Sussex
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Sussex is a historic area in South East England. Its name comes from the Old English word for "South Saxons." Sussex was once its own kingdom but is now part of the Kingdom of England. Today, the area is split into two counties: East Sussex and West Sussex.
The county borders Surrey to the north, Kent to the north-east, the English Channel to the south, and Hampshire to the west. It includes the city of Brighton and Hove, part of the South Downs National Park, and the beautiful Chichester Harbour. Sussex has a long coastline.
In 2007, Sussex Day was created to celebrate the county's culture and history. In February 2025, plans were approved to give more powers to a new combined county authority.
Toponymy
The name "Sussex" comes from old words meaning "land of the South Saxons." The South Saxons were people who lived in the area long ago. They came from a place called the North German Plain during the fifth and sixth centuries.
The name "South Saxons" was used as early as the year 689. Later, in a big book from the year 1086 called the Domesday Book, Sussex was written as Sudsexe. Today, there are places in the United States and Australia that are also named after Sussex.
Symbols
Main article: Symbols of Sussex
The flag of Sussex shows six gold birds, called martlets, on a blue background. This design became official in 2011. It is based on an old symbol used for the area since at least the early 1600s.
Sussex by the Sea is often considered the special song of Sussex. It was written in 1907 and is still sung at celebrations and sports events.
The special day for Sussex, called Sussex Day, happens each year on June 16. This day honors St Richard of Chichester, who is regarded as the special protector of Sussex.
Sussex has a special saying: We wunt be druv, meaning "we will not be pushed around." This shows the independent spirit of the people of Sussex. The round-headed rampion flower is the special flower of Sussex.
Geography
Main article: Geography of Sussex
See also: Geology of East Sussex
Sussex is in the southern part of England. It has many natural features shaped by a large land curve called the Wealden anticline. This gives Sussex high lands running from west to east, including the Weald and the South Downs.
The highest point in Sussex is Blackdown. The River Arun is the longest river completely within Sussex. Sussex also has many lakes, mostly man-made reservoirs, with Bewl Water being the largest.
The coast of Sussex gets more sunshine than most of the United Kingdom. Sussex usually has less rain than average, especially along the coast. Most people in Sussex live near the coast or along major roads, with Brighton being the largest city.
| Rank | Urban area | Population | Statistical localities | Comments | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2001 Census | 2011 Census | ||||
| 1 | Brighton/Worthing/Littlehampton | 461,181 | 474,485 | 10 | Sometimes referred to as two primary urban areas – Brighton Urban Area and Worthing Urban Area |
| 2 | Crawley | 180,177 | 180,508 | 6 | Includes approx. 30,000 people living in Surrey. In the 2001 census this urban area included Reigate and Redhill in Surrey but in the 2011 census it did not. East Grinstead was part of this urban area for the 2011 census but it was not for previous censuses. |
| 3 | Hastings/Bexhill | 126,386 | 133,422 | 2 | |
| 4 | Eastbourne | 106,562 | 118,219 | 1 | |
| 5 | Bognor Regis | 62,141 | 63,885 | 1 | |
Population
Sussex had about 1.7 million people in 2021. This means there were 451 people for every square kilometer, a bit more than the average for all of England.
Long ago, in 681, a writer named Bede said Sussex had enough land for 7,000 families. If each family had ten people, that would mean about 70,000 people lived there. The number of people changed over time. In 1801, 159,311 people lived in Sussex. By 1891, the population grew to 550,446, and in 1901 it was 605,202.
History
Main articles: History of Sussex and Timeline of Sussex history
The area that is now Sussex has a very long history. Very old tools and bones have been found there, showing people lived there hundreds of thousands of years ago.
Later, the Romans came to Sussex and built towns and a big house called a palace. After the Romans left, new groups of people arrived and set up their own kingdom. One famous moment was when a leader named William landed in Sussex and fought a big battle. This battle changed the history of all of England.
Over many years, Sussex has seen many changes. It was important during wars, and people there have been part of big events in British history. Even today, Sussex remains a special and historic part of England.
Governance
See also: History of local government in Sussex
Politics
In February 2025, leaders planned to make a new group to help manage Sussex. This group will take care of important jobs like roads, safety, health, and jobs. People in Sussex might pick a leader called the Mayor of Sussex to help run this group starting in May 2026. Some older groups may change or stop, and new groups will start in areas like East Sussex and West Sussex.
Now, different parts of Sussex are led by different groups. Some leaders are from the Conservative Party, some from Labour, and others from the Liberal Democrats or Green Party. In the UK Parliament, Sussex has 17 leaders called MPs. In the 2024 election, some were from Labour, some from the Conservatives, some from the Liberal Democrats, and one from the Green Party.
Law
Sussex has its own police group called Sussex Police, which began in 1968 and works from Lewes. The main court for Sussex is Lewes Crown Court, with smaller courts in Lewes, Brighton, and Hove. There is also a smaller court in Chichester. Sussex has prisons for men in Lewes and Ford.
