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Richborough Power Station

1962 establishments in England1996 disestablishments in EnglandBuildings and structures demolished in 2012Coal-fired power stations in EnglandDemolished power stations in the United Kingdom
Energy infrastructure completed in 1962Former coal-fired power stations in the United KingdomFormer power stations in EnglandOil-fired power stations in EnglandPages with disabled graphsPower stations in South East EnglandUse British English from January 2013
Richborough Power station geograph.org.uk 46026
Richborough Power station geograph.org.uk 46026

Richborough power station was a 336 MW power station close to the mouth of the River Stour near Sandwich, on the east coast of Kent. It was built on land within the Port of Richborough but being on the northern edge its site lies mostly within the neighbouring parish of Minster, Kent. It operated from 1962 to 1996; the towers were demolished on 11 March 2012. BFL Management Ltd, the current owners of the site plan to bring it back into use as the £750 million Richborough Energy Park.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Richborough Power Station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Richborough Power Station
South Road, Thanet Minster

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Wikipedia: Richborough Power StationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.31 ° E 1.346 °
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Address

South Road

South Road
CT13 9DE Thanet, Minster
England, United Kingdom
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Richborough Power station geograph.org.uk 46026
Richborough Power station geograph.org.uk 46026
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Battle of Wippedesfleot

The Battle of Wippedesfleot was a battle in 466 between the Anglo-Saxons (or Jutes), led by Hengest, and the Britons. It is described in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle thus: 465: Her Hengest 7 Æsc gefuhton uuiþ Walas neah Wippedesfleote 7 þær .xii. wilisce aldormenn ofslogon, 7 hiera þegn an þær wearþ ofslægen, þam wæs noma Wipped. 465: Here Hengest and Æsc fought together against Welsh (= Britons) near Wippedesfleot and there slew 12 Welsh leaders, and one of their thanes was slain, whose name was Wipped.This battle is said to have resulted in much bloodshed and slaughter on both sides, to the extent that hostilities abated for a while thereafter. Some historians believe in a Saxon victory, but that is not what is mentioned in the text. The limited number of casualties is an indication that the battle was a small one. The number of warriors involved must not have reached 200 men. Wippedesfleot is thought to be Ebbsfleet in Kent, near Ramsgate. Its location made the author of the Historia Brittonum think that all Saxons had now been driven out of Britain. Wippedes is possibly a corruption of Latin oppidis in reference to the creek's position by the twin forts of Rutupiæ and Rutupiæ alteræ (Regulbium). Ramsgate is the main place upon the former Island of Thanet, "which was given to the Saxons by Vortigern". It was the very place where, according to the Historia Brittonum, the Saxons first landed. Gildas does not mention the battle.