Narnia Tours to Follow in Footsteps of Lord of the Rings

Now both literary and film fans of Lewis’ classic can be whisked away on their own magical adventure to the locations featured in some of the most memorable scenes in the movie thanks to a number of tour companies now offering Narnia-related tours in England, Northern Ireland and New Zealand.

Harper Taxi Tours in Belfast, Northern Ireland, the place of Lewis’ birth, have announced plans to supplement its politically themed itineraries with a C.S. Lewis tour.

Stops on the 75-minute C.S. Lewis Black Taxi Tour of Belfast include Lewis’ childhood church, St. Mark’s, and the Victoria home, Little Lea, in whose “Little End Room” the young author concocted his first stories while looking out across the Mourn Mountains – “which under a particular light made me feel that at any moment a giant might raise his head over the next ridge,” he wrote.

Other Narnia attractions on offer in Northern Ireland include Crawfordsburn Country Park where fans can see the lamppost that inspired the one in Narnia, as well as the 17th century Dunluce Castle on Antrim Coast, believed to be the basis for Cair Paravel, the royal fortress in Narnia.

Meanwhile in New Zealand, where locals are already accustomed to hoards of Lord of the Rings tourists, tour company Canterbury Sightseeing is to launch Narnia tours to the location of the dramatic battle scene at Flock Hill Station, near Christchurch.

“It is incredible how nostalgia affects people,” Canterbury Sightseeing director Melissa Heath told The New Zealand Herald. “People are prepared to pay an incredible amount of money to revisit their memories.”

[Christianity Today]

‘Narnia’ tours light the way

In Disney’s new blockbuster The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, four young siblings use a wardrobe door to travel from wartime England to the mythical landscapes of Narnia, the fairy-tale world made famous by British novelist C.S. Lewis.

And for movie and literary pilgrims in search of real-life Narnias, the celluloid version of Lewis’ classic already is sparking related tours in England, Northern Ireland and New Zealand, where several key locations were filmed.

In the author’s birthplace of Belfast, Northern Ireland, Harper Taxi Tours plans to supplement its politically themed itineraries with a C.S. Lewis tour. Stops will include Lewis’ childhood church, St. Mark’s, and the Victorian home, Little Lea, in whose “Little End Room” the young author concocted his first stories while gazing at the Mourne Mountains — “which under a particular light,” he wrote, “made me feel that at any moment a giant might raise his head over the next ridge.”

Elsewhere in Northern Ireland, visitors to Crawfordsburn Country Park can see the lamppost that inspired the one in Narnia, and the 17th-century Dunluce Castle on the Antrim Coast, believed to be the basis for Cair Paravel, the royal fortress in Narnia.

Though a northerner at heart, Lewis, who died in 1963, spent most of his adulthood in southern England, including Oxford, where he studied, taught and downed so many pints at the Eagle and Child pub that a special “C.S. Lewis chair” is dedicated to his memory.

In New Zealand — where, thanks to the Lord of the Rings trilogy, locals are already accustomed to hordes of costume-clad tourists seeking magical scenery — Canterbury Sightseeing is launching Narnia tours to the film’s climactic battle scene at Flock Hill Station, near Christchurch.

“It is incredible how nostalgia affects people,” Canterbury Sightseeing director Melissa Heath told The New Zealand Herald. “People are prepared to pay an incredible amount of money to revisit their memories.”