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Exeter
Exeter
from Wikipedia

Exeter (/ˈɛksɪtər/ EK-sit-ər) is a cathedral city and the county town of Devon in South West England. It is situated on the River Exe, approximately 36 mi (58 km) northeast of Plymouth and 65 mi (105 km) southwest of Bristol.

Key Information

In Roman Britain, Exeter was established as the base of Legio II Augusta under the personal command of Vespasian. Exeter became a religious centre in the Middle Ages. Exeter Cathedral, founded in the mid 11th century, became Anglican in the 16th-century English Reformation. Exeter became an affluent centre for the wool trade, although by the First World War the city was in decline. After the Second World War, much of the city centre was rebuilt and is now a centre for education, business and tourism in South West England. It is home to two of the constituent campuses of the University of Exeter: Streatham and St Luke's.

The administrative area of Exeter has the status of a non-metropolitan district under the administration of the County Council. It is the county town of Devon and home to the headquarters of Devon County Council. A plan to grant the city unitary authority status was scrapped by the 2010 coalition government,[4] however it is currently making another bid for unitary status under local government reorganisation.[5]

Name

[edit]

The modern name of Exeter is a development of the Old English Escanceaster,[6] from the anglicised form of the river now known as the Exe and the Old English suffix -ceaster (as in Dorchester and Gloucester), used to mark important fortresses or fortified towns (from Latin castrum, meaning fortress, or castra, military camp). (Similarly, the city's Cornish name Karesk and its Welsh name Caerwysg both mean "caer or fortress on the Exe".) The name "Exe" is a separate development of the Brittonic name—meaning "water"[6] or, more exactly, "full of fish" (cf. Welsh pysg, pl. "fish")[7]—that also appears in the English Axe and Esk and the Welsh Usk (Wysg).

History

[edit]

Prehistory

[edit]

Exeter began as settlements on a dry ridge ending in a spur overlooking a navigable river teeming with fish, with fertile land nearby. Although there have been no major prehistoric finds, these advantages suggest the site was occupied early.[8]

Coins have been discovered from the Hellenistic kingdoms, suggesting the existence of a settlement trading with the Mediterranean as early as 250 BC.[9] Such early towns had been a feature of pre-Roman Gaul as described by Julius Caesar in his Commentaries and it is possible that they existed in Britannia as well.

The source Geoffrey of Monmouth stated that when Vespasian besieged the city in 49 AD its Celtic name was Kaerpenhuelgoit, meaning 'town on the hill under the high wood'.[10]

A portion of Exeter's city wall, formed of both Roman and medieval stones

Roman times

[edit]

The Romans established a 42-acre (17 ha) 'playing-card' shaped (rectangle with round corners and two short and two long sides - "stadium") fort (Latin: castrum) named Isca around AD 55. The fort was the southwest terminus of the Fosse Way (Route 15 of the Antonine Itinerary) and served as the base of the 5 000-man Second Augustan Legion (Legio II Augusta) at some time led by Vespasian, later Roman Emperor, for the next 20 years before they moved to Caerleon in Wales, which was also known as Isca. To distinguish the two, the Romans also referred to Exeter as Isca Dumnoniorum, "Watertown of the Dumnonii", and Caerleon as Isca Augusta. A small fort was also maintained at Topsham; a supply depot on the route between the two was excavated at St Loyes near Topsham Road in 2010.[11]

The presence of the fort built up an unplanned civilian community (vicus or canabae) of natives and the soldiers' families, mostly to the northeast of the fort. This settlement served as the tribal capital (civitas) of the Dumnonii[12] and was listed as one of their four cities (Ancient Greek: poleis) by Ptolemy in his Geography[13] (it also appeared in the 7th-century Ravenna Cosmography, where it appears as an apparently confused entry for Scadu Namorum[14]). When the fortress was abandoned around the year 75, its grounds were converted to civilian purposes: its very large bathhouse was demolished to make way for a forum and a basilica, and a smaller-scale bath was erected to the southeast.[12] This area was excavated in the 1970s,[15][16] but could not be maintained for public view owing to its proximity to the present-day cathedral. In January 2015, it was announced that Exeter Cathedral had launched a bid to restore the baths and open an underground centre for visitors.[17]

In the late 2nd century, the ditch and rampart defences around the old fortress were replaced by a bank and wall enclosing a much larger area, some 92 acres (37 hectares).[18] Although most of the visible structure is older, the course of the Roman wall was used for the subsequent Exeter city walls. Thus about 70% of the Roman wall remains, and most of its route can be traced on foot. The Devonian Isca seems to have been most prosperous in the first half of the 4th century: more than a thousand Roman coins have been found around the city and there is evidence for copper and bronze working, a stock-yard, and markets for the livestock, crops, and pottery produced in the surrounding countryside.[19] The dating of the coins so far discovered, however, suggests a rapid decline: virtually none have been discovered dated after the year 380.[20]

Medieval times

[edit]

Bishop Ussher identified the Cair Pensa vel Coyt,[21] listed among the 28 cities of Britain by the History of the Britons, as Isca,[22] although David Nash Ford read it as a reference to Penselwood and thought it more likely to be Lindinis (modern Ilchester).[23] Nothing is certainly known of Exeter from the time of the Roman withdrawal from Britain around the year 410 until the seventh century.[24] By that time, the city was held by the Saxons, who had arrived in Exeter after defeating the British Dumnonians at Peonnum in Somerset in 658.[25] It seems likely that the Saxons maintained a quarter of the city for the Britons under their own laws around present-day Bartholomew Street,[26] which was known as "Britayne" Street until 1637 in memory of its former occupants.[27]

Exeter was known to the Saxons as Escanceaster.[6] In 876, it was attacked and briefly captured by Danish Vikings. Alfred the Great drove them out the next summer.[28] Over the next few years, he elevated Exeter to one of the four burhs in Devon, rebuilding its walls on the Roman lines.[29] These permitted the city to fend off another attack and siege by the Danes in 893.[29] King Athelstan again strengthened the walls around 928, and at the same time drove out the remaining Britons from the city.[28] (It is uncertain, though, whether they had lived in the city continuously since the Roman period or returned from the countryside when Alfred strengthened its defences.[30]) According to William of Malmesbury, they were sent beyond the River Tamar, which was fixed as the boundary of Devon. (This may, however, have served as a territorial boundary within the former kingdom of Dumnonia as well.[31]) Other references suggest that the British simply moved to what is now the St David's area, not far outside Exeter's walls. The quarter vacated by the Britons was apparently adapted as "the earl's burh" and was still named Irlesberi in the 12th century.[28] In 1001, the Danes again failed to get into the city, but they were able to plunder it in 1003 because they were let in, for unknown reasons, by the French reeve of Emma of Normandy, who had been given the city as part of her dowry on her marriage to Æthelred the Unready the previous year.[28]

The gatehouse of Rougemont Castle

Two years after the Norman conquest of England, Exeter rebelled against King William. Gytha Thorkelsdóttir, the mother of the slain King Harold, was living in the city at the time, and William promptly marched west and initiated a siege. After 18 days, William accepted the city's honourable surrender, swearing an oath not to harm the city or increase its ancient tribute. However, William quickly arranged for the building of Rougemont Castle to strengthen Norman control over the area. Properties owned by Saxon landlords were transferred into Norman hands and, on the death of Bishop Leofric in 1072, the Norman Osbern FitzOsbern was appointed his successor.[32]

In 1136, early in the Anarchy, Rougemont Castle was held against King Stephen by Baldwin de Redvers. Redvers submitted only after a three-month siege, not when the three wells in the castle ran dry, but only after the exhaustion of the large supplies of wine that the garrison was using for drinking, baking, cooking, and putting out fires set by the besiegers.[33] During the siege, King Stephen built an earthen fortification at the site now known (erroneously) as Danes Castle.[34]

Remains of the medieval Exe Bridge, built around 1200[35]
Oil on canvas painting by an unknown artist c.1870. These houses were later demolished to make way for St Edmund's Church. The painting depicts the edge of the River Exe flowing under three arches of the Old Exe Bridge, with houses on the bridge and on the river bank, St Edmund's Church can be seen in the top left.

The city held a weekly market for the benefit of its citizens from at least 1213, and by 1281 Exeter was the only town in the south-west to have three market days per week. There are also records of seven annual fairs, the earliest of which dates from 1130, and all of which continued until at least the early 16th century.[36]

Prior to the expulsion of the Jews of England in 1290, Exeter was home to England's most westerly Jewish community.[37]

During the high medieval period, both the cathedral clergy and the citizens enjoyed access to sophisticated aqueduct systems which brought pure drinking water into the city from springs in the neighbouring parish of St Sidwell's. For part of their length, these aqueducts were conveyed through a remarkable network of tunnels, or underground passages, which survive largely intact and which may still be visited today.[38]

Exeter and Bristol hosted the first recorded Common Council in the medieval England.[39] The first detailed and continuous evidence of its existence and activity was founded after 1345.[40] Formed by twelve "better and more discreet men" (in Latin: duodecim meliores), reelected each year, it was originally designed to control the abuse of the Major and of his four stewards, which respectively presided over the borough court and the provost court. The members of the Common Council come from the same elite of wealthy citizens, as did the major and the stewards[41] and this concern introduced a second conflict of interests in the government organism of the city.

Modern times

[edit]
An illustration of Exeter in 1563, entitled Civitas Exoniae (vulgo Excester) urbs primaria in comitatu Devoniae
Tudor and Stuart eras

In 1537, the city was made a county corporate. In 1549, the city successfully withstood a month-long siege by the so-called Prayer Book rebels: Devon and Cornish folk who had been infuriated by the radical religious policies of King Edward VI. The insurgents occupied the suburbs of Exeter, burnt down two of the city gates and attempted to undermine the city walls, but were eventually forced to abandon the siege after they had been worsted in a series of bloody battles with the king's army. A number of rebels were executed in the immediate aftermath of the siege.[42] The Livery Dole almshouses and chapel at Heavitree were founded in March 1591 and finished in 1594.

When John Hooker was appointed to the city payroll in 1561, he created the Court of Orphans as a municipal government for families broken by the premature death of their major economic source. He also was made the Common Council as the legal owner of any estate left to the orphan children of Exeter, until they have reached the age of 21 to be partially paid back.[43] The orphan tax was used to fund the construction of the Exeter canal.[44]

The city's motto, Semper fidelis, is traditionally held to have been suggested by Elizabeth I, in acknowledgement of the city's contribution of ships to help defeat the Spanish Armada in 1588;[45] however its first documented use is in 1660.[citation needed] Schools in Exeter teach that the motto was bestowed by Charles II in 1660 at the Restoration due to Exeter's role in the English Civil War.[citation needed]

When in 1638 Reverend John Wheelwright was exiled from the Massachusetts Bay Colony and subsequently established a community on the banks of the Squamscott River, he named the region Exeter after its Devonian counterpart. During the American Revolution it became the capital of New Hampshire.[46]

Exeter was secured for Parliament at the beginning of the English Civil War, and its defences very much strengthened, but in September 1643 it was captured by the Cornish Royalist Army led by Prince Maurice. Thereafter, the city remained firmly under the king's control until near the end of the war, being one of the final Royalist cities to fall into Parliamentarian hands.[47] The surrender of Exeter was negotiated in April 1646 at Poltimore House by Thomas Fairfax.[48] During this period, Exeter was an economically powerful city, with a strong trade of wool. This was partly due to the surrounding area which was "more fertile and better inhabited than that passed over the preceding day" according to Count Lorenzo Magalotti who visited the city when he was 26 years old.[49] Magalotti writes of over thirty thousand people being employed in the county of Devon as part of the wool and cloth industries, merchandise that was sold to "the West Indies, Spain, France and Italy".[50] Celia Fiennes also visited Exeter during this period, in the early 18th century. She remarked on the "vast trade" and "incredible quantity" in Exeter, recording that "it turns the most money in a week of anything in England", between £10,000 and £15,000.[51]

Georgian and Victorian eras
John Rocque's 1744 map of Exeter

Early in the Industrial Revolution, Exeter's industry developed on the basis of locally available agricultural products and, since the city's location on a fast-flowing river gave it ready access to water power, an early industrial site developed on drained marshland to the west of the city, at Exe Island. However, when steam power replaced water in the 19th century, Exeter was too far from sources of coal (or iron) to develop further. As a result, the city declined in relative importance and was spared the rapid 19th-century development that changed many historic European cities. Extensive canal redevelopments during this period further expanded Exeter's economy, with "vessels of 15 to 16 tons burthen [bringing] up goods and merchandise from Topsham to the City Quay".[52] In 1778 a new bridge across the Exe was opened to replace the old medieval bridge. Built at a cost of £30,000, it had three arches and was built of stone.[53]

Frontispiece to Shapter's "History of the Cholera in Exeter in 1832"

In 1832, cholera, which had been erupting all across Europe, reached Exeter. The only known documentation of this event was written by Dr Thomas Shapter, one of the medical doctors present during the epidemic.[54]

The first railway to arrive in Exeter was the Bristol and Exeter Railway that opened a station at St Davids on the western edge in 1844. The South Devon Railway Company extended the line westwards to Plymouth, opening their own smaller station at St Thomas, above Cowick Street. A more central railway station, that at Queen Street, was opened by the London and South Western Railway in 1860 when it opened its alternative route to London. Butchers Lloyd Maunder moved to their present base in 1915, to gain better access to the Great Western Railway for transportation of meat products to London.

