Dictionary Definition
Coventry
Noun
1 the state of being banished or ostracized
(excluded from society by general consent); "the association should
get rid of its elderly members--not by euthanasia, of course, but
by Coventry" [syn: banishment, ostracism]
2 an industrial city in central England;
devastated by air raids during World War II; remembered as the home
of Lady Godiva in the 11th century
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- Banishment.
-
- Joe received Coventry from his colleagues after telling the sexist joke.
Proper noun
- An industrial city in central England.
Derived terms
Translations
Extensive Definition
Coventry (pronunciation) is a
city and metropolitan
borough in the county
of West
Midlands in England. With a
population of 303,475
at the
2001 Census (306,000 est. 2007), Coventry is the 9th largest
city in England and the
11th largest in the United
Kingdom. It is also the second largest city after Birmingham in
the English
Midlands by population, although both Nottingham and
Leicester
have larger urban
areas.
Coventry is situated 95 miles (153 km)
northwest of London and 19 miles (30 km) east of
Birmingham, and is notable for being further inland from the
coast than any other
city in Britain. Although harbouring a population of almost a
third of a million inhabitants, Coventry is not amongst the
English Core Cities Group due to its proximity to
Birmingham.
Coventry was also the world's first 'twin city'
when it formed a twinning relationship with the Russian city of
Stalingrad (now
Volgograd) during
World
War II. The city is also subsequently twinned with Dresden, as a
gesture of peace and reconciliation, and 27 others around the
world.
Coventry
Cathedral is notable by way of it being amongst the most modern
cathedrals in the
world, having been built following the World War
II bombing of the ancient cathedral by the Luftwaffe.
Coventry has since developed an international reputation as one of
Europe's major cities of peace and reconciliation, centred around
its Cathedral, and holds an annual Peace Month. Coventry is also
notable because
Coventry motor companies have contributed significantly to the
British
motor industry, and also because it has two universities, the
city centre-based Coventry
University and the University
of Warwick on the southern outskirts. Coventry is also famous
for the legendary 11th century
exploits of Lady Godiva.
Their football team is Coventry
City F.C. who are in the Coca-Cola
Championship and were founded in 1883.
History
Coventry is traditionally believed to have been
established in the year 1043 with the founding
of a Benedictine
Abbey by
Leofric,
Earl of Mercia and his wife Lady Godiva.
Current evidence suggests that this abbey was probably in existence
by 1022,
therefore Leofric and Godiva most likely endowed it around 1043. In
time, a market was
established at the abbey gates and the settlement expanded.
By the 14th
century, Coventry had become an important centre of the
cloth trade, and
throughout the Middle Ages
was one of the largest and most important cities in England.
Coventry was granted
city status in 1345, and later became a
county in its own right.
Hostile attitudes of the cityfolk towards
Royalist prisoners held in Coventry during the English
Civil War are believed to have originated the phrase "sent to
Coventry", which in Britain means "to be ostracised"; although
their physical needs were catered for, the Royalist prisoners were
literally never spoken to by anybody.
In the 18th and 19th centuries, Coventry became
one of the three main UK centres of watch and clock manufacture and ranked
alongside Prescot, near
Liverpool
and Clerkenwell in
London. As, the industry declined, due mainly to competition from
Swiss
made clock and
watch manufacturers, the
skilled pool of workers proved crucial to the setting up of
bicycle manufacture and
eventually the motorcycle, automobile, machine tool and
aircraft industries.
In the late-19th century, Coventry became a major
centre of bicycle
manufacture, with the industry being pioneered by Rover. By the
early 20th century, bicycle manufacture had evolved into motor manufacture, and
Coventry became a major centre of the British
motor industry. Over 100 different companies have produced
motor vehicles in Coventry, and industry that came to an end in
2006 as the last ever car rolled off the production lines at
Peugeot.
Coventry suffered severe bomb damage during
World
War II, most notoriously from a massive Nazi German Luftwaffe air
raid (the "Coventry
Blitz") on November 14,
1940. This
destroyed most of the historic city centre and Coventry's historic
Cathedral.
