All the chats in England

  1. Chats in Gateshead
  2. Chats in Gloucestershire
  3. Chats in Greater London
  4. Chats in Hampshire
  5. Chats in Hartlepool
  6. Chats in Herefordshire
  7. Chats in Hertfordshire
  8. Chats in Isle of Wight
  9. Chats in Kent
  10. Chats in Kirklees
  11. Chats in Knowsley
  12. Chats in Lancashire
  13. Chats in Leicestershire
  14. Chats in Lincolnshire
  15. Chats in Liverpool
  16. Chats in Luton
  17. Chats in Manchester
  18. Chats in Medway
  19. Chats in Metropolitan Borough of Wirral
  20. Chats in Middlesbrough
  21. Chats in Milton Keynes
  22. Chats in Newcastle upon Tyne
  23. Chats in Norfolk
  24. Chats in North East Lincolnshire
  25. Chats in North Lincolnshire
  26. Chats in North Somerset
  27. Chats in North Yorkshire
  28. Chats in Northamptonshire
  29. Chats in Northumberland
  30. Chats in Nottingham
  31. Chats in Nottinghamshire
  32. Chats in Oxfordshire
  33. Chats in Peterborough
  34. Chats in Plymouth
  35. Chats in Poole
  36. Chats in Portsmouth
  37. Chats in Reading
  38. Chats in Redcar and Cleveland
  39. Chats in Rotherham
  40. Chats in Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead
  41. Chats in Sandwell
  42. Chats in Sefton
  43. Chats in Sheffield
  44. Chats in Shropshire
  45. Chats in Slough
  46. Chats in Solihull
  47. Chats in Somerset
  48. Chats in South Gloucestershire
  49. Chats in South Tyneside
  50. Chats in Southampton
England

England is one of the four constituent nations of the United Kingdom. Its territory is geographically formed by the south and central part of Great Britain, an island that shares with Scotland and Wales, and about 100 smaller islands such as the Sorling Islands and the Isle of Wight. It limits to the north with Scotland, to the west with Wales - its two land borders -, to the northwest with the Irish Sea, to the southwest with the Celtic Sea, to the east with the North Sea and to the south with the English Channel. England assumes 84% ​​of the population and 85% of the GDP of the United Kingdom.

The territory of present-day England has been inhabited by several cultures for about 35,000 years, but it takes its name from the Angles, one of the Germanic peoples who settled there during the 5th and 6th centuries. It became a unified state in the year 927 and since the era of discoveries, which began in the 15th century, it has had a great cultural and legal impact throughout the world. The English language, the Anglican Church and the Law of England - taken as the basis for the legal system of many other countries of the world - were developed in England, and the parliamentary system of government has been widely adopted by other nations. The Kingdom of England - which since 1284 also included Wales - was an independent state until 1707, date on which the Act of Union with Scotland was signed, to create the Kingdom of Great Britain.

In 1801 Ireland joined the Kingdom of Great Britain thus creating the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland until 1922. With the independence and partition of Ireland since then it is the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.


Pages: