Some people travel for leisure but for those who love history, Unesco’s World Heritage Sites are a ready-made bucket list.

The UN agency started these listings in 1978 with a goal of preserving cultural and natural landmarks around the globe, from the Taj Mahal to the Galápagos Islands. But you don’t have to venture far to find them as the UK itself is home to 31 such locations. Here are some of the best spots to visit.

The Telegraph. Designed by John Vanbrugh, the palace’s “broad wings and art-stuffed chambers” are “beautifully” sprawled over the Oxfordshire landscape. The grand estate was completed around 1735 and was made in honour of the Duke of Marlborough when he won the Battle of Blenheim in 1704, which took place at Blindheim in Bavaria. The fact that he emerged victorious against Louis XIV, the creator of the famed palace Versailles, “adds a sweet symmetry” to its history.

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The Independent. The causeway is a “spectacular cluster of around 40,000 black basalt polygonal columns” in the sea, reaching heights of up to 39 feet. They are a result of lava that was “cooled some 60 million years ago”. Over time, the structure evolved into “tightly interlocking formations, cracking into remarkably regular geometric shapes”. This is an “exceptionally rare” phenomenon, especially at this scale.

Plymouth Live. It is full of “dog-friendly beaches” and “top-notch pubs and restaurants”, including the Peterville Inn, which was named the UK’s best pub at the VisitEngland Awards for Excellence. You will never be short of things to do as “popular spots for surfing, swimming and sunbathing” can all be found in this “delightful” coastal town. It is famously home to “Cornwall’s most awe-inspiring coastal paths and walks”. The village also has “remnants” of its mining heritage and visitors can still visit the “engine houses and mine shafts” today.