Aside from London, Hull and Plymouth, Coventry
suffered more damage than any other British city during the
Luftwaffe
attacks, with huge firestorms devastating most of the city centre.
The city was targeted due to its high concentration of armaments,
munitions and aircraft engine plants which contributed greatly to
the British war effort. Following the raids, the majority of
Coventry's historic buildings could not be saved as they were in
ruinous states or were deemed unsafe for any future use, although
several were later demolished simply to make way for modern
developments.
In the postwar years Coventry was largely rebuilt
under the general direction of the Gibson Plan,
gaining a new pedestrianised shopping precinct (the first of its
kind in Europe on such a scale) and the much-celebrated new
St
Michael's Cathedral in 1962 (incorporating the world's largest
tapestry). In 1967, the Eagle Street Mosque opened as
Coventry's first mosque.
Coventry's motor industry boomed during the 1950s
and 1960s, but during the 1970s the British motor industry
underwent decline and Coventry suffered badly as a result. By the
early 1980s, Coventry had one of the highest unemployment rates in
the country. In recent years, the city has recovered with newer
industries locating there, although the motor industry continues to
decline. As of 2008, only one motor manufacturing plant remained
operational, that of LTI Ltd, producing the popular TX4 taxi cabs.
City boundaries
Unlike other major UK cities, Coventry does not have an extensive 'greater' urban area. This is partly because the city boundaries were drawn so as to include practically all of its suburbs, and partly because Coventry has comparatively little in the way of contiguous satellite towns and dormitory settlements.The M6 motorway directly to the north of Coventry
acts as an artificial boundary which precludes expansion into the
Bedworth-Nuneaton urban
area, as does the protected West Midlands Green
Belt which surrounds the city on all sides. This has
circumvented the expansion of the city into both the administrative
county of Warwickshire
and the metropolitan borough of Solihull, and has
helped to prevent the coalescence of the city with surrounding
settlements such as Kenilworth,
Leamington
Spa, Warwick, Rugby,
Meriden
and Balsall
Common.
Suburbs or areas
A BI
J
K
N
O
Q
R
U
W
- Walsgrave-On-Sowe
- Westwood Heath
- Whitley
- Whitmore Park
- Whoberley
- Willenhall
- Wood End
- Woodway Park
- Wyken
Places of interest
St. Michael's Cathedral is Coventry's best-known landmark and visitor attraction. The original 14th century cathedral was largely destroyed by German bombing during World War II, leaving only the outer walls and spire. The new Coventry Cathedral was opened in 1962 next to the ruins of the old. It was designed by Sir Basil Spence. The cathedral contains the tapestry Christ in Glory by Graham Sutherland. The bronze statue St Michael's Victory over the Devil by Jacob Epstein is mounted on the exterior of the new cathedral near the entrance. Benjamin Britten's War Requiem, regarded by some as his masterpiece, was written for the opening of the new Cathedral.The spire of the ruined cathedral forms one of
the Three Spires which have dominated the city skyline since the
14th century, the others being those of Christ Church (of which
only the spire survives) and Holy Trinity Church (which is still in
use). Another major visitor attraction in Coventry city centre is
the free-to-enter Coventry
Transport Museum, which has the largest collection of
British-made road vehicles in the world. The most notable exhibits
are the world speed record-breaking cars, Thrust2 and
ThrustSSC.
The museum received a major refurbishment in 2004 which included
the creation of a striking new entrance as part of the city's
Phoenix Initiative project. The revamp saw the museum exceed its
projected five-year visitor numbers within the first year alone,
and it was a finalist for the 2005 Gulbenkian
Prize.
The
Herbert Art Gallery and Museum is a major art gallery in the
city centre. About four miles from the city centre and just outside
Coventry in Baginton is the
Lunt
Fort, a reconstructed Roman fort.
The Midland
Air Museum is situated just within the perimeter of Coventry on
land adjacent to Coventry
Airport and near Baginton.
