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Rye is a town and civil parish in the Rother district of East Sussex, England, two miles (three kilometres) from the sea at the confluence of three rivers: the Rother, the Tillingham and the Brede.
Easy to reach by train or car from the capital London and from anywhere in the counties of East Sussex, Kent, and West Sussex, Rye is the perfect English day trip or weekend break. Expect historic sights, unique natural landscapes, and plenty of quirky shops and eateries.
Rye makes an excellent weekend destination or a stop on a cycle or hiking tour of the Romney Marshes. It's also a good place to warm up with tea and a cake after a bracing day on nearby, dog-friendly Camber Sands.
It covers the top attractions and best things to do and see in Rye in 24 hours. Steeped in history, Rye is a well-preserved medieval town in East Sussex with a medieval castle, a beautiful church, and some of the best preserved medieval homes in England.
From Tillingham Winery to the Mermaid Inn, here’s how to smash the perfect day (or weekend) in Rye.
Rye is a picturesque town in East Sussex, with cobbled streets, historical buildings and lovely independent shops making it easy to spend several hours wandering the streets.
Rye is a town in East Sussex that in medieval times was one of the Cinque Ports responsible for England's maritime defence. It stood at the head of a bay, which silted up, leaving the town two miles from the sea.
Possibly southeast England’s quaintest town, Rye is a little nugget of the past, a medieval settlement that looks like someone hit the pause button on time. Even the most hard-boiled cynic can’t fail to be softened by Rye’s cobbled lanes, mysterious passageways and crooked half-timbered Tudor buildings. Tales of resident smugglers, ghosts ...
Rye, a charming medieval cinque port town is one of England’s best kept secrets. Here are my tips on the best things to do in Rye, East Sussex
Rye is one of the best-preserved walled medieval hill towns in England. It also has a wonderful selection of Tudor and Georgian buildings. The town kept a strong sense of its own identity when many high streets became clones of one another.