There are lots to see in York. Not just the Minster or the city walls. You have a couple of museums as well. The most known is perhaps the Jorvik Viking Centre, I visited the Vikings, but I was a bit disappointed... It was a bit .. to much... Or since I'm Swedish, I have seen it all before? But the excavation site was interesting.
york castle museum
A museum I did like was York Castle museum - if you want to get to know York, this is the place. The museum's displays include recreated period rooms such as a Victorian parlour and a Jacobean dining room. There is also a recreation of a Victorian street and an Edwardian street. Since the museum buildings is the former City jail, you can also see Dick Turpin's cell.
Next to York Castle museum, you have the Clifford's tower. From 1068, a part of the castle William the Conqueror built. I never went in, but I love the building.
the clifford's tower
In the York Museum Gardens you have this beautiful ruin of St Mary's Abbey, Benedictine abbey. The original abbey on the site was founded in 1055 and dedicated to Saint Olave. It was refounded by William II in 1088 who laid the foundation stone of the Norman church, although this church no longer remains. Following a dispute and riot in 1132, a party of reform-minded monks left to establish the Cistercian monastery of Fountains Abbey. The surviving ruins date back to the rebuilding programme begun in 1271 and finished by 1294.
st mary's abbey - i had my lunch here one day
St Mary's was once the largest and richest Benedictine establishment in the north of England and the abbey was one of the largest landholders in Yorkshire. However, in 1539, during the Dissolution of the Monasteries under Henry VIII, it was closed and subsequently substantially destroyed. All that remains today are the north and west walls, plus a few other remnants: the Pilgrims' Hospitium, the West Gate and the 14th-century timber-framed Abbot's House - now called the Kings Manor.
king's manor (now a part of york university)
In the Museum Gardens you also have the Yorkshire Museum, next to St Mary's Abbey - home to some of Britain's finest archaeological treasures and the history of England until 1550 can be traced through its galleries. I never went in, because of the beautiful weather.
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