Coventry was one of the main centres of
watchmaking during the 18th and 19th centuries and as the industry
declined the skilled workers were key to setting up the cycle
trade. A group of local enthusiasts are in the process of setting
up a museum in Spon Street.
Coventry City Football Club have recently started
playing at their new home, the Ricoh Arena,
a 32,000 capacity stadium in Foleshill in
north Coventry, and their football academy is now based at The
Alan Higgs Centre, a leisure centre in south-east Coventry
opened in 2004. The Highfield
Road stadium has been demolished making way for new housing and
a small green.
Coventry City Farm is a small farm in an urban setting. It is
mainly to educate city children who might not get out to the
countryside very often. The farm closed in 2008 due to funding
problems.
The river Sherbourne runs under Coventry's city
centre; the river was paved over during the rebuilding after
WWII and
is not commonly known.
Education
Coventry has two universities; Coventry University situated on a modern city centre campus and the University of Warwick, which lies 5.5 km (3.5 miles) to the south of the city centre within Coventry near the border with Warwickshire. The University of Warwick is one of only five universities never to have been rated outside the top ten in terms of teaching excellence and research and is a member of the prestigious Russell Group. It won the prestigious BBC TV University Challenge trophy in April 2007.Coventry also has three colleges within city
boundaries, City
College, Henley College and Hereward College.
Many of the secondary schools in and around
Coventry are specialist colleges, such as Finham
Park School, which is a Mathematics and IT college and now a
teacher training school and
Coventry Blue Coat Church of England School which has recently
become a specialist college of Music, one of only a few in the
country.
Bishop Ullathorne RC School became a specialist college in
Humanities in 2006. Woodlands
School in Coventry is now also a sports college, which has a
newly built sport centre.
Ernesford Grange School, in the South East, is a specialist
science college. Coundon
Court School is a Technology college. Pattison
College, a private school opened in 1949, specialises in the
performing arts. There is also Caludon Castle School, a business
and enterprise school, which has been rebuilt over 2005-2007.
Exhall
Grange School and Science College is in the North of the City,
although, its catchment area is north Warwickshire.
The Coventry School Foundation comprises the
independent schools King
Henry VIII School and Bablake
School together with
Coventry Preparatory School.
The Woodlands School, which is an all boys'
school, and Tile
Hill Wood School are the only single-sex schools left in
Coventry. However, their sixth forms
have merged to form the "West Coventry 6th Form", whose lessons
take place in mixed classes on both sites.
Arts and culture
- During the early 19th century, Coventry was well-known due to author George Eliot who was born near Nuneaton. The city was the model for her famous novel Middlemarch (1871).
- The Coventry Carol is named after the city of Coventry. It was a carol performed in the play The Pageant of The Shearman and Tailors, written in the 15th century as one of the Coventry Cycle Mystery Plays. These plays depicted the nativity story, the lyrics of the Coventry Carol referring to the Annunciation to the Massacre of the Innocents, which was the basis of the Pageant of the Shearmen and Tailors. These plays were traditionally performed on the steps of the (old) Cathedral, and the plays are believed to have been performed for both Richard III in 1484 and Henry VII in 1584.
- The Belgrade Theatre was Britain's first purpose-built civic theatre, opened in 1958. In 1965 the world's first Theatre-in-Education (TiE) company was formed to develop theatre as a way of inspiring learning in schools. The TiE movement spread worldwide, but many UK companies were closed in the 1980s and 1990s, including the Belgrade TiE company which was closed by the theatre's management and the city council in 1996.
- During the late-1970s and early-1980s, Coventry was the centre of the Two Tone musical phenomenon, with bands such as The Specials and The Selecter coming from the city, spawning several major hit singles and albums. The Specials achieved two UK #1 hit singles between 1979 - 1981, namely "Too Much Too Young" and "Ghost Town". Notable singles by The Selecter included "On My Radio" and "Three Minute Hero".
- Today Coventry is recognised for its range of music events including one of the UK's foremost international jazz programmes, The Coventry Jazz Festival, and the award-winning Godiva Festival. On the Saturday of the Godiva Festival, a carnival parade also starts in the city centre and makes its way to the War Memorial Park where the festival is held.