The High Street c. 1895

The first electricity in Exeter was provided by the Exeter Electric Light Company, which was formed at the end of the 1880s, but it was municipalised in 1896 and became the City of Exeter Electricity Company.[55] In 1896 £88,000 was spent constructing sewerage system which reduced the risk of infectious diseases,[56]

The first horse-drawn trams in Exeter were introduced in 1882 with 3 lines radiating from the city's East Gate. One line went to St David's station via New North Road, the Obelisk (where the Clock Tower now stands) and St David's Hill. The second line went out along Heavitree Road to Livery Dole and the third went to Mount Pleasant along Sidwell Street. There was a depot off New North Road.[57]

20th century

[edit]
Lamp standard from the 1905 Exe bridge, installed at Butts Ferry, on Exeter Quayside, in 1983

A new bridge across the Exe was opened on 29 March 1905, replacing the former Georgian bridge. Made of cast iron and steel with a three-hinged arch design, it cost £25,000 and was designed by Sir John Wolfe Barry.[53] Also in 1905, electric trams replaced the horse trams[58] with a new route which passed along the High Street, down Fore Street and over the new Exe Bridge. Once across the Exe the line divided, with one route along Alphington Road and another along Cowick Street. The line to St David's Station travelled along Queen Street instead of along New North Road and the line to Heavitree was extended.[59] On 17 March 1917, a tram went out of control going down Fore Street, hit a horse-drawn wagon, then overturned on Exe Bridge; one female passenger was killed.[60] By the 1920s there were problems with congestion caused by the trams, a need for expensive track renewal work and the slow speed of the trams in Exeter's narrow streets. After much discussion, the council decided to replace the tram service with double-decker buses and the last tram ran on 19 August 1931. The only remaining Exeter tram in service is car 19, now at the Seaton Tramway.[61]

Watercolour by Olive Wharry circa 1942 of St. Sidwell's Church, Exeter, after the Blitz. In the early hours of 4th May 1942 a 250kg bomb fell directly on St Sidwells. The church tower was left standing but was so badly damaged that it was pulled down shortly after. A replacement church was built on the site. From the Royal Albert Memorial Museum's collection (63/2004/4).

Exeter was bombed by the German Luftwaffe during the Second World War when a total of 18 raids between 1940 and 1942 flattened much of the city centre. Between April 1941 and April 1943, Exeter was defended from enemy bombers by the No. 307 Polish Night Fighter Squadron, nicknamed the 'Lwów Eagle Owls', who were based at Exeter Airport. The city of Lwów shared the same motto as the city of Exeter – 'Semper Fidelis' (Always faithful).

In April and May 1942, as part of the Baedeker Blitz and specifically in response to the RAF bombing of Lübeck and Rostock, 40 acres (16 hectares) of the city were leveled by incendiary bombing. Many historic buildings in the centre—particularly adjacent to High Street and Sidwell Street—were destroyed, and others, including the cathedral, were damaged. On the night of 4 May, the Polish 307 Squadron dispatched four available aircraft against forty German Junkers Ju 88 bombers, preventing four German aircraft from releasing their load of bombs on Exeter. 156 people were killed, but the squadron suffered no casualties in the process.

To commemorate the friendship that had formed between the 307 Squadron and Exeter, the squadron presented the city with a Polish flag on 15 November 1942 (the first British city to have had that honour) outside Exeter Cathedral. Since 2012, a Polish flag is raised over the city's Guildhall on 15 November; the day is now known as '307 Squadron Day' in Exeter. On 15 November 2017, a plaque in memory of the squadron was unveiled in the St James Chapel of Exeter Cathedral by the Polish Ambassador Arkady Rzegocki.

Large areas of the city centre were rebuilt in the 1950s, with little attempt to preserve or restore historic buildings. The street plan was altered in an attempt to improve traffic circulation, and former landmarks like St Lawrence, the College of the Vicars Choral, and Bedford circus disappeared. The modern architecture stands in sharp contrast to the red sandstone of buildings that survived the Blitz.[62] One notable exception was The House That Moved, which is one of Europe's oldest private residences,[63] which was due for demolition for a new relief road, but was saved after the intervention of the Ministry of Works, and was moved to a new location.[64][65]

Exe Flood Relief Channel built after the floods of 1960

On 27 October 1960, following very heavy rain, the Exe overflowed and flooded large areas of Exeter including Exwick, St Thomas and Alphington. The water rose as high as 2 metres above ground level in places and 150 employees of the local firm Beach Bros were trapped for nine hours. 2,500 properties were flooded. Later the same year on 3 December the river levels rose again, flooding 1,200 properties. These floods led to the construction of new flood defences for Exeter. Work began in 1965, took 12 years to complete and cost £8 million. The defences included three flood relief channels, and were complemented by the construction of two new concrete bridges (built in 1969 and 1972) to replace the old Exe Bridge which had obstructed the flow of the river and made the flooding worse.[66]

A high-profile, random murder of a child occurred in the city in 1997, which today remains one of the UK's highest-profile unsolved murders. 14-year-old Kate Bushell, a pupil at what is now West Exe School, had her throat cut by an unidentified attacker while walking her dog along Exwick Lane, Exwick, on 15 November 1997. Despite the police insisting the killer must be local and repeatedly appealing for locals to come forward with information on Crimewatch, the attacker has never been identified. Police believe Bushell's murder is possibly linked to the murder of dogwalker Lyn Bryant in Cornwall only one year later in 1998. Police have DNA evidence in the Bryant case and there remains a £10,000 reward for information in both cases.[67]

21st century

[edit]

The Princesshay shopping centre adjoining the Cathedral Close and the High Street was redeveloped between 2005 and 2007,[68][69] despite some local opposition.[70] It incorporates 123 varied residential units.[71]

To enable people with limited mobility to enjoy the city, Exeter Community Transport Association provides manual and powered wheelchairs and scooters ('Shopmobility') for use by anyone suffering from short- or long-term mobility impairment to access the city centre shopping facilities, events and meetings with friends.[72]

In May 2008 there was an attempted terrorist attack on the Giraffe cafe in Princesshay, but the bomber was the only one injured.[73]

John Lewis Building, adjacent to Waterstones in the busy high street.
John Lewis Building (right), adjacent to Waterstones (left) in the busy high street

On 12 October 2012, John Lewis opened its first high-street home store on Sidwell Street, with an area of 65,000 ft, it was the biggest John Lewis store to open that year.[74] It took on 300 staff.[75]

A £30 million improvement scheme for the flood defences was approved in March 2015. The plans involve the removal of check weirs and a deeper, "meandering stream" in the centre of the drainage channels to improve flow. The plans followed a study by the Environment Agency that revealed weaknesses in the current defences.[76] A community currency for the city, the Exeter Pound, was introduced in 2015[77] and dissolved in 2018.[78]

A serious fire broke out in buildings in central Exeter on 28 October 2016. The Royal Clarence Hotel, 18 Cathedral Yard and The Well House Tavern[79] were severely damaged in the fire.[80][81] In July 2017 the restoration and reconstruction plans were officially unveiled, with the rebuild expected to be completed in 18 months and a scheduled reopening of the hotel in 2019.[82][83] 18 Cathedral Yard was repaired by November 2018, but there was a second round of bids for the work to complete repairs to The Well House, and to rebuild the Royal Clarence Hotel as a 74-bedroom hotel.[84][85][86] However, in late 2021 it was announced that the hotel scheme was "significantly unviable",[87] and the Royal Clarence site would be converted into twenty-three luxury apartments with the ground floor acting as a leisure and hospitality space.[88]The plans[89][90] were officially granted permission on 11 October 2022. The work, involving the demolition and reconstruction of the remaining fabric, will last just under eighteen months and was due to begin in the summer of 2023.[91] However on 19 December 2024, it was announced that local architecture NooKo will now undertake the work.[92] The restoration of The Royal Clarence, The Well House Tavern pub, and Exeter Bank building commenced on 1 April 2025, which is scheduled for completion in 2027.[93][94][95] On 18 August 2025, Nooko announced, that they had submitted small amendments and alterations to the planning permission. The proposals include; Alternative designs on all apartments and duplexes. Which will now all feature two bedrooms. A new staircase will also be introduced. Alongside a internal light well that will be featured around some of the original, fire-scarred timbers. Therefore preserving much more of the original building historical fabric materials from the previous design. Exeter City Council will announce their decision of subject to approval in November 2025.[96][97]

On 27 February 2021 a 2,200 lb (1,000 kg) Second World War bomb was uncovered at a construction site and more than 2,600 people were evacuated. Bomb Disposal squads used approximately 400 tons of sand to secure it. It was safely detonated at 18:12.[98] By 1 March hundreds of the evacuees were unable to return to their properties, due to damage caused by the detonation of the bomb.[99] On 2 March the council permitted affected residents to return to their homes while noting that many might be "uninhabitable at this stage". The University of Exeter reported that some 300 students (of the 1,400 evacuated) had yet to return.[100]

Homelessness

[edit]

Exeter has the 6th highest number of rough sleepers on a single night of all local authorities in England (as of the autumn of 2020),[101] marking a 19% increase from 2019.[101] In 2014, Exeter had "...the unenviable status of having the highest per capita rate of rough sleeping outside of London".[102] During the COVID-19 pandemic, 102 people in Exeter rough sleeping, or at risk of rough sleeping were accommodated as part of the government's 'Everybody In' directive.[103][104] In Exeter City Council's recent 'Rough Sleeping Delivery Plan', a total of £3,351,347 was allocated for the purpose of reducing rough sleeping for the 2020–2021 period.[105] The government's Next Steps Accommodation Programme also provided Exeter City Council with £440,000 to help reduce the number of rough sleepers on Exeter's streets.[106] The council has also focussed its efforts on reducing rough sleeping in the long term, with a "£3 million Capital programme bid [for] the creation of 31 units of new long term move-on accommodation with dedicated support to be delivered before 31 March 2021".[104]

Governance

[edit]
The Exeter Law Courts
Exeter Civic Centre

Parliamentary

[edit]

Exeter is in two parliamentary constituencies, the majority of the city is in the Exeter constituency but three wards (Pinhoe, St Loyes, and Topsham) are in Exmouth and Exeter East. Since World War II until recently, Exeter itself was relatively marginal, with its Member of Parliament usually drawn from the governing party. Nowadays the Exeter seat is increasingly becoming a Labour stronghold. The Exeter MP is Steve Race, with the Youth MP being Georgia Howell. Prior to Brexit in 2020, Exeter was part of the South West England European constituency, which elected 6 MEPs.

Further to the completion of the 2023 Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies, Exmouth and Exeter East were first contested at the 2024 general election, electing Conservative David Reed.[107]

Local Government

[edit]

Exeter's city council is a district authority, and shares responsibility for local government with the Devon County Council. In May 2012 Labour became the majority party on the council. Exeter City Council's bid for the city to become a Unitary Authority was initially approved by ministers in February 2010. A judicial review was called by Devon County Council and the Court held that the Minister had acted unlawfully in granting Unitary status to Exeter at the same time, however, following the 2010 general election the new coalition government announced in May 2010 that the reorganisation would be blocked.[108][109]

From Saxon times, it was in the hundred of Wonford.[110] Exeter has had a mayor since at least 1207 and until 2002, the city was the oldest 'Right Worshipful' Mayoralty in England. As part of the Golden Jubilee of Elizabeth II Exeter was chosen to receive the title of Lord Mayor. Councillor Granville Baldwin became the first Lord Mayor of Exeter on 1 May 2002 when Letters Patent were awarded to the city during a visit by the Queen. The Lord Mayor is elected each year from amongst the 39 Exeter city councillors and is non-political for the term of office.

Public services

[edit]

Policing in Exeter is provided by the Devon and Cornwall Constabulary who have their headquarters at Middlemoor in the east of the city.

The fire service is provided by the Devon and Somerset Fire and Rescue Service, which is headquartered at Clyst St George near Exeter. It has two fire stations located at Danes Castle and Middlemoor.

The Royal Devon University Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust has a large hospital located to the south-east of the city centre. Ambulance services in Exeter are provided by South Western Ambulance Service NHS Trust. The HQ, West Trust Divisional HQ and 999 control is in Exeter which provides cover for Devon, Cornwall, Somerset and the Isles of Scilly.

Geography

[edit]
The River Exe

The city of Exeter was established on the eastern bank of the River Exe on a ridge of land backed by a steep hill. It is at this point that the Exe, having just been joined by the River Creedy, opens onto a wide flood plain and estuary which results in quite common flooding. Historically this was the lowest bridging point of the River Exe which was tidal and navigable up to the city until the construction of weirs later in its history. This combined with the easily defensible higher ground of the ridge made the current location of the city a natural choice for settlement and trade. In George Oliver's The History of the City of Exeter, it is noted that the most likely reasons for the original settling of what would become modern Exeter was the "fertility of the surrounding countryside" and the area's "beautiful and commanding elevation [and] its rapid and navigable river".[111] Its woodland would also have been ideal for natural resources and hunting.

Exeter sits predominantly on sandstone and conglomerate geology, although the structure of the surrounding areas is varied.[112] The topography of the ridge which forms the backbone of the city includes a volcanic plug, on which the Rougemont Castle is situated. The cathedral is located on the edge of this ridge and is therefore visible for a considerable distance.

Exeter is 80 mi (130 km) west-southwest of Salisbury, 158 mi (254 km) west-southwest of London, 18 mi (29 km) north of Torquay, 36 mi (58 km) northeast of Plymouth and 74 mi (119 km) east-northeast of Truro.

Climate

[edit]
The Cathedral Green after a rare snowfall

Exeter has mild wet winters, punctuated by colder spells that are usually short-lived. Summer is characterised by warm and changeable weather with hot and cooler rainy spells. Temperatures do not vary much throughout the year compared to other locations at this latitude; however, the topography of Exeter can enhance the diurnal range by a couple degrees Celsius, as spots along the sheltered valley of the River Exe such as Quayside, St Thomas and Exwick see colder nights and warmer days, the only exception to this is with foggy and frosty weather in the winter during anticyclonic activity when fog can linger all day and keep daytime temperatures suppressed.[citation needed] Similarly, the same weather patterns can elevate the maximum daily temperatures, The hottest month is July with an average high of 21.7 °C (71.1 °F), and the coldest month is January with an average high of 8.8 °C (47.8 °F). October is the wettest month with 88.9 mm (3.50 in) of rain. The weather station for these reading is at Exeter Airport; adding one degree Celsius to the readings from the maximum daily temperature and deducting a degree from the overnight minima broadly covers the location disparity.[citation needed] It is precisely because of shelter from Dartmoor that Exeter is more frost-prone than areas to the southwest, such as Plymouth. It is also drier and warmer in the summer for the same reason. The highest recorded temperature in Exeter stands at 33.5 °C (92.3 °F)[113] recorded in June 1976, while the lowest recorded temperature is −16.4 °C (2.5 °F)[114] recorded in December 2010. Although annual precipitation at the airport is 830mm, the figures in the city itself is slightly higher. Annual precipitation in Exeter ranges from 850mm in the Digby/Newcourt area, 890mm in Heavitree and up to 960-970mm in the Redhills/Exwick area. The city centre is estimated at around 900mm.

