5.9-mile (9.5 km) Blaydon Race (a road race from Newcastle to Blaydon), which has taken place on 9 June annually since 1981, to commemorate the celebrated Blaydon Races horse racing.[263]

The 2012 London Olympic committee selected Newcastle as one of the UK host venue cities,[264][265] with the stadium St James' Park hosting 9 matches in both the men's and women's football.[266]

The Newcastle Warriors were a professional ice hockey team that played the 1995–96 season in the British Hockey League. The Newcastle Vipers were also a professional ice hockey team in the British National League from 2002 and then the Elite Ice Hockey League between 2005 and 2011 (when the team folded).

Newcastle upon Tyne was one of the 11 host cities for the 2015 Rugby World Cup.[267] St James' Park hosted three matches;

  • South Africa v. Scotland (3 October 2015)
  • New Zealand v. Tonga (9 October 2015)
  • Samoa v. Scotland (10 October 2015)

Transport edit

Air edit

 
Aircraft at Newcastle International Airport

Newcastle International Airport is situated on the northern outskirts of the city at Woolsington, near to Ponteland. It is the largest and busiest airport in North East England and the second largest and busiest in Northern England (behind Manchester), handling over five million passengers per year. It is also the tenth-largest, and the fastest growing regional airport in the UK,[268] expecting to reach 10 million passengers by 2016, and 15 million by 2030.[269] As of 2007, Newcastle Airport operates flights to 90 destinations worldwide.[270] The airport is serviced by numerous airlines including British Airways, Jet2, easyJet, Emirates, Ryanair, Air France, TUI Airways, Loganair, KLM and Eurowings.

The airport is connected to Central Newcastle by the Tyne and Wear Metro, with an average journey between Central Station Metro station and Newcastle Airport Metro station taking approximately 20 minutes.

Rail edit

 
Central Station

Newcastle Central Station is a principal stop on the East Coast Main Line and Cross Country Route. It is one of the busiest stations in Britain.[271]

Train operator London North Eastern Railway[272] provides a half-hourly frequency of trains to London King's Cross, with a variable journey time of between two and three hours, and north to Scotland with all trains calling at Edinburgh Waverley and a small number of trains extended to Glasgow Central, Aberdeen and Inverness.[273] CrossCountry links Newcastle with destinations in Yorkshire, the Midlands and the South West. TransPennine Express operates services to the North West. Northern Trains provide local and regional services. Additionally, ScotRail offer an infrequent service to Glasgow Central.

In 2014, work was completed on the station's historic entrance.[271] Glazing was placed over the historic arches and the Victorian architecture was enhanced; transforming the 19th century public portico.[271] The station is one of only six Grade One listed railway stations in the UK.[271] Opened in 1850 by Queen Victoria, it was the first covered railway station in the world and was much copied across the UK. It has a neoclassical façade, originally designed by the architect John Dobson, and was constructed in collaboration with Robert Stephenson.[274][275] The station sightlines towards the Castle Keep, whilst showcasing the curvature of the station's arched roof.[271] The first services were operated by the North Eastern Railway company.

The other mainline station in Newcastle is Manors, exclusively served by Northern Trains.

Metro edit

 
Map of the Tyne and Wear Metro

The city is served by the Tyne and Wear Metro, a system of suburban and underground railways covering much of Newcastle and the surrounding metropolitan boroughs. It was opened in five phases between 1980 and 1984, and was Britain's first urban light rail transit system.[276] The network was developed from a combination of existing and newly built tracks and stations, with deep-level tunnels constructed through Central Newcastle.[277][278] A bridge was built across the Tyne, between Newcastle and Gateshead, and opened by Queen Elizabeth II in 1981.[279] Extensions to the network were opened in 1991 and 2002.[280] It is operated directly by Nexus, carrying over 37 million passengers a year.[281] In 2004, the company Marconi designed and constructed the mobile radio system to the underground Metro system.[282] The Metro system was the first in the UK to have mobile phone antennae installed in the tunnels.[283]

The Metro consists of two lines. The Green line begins at Newcastle Airport, goes through Central Newcastle and into the City of Sunderland, terminating at South Hylton. The yellow line starts at St James, runs north of the river alongside Byker towards Whitley Bay, before returning to Central Newcastle, then connecting to Gateshead Interchange before finally terminating at South Shields.

The system is currently undergoing a period of refurbishment and modernisation, entitled 'Metro: All Change.' The programme has replaced all ticket machines and introduced ticket gates at the busiest stations – part of the transition to smart ticketing. All Metro trains are being completely refurbished and most stations are undergoing improvement works (or in some cases complete reconstruction, for example North Shields). In addition; tracks, signalling and overhead wires are also being overhauled.[284] Longer-term plans include the procurement of an entirely new fleet of trains and further extensions to the system. Proposed routes include to Newcastle's west end, to the Cobalt Business Park in North Tyneside, to the Metrocentre in Gateshead and to additional locations in Gateshead, South Tyneside and Sunderland. Several of the proposed routes would require trams as opposed to the current light rail trains.[285]

Road edit

 
Tyne Bridge

Major roads in the area include the A1 (Newcastle Gateshead Western Bypass), stretching north to Edinburgh and south to London; the A19 heading south past Sunderland and Middlesbrough to York and Doncaster; the A69 heading west to Carlisle; the A696, which becomes the A68 heads past Newcastle Airport and up through central Northumberland and central Scottish Borders, the A167, the old "Great North Road", heading south to Gateshead, Chester-le-Street, Durham and Darlington; and the A1058 "Coast Road", which runs from Jesmond to the east coast between Tynemouth and Cullercoats. Many of these designations are recent—upon completion of the Western Bypass, and its designation as the new line of the A1, the roads between this and the A1's former alignment through the Tyne Tunnel were renumbered, with many city centre roads changing from a 6-prefix[286] to their present 1-prefix numbers. In November 2011 the capacity of the Tyne Tunnel was increased when a project to build a second road tunnel and refurbish the first tunnel was completed.[287]

Bus

Bus services in Newcastle upon Tyne and the surrounding boroughs part are coordinated by the Tyne and Wear Passenger Transport Executive.[288] Stagecoach North East is the primary bus operator in the city, running city services between both the West and East ends, with some services extending out to the MetroCentre, Killingworth, Wallsend and Ponteland. Go North East provides the majority of services to and from the south of the Tyne, linking Newcastle with Gateshead, South Tyneside, Sunderland, and County Durham. Arriva North East runs numerous services to the north of city, North Tyneside and Northumberland. Additionally, QuayLink connects Newcastle and Gateshead to the Quayside. Newcastle Central coach station is the city's main hub for long-distance services, such as those operated by National Express.

Other major bus departure points are Pilgrim Street (for buses running south of the Tyne via Gateshead), and Blackett Street/Monument for services to the East and West of the city. Many bus services also pass Newcastle Central Station, a major interchange for rail and metro services.[289]

Cycling edit

Newcastle is accessible by several mostly traffic-free cycle routes that lead to the edges of the city centre, where cyclists can continue into the city by road, using no car lanes. The traffic-free C2C cycle route runs along the north bank of the River Tyne, enabling cyclists to travel off-road to North Shields and Tynemouth in the east, and westwards towards Hexham.

Suburban cycle routes exist, which use converted trackbeds of former industrial wagonways and industrial railways. A network on Tyneside's suburban Victorian waggonways is being developed.[290] A network of signed on-road cycle routes is being established,[291] including some designated on-road cycle lanes that will lead from the city centre to the suburbs of Gosforth, Heaton and Wallsend.

Newcastle has a growing culture of bicycle usage. Newcastle is also home to a cycling campaign, called the 'Newcastle Cycling Campaign.'[292] The ideal of the organisation is to model other European cities like Amsterdam and Copenhagen.[292] The aims of the organisation, within the constitution are: To raise the profile of cycling, especially utility cycling around the city;[293] to educate decision makers over the benefits of cycling;[293] to promote equality.[293]

Following guidelines set in the National Cycling strategy, Newcastle first developed its cycling strategy in 1998.[294] As of 2012, the city council's social aims and objectives for cycling include: highlighting the usage of cycling to cut city congestion and educating that cycling promotes healthy living[291] The authority also has infrastructure aims and objectives which include: developing on road cycle networks on quieter streets; making safer routes on busier streets; innovating and implementing contraflows on one way streets; developing the existing off-road cycle route networks and improve signage; joining up routes that are partially or completely isolated; Increase the number of cycle parking facilities; working with employers to integrate cycling into workplace travel plans; link the local networks to national networks.[291]

Water edit

DFDS Seaways runs a ferry service to IJmuiden, near Amsterdam in The Netherlands,[295] from Newcastle International Ferry Terminal (located in North Shields). The DFDS ferry service to Gothenburg, Sweden, ceased at the end of October 2006 and their service to Bergen and Stavanger, Norway was terminated in late 2008. The company cited high fuel prices and new competition from low-cost air services as the cause. However, since summer 2007, Thomson cruise lines have included Newcastle as a departure port on its Norwegian and Fjords cruise.[296]

Government and politics edit

 
Newcastle Civic Centre, meeting place of the City Council

Newcastle is a metropolitan borough with city status, governed by Newcastle City Council. Since 2018 the council has been a member of the North of Tyne Combined Authority, which is due to be replaced by the larger North East Mayoral Combined Authority in May 2024.[297] There are six civil parishes within the city boundaries, at Blakelaw and North Fenham, Brunswick, Dinnington, Hazlerigg, North Gosforth, and Woolsington, which form an additional tier of local government for their areas. The rest of the city is an unparished area.[298]

Administrative history edit

Newcastle was an ancient borough. It is said to have been made a borough by William II (reigned 1087–1100), although the earliest known charter was granted by Henry II (reigned 1154–1189). In 1400, a new charter from Henry IV gave the borough the right to hold its own courts and appoint its own sheriffs, making it a county corporate, independent from the Sheriff of Northumberland.[299] Whilst administratively independent, Newcastle was still deemed part of the geographical county of Northumberland for the purposes of lieutenancy until 1974.[300][301]

The Northumberland assizes were held at the Castle in Newcastle, and subsequently at the Moot Hall, built within the castle site in 1811.[302] The Moot Hall also served as the meeting place of Northumberland County Council from its creation in 1889 until 1981 when the county council moved to Morpeth.[303] Newcastle was therefore sometimes described as the county town of Northumberland,[304] although that title was also claimed by Alnwick, where knights of the shire were elected until the Reform Act 1832.[305]

 
Guildhall, built 1655: Town council's headquarters until 1863

Until the 1830s the borough just covered the four parishes of All Saints, St Andrew, St John, and St Nicholas.[299] The parliamentary borough (constituency) was enlarged in 1832 to also take in Byker, Elswick, Heaton, Jesmond and Westgate.[306] The municipal boundaries were enlarged to match the constituency in 1836, when Newcastle was reformed to become a municipal borough under the Municipal Corporations Act 1835, which standardised how most boroughs operated across the country.[307]

Newcastle was awarded city status in 1882. When elected county councils were established in 1889, Newcastle was considered large enough to provide its own county-level services, and so it was made a county borough.[308] The city boundaries were enlarged on several occasions, notably in 1904 when it absorbed Benwell, Fenham and Walker,[309] and in 1935 when it absorbed Kenton and parts of neighbouring parishes.[310] In 1906 the city was given the right to appoint a Lord Mayor.[311]

In 1974 the county borough was replaced by a larger metropolitan borough within the new county of Tyne and Wear. The borough gained the area of the former urban districts of Gosforth and Newburn, and the parishes of Brunswick, Dinnington, Hazlerigg, North Gosforth and Woolsington. It also gained the Moot Hall, which until 1974 had been an exclave of the administrative county of Northumberland surrounded by the city.[312][313] Newcastle's city status was transferred to the enlarged borough at the same time.[314]

From 1974 until 1986 the city council was a lower-tier district authority, with Tyne and Wear County Council providing county-level services. The county council was abolished in 1986, since when the city council has again provided both district-level and county-level services, as it had done when it was a county borough prior to 1974. Some functions are provided across Tyne and Wear by joint committees with the other districts. The county of Tyne and Wear continues to exist as a ceremonial county for the purposes of lieutenancy, but has had no administrative functions since 1986.[315]

UK Parliament edit

Newcastle is represented by three elected Members of Parliament (MPs) in the House of Commons, the lower house of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. Two of the current MPs are from the Labour Party and one sits as an independent.