Administrative divisions
Historic sub-divisions
Main article: Rape (county subdivision)
Sussex used to be divided into special areas called rapes for different jobs. There were originally four rapes: Arundel, Lewes, Pevensey, and Hastings. Two more rapes, Bramber and Chichester, were added later.
Modern local authority areas
Sussex is now divided into two areas for special events and two larger areas for everyday jobs: East Sussex and West Sussex, plus the city of Brighton and Hove. Each larger area has its own group to handle schools, help for families, libraries, buses, and cleaning up trash. Smaller groups help with planning and building rules.
This way of dividing Sussex into two parts started in 1504 and was made official by laws in 1865 and 1888.
| Ceremonial county (post 1974) | West Sussex | East Sussex | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Upper tier | 1. West Sussex | 2. East Sussex | 3. Brighton & Hove (unitary, post 1997) |
| Lower tier | |||
Economy
Sussex is in the South East of England. Some parts of Sussex have a weaker economy than the rest of the UK. Efforts are being made to help improve the economy, including special deals for places like Brighton.
Tourism is important in Sussex, with popular seaside towns and the South Downs National Park. Brighton is known for its media and technology businesses. Universities and big companies also provide jobs. Sussex has a history of iron working, glass making, and farming. It still has fishing and leisure ports along its coast.
Transport
Sussex has two main roads kept up by the UK Department for Transport. The A27/A259 runs along the coast from east to west. It connects places like Chichester, Worthing, Brighton, Lewes, and Hastings. The other is the A23/M23, which goes north-south. It links Brighton and Crawley to Gatwick Airport and London. Other important roads include the A21, A22, and A24.
Trains in Sussex are run by Govia Thameslink Railway. They operate on several key routes, such as the Brighton Mainline, East Coastway line, West Coastway line, Arun Valley line, and Marshlink line. There have been ideas to reopen the Uckfield — Lewes line.
Gatwick Airport, located just north of Crawley, is one of the busiest airports in the UK. Sussex also has two commercial ports: Newhaven and Shoreham-by-Sea. DFDS runs a ferry service from Newhaven to Dieppe in France. From there, you can take trains to Rouen and Paris.
Education
Sussex has several important schools and universities. The oldest university is the University of Sussex, which opened in 1961. It is known for its research.
Later, the University of Brighton joined in 1992, and the University of Chichester started in 2005. There are also colleges and schools, such as The Prebendal School, one of the oldest schools in the area. Sussex has many places for children to learn and grow.
Healthcare
Main article: Healthcare in Sussex
The Royal Sussex County Hospital began in 1828 in Brighton. Another important hospital, St. Francis Hospital (now the Princess Royal Hospital), started in 1859 in Haywards Heath. In 2002, Sussex got its first medical school, the Brighton and Sussex Medical School. By 2011, the four healthcare groups in Sussex joined to form NHS Sussex. The Royal Sussex County Hospital has a Major Trauma Centre, one of only five in southern England, and a cancer centre that helps people across Sussex.
Culture
Main article: Culture of Sussex
Sussex has a long history of being different from the rest of England. The people there are known for thinking independently and not liking to be told what to do, as shown by their motto, We wunt be druv. The area is famous for its lively bonfire celebrations and rich musical traditions. In the early 1900s, Sussex became a center for modern artists and writers who were drawn to its seaside towns and countryside.
The county is home to the Brighton Festival and the Brighton Fringe, England's largest arts event. Brighton Pride is one of the UK’s biggest and oldest pride events, with similar celebrations happening in towns like Crawley, Eastbourne, Hastings, and Worthing. Chichester hosts the Chichester Festival Theatre and Pallant House Gallery.
Architecture
Building materials in Sussex match its natural landscape, with flint used on and near the South Downs and sandstone in the Weald area. Brick is used throughout the county.
The architecture of Sussex is usually simple but can also include very unique and unusual buildings, like the Saxon Church of St Mary the Blessed Virgin, Sompting, Castle Goring, which looks very different from the front and back, and Brighton’s Indo-Saracenic Royal Pavilion.
Dialect
Sussex has had its own special way of speaking for a long time, with differences in various parts of the county. The dialect includes many words for mud, similar to how some people think there are many words for snow.
Literature
Writers born in Sussex include poets and playwrights like Thomas May, Thomas Otway, and John Fletcher. Fletcher worked with Shakespeare. Other famous writers from Sussex include William Collins, William Hayley, Percy Bysshe Shelley, and many more.
Many well-known writers, though not born in Sussex, lived there, such as Charlotte Turner Smith, William Blake, Alfred Tennyson, H. G. Wells, and AA Milne, who wrote the Winnie-the-Pooh stories while living in Ashdown Forest. Sussex has been home to four winners of the Nobel Prize in Literature.