Climate data for Exeter Airport (EXT), elevation: 27 m (89 ft), 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1958–present
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 16.6
(61.9)
14.9
(58.8)
21.0
(69.8)
23.6
(74.5)
27.5
(81.5)
33.5
(92.3)
32.2
(90.0)
33.0
(91.4)
26.9
(80.4)
26.0
(78.8)
18.6
(65.5)
15.9
(60.6)
33.5
(92.3)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 9.1
(48.4)
9.4
(48.9)
11.3
(52.3)
13.8
(56.8)
17.1
(62.8)
20.0
(68.0)
21.8
(71.2)
21.6
(70.9)
19.3
(66.7)
15.5
(59.9)
12.0
(53.6)
9.4
(48.9)
15.0
(59.0)
Daily mean °C (°F) 5.9
(42.6)
5.9
(42.6)
7.4
(45.3)
9.3
(48.7)
12.2
(54.0)
15.2
(59.4)
17.0
(62.6)
16.9
(62.4)
14.6
(58.3)
11.6
(52.9)
8.2
(46.8)
6.0
(42.8)
10.9
(51.6)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 2.6
(36.7)
2.4
(36.3)
3.5
(38.3)
4.8
(40.6)
7.3
(45.1)
10.4
(50.7)
12.1
(53.8)
12.1
(53.8)
9.9
(49.8)
7.8
(46.0)
4.4
(39.9)
2.7
(36.9)
6.7
(44.1)
Record low °C (°F) −15.0
(5.0)
−9.3
(15.3)
−9.6
(14.7)
−4.4
(24.1)
−1.7
(28.9)
0.9
(33.6)
2.1
(35.8)
2.0
(35.6)
−1.0
(30.2)
−3.9
(25.0)
−6.2
(20.8)
−16.4
(2.5)
−16.4
(2.5)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 85.6
(3.37)
65.1
(2.56)
62.3
(2.45)
61.4
(2.42)
51.0
(2.01)
53.8
(2.12)
48.2
(1.90)
64.1
(2.52)
60.3
(2.37)
92.5
(3.64)
95.3
(3.75)
90.1
(3.55)
829.2
(32.65)
Mean monthly sunshine hours 58.4 82.7 117.1 167.4 195.5 194.7 193.8 171.8 151.2 106.8 69.5 52.6 1,561.6
Source 1: Magic seaweed
Source 2: KNMI[115]

Demography

[edit]
Population pyramid of Exeter (district) in 2021

From the 2011 Census, the Office for National Statistics published that Exeter's district area population was 117,773;[118] 6,697 more people than that of the last census from 2001, which indicated that Exeter had a population of 111,076.[119] At the time of the 2011 UK census, the ethnic composition of Exeter's population was 93.1% White, with the largest minority ethnic group being Chinese at 1.7%.[3] The White British, White Irish and other ethnic group all declined in numbers since the 2001 census (−1%, -6% and −10% respectively). Meanwhile, the Chinese and Other Asian had the largest increases (429% and 434% respectively).[3][120] This excludes the two new ethnic groups added to the 2011 census of Gypsy or Irish Traveller and Arab. Below are the 10 largest immigrant groups in Exeter as of 2011.[3]

Immigrants in Exeter (2011 Census)
Country of birth Numbers
China 1,665
Poland 1,296
Germany 710
India 653
Ireland 469
South Africa 438
USA 350
France 310
Philippines 295
Australia 242

In 2011, the City of Exeter had a population of 117,773, while its inner urban subdivision had a population of 113,507. The Exeter USD (urban subdivision) does not include the town of Topsham, which while it is administratively part of the city, it is often considered a separate individual settlement as well as the fact its excluded from the city's constituency.

Exeter compared 2011 Exeter USD Exeter City
White British 88.1% 88.3%
Asian 4.0% 3.9%
Black 0.6% 0.5%

[121]

In 2011, 11.9% of the population of the Exeter USD were non-white British, compared with 11.7% for the actual city and surrounding borough of Exeter.

In 2009, Exeter City was 89.1% White British, compared with 88.3% in 2011.[122]

The Exeter Urban Area had a population of 124,079[123] in 2014, compared with 124,328 for the city and borough of Exeter. While the Exeter Metropolitan Area had a population of 467,257 in the same year and includes Exeter along with Teignbridge, Mid Devon and East Devon.[124] Out of all the Devon districts, Exeter receives the largest number of commuters from East Devon, followed by Teignbridge. Most of the city's ethnic minority population live in the central, northwestern and eastern suburbs of the city. Outlying areas such as Pinhoe, Cowick and the expensive suburb of Topsham are all 95% White British as of 2011.

Ethnicity

[edit]

The ethnicity of the City of Exeter from 1991 to 2021 is below:

Ethnic Group Year
1991[125] 2001[126] 2011[127] 2021[128]
Number % Number % Number % Number %
White: Total 96,811 98.7% 108,459 97.6% 109,590 93.1% 118,034 90.3%
White: British 105,231 94.7% 104,013 88.3% 108,095 82.7%
White: Irish 668 629 875 0.7%
White: Gypsy or Irish Traveller 93 100 0.1%
White: Roma 181 0.1%
White: Other 2,560 2.3% 4,855 4.1% 8,783 6.7%
Asian or Asian British: Total 663 0.7% 1,107 1% 4,595 3.9% 6,375 4.8%
Asian or Asian British: Indian 212 284 946 1,588 1.2%
Asian or Asian British: Pakistani 37 67 164 274 0.2%
Asian or Asian British: Bangladeshi 80 142 227 513 0.4%
Asian or Asian British: Chinese 185 378 1,998 2,020 1.5%
Asian or Asian British: Other Asian 149 236 1,260 1,980 1.5%
Black or Black British: Total 202 0.3% 225 0.2% 667 0.6% 1,137 0.9%
Black or Black British: Caribbean 51 62 128 893 0.7%
Black or Black British: African 76 142 492 137 0.1%
Black or Black British: Other Black 75 21 47 107 0.1%
Mixed or British Mixed: Total 924 1% 1,938 1.6% 3,308 2.6%
Mixed: White and Black Caribbean 179 403 503 0.4%
Mixed: White and Black African 108 278 484 0.4%
Mixed: White and Asian 350 773 1305 1.0%
Mixed: Other Mixed 287 484 1016 0.8%
Other: Total 449 0.5% 361 0.3% 983 0.8% 1,853 1.4%
Other: Arab 659 802 0.6%
Other: Any other ethnic group 449 0.5% 361 0.3% 324 1,051 0.8%
Total 98,125 100% 111,076 100% 117,773 100% 130,707 100%

Religion

[edit]
Religion 2001[129] 2011[130]
Number % Number %
Holds religious beliefs 78,839 70.9 67,382 57.2
Christian 76,773 69.1 63,486 53.9
Buddhist 375 0.3 683 0.6
Hindu 123 0.1 372 0.3
Jewish 152 0.1 155 0.1
Muslim 858 0.8 1,855 1.6
Sikh 76 0.1 160 0.1
Other religion 482 0.4 671 0.6
(No religion and Religion not stated) 32,237 29.1 50,391 42.8
No religion 22,719 20.5 40,862 34.7
Religion not stated 9,518 8.6 9,529 8.1
Total population 111,076 100.0 117,773 100.0

Economy

[edit]
Princesshay Shopping Centre with Exeter Cathedral in the background
The Higher Market, Exeter, in 1943; at this time the larger firms such as Mac Fisheries had joined the smaller shopkeepers' stalls in the market, which, before the war, along with neighbouring Goldsmith Street, was earmarked for demolition; a new Civic Centre was to be built on the site.

The Met Office, the main weather forecasting organisation for the United Kingdom and one of the most significant in the world, relocated from Bracknell in Berkshire to Exeter in early 2004. It is one of the largest employers in the area (together with the University of Exeter, Devon County Council and Royal Devon University Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust).

Around 35,000 people commute into Exeter on a daily basis, from nearby surrounding towns.[131] Exeter provides services, employment and shopping for local residents within the city limits and also from nearby towns in Teignbridge, Mid Devon and East Devon, together sometimes known as the Exeter & Heart of Devon area (EHOD). Exeter therefore provides for the EHOD area population of 457,400.[132]

Exeter has been identified among the top ten most profitable locations for a business to be based.[133] As of 2022, 39% of Exeter workers are in professional occupations, much higher than the national average of 26%. However, median pay for full-time workers is below the figure for Great Britain as a whole, though above that for South West England.[134]

The city centre provides substantial shopping facilities. The High Street is mainly devoted to branches of national chains: a NEF survey in 2005 rated Exeter as the worst example of a clone town in the UK, with only a single independent store in the city's High Street, and less diversity (in terms of different categories of shop) than any other town surveyed. In 2010, a similar survey reported the city was still the worst clone town.[135] As of 2019, the last independent store on the high street is closed.[136] Three significant shopping areas that connect to the High Street provide a somewhat more varied menu. Princesshay, a post-war retail area connecting to the south side of the High Street was home to a number of independent stores prior to redevelopment in 2007, but is now also largely occupied by national chains. It is still intended that a number of the new units will be let to local independent stores.[citation needed] The House of Fraser building on the high street has been bought by a local wealth performance management firm, Prydis, who have released their plans to redevelop the building as a three-storey hotel with a rooftop bar and retail shops.[137]

On the other side of the High Street, the partly-undercover Guildhall Shopping Centre houses a mixture of national and more regional shops, and connects to the wholly enclosed Harlequins Centre where smaller businesses predominate. Smaller streets off the High Street such as Gandy Street also offer a range of independent shops.[138]

On 26 June 2004, Exeter was granted Fairtrade City status.[139]

Although Exeter contains a number of tourist attractions, the city is not dominated by tourism, with only 7% of employment dependent on tourism compared with 13% for Devon as a whole (2005 figures).[140]

There are also plans to build on land in the Teignbridge and East Devon areas, which border Exeter's boundaries, as part of the "Exeter Growth Point" strategy. This includes the new town of Cranbrook, located about five mi (eight km) east of the city in East Devon, where construction began in 2011 and which is now home to several thousand residents.[141][142][143]

Landmarks

[edit]
A panorama of the city taken from the roof of the north tower of the cathedral

Among the notable buildings in Exeter are:

Religious buildings

[edit]
Exeter Cathedral and the Devon County War Memorial
  • The cathedral, founded in 1050 when the bishop's seat was moved from the nearby town of Crediton (birthplace of Saint Boniface) because Exeter's Roman walls offered better protection against "pirates", presumably Vikings. A statue of Richard Hooker, the 16th century Anglican theologian, who was born in Exeter, has a prominent place in the Cathedral Close.
  • St Nicholas Priory in Mint Lane, the remains of a monastery, later used as a private house and now a museum owned by the city council. The priory was founded in medieval times and was home to Benedictine monks for over 400 years, until it was closed and partly demolished by Henry VIII. The remaining buildings were then sold off in 1602 and became the home of the locally wealthy Hurst family. The property has been fully renovated by Exeter City Council, and the small garden area features Tudor plants and herbs[144]
  • A number of medieval churches including St Mary Steps which has an elaborate clock.
  • The Exeter Synagogue is the third oldest synagogue in Britain, completed in 1763.
  • St Thomas' Church, originally built in the 13th century just outside the city walls. Destroyed by fire and rebuilt in the 17th century; grade I listed.[145]
A panorama of Exeter Cathedral and Cathedral Close

Secular buildings and features

[edit]
"The House That Moved", West Street, Exeter
  • The ruins of Rougemont Castle; later parts of the castle were still in use by the Crown Court and the County Court until 2004 when the new Exeter Law Courts opened. A plaque near the surviving medieval gatehouse recalls the fate of Alice Molland, tried for witchcraft at Exeter in 1685, and reputedly the last person in England to have been executed for that crime; others convicted of witchcraft had been hanged in Exeter in 1581, 1610, and 1682.[146][147]
  • The Guildhall, which has medieval foundations and has been claimed to be the oldest municipal building in England still in use.[148]
  • Mol's Coffee House, a historic building in the Cathedral Close.
  • Tuckers Hall, a 15th-century guild hall for the incorporation of Weavers, Fullers and Shearmen, that is still in use today.
  • The Custom House in the Quay area, which is the oldest brick building surviving in the city.
  • "The House That Moved", a 14th-century Tudor building, earned its name in 1961 when it was moved from its original location on the corner of Edmund Street in order for a new road to be built in its place. Weighing more than twenty-one tonnes, it was strapped together and slowly moved a few inches at a time to its present-day position.
  • Parliament Street in the city centre is one of the narrowest streets in the world.
  • The Butts Ferry, an ancient cable ferry across the River Exe.
  • Wyvern Barracks, a former artillery barracks, dates back to about 1800.[149]
  • Higher Barracks, a former cavalry barracks, dates back to 1794.[150]
  • The Devon County War Memorial in the Cathedral Close, designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens and unveiled in 1922 by Edward, Prince of Wales.[151]

Northernhay Gardens

[edit]

Located just outside the castle, Northernhay Gardens is the oldest public open space in England, being originally laid out in 1612 as a pleasure walk for Exeter residents.

Transport

[edit]

Car

[edit]
Bridge carrying the M5 motorway across the River Exe

The M5 motorway to Bristol and Exeter starts at Birmingham, and connects at Bristol with the M4 to London and South Wales. The older A30 road provides a more direct route to London via the A303 and M3, and a non-motorway route to Bristol via the A303 and A37. The M5 is the modern lowest bridging point of the River Exe. Going westwards, the A38 connects Exeter to Plymouth and south east Cornwall, whilst the A30 continues via Okehampton to Cornwall and ends at Penzance. The cities of Bristol, Plymouth, Bath, Salisbury and Truro can all be reached within two hours.