EU referendum edit

In the 2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum, Newcastle voted for the United Kingdom to remain in the European Union, with a ratio of 51:49 in favour of remain, compared to a national ratio of 48:52 in favour of leave.[316]

Education edit

Schools and colleges edit

Newcastle has 74 primary schools and 20 secondary schools, of which 13 are LEA-funded and 7 are fee-paying independent schools.

There are a number of critically acclaimed state secondary schools, including Walker Riverside Academy, Gosforth Academy, Jesmond Park Academy, St Cuthbert's High School, St Mary's Catholic School, Kenton School, Sacred Heart, Excelsior Academy, Walbottle Academy and Benfield School.

The largest co-educational independent school is the Royal Grammar School. The largest girls' independent school is Newcastle High School for Girls. Both schools are located on the same street in Jesmond. Newcastle School for Boys is the only independent boys' only school in the city and is situated in Gosforth. Other independent schools include Dame Allan's School.

Newcastle College is the largest general further education (FE) college in North East England and is a Beacon Status college. There are also two smaller FE colleges in Newcastle.

Universities edit

The city has two major universities – Newcastle University and Northumbria University.

Newcastle University has its origins in the Durham University School of Medicine and Surgery, established in 1834. It became fully independent on 1 August 1963, forming the University of Newcastle upon Tyne (now simply Newcastle University). It is a red brick university and is a member of the Russell Group, an association of research-intensive UK universities, often considered to represent the best UK universities.[317][318] It won the Sunday Times University of the Year award in 2000.[319] It was awarded the Gold Award in the Teaching Excellence Framework (TEF), one of only ten Russell Group universities to achieve the Gold TEF rating.[320]

Northumbria University has its origins in Newcastle Polytechnic, established in 1969 and becoming the University of Northumbria at Newcastle in 1992 as part of the UK-wide process in which polytechnics became new universities. Northumbria University was voted 'Best New University' by The Times Good University Guide 2005. It holds the Silver TEF Award.

Museums and galleries edit

There are several museums and galleries in Newcastle, including the Centre for Life[321] with its Science Village;[322] the Discovery Museum[323] a museum highlighting life on Tyneside, including Tyneside's shipbuilding heritage, and inventions which changed the world; the Great North Museum;[324] in 2009 the Newcastle on Tyne Museum of Antiquities merged with the Great North Museum (Hancock Museum);[325] Seven Stories, the National Centre for Children's Books;[145][146] the Side Gallery with historical and contemporary photography from around the world and Northern England;[326] and the Newburn Motor Museum.[327]

The Laing Art Gallery, similarly to other art galleries and museums around the world, has collections digitised on the Google Cultural Institute,[328][329] an initiative that makes important cultural material accessible online.

Religious sites edit

 
St Nicholas' Cathedral, as seen from the Castle

Newcastle has three cathedrals, the Anglican St Nicholas', with its elegant lantern tower of 1474, the Roman Catholic St Mary's designed by Augustus Welby Pugin and the Coptic Orthodox Cathedral in Fenham.[330] All three cathedrals began their lives as parish churches. St Mary's became a cathedral in 1850 and St Nicholas' in 1882. Another prominent church in the city centre is the Church of St Thomas the Martyr which is unique as the only Church of England church without a parish and which is not a peculiar.

One of the largest evangelical Anglican churches in the UK is Jesmond Parish Church, situated a little to the north of the city centre.

Newcastle is home to the only Baháʼí Centre in North East England; the centre has served the local Baháʼí community for over 25 years and is located close to the Civic Centre in Jesmond.

Newcastle was a prominent centre of the Plymouth Brethren movement up to the 1950s, and some small congregations still function. Among these are at the Hall, Denmark Street and Gospel Hall, St Lawrence.

The Parish Church of St Andrew is traditionally recognised as 'the oldest church in this town'.[331] The present building was begun in the 12th Century and the last addition to it, apart from the vestries, was the main porch in 1726.[332] It is quite possible that there was an earlier church here dating from Saxon times. This older church would have been one of several churches along the River Tyne dedicated to St Andrew, including the Priory church at Hexham.[332] The building contains more old stonework than any other church in Newcastle. It is surrounded by the last of the ancient churchyards to retain its original character. Many key names associated with Newcastle's history worshipped and were buried here. The church tower received a battering during the Siege of Newcastle by the Scots who finally breached the Town Wall and forced surrender. Three of the cannonballs remain on site as testament to the siege.[332]

Notable people edit

Charles Avison, the leading British composer of concertos in the 18th century, was born in Newcastle upon Tyne in 1709 and died there in 1770.[333] Basil Hume, Archbishop of Westminster, was born in the city in 1923.[334] Vice Admiral Cuthbert Collingwood, 1st Baron Collingwood, was born in the city.[335] Ironmaster, metallurgist, and member of parliament Isaac Lowthian Bell was born in the city in 1816.[336] Other notable people born in or associated with Newcastle include: engineer and industrialist Lord Armstrong,[337] engineer and father of the modern steam railways George Stephenson, his son, also an engineer, Robert Stephenson, engineer and inventor of the steam turbine Sir Charles Parsons, inventor of the incandescent light bulb Sir Joseph Swan, actor and comedian Rowan Atkinson,[338] industrial designer Sir Jonathan Ive, who studied at Newcastle Polytechnic (now Northumbria University), modernist poet Basil Bunting,[339] and Lord Chief Justice Peter Taylor. Portuguese writer Eça de Queiroz was a diplomat in Newcastle from late 1874 until April 1879—his most productive literary period.[340] Former Prime Minister of Thailand Abhisit Vejjajiva,[341] was born in the city. Composer Agustín Fernández has been based in the city since 1995, teaching at Newcastle University and occasionally collaborating with Royal Northern Sinfonia.

Musicians Cheryl, Eric Burdon, Sting, Mark Knopfler, the Lighthouse Family, Jeffrey Dunn, Brian Johnson, Alan Hull, Sakima, and Neil Tennant lived in Newcastle. Hank Marvin and Bruce Welch were both former pupils of Rutherford Grammar School.[342] Actors Charlie Hunnam and James Scott,[343] entertainers Ant & Dec and footballers Michael Carrick and Alan Shearer were also born in Newcastle. Multiple circumnavigator David Scott Cowper, Nobel Prize winning physicist Peter Higgs, who researched the mass of subatomic particles,[344] and wrestler Benjamin Satterley were born in the city. John Dunn, inventor of the keyed Northumbrian smallpipes, lived and worked in the city. Kathryn Tickell, the celebrated Northumbrian piper and composer, has longstanding associations with Newcastle as a resident, frequent performer at Sage Gateshead and teacher at Newcastle University. Marc Smith (born 1963), French palaeographer, was born in Newcastle. Freddy Shepherd, former chairman of Newcastle United F.C. for ten years, lived in Newcastle upon Tyne until his death in 2017.

International relations edit

Twin towns – sister cities edit

Newcastle upon Tyne is twinned with:

Other agreements edit

Newcastle has a "friendship agreement" with the American city of Little Rock, Arkansas.[356] Since 2003, it has had a "special cooperation agreement" with the Swedish city of Malmö.[357] Furthermore, Newcastle participated in the 1998 summit of worldwide cities named Newcastle,[358] which led to friendship agreements with the following places:

Foreign consulates edit

The following countries have consular representation in Newcastle: Denmark,[359] Finland, Romania, Belgium,[360] France,[361] Germany,[362] Iceland,[363] Italy,[364] Norway,[365] and Sweden.[366]

