AudaTours logoAudaTours

Winchester Audio Tour: Everyday Histories

Audioguida14 tappe

Winchester's spires and royal halls belong to bishops and kings. The city between them belongs to a different cast entirely: the Norman mason who built the cathedral in 1079 on waterlogged peat; the deep-sea diver William Walker who spent five years underground in complete darkness replacing those rotten foundations with concrete, brick by underwater brick; the manciple John Bedell who provisioned Winchester College for nearly forty years; the tanner James Cooke who rebuilt the Saxon mill on the Itchen in 1743; the butter-sellers and cheese-sellers who traded from the Buttercross steps; the coaching-inn landlord who turned 270 years of trade into a bric-a-brac shrine; and the unnamed abbey workers whose bones were scattered by prison convicts in 1788. Heritage Open Days 2026 theme is Everyday Histories — the unsung people missing from the picture. This tour gives them their day.

Anteprima del tour

map

Informazioni su questo tour

  • schedule
    Durata 40–60 minsVai al tuo ritmo
  • straighten
    4.2 km di percorso a piediSegui il percorso guidato
  • location_on
  • wifi_off
    Funziona offlineScarica una volta, usa ovunque
  • all_inclusive
    Accesso a vitaRiascolta quando vuoi, per sempre
  • location_on
    Parte da Winchester Cathedral, Winchester

Tappe di questo tour

location_on
1
lock
Winchester CathedralJane Austen's ledger stone in the floor of the Cathedral's north aisle, where she was buried on 24 July 1817. She came to Winchester on 24 May 1817, gravely ill, and lodged at 8 College Street with her sister Cassandra. She died on 18 July, aged 41. Her brothers arranged the epitaph: it mentions her piety, her family, and her 'extraordinary endowments of mind' — but not a single novel. The first public acknowledgement of her authorship came only with a brass wall plaque added by her nephew in 1870.
location_on
2
lock
8 College StA Grade II* listed late-18th-century house in College Street where Jane Austen lodged with her sister Cassandra from 24 May to 18 July 1817 — her last eight weeks of life. She came to Winchester to seek treatment from surgeon Giles King Lyford; she died here on 18 July, aged 41. She was working on Sanditon in this house and wrote a light comic poem about St Swithun's Day on 15 July. The blue plaque above the door was placed by her admirers, not her family.
location_on
3
lock
The Wykeham Arms, WinchesterA Grade II listed coaching inn at 75 Kingsgate Street, established in 1755, tucked between Winchester College and the Cathedral Close. Lord Nelson is said to have stopped here on his way to Portsmouth. By the mid-20th century it had become the Fleur de Lys bar. Its late landlord Graeme Jameson, widely regarded as the perfect landlord, filled the pub with so much bric-a-brac that his collection still covers the walls today.
location_on
4
lock
Kingsgate StreetOne of two surviving medieval city gates of Winchester, probably built in the early 1100s on the site of a Roman gate. The church of St Swithun-upon-Kingsgate sits directly on top of the gateway arch — a rare surviving example of the 'gateway church' type, built for the lay workers of the adjacent abbey. The gate's stonework dates largely to the 13th-14th centuries. It still carries the minor road under its arch.
location_on
5
lock
Winchester CollegeFounded in 1382 by William of Wykeham, Bishop of Winchester and Lord Chancellor — himself the son of a Hampshire peasant farmer, who rose to become Chancellor to two kings. The college was built to house and educate 70 poor scholars, 16 choristers, 10 fellows, a warden and a domestic staff. Manciple John Bedell provisioned the college kitchen from 1459 to 1498 — 39 years of daily catering for seventy mouths. The college has operated continuously on its original site ever since.
location_on
6
lock
Wolvesey Castle (Old Bishop's Palace)The ruins of the 12th-century bishops' palace built primarily by Henry of Blois (Bishop 1129-1171), brother of King Stephen and grandson of William the Conqueror. At his death in 1171 Wolvesey was the most expensive non-royal building project in Norman England. A workforce of hundreds — stone-cutters, masons, carpenters, plasterers, metalworkers — built and maintained the palace continuously from the 1120s. Mary I and Philip II of Spain held their wedding reception here in 1554.

Domande frequenti

Come inizio il tour?

Dopo l'acquisto, scarica l'app AudaTours e inserisci il tuo codice di riscatto. Il tour sarà pronto per partire immediatamente – tocca play e segui il percorso guidato dal GPS.

Ho bisogno di internet durante il tour?

No! Scarica il tour prima di iniziare e goditelo completamente offline. Solo la funzione chat richiede internet. Ti consigliamo di scaricare tramite WiFi per risparmiare dati mobili.

È un tour guidato di gruppo?

No – è un tour audio autoguidato. Esplori in autonomia al tuo ritmo, con la narrazione audio riprodotta dal tuo telefono. Nessuna guida, nessun gruppo, nessun orario.

Quanto dura il tour?

La maggior parte dei tour richiede 60–90 minuti, ma sei tu a controllare il ritmo. Metti in pausa, salta le tappe o fai pause quando vuoi.

E se non riesco a finire il tour oggi?

Nessun problema! I tour hanno accesso a vita. Metti in pausa e riprendi quando vuoi – domani, la prossima settimana o il prossimo anno. I tuoi progressi vengono salvati.

Quali lingue sono disponibili?

Tutti i tour sono disponibili in oltre 50 lingue. Seleziona la lingua preferita quando riscatti il codice. Nota: la lingua non può essere cambiata dopo la generazione del tour.

Dove accedo al tour dopo l'acquisto?

Scarica l'app gratuita AudaTours dall'App Store o Google Play. Inserisci il codice di riscatto (inviato via email) e il tour apparirà nella tua libreria, pronto per essere scaricato e avviato.

verified_user
Soddisfazione garantita

Se il tour non ti piace, ti rimborseremo l'acquisto. Contattaci a [email protected]

Pagamento sicuro con

Apple PayGoogle PayVisaMastercardPayPal
Amato dai viaggiatori di tutto il mondo

Migliaia di tour iniziati.
Un sacco di opinioni.

4.8 su App Store e Google Play. Ecco alcune recensioni a cui torniamo spesso.

starstarstarstarstar
Un ottimo modo per conoscere Brighton senza sentirsi un turista. La narrazione aveva profondità e contesto, senza esagerare.
Christoph
Christoph
Tour Brighton
starstarstarstarstar
Ho iniziato questo tour con un cornetto in mano e zero aspettative. L'app ti accompagna tranquillamente, niente pressione, solo tu, le tue cuffie e delle storie interessanti.
download Scarica l'app

Metti le cuffie.
Esci fuori.

Gratis da scaricare. Tour in ogni città. Parti in 60 secondi — senza account, senza carta.

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play
starstarstarstarstar_half
4.8
AudaTours app icon
headphones
~ 4 min al tuo primo tour
public
1.000+ città nel mondo
all_inclusive
AudaTours
Unlimited

Ogni tour. Ogni città. Un abbonamento.

3323 tour2270 città139 paesi50+ lingue