- In the film The Italian Job, the famous scene of Mini Coopers being driven at speed through Turin's catacombs was actually filmed in Coventry, using what were then the country's biggest sewer pipes. More recently various locations in Coventry have been used in the BAFTA nominated film "Bouncer" starring Ray Winstone, All in the Game, also starring Ray Winstone (Ricoh Arena), the medical TV series Angels (Walsgrave Hospital), the BBC sitcom Keeping Up Appearances (Stoke Aldermoor and Binley Woods districts) and in August 2006 scenes from "The Shakespeare Code", an episode of the third series of Doctor Who, were filmed in the grounds of Ford's Hospital.
Venues
Theatre, art and music venues in Coventry include:- The Warwick Arts Centre: situated at the University of Warwick, Warwick Arts Centre includes an art gallery, a theatre, a concert hall and a cinema. It is the second largest arts centre in the UK, after London's Barbican.
- The College Theatre: the city's main community theatre, housed at the Butts Centre of City College Coventry. It's a fully functioning theatre with flying scenery, full sound and lighting boxes.
- The Belgrade Theatre: one of the largest producing theatres in Britain, the 866 seat Belgrade was the first civic theatre to be opened in the UK following World War II.
- Also currently being built is the Belgrade Plaza.
- The Ricoh Arena: located 5.5 km (3.5 miles) north of the city centre, the 32,000 capacity Coventry City FC stadium is also used to hold major rock concerts for some of the world's biggest acts, including the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Bon Jovi. The adjacent Ricoh Exhibition Hall is a 6,000-seater events venue for hosting a multitude of other acts.
- The SkyDome Arena, which is a 3000 capacity sports auditorium, and has played host to artists such as Girls Aloud, Paul Oakenfold, Judge Jules and Paul Morrell.
- The War Memorial Park, which holds various festivals including the Godiva Festival, every year.
- The Butts Park Arena, home of Coventry Rugby Football Club, holds music concerts occasionally.
- The Kasbah Nightclub, Hillfields. It was renamed after refurbishment in 2007, but is still often referred to by its old name, 'Colosseum'.
- The Criterion Theatre, a small theatre, in Earlsdon.
Sport
Sporting teams include Coventry City (Football), Coventry Sphinx (Football), Coventry Copsewood (Football), Coventry Rugby Club (Rugby Union), City Of Coventry Swimming Club (Swimming), Coventry Blaze (Ice Hockey), Coventry Bears (Rugby League), Coventry Godiva Harriers (Athletics), Coventry Bees (Speedway), Coventry Crusaders (Basketball), Coventry Cassidy Jets (American Football) and Four Masters GAA Club (Gaelic football).In football, Coventry City have been in existence
since the late 19th century, but did not reach the
top flight of the Football
League until 1967, when they were promoted as
Second Division champions. Their highest league position so far
is sixth place in the First Division in 1970, and their only major
trophy to date is the FA Cup which was
won in 1987 with a 3-2 win over Tottenham
Hotspur at Wembley.
Coventry were founder members of the Premier
League in 1992, but currently play in the
Football League Championship (formerly Division One) where they
have been since 2001.
In 2003, Coventry
Blaze won the British
National League and Playoffs. Between 1998 and 2000, Coventry
hosted the
Speedway Grand Prix of Great Britain at Brandon
Stadium.
2005 was a good year for sport in Coventry. Not
only did it become the first city in the UK to host the
International Children's Games, but three of the city sports team
won significant honours. The Blaze won the treble consisting of
Elite League, playoff and
Challenge Cup, the Jets won the
BAFL Division 2 championship and were undefeated all season,
while the Bees won the Elite League playoffs. In 2007, Coventry
Blaze won the
Elite League and the
British Challenge cup and narrowly missed out on the treble by
losing in the semi-finals of the playoffs.
The Coventry Bees are based at Brandon Stadium to
the east of the city. The stadium has operated both sides of
WWII. The Bees
started in 1948 and have operated continuously ever since. They
started out in the National League Division three before moving up
to the Second Division and, later to the top flight. They have
operated at this level ever since.