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

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newcastle, upon, tyne, other, places, with, same, name, newcastle, simply, newcastle, kass, ɑː, səl, city, metropolitan, borough, tyne, wear, england, england, northernmost, metropolitan, borough, located, river, tyne, northern, bank, opposite, gateshead, sout. For other places with the same name see Newcastle Newcastle upon Tyne or simply Newcastle nj uː ˈ k ae s el new KASS el RP ˈ nj uː k ɑː s el NEW kah sel 8 is a city and metropolitan borough in Tyne and Wear England It is England s northernmost metropolitan borough located on the River Tyne s northern bank opposite Gateshead to the south It is the most populous settlement in the Tyneside conurbation and North East England 9 Newcastle upon TyneCity and metropolitan boroughThe Quayside with the Tyne Bridge to the left and the Millennium Bridge to the centre rightThe City CentreThe CastleGrainger TownTheatre RoyalSt Mary s RC CathedralThe Civic CentreCoat of armsNickname The ToonMotto s Latin Fortiter Defendit Triumphans lit Triumphing by Brave Defence Newcastle shown within Tyne and WearNewcastle upon TyneLocation within EnglandShow map of EnglandNewcastle upon TyneLocation within the United KingdomShow map of the United KingdomNewcastle upon TyneLocation in EuropeShow map of EuropeCoordinates 54 58 41 N 1 36 37 W 54 9780 N 1 6102 W 54 9780 1 6102 1 OS grid referenceNZ 2504 6489 1 Sovereign stateUnited KingdomCountryEnglandRegionNorth EastCity regionNorth of TyneCeremonial countyTyne and WearHistoric countyNorthumberlandFounded2nd century ADCity status1882Metropolitan borough1 April 1974Administrative HQNewcastle Civic CentreGovernment 2 TypeMetropolitan borough with leader and cabinet BodyNewcastle City Council ControlLabour LeaderNick Kemp L Lord MayorVeronica Dunn Chief ExecutivePam Smith House of Commons3 MPs Nick Brown Ind Catherine McKinnell L Chi Onwurah L Area 3 City and metropolitan borough44 sq mi 115 km2 Land43 8 sq mi 113 5 km2 Rank182ndPopulation 2021 5 City and metropolitan borough298 264 Rank47th Density6 810 sq mi 2 629 km2 Urban286 445 4 DemonymsNovocastrianGeordie colloq Ethnicity 2021 6 Ethnic groupsList 80 0 White11 4 Asian3 3 Black2 3 Mixed3 1 otherReligion 2021 6 ReligionList 41 3 Christianity40 8 no religion9 0 Islam1 4 Hinduism0 5 Sikhism0 5 Buddhism0 2 Judaism0 4 other6 0 not statedTime zoneUTC 0 GMT Summer DST UTC 1 BST Postcode areaNE1 7NE12 20NE27 29NE82 99Dialling code0191ISO 3166 codeGB NETGSS codeE08000021ITL codeTLC22GVA2021 estimate 7 Total 9 5 billion Per capita 31 700GDP nominal 2021 estimate 7 Total 10 5 billion Per capita 35 070Websitenewcastle wbr gov wbr ukNewcastle developed around a Roman settlement called Pons Aelius 10 The settlement became known as Monkchester before taking on the name of a castle built in 1080 by William the Conqueror s eldest son Robert Curthose It was one of the world s largest ship building and repair centres during the industrial revolution 11 Newcastle is historically part of the county of Northumberland but was governed as a county corporate after 1400 12 13 14 15 In 1974 Newcastle became part of Tyne and Wear Since 2018 the city council has been part of the North of Tyne Combined Authority Contents 1 History 1 1 Roman 1 2 Anglo Saxon and Norman 1 3 Middle Ages 1 4 16th to 19th centuries 1 5 20th and 21st centuries 2 Geography 2 1 Ouseburn 2 2 Quayside 2 3 Grainger Town 2 3 1 Chinatown 2 4 Housing 2 5 Climate 2 6 Environment 3 Culture 3 1 Nightlife 3 2 Food 3 3 Theatre 3 4 Literature and libraries 3 5 Festivals and fairs 3 6 Music 3 7 Concert venues 3 8 Independent cinema 3 9 Landmarks 4 Media 4 1 TV and film 4 2 Print media 4 3 Television 4 4 Radio 4 5 Public City WiFi 5 Economy 5 1 Retail 6 Population 6 1 Demographics 6 1 1 Age 6 1 2 Religion 6 1 3 Ethnicity and nationality 6 2 Geordies 6 2 1 Dialect 6 3 Health 7 Sport 8 Transport 8 1 Air 8 2 Rail 8 3 Metro 8 4 Road 8 5 Cycling 8 6 Water 9 Government and politics 9 1 Administrative history 9 2 UK Parliament 9 3 EU referendum 10 Education 10 1 Schools and colleges 10 2 Universities 10 3 Museums and galleries 11 Religious sites 12 Notable people 13 International relations 13 1 Twin towns sister cities 13 2 Other agreements 13 3 Foreign consulates 14 See also 15 References 15 1 Citations 15 2 Sources 16 External linksHistory editMain article History of Newcastle upon Tyne Roman edit The first recorded settlement in what is now Newcastle was Pons Aelius Hadrian s bridge a Roman fort and bridge across the River Tyne It was given the family name of the Roman Emperor Hadrian who founded it in the 2nd century AD This rare honour suggests Hadrian may have visited the site and instituted the bridge on his tour of Britain The population of Pons Aelius then is estimated at 2 000 Fragments of Hadrian s Wall are visible in parts of Newcastle particularly along the West Road The course of the Roman Wall can be traced eastwards to the Segedunum Roman fort in Wallsend the wall s end and to the separate supply fort of Arbeia in South Shields across the river from Hadrian s Wall 16 The extent of Hadrian s Wall was 73 miles 117 km spanning the width of Britain the Wall incorporated the Vallum a large rearward ditch with parallel mounds 17 and was built primarily for defence and to prevent the incursion of Pictish tribes from the north and probably not as a fighting line for a major invasion However it seems that the Vallum stopped just west of Newcastle where its role as a secondary line of defence was performed by the River Tyne 18 nbsp Newcastle Castle Keep is the oldest structure in the city dating back to at least the 11th century Anglo Saxon and Norman edit After the Roman departure from Britain completed in 410 Newcastle became part of the powerful Anglo Saxon kingdom of Northumbria and was known throughout this period as Munucceaster sometimes modernised as Monkchester 19 Conflicts with the Danes in 876 left the settlements along the River Tyne in ruins 20 After the conflicts with the Danes and following the 1088 rebellion against the Normans Monkchester was all but destroyed by Odo of Bayeux 21 Because of its strategic position Robert Curthose son of William the Conqueror erected a wooden castle there in the year 1080 20 The town was henceforth known as Novum Castellum or New Castle 20 The wooden structure was replaced by a stone castle in 1087 20 The castle was rebuilt again in 1172 during the reign of Henry II Much of the keep which can be seen in the city today dates from this period 20 Middle Ages edit Throughout the Middle Ages Newcastle was England s northern fortress In 1400 Newcastle was separated from Northumberland for administrative purposes 12 13 14 15 and made a county of itself by Henry IV 12 13 14 15 Newcastle was given the title of the county of the town of Newcastle upon Tyne 22 The town had a new charter granted by Elizabeth I in 1589 23 A 25 foot high 7 6 m stone wall was built around the town in the 13th century 24 to defend it from invaders during the Border war against Scotland The Scots king William the Lion was imprisoned in Newcastle in 1174 and Edward I brought the Stone of Scone and William Wallace south through the town Newcastle was successfully defended against the Scots three times during the 14th century 12 15 16th to 19th centuries edit nbsp An engraving by William Miller of Newcastle in 1832 as seen from GatesheadFrom 1530 a royal act restricted all shipments of coal from Tyneside to Newcastle Quayside giving a monopoly in the coal trade to a cartel of Newcastle burgesses known as the Hostmen This monopoly which lasted for a considerable time helped Newcastle prosper and develop into a major town The phrase taking coals to Newcastle was first recorded contextually in 1538 25 The phrase itself means a pointless pursuit 26 In the 18th century the American entrepreneur Timothy Dexter regarded as an eccentric defied this idiom He was persuaded to sail a shipment of coal to Newcastle by merchants plotting to ruin him however his shipment arrived on the Tyne during a strike that had crippled local production allowing him to turn a considerable profit 27 28 nbsp Victoria Tunnel built to transport coal 29 In the Sandgate area to the east of the city and beside the river resided the close knit community of keelmen and their families 30 They were so called because they worked on the keels boats that were used to transfer coal from the river banks to the waiting colliers for export to London and elsewhere In the 1630s about 7 000 out of 20 000 inhabitants of Newcastle died of plague more than one third of the population 31 Specifically within the year 1636 it is roughly estimated with evidence held by the Society of Antiquaries that 47 of the then population of Newcastle died from the epidemic this may also have been the most devastating loss in any British city in this period 32 nbsp Newcastle was once a major industrial centre particularly for coal and shippingDuring the English Civil War the North declared for the King 33 In a bid to gain Newcastle and the Tyne Cromwell s allies the Scots captured the town of Newburn In 1644 the Scots then captured the reinforced fortification on the Lawe in South Shields following a siege and the city was besieged for many months It was eventually stormed with roaring drummes and sacked by Cromwell s allies The grateful King bestowed the motto Fortiter Defendit Triumphans Triumphing by a brave defence upon the town Charles I was imprisoned in Newcastle by the Scots in 1646 7 34 nbsp Newcastle city centre 1917 with St James Park football ground above and left of centreNewcastle opened its first lunatic asylum in 1767 35 The asylum catered for people from the counties of Newcastle Durham and Northumberland 35 The Newcastle Eccentrics of the 19th century were a group of unrelated people who lived in and around the centre of Newcastle and its Quayside between the end of the 18th and early mid 19th century These were characters who were described as Worthies Props or Eccentrics and would later be more gently described as unfortunates All had some form of physical or mental disability but were looked upon as unfortunates and generally liked respected and looked after by the population of hard working inhabitants citation needed Newcastle was the country s fourth largest print centre after London Oxford and Cambridge 36 and the Literary and Philosophical Society of 1793 36 with its erudite debates and large stock of books in several languages predated the London Library by half a century 36 Some founder members of the Literary and Philosophical Society were abolitionists 37 Newcastle also became a glass producer with a reputation for brilliant flint glass 38 A permanent military presence was established in the city with the completion of Fenham Barracks in 1806 39 The great fire of Newcastle and Gateshead was a tragic and spectacular series of events starting on Friday 6 October 1854 in which a substantial amount of property in the two North East of England towns was destroyed in a series of fires and an explosion which killed 53 and injured hundreds 40 The status of city was granted to Newcastle on 3 June 1882 41 In the 19th century shipbuilding and heavy engineering were central to the city s prosperity and the city was a powerhouse of the Industrial Revolution 42 This revolution resulted in the urbanisation of the city 43 In 1817 the Maling company at one time the largest pottery company in the world moved to the city 44 The Victorian industrial revolution brought industrial structures that included the 2 1 2 mile 4 km Victoria Tunnel built in 1842 which provided underground wagon ways to the staithes 45 On 3 February 1879 Mosley Street in the city was the first public road in the world to be lit up by the incandescent lightbulb 46 47 Newcastle was one of the first cities in the world to be lit up by electric lighting 48 Innovations in Newcastle and surrounding areas included the development of safety lamps Stephenson s Rocket Lord Armstrong s artillery Be Ro flour 49 Lucozade 50 Joseph Swan s electric light bulbs and Charles Parsons invention of the steam turbine which led to the revolution of marine propulsion and the production of cheap electricity In 1882 Newcastle became the seat of an Anglican diocese with St Nicholas Church becoming its cathedral 51 20th and 21st centuries edit Newcastle s public transport system was modernised in 1901 when Newcastle Corporation Tramways electric trams were introduced to the city s streets though these were replaced gradually by trolley buses from 1935 with the tram service finally coming to an end in 1950 52 The city acquired its first art gallery the Laing Art Gallery in 1904 so named after its founder Alexander Laing a Scottish wine and spirit merchant 53 who wanted to give something back to the city in which he had made his fortune Another art gallery the Hatton Gallery now part of Newcastle University opened in 1925 54 With the advent of the motor car Newcastle s road network was improved in the early part of the 20th century beginning with the opening of the Redheugh road bridge in 1901 55 and the Tyne Bridge in 1928 56 Efforts to preserve the city s historic past were evident as long ago as 1934 when the Museum of Science and Industry opened 57 as did the John G Joicey Museum in the same year 58 Council housing began to replace inner city slums in the 1920s and the process continued into the 1970s along with substantial private house building and acquisitions 59 Unemployment hit record heights in Newcastle during the Great Depression of the 1930s The city s last coal pit closed in 1956 60 though a temporary open cast mine was opened in 2013 61 The temporary open cast mine shifted 40 000 tonnes of coal using modern techniques to reduce noise on a part of the City undergoing redevelopment 61 The slow demise of the shipyards on the banks of the River Tyne happened in the 1970s 1980s and 1990s 62 nbsp View northwards from the Castle Keep towards Berwick on Tweed in 1954 nbsp Panorama from Newcastle castle keep across the River Tyne to Gateshead in 1954During the Second World War the city and surrounding area were a target for air raids as heavy industry was involved in the production of ships and armaments The raids caused 141 deaths and 587 injuries 63 A former French consul in Newcastle called Jacques Serre assisted the German war effort by describing important