Bakewell
Bakewell— old charm and pudding BAKEWELL Moorlands in the English countryside always bring back to my memory Emily Brontë’s ‘Wuthering Heights.’ There, she vividly described the nineteenth-century Yorkshire moorland as open, wild, and exposed, with untamed wind force and brooding character. The neighbouring Derbyshire moor, which we saw from Monsal Head, a Peak District viewpoint, was, in contrast, somewhat softer and more picturesque. Maybe because we saw it as tourists in the twenty-first century. On our way back, we took a brief halt at a small, charming town. It was a pleasant surprise, as I had no previous knowledge about the town and its breathtaking beauty. Nor had I come across the name of this town, which is so heavily wrapped with history right from the Anglo-Saxon era. Early settlement around the 9th – 10th centuries is associated with a cluster of warm springs by the River Wye. Archaeologists have e...