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Birmingham's 35 miles of canals is said to be more than Venice.
Only London has more Michelin Star restaurants in the UK than Greater Birmingham, with the latter boasting six.
Famous chocolate brand Cadbury was founded in the city, with its dark chocolate bar "Bournville" named after the village of the same name.
Approximately 90 per cent of the UK population can reach Birmingham within four hours of driving.
Although Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit were set in Middle Earth, many of the characters and locations were based on Birmingham, where author J.R.R. Tolkien grew up.
Sutton Park in Birmingham is one of the largest urban parks in Europe.
The modern version of lawn tennis can be traced back to Edgbaston in Birmingham.
Inventor James Watt developed his steam engine in Birmingham, putting into motion the start of the Industrial Revolution in the United Kingdom.
Birmingham is one of the most diverse cities in Europe, and is reportedly home to 187 nationalities.
Birmingham's Black Sabbath are often considered as the first heavy metal band.
The Hippodrome in Birmingham is the busiest theatre in the UK, with more than 520,000 visitors a year.
Approximately 40 per cent of the UK's jewellery comes from Birmingham's Jewellery Quarter.
Birmingham is Europe's "youngest" major city, with around 40 per cent of the population under the age of 25.
Indian and Pakistani immigrants created the famous Balti curry dish in Birmingham in 1971, with the city boasting more than 100 Balti Houses.
Athletes like Formula One world champion Nigel Mansell and Paralympic swimming champion Ellie Simmonds have called Birmingham their home.
Arena Birmingham - which will host the gymnastics at the 2022 Commonwealth Games - hosted the 1998 Eurovision Song Contest.
Birmingham's iconic Bullring shopping centre is the biggest of its kind in a UK city centre.
Birmingham's famous multi-road interchange called "Spaghetti Junction" connects motorways and other parts of the city.
The Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery has the world's largest collection of Pre-Raphaelite paintings.
The anchor of the Titanic was created in the Black Country, part of the West Midlands.
The FA Cup, the oldest national football competition in the world, had its trophy made in Birmingham, with the original stolen in 1895 and never recovered.
Murder mystery board game Cluedo was invented in 1943 in Birmingham, by Anthony E. Pratt.
The first-ever hole-in-the-heart surgery took place in 1950 in Birmingham's Children Hospital.
Birmingham is home to five universities - University of Birmingham, Aston University, Birmingham City University, Newman University and University College Birmingham.
The nearby town of Solihull was given its name as it was the hill where Birmingham residents dumped their soil, known as "Soily Hill".
The Library of Birmingham is the biggest in the UK.
With a large Asian population, Birmingham has the biggest Bollywood cinema centre in Europe, with six of the 30 screens at the Star City complex dedicated to Bollywood.
The city's nickname "Brum" is thought to come from the name Brummagem.
97 councillors sit on Birmingham City Council.
Birmingham's St Patrick's Day parade is thought to be the third largest in the world behind New York City and Dublin.
Birmingham is the most "inland" major city in the UK and is nearly two hours drive away from the nearest beach.
Birmingham is the second most visited english city outside London for overseas visitors.
Birmingham has 571 parks - more than any other European city of similar size.
Birmingham has the highest Muslim, Sikh and Buddhist populations in the UK outside London.
The longest-established "building-based" theatre is in Birmingham - the Birmingham Repertory Theatre.
The UK's largest two-day LGBT festival is Birmingham Pride.
The Football League - the world's first league football competition - was founded by Birmingham resident and Aston Villa Football Club director William McGregor in 1888.
The city has hosted the World Indoor Athletics Championships, the World Half Marathon Championships, Diamond League Athletics and the British Athletics Championships, with UK Athletics based at Alexander Stadium.
The Electric in Birmingham is the oldest working cinema in the UK, dating back to 1909.
Birmingham has nine sister cities including Lyon, Frankfurt, Milan, Chicago and Johannesburg.
Birmingham has a Chinese Quarter which was officially recognised in the 1980s, following a few decades of migration from Hong Kong.
Popular UK drama Peaky Blinders is based on a gang from the city, who roamed Birmingham in the late 19th and early 20th century.
Birmingham was the United Kingdom's candidate city for the 1992 Summer Olympics, which eventually went to Barcelona.
Birmingham has close ties with athletics and some big stars train or come from the city or surrounding areas. Mark Lewis-Francis was born in Birmingham while Olympic heptathlon champion Denise Lewis is from neighbouring West Bromwich.
Although Birmingham City and Aston Villa are the only major football clubs in the city of Birmingham, Premier League clubs Wolverhampton Wanderers and West Bromwich Albion are within 15 miles of the city centre - as is the Football League's Walsall.
Inventor and pioneering industrialist Matthew Boulton, who lived in Birmingham in the 1700s, was richer than Bill Gates when adjusted for inflation.
The author of the popular children's book and television series Thomas the Tank Engine, Wilbert Awdry, invented the famous characters while working at Birmingham's St. Nicholas' Church to amuse his son Christopher who was ill with measles.
From 1986 to 1990, Birmingham held an annual motorsport race in the city centre - which featured future Formula One drivers including Ferrari's Jean Alesi.
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Queen's Baton Relay


Birmingham 2022 Baton Relay
The Route
The Baton
Become a batonbearer
Origins of the Baton Relay


Birmingham 2022 Baton Relay

The 16th Queen's Baton Relay is underway, and the Baton is travelling to all 72 Commonwealth Games nations and territories, before it will come to an end at Birmingham 2022.

As is tradition, Her Majesty The Queen has placed a message inside the Baton which will be read out at the Opening Ceremony of Birmingham 2022 on July 28.