Travel by car in the city is often difficult with regular jams centred on the Exe Bridges area.[citation needed] Historically, the bridges were a significant bottleneck for holiday traffic heading to southwest England, leading to the construction of the first bypass in the mid-1930s over Countess Wear Bridge, followed by the M5 in 1977.[152] To further address the problem of congestion in the city centre, Devon County Council opened three park and ride sites, and in 2006 considered the introduction of congestion charges.[153][needs update]

Bus

[edit]

Exeter's main operator of local buses is Stagecoach South West, which operates most of the services in the city. Dartline Coaches and Greenslades are minor operators in the city, with Country Bus serving semi-regular services to Moretonhampstead. Former operator Cooks Coaches were taken over by Stagecoach forming Stagecoach South West. Western Greyhound was also a main operator connecting Exeter to Cornwall until its services were taken over by First Devon & Cornwall, Plymouth Citybus and Stagecoach South West in March 2015.[154] On July 25, 2021, the new bus station opened. It was "...built on the same site as the old station, was funded by Exeter City Council and a £800,000 grant from the Local Enterprise Partnership's (LEP) 'Getting Building Fund'."[155]

Railway

[edit]
Exeter St Davids Railway Station

Exeter is a major rail hub in the South West and is linked to most branch lines in Devon, including to Paignton, Exmouth, Barnstaple and Okehampton. This makes it possible to reach most stations in Devon directly from Exeter St Davids.

Exeter is served by three main railway stations. Exeter St Davids is served by all services and is a major interchange station within the South West Peninsula's rail network, whilst Exeter Central is more convenient for the city centre but served only by local services and the main line route to London Waterloo. In the south-west of the city, Exeter St Thomas serves the western side of the city. There are also seven suburban stations, Topsham, St James Park, Polsloe Bridge, Pinhoe, Digby & Sowton, Marsh Barton and Newcourt, served only by local services. Under the ongoing Devon Metro scheme, a gradual upgrade programme is underway to bring a rapid transit-style service on Exeter's local rail network using these existing commuter lines.

There are two main line railway routes from Exeter to London, the faster route via Taunton and Reading to London Paddington and the slower West of England Main Line via Salisbury and Basingstoke to London Waterloo. Another main line, the Cross Country Route, links Exeter with Bristol, Birmingham, Derby, Leeds, Newcastle, Edinburgh and Aberdeen. Great Western Railway and CrossCountry services continue westwards along the Exeter to Plymouth Line, variously serving Torquay, Plymouth and Cornwall. Local branch lines run to Paignton (see Riviera Line), Exmouth (see Avocet Line), Barnstaple (see Tarka Line) and Okehampton (see Dartmoor Line).

The Exeter to Plymouth line of the London and South Western Railway (LSWR) used to provide an alternative route via Okehampton connecting north Cornwall and Plymouth to Exeter and the rest of the UK railway system until its closure in 1968. There are proposals to reopen the line from Okehampton via Tavistock to Bere Alston, for a through service to Plymouth.[156] On the night of 4 February 2014, amid high winds and extremely rough seas, part of the South Devon Railway sea wall at Dawlish was breached, washing away around 40 m (130 ft) of the wall and the ballast under the railway immediately behind and closing the Exeter to Plymouth Line. Network Rail began repair work[157] and the line reopened on 4 April 2014.[158] In the wake of widespread disruption caused by damage to the mainline track at Dawlish by coastal storms in February 2014, Network Rail is considering reopening the Bere Alston to Okehampton and Exeter section of the former LSWR line as an alternative to the coastal route.[159]

Air

[edit]
Exeter International Airport

Exeter Airport lies east of the city, and the local airline, previously called Jersey European and British European but later as Flybe, was a significant local employer until its collapse in 2020. It is also a base for TUI Airways with flights to Faro, Mallorca, Lanzarote and elsewhere. The airport offers a range of scheduled flights to British and Irish regional airports and charter flights. Connections to international hubs began with Paris-Charles de Gaulle in 2005 and later a daily service to Amsterdam Schiphol Airport which ended with the collapse of Flybe in 2020. Ryanair started flights in 2019 to Luqa, Naples and Málaga. Shortly adding Alicante but stopping the Naples and Luqa flights.

Canal

[edit]
Exeter Canal Basin

The Exeter Canal, also known as the Exeter Ship Canal, was first constructed by John Trew in about 1566,[160] representing one of the oldest artificial waterways in Britain. It was cut to bypass the St James' Weir that had been built across the River Exe at Duckes Marsh to provide a leat to a mill constructed just below the confluence of the Northbrook, in what became the village of Countess Weir. The weir had the effect of preventing water-borne trade in the City of Exeter and forced boats to load and unload at Topsham from where the Earls of Devon were able to exact large tolls to transport goods to and from Exeter.

Originally three ft (0.9 m) deep and 16 ft (5 m) wide, the canal ran two mi (three km) from the confluence of the Matford Brook, just above Bridge Road in Countess Weir to Haven Banks, close to the centre of Exeter. In order to maintain a consistent navigable water level, another weir was constructed by Trew, just below the point the canal joins the river. The canal was later extended south to Topsham Lock 3+2132 mi (5.88 km), deepened and widened, and later still it was extended to Turf Lock near Powderham five mi (eight km). The canal was successful until the middle of the 19th century since when its use gradually declined – the last commercial use was in 1972. However it is now widely used for leisure purposes, and the city basin is part of a £24 million redevelopment scheme.

Education

[edit]
Laver Building, University of Exeter

The University of Exeter, which has two campuses in the city, includes the Business School, the Bill Douglas Cinema Museum, the Henry Wellcome building for Biocatalysis, and, as of September 2018, the Exeter Centre for Circular Economy.

Exeter College is a further education college. It previously operated as the sole sixth form for the entire maintained school sector in the city. However, in 2014 Exeter Mathematics School was established, a free school sixth form with a specialism in Mathematics.

For about 30 years the city of Exeter operated a maintained school system in which the divisions between phases came at different ages from most of the United Kingdom, with first, middle and high rather than infant, junior and secondary schools, so that children transferred between schools at the age of about 8 and 12 rather than 7 and 11.[citation needed] From 2005, however, it has adopted the more usual pattern, because of the pressures of the UK National Curriculum. The changeover back to the more typical structure led to a citywide, PFI funded, rebuilding programme for the high schools and led to the changing of names for some schools. Following the reorganisation there are 25 primary schools, four referral schools, three special schools and five secondary schools within Exeter.[161] The secondary schools are Isca Academy (formerly Priory High School), St James School (formerly St James High School), St Luke's Church of England School (formerly Vincent Thompson High School), St Peter's Church of England Aided School (a consolidation of the former Bishop Blackall High School for Girls and Heles High School for Boys) and West Exe School (formerly St Thomas High School).

The city has a number of independent schools, including Exeter School, Exeter Cathedral School, The Maynard School and St Wilfrid's School.

There are specialist schools for pupils with sensory needs, including Exeter Royal Academy for Deaf Education (which has now relocated to the former Rolle College in Exmouth), and the West of England School for the Partially Sighted.

The Atkinson Unit is a secure specialist residential and educational complex for children in care or remanded by the courts.

Religion

[edit]
St Michael's Church and Episcopal Building

Numerous churches, and other religious buildings, are present in Exeter. A majority belong to differing Christian denominations, including a Church of England cathedral. The medieval city of Exeter had nearly 70 churches, chapels, monasteries and almshouses.[162]

Exeter Cathedral is the seat of the Bishop of Exeter. The erection of the present building was completed in approximately 1400, and possesses the longest uninterrupted vaulted ceiling in England, as well as other noticeable characteristics. A collective of Anglican churches form the Exeter Deanery.

There are two Catholic Churches: the Sacred Heart and the Blessed Sacrament, with congregations reflecting the nature of older and more recent immigration.

Exeter Synagogue, located within a near proximity to Mary Arches Street, was completely erected in 1763.

Exeter's mosque and Islamic centre are located on York Road. The first mosque was opened in 1977.[163] The purpose-built mosque opened in 2011.

At the 2001 census, 69.12% of Exeter's population stated their religion as Christian, which is mildly lower than the regional average of 73.99% and the national average of 71.74%. Despite this, all other religions had exceeded the regional average at just under 1%. Although, they were much lower than the national average with the exemption of Buddhism. 20.45% of Exeter's population stated they had no religion, which was higher than the regional average of 16.75% and the national average of 14.59%.[164]

Anglican churches

[edit]
St David's Church, Exeter

John Betjeman (writing in 1958) selects St David's ("Caroe's best church"), St Martin's ("characteristic little city church, 15th century"), St Mary Steps ("medieval city church; font"), St Michael's ("Victorian, on a fine site"), and St Thomas's ("fittings"). His coverage of St Mary Arches is more detailed: "worth seeing ... as the completest Norman church in Devon: beautifully light and airy after its restoration from the bombing in 1942. 18th-century altar arrangements. Memorials to Exeter worthies, 16th to 18th centuries."[165]

The aforementioned collective of Anglican churches include St David's Church, located near to St David's Station. The church was envisaged by W. D. Caroe, with the windows being manufactured by Kempe & Tower, and was later constructed between 1897 and 1900. A tower stands on the northeast side, with the overall design being described as "highly picturesque" by Nikolaus Pevsner.

St Edmund-on-the-Bridge was built on the Exe Bridge c. 1230–40. Two arches of the bridge remain under the undercroft though the church was rebuilt in the Perpendicular style in 1835, using the old materials.

St Martin's is in the Cathedral Close; the plan is odd, and there are numerous items of church furniture, though these are not of high aesthetic value. St Mary Arches is a Norman church with aisles. St Mary Steps was originally by the West Gate of the city; the font is Norman, and there is a remarkable early clock. St Michael, Heavitree was built in 1844–46 and extended later in the century. St Pancras is of the 13th century and has a nave and chancel only; the font is Norman. The plan of St Petroc's church is highly unusual: a second chancel has been added facing north while the original chancel has another use and faces east. There are two aisles on the south, one of 1413 and another of the 16th century.

St Sidwell's church is by W. Burgess, 1812, in the Perpendicular style. St Stephen's church is partly of the 13th century but most of the structure is as rebuilt in 1826.[166] St Michael and All Angels Church on Mount Dinham has a spire which exceeds the height of the towers of Exeter Cathedral.

Sport

[edit]

Rugby union

[edit]

The city's professional rugby union team is the Exeter Chiefs. Founded in 1871, as Exeter Rugby Club, the team have played their home games at Sandy Park stadium, located adjacent to junction 30 of the M5, since 2006 after relocating from their previous stadium at the County Ground which had been used continually from 1905.[167] They have been continuous members of the highest division of English rugby, the Premiership, since 2010.[167] They have been English champions twice, in 2017[168] and 2020, and Anglo-Welsh Cup winners twice, in 2014 and 2018.[169][170] In 2020, the club became European Champions for the first time in their history, defeating Parisian based club Racing 92 in the final at Bristol's Ashton Gate Stadium 31–27.

The city also has two other clubs: Wessex Rugby Club, which is located in Exwick, and Exeter Saracens Rugby Club,[171] which is located in Whipton.

Football

[edit]

Exeter City is Exeter's only professional football club. Currently members of EFL League One, they have played their home games at St James Park since their formation in 1901. The club were founder members of the Football League's Third Division (south) in 1920, but have never progressed higher than the third tier of the English football league system, and in 2003 were relegated to the Conference.

Other sports

[edit]

Exeter Cricket Club administers three teams that play in the Devon Cricket League. The first of these plays in the Premier Division at first XI level, and the next plays at second XI level. The teams play their home games at County Ground, where the club has remained for over 180 years.

Exeter Rowing Club competes both locally and nationally, and has a recorded history originating in the early 19th century.[172] The City of Exeter Rowing Regatta is run annually in July, and is the eldest and largest regatta in the South West, with racing first recorded on the river in the 1860s.[173]

Exeter's speedway team, Exeter Falcons, was established in 1929 and were located at the County Ground until its permanent closure in 2005.[clarification needed] The team was revived in 2015, but is currently[when?] based in Plymouth. Speedway was also staged briefly at tracks in Alphington and Peamore after the Second World War.

Culture

[edit]
Exeter Guildhall, which dates from 1470

Literature

[edit]
The Exeter Riddle Sculpture in Exeter High Street, created by artist Michael Fairfax and installed in 2005[174]

The Exeter Book, an anthology of Anglo Saxon poetry, is conserved in the vaults of Exeter Cathedral. The Exeter Book originates from the 10th century and is one of four manuscripts that between them encompass all surviving poetry composed in Old English. Predominantly, the Book incorporates shorter poems, several religious pieces, and a series of riddles, a handful of which are famously lewd. Some of these riddles are inscribed on a highly polished steel obelisk in High Street, placed there on 30 March 2005.[175]

Another famous manuscript is the Liber Exoniensis or Exon Domesday, a composite land and tax register of 1086. The piece contains a variety of administrative materials concerning the counties of Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, Somerset and Wiltshire. This document is also conserved in Exeter Cathedral.

In 2019, the city became a UNESCO City of Literature.[176]

Theatre

[edit]

Exeter has several theatres. The Northcott Theatre is situated in the Streatham campus of the University of Exeter and is one of relatively few provincial English theatres to maintain its own repertory company.[177]

Barnfield Theatre

The Barnfield Theatre was originally constructed as Barnfield Hall by Exeter Literary Society towards the end of the 19th century and converted to a theatre in 1972.[178]

The Cygnet Theatre in Friars Walk is the home of the Cygnet Training Theatre and is a member of the Conference of Drama Schools.[179]

Additionally, more innovative and contemporary performances, theatrical productions and dance pieces are programmed the Exeter Corn Exchange in Market Street.[180]

Music

[edit]

The largest orchestra based in Exeter is the EMG Symphony Orchestra.[181]

Chris Martin, lead singer of rock band Coldplay, was born in Exeter and grew up in a Grade II-listed Georgian house in the nearby village of Whitestone.[182] He was educated at Exeter Cathedral School during his early teens.[183] Subsequently, the band has frequently returned to Exeter to perform, including during BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend in 2016, which was hosted at the nearby Powderham Castle.[184] Coldplay also teased the track list to their eighth studio album, Everyday Life (2019), in the Express & Echo, Exeter's local newspaper.[185]

Another major rock band, Muse, has ties to Exeter. The band's members were all born and raised in nearby Teignmouth, and some of the band's earliest performances were at Exeter's 220-capacity Cavern Club, on Queen Street, in the early 1990s. They have since performed 33 times at the venue, most recently in 2022, when they débuted new material from their upcoming ninth studio album, Will of the People (2022).[186]

The Cavern Club has become one of Exeter's primary live music venues since its opening in 1991, hosting artists including Coldplay, Muse, Biffy Clyro, George Ezra, The 1975, Bastille and Kaiser Chiefs.[187] It remains a popular venue for local artists, as well as one of the city's main student nightclubs.