Before WWII speedway operated at Foleshill
Stadium in the City and was the base for the pre-war Coventry
teams.
Famous Coventrians
Arguably Coventry's most famous resident was Lady Godiva who, according to legend, rode through the city naked on horseback in protest at high taxes being waged on the cityfolk by her husband Leofric, Earl of Mercia. According to the legend the residents of the city were commanded to look away as she rode, but one man didn't and was allegedly struck blind. He became known as Peeping Tom thus originating a new idiom, or metonym, in English. There is a statue of her in the city centre, which used to stand out in the open but is now situated under the much-maligned Cathedral Lanes shopping centre canopy (see right). There is also a bust of Peeping Tom looking out from a bridge that crosses one branch of the shopping precinct.Other famous people from Coventry include Sir
Frank
Whittle, the inventor of the jet engine,
the poet and novelist Philip
Larkin, the noted trade union organiser Tom Mann, the
actors Nigel
Hawthorne and Clive Owen,
the pioneering electronic composer Delia
Derbyshire, the broadcaster Brian
Matthew, the record producer Pete
Waterman, the athlete and former 5,000m world-record holder
David
Moorcroft, Ian
Bell, the Ashes winning cricketer and the
2003 Rugby Union World Cup winners Neil Back and
Danny
Grewcock, former England boxing captain and European champion
Errol
Christie, author Lee Child, the
Cyborg Scientist Kevin
Warwick, Jerry
Dammers, writer of the song "Free
Nelson Mandela" and the driving-force behind The
Specials, Terry
Hall, lead singer with The Specials, Fun Boy
Three and The
Colourfield (and a celebrated solo artist in his own right),
Clive Scott and Barrie Bernard who were members of the band
Jigsaw,
Hazel
O'Connor, a rock singer of the 1980s-1990s, Paul King (lead
singer of the mid-80s band King),
Clint
Mansell (lead singer of the 1990s indie band Pop
Will Eat Itself), Julianne
Regan (lead singer of the 80s-90s band All
About Eve), Jason John (aka Jason Herbert) of the 1990s boy
band Big
Fun, Julian Little, DJ/Producer (Portamento/RAW) was born in
Coventry, Lee Dorrian,
(a former member of Napalm Death
and later Cathedral
- both well-known bands in the grindcore / death metal
and doom
metal scenes respectively), and Bolt
Thrower, (another band well-known in the death metal scene).
Roy Allbrighton, the lead guitarist and vocalist from Prog Rock
group Nektar, who have
been recording and touring since the early 1970s and are still
popular in the US and Europe, is from Coventry. In the 19th
century, the inventor James
Starley and his nephew J.K.
Starley lived in the city, and were both instrumental in the
development of the bicycle, and for starting the
British bicycle industry. J.K. Starley was also responsible for
founding Rover. A
statue near Warwick Row commemorates James Starley.
The politician Mo Mowlam who
was
Secretary of State for Northern Ireland spent part of her youth
in Coventry. Joseph
Paxton, the architect of the
Crystal Palace, was a Member
of Parliament for the city from 1854 to 1865.
Two Tone
ska bands The Specials
and The
Selecter are both from Coventry – one of The Specials' best
known hits, Ghost Town is often thought to be written about the
city. Other bands from the city which found success include
The
Primitives, Fun Boy
Three, The
Colourfield, King,
The
Sorrows and The
Flys. More recently, indie-band The Enemy,
hailing from the suburb of Holbrooks, succeeded in reaching no.1 in
the UK album charts with their debut We'll Live & Die In These
Towns in July 2007.
2004
Olympics 4x100m relay gold medallist Marlon
Devonish is also from Coventry, and in November of the same
year he was awarded with an MBE. He also appeared at the opening
ceremony of the International Children's Games held in 2005.
Show
Jumping World Cup champion Nick Skelton
who has jumped for the Great
Britain team on 152 occasions.
