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Explore England, Scotland, and Wales Quiz

Question: What is the highest mountain in Wales?
Answer: Snowdon, a mountain in northern Wales, is the highest point in England and Wales and the principal massif in the Snowdonia mountains.
Question: Which are the largest and most northerly of Scotland’s Outer Hebrides islands?
Answer: Lewis and Harris are the largest and most northerly of Scotland’s Outer Hebrides islands. They lie 24 miles (39 km) from the west coast of the Scottish mainland and are separated from it by the Minch channel.
Question: Cardigan Bay, located on the west coast of Wales, is an inlet of which sea?
Answer: Cardigan Bay is a scenic inlet of the Irish Sea indenting the west coast of Wales. It is about 65 miles (105 km) long from south-southwest to north-northeast.
Question: Which borough of London was a Roman settlement and served as a crossing point for ferries across the River Thames during the Middle Ages?
Answer: An inner borough of London, Wandsworth lies west of Lambeth and stretches for 5 miles (8 km) along the south bank of the River Thames. There is evidence of Iron Age and Roman settlement along the Thames at what is now the Putney district, which also served as a crossing point for ferries during the Middle Ages.
Question: Which historic region of northern Scotland spans the width of the country from the North Sea in the east to the Atlantic Ocean in the west?
Answer: Ross and Cromarty is the historic region of northern Scotland that spans the width of the country from the North Sea in the east to the Atlantic Ocean in the west. It comprises the historic counties of Ross-shire and Cromartyshire.
Question: Which river forms most of the boundary between the English counties of Suffolk and Essex?
Answer: In eastern England the River Stour rises in eastern Cambridgeshire, flows eastward through East Anglia, forming most of the county boundary between Suffolk and Essex, and enters the North Sea at Harwich by a tidal estuary.
Question: Which region in southwestern Scotland, the name of which is derived from the Gaelic name meaning “Stranger Gaels,” comprises the historic counties of Kirkcudbrightshire and Wigtownshire?
Answer: Galloway comprises the historic counties of Kirkcudbrightshire and Wigtownshire. The name Galloway is derived from the Gallgaidhel, or Gallwyddel (“Stranger Gaels”), the original Celtic people of this region.
Question: Which river in Scotland was the site of the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314?
Answer: The River Forth in eastern Scotland flows from west to east from its headwaters on the eastern slopes of Ben Lomond to the Firth of Forth (the estuary), near Kincardine. The river has a short highland section and a longer lowland section, falling only 80 feet (25 metres) in 55 miles (90 km). This stretch, called the Links of Forth, was the site of the Battle of Bannockburn, during which English troops suffered a major defeat at Scottish hands in 1314.
Question: What is Skara Brae, located on the Orkney Islands of Scotland?
Answer: Skara Brae is one of the most perfectly preserved Stone Age villages in Europe. It was covered for hundreds of years by a sand dune on the shore of the Bay of Skaill, Mainland, Orkney Islands, Scotland.
Question: Which borough in the English county of Surrey is known for its mineral springs?
Answer: Epsom and Ewell, a borough (district) in the historic county of Surrey, England, became important with the discovery (c. 1618) of mineral springs (from which Epsom salts derived).
Question: What is Tilbury, in southeastern England, known for?
Answer: The port of Tilbury is located in the historic county of Essex, England. It is known for its docks; constructed in 1884–86, they have been extensively modernized.
Question: In which administrative county of England would you find the Vale of White Horse?
Answer: The Vale of White Horse district is located in the administrative county of Oxfordshire, England. It encompasses the northern part of the historic county of Berkshire.
Question: Which of these places, in addition to being one of Europe’s main oil ports, is the main fishing port of Wales?
Answer: Milford Haven, located on the north shore of a deep natural harbour, is Wales’s main fishing port. It had gained importance as a fishing port by 1900, and after 1960 it became one of Europe’s leading oil ports.
Question: Which borough in Greater London was known as the Bridge Ward Without (or the ward of Bridge-without) in the 16th century?
Answer: In the mid-16th century the London borough of Southwark became known as the Bridge Ward Without or the ward of Bridge-without. It takes its name from London Bridge, with the addition of the word without because the bridge must be passed in order to reach it. Southwark was incorporated in 1327.
Question: For what is the English town of Royal Tunbridge Wells known?
Answer: The English town of Royal Tunbridge Wells developed into a spa after a medicinal spring (containing mild chalybeate waters) was discovered at the site in 1606. The location of the spa on several hills of the wooded district (known as the Weald) added to its popularity.
Question: Which city in Scotland lies within the historic county of Lanarkshire?
Answer: Glasgow lies entirely within the historic county of Lanarkshire in Scotland.
Question: What historic structure can be found between the River Severn near Chepstow, Wales, and the seaward end of the Dee estuary?
Answer: Offa’s Dyke is an earthwork that extends linearly, with some gaps, from the River Severn near Chepstow, Wales, to the seaward end of the Dee estuary, passing for 169 miles (270 km) through the counties of Gloucestershire, Herefordshire, Radnorshire, Montgomeryshire, Shropshire, Denbighshire, and Flintshire. It was built at the orders of Offa, a Mercian king of the second half of the 8th century, who sought to define the boundary between his kingdom and the lands of the Welsh.