Thom Yorke, lead singer of rock band Radiohead, attended the University of Exeter in the early 1990s and helped to set up the Cavern Club.[188] He also played multiple gigs on the university campus with techno band Flickernoise, and regularly DJed at the Lemon Grove, a student nightclub on the Streatham Campus, where he is rumoured to have written the lyrics to Radiohead's first hit single "Creep".[189]

The University's Great Hall has emerged as a popular venue for live concerts in recent years, including English pop band Blossoms in 2022[190] and English internet personality and musician, KSI in 2022.[191] Westpoint Arena, on the city's eastern outskirts near Exeter Airport, has also hosted a handful of major artists, such as The 1975 and Lewis Capaldi in 2023.[192]

Museums and galleries

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  • The Royal Albert Memorial Museum in Queen Street is Exeter's predominant museum. The museum maintains its own collections of regional, national and international importance. Recently, the museum underwent an extensive refurbishment. It reopened on 14 December 2011, and was subsequently awarded the National Art Fund Prize – UK Museum of the Year 2012.[193] The Museum also runs St Nicholas Priory in Mint Lane, near Fore Street.
  • Additionally, the University of Exeter has an extensive fine art collection and an assortment of exhibition spaces across its Streatham campus. Showing a vibrant programme of exhibitions, performances, films and visual arts. The sculpture collection contains works by artists including Barbara Hepworth, Peter Thursby, Geoffrey Clark and Elaine M. Goodwin. It can be located using the Sculpture Trail.
  • Exeter Phoenix is one of South West England's leading contemporary arts venues. The venue occupies the former university site in Gandy Street and programmes international, national and outstanding regional artists.
  • Until its closure in 2017, Spacex (art gallery), was a contemporary arts organisation, that programmed exhibitions of contemporary art and promoted artist-led projects, events and research.

Newspapers

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Radio

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BBC Radio Devon broadcasts to Exeter locally on FM (95.8) and AM (990 AM/MW), although the majority of programming originates in Plymouth. In the evenings, BBC Radio Devon joins the South West Regional service. Heart West formerly Gemini FM and DevonAir, broadcasts on 97.0 FM, with East Devon and Torbay utilising their own frequencies. Both Heart West and BBC Radio Devon broadcast from the St Thomas transmitter. AM radio is broadcast from Pearce's Hill located at J31 of the M5.

Other radio stations include Radio Exe, an easy listening station broadcasting on 107.3 FM, Phonic.FM which provides a "no adverts no playlist" alternative on 106.8 FM or online at www.phonic.fm, VI, a station broadcasting from the West of England School and College on 1386 AM/MW.

Additionally, Exeter University has a well established student station, Xpression FM, which broadcasts on 87.7 FM using two low-powered transmitters, although it can be heard over much of the north of the city.

The local commercial radio station is Radio Exe. The local community radio station is Phonic FM.

Television

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Both BBC Spotlight and ITV West Country provide Exeter with regional news outputs. BBC Spotlight is broadcast from Plymouth and ITV West Country is broadcast from Bristol, although both services do have newsrooms in Exeter. The St Thomas and Stockland Hill transmitting station both provide the city's coverage.

Twin towns

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Exeter is twinned with:

City[194] Since[195] Organisation[194]
France Rennes “early 1950s” Exeter Twinning Circle
Germany Bad Homburg 1965
Italy Terracina 1988
Russia Yaroslavl[a] 1989 Exeter Yaroslavl Twinning Association (Russian: Общество Дружбы Ярославль-Эксетер)

Freedom of the City

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The following people and military units have received the Freedom of the City of Exeter.

Individuals

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Military units

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[204][205]

Notable people

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See also

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Notes

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References

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Sources and further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Exeter is a cathedral city and the county town of in , located on the River approximately 36 miles northeast of Plymouth, with a of around 130,000. Originating as the Roman settlement of in the AD, the city developed into a key medieval centre, highlighted by , which was founded in 1050 under King Edward the Confessor and largely rebuilt in the Decorated Gothic style between the 12th and 14th centuries. As an administrative and educational hub, Exeter hosts the , which traces its origins to institutions established in 1851 and received its in 1955. The city's economy is driven by sectors such as , , healthcare, and , contributing to its role as a regional centre for commerce and culture.

Etymology

Origins and historical usage

The name Exeter originates from the pre-Roman Celtic term Iska or Eisca, a Brythonic root denoting flowing water or a watery place, reflecting the settlement's position on the River Exe (itself derived from the same stem). This etymon appears in related river names across Britain, such as the and Axe, indicating a shared linguistic pattern for aquatic features in Celtic . Under Roman administration from circa 50 AD, the settlement was designated , combining the Celtic river name with a Latin descriptor for the local tribe, effectively meaning "the Iska of the Dumnonii" or "water-town of the Dumnonii." The British precursor form Caerwisc similarly evoked a "fort on the Uisc," underscoring continuity in associating the site with its riverine fortification. Following the Roman withdrawal, Anglo-Saxon speakers adapted the name to Exanceaster or Escanceaster by the , merging the river element Exe (from Isca) with ceaster, an term for a former Roman walled settlement or fortress. This evolution is documented in early medieval records, including Athelstan's 928 expulsion of the Celtic population and renaming of the city as Exancaester to assert Saxon dominance over its British quarter. The Exanceaster form persisted in administrative documents, such as the 1050 Foundation Charter establishing the Diocese of Exeter, which employs the Anglo-Saxon variant to formalize ecclesiastical authority under King Edward the . Subsequent medieval charters and maps, including those from the Norman period onward, retained this structure, evidencing linguistic stability amid political transitions while adapting orthography to Exeter.

Geography

Location and terrain

Exeter occupies a strategic position on the River Exe in , , at coordinates 50°43′N 3°32′W, where the main river channel is augmented by tributaries including the River Culm upstream and the River Clyst downstream near Topsham. This confluence facilitates water flow dynamics that historically and presently affect the city's hydrological regime, with the Exe draining a catchment originating from . The urban footprint extends across approximately 18 square miles (47 km²) amid Devon's characteristic rolling terrain of low hills and valleys. Elevations within the built-up area average 99 meters (325 feet) above , with the highest points in peripheral zones reaching around 150 meters, rendering low-lying sectors adjacent to the river susceptible to inundation during high discharge events. Exeter's setting places it roughly 25 miles northeast of the boundary to the southwest and over 40 miles south of , embedding the locale within a matrix of moorland-influenced topography that supports grassland farming and trail-based activities.

Climate patterns

Exeter exhibits a temperate (Köppen Cfb), marked by mild seasonal temperatures, moderate precipitation throughout the year, and influence from Atlantic weather systems. The city's position in southwest exposes it to prevailing westerly winds, which deliver moist air masses and contribute to consistent rainfall but buffer against extreme continental temperature swings. Long-term meteorological records from (1991–2020 baseline) indicate an annual mean temperature of 10.9°C, with daily maximums averaging 15.0°C and minimums 6.7°C. Winters remain mild, exemplified by January's mean of approximately 5.9°C (maximum 9.1°C, minimum 2.6°C), while summers are cool, with averaging 17.0°C (maximum 21.8°C, minimum 12.1°C). Annual rainfall totals 829 mm, distributed relatively evenly but peaking in autumn and winter; records the highest monthly average at 92 mm, and the lowest at 48 mm. These figures align with regional norms for coastal but reflect lower overall precipitation than the broader southwest average of around 1,000–1,200 mm, owing to Exeter's leeward position relative to upland areas like .
MonthMean Max Temp (°C)Mean Min Temp (°C)Rainfall (mm)
9.12.686
9.42.465
11.33.562
April13.84.861
May17.17.351
June20.010.453
July21.812.148
August21.612.164
September19.39.960
October15.57.892
November12.04.495
December9.42.790
Data sourced from Met Office Exeter Airport 1991–2020 averages. Extreme weather events underscore vulnerability to Atlantic depressions, including the wet and stormy 2019–2020 winter, which contributed to regional flooding, and Storm Alex on 4–5 October 2021, which caused widespread inundation in Exeter with up to 100 mm of internal property flooding in affected areas and impacts on 96 properties citywide from associated surface and fluvial overflows. From 1980 to 2025, observed trends mirror patterns of gradual temperature rise (approximately 1°C nationally since the ) with increased winter rainfall variability, though Exeter's annual totals have remained stable and below southwest norms, exhibiting fewer prolonged dry spells than southeastern but heightened sensitivity to intense westerly-driven storms.

History

Pre-Roman and Roman periods

Archaeological evidence indicates human habitation in the Exeter area during the , associated with the tribe, a Celtic group occupying southwest Britain. Nearby hillforts, such as Cadbury Castle, served as defended settlements for the prior to Roman arrival around 50 AD, reflecting tribal organization focused on , , and local rather than extensive urbanization. The Romans established circa 55 AD as a fortress on a defensible hill overlooking the River Exe, initially housing the to secure control over the territory and facilitate conquest in the southwest. By the late AD, the military site transitioned to a colonia, featuring a , forum for administration and commerce, public baths, and defensive walls enclosing approximately 2 miles in circumference to protect against unrest and enable orderly urban development. Isca Dumnoniorum functioned as an economic hub, leveraging proximity to tin mines for export along trade routes to the Mediterranean, as evidenced by imported , amphorae for wine and oil, and scattered hoards denoting monetary circulation tied to resource extraction and provisioning. The town's role diminished in the 4th-5th centuries amid empire-wide instability, with suburbs abandoned and decaying before full Roman withdrawal circa 410 AD, marking the end of organized presence and centralized governance.

Medieval developments

Exeter was refortified as a by in response to Viking incursions around 877, establishing it as a defended settlement within Wessex's network of fortifications. A operated in the city during Alfred's reign, producing silver pennies circa 895–899 that circulated as currency and evidence of economic activity. In 1050, Bishop Leofric transferred the from to Exeter, centralizing ecclesiastical authority and endowing the city with a that wielded significant feudal influence over lands and tenants. Following the , Exeter's resistance led to an 18-day siege in 1068, after which William I ordered the construction of atop the northeastern Roman walls to enforce feudal loyalty and control regional barons. This motte-and-bailey fortress exemplified Norman imposition of secular power, complementing the church's domain. The Norman cathedral's construction commenced in 1114 under Warelwast, incorporating Romanesque elements that underscored the bishopric's and wealth derived from tithes and estates. These dual pillars—castle and cathedral—structured feudal governance, with the bishop often mediating between crown and local lords. Exeter's medieval economy pivoted on the , exporting Devon's fleeces and serges through its and cloth markets, which generated customs revenues and merchant fortunes by the 13th century. Guilds, such as those of tuckers and fullers, regulated production and sales, empowering a merchant class that lobbied for privileges and invested in urban infrastructure. This commercial base causally linked to wealth accumulation, as exports funded halls and ecclesiastical benefactions, fostering resilience amid feudal obligations. The struck in 1348–1349, killing over two-thirds of Exeter's estimated 12,000 inhabitants and disrupting labor and markets. The castle's role in conflicts like the Barons' Wars exemplified ongoing feudal tensions, but post-plague recovery by 1400 relied on guild-monopolized wool processing and exports, which attracted migrants and rebuilt population to pre-plague levels through higher wages and trade volumes. Ecclesiastical estates, less affected by urban mortality, provided continuity in land management and , stabilizing the feudal order.

Early modern era

During the , Exeter's economy flourished through the woollen cloth trade, particularly the production of serge, which became the city's dominant export. This industry expanded significantly from the late , with cloth manufacturing hubs like Tuckers Hall serving as central points for trade activities established in 1471. By the mid-16th century, approximately 65% of the city's was employed in wool-related occupations, driving urban growth and making Exeter England's fourth-largest town. Religious tensions marked the era, as Exeter initially resisted Protestant reforms during the . In 1549, the city faced a during the [Prayer Book Rebellion](/page/Prayer Book Rebellion), a Catholic-led uprising against the imposition of the ; Exeter's authorities closed the gates, repelling the rebels from and who sought to enforce traditional practices, though the crown's forces ultimately suppressed the revolt. Exeter emerged as a stronghold in the (1642–1646), enduring multiple sieges that inflicted substantial damage on its infrastructure, including city walls and suburbs cleared for defense. The first siege from late 1642 to January 1643 saw Parliamentary forces under the fail to capture the city, which held out until 1646 when Fairfax's army compelled surrender, leading to post-war fines and garrisoning that strained local resources. To mitigate silting and weirs obstructing the River Exe, Exeter merchants commissioned the construction of the Ship Canal in 1564–1566, engineered by John Trew, enabling larger vessels to reach the quayside and sustaining trade. However, by the , ongoing silting in the estuary and the Exe limited access for bigger ships, diminishing the port's maritime prominence despite the canal. The Glorious Revolution of 1688 brought further unrest, with William of Orange's advance cavalry arriving in Exeter to prepare for his landing in Devon, amid broader anti-Catholic disturbances across England that pressured James II's regime. Wool exports, which had peaked in the 17th century with family-based production employing up to four-fifths of the populace by 1700, began declining due to competition, shifting fashions, and wars, as trade ledgers indicated reduced volumes of serge and other cloths. Population stabilized around 15,000 by 1700, reflecting slowed growth amid these economic pressures.