targets in the region to Admiral Raeder who was the head of the German Navy 64 The public sector in Newcastle began to expand in the 1960s The federal structure of the University of Durham was dissolved That university s college in Newcastle which had been known as King s College became the University of Newcastle upon Tyne now known as Newcastle University which was founded in 1963 65 followed by Newcastle Polytechnic in 1969 the latter received university status in 1992 and became the University of Northumbria at Newcastle now known as Northumbria University 66 Further efforts to preserve the city s historic past continued in the later 20th century with the opening of Newcastle Military Vehicle Museum in 1983 and Stephenson Railway Museum in 1986 The Military Vehicle museum closed in 2006 67 New developments at the turn of the 21st century included the Life Science Centre in 2000 and Millennium Bridge in 2001 68 Based at St James Park since 1886 Newcastle United F C became Football League members in 1893 69 They have won four top division titles the first in 1905 and the most recent in 1927 six FA Cups the first in 1910 and the most recent in 1955 and the Inter Cities Fairs Cup in 1969 70 They broke the world transfer record in 1996 by paying 15 million for Blackburn Rovers and England striker Alan Shearer one of the most prolific goalscorers of that era 71 In 2017 Newcastle was the venue for the 2017 Freedom City festival The 2017 Freedom City festival commemorated the 50 years since Dr Martin Luther King s visit to Newcastle where King received his honorary degree from Newcastle University 72 73 74 In 2018 Newcastle hosted the Great Exhibition of the North the largest event in England in 2018 The exhibition began on 22 June with an opening ceremony on the River Tyne and ended on 9 September with the Great North Run weekend The exhibition describes the story of the north of England through its innovators artists designers and businesses 75 76 In 2019 various travel sites named Newcastle to be the friendliest city in the UK 77 Geography edit nbsp Side a street in Newcastle near the Tyne BridgeSince 1974 Newcastle has been a part of the metropolitan county of Tyne and Wear in North East England The city is located on the north western bank of the River Tyne approximately 46 miles 74 km south of the border with Scotland The ground beneath the city is formed from Carboniferous strata of the Middle Pennine Coal Measures Group a suite of sandstones mudstones and coal seams which generally dip moderately eastwards To the west of the city are the Upper Pennine Coal Measures and further west again the sandstones and mudstones of the Stainmore Formation the local equivalent of the Millstone Grit 78 In large parts Newcastle still retains a medieval street layout Narrow alleys or chares most of which can only be traversed by foot still exist in abundance particularly around the riverside Stairs from the riverside to higher parts of the city centre and the extant Castle Keep originally recorded in the 14th century remain intact in places Close Sandhill and Quayside contain modern buildings as well as structures dating from the 15th 18th centuries including Bessie Surtees House the Cooperage and Lloyds Quayside Bars Derwentwater House and House of Tides a restaurant situated at a Grade I listed 16th century merchant s house at 28 30 Close The city has an extensive neoclassical centre referred to as Tyneside Classical 79 largely developed in the 1830s by Richard Grainger and John Dobson More recently Newcastle architecture considered to be Tyneside classical has been extensively restored Broadcaster and writer Stuart Maconie described Newcastle as England s best looking city 80 81 and the German born British scholar of architecture Nikolaus Pevsner 82 describes Grey Street as one of the finest streets in England In 1948 the poet John Betjeman said of Grey Street As for the curve of Grey Street I shall never forget seeing it to perfection traffic less on a misty Sunday morning 83 The street curves down from Grey s Monument towards the valley of the River Tyne and was voted England s finest street in 2005 in a survey of BBC Radio 4 listeners 84 85 In the Google Street View awards of 2010 Grey Street came 3rd in the British picturesque category 86 A portion of Grainger Town was demolished in the 1960s to make way for the Eldon Square Shopping Centre including all but one side of the original Eldon Square itself nbsp 360 panoramic shot taken from the top of the Keep Immediately to the north west of the city centre is Leazes Park first opened to the public in 1873 87 after a petition by 3 000 working men of the city for ready access to some open ground for the purpose of health and recreation Just outside one corner of this is St James Park the stadium home of Newcastle United FC which dominates the view of the city from all directions nbsp View of St James Park on the skyline and surrounding buildings as seen from GatesheadAnother major green space in the city is the Town Moor lying immediately north of the city centre It is larger than London s Hyde Park and Hampstead Heath put together 88 89 and the freemen of the city have the right to graze cattle on it 88 89 The right extends to the pitch of St James Park Newcastle United Football Club s ground this is not exercised although the Freemen do collect rent for the loss of privilege Honorary freemen include Bob Geldof 90 King Harald V of Norway 91 Bobby Robson 92 Alan Shearer 93 the late Nelson Mandela 94 and the Royal Shakespeare Company 95 The Hoppings funfair said to be the largest travelling funfair in Europe is held here annually in June 96 In the south eastern corner of the Town Moor is Exhibition Park which contains the only remaining pavilion from the North East Coast Exhibition of 1929 From the 1970s until 2006 this housed the Newcastle Military Vehicle Museum which closed in 2006 The pavilion is now being used as a microbrewery and concert venue for Wylam Brewery 97 Ouseburn edit The wooded gorge of the Ouseburn in the east of the city is known as Jesmond Dene and forms another recreation area linked by Armstrong Park and Heaton Park to the Ouseburn Valley where the river finally reaches the River Tyne The springtime dawn chorus at 55 degrees latitude has been described as one of the best in the world 98 The dawn chorus of the Jesmond Dene green space has been professionally recorded and has been used in various workplace and hospital rehabilitation facilities 98 Quayside edit nbsp Quayside architectureThe area around the Tyne Gorge between Newcastle on the north bank and Gateshead on the south bank is the famous Newcastle Gateshead Quayside It is famed for its series of dramatic bridges including the Tyne Bridge of 1928 which was built by Dorman Long of Middlesbrough Robert Stephenson s High Level Bridge of 1849 the first road rail bridge in the world and the Swing Bridge of 1876 99 Large scale regeneration efforts have led to the replacement of former shipping premises with modern new office developments an innovative tilting bridge the Gateshead Millennium Bridge integrated the Quayside more closely with the Gateshead Quayside home to the BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art the venue for the Turner Prize 2011 100 and the Norman Foster designed The Sage Gateshead music centre The Newcastle and Gateshead Quaysides are now a thriving cosmopolitan area with bars restaurants hotels and public spaces nbsp Seen here in 2008 on the Quayside are the Tyne Salmon Cubes a celebration of the River Tyne salmon 101 Grainger Town edit Main article Grainger Town nbsp Grainger Street circa 1906The historic heart of Newcastle is the Grainger Town area Established on classical streets built by Richard Grainger a builder and developer between 1835 and 1842 some of Newcastle upon Tyne s finest buildings and streets lie within this area of the city centre including Grainger Market Theatre Royal Grey Street Grainger Street and Clayton Street 102 These buildings are predominantly four stories high with vertical dormers domes turrets and spikes Richard Grainger was said to have found Newcastle of bricks and timber and left it in stone 103 Of Grainger Town s 450 buildings 244 are listed of which 29 are grade I and 49 are grade II nbsp Grey s MonumentGrey s Monument which commemorates Prime Minister Earl Grey and his Reform Act of 1832 stands above Monument Metro Station and was designed and built by Edward Hodges Baily and Benjamin Green Hodges who also built Nelson s Column designed and built the statue 104 and the monument plinth was designed and built by Benjamin Green 105 The Grainger Market replaced an earlier market originally built in 1808 called the Butcher Market 106 The Grainger Market itself was opened in 1835 and was Newcastle s first indoor market 107 At the time of its opening in 1835 it was said to be one of the largest and most beautiful markets in Europe 107 The opening was celebrated with a grand dinner attended by 2000 guests and the Laing Art Gallery has a painting of this event 107 With the exception of the timber roof which was destroyed by a fire in 1901 and replaced by latticed steel arches the Market is largely in its original condition 107 The Grainger Market architecture like most in Grainger Town which are either grade I or II listed was listed grade I in 1954 by English Heritage 106 The development of the city in the 1960s saw the demolition of part of Grainger Town as a prelude to the modernist rebuilding initiatives of T Dan Smith the leader of Newcastle City Council A corruption scandal was uncovered involving Smith and John Poulson a property developer from Pontefract West Yorkshire and both were imprisoned Echoes of the scandal were revisited in the late 1990s in the BBC TV mini series Our Friends in the North 108 Chinatown edit nbsp Newcastle s Chinatown archNewcastle s thriving Chinatown lies in the north west of Grainger Town centred on Stowell Street A new Chinese arch or paifang providing a landmark entrance was handed over to the city with a ceremony in 2005 109 Housing edit The Tyneside flat was the dominant housing form constructed at the time when the industrial centres on Tyneside were growing most rapidly They can still be found in areas such as South Heaton in Newcastle but once dominated the streetscape on both sides of the Tyne 110 Tyneside flats were built as terraces one of each pair of doors led to an upstairs flat while the other led into the ground floor flat each of two or three rooms A new development in the Ouseburn valley has recreated them Architects Cany Ash and Robert Sakula were attracted by the possibilities of high density without building high and getting rid of common areas 111 In terms of housing stock the authority is one of few authorities to see the proportion of detached homes rise in the 2010 Census to 7 8 in this instance this was coupled with a similar rise in flats and waterside apartments to 25 6 and the proportion of converted or shared houses in 2011 renders this dwelling type within the highest of the five colour coded brackets at 5 9 and on a par with Oxford and Reading greater than Manchester and Liverpool and below a handful of historic densely occupied arguably overinflated markets in the local authorities Harrogate Cheltenham Bath inner London Hastings Brighton and Royal Tunbridge Wells 112 Significant Newcastle housing developments include Ralph Erskine s the Byker Wall designed in the 1960s and now Grade II listed It is on UNESCO s list of outstanding 20th century buildings 113 Climate edit Newcastle has an oceanic climate Koppen Cfb Data in Newcastle was first collected in 1802 by the solicitor James Losh 114 Situated in the rain shadow of the North Pennines Newcastle is amongst the driest cities in the UK Temperature extremes recorded at Newcastle Weather Centre include 37 0 C 98 6 F set in July 2022 115 down to 14 0 C 6 8 F on 29 December 1995 116 Newcastle can have cool to cold winters though usually warmer than the rural areas around it and the winters are often compensated for by warm summers with very long daylight hours in the summer months longer than all other major English cities Newcastle upon Tyne shares the same latitude as Copenhagen and southern Sweden The nearest weather station to provide sunshine statistics is at Durham about 14 miles 23 km south of Newcastle City Centre Durham s inland less urbanised setting results in night time temperature data about 1 degree cooler than Newcastle proper throughout the year Climate data for Newcastle Met Office Durham Extremes NewcastleMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 14 0 57 2 14 0 57 2 21 0 69 8 21 0 69 8 25 0 77 0 26 0 78 8 37 0 98 6 32 5 90 5 21 0 69 8 20 0 68 0 18 0 64 4 15 0 59 0 37 0 98 6 Mean daily maximum C F 6 6 43 9 7 2 45 0 9 5 49 1 11 9 53 4 15 0 59 0 17 6 63 7 20 1 68 2 19 8 67 6 17 2 63 0 13 3 55 9 9 4 48 9 6 7 44 1 12 9 55 2 Daily mean C F 3 8 38 8 4 1 39 4 5 9 42 6 7 8 46 0 10 6 51 1 13 3 55 9 15 6 60 1 15 4 59 7 13 1 55 6 9 8 49 6 6 4 43 5 3 9 39 0 9 2 48 6 Mean daily minimum C F 0 9 33 6 0 9 33 6 2 3 36 1 3 7 38 7 6 1 43 0 9 0 48 2 11 1 52 0 11 0 51 8 9 0 48 2 6 3 43 3 3 4 38 1 1 1 34 0 5 4 41 7 Record low C F 12 6 9 3 3 0 26 6 9 0 15 8 2 0 28 4 1 0 30 2 1 0 33 8 6 0 42 8 3 0 37 4 0 0 32 0 5 0 23 0 11 0 12 2 14 0 6 8 14 0 6 8 Average rainfall mm inches 52 3 2 06 41 8 1 65 44 6 1 76 52 7 2 07 44 2 1 74 55 4 2 18 54 0 2 13 60 8 2 39 55 4 2 18 60 9 2 40 72 0 2 83 57 0 2 24 651 1 25 63 Average rainy days 1 0 mm 11 4 9 3 9 7 9 5 9 2 9 7 9 0 9 6 9 3 11 3 12 3 11 7 122Mean monthly sunshine hours 58 6 80 3 115 5 150 3 181 7 164 8 172 3 167 3 134 5 102 8 66 4 51 2 1 445 4Source Met Office 117 vteClimate data for Newcastle United Kingdom 1981 2010 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearMean daily maximum C F 8 2 46 8 8 5 47 3 10 2 50 4 12 1 53 8 14 9 58 8 17 2 63 0 19 1 66 4 18 9 66 0 17 0 62 6 13 8 56 8 10 6 51 1 8 5 47 3 13 3 55 9 Daily mean C F 5 4 41 7 5 4 41 7 6 8 44 2 8 2 46 8 10 7 51 3 13 2 55 8 15 1 59 2 15 0 59 0 13 2 55 8 10 5 50 9 7 6 45 7 5 7 42 3 9 7 49 5 Mean daily minimum C F 2 5 36 5 2 3 36 1 3 3 37 9 4 2 39 6 6 5 43 7 9 2 48 6 11 1 52 0 11 0 51 8 9 4 48 9 7 1 44 8 4 5 40 1 2 9 37 2 6 2 43 1 Average rainfall mm inches 106 6 4 20 74 8 2 94 80 4 3 17 63 2 2 49 66 8 2 63 68 3 2 69 60 5 2 38 81 8 3 22 73 6 2 90 100 0 3 94 105 3 4 15 101 9 4 01 983 2 38 72 Average rainy days 14 2 10 