Sandwich

England, United Kingdom
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Sandwich, town (parish) at the northern edge of Dover district, administrative and historic county of Kent, southeastern England. It lies along the River Stour, 2 miles (3 km) from the North Sea.

Originally, the tidewater came far enough up the Stour estuary to make Sandwich a port. By the 9th century the town had replaced the decayed Roman port of Richborough, and in the 11th century it became one of the Cinque Ports. It flourished during the Middle Ages and was chartered as a borough in 1226. English kings continually used it for their expeditions to France, and its herring fishing and general trade prospered. Progressive silting of the channel entrance led to its decay by the 17th century; an influx of French and Flemish Protestant refugees only temporarily revived its prosperity.

In modern times Sandwich has remained small, retaining many old buildings along the narrow winding streets within the line of the old walls, now marked by a public walk. Two of its medieval churches, St. Clement’s and St. Peter’s, are conspicuous buildings, as is St. Mary’s, which was rebuilt in 1667. Its golf course is well known. The town is nominally the seat of an earldom, whose best-known member, John Montagu, 4th Earl, popularized and lent his name to the sandwich. Pop. (2001) 4,753; (2011) 4,985.

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The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Kenneth Pletcher.