Industrial and modern transformations

The arrival of in Exeter on 1 May facilitated expanded activities, particularly in the trade and railway-related . Exeter's industry, centered on varieties like and trolly lace, benefited from improved transport links that enabled wider distribution, though it faced competition from machine-made alternatives by the late . The city's grew to 47,185 by the 1901 census, reflecting this infrastructural boost amid broader . During the Second World War, Exeter suffered significant damage from raids, culminating in the of April-May 1942, which destroyed approximately 1,500 houses and much of the . These attacks, retaliatory for RAF bombings of German cities, leveled about half of the 's structures and inflicted heavy casualties, with 156 civilians killed in the main raid on 3-4 May. The devastation encompassed roughly a third of the city center, disrupting pre-war economic patterns centered on retail and . Post-war reconstruction emphasized functional , with the Princesshay precinct—a area—opened on 21 October 1949 to replace blitzed commercial zones. Town planner Thomas Sharp's 1940s vision guided this shift toward pedestrian-friendly precincts and vehicular separation, prioritizing rapid rebuilding over historical fidelity. Such developments marked a departure from medieval layouts, incorporating prefabricated elements to address housing and retail shortages. From the to , Exeter experienced as traditional sectors like and maintenance waned, aligning with national trends of decline. peaked during the 1980s under economic policies emphasizing market liberalization, with rates averaging 9.7% from 1980-1995, though Exeter's service-oriented pivot—bolstered by its administrative and educational roles—mitigated some impacts compared to heavier industrial areas. This period saw a reorientation toward tertiary , reducing reliance on mechanized production.

Post-2000 urban and social evolution

The Exeter Plan, submitted to the Planning Inspectorate on September 26, 2025, outlines a 20-year framework for urban growth, emphasizing new , , and to accommodate projected increases. This includes allocations for over 2,500 homes in the South West Exeter urban extension, bordering Alphington and incorporating sites spanning 21.5 hectares. In October 2025, Homes South West received approval for 350 homes at Ashworth Place in Mosshayne, all fitted with solar panels and charging points, alongside allotments and green spaces. Smaller-scale housing schemes have also advanced, such as a July 2025 proposal for 162 homes on Exeter's outskirts, comprising 63 two-bedroom, 68 three-bedroom, and 31 four-bedroom units, with 37% designated as affordable to address local needs. Despite these expansions, affordability challenges persist, evidenced by a rise in available properties from 1,117 listings in January 2024 to 1,396 in January 2025, signaling increased supply amid steady demand pressures in a market where first-time buyers face elevated entry barriers. Social strains have intensified alongside growth, with homeless deaths in Exeter surging to 21 in from eight in each of the prior two years, according to records from the Museum of Homelessness. This escalation correlates with funding pressures on services; proposed eliminating a £1.5 million prevention grant in 2023, prompting over 900 objections and partial reversals, though support was extended only until March 2025 amid ongoing budget constraints. Such cuts have strained prevention efforts, contributing to visible urban challenges including reports of heightened street-level disturbances.

Governance

Local council structure

Exeter City Council serves as the district-level authority within Devon's two-tier local government framework, managing services including planning, housing, waste collection, environmental health, and cultural facilities, while oversees county-wide functions such as highways, , and social care. Established by the Local Government Act 1972 effective from 1974, the council consists of 39 elected councillors representing 17 wards, with elections for one-third of seats held annually over a three-year cycle. Labour has maintained majority control since the 2010 elections, holding 24 of 39 seats following the May 2024 local elections. The council's net general fund expenditure budget for 2025/26 totals £21.9 million, reflecting a £2.9 million increase from the prior year amid pressures from and service demands, funded partly through precepts and government grants. Key responsibilities encompass via the Exeter Plan, the statutory local plan extending to 2040, which allocates sites for approximately 18,000 new homes and employment land to accommodate projected population growth while prioritizing and infrastructure integration. Housing delivery falls under this remit, with the council enforcing policies on affordable units and student accommodation to balance community needs, though enforcement has faced scrutiny for inconsistent application. contributions from the city council for a band D property stand at £123.84 in 2025/26, comprising about 7.8% of the total bill when combined with county precepts. Efficiency critiques arise from empirical service delivery metrics, including high collection rates of 97.3% in recent years, outperforming some national averages but trailing top performers. Resident surveys conducted annually reveal mixed satisfaction, with positive benchmarks in areas like but lower ratings for responsiveness in and , correlating with documented delays in infrastructure-aligned development; for instance, a 2024 ruling quashed for 350 homes at St Sidwell's Point due to officer reports providing seriously misleading advice on highway impacts, underscoring administrative shortcomings in matching growth with timely approvals. Ongoing proposals for reorganisation, including Exeter's bid for unitary status to consolidate powers and streamline decision-making, aim to address such inefficiencies evidenced by fragmented service outcomes.

Parliamentary constituencies

The Exeter parliamentary constituency encompasses the core urban area of the city, including its historic centre and university districts, and has been held by the Labour Party since the 1997 . In the July 2024 election, Labour candidate Steve Race won with 18,225 votes (45.3% of the valid vote), defeating the Conservative Tessa Tucker who received 6,288 votes (15.6%), yielding a majority of 11,937; other parties included the Greens with 5,907 votes (14.7%) and the Liberal Democrats with 5,336 (13.3%). in the 2024 contest stood at 62.1%, below the national average of 59.9% but consistent with patterns in urban seats where participation has hovered around 65% in prior elections such as 2019 (67.5%). Prior to 1997, the seat exhibited Conservative dominance, with the party retaining it through multiple elections from the period onward, reflecting broader rural and traditional voter alignments in before urban demographic shifts and national Labour gains under altered the balance. This transition underscores an ideological pivot in Exeter's representation toward centre-left priorities, sustained across eight parliaments despite boundary adjustments and national swings. In the 2016 membership , the Exeter local authority area recorded 54.6% voting to Remain against 45.4% for Leave, exceeding the UK-wide Remain share of 48.1% and highlighting divergence from more Leave-leaning rural districts. Boundary revisions effective from 2024, enacted by the Boundary Commission for England to equalise electorate sizes, reallocated eastern suburbs of Exeter—including Pinhoe, St Loyes, and Topsham wards—to the new Exmouth and Exeter East constituency, which overlaps with parts of East Devon and returned Conservative David Reed with a narrow majority over Labour. These changes preserved the core Exeter seat's Labour orientation while fragmenting peripheral areas with mixed suburban-rural electorates, potentially influencing future contests amid ongoing debates on regional devolution where Exeter's MPs have advocated for enhanced local powers without endorsing federal models.

Policy implementation and public services

Exeter's healthcare services are primarily provided through the Royal Devon University Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust, which operates the Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital and covers the city as part of NHS Devon. The Trust's overall rating from the remains "requires improvement," with medical care rated "good" but community needing enhancement, reflecting persistent challenges in and operational efficiency despite some progress. In September 2025, certain Devon health services, including elements under NHS Devon, were removed from special measures following recorded improvements in performance metrics, though systemic pressures like workforce shortages—NHS Devon employing 483 staff as of April 2025 after reductions—continue to strain elective care and ambulance response times, targeted to average no more than 30 minutes across 2025/26. Policing in Exeter falls under the force, which recorded a rate of 58 incidents per 1,000 people for the 12 months ending August 2025, placing it sixth lowest among England's 42 forces. However, overall in the force area rose 11.7% in the year to September 2025, contrasting with a national decrease, driven by increases in , public order, and sexual offences exceeding pre-pandemic levels, while offences, though historically lower, contributed to localized pressures in urban areas like Exeter. In Exeter specifically, quarterly rates declined compared to the prior year ending March 2025, yet force-wide data indicate implementation gaps in preventive policing, with outcomes for and remaining inconsistent amid broader resource constraints. Homelessness policies in Exeter, coordinated by the City Council under its 2023-2027 Prevention Strategy, have struggled to curb rough sleeping, which doubled in 2022 to an estimated 20+ individuals nightly by November, amid broader single homelessness affecting hundreds through temporary accommodations totaling 29,457 nights since April 2022. Council counts have been criticized by charities like St Petrock's for underestimating the scale—e.g., government data showed 44 rough sleepers in November 2024 versus lower local figures—potentially inflating perceptions of success while excluding transient or non-street homeless groups, thus masking causal drivers like insufficient preventive interventions. Efforts to halt funding reductions, including Devon County Council's proposed £1.5 million cut to prevention grants paused in 2023 but revisited amid 2025 fiscal pressures, failed to secure full reversals despite charity bids, leading to warnings of exacerbated street homelessness and 21 deaths among the homeless in Exeter in 2024, up from eight in 2023. Water and sewage services are managed by , serving Exeter with ongoing issues in spill management and resilience. External sewer floodings decreased 24% since 2020, yet the company recorded four serious incidents in 2024—the highest per 10,000 km of sewer—and over 550,000 hours of spills regionally, prompting mandates for 7-24% reductions in risks through 2030. Post-2020 events, including those bypassing the Exeter Flood Defence Scheme, defenses have incorporated demountable barriers, but persistent high spill volumes indicate causal shortcomings in upgrades and overflow controls, with bills rising a third in 2025 despite sector-worst performance.

Demographics

Population growth and density

According to the 2021 Census conducted by the Office for National Statistics, the of stood at 130,800, marking an 11.1% increase from 117,800 recorded in the 2011 Census. This upward trajectory continues from the 2001 Census figure of 111,066, representing overall growth of approximately 18% over two decades, primarily attributable to net rather than natural increase. In-migration has been fueled by the expansion of the , which enrolls over 14,000 students and attracts temporary residents contributing to sustained housing demand, alongside net inflows of workers drawn to the city's employment hubs, including those who commute daily but establish residency. Exeter's land area encompasses 47 square kilometers, yielding a of roughly 2,780 persons per square kilometer as of 2021. This density underscores the city's compact urban form, concentrated along the River Exe and historic core, with peripheral expansions accommodating recent growth. Demographic pressures include an aging profile, with 16.7% of the population aged 65 and over in 2021, up from lower proportions in prior censuses due to longer life expectancies and lower birth rates. The aligns with the average of 1.44 children per woman in 2023, remaining below the 2.1 replacement threshold and insufficient to offset aging without continued migration. The Exeter Plan 2021-2041 anticipates further expansion through targeted and developments, projecting a 10-15% rise by 2040 to address migration-driven demand while managing in a constrained .

Ethnic and migratory shifts

The ethnic composition of Exeter has shifted modestly since the early 2000s, driven primarily by and the expansion of higher education. In the 2021 Census, 90.3% of the city's 130,707 residents identified as , a decline from 93.1% in 2011, reflecting inflows from and non-EU countries alongside self-identification changes. Within the White category, the proportion of residents stood at approximately 84%, with (including EU nationals) comprising much of the remainder, up due to post-2004 EU enlargement migration. Asian or Asian British residents increased to 4.9% in 2021 from 3.9% in 2011, primarily from and , while Mixed or multiple ethnic groups rose to 2.5% from 1.6%. Black, African, or Black British residents reached 0.9%, and Other ethnic groups 1.4%.
Ethnic Group2011 (%)2021 (%)Change (pp)
White93.190.3-2.8
Asian/Asian British3.94.9+1.0
Black/African/Caribbean/Black British0.60.9+0.3
Mixed/Multiple1.62.5+0.9
Other0.81.4+0.6
Data from Census. Approximately 15% of Exeter's population was non-UK born in 2021, elevated by the University of Exeter's student body of around 25,000, of which 22% are international (non-UK) students, many on short-term visas. EU-born residents, such as those from Poland (1.5% of the population, up from 1.1% in 2011), contributed to earlier inflows, while non-EU migration has risen post-Brexit, including from and via study and work routes. Net accounted for over half of Exeter's between 2011 and 2021, exacerbating demand amid limited supply, with local waiting lists for social housing exceeding 2,000 households and average house prices surpassing £300,000 by 2023. Empirical data indicate benefits from skilled migrant inflows, such as bolstering the university's output and filling labor gaps in healthcare and , where non-UK workers comprise 20-25% of staff in Devon NHS trusts. Conversely, ONS analyses highlight strains including higher welfare usage among recent low-skilled migrants (up to 40% claiming benefits within five years) and integration challenges, evidenced by lower English proficiency among 10% of non-EU born residents, correlating with localized service pressures in schools and . These shifts remain smaller than national averages, with Exeter retaining a predominantly demographic compared to urban centers like (36.8% non-White).

Religious demographics

In the 2021 census, 40.0% of Exeter's residents identified as Christian, down from 53.9% in 2011, while 48.5% reported no religious affiliation, an increase from 34.7%. These figures reflect accelerated in Exeter compared to national trends, where Christian identification fell from 59.3% to 46.2% over the same period, driven by intergenerational shifts: younger age groups, bolstered by the city's large student population from the , show markedly lower affiliation rates, with those under 30 nationally identifying as Christian at under 30% versus over 60% for those over 70. Minority religious groups remain small but demonstrate varied trajectories. Muslims numbered approximately 2,815 (2.2% of the population), aligning with national growth in this group from 4.9% to 6.5% between 2011 and 2021, primarily attributable to immigration from and the rather than conversions. Hindu (698 residents, 0.5%) and Sikh (179, 0.1%) populations stayed stable at low levels, consistent with limited net migration from relevant source countries and minimal domestic growth. Empirical data underscore a distinction between nominal affiliation and active practice, with UK-wide surveys revealing weekly at roughly 1% of adults—far below Christian self-identification—indicating cultural residualism rather than devout as a key factor in persistent but eroding figures. This pattern in Exeter, a historic city, amplifies national , as youth-driven disaffiliation and low attendance contribute to structural declines like church closures observed across from 2011 to 2021.

Economy

Core sectors and employment

Exeter's economy is dominated by the services sector, which encompasses the majority of opportunities. Public , , and services form a foundational cluster, for 35.4% of total jobs or approximately 29,800 positions based on resident labor market data. Within this, human and social work activities represent the largest single industry at 19.1% of roles, underscoring the sector's scale in sustaining local GVA through public and quasi-public operations. The acts as a pivotal anchor institution, generating £509.4 million in GVA for the city and supporting 9,750 jobs—equivalent to 9% of Exeter's total —primarily through , research, and ancillary services focused on environmental sciences, modeling, and . contributes an additional 9.3% of jobs (around 9,000 positions), reflecting the presence of regional government functions. Retail trade and , drawing on the city's medieval historic core including sites like the and quay, bolster service-oriented , though exact shares vary with seasonal visitor patterns integrated into broader distribution and activities. Overall stands at 3.0% for the year ending December 2023, with claimant counts at 1.9% in late 2023 ranking low among cities per Centre for Cities analysis.