6 12 7 10 4 11 2 10 1 10 0 11 3 10 0 13 0 13 4 13 2 140 1Source WMO 118 Environment edit Main article North East Green Belt The city is located within the centre of the North East Green Belt also known as the Tyne and Wear Green Belt 119 The green belts stated aims 120 are to Prevent the merging of settlements Safeguard the countryside from encroachment Check unrestricted urban sprawl Assist in urban regeneration in the city region by encouraging the recycling of derelict and other urban landThe green belt surrounds Brunswick Village Dinnington Callerton Hazlerigg Throckley Walbottle and Woolsington Popular locations such as Ryton Island Tyne Riverside Country Park the city s golf courses Newcastle Racecourse and Newcastle International Airport fall inside the green belt The city has been recognised for its commitment to environmental issues with a programme planned for Newcastle to become the first carbon neutral city 121 however those plans have been revised and they now hope to be carbon neutral by 2050 122 Culture editNightlife edit nbsp The Gate complex on Newgate Street is a nightlife destinationThe Rough Guide to Britain placed Newcastle upon Tyne s nightlife as Great Britain s number one tourist attraction 123 In the Tripadvisor Travellers Choice Destination Awards for Nightlife destinations Newcastle was awarded third place in Europe behind London and Berlin 124 and seventh place in the world 125 In July 2023 Newcastle was voted the best city in the UK for food fashion and nightlife 126 There are many bars on the Bigg Market and its adjoining streets Other areas popular for nightlife include Collingwood Street commonly referred to as the Diamond Strip due to its concentration of high end bars Neville Street the Central Station area Osborne Road in Jesmond and the wider Ouseburn area are home to a variety of younger metropolitan bars The Gate located on Newgate Street has become a popular venue for late night entertainment in the past decade and a half 127 Newcastle s pink triangle is concentrated on Times Square surrounded by the Centre for Life 128 129 nbsp Bigg MarketFood edit Bakery chain Greggs was founded and is headquartered in Newcastle and has the greatest number of Greggs stores per capita in the world 130 Local delicacies include pease pudding and stottie cake In 1967 London based Smith s Crisps created Salt amp Vinegar flavour crisps which were first produced by their Newcastle based subsidiary Tudor Crisps and tested in Tudor s home market of north east England before being launched nationally 131 In 2010 Osborne Road in Jesmond was awarded fourth place in the UK Google Street View awards for the foodie category 86 Newcastle has its own Chinatown Additionally the city has a wide variety of cuisines available including Greek Mexican Spanish Indian Italian Persian Japanese Malaysian French American Mongolian Moroccan Thai Polish Vietnamese and Lebanese There has also been a noticeable growth in Newcastle s gourmet restaurant industry in recent years 132 133 134 Theatre edit The city has a proud history of theatre Stephen Kemble of the well known Kemble family managed the original Theatre Royal Newcastle for fifteen years 1791 1806 He brought members of his famous acting family such as Sarah Siddons and John Kemble out of London to Newcastle Stephen Kemble guided the theatre through many celebrated seasons The original Theatre Royal in Newcastle was opened on 21 January 1788 and was located on Mosley Street 135 It was demolished to make way for Grey Street where its replacement was built nbsp The Theatre Royal Grey StreetThe city still contains many theatres The largest the Theatre Royal on Grey Street first opened in 1837 designed by John and Benjamin Green 136 It has hosted a season of performances from the Royal Shakespeare Company for over 25 years as well as touring productions of West End musicals 137 The Mill Volvo Tyne Theatre hosts smaller touring productions whilst other venues feature local talent Northern Stage formally known as the Newcastle Playhouse and Gulbenkian Studio hosts various local national and international productions in addition to those produced by the Northern Stage company 138 Other theatres in the city include the Live Theatre the People s Theatre Gosforth Civic Theatre and the Jubilee Theatre NewcastleGateshead was voted in 2006 as the arts capital of the UK in a survey conducted by the Artsworld TV channel 139 Literature and libraries edit nbsp Avison Library on New Bridge Street West nbsp Literary and Philosophical Society of Newcastle upon Tyne Newcastle has a strong reputation as a poetry centre The Morden Tower run by poet Tom Pickard is a major venue for poetry readings in the North East being the place where Basil Bunting gave the first reading of Briggflatts in 1965 140 The Literary and Philosophical Society of Newcastle upon Tyne popularly known as the Lit amp Phil is the largest independent library outside London housing more than 150 000 books Its music library contains 8 000 CDs and 10 000 LPs 141 142 The current Lit and Phil premises were built in 1825 and the building was designed by John and Benjamin Green 136 Operating since 1793 and founded as a conversation club its lecture theatre was the first public building to be lit by electric light during a lecture by Joseph Swan on 20 October 1880 141 The old City library designed by Basil Spence 143 was demolished in 2006 143 and replaced The new building opened on 21 June 2009 144 and was named after the 18th century local composer Charles Avison the building was first opened by Dr Herbert Loebl 144 Later that year it was officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II Seven Stories the National Centre for Children s Books opened in 2005 in the Ouseburn Valley 145 146 Festivals and fairs edit In either January or February Newcastle s Chinatown becomes the focus point of celebrations for the Chinese New Year with carnivals and parades The Newcastle Science Festival now called Newcastle ScienceFest returns annually in early March 147 The Newcastle Beer Festival organised by CAMRA takes place in April each year 148 Evolution Festival a music festival that attracted tens of thousands of attendees took place in May from 2002 until 2013 and was described as the biggest festival Tyneside has ever staged 149 150 The This Is Tomorrow festival now takes place over the spring bank holiday and is in the same location The biennial AV Festival of international electronic art featuring exhibitions concerts conferences and film screenings is held in March The North East Art Expo a festival of art and design from the regions professional artists is held in late May 151 152 The Hoppings the largest annual collection of travelling fairs in Europe comes together on Newcastle Town Moor every June The event has its origins in the Temperance Movement during the early 1880s and coincides with the annual race week at High Gosforth Park 153 Newcastle Community Green Festival which claims to be the UK s biggest free community environmental festival also takes place every June in Leazes Park 154 The Cyclone Festival of Cycling takes place within or starting from Newcastle in June 155 156 The Northern Pride Festival and Parade is held in Leazes Park and in the city s Gay Community in mid July The Ouseburn Festival a family oriented weekend festival near the city centre incorporating a Family Fun Day and Carnival Day is held in late July 157 Newcastle Mela held on the late August Bank Holiday weekend is an annual two day multicultural event that blends drama music and food from Punjabi Pakistani Bengali and Hindu cultures 158 NewcastleGateshead also holds an annual International Arts Fair The 2009 event will be in the Norman Foster designed Sage Gateshead Music and Arts Centre in September 159 In October there is the Design Event festival an annual festival providing the public with an opportunity to see work by regional national and international designers 160 The SAMA Festival an East Asian cultural festival is also held in early October 161 Music edit nbsp Sting principal songwriter lead singer and bassist for English rock band The Police See also List of bands and musicians from Newcastle Upon Tyne Newcastle s vernacular music was a mixture of Northumbrian folk music and nineteenth century songs with dialect lyrics by writers such as George Geordie Ridley whose songs include one which became an unofficial Tyneside national anthem Blaydon Races The 1960s saw the internationally successful rock group The Animals emerge from Newcastle night spots such as Club A Go Go 162 on Percy Street Other well known acts with connections to the city include Sting 163 Bryan Ferry 164 Dire Straits 165 and more recently Maximo Park 166 There is also a thriving underground music scene that encompasses a variety of styles including drum and bass doom metal and post rock Lindisfarne are a folk rock group with a strong Tyneside connection Their most famous song Fog on the Tyne 1971 was covered by Geordie ex footballer Paul Gascoigne in 1990 Venom reckoned by many to be the originators of black metal and extremely influential to the extreme metal scene as a whole formed in Newcastle in 1979 Folk metal band Skyclad often regarded as the first folk metal band also formed in Newcastle after the break up of Martin Walkyier thrash metal band Sabbat Andy Taylor former lead guitarist of Duran Duran was born here in 1961 Brian Johnson was a member of local rock band Geordie before becoming the lead vocalist for Australian band AC DC 167 nbsp Dire Straits frontman Mark Knopfler His song Local Hero is played at St James Park before the start of every Newcastle United home game 168 Newcastle is the home of Kitchenware Records c 1982 169 previously home to acclaimed bands such as Prefab Sprout Martin Stephenson and the Daintees and The Fatima Mansions The members of Lighthouse Family met at Newcastle University the music video for their hit single High features the city s Tyne Bridge 170 The 1990s boom in progressive house music saw the city s Global Underground record label publish mix CDs by the likes of Sasha Paul Oakenfold James Lavelle and Danny Howells recording mix compilations The label is still going strong today with offices in London and New York and new releases from Deep Dish and Adam Freeland 171 Newcastle s leading classical music ensemble is the Royal Northern Sinfonia which was founded in 1958 and performed regularly at Newcastle City Hall until 2004 Nowadays it is based at The Sage Gateshead ICMuS Newcastle University s music department has been a driving force for music in the region producing innovative work organising concerts and festivals instigating the first degree programme in folk music in the British Isles and engaging creatively with communities in the region Concert venues edit nbsp Metro Radio ArenaThe largest venue used for music concerts is St James Park home of Newcastle United which has also previously been used for Rugby League games and the Olympic Games The second largest music venue in Newcastle is the 11 000 seat Utilita Arena Newcastle which opened in 1995 and hosts major pop and rock concerts 172 173 Newcastle City Hall is one of the oldest venues in the region and attracts big names who are often legends of the past 172 Both of the city s universities have venues that mainly host indie and alternative bands 172 On 14 October 2005 the 2 000 capacity O2 Academy Newcastle opened It had previously been a music venue in the 1960s hosting concerts by The Beatles and The Who 174 The new venue was headlined by The Futureheads on the opening night and known as the Carling Academy for a number of years Since opening the venue has hosted performances by major bands and solo musicians including Adele Arctic Monkeys Katy Perry The Libertines Blondie and Amy Winehouse 175 nbsp O2 Academy NewcastleThe Riverside music venue on Melbourne Street open from 1985 until 1999 notably hosted Nirvana s first European show in 1989 176 The venue also welcomed Oasis David Bowie and The Stone Roses and was named Best Regional Venue by NME in 1993 177 Riverside has also been the subject of a book Riverside Newcastle s Legendary Alternative Music Venue 178 In 2016 open air concerts took place at Times Square for the first time including performances from Maximo Park Ocean Colour Scene and Catfish and the Bottlemen 179 180 181 The small music venue Think Tank was a nominee for Best Small Venue in NME in 2015 182 The Cluny in Ouseburn Valley is one of the most important venues for breaking bands in the region 183 Trillians Rock Bar is well noted for its rock and metal shows 172 and The Head of Steam is a 90 capacity basement venue described as one of Newcastle s staple venues 184 Independent cinema edit nbsp Tyneside Cinema designed and built by Dixon Scott great uncle of Ridley and Tony Scott 185 Newcastle has multiple independent cinemas including the famous Tyneside Cinema 186 located on Pilgrim Street It originally opened as the Bijou News Reel Cinema in 1937 and was designed and built by Dixon Scott great uncle of film directors Ridley Scott 185 and Tony Scott The Pilgrim Street building was refurbished between November 2006 and May 2008 during the refurbishment works the cinema relocated to the Old Town Hall Gateshead In May 2008 the Tyneside Cinema reopened in the restored and refurbished original building 187 The site currently houses three cinemas including the restored Classic 188 the United Kingdom s last surviving news cinema still in full time operation alongside two new screens and dedicated education and teaching suites As well as this the city is home to The Side Cinema and Star and Shadow Cinema which are both small venues which have built up cult audiences of film fans Landmarks edit Its landmarks include the Tyne Bridge the Swing Bridge Newcastle Castle Newcastle Cathedral St Mary s Cathedral St Thomas Church Grainger Town including Grey s Monument and the Theatre Royal the Millennium Bridge St James Park Chinatown and Fernwood House Media editTV and film edit See also Category Films set in Newcastle upon Tyne and Category Television shows set in Newcastle upon Tyne The earliest known film featuring some exterior scenes filmed in the city is On the Night of the Fire 1939 189 though by and large the action is studio bound Later came The Clouded Yellow 1951 and Payroll 1961 both of which feature more extensive scenes filmed in the city