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Western Morning News (Saturday)

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July 12, 2025

A TWIN-CENTRE TRIP TO CYPRUS GIVES PAUL HENDERSON A HISTORY LESSON

WE'RE walking in the sunshine in the footsteps of kings and queens, pashas and sultans in the ancient city of Amathus.

One of the kings had a bloodline to Cleopatra and would have bathed in the stone baths heated by furnaces, choosing a medium or very hot tub, or even a steam room before plunging into cold mountain water.

After bathing, his Royal Highness would have been massaged with expensive aromatic oils and perfumes imported from the East.

All of this pampering happened 3,000 years ago on the coastal cliffs of the southern coast of Cyprus, where unwashed sailors, farmers and merchants were not accepted into the inner city until they bathed to become socially acceptable.

Archaeologists have spent decades digging to expose the ruins of royal palaces and temples for worshipping the gods of love and fertility, war and hunting, structures built on hills with views of the Mediterranean Sea to spot Arab invaders.

In the main square under a cloudless, blue sky, our guide Rose Marie vividly transports us into the past to imagine maritime traders arriving from the now sunken but still visible port. They were there to buy and sell, chat and argue under a covered shopping arcade that doubled up as a newsroom where stories were exchanged from Lebanon, Syria and mainland Greece.

After travelling back in time, we take a 10-minute drive to Limassol to check in at Louis Hotels' Royal Apollonia. The property blends old-world charm with up-to-date amenities, including a swim-up bar in one of the three pools, three restaurants, and beach loungers attended by waiters.

The hotel has replicated the rejuvenation treatments of the kings and queens in its own temple of wellbeing. Soothing scents give a sense of calm and a couples' massage relieves our tired muscles in the tranquillity of the spa.

WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Western Morning News (Saturday)

Western Morning News (Saturday)

Hook, line, and sinker

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time to read

1 mins

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Western Morning News (Saturday)

Gulls looking to gain ground in title race

WITH 22 games to go in their National League South campaign, ahead of today's home game against Hampton & Richmond Borough (KO 3pm), manager Paul Wotton says Torquay United are 'one thousand, million, trillion per cent' in the race for promotion.

time to read

2 mins

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Western Morning News (Saturday)

Is British society equal? The clues are in the titles

I HAVE no wish to detract from the pride and pleasure which recipients of the latest New Year honours must feel, but the annual announcement always depresses me, and not because I've been overlooked yet again; if I still hope one day to be offered some royal bauble it’s only because I'd relish the opportunity to refuse it, joining a far more select and noble band which includes Alan Bennett, Helen Mirren, Peter O'Toole, George Bernard Shaw, Danny Boyle (who said the honours system “just makes me vomit”), Stephen Hawking, Michael Faraday, TE Lawrence, JG Ballard (“the honours system is a Ruritanian charade that helps to prop up the top-heavy monarchy”), Virginia Woolf, JB Priestley, WH Auden and the historian AJP

time to read

2 mins

January 10, 2026

Western Morning News (Saturday)

FARM HAS 36 ACRES

The farm is for sale due to retirement, having been in the ownership of the same family for about 60 years, originally being a dairy farm, then following the sale of the herd continued as a stock farm and of late some of the land has been let for horses.

time to read

1 mins

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Western Morning News (Saturday)

Staying indoors to work on the podcast

Read Martin's column every week in the Western Morning News

time to read

4 mins

January 10, 2026

Western Morning News (Saturday)

Young mum 'glassed' friend in bar

A YOUNG mother has been banned from a town centre bar after she glassed a friend on the side of head for no apparent reason.

time to read

1 mins

January 10, 2026

Western Morning News (Saturday)

This book is my baby... the film feels more like a niece or nephew

Prize-winning novelist Maggie O'Farrell talks about the big-screen adaptation of her book Hamnet, and tells HANNAH STEPHENSON how she loved every minute of being co-screenwriter on the project

time to read

4 mins

January 10, 2026

Western Morning News (Saturday)

Western Morning News (Saturday)

Grand days out... with a garden crawl

ON A THREE-DAY TOUR OF COUNTY DOWN IN NORTHERN IRELAND, DANIEL BIRD DISCOVERS STATELY HOMES AND SPRAWLING GROUNDS THAT ARE FIT FOR OUR KING

time to read

4 mins

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Western Morning News (Saturday)

To be, or not to be an Oscar winner... that is the question

JESSIE BUCKLEY SHOULD BE A SHOO-IN FOR A GOLDEN STATUE FOR HER TOWERING PERFORMANCE IN MOVING DRAMA ABOUT THE TRAGIC INSPIRATION FOR SHAKESPEARE'S HAMLET

time to read

2 mins

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Western Morning News (Saturday)

Western Morning News (Saturday)

Caldwell's grand plan to pull off Cup giant-killing

‘ANY have tried, but few have succeeded in beating Manchester City and their charismatic manager Pep Guardiola.

time to read

4 mins

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