Sky Sports
presenter Richard
Keys, who has presented more than 1,000 football matches making
him British television's most presented anchorman.
West End
theatre producer and entertainment entrepreneur Dominic
Madden, responsible for the re-development of the Elephant
and Castle theatre into The Coronet
music venue.
Celebrity dad Shakeel
Goulthorp appeared on the BBC1 and BBC3 programme He's
Having A Baby hosted by Davina
McCall and Danny
Wallace from May 2005 to October 2005. Shakeel used to reside
in Bedworth until
2001 where he moved to Coventry. He is an avid Coventry
City F.C. supporter and works as a Train Guard in the
city.
Coventry is also home to Rajinder Rai more
commonly known as Panjabi MC who
came to become famous with his smash hit single Mundian To Bach Ke
or in English, Beware of the Boys (Knight Rider remix) and also
with the German underground dance floor filler Jogi. Other Notable
Bhangra stars that reside in Coventry are The
Specialist known for his ground breaking album Word is Born and
Repazent as a collaboration with Tru Skool.
Another known Bhangra artist amongst the British Asian community is
Silinder
Pardesi.
The city's list of more infamous individuals
includes:
- Porn star Debee Ashby, who achieved notoriety during 1983 when she appeared nude with her mother in an adult magazine.
- Nazi Colin Jordan who led the National Socialist Movement during the 1960s.
- Zain Ali who assisted Nazi Colin Jordan in the SS Movement of the 1960s.
Economy
This is a chart of trend of regional gross value added of Coventry at current basic prices by Office for National Statistics with figures in millions of British Pounds Sterling: Notes:- Components may not sum to totals due to rounding
- Includes hunting and forestry
- Includes energy and construction
- Includes financial intermediation services indirectly measured
Coventry has long been a centre of motor and
cycle manufacturing, dating back from 1896, the car and cycle
industry has been a strong centre point for this town. Starting out
with some less familiar names such as Coventry Motette, Great
Horseless Carriage Co, Swift
Motor Company and more familiar names like Humber, Riley,
Francis-Barnett and Daimler
and the Triumph
motorcycle having its origins in 1902 in a Coventry factory.
Although the motor industry has declined almost to the point of
extinction, the Jaguar
company has retained its corporate and research headquarters in the
city (at Allesley and Whitley), and Peugeot still have
a large parts centre in Humber Road. The famous London black cab
taxis are produced in Coventry by LTI
and these are now the only vehicles still wholly built in
Coventry.
The manufacture of machine
tools was once a major industry in Coventry. The Alfred
Herbert company became one of the largest machine tool
companies in the world. Unfortunately in later years the company
faced tough competition from foreign machine tool builders and
ceased trading in 1983. Another famous Coventry machine tool
manufacturer was the A.C.Wickman
company.
Coventry's main industries include: cars,
electronic equipment, machine tools, agricultural machinery,
man-made fibres, aerospace components and telecommunications
equipment. In recent years, the city has moved away from
manufacturing industries towards business services, finance,
research, design and development, creative industries as well as
logistics and leisure.
Transport
Coventry is near the M6, M69, M45 and M40 motorways. It is also served by the A45 and A46 dual carriageways. Coventry has a much used inner ring road opened in the 1960s (approx.). Phoenix Way, a dual carriageway running north–south opened 1998 (approx.), has improved traffic flows through the city.For rail, Coventry
railway station is served by the West
Coast Main Line, and has regular rail services between London and Birmingham (and
stations beyond). It is also served by railway lines to Nuneaton via
Bedworth.
There is a line linking it to Leamington
Spa and onwards to the south coast. Coventry also has 2
Suburban Rail stations in Canley
and in
Tile Hill.
Bus service operators
in Coventry include National
Express Coventry, Travel De
Courcey and Stagecoach
in Warwickshire. Pool
Meadow Bus Station is the main bus and coach interchange in the city
centre.
The nearest major airports are
Birmingham International Airport, some 17 km (11
miles) to the west of the city and Coventry
Airport in Baginton, from
which Thomsonfly
operates commercial scheduled flights to more than 20 European
destinations, located 8 km (5 miles) south of the city
centre.