The gangster thriller Get Carter 1971 was shot on location in and around Newcastle and offers an opportunity to see what Newcastle looked like in the early 1970s 190 The city was also backdrop to another gangster film the film noir Stormy Monday 1988 directed by Mike Figgis and starring Tommy Lee Jones Melanie Griffith Sting and Sean Bean 191 As well as this Newcastle was used as the location for I Daniel Blake 2016 which won the Palme d Or award at Cannes Film Festival as well as the BAFTA for Outstanding British Film The city has been the setting for films based around football films such as Purely Belter 2000 192 The One and Only 2002 193 and Goal 194 have all been focused around Tyneside The comedy School for Seduction 2004 starring Kelly Brook was also filmed in Newcastle 195 The Bollywood film Hum Tum Aur Ghost 2010 was shot on location in Newcastle s city centre and features key scenes in and around Grainger Town 196 The film Public Sex 2009 was shot in and around Newcastle and features several scenes under and around the Tyne Bridge Crime drama Harrigan 2013 was filmed in the city as well as Gateshead and Teesside 197 Print media edit See also List of television shows set in Newcastle upon Tyne Local newspapers that are printed in Newcastle include Trinity Mirror s Evening Chronicle and The Journal the Sunday Sun as well as the Metro freesheet The Crack is a monthly style and listings magazine similar to London s Time Out The adult comic Viz originated in Jesmond and includes many references to Newcastle and The Mag is a fanzine for Newcastle United supporters Television edit BBC North East and Cumbria is based to the north of the city on Barrack Road Spital Tongues in a building known as the Pink Palace 198 It is from here that the Corporation broadcasts the Look North television regional news programme and local radio station BBC Radio Newcastle nbsp Two converted warehouses provided the base for Tyne Tees on City Road until 2005ITV Tyne Tees was based at City Road for over 40 years after its launch in January 1959 199 In 2005 it moved to a new facility on The Watermark business park next to the MetroCentre in Gateshead 200 The entrance to studio 5 at the City Road complex gave its name to the 1980s music television programme The Tube 199 Radio edit Independent Local Radio stations include Metro Radio and sister station Greatest Hits Radio North East which are both based on the north side of the Tyne Bridge Capital North East broadcasts across Newcastle and the North East England region from its studios in Wallsend 201 Heart North East and Smooth North East also broadcast from studios in the city nbsp BBC NewcastleNE1fm launched on 8 June 2007 the first full time community radio station in the area 202 Newcastle Student Radio is run by students from both of the city s universities broadcasting from Newcastle University s students union building during term time 203 Radio Tyneside 204 has been the voluntary hospital radio service for most hospitals across Newcastle and Gateshead since 1951 broadcasting on Hospedia 205 online and also on 93 6 FM since July 2018 206 also under a community radio licence 207 The city also has a Radio Lollipop station based at the Great North Children s Hospital in the Newcastle Royal Victoria Infirmary Public City WiFi edit Newcastle was one of the first cities in the UK to have its city centre covered by free wireless internet access It was developed and installed at the end of 2006 and went active in March 2007 208 Economy editSee also List of companies based in Newcastle upon Tyne The city s economy is diverse with major economic output in science finance retail education tourism and nightlife Newcastle is one of the UK Core Cities as well as part of the Eurocities network 209 210 211 Newcastle played a major role during the 19th century Industrial Revolution and was a leading centre for coal mining shipbuilding engineering munitions and manufacturing Heavy industries in Newcastle declined in the second half of the 20th century with office service and retail employment now becoming the city s staples Today Newcastle s economy contributes around 13 billion to the UK GVA 212 This figure is mostly produced by corporate activity in the city centre The city s thriving nightlife is estimated to be worth 340 million per year and consequently is seen as a major contributor to Newcastle s economy 213 The UK s first biotechnology village the Centre for Life is located by Central Station The village is the first step in the City Council s plans to transform Newcastle into a science city 214 Retail edit nbsp South entrance of Northumberland Street now pedestrianised nbsp Old Eldon Square the Eldon Square Shopping Centre is built around it and takes its name from it In 2010 Newcastle was positioned ninth in the retail centre expenditure league of the UK 215 There are several major shopping areas in Newcastle City Centre The largest of these is the Eldon Square Shopping Centre one of the largest city centre shopping complexes in the UK 216 It has one of the largest John Lewis amp Partners stores in the UK This John Lewis branch was formerly known as Bainbridge established in 1838 often cited as the world s first department store 217 Emerson Bainbridge 1817 1892 218 a pioneer and the founder of Bainbridge 219 sold goods via department a new arrangement of trade for that time The Bainbridge official ledgers reported revenue by department giving birth to the name department store 218 219 Eldon Square is currently undergoing a full redevelopment A new bus station replacing the old underground bus station was officially opened in March 2007 220 The wing of the centre including the undercover Green Market near Grainger Street was demolished in 2007 so that the area could be redeveloped 221 This was completed in February 2010 with the opening of a Debenhams department store as well as other major stores including Apple Hollister and Guess 222 nbsp Central Arcade Newcastle upon TyneThe main shopping street in the city is Northumberland Street In a 2004 report it was ranked as the most expensive shopping street in the UK for rent outside London 223 It is home to two major department stores including the first and largest Fenwick department store which houses some of the most luxurious designer labels and one of the largest Marks and Spencer stores outside London Both stores have entrances into Eldon Square Shopping Centre Other shopping destinations in Newcastle include Grainger Street and the area around Grey s Monument the relatively modern Eldon Garden and Monument Mall complexes Central Arcade and the traditional Grainger Market On Blackett Street can be found the silversmith Reid amp Sons which was established in the city in 1788 224 Outside the city centre the largest suburban shopping areas are Gosforth and Byker From 2007 inside Kingston Park on the edge of Newcastle the Tesco store was the largest Tesco hypermarket in the UK 225 for a period of time Close to Newcastle the largest indoor shopping centre in Europe the MetroCentre is located in Gateshead Population edit nbsp Newcastle upon Tyne population pyramid in 2021 nbsp Jesmond has become an affluent area and is popular with students nbsp Stanhope Street in Arthur s Hill is home to one of the largest Asian communities in North East England nbsp Gosforth High Street in the north of the city According to the ONS Newcastle had a population of 293 000 in 2015 226 Tyneside made up of Newcastle and the surrounding metropolitan boroughs of Gateshead North Tyneside and South Tyneside has a population of approximately 880 000 making it the eighth most populous urban area in the UK 227 The wider metropolitan area of Tyneside Wearside has a population of approximately 1 122 000 Additionally Newcastle is home to a large temporary population of students from Newcastle and Northumbria universities Areas of suburban Newcastle with significant student populations include Jesmond Shieldfield Gosforth Sandyford Spital Tongues and Heaton 228 Year Population1801 33 322 33322 1851 80 184 80184 1901 246 905 246905 1911 293 944 293944 1921 309 820 309820 1931 326 576 326576 1941 333 286 333286 1951 340 155 340155 1961 323 844 323844 1971 308 317 308317 1981 272 923 272923 1991 277 723 277723 2001 259 573 259573 2011 292 200 292200 2019 229 302 820 302820 Demographics edit Age edit According to the same statistics the average age of people living in Newcastle is 37 8 years compared to the national average being of 38 6 years Religion edit From the 2011 Census two significant religions could be identified in the city Christian and Muslim 56 6 of Newcastle identified as Christian and 6 3 as Muslim 230 Over 28 stated they have no religious affiliation Ethnicity and nationality edit According to the 2011 census 231 the metropolitan borough of Newcastle upon Tyne was predominately white representing 85 3 of the population including non British white Asians made up 9 8 of the population 2 3 Pakistani 1 7 Bangladeshi 1 8 Indian 2 2 Chinese 1 8 Asian other Black people make up a small proportion of the population 1 7 Black African 0 1 Black Caribbean and 0 1 Black other as do mixed race groups at 1 6 0 6 Asian and White 0 3 White and Caribbean 0 3 White and African 0 4 White and Other The last significantly sized ethnic community in Newcastle is Arab at 0 9 The remainder of the population 0 5 represent other ethnicities Large populations of ethnic minorities can be found in areas such as Elswick Wingrove and Arthurs Hill 232 According to the 2011 UK Census those born outside the UK were mainly from India 3 315 China 3 272 Pakistan 2 644 Bangladesh 2 276 Poland 1 473 Germany 1 357 Nigeria 1 226 Iran 1 164 Hong Kong 1 038 and Ireland 942 232 In the North East Newcastle was the most ethnically diverse district followed by Middlesbrough There are also small but significant Chinese Jewish and Eastern European populations The International Organization for Migration states there are estimated to be between 500 and 2 000 Bolivians in Newcastle one of the largest populations in any city in the UK 233 234 Ethnic Group Year1991 235 2001 236 2011 237 2021 238 Number Number Number Number White Total 248 990 96 241 684 93 1 239 533 85 5 240 002 80 White British 235 259 90 6 229 520 81 9 223 567 74 5 White Irish 1 733 1 826 1 895 0 6 White Gypsy or Irish Traveller 163 332 0 1 White Roma 1 031 0 3 White Other 4 692 8 024 13 177 4 4 Asian or Asian British Total 8 610 3 3 13 243 5 1 27 107 9 7 34 128 11 3 Asian or Asian British Indian 2 198 3 098 5 072 7 304 2 4 Asian or Asian British Pakistani 2 920 4 842 6 364 8 753 2 9 Asian or Asian British Bangladeshi 1 300 2 607 4 692 7 248 2 4 Asian or Asian British Chinese 1 213 1 871 6 037 5 382 1 8 Asian or Asian British Other Asian 979 825 4 942 5 441 1 8 Black or Black British Total 950 0 4 959 0 4 5 160 1 8 9 921 3 3 Black or Black British Caribbean 196 133 217 340 0 1 Black or Black British African 496 738 4 664 8 555 2 9 Black or Black British Other Black 258 88 279 1 026 0 3 Mixed or British Mixed Total 2 290 0 9 4 279 1 5 6 920 2 4 Mixed White and Black Caribbean 398 830 915 0 3 Mixed White and Black African 403 859 1 378 0 5 Mixed White and Asian 912 1 609 2 600 0 9 Mixed Other Mixed 577 981 2 027 0 7 Other Total 991 0 4 1 360 0 5 4 098 1 5 9 156 3 1 Other Arab 2 602 4 175 1 4 Other Any other ethnic group 991 0 4 1 360 0 5 1 496 4 981 1 7 Total 259 541 100 259 536 100 280 177 100 300 127 100 Geordies edit Main article Geordie The regional nickname for people from Newcastle and the surrounding area is Geordie The Latin term Novocastrian can equally be applied to residents of any place called Newcastle although it is most commonly used for ex pupils of the city s Royal Grammar School 239 Dialect edit The dialect of Newcastle is also referred to as Geordie It contains a large amount of vocabulary and distinctive words and pronunciations not used in other parts of the United Kingdom The Geordie dialect has much of its origins in the language spoken by the Anglo Saxon populations who migrated to and conquered much of England after the end of Roman Imperial rule This language was the forerunner of Modern English but while the dialects of other English regions have been heavily altered by the influences of other foreign languages particularly Latin and Norman French the Geordie dialect retains many elements of the old language An example of this is the pronunciation of certain words dead cow house and strong are pronounced deed coo hoos and strang which is how they were pronounced in the Anglo Saxon language Other Geordie words with Anglo Saxon origins include larn from the Anglo Saxon laeran meaning teach burn stream and gan go 240 According to the British Library Locals insist there are significant differences between Geordie and several other local dialects such as Pitmatic and Mackem Pitmatic is the dialect of the former mining areas in County Durham and around Ashington to the north of Newcastle upon Tyne while Mackem is used locally to refer to the dialect of the city of Sunderland and the surrounding urban area of Wearside 241 Bairn and hyem meaning child and home respectively are examples of Geordie words with origins in Scandinavia 242 barn and hjem are the corresponding modern Norwegian and Danish words Some words used in the Geordie dialect are used elsewhere in the Northern United Kingdom The words bonny meaning pretty and stot bounce are used in Scots aye yes and nowt IPA naʊt rhymes with out nothing are used elsewhere in Northern England Many words however appear to be used exclusively in Newcastle and the surrounding area such as canny a versatile word meaning good nice or very hacky dirty netty toilet hockle spit 243 Health edit nbsp Royal Victoria InfirmaryAccording to research from 2011 public health and levels of deprivation in Newcastle upon Tyne was generally worse than average in England 244 As levels of deprivation is considerably higher than the nationwide average sociologists argue that as a result the life expectancy for both men and women is lower than the nationwide average There is significant discrepancy between life expectancies in wealthy areas and deprived areas with life expectancy up to 14 3 years lower for men and 11 1 years lower for women in deprived areas than in wealthy areas 245 From 2015 to 2019 Newcastle became relatively more deprived according to the Index of Multiple Deprivation 246 From 2001 to 2011 as