Bridgwater Health And Beauty
Browse the Ufindus Health and Beauty directory listings to keep you feeling and looking good. You can find health professionals like doctors, dentists, and even chiropodists local to your town. If you are seeking a more holistic approach to wellbeing, there is also an extensive collection of complementary healthcare practitioners, and options for alternative therapy. Get body and soul back on track; check out our physiotherapists and psychotherapists to get you healthy outside and in. Find help in achieving your target weight with weight loss courses and healthy products sourced from our health and beauty directory. We have resources for health products and services to keep you healthy into old age; see our links for mobility equipment and services. After all that hard work on your health, pamper yourself! Choose from a range of beauty treats from the Ufindus listings. Visit your local hair and beauty salon for a new do, or indulge in a home makeover with the girls. We have everything to keep the men and women of the UK looking beautiful. Keep the summers golden glow with a trip to the sunbeds, and keep your skin baby soft by selecting one of the many skin creams available. We have links to cosmetics and make up companies that bring out your natural beauty, as well as tattoo and piercing parlours when you want to stand out from the crowd. As well as beauty treats, Ufindus has listings for treatments for hair loss as well as removal. Unveil the beautiful you with Ufindus Health and Beauty!
About Bridgwater - show infohide info
Bridgwater in Somerset, England, is a market town with Saxon origins. The name of Bridgwater is meant to come from the Saxon, Brigg, meaning quay. The Domesday Book has the town listed as Brugie, while Brugia was also used. After the Norman invasion, the land was given to a Norman prince Walter Douai. Hence the name became corrupted from Burgh-Walter, Brugg-Walter and Brigg-Walter to Bridgwater. William de Briwere was granted the lordship of the Manor of Bridgwater by Henry II, and new buildings appeared. Bridgwater Castle was built in Old Red Sandstone and covered a site of 8 or 9 acres with its own tidal moat. Unusually, the main entrance opposite the Cornhill was built with a pair of adjacent gates and drawbridges. It also had a keep, a dungeon, chapel, stables and a bell tower. William de Briwere also founded St John's hospital as well as starting the construction of the town's first stone bridge. One of William's sons went on to found a Franciscan priory in the town. During the English Civil War the town and the castle were held by the Royalists under Colonel Sir Francis Wyndham, and following the troubles, Bridgnorth Castle was destroyed in 1645. Further problems with for Bridgwater ensued with the 1685 Monmouth Rebellion. Because of the rebellion it is alleged that, until recently members of the Royal Family would not travel through Bridgwater without drawing the blinds of the Royal Train as a response to the ancient rebellion. Bridgwater has often been at the forefront of political progression; in 1797 it was the first town in Britain to petition the government to ban slavery. Bridgwater�s River Parrett was formerly central to the town�s trade, and Bridgwater became a major seaport for the south west. With the Industrial Revolution, Bridgwater was linked to Taunton by the Bridgwater and Taunton Canal (1827), and docks were built in 1841. The focus has now shifted from port trade to industry in plastics, engine parts, industrial chemicals, and foods, making Bridgwater one of Somerset�s major industry centres. The factory formerly producing cellophane was closed in the summer of 2005. Bridgwater is also home to two major distribution centres: Excel, as well as the NHS Logistics Authority.
Companies in Bridgwater by type
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