The Coventry
Canal terminates near the city centre at
Coventry Canal Basin and is navigable for 61 km (38
miles) to Fradley
Junction in Staffordshire.
Waste management
Coventry has a large incineration plant which burns rubbish from both Coventry and Solihull and in the process produces electricity for the National Grid and some hot water that is used locally. In addition, some rubbish is still put into landfill.Coventry
City Council is assisting recycling as part of their
waste
management strategy in line with national trends:
- many areas of Coventry have kerb-side paper recycling and garden-green rubbish collection.
- a wide range of waste materials can be taken by car to the recycling depot, which is adjacent to the incineration unit.
- there are many recycling points throughout the City for paper, glass recycling and metal / tin can recycling.
In October 2006, Coventry City Council signed the
Nottingham
Declaration, joining 130 other UK councils in committing to
reduce the greenhouse
gas emissions of the council and to help the local community do
the same.
Politics
Traditionally a part of Warwickshire (although it was a county in its own right for 400 years), Coventry became an independent county borough in 1889. It later became a metropolitan district of the West Midlands county under the Local Government Act (1974), even though it was entirely separate to the Birmingham conurbation area (this is why Coventry appears to unnaturally "jut out" into Warwickshire on political maps of the UK). In 1986, the West Midlands County Council was abolished and Coventry became administered as an effective unitary authority in its own right.Coventry is still strongly associated with its
traditional county, Warwickshire. This may be because of its
geographical location, forming a large protrusion into the
county.
Coventry is administered by Coventry City
Council. The city is divided up into 18 Wards
each with three councillors. Coventry had
long been considered a stronghold or source of safe seats for
the Labour
Party. The city council was for years described as a "one party
state", but has been Conservative-controlled
since the local elections on May 4, 2006 (although the
Conservative group held the administration on the casting vote of
the Lord Mayor since June 2004). A notable politician serving with
Coventry City Council is former Militant
Tendency Labour MP Dave Nellist
who now represents the
Socialist Party (England and Wales).
The leader of the controlling Conservative group
is Ken Taylor, who has held the post of Leader of the Council since
2004. The leader of the opposition Labour group is John
Mutton.
Certain local services are provided by West
Midlands wide agencies including the West
Midlands Police, the
West Midlands Fire Service and the
West Midlands Passenger Transport Executive (Centro) which is
responsible for public
transport.
In 2006, Coventry and Warwickshire Ambulance
Service was merged with the
West Midlands Ambulance Service. The Warwickshire and
Northamptonshire Air
Ambulance service is based at Coventry
Airport in Baginton.
Coventry is represented in
Parliament by three MPs
all of whom are Labour. These are:
At the Annual Meeting of the City Council on
May 17
2007,
Councillor Dave Batten was elected as the new Lord Mayor of
Coventry. Councillor Batten has been a Labour councillor for 16
years representing the Westwood Ward. Councillor Batten's wife,
Lyn, is Lady Mayoress. The Deputy Lord Mayor is Councillor Andy
Matchet. He has been a Conservative councillor in Earlsdon since
1999.
The Bishop
of Coventry since April 1998 has been the Rt Revd. Colin
Bennetts, who will be retiring from the post on December 1,
2007.
