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The universal geography : earth and its inhabitants

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SUSSEX. 143<br />

way to tlie sea. A portion of the castle contains the museum of the Sussex<br />

Archasological Society. Mount Harry, the site of the defeat of Henry III. by<br />

Earl Simon de Montfort in 1264, lies 3 miles to the east of it. Netrhaven at<br />

the mouth of the Ouse, is merely an outport of London, whence there is reo-ular<br />

communication with Dieppe. Close to the railway station may be seen a mill, the<br />

motive power of which is supplied by the tide. Formerly the Ouse entered the<br />

sea at Staford, a quiet watering-place about 2 miles farther east.<br />

Eastbourne, on the eastern side of Beachy Head, consists of an old villao-e at<br />

Fig. 78.<br />

—<br />

Beightox.<br />

Scale 1 : 120,000.<br />

some distance from the sea, <strong>and</strong> a modern watering-place, far more quiet iu<br />

appearance than are <strong>its</strong> rivals, Brighton <strong>and</strong> Hastings. But whilst the old village<br />

of Eastbourne has grown into a populous town, <strong>its</strong> neighbour Pevensey, on the site<br />

of the Roman Portus Anderida, <strong>and</strong> affiliated to Hastings as one of the Cinque<br />

Ports, has been deserted by the sea, <strong>and</strong> has dwindled into a poor village, whose<br />

houses nestle at the base of a Norman castle reared upon Eoman fotmdatious. As<br />

one of the Cinque Ports, Pevensey was exempted from customs dues, <strong>and</strong> enjoyed<br />

special fishery rights, on condition of <strong>its</strong> providing a certain number of men-of-war<br />

L 2

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