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Canterbury, Kent
Canterbury, KentSt. Augustine's Abbey, Canterbury, Kent, England.

Kent

county, England, United Kingdom

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Reform UK’s Kent council faces ‘extreme risk’ after passing first budget Feb. 13, 2026, 4:21 AM ET (The Guardian)
Tonbridge Castle
Tonbridge CastleTonbridge Castle gatehouse (left) and mansion, Tonbridge and Malling, Kent, England.

Kent, administrative, geographic, and historiccounty ofEngland, lying at the southeastern extremity ofGreat Britain. It is bordered to the southwest byEast Sussex, to the west bySurrey, to the northwest byGreater London, to the north by theThames estuary, to the northeast by theNorth Sea, to the east by theStrait of Dover, and to the southeast by theEnglish Channel The north-central town ofMaidstone is the county seat.

The administrative, geographic, and historic counties occupy somewhat different areas. The administrative county has 12 districts:Dover,Sevenoaks,Shepway, andThanet, the boroughs ofAshford,Dartford,Gravesham, Maidstone,Swale,Tonbridge and Malling, andTunbridge Wells, and the city ofCanterbury. The geographic countycomprises the entire administrative county plus the unitary authority ofMedway. The historic county includes the entire geographic county as well as eastern portions of Greater London, including all or most of the boroughs ofBexley,Bromley,Greenwich, andLewisham.

Romney Marsh
Romney MarshRomney Marsh, Kent, England.

A line ofchalk hills (the NorthDowns) running from west to east forms the spine of the county. North of the ridge the land falls to the marshy and low-lying shore of the Thames estuary, and to the south there is an area of clays and sands forming a rolling wooded region known asThe Weald. The long coastline of Kent is alternately flat and cliff-lined. The low Thames coast is bordered by marshes and islands (Grain and Sheppey), and farther east the formerIsle of Thanet now forms part of Kent. There are chalk cliffs at Thanet at the North Foreland and again between Dover andDeal, but farther south is the low-lying area ofRomney Marsh, which has emerged from the sea, in part by reclamation, since Roman times. In the extreme southeast is the shingle promontory ofDungeness.

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Roman fort near Richborough, Kent
Roman fort near Richborough, KentRuins of a Roman fort on the grounds of Richborough Castle, Richborough, Kent, England.

Because of its position facing the continent of Europe across the Strait of Dover, Kent has been subjected to numerous invasions and has attracted successive waves of settlement. Evidence of early Continental invaders is seen at Kits Coty House near Aylesford, a longbarrow at Chilham, and Bigbury (a Belgic hill fort). Roman settlement began with the subjugation of the area in 43ce. The chief Roman supply port wasRichborough, and the administrative centre was atCanterbury, where Roman baths and a theatre have been unearthed. Early in the 5th century Kent was invaded byJutes and Saxons, and it became one of the seven kingdoms of Anglo-SaxonBritain. In 597 the king of Kent welcomed the Christian mission of Augustine (laterSt. Augustine of Canterbury). Augustine founded an abbey outside the walls of Canterbury, a monastery inside (where the cathedral now stands), and a second diocese (604) atRochester.

Canterbury Cathedral
Canterbury CathedralThe cathedral at Canterbury, Kent, England.

After theNorman Conquest (1066), the Normans rebuilt Rochester and Canterbury cathedrals and constructed a number of castles, of which those at Dover and Rochester survive. In 1170Canterbury Cathedral was the scene of the murder ofThomas Becket, the archbishop. Many pilgrims subsequently visited his shrine, and those of the 14th century were immortalized byGeoffrey Chaucer in hisThe Canterbury Tales.

Deal Castle
Deal CastleDeal Castle, Kent, England.

TheTudor monarchs established a royal palace at Greenwich, the birthplace ofHenry VIII. Under the Tudors, in the 16th century, when defense of Britain’s shores became a preoccupation, coastal forts were built (e.g., at Deal), and naval dockyards were established at Deptford,Woolwich,Chatham and Sheerness. TheRoyal Greenwich Observatory was established in 1675. Sensitivity to the defense of Kent reached a peak in Napoleonic times and again in 1940 duringWorld War II, when a German invasion was expected.

As the neighbouring metropolis ofLondon grew, it expanded eastward into the historic county of Kent. In 1889 the present-day boroughs of Greenwich and Lewisham were incorporated into the new administrative county of London, and in 1965 the boroughs of Bexley and Bromley became part of the metropolitan county of Greater London as well.

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Rural Kent has long been known as the “Garden of England.” Fruits, especially apples and cherries, and hops are grown, mainly in the Medway valley and in north Kent. Market gardening is extensively practiced. Important arable crops include barley, wheat, oats, and potatoes. Romney Marsh, one of the world’s finest natural grasslands, is famous for its sheep, but a section of it has been plowed up for the production of spring flowers and bulbs. Industries includepapermaking along the Darent and Medway, engineering and the production of chemicals along the Thames, and the production of plastics, bricks, tiles, and cement on the Lower Medway and Swale. There are oil refineries on the Isle of Grain and railway workshops at Ashford.

Folkestone
FolkestoneHarbour of Folkestone, Kent, England.

The suburbs of London continue toencroach on the farmlands of northwestern Kent, and such towns as Sevenoaks and Tonbridge lie well within the commuter belt of the capital. Britain’s entry into theEuropean Economic Community (now theEuropean Union) in 1973 greatly strengthened links between the southeastern section of the county and the Continent by increasing Channel trade. The expansion of trade and the opening in 1994 of theChannel Tunnel, with a terminus atFolkestone, brought new importance to eastern Kent as a warehousing area and a focus of shipping and other transportation routes. Area administrative county, 1,368 square miles (3,543 square km); geographic county, 1,442 square miles (3,735 square km). Pop. (2001) administrative county, 1,329,718; geographic county, 1,579,206; (2011) administrative county, 1,463,740; geographic county, 1,727,665.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated byKenneth Pletcher.

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