Productivity and challenges

Exeter's productivity, measured as (GVA) per hour worked, stood at £35.8 in 2022, placing it 16th among 63 cities analyzed by the Centre for Cities, though this figure reflects a reliance on that limits overall dynamism. The city's private-to- jobs ratio has historically underperformed relative to peers, constraining higher-value private enterprise growth and contributing to output gaps compared to more balanced economies. Total GVA reached £5.9 billion in 2022, supporting but highlighting vulnerabilities from sector composition skewed toward lower-productivity public services. Housing affordability poses a significant challenge, with average property prices in Exeter averaging £285,000 in early 2024, driven by rapid and limited supply, outpacing local median wages of approximately £32,000 annually. This mismatch exacerbates labor retention issues, as elevated costs relative to earnings deter private sector expansion and contribute to skills outflows. Infrastructure strains, including urban congestion and patchy digital connectivity, further hinder productivity amid ongoing residential and commercial development pressures. Tourism provides a counterbalance, generating an estimated £206 million in annual visitor expenditure that supports local jobs and es, though its seasonal nature amplifies economic volatility and fails to offset broader regulatory hurdles. Criticisms from economic analyses point to over-regulation in planning and support as stifling , evidenced by low start-up rates of 33.2 per 10,000 in 2023, ranking Exeter 55th among cities. These factors underscore persistent gaps between Exeter's growth potential and realized output, rooted in structural dependencies rather than inherent market limitations.

Recent expansions and forecasts

Exeter's property sector has experienced a rebound in activity through 2025, driven by stabilizing interest rates and sustained demand from first-time buyers, who paid an average of £254,000 in 2025. Local market analyses indicate improved affordability relative to broader South West trends, with agents forecasting steady price growth amid increased stock availability, though sales volumes rose modestly to 1,773 homes in the first half of 2025 from 1,747 in 2024. This expansion supports overflow from urban pressures but highlights risks of over-reliance on residential development without proportional infrastructure gains. The wider economy has shown post-2023 recovery momentum, with Devon's gross value added (GVA) rising 5.7% to £25.9 billion that year, outpacing the average. PwC's 2025 Good Growth for Cities index places Exeter fourth nationally, crediting high performance in jobs, metrics, and as drivers of inclusive expansion in high-growth sectors like and advanced . EY's regional forecasts anticipate modest GVA growth of around 1.6% annually through 2028, with the South West, including Exeter, benefiting from relative resilience in consumer-facing and knowledge-intensive industries despite subdued national momentum. Key infrastructure initiatives, such as the Marlcombe new town in adjacent —shortlisted by government for up to 20,000 homes—aim to channel Exeter's spillover growth, with plans advancing via £350,000 in council funding matched by to bolster housing and enterprise zones. This development, named via in September 2025, targets completion over 25 years to support regional labor supply and innovation ties to Exeter. Notwithstanding these advances, forecasts underscore sustainability challenges, as rapid population inflows strain public services; Devon County Council reports escalating demands in special educational needs and adult care, contributing to £66 million in cost pressures for 2025-26 and necessitating £22 million in concealed cuts despite nominal budget hikes. Exeter City Council, facing similar fiscal tightness, implemented a 2.99% council tax rise for 2025-26 to sustain core operations amid growth-induced deficits. Regional projections estimate Devon's economy expanding 15% by 2030, yet council assessments warn of infrastructure bottlenecks in transport and utilities if expansion outpaces investment.

Education

Compulsory schooling

Exeter's compulsory schooling encompasses for ages 5–11 and for ages 11–16 (or 18 with ), delivered primarily through state-funded schools governed by , alongside academies and voluntary-aided faith schools. The city hosts approximately 50 primary, secondary, and sixth-form institutions serving its pupil population, with a mix including community schools, church-affiliated establishments (such as those under the of Exeter), and converter academies that operate with greater autonomy from local authority oversight. Academic outcomes are assessed via SATs for primaries and examinations for secondaries, with -wide data indicating moderate performance relative to national benchmarks. In 2024, secondary schools in achieved an average of around 60–70% of pupils attaining grade 4 or above (standard pass) in both English and s, though this varies by institution; for instance, West Exe School in Exeter reported 69% achieving grade 4+ in these core subjects. inspections, which evaluate overall effectiveness, leadership, and pupil outcomes, rate the majority of Exeter's schools as "Good," with fewer achieving "Outstanding" amid ongoing post-pandemic recovery efforts. Persistent challenges include funding constraints and demographic pressures from Exeter's population growth of approximately 12.6% projected between 2011 and 2026, which has heightened demand for places without proportional resource increases. Per-pupil funding in stood at £5,484 for 2024–25, roughly £200 below the national average, contributing to strains on staffing and facilities despite average class sizes remaining under national norms (25.5 s for primaries versus 26.4 nationally). These factors have correlated with issues like elevated pupil absence rates and slower progress for disadvantaged cohorts, where only 39% of Year 6 disadvantaged s met expected standards in reading, writing, and maths in recent assessments.

Tertiary institutions and research

The , founded as University College of the South West of England in 1922 and granted full university status by in 1955, enrolls approximately 30,000 students across its campuses. As a member of the , it generated £129.2 million in research grants and contracts in the 2023–24 fiscal year, supporting outputs in areas such as climate modeling and , where Exeter hosts one of the world's highest concentrations of researchers addressing challenges. Exeter College, an Ofsted-rated outstanding provider established in 1970, complements higher education by offering vocational qualifications, A-levels, and apprenticeships to over 5,000 learners annually, targeting skills gaps in sectors like and . Its programs emphasize practical training, including higher technical education for upskilling adults and school leavers, fostering direct pathways to local without the scale of research-oriented output seen at the university. These institutions drive measurable economic effects in Exeter, with the alone contributing £455 million in local income in 2020–21 through tuition, grants, and supply chains, while supporting thousands of jobs equivalent to roughly 10% of the city's employment base via direct staffing and induced spending. expenditures on and services amplify this, yet contribute to "town versus gown" frictions, as rising has inflated rental prices and converted family homes into shared accommodations, exacerbating affordability issues in neighborhoods like St James. Local critiques highlight how unchecked expansion strains without proportional graduate retention or wage uplift for non-academic residents.

Transport

Road infrastructure

Exeter's road network connects to the primarily through Junction 30, providing access from the A379 (Sidmouth Road) into the , while Junction 29 links to the A30 from the east and Junction 31 to the A30 westward and A377 northward. The A30 serves as a major bypassing Exeter to the south, handling significant east-west traffic, with average daily flows on sections near the city exceeding 35,000 vehicles as of recent counts, though peak routes approach 50,000 amid growing regional demand. Congestion remains a persistent issue, particularly around the M5-A30 interchange and urban approaches, where data indicates Exeter experiences above-average delays compared to norms, exacerbated by development pressures and limited capacity expansions. Park-and-ride facilities, operational at sites like Sowton and Matford, aim to divert vehicles from the by offering peripheral linked to bus services, with strategies citing reduced inner-city entries as a key outcome since their expansion in the . Usage has helped mitigate peak-hour volumes in the core, though overall efficacy is debated amid rising total traffic in , which reached nearly 6 billion vehicle miles in 2024. Recent interventions include cycle lane installations and road closures, such as , intended to prioritize non-motorized access but criticized for displacing onto residential routes, increasing local congestion and emissions as reported by affected communities and operators. These measures have faced pushback for prioritizing over , with evidence from similar schemes elsewhere showing net delays from reduced space. Electric vehicle infrastructure has expanded in tandem with sustainable , including a 2025 approval for 350 homes at a major development equipped with solar panels and dedicated EV charging points, supporting broader goals. Complementary projects, like the Water Lane Solar Park, integrate battery storage to power municipal EV fleets and public chargers, aligning with Exeter's implementation plan projecting a sixfold demand rise by 2030.

Public transit systems

Exeter's bus network is primarily operated by South West and First Bus, which together provide approximately 95% of local services in the region. These operators maintain an extensive system covering urban and suburban areas, with handling key routes such as the 5, 5A, 55, and 58 series connecting Exeter city center to surrounding locales like and . The network includes over 50 distinct urban and interurban routes within Exeter and its immediate environs, supported by timetables accessible via operator apps and county-wide interactive maps. Passenger volumes have declined significantly, with Devon-wide bus journeys dropping 28% in recent years—one of the steepest falls nationally—reflecting broader challenges in usage despite investments. Specific corridors, such as Heavitree and Pinhoe Road, carry around 783,000 passengers annually, but overall service frequency in Exeter has fallen by nearly 42% since 2010, from 167 trips per hour to 98. The city has avoided implementing a congestion charge, with no such scheme enacted or currently planned, preserving accessibility for bus operations amid traffic pressures. Air quality measures post-2020 have focused on voluntary upgrades rather than mandatory zones; Exeter lacks a formal charging non-compliant vehicles, though it maintains an Air Quality Management Area declared in 2011 and has introduced electric buses to reduce emissions from fleets. Operator efforts, including Stagecoach's fleet in Exeter and nearby areas, aim to cut carbon outputs, but measurable impacts on overall air quality remain limited without broader enforcement. Criticisms of the system center on reliability and coverage gaps, particularly for rural links extending from Exeter, where services are often infrequent, late, or canceled due to operator challenges and insufficient subsidies. Despite public funding for supported routes, underutilization persists amid declining ridership and post-pandemic shifts, rendering parts of the network "unfit for purpose" according to analyses, with rural facing extended times that hinder access to and services. Recent operator changes, such as assuming routes like 20, 118, and 369 in late 2024, have not reversed these trends, highlighting ongoing efficacy issues in a commercially driven model reliant on subsidies that fail to ensure consistent performance. Exeter St David's railway station serves as the principal rail hub, offering direct Great Western Railway services to London Paddington with journey times of approximately 2 hours and 10 minutes, operating hourly during peak periods. operates intercity routes northward, including direct trains to Waverley taking around 8 hours. These connections support commuter and but remain constrained by the absence of high-speed like HS2, which terminates in the without extending to the South West, thereby capping potential reductions in journey times and associated economic expansion compared to HS2-served regions. Freight rail lines in the area, including connections via the South Devon Main Line, facilitate logistics by handling bulk goods transport, though limited intermodal terminals hinder broader modal shift from road haulage. , located 4 miles east of the city centre, handles around 450,000 to 500,000 passengers annually as of 2024, with growth of 8% year-on-year driven by seasonal charter and operations. It features direct seasonal flights to European leisure destinations such as , , Faro, and via , alongside holiday charters to sites like , , and the ; provides connections through to over 90 European cities. While passenger-focused, the airport supports regional cargo via dedicated tenants, emphasizing short-haul logistics over long-haul volumes.

Landmarks

Architectural heritage

Exeter's architectural heritage features surviving Roman city walls, originally constructed around AD 55 as part of the fortress , later extended and strengthened during Anglo-Saxon and medieval periods to enclose the historic core. These defenses, spanning multiple segments, reflect the city's strategic evolution from Roman outpost to medieval stronghold, with elements like gates and arches demonstrating over centuries. The medieval Guildhall, erected between 1468 and 1470, stands as one of England's oldest continuously used civic buildings, characterized by ancient timbers and walls that embody its functional longevity despite later modifications, including a 16th-century facade and 19th-century interior restorations. This structure serves as an active municipal hub, underscoring preservation efforts that maintain its role amid urban pressures. The , completed in 1681, represents an early example of purpose-built maritime administration in , constructed in to handle the boom, and remains a key quayside landmark following its conversion to a visitor centre. Post-World War II reconstruction addressed Blitz damage, notably through the 1949 Princesshay development, which was fully redeveloped in 2007 into a contemporary retail complex integrating modern with the surrounding historic fabric. Exeter boasts approximately 1,800 listed buildings, the majority Grade II, protected under statutory designations to safeguard secular structures from or insensitive alteration. Preservation challenges persist, with development proposals like high-rise towers at Southgate posing risks to settings of walls and other assets through visual and contextual impacts. Organizations such as the Exeter Historic Buildings Trust actively support maintenance and to counter these threats.

Religious structures

Exeter Cathedral exemplifies , with its construction spanning the 12th to 14th centuries, featuring a notable vaulted ceiling and the longest uninterrupted medieval stone vault in the world. The structure suffered bomb damage during the 1942 Baedeker raids, particularly to the Chapel of St James in the south choir aisle, which was repaired post-war to restore its medieval fabric. Annual maintenance and operational costs reach approximately £1.5 million, sustained in part by admission fees from over 500,000 annual visitors, while regular congregational services draw far fewer participants, reflecting a shift toward over active . St Nicholas Priory, founded in 1087 as a by , represents Exeter's earliest surviving religious edifice; dissolved during the 1536 , it later served residential purposes before restoration as a managed for public events rather than . The on Wynards Lane, built around 1690 after the 1689 Toleration Act enabled nonconformist gatherings, hosts Exeter's Quaker meetings, though attendance has dwindled in line with national trends in religious observance, with weekly services limited to small groups.

Green spaces

Exeter's green spaces total approximately 246 hectares under city council management, including formal parks, playing fields, allotments, woodlands, and informal areas such as pocket parks, which collectively support and public access amid . These areas constitute about 9.5% of the city's land when combining public open spaces exceeding 250 acres with valley parks, enabling widespread resident access within walking distance. Northernhay Gardens, established in 1612 as England's oldest public open space, spans a compact central site originally designed as a promenade, featuring mature trees and historical plantings that host diverse and species per local ecological surveys. Adjacent Rougemont Gardens extends this network with similar Victorian-influenced layouts, contributing to urban hotspots identified in the Exeter Biodiversity Reference Map, which catalogs habitats of principal importance for planning. Paths along the River Exe provide over 10 kilometers of recreational routes for walking and , integrating natural attenuation through riparian that slows runoff, as evidenced by the city's defense scheme protecting more than 3,000 properties via barriers and natural channel management. Empirical data from indices show these corridors achieving a (NDVI) of 0.15 in central zones, with 11.67% tree cover, ranking Exeter highest among cities for urban green metrics and demonstrating effective retention despite development pressures. Housing allocations in the Exeter Plan, targeting new developments on city edges, have prompted concerns over encroachments, with wildlife surveys by Devon Wildlife Trust revealing declines in species like pollinators where buffers are reduced, underscoring that green space protections rely on enforced policies rather than designations alone. National analyses indicate developers deliver only half of pledged ecological features in such projects, based on post-construction audits, highlighting causal gaps between planning intent and outcomes that challenge assumptions of automatic urban greenbelt efficacy.

