Peterborough is a city in Cambridgeshire, England, situated some 80 miles north of London. Until the end of the Second World War it was a small, although ancient city: there were stone age and bronze age settlements on the site, and the Romans established a clay-mining town nearby.

Peterborough's modern growth began in the 1960s when it was nominated one of Britain's New Towns. Major expansion followed and the town's population more than doubled in the following decade. In common with most New Towns, there is a strange sense of soullessness about the place, although with a population of nearly 100,000 before the New Town programme began it's not as obvious here as in some other places.

In 1992 it was designated an Environment City, one of only four cities in Britain to be given this status. Certainly there is an abundance of green space in the town, and the cycle route network there is considered to be one of the best in the country. More of a dormitory town than a major centre in itself, Peterborough (like most British cities) is attempting to market itself as a tourist attraction. It's situated close enough to Cambridge and the East Anglian fenland to be used as a base for exploring that area, but I wouldn't think many people would consider going there on holiday.