Liverpool is situated in the North West of the England (UK), and can be found on a map just above the tip of Wales.
Canterbury and York are the two archdioceses.
It depends on where about you live in liverpool from speke to wales is 77 miles from whiston to wales it is 80 miles but from liverpool to wales is 89 miles
Oh honey, Liverpool has never been a part of Wales. It's always been a proud city in England, with its own unique culture and history. So, unless you're mixing up your geography with a sprinkle of imagination, Liverpool is firmly planted in good ol' England, not across the border in Wales.
Probably (in no order and with regard to population and popularity of tourists): London, England Edinburgh, Scotland Liverpool, England Belfast, Northern Ireland Cardiff, Wales Strictly going by population it would be: London, England Birmingham, England Glasgow, Scotland Liverpool, England Manchester, England
Not directly, you can take the Dublin Ferry to Holyhead Wales or Liverpool England then take a Train to Newcastle.
Lennon was born in Liverpool, England and was brought up in Woolton - a suburb of Liverpool.
Mathew Street, home of the Cavern Club in Liverpool.
Wales isn't in England. The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland is comprised of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. Wales is a Principality which lies to the west of England. If you look at a map of Britain and find the cities of Liverpool and Bristol and draw an imaginary line between the two, Wales lies roughly to the west of that line.
The area of City of Liverpool - New South Wales - is 305.5 square kilometers.
This is a county in the North-West of England, just south of Manchester and Liverpool and just east of Wales.
Maybe Liverpool, England