From ancient landmarks steeped in history to natural wonders, a new interactive map has revealed the exact locations of England's 400,000 heritage sites.

Created by Historic England, the map marks the many grade-listed buildings, protected parks and heritage sites around the country. Live and breathe the story of England at places like Windsor Castle, Hampton Court Palace, Tower Bridge, Battersea Power Station, and other national treasures like Abbey Road Studios and the BT Tower.

The map can be filtered by various heritage sites, including listed venues, building preservation notices, certificates of immunity, scheduled monuments, parks and gardens, battlefields, protected wrecks, and world heritage sites. Simply select which one you are interested in viewing, and click 'apply filters'.

England boasts an impressive 400,000 grade-listed buildings and 33 properties inscribed on the World Heritage List. If you're looking to explore more of these historical sites, then browse the map to ensure you don't miss any.

TRY MAP

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Historic England

The map also includes the world-famous Stonehenge, Richmond Park in London, Philips Green in Manchester, the Roman defensive fortification Hadrian's Wall, and the Jurassic Coast — a 95-mile long stretch of coastline in southern England, situated within the counties of Dorset and Devon.

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a stretch of hadrian's wall at walton's crags in northumberland, england, coloured by the setting sunpinterest
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"For the first time, we have robust economic evidence that heritage makes a significant contribution to people's quality of life," Lord Neil Mendoza, chairman of Historic England, told Mail Online.

"We all value the role that green spaces play in ensuring wellbeing. This new ground-breaking research shows us that the everyday local heritage found in towns and cities across England plays a comparable and valuable role."

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Lisa Joyner
Deputy Daily Editor, Country Living and House Beautiful

 Lisa Joyner is the Deputy Daily Editor at House Beautiful UK and Country Living UK, where she's busy writing about home and interiors, gardening, dog breeds, pets, health and wellbeing, countryside news, small space inspiration, and the hottest properties on the market. Previously, she has written for Conde Nast Traveller, House & Garden and Marie Claire magazine. Lisa studied at University For The Creative Arts, where she completed a BA in Fashion Journalism.