| KATHARINE | Duchess of Kent |
| WORSLEY | Katharine ___, maiden name of the Duchess of Kent (7) |
| JOAN | Known as the Fair Maid of Kent, the forename of the wife of Edward the Black Prince who was the mother of Richard II (4) |
| FULLER | Author whose The Worthies of England describes the counties and their native commodities including the silver of Devon, cherries of Kent and the pearls of Cumberland (6) |
| ROMNEYMARSH | Area of Kent; breed of sheep |
| PRINCESSMARINA | Mother of the Duke of Kent |
| LANE | Love of Kent, way out of town |
| DOMNEEAFE | Legendary daughter of Eormenred of Kent |
| WHITECLIFFS | ___ of Dover: part of Kent's coastline |
| MIDDLETON | Thomas ___, Jacobean author of stage plays Women Beware Women and Hengist, King of Kent (9) |
| FORKEDLIGHTNING | Sign of storm easing, dropping east after crossing over half of Kent (6,9) |
| CANTERBURY | English city, seat of the University of Kent (10) |
| WHITEHORSE | The standard of the ancient Saxons, hence the emblem of Kent |
| ENTHALPY | Characters of Kent, Hal, Pyramus display a measure of energy |
| RICHARDII | Son of the Black Prince and the Fair Maid of Kent, this English king was deposed by Henry IV (7,2) |
| THANET | Isle of ?, area of Kent formerly separated from the mainland by the Wantsum Channel |
| KNEE | Joint inclusion of the Northeast by half of Kent (4) |
| OCTA | An Anglo-Saxon King of Kent during the 6th century who appears in Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae |
| EASTERN | Plant in the middle of Kent facing direction of sunrise (7) |
| ETHELBERT | Canonised king of Kent and first codifier of English law |