Isle of Wight

The Isle of Wight is an English island and county, off the southern English coast, to the south of the county of Hampshire, between the Solent and the English Channel. Popular from Victorian times as a holiday resort, the Isle of Wight is known for its natural beauty and as home to the Royal Yacht Squadron at Cowes, a town that hosts a world famous annual regatta.

The Island possesses a rich history including its own brief status as a vassal kingdom in the fifteenth century. It was home to poet Alfred Lord Tennyson, and Queen Victoria had her much loved summer residence and final home Osborne House built in East Cowes. Its maritime history encompasses boat building and sail making through to the manufacture of flying boats and the world's first hovercraft. Its space history includes the launch of the Black Arrow and Black Knight space rockets. It is home to the Bestival and the recently revived Isle of Wight Festival, which, in 1970, was one of the largest rock music events ever held.specify] The island is also one of the richest fossil locations for dinosaurs in Europe.

In 686 AD, it became the last part of the British Isles to convert to Christianity, almost a century after the rest of Great Britain.

The island is the smallest ceremonial county in England (when not including the predominantly urban counties of Bristol and the City of London) at 380 km² (147 sq mi), just beating the revived Rutland at 382 km² (148 sq mi), although at low tide it is actually larger than Rutland. With just one Member of Parliament and 132,731 permanent residents in the 2001 census, it is also the most populated Parliamentary constituency in the United Kingdom. It has historically been part of Hampshire.