Demographics
Similar to most major British cities, Coventry has a fairly large ethnic minority population, non-white Britons making up 24.5% of the population as of 2005 estimates. The breakdown of the ethnic minority population is not typical, the Sikhs are the largest non-Christian religion, there are significant numbers of other South Asians but the black population is rather low at 2.9%. The ethnic minority population is mainly concentrated in the Foleshill ward and the St. Michael's ward. White Britons make up 75.5% of the population, White Irish people make up 2.9%, and Other White people make up 2.8%. 8.1% of the city's population is Indian, 2.2% Pakistani, 0.8% Other South Asian, 0.7% Bangladeshi. 1.5% of people are Black African, 1.2% Black Caribbean, 0.2% Other Black. People belonging to two or more races make up 2.0% of the population, the Chinese make up 1.4% and Others (mainly Orientals) make up the remaining 0.8%.Closest cities, towns and villages
Cities (within 80 km/50 miles)
- Birmingham (30 km/19 miles)
- Leicester (38 km/24 miles)
- Lichfield (48 km/30 miles)
- Wolverhampton (59 km/37 miles)
- Worcester (69 km/43 miles)
- Derby (80 km/50 miles)
- Nottingham (80 km/50 miles)
Towns (within 32 km/20 miles)
- Bedworth (10 km/6 miles)
- Kenilworth (10 km/6 miles)
- Nuneaton (14.5 km/9 miles)
- Leamington Spa (16 km/10 miles)
- Warwick (19 km/12 miles)
- Rugby (19 km/12 miles)
- Hinckley (19 km/12 miles)
- Atherstone (20 km/12.5 miles)
- Solihull (21 km/13 miles)
- Southam (21 km/13 miles)
- Stratford-upon-Avon (30 km/19 miles)
- Sutton Coldfield (32 km/20 miles)
- Tamworth (32 km/20 miles)
Villages
- Baginton, about 4 miles south
- Neal's Green/Ash Green - about 4 miles north
- Burton Green, about 4 miles west
- Binley Woods, about 5 miles southeast
- Stoneleigh, 5 miles south
- Ryton-on-Dunsmore, about 5.5 miles southeast
- Hawkesbury, about 5.5 miles north
- Ansty, about 6 miles north east
- Corley, about 6 miles northwest
- Bulkington, about 6 miles northeast
- Brandon, about 6 miles southeast
- Shilton, about 7 miles northheast
- Berkswell, about 7 miles west
- Balsall Common, about 7 miles west
- Fillongley, about 7 miles north
- Wolston, about 7 miles southeast
- Brinklow, about 7 miles east
- Bubbenhall, about 7 miles southeast
- Meriden, about 8 miles west
- Bramcote, about 8 miles northeast
- Princethorpe, about 10 miles southeast
- Stretton-on-Dunsmore, about 10 miles southeast
- Wolvey, about 10 miles northeast
Postcodes
Postal districts CV1 to CV6 inclusive cover the city of Coventry and its immediate suburbs. Postal districts CV7 to CV47 cover almost all of the surrounding administrative county of Warwickshire, with the exception of those areas around Coleshill, Polesworth, Alcester and Studley in western Warwickshire, which have Birmingham (B) postcodes instead.Twin cities
Coventry was the first city to "twin" with another city (Volgograd, Russia) and hence began the now common worldwide practice of twinning. It continued after World War II when Coventry twinned with Dresden as an act of peace and reconciliation, both cities having been very heavily bombed during the war. Each twin city country is represented in a specific ward of the city and in each ward has a peace garden dedicated to that twin city.Coventry is now twinned with 26 places across the
world:
Honours
A minor planet 3009 Coventry discovered by Soviet astronomer Nikolai Stepanovich Chernykh in 1973 is named after the city.2008 bomb scare
On 12 March 2008 an unexploded World War II Luftwaffe bomb was discovered at 12 noon on a building site in Coventry's city centre, a British Army bomb disposal unit was called in and subsequently called in experts from Cambridge. A controlled explosion was conducted at approximately 02:40 GMT on the morning of March 13.At first areas in close range of the bomb were
evacuated (including a school and a hospital), however, as the day
progressed larger parts of the city were closed off. Later, a
cordon of 500 metres was enforced.
Further reading
- Albert Smith and David Fry: (1991). The Coventry We Have Lost. Vol 1. Simanda Press, Berkswell. ISBN 0-9513867-1-9
- Albert Smith and David Fry: (1993). The Coventry We Have Lost. Vol 2. Simanda Press, Berkswell. ISBN 0-9513867-2-7
References
- Coventry: History and Guide, by David McGrory (1993) ISBN 0-7509-0194-2
- A History of Warwickshire, by Terry Slater (1981) ISBN 0-85033-416-0
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