Music
Main article: Music of Sussex
Sussex has a rich musical history in folk, classical, and popular music. The county’s unofficial anthem is Sussex by the Sea, composed by William Ward-Higgs. Traditional songs have been passed down through generations, collected by people like John Broadwood and Lucy Broadwood.
Sussex has been home to many classical composers, including Thomas Weelkes, John Ireland, and Ralph Vaughan Williams. The county also has famous orchestras like the Brighton Philharmonic Orchestra and the Worthing Symphony Orchestra.
In popular music, Sussex has produced artists such as Leo Sayer, The Cure, Keane, and The Kooks. The county hosted the UK’s first large free music festival, Phun City, and the 1974 Eurovision Song Contest, which made ABBA famous worldwide. Major festivals include The Great Escape Festival and Glyndebourne Festival Opera.
Television
Due to the size of the county, it is covered by more than one TV station:
- BBC South East covers Brighton & Hove and East Sussex, and also Haywards Heath, East Grinstead, Burgess Hill and Shoreham-by-Sea in West Sussex.
- BBC South covers the remainder of West Sussex.
- ITV Meridian is another regional news which covers the county.
- Crawley is covered by both regions, but receives a better TV signal from BBC London and ITV London.
Religion
Main article: Religion in Sussex
See also: History of Christianity in Sussex
Christianity is the main religion in Sussex, with about 58% of people identifying as Christian according to the 2011 census. Other groups include Muslims (1.4%), Hindus (0.7%), and those with no religion (30.5%).
Sussex has been a single diocese since the eighth century, after St Wilfrid founded Selsey Abbey. The Normans later moved the cathedral to Chichester in 1075. Since 1965 Arundel Cathedral has been the seat of the Roman Catholic Bishops of Arundel and Brighton. Different religious groups have existed in Sussex for centuries, including Jewish communities and various modern belief groups around East Grinstead.
Science
Pell's equation and the Pell number are named after the 17th-century mathematician John Pell. In the 19th century, geologist Gideon Mantell began studying dinosaurs and discovered the first fossil teeth of Iguanodon. Braxton Hicks contractions are named after the Sussex doctor John Braxton Hicks.
In the 20th century, Frederick Soddy won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work on radioactive substances. Frederick Gowland Hopkins shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1929 for discovering vitamins. Martin Ryle shared the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1974. While at the University of Sussex, Harold Kroto won the 1996 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for discovering fullerenes. David Mumford won the Fields Medal in 1974 and the National Medal of Science in 2010.
In the social sciences, Sussex was home to economist John Maynard Keynes from 1925 to 1946.
Sport
Main articles: Sport in Sussex, Cricket in Sussex, and Football in Sussex
Sussex has a long history of sports. It played a key role in the early development of cricket and stoolball. Sussex is where cricket was first recorded as being played by men in 1611 and by women in 1677. Sussex CCC, founded in 1839, is England's oldest county cricket club. Slindon Cricket Club was dominant in the 18th century. Sussex is also believed to be the origin of stoolball.
Sussex has teams in the Premier League like Brighton & Hove Albion and in the Football League like Crawley Town. Sussex has its own football association and football league. The county is home to race tracks like Goodwood and show jumping events.
Cuisine
See also: Beer in Sussex and Sussex wine
Sussex is known for its "seven good things": Pulborough eel, Selsey cockle, Chichester lobster, Rye herring, Arundel mullet, Amberley trout, and Bourne wheatear. Other local dishes include Ashdown Partridge Pudding, Chiddingly Hot pot, and Sussex Pond Pudding.
The county has a long history of brewing of beer and many vineyards. Sussex wine gained Protected Designation of Origin status in 2022, with wines winning awards worldwide. Many vineyards use traditional Champagne methods.
Visual arts
Some of the earliest known art in Sussex is from the Neolithic flint mines at Cissbury. The Roman palace at Fishbourne has the UK’s largest collection of mosaics, and the villa at Bignor has some of England’s best-preserved Roman mosaics.
The ‘Lewes Group’ of wall paintings from the 12th century can be found in several Sussex churches. The Long Man of Wilmington is Europe’s largest human-shaped landmark.
In the late 18th century, important works of Sussex were commissioned by people like William Burrell, George Wyndham, 3rd Earl of Egremont, and John 'Mad Jack' Fuller.
In the 19th century, artists like Copley Fielding, Aubrey Beardsley, and Eric Gill were born or lived in Sussex. The 1920s and 1930s saw works by Edward Burra and Eric Ravilious.
In the early 20th century, Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant lived at Charleston Farmhouse. Sussex became a center for surrealism, with artists like Salvador Dalí and Pablo Picasso visiting places like West Dean and Farley Farm House.
Notable people
Main listing: List of people from Sussex
Sussex is a lovely place in South East England. Many famous people have lived there, from kings long ago to artists today. You can find out more about them on the list of people from Sussex.
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