The Queen's Baton Relay was launched from Buckingham Palace on October 7, 2021.

The Baton is now part way through its 294-day-long journey, travelling through Europe, Africa, Asia, Oceania, the Caribbean, and the Americas, covering approximately 90,000 miles.

The Baton spends between two and four days in each country and territory, and more than 7,500 Batonbearers are trusted to carry the Baton during the Relay - a once-in-a-lifetime experience.

In each country and territory, events and activities are hosted to celebrate youth engagement in sport and the untold stories of community heroes, and projects that address at least one of the 17 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals are showcased.


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The Route

The route of the Relay to the Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games (c)Birmingham 2022

After flying out of Birmingham Airport, the Relay first headed to Europe.

The opening destination was Cyprus on October 12, followed by Malta.

On October 16, the Baton arrived in Africa to begin its journey around the 19 Commonwealth countries and territories on the continent.

Christmas Eve was spent in Seychelles before the Baton brought in the New Year in the Maldives.

Three days were spent in Pakistan before visits to Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, and there were four days in India between January 12 and 15.

After visiting Singapore, Malaysia and Brunei in Southeast Asia, the Baton reached the Pacific islands in February before arriving in New Zealand between March 12 and 15 - a stop which will include Commonwealth Day.

Four days will be spent in Australia from March 17 to 20 and then there will be two months in the Caribbean and the Americas.

This will include four days in Canada from May 26.

As the Relay reaches its conclusion, the Baton will visit the Falkland Islands, Jersey, Guernsey, and the Isle of Man before five days in Scotland.

There will be four days in Northern Ireland and five in Wales, before 25 days across the entirety of host nation England.

At the Opening Ceremony, the final Batonbearer will return the Baton to Queen Elizabeth II, or a chosen representative.


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The Baton

Zimbabwe-born, Coventry-based artist Laura Nyahuye is the designer of the Birmingham 2022 Baton.

It was made in Birmingham's Jewellery Quarter, using the traditional method of lost-wax casting, so has strong local links to the host city.

Design took place in conjunction with Raymont-Osman Product Design, a design and engineering company, and development specialists Kajul, which are both based in Warwickshire.

The Baton has been cast in non-precious metals - copper, aluminium and brass - to represent the gold, silver and bronze medals at the Games.

A platinum strand spans the length of the Baton, in recognition of Queen Elizabeth II's platinum jubilee year, which marks the 70th anniversary of her accession to the throne in 1952.

This also celebrates her role as head of the Commonwealth.

A number of hi-tech features are also included, such as a 360-degree camera, heart-rate monitors, atmospheric sensors and LED lighting.

Laura Nyahuye designed the hi-tech Birmingham 2022 baton (c)Birmingham 2022

The lighting changes each time the Baton is exchanged by two people - a move which will highlight "connections" after the COVID-19 pandemic limited human contact.

Also included as part of the Baton are "lungs". These are atmospheric sensors with laser technology which will analyse environmental conditions wherever the Baton is in the world.

Augmented reality will be used to creatively visualise the data captured throughout the journey, to promote awareness of air quality across the Commonwealth.

This data will be sent to the University of Birmingham for analysis.

The Queen's message will be placed in a mechanised chamber under a brass leaf plaque.


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Batonbearers

The Baton Relay will arrive in host nation England in July 2022 and will be carried across the country by more than 2,000 Batonbearers.

In early 2022, Birmingham 2022 invited the public to nominate inspiring individuals in their local communities to be Batonbearers. Nominations are now closed, and successful Batonbearers will be notified in April.

Individuals who are selected to be a Batonbearer meet the following criteria:

  • Always willing to take on a challenge and has a unique and inspiring story;
  • Has made a meaningful contribution to sport, education, the arts, culture, or charity;
  • Is a figure of inspiration that positively challenges others to achieve their best;
  • Has taken on a challenge or cause and made a positive impact within their community.

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Origins of the Baton Relay

The Queen's Baton Relay has been an essential part of the Commonwealth Games for more than 60 years.

Typically, it takes more than a year to complete and provides a vital connection to all the nations and regions of the Commonwealth.

Since being launched in 1958 to prelude the Commonwealth Games in Cardiff, the Queen's Baton Relay has become the longest Relay of its kind in the world.

Athletics coach Bernard Baldwin, the founder of the legendary Nos Galan New Year's Eve race, had previously organised similar relays for Welsh national celebrations.

His idea of a similar event at the finale of the 1958 Games may well have been the inspiration for the Queen's Baton Relay.

The baton now travels to every country and territory in the Commonwealth (c)Getty Images

A Baton which featured the red dragon was designed in Cardiff and made in the Jewellery Quarter of Birmingham, providing a pleasing link with the 2022 host city.

Birmingham was on the route for the first Relay which travelled by day and night to Cardiff.

The Baton usually starts its journey at Buckingham Palace in London, but in 1970 Queen Elizabeth II sent her message to the athletes of Edinburgh from Canada's Northwest Territories.

In 1974, the Relay for Christchurch began from Sandringham, the Queen's residence in Norfolk.

From 1990 onwards, the Queen's Baton Relay has become ever more ambitious and in 2006 it visited all of the Commonwealth nations and territories for the first time en-route to Melbourne.

"We want as many hands as possible to touch it so that The Queen knows that in her family throughout the Commonwealth, as many people have the chance to touch it and see her message," Commonwealth Games Federation President Dame Louise Martin has said.

For the 2018 Commonwealth Games in Gold Coast in Australia, the Relay proved to be a magnificent odyssey over 388 days.

More than 8,000 bearers carried the Baton over a distance of 230,000 kilometres.


Timeline


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