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  Home > United Kingdom > England > Cambridgeshire > Attractions
 
 
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The Eagle (DNA)   
This public house is one of the oldest in Cambridge, but is world renowned for far more than a drinking den. Popular with scientists due to its proximity to the University’s Cavendish laboratories it was the place that the first announcement was made that DNA had been discovered.


The Fitzwilliam Museum   
The Fitzwilliam Museum houses magnificent collections of art and antiquities of international importance – sculpture; furniture; paintings by Titian, Rubens, Van Dyck, Canaletto, Constable, Monet, Renoir, Cézanne and Picasso; drawings and prints. We can also offer guided tours, gallery talks, family activities, an education and events programme, cafe and shop..


The Junction   
The Junction is one of East Anglia’s premier arts and music venues. The facility comprises of three main auditoriums; a 1000 capacity venue for bands and club nights, a modern and versatile 220 capacity theatre and a dedicated rehearsal and workshop facility with dance capability.


The Manor   
Built in about 1130, the Manor is one of the oldest continuously inhabited house in Britain. Made famous as the house of Green Knowe by the author Lucy Boston, it contains many items featured in her stories and readers can walk into the books.


The Orchard   
The Orchard at Grantchester is a little corner of England where time has stood still. A few miles up river from the city of Cambridge, this tranquil garden and tearooms has offered an oasis to students, tourists and villagers for centuries.


The Raptor Foundation   
The Raptor Foundation is a bird of prey sanctuary and hospital which serves as a unique and exciting place for children and adults alike to meet and learn about owls, hawks, falcons and buzzards.


The Round Church at St Andrew the Great   
This unique church is one of Cambridge’s most photographed attractions. The unusual church that’s completely round is situated close to the historic centre of the city and close to the river.


The Rupert Brooke Museum   
This small museum is situated close to the world famous ‘Orchard’ in the Cambridgeshire village of Grantchester. Rupert Brooke, one of the nations favourite and most celebrated poets, frequented the area around Grantchester and also has a pub named after him.


Trinity College   
Trinity is the largest of all the colleges at either Oxford or Cambridge University. The college was founded in 1546 by Henry VIII and has long been the richest of all the colleges with an estimated financial endowment of over £700 million.


Trinity Hall   
The devastation caused by the Black Death plague of the 1340s caused the loss of nearly half of the English population; Bishop Bateman himself lost nearly 700 of his parish priests, and so his decision to found a college was probably centred around a need to rebuild the priesthood.


     
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