with all UK cities all cause mortality rates have fallen life expectancy has increased Early death rates from cancer and from heart disease and stroke have fallen but remain worse than the England average Almost 21 9 of Year 6 children are clinically obese In 2014 5 35 9 of 10 to 11 year olds were classified as overweight or obese in comparison to a national average of 33 2 247 54 9 of pupils meet the recommendation of at least three hours each week on school sport Levels of teenage pregnancy are higher than the nationwide average In 2011 GCSE attainment amongst school children was worse than the England average 248 Estimated numbers of adults healthy eating are lower than the England average 249 Rates of smoking related deaths 250 and hospital stays for alcohol related harm are higher than average 251 Newcastle remains one of the few major cities in England to supply fluoridated water this scheme is directed by Northumbria Water plc 252 Newcastle has two large teaching hospitals the Royal Victoria Infirmary and the Freeman Hospital which is also a pioneering centre for transplant surgery In a report published in early February 2007 by the Ear Institute at the University College London and Widex Newcastle was named as the noisiest city in the whole of the UK with an average noise level of 80 4 decibels The report claimed that these noise levels would have a negative long term impact on the health of the city s residents 253 The report was criticised however for attaching too much weight to readings at arbitrarily selected locations which in Newcastle s case included a motorway underpass without pedestrian access 254 As well as numerous parks open spaces and extensive riverside areas puzzlingly the report also overlooked the 1000 acre Town Moor at the heart of the city Larger than London s Hyde Park and Hampstead Heath combined 255 and even larger than New York s Central Park the town moor dates back to the 12th century with the land tenure and its use being regulated by an Act of Parliament Sport edit nbsp St James Park during a match between Newcastle United and Manchester UnitedThe city has a strong sporting tradition Football club Newcastle United has been based at St James Park since the club was established in 1892 although any traces of the original structure are now long gone as the stadium now holds more than 52 000 seated spectators being England s seventh largest football stadium 256 The city also has non League football clubs Newcastle Benfield West Allotment Celtic Team Northumbria and Heaton Stannington There is a women s football team Newcastle United Women s Football Club founded in 1989 Newcastle United W F C currently has 40 ladies aged between 16 and 29 years signed or associated with the club and plays in the FA Women s Premier League North 257 The Newcastle Falcons are the only rugby union team in north east England to have played in the Aviva Premiership They play at Kingston Park Stadium in the northern suburb of Kingston Park 1996 Pilkington Shield winners Medicals RFC are also based in Newcastle Newcastle Thunder formerly Gateshead Thunder are a professional rugby league club based in the city who now also play at Kingston Park Stadium They currently play in the Kingstone Press League 1 Since 2015 the Super League Magic Weekend has been played annually in the city at St James Park Newcastle has a horse racing course at Gosforth Park 258 The city is also home to the Newcastle Eagles basketball team who play their home games at the new Sport Central complex at Northumbria University 259 The Eagles are the most successful team in the history of the British Basketball League BBL 260 The city s speedway team Newcastle Diamonds are based at Brough Park in Byker a venue that is also home to greyhound racing Newcastle also hosts the start of the annual Great North Run the world s largest half marathon 261 in which participants race over the Tyne Bridge into Gateshead and then towards the finish line 13 1 miles 21 1 km away on the coast at South Shields 262 Another athletic event is the 5 9 mile 9 5 km Blaydon Race a road race from Newcastle to Blaydon which has taken place on 9 June annually since 1981 to commemorate the celebrated Blaydon Races horse racing 263 The 2012 London Olympic committee selected Newcastle as one of the UK host venue cities 264 265 with the stadium St James Park hosting 9 matches in both the men s and women s football 266 The Newcastle Warriors were a professional ice hockey team that played the 1995 96 season in the British Hockey League The Newcastle Vipers were also a professional ice hockey team in the British National League from 2002 and then the Elite Ice Hockey League between 2005 and 2011 when the team folded Newcastle upon Tyne was one of the 11 host cities for the 2015 Rugby World Cup 267 St James Park hosted three matches South Africa v Scotland 3 October 2015 New Zealand v Tonga 9 October 2015 Samoa v Scotland 10 October 2015 Transport editAir edit Main article Newcastle International Airport nbsp Aircraft at Newcastle International AirportNewcastle International Airport is situated on the northern outskirts of the city at Woolsington near to Ponteland It is the largest and busiest airport in North East England and the second largest and busiest in Northern England behind Manchester handling over five million passengers per year It is also the tenth largest and the fastest growing regional airport in the UK 268 expecting to reach 10 million passengers by 2016 and 15 million by 2030 269 As of 2007 update Newcastle Airport operates flights to 90 destinations worldwide 270 The airport is serviced by numerous airlines including British Airways Jet2 easyJet Emirates Ryanair Air France TUI Airways Loganair KLM and Eurowings The airport is connected to Central Newcastle by the Tyne and Wear Metro with an average journey between Central Station Metro station and Newcastle Airport Metro station taking approximately 20 minutes Rail edit nbsp Central StationNewcastle Central Station is a principal stop on the East Coast Main Line and Cross Country Route It is one of the busiest stations in Britain 271 Train operator London North Eastern Railway 272 provides a half hourly frequency of trains to London King s Cross with a variable journey time of between two and three hours and north to Scotland with all trains calling at Edinburgh Waverley and a small number of trains extended to Glasgow Central Aberdeen and Inverness 273 CrossCountry links Newcastle with destinations in Yorkshire the Midlands and the South West TransPennine Express operates services to the North West Northern Trains provide local and regional services Additionally ScotRail offer an infrequent service to Glasgow Central In 2014 work was completed on the station s historic entrance 271 Glazing was placed over the historic arches and the Victorian architecture was enhanced transforming the 19th century public portico 271 The station is one of only six Grade One listed railway stations in the UK 271 Opened in 1850 by Queen Victoria it was the first covered railway station in the world and was much copied across the UK It has a neoclassical facade originally designed by the architect John Dobson and was constructed in collaboration with Robert Stephenson 274 275 The station sightlines towards the Castle Keep whilst showcasing the curvature of the station s arched roof 271 The first services were operated by the North Eastern Railway company The other mainline station in Newcastle is Manors exclusively served by Northern Trains Metro edit Main article Tyne and Wear Metro nbsp Map of the Tyne and Wear MetroThe city is served by the Tyne and Wear Metro a system of suburban and underground railways covering much of Newcastle and the surrounding metropolitan boroughs It was opened in five phases between 1980 and 1984 and was Britain s first urban light rail transit system 276 The network was developed from a combination of existing and newly built tracks and stations with deep level tunnels constructed through Central Newcastle 277 278 A bridge was built across the Tyne between Newcastle and Gateshead and opened by Queen Elizabeth II in 1981 279 Extensions to the network were opened in 1991 and 2002 280 It is operated directly by Nexus carrying over 37 million passengers a year 281 In 2004 the company Marconi designed and constructed the mobile radio system to the underground Metro system 282 The Metro system was the first in the UK to have mobile phone antennae installed in the tunnels 283 The Metro consists of two lines The Green line begins at Newcastle Airport goes through Central Newcastle and into the City of Sunderland terminating at South Hylton The yellow line starts at St James runs north of the river alongside Byker towards Whitley Bay before returning to Central Newcastle then connecting to Gateshead Interchange before finally terminating at South Shields The system is currently undergoing a period of refurbishment and modernisation entitled Metro All Change The programme has replaced all ticket machines and introduced ticket gates at the busiest stations part of the transition to smart ticketing All Metro trains are being completely refurbished and most stations are undergoing improvement works or in some cases complete reconstruction for example North Shields In addition tracks signalling and overhead wires are also being overhauled 284 Longer term plans include the procurement of an entirely new fleet of trains and further extensions to the system Proposed routes include to Newcastle s west end to the Cobalt Business Park in North Tyneside to the Metrocentre in Gateshead and to additional locations in Gateshead South Tyneside and Sunderland Several of the proposed routes would require trams as opposed to the current light rail trains 285 Road edit nbsp Tyne BridgeMajor roads in the area include the A1 Newcastle Gateshead Western Bypass stretching north to Edinburgh and south to London the A19 heading south past Sunderland and Middlesbrough to York and Doncaster the A69 heading west to Carlisle the A696 which becomes the A68 heads past Newcastle Airport and up through central Northumberland and central Scottish Borders the A167 the old Great North Road heading south to Gateshead Chester le Street Durham and Darlington and the A1058 Coast Road which runs from Jesmond to the east coast between Tynemouth and Cullercoats Many of these designations are recent upon completion of the Western Bypass and its designation as the new line of the A1 the roads between this and the A1 s former alignment through the Tyne Tunnel were renumbered with many city centre roads changing from a 6 prefix 286 to their present 1 prefix numbers In November 2011 the capacity of the Tyne Tunnel was increased when a project to build a second road tunnel and refurbish the first tunnel was completed 287 BusBus services in Newcastle upon Tyne and the surrounding boroughs part are coordinated by the Tyne and Wear Passenger Transport Executive 288 Stagecoach North East is the primary bus operator in the city running city services between both the West and East ends with some services extending out to the MetroCentre Killingworth Wallsend and Ponteland Go North East provides the majority of services to and from the south of the Tyne linking Newcastle with Gateshead South Tyneside Sunderland and County Durham Arriva North East runs numerous services to the north of city North Tyneside and Northumberland Additionally QuayLink connects Newcastle and Gateshead to the Quayside Newcastle Central coach station is the city s main hub for long distance services such as those operated by National Express Other major bus departure points are Pilgrim Street for buses running south of the Tyne via Gateshead and Blackett Street Monument for services to the East and West of the city Many bus services also pass Newcastle Central Station a major interchange for rail and metro services 289 Cycling edit Newcastle is accessible by several mostly traffic free cycle routes that lead to the edges of the city centre where cyclists can continue into the city by road using no car lanes The traffic free C2C cycle route runs along the north bank of the River Tyne enabling cyclists to travel off road to North Shields and Tynemouth in the east and westwards towards Hexham Suburban cycle routes exist which use converted trackbeds of former industrial wagonways and industrial railways A network on Tyneside s suburban Victorian waggonways is being developed 290 A network of signed on road cycle routes is being established 291 including some designated on road cycle lanes that will lead from the city centre to the suburbs of Gosforth Heaton and Wallsend Newcastle has a growing culture of bicycle usage Newcastle is also home to a cycling campaign called the Newcastle Cycling Campaign 292 The ideal of the organisation is to model other European cities like Amsterdam and Copenhagen 292 The aims of the organisation within the constitution are To raise the profile of cycling especially utility cycling around the city 293 to educate decision makers over the benefits of cycling 293 to promote equality 293 Following guidelines set in the National Cycling strategy Newcastle first developed its cycling strategy in 1998 294 As of 2012 update the city council s social aims and objectives for cycling include highlighting the usage of cycling to cut city congestion and educating that cycling promotes healthy living 291 The authority also has infrastructure aims and objectives which include developing on road cycle networks on quieter streets making safer routes on busier streets innovating and implementing contraflows on one way streets developing the existing off road cycle route networks and improve signage joining up routes that are partially or completely isolated Increase the number of cycle parking facilities working with employers to integrate cycling into workplace travel plans link the local networks to national networks 291 Water edit DFDS Seaways runs a ferry service to IJmuiden near Amsterdam in The Netherlands 295 from Newcastle International Ferry Terminal located in North Shields The DFDS ferry service to Gothenburg Sweden ceased at the end of October 2006 and their service to Bergen and Stavanger Norway was terminated in late 2008 The company cited high fuel prices and new competition from low cost air services as the cause However since summer 2007 Thomson cruise lines have included