Culture

Literary and artistic contributions

Exeter's literary contributions trace to the Anglo-Saxon era, most prominently through the , a 10th-century of poetry comprising elegies, riddles, and religious verses, donated to Exeter Cathedral's library around 1072 and remaining a cornerstone of English literary heritage. This manuscript preserves approximately one-sixth of surviving Old English poetry, underscoring the city's early role in manuscript production and textual preservation. In recognition of its continuous 1,000-year tradition of bookmaking and literacy promotion since the 13th century, Exeter received status in 2019. The designation highlights institutional support, including the 's Special Collections, which house archives of 20th-century authors such as and , fostering scholarly access to Devon-linked literary materials. Literary connections include , who lived in Exeter during his youth and delivered a public reading of there on February 25, 1858. J.K. Rowling studied French and at the from 1983 to 1986, drawing indirect influence from the region's scholarly environment during her formative years. Artistically, Exeter sustains a vibrant contemporary scene centered on , with Exeter Phoenix serving as a primary venue for exhibitions since its galleries opened in 2012, showcasing works by emerging and established regional artists in spaces like the Phoenix Gallery and Walkway Gallery. The venue hosts annually around 20 exhibitions, emphasizing critically engaged contemporary practice from UK-based creators. Complementing this, the Royal Albert Memorial Museum's art gallery curates collections of British and European , including ceramics and paintings tied to , supporting public engagement with artistic heritage dating to the museum's 1868 founding. Community-driven initiatives, such as artist commissions through Exeter Culture, have funded over seven projects since 2024, integrating local landscapes and themes into new works.

Performing arts scene

The Exeter Northcott Theatre, affiliated with the and opened in 1967, serves as the city's primary venue for professional theatre productions, hosting a mix of drama, musicals, and touring shows with an annual attendance exceeding 100,000 visitors across its 460-seat . Its programming includes university-linked events and commercial runs, such as family-oriented pantomimes like , but operations depend significantly on subsidies, including £127,300 yearly from as a National Portfolio Organisation, alongside university support, which covers shortfalls from ticket sales. This funding model sustains output amid fluctuating attendance, though it underscores a broader reliance on public money rather than self-sustaining demand, with varying by production popularity. The Exeter Phoenix and similar multi-arts spaces host independent productions, including and live music integrated with performance, while touring shows at venues like the supplement the scene with commercial plays and musicals. Attendance metrics for these are less comprehensively tracked, but they draw smaller, niche crowds compared to Northcott's scale, often bolstered by local council grants that prioritize over profitability. Annual events like the revived Exeter Carnival, featuring street parades with performative elements such as illuminated floats and music acts involving over 40 entries and 600 participants, attract thousands of spectators, as seen in its 2022 return after a hiatus. Post-COVID recovery has strained the sector, with national funding pressures and warnings of vulnerability to future disruptions exacerbating subsidy dependencies; venues like Northcott faced operational threats without sustained investment, as emergency grants tapered off by late 2020, prompting critiques that heavy reliance on taxpayer support—rather than audience-driven viability—limits resilience and innovation. Local arts bodies continue seeking grants, such as those from Exeter City Council, to offset cuts, highlighting how public financing props up attendance short of market thresholds.

Media outlets

Exeter's media landscape traces its origins to the , when the city's first was established in St Edmund's Church, facilitating early dissemination of printed materials. By the , active operations had expanded, producing broadsheets and other publications, with a notable surge in surviving examples from the onward. These early presses laid the foundation for Exeter's role as a regional printing hub during the Civil War era and beyond, though output remained limited compared to until the . The Express and Echo, launched on October 1, 1904, emerged as Exeter's primary daily newspaper, initially published from High Street and later amalgamating with titles like the Western Echo. Owned by Reach PLC, it covered local news, events, and politics until print frequency declined amid broader industry trends; by 2011, it shifted to weekly publication, with further reductions to bi-weekly in subsequent years as digital platforms absorbed readership. Today, its content integrates into Devon Live, a digital-first outlet under the same publisher, emphasizing online news, sports, and features for Exeter and surrounding areas. Broadcast media is dominated by BBC Radio Devon, which maintains a studio in Exeter (relocated to Exeter College on Queen Street since 2021) and provides local news, sports coverage—including and —and community programming across . Complementing this are commercial stations like Radio Exe, focusing on music and Devon-specific updates such as parking policy changes, and DevonAir Radio, serving Exeter with FM/DAB+ signals for news and entertainment. Independent online outlets have proliferated in response to perceived gaps in mainstream coverage, particularly critiques of local . The Exeter Observer, a reader-funded platform, prioritizes investigative public-interest , scrutinizing Exeter City Council decisions and advocating accountability in areas like development and policy—positioning itself as an alternative to established media often aligned with institutional narratives. Similarly, The Exeter Daily, launched in 2012, operates as a crowd-sourced site for community news, while the council's Exeter Citizen quarterly provides official updates but reflects governmental perspectives. This digital shift, driven by declining print viability since the early , has reduced physical newspaper distribution in Exeter, with libraries curtailing physical copies by 2025 in favor of online access, mirroring national trends toward platform-dominated consumption.

Religion

Dominant traditions

The maintains primacy among practiced faiths in Exeter, anchored by the city's role as the seat of the Diocese of Exeter, which oversees Anglican worship across and . Exeter functions as the central hub for Anglican , hosting regular services including daily choral and major festivals, while supporting a network of local parishes with active congregations focused on traditional sacraments and community outreach. Attendance at these services reflects broader national declines, with Church of England weekly participation falling amid post-pandemic shifts and secular trends observed in . Catholicism represents a minority tradition, primarily through the Sacred Heart Cathedral, which serves as the focal point for the local Roman Catholic community under the Diocese of Plymouth. Services emphasize the Mass and sacramental life, drawing adherents for weekly Eucharist and feast days, though numbers remain modest compared to Anglican institutions. Methodism constitutes another established Protestant minority, with multiple chapels operating under the Exeter Coast & Country Circuit, offering hymn-singing, preaching, and social ministries rooted in Wesleyan heritage. Smaller interfaith communities include a longstanding Jewish presence centered on the Exeter , Britain's third-oldest, where non-denominational services and holiday observances sustain a compact group without reported tensions. The Muslim community, served by the Exeter Mosque and Islamic Centre—South West England's first purpose-built mosque—practices Sunni traditions through daily prayers, Jumu'ah, and community iftars, maintaining peaceful coexistence with other groups. In the 2021 Census, 48.5% of Exeter residents identified as having no , a sharp increase from 34.7% in , reflecting a broader trend driven by rising and weakened intergenerational religious transmission. Christian identification fell to 41.8% in the same period, with at 2.5% and other faiths comprising smaller shares, underscoring a demographic shift where empirical and personal increasingly supplant traditional affiliations. This pattern aligns with UK-wide data from for National Statistics (ONS), which attributes such changes to factors including populations with differing retention rates and the influence of secular public institutions that emphasize evidence-based worldviews over doctrinal adherence. Church closures exemplify the institutional strain, with the Diocese of Exeter reporting ten buildings shuttered since 2003 amid declining attendance, a trend exacerbated by maintenance costs and low congregational numbers in urban areas like Exeter. Nationally, the saw 423 closures between 2010 and 2019, often in regions with high secular identification, as empirical data on participation rates—hovering below 2% of the for regular worship—render many parishes unsustainable. Critics, drawing on Pew Research findings, link this to state systems that prioritize and critical inquiry, inadvertently diminishing religious socialization by exposing youth to causal explanations rooted in observable evidence rather than faith-based narratives. Pockets of evangelical resilience persist, with new plantings like Emmanuel Church Exeter, affiliated with the Fellowship of Independent Evangelical Churches, launching services in 2024 to target urban demographics through contemporary outreach. Similarly, St Leonard's Church maintains an evangelical focus with Bible-centered teaching for a diverse city-center congregation. The University of Exeter's Mary Harris Memorial Chapel sustains a niche role via its auditioned choir and weekly choral evensong, offering liturgical continuity for students amid broader apathy, supported by scholarships that foster participation in traditional Anglican rites. These institutions counter secular momentum through intentional community-building, though they represent exceptions in a landscape where causal factors like educational secularism continue to erode mainstream religious vitality.

Sport

Team sports dominance

Exeter City Football Club competes in , the third tier of English professional football, marking its fourth consecutive season at this level as of 2025–26. The club has been fan-owned by the Exeter City Supporters' Trust since 2003, following fraud investigations that led to the arrest of former directors John Russell and Mike Lewis amid £5 million in debts; Russell received a 21-month sentence for fraudulent trading, while Lewis was given community service. This ownership model emerged after the club faced near-extinction, with supporters raising funds to secure its future. In October 2025, a League One match between Exeter City and Reading was temporarily halted on October 11 after a Reading supporter allegedly directed a racist comment at an Exeter player, prompting both clubs to issue statements condemning the incident and pledging zero-tolerance action. Police investigated the disorder, but no broader halt to the fixture occurred. Exeter City's finances have faced scrutiny in 2025, with a potential cashflow shortfall in June prompting a £400,000 contingency loan from the Supporters' Trust; the club responded with £1 million in cutbacks and placed chief executive Joe Gorman on gardening leave over operational concerns. Interim chair Clive Harrison announced plans to raise additional , including via share utilization, amid calls from fans for an independent inquiry into the issues. Exeter Chiefs, the city's professional team, compete in , England's top division, having won the title in 2020 by defeating Wasps 19–13 in the final to secure a domestic double alongside their European Champions Cup victory. The club, under long-term director of rugby , has maintained competitiveness in the Premiership, recording recent bonus-point wins such as a 39–12 victory over in 2025. While not directly implicated in 2025 cashflow crises, the Chiefs have experienced a performance decline since their 2020 peak, attributed to failure to adapt to post-pandemic financial pressures in rugby.

Recreational pursuits

Recreational cricket in Exeter centers on the County Ground, home to Exeter Cricket Club, which supports multiple amateur teams competing in local leagues and fostering community play since its establishment in the 19th century. The club emphasizes grassroots participation, with facilities accommodating non-professional matches and training sessions. Athletics draws participants through inclusive clubs like Exeter Harriers, which welcomes runners aged 8 and above, from novices to elites, with group sessions at venues such as Exeter Arena's outdoor track. The arena, managed by Exeter Leisure, provides a six-lane synthetic track for track and field events, supporting casual and club-based training. Cycling recreation thrives via clubs including Exeter Wheelers, which organizes time trials and social rides, and CTC Exeter (Cycling UK local group), offering Sunday day rides and Thursday bike buses for varied skill levels. Moderate participation stands at 13% among adults in Exeter's priority areas, contributing to broader . Health data from the 2024 Local Active Lives Survey indicates 44% of adults in Exeter's priority areas achieve at least 150 minutes of moderate activity weekly, qualifying as active, while 25% engage specifically in sports or fitness pursuits; inactivity affects 40%, higher than national trends where activity levels remain stable around 63%. These rates underscore reliance on accessible facilities like the University of Exeter's pitches and arenas for multi-sport use, alongside council-maintained fields for informal play.

Notable individuals

Historical figures

Sir (1545–1613), born on 2 March 1545 in Exeter to merchant John Bodley and Joan Hone, was an English diplomat, scholar, and who served as ambassador to multiple European courts under Queen Elizabeth I. After retiring from in 1597, he dedicated his fortune and efforts to refounding the University of Oxford's library, resulting in the Bodleian Library's reopening on 8 November 1602 as one of Europe's premier repositories, with statutes he drafted emphasizing its role in preserving knowledge for scholars. Bodley's Exeter origins influenced his early Protestant education amid religious upheavals, including family exile during Queen Mary's reign. John Hooker, alias Vowell (c.1527–1601), born in Exeter as the son of Robert Hooker, served as the city's chamberlain from 1555 and chronicled its governance through detailed annals begun in 1558–1559, providing primary records of Elizabethan civic life, including responses to events like the of 1549. As an antiquary and constitutional writer, he produced works such as Synopsis Chorographical of Devonshire and influenced early municipal historiography, advocating for ordered republican elements in local administration while holding roles like chamberlain until his death on 30 August 1601. His efforts preserved Exeter's medieval charters and customs, drawing on direct access to city archives. Exeter's pre-20th-century natives included few documented explorers, with stronger representations in scholarship and civic scholarship; (c.1540–1596), though not born in Exeter, maintained trade links through the port and received royal honors tied to interests, but primary records confirm his origins rather than native status. Bishops serving Exeter, such as Leofric (d.1072), who transferred the see from in 1050, were typically appointed from external clergy rather than local births, limiting native ecclesiastical figures in surviving records.

Modern contributors

Chris Martin, born in Exeter in 1977, rose to prominence as the lead vocalist and songwriter for the band , which has sold over 100 million records worldwide and won multiple for albums such as Parachutes (2000) and A Rush of Blood to the Head (2002). Actor , born in Exeter in 1978, gained recognition for roles in films like (2005) and television series including (2013–2015) and (2016–2017), contributing to British screen productions with a focus on period dramas and thrillers. The has fostered academics with significant research impacts, including Professor Clive Ballard, whose work on and has positioned him among the world's most influential scientists in clinical as of 2023 rankings. Other faculty, such as Professor Tim Frayling in and , have advanced understanding of chronic diseases through large-scale genomic studies. In business, alumnus Jesse Wilson founded JUBEL, a fruit-infused brand that became the top-selling for a major national retailer by January 2025, demonstrating innovation in the beverage sector amid shifting consumer preferences for low-alcohol alternatives. , another alumnus and nephew of King Charles III, has built a career in and sponsorship, notably as managing director of the Royal Windsor since 2021. While successes dominate, some Exeter-associated sports figures have faced scrutiny; for instance, defender was charged with drink-driving in February 2025 following an incident on the A30, highlighting occasional off-field issues in professional football.

References

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