Newcastle as a departure port on its Norwegian and Fjords cruise 296 Government and politics editMain article Newcastle City Council nbsp Newcastle Civic Centre meeting place of the City CouncilNewcastle is a metropolitan borough with city status governed by Newcastle City Council Since 2018 the council has been a member of the North of Tyne Combined Authority which is due to be replaced by the larger North East Mayoral Combined Authority in May 2024 297 There are six civil parishes within the city boundaries at Blakelaw and North Fenham Brunswick Dinnington Hazlerigg North Gosforth and Woolsington which form an additional tier of local government for their areas The rest of the city is an unparished area 298 Administrative history edit Newcastle was an ancient borough It is said to have been made a borough by William II reigned 1087 1100 although the earliest known charter was granted by Henry II reigned 1154 1189 In 1400 a new charter from Henry IV gave the borough the right to hold its own courts and appoint its own sheriffs making it a county corporate independent from the Sheriff of Northumberland 299 Whilst administratively independent Newcastle was still deemed part of the geographical county of Northumberland for the purposes of lieutenancy until 1974 300 301 The Northumberland assizes were held at the Castle in Newcastle and subsequently at the Moot Hall built within the castle site in 1811 302 The Moot Hall also served as the meeting place of Northumberland County Council from its creation in 1889 until 1981 when the county council moved to Morpeth 303 Newcastle was therefore sometimes described as the county town of Northumberland 304 although that title was also claimed by Alnwick where knights of the shire were elected until the Reform Act 1832 305 nbsp Guildhall built 1655 Town council s headquarters until 1863Until the 1830s the borough just covered the four parishes of All Saints St Andrew St John and St Nicholas 299 The parliamentary borough constituency was enlarged in 1832 to also take in Byker Elswick Heaton Jesmond and Westgate 306 The municipal boundaries were enlarged to match the constituency in 1836 when Newcastle was reformed to become a municipal borough under the Municipal Corporations Act 1835 which standardised how most boroughs operated across the country 307 Newcastle was awarded city status in 1882 When elected county councils were established in 1889 Newcastle was considered large enough to provide its own county level services and so it was made a county borough 308 The city boundaries were enlarged on several occasions notably in 1904 when it absorbed Benwell Fenham and Walker 309 and in 1935 when it absorbed Kenton and parts of neighbouring parishes 310 In 1906 the city was given the right to appoint a Lord Mayor 311 In 1974 the county borough was replaced by a larger metropolitan borough within the new county of Tyne and Wear The borough gained the area of the former urban districts of Gosforth and Newburn and the parishes of Brunswick Dinnington Hazlerigg North Gosforth and Woolsington It also gained the Moot Hall which until 1974 had been an exclave of the administrative county of Northumberland surrounded by the city 312 313 Newcastle s city status was transferred to the enlarged borough at the same time 314 From 1974 until 1986 the city council was a lower tier district authority with Tyne and Wear County Council providing county level services The county council was abolished in 1986 since when the city council has again provided both district level and county level services as it had done when it was a county borough prior to 1974 Some functions are provided across Tyne and Wear by joint committees with the other districts The county of Tyne and Wear continues to exist as a ceremonial county for the purposes of lieutenancy but has had no administrative functions since 1986 315 UK Parliament edit Newcastle is represented by three elected Members of Parliament MPs in the House of Commons the lower house of the Parliament of the United Kingdom Two of the current MPs are from the Labour Party and one sits as an independent Newcastle upon Tyne Central Newcastle upon Tyne East Newcastle upon Tyne NorthChi Onwurah Nick Brown Catherine McKinnell nbsp nbsp nbsp Labour Independent LabourEU referendum edit In the 2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum Newcastle voted for the United Kingdom to remain in the European Union with a ratio of 51 49 in favour of remain compared to a national ratio of 48 52 in favour of leave 316 Education editSchools and colleges edit See also List of schools in Newcastle upon Tyne Newcastle has 74 primary schools and 20 secondary schools of which 13 are LEA funded and 7 are fee paying independent schools There are a number of critically acclaimed state secondary schools including Walker Riverside Academy Gosforth Academy Jesmond Park Academy St Cuthbert s High School St Mary s Catholic School Kenton School Sacred Heart Excelsior Academy Walbottle Academy and Benfield School The largest co educational independent school is the Royal Grammar School The largest girls independent school is Newcastle High School for Girls Both schools are located on the same street in Jesmond Newcastle School for Boys is the only independent boys only school in the city and is situated in Gosforth Other independent schools include Dame Allan s School Newcastle College is the largest general further education FE college in North East England and is a Beacon Status college There are also two smaller FE colleges in Newcastle Universities edit The city has two major universities Newcastle University and Northumbria University Newcastle University has its origins in the Durham University School of Medicine and Surgery established in 1834 It became fully independent on 1 August 1963 forming the University of Newcastle upon Tyne now simply Newcastle University It is a red brick university and is a member of the Russell Group an association of research intensive UK universities often considered to represent the best UK universities 317 318 It won the Sunday Times University of the Year award in 2000 319 It was awarded the Gold Award in the Teaching Excellence Framework TEF one of only ten Russell Group universities to achieve the Gold TEF rating 320 Northumbria University has its origins in Newcastle Polytechnic established in 1969 and becoming the University of Northumbria at Newcastle in 1992 as part of the UK wide process in which polytechnics became new universities Northumbria University was voted Best New University by The Times Good University Guide 2005 It holds the Silver TEF Award Museums and galleries edit There are several museums and galleries in Newcastle including the Centre for Life 321 with its Science Village 322 the Discovery Museum 323 a museum highlighting life on Tyneside including Tyneside s shipbuilding heritage and inventions which changed the world the Great North Museum 324 in 2009 the Newcastle on Tyne Museum of Antiquities merged with the Great North Museum Hancock Museum 325 Seven Stories the National Centre for Children s Books 145 146 the Side Gallery with historical and contemporary photography from around the world and Northern England 326 and the Newburn Motor Museum 327 The Laing Art Gallery similarly to other art galleries and museums around the world has collections digitised on the Google Cultural Institute 328 329 an initiative that makes important cultural material accessible online Religious sites edit nbsp St Nicholas Cathedral as seen from the CastleSee also Diocese of Newcastle Diocese of Hexham and Newcastle and North East Jewry Newcastle has three cathedrals the Anglican St Nicholas with its elegant lantern tower of 1474 the Roman Catholic St Mary s designed by Augustus Welby Pugin and the Coptic Orthodox Cathedral in Fenham 330 All three cathedrals began their lives as parish churches St Mary s became a cathedral in 1850 and St Nicholas in 1882 Another prominent church in the city centre is the Church of St Thomas the Martyr which is unique as the only Church of England church without a parish and which is not a peculiar One of the largest evangelical Anglican churches in the UK is Jesmond Parish Church situated a little to the north of the city centre Newcastle is home to the only Bahaʼi Centre in North East England the centre has served the local Bahaʼi community for over 25 years and is located close to the Civic Centre in Jesmond Newcastle was a prominent centre of the Plymouth Brethren movement up to the 1950s and some small congregations still function Among these are at the Hall Denmark Street and Gospel Hall St Lawrence The Parish Church of St Andrew is traditionally recognised as the oldest church in this town 331 The present building was begun in the 12th Century and the last addition to it apart from the vestries was the main porch in 1726 332 It is quite possible that there was an earlier church here dating from Saxon times This older church would have been one of several churches along the River Tyne dedicated to St Andrew including the Priory church at Hexham 332 The building contains more old stonework than any other church in Newcastle It is surrounded by the last of the ancient churchyards to retain its original character Many key names associated with Newcastle s history worshipped and were buried here The church tower received a battering during the Siege of Newcastle by the Scots who finally breached the Town Wall and forced surrender Three of the cannonballs remain on site as testament to the siege 332 Notable people editMain article List of people from Newcastle upon Tyne This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Newcastle upon Tyne news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Charles Avison the leading British composer of concertos in the 18th century was born in Newcastle upon Tyne in 1709 and died there in 1770 333 Basil Hume Archbishop of Westminster was born in the city in 1923 334 Vice Admiral Cuthbert Collingwood 1st Baron Collingwood was born in the city 335 Ironmaster metallurgist and member of parliament Isaac Lowthian Bell was born in the city in 1816 336 Other notable people born in or associated with Newcastle include engineer and industrialist Lord Armstrong 337 engineer and father of the modern steam railways George Stephenson his son also an engineer Robert Stephenson engineer and inventor of the steam turbine Sir Charles Parsons inventor of the incandescent light bulb Sir Joseph Swan actor and comedian Rowan Atkinson 338 industrial designer Sir Jonathan Ive who studied at Newcastle Polytechnic now Northumbria University modernist poet Basil Bunting 339 and Lord Chief Justice Peter Taylor Portuguese writer Eca de Queiroz was a diplomat in Newcastle from late 1874 until April 1879 his most productive literary period 340 Former Prime Minister of Thailand Abhisit Vejjajiva 341 was born in the city Composer Agustin Fernandez has been based in the city since 1995 teaching at Newcastle University and occasionally collaborating with Royal Northern Sinfonia Musicians Cheryl Eric Burdon Sting Mark Knopfler the Lighthouse Family Jeffrey Dunn Brian Johnson Alan Hull Sakima and Neil Tennant lived in Newcastle Hank Marvin and Bruce Welch were both former pupils of Rutherford Grammar School 342 Actors Charlie Hunnam and James Scott 343 entertainers Ant amp Dec and footballers Michael Carrick and Alan Shearer were also born in Newcastle Multiple circumnavigator David Scott Cowper Nobel Prize winning physicist Peter Higgs who researched the mass of subatomic particles 344 and wrestler Benjamin Satterley were born in the city John Dunn inventor of the keyed Northumbrian smallpipes lived and worked in the city Kathryn Tickell the celebrated Northumbrian piper and composer has longstanding associations with Newcastle as a resident frequent performer at Sage Gateshead and teacher at Newcastle University Marc Smith born 1963 French palaeographer was born in Newcastle Freddy Shepherd former chairman of Newcastle United F C for ten years lived in Newcastle upon Tyne until his death in 2017 International relations editTwin towns sister cities edit See also List of twin towns and sister cities in the United Kingdom Newcastle upon Tyne is twinned with Newcastle Australia 345 Atlanta Georgia U S 1977 346 Groningen Netherlands 347 Bergen Norway 1968 348 349 Gelsenkirchen Germany 1948 350 Haifa Israel 351 Nancy France 1954 352 353 Taiyuan China 1985 unilaterally terminated by Newcastle upon Tyne in 2022 354 355 Other agreements edit Newcastle has a friendship agreement with the American city of Little Rock Arkansas 356 Since 2003 it has had a special cooperation agreement with the Swedish city of Malmo 357 Furthermore Newcastle participated in the 1998 summit of worldwide cities named Newcastle 358 which led to friendship agreements with the following places Neuburg an der Donau Germany Neuchatel Switzerland Neufchateau Vosges France New Castle Delaware United States New Castle Indiana United States New Castle Pennsylvania United States Newcastle under Lyme England Newcastle KwaZulu Natal South Africa Shinshiro JapanForeign consulates edit The following countries have consular representation in Newcastle Denmark 359 Finland Romania Belgium 360 France 361 Germany 362 Iceland 363 Italy 364 Norway 365 and Sweden 366 See also edit nbsp North East England portalList of tallest buildings and structures in Newcastle upon Tyne List of public art in Newcastle upon Tyne List of Freemen of the City of Newcastle upon Tyne Duke of NewcastleReferences editCitations edit a b Newcastle upon Tyne North East Ordnance Survey Retrieved 16 January 2024 How we run the city Newcastle City Council Retrieved 16 January 2024 Mid Year Population Estimates UK June 2021 Office for National Statistics 21 December 2022 Retrieved 18 October 2023 Towns and cities characteristics of built up areas England and Wales Census 2021 Census 2021 Office for National Statistics Retrieved 29 March 2024 Mid Year Population Estimates UK June 2021 Office for National Statistics 21 December 2022 Retrieved 18 October 2023 a b UK Census 2021 2021 Census Area Profile Newcastle upon Tyne Local Authority E08000021 Nomis Office for National Statistics Retrieved 9 January 2024 a b Fenton Trevor 25 April 2023 Regional gross domestic product city regions Office for National Statistics Retrieved 2 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