Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Victorious Festival

Music festival in Portsmouth, United Kingdom From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Victorious Festival
Remove ads

Victorious Festival is a three-day music festival held in Portsmouth, United Kingdom. It was founded in 2012.[1] In its first year, the festival was named the Victorious Vintage Festival.[2] The first official Victorious Festival was 2013. The festival was held in Portsmouth Historic Dockyard, before moving to Southsea Seafront in 2014.[3]

Thumb
Common stage at Victorious Festival, 2016
Thumb
Aerial view of the Common Stage, 2022
Thumb
Castle Stage in 2023

Southsea Castle, Southsea Skatepark, the D-Day Museum and other local attractions are within the festival boundaries and are only accessible to ticket holders during that time.[4]

Victorious has a charitable arm called Victorious in the Community. The aim of this arm is give back to Portsmouth by supporting local charities and good causes in the area.[5] Part of the proceeds from ticket sales is given to the local D-Day Museum.[6]

The 2017 festival extended the duration to include a first night party headlined by Madness. Camping facilities were provided for the 2017 festival at a site at Farlington playing fields after camping on Southsea Common was ruled out. Portsmouth City Council has agreed to allow the festival until 2027 and hoped that the festival would bring over £5.8m a year for the local economy.[7] In 2017, a majority stake in the festival was sold to Global Entertainment with the hopes that bigger acts may be secured in future.[8] Superstruct Entertainment, the live entertainment platform backed by Providence Equity Partners, part-owns the festival after it entered definitive agreement for the acquisition of several live music and entertainment festivals from Global Media & Entertainment in April 2019.[9] The festival is still run and operated by the same local team of people that founded it. The daily capacity of the 2019 festival was 65,000.[10]

The 2020 edition of the festival was cancelled in May 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but returned the following year.[11]

The festival has a significant economic impact on Portsmouth each year. In 2022 the impact was measured at £15m [12] and in 2023 it was estimated to be "around £20m" and is a huge boost to tourism in Portsmouth.[13]

The Portsmouth News reported that nearly 80,000 people attended the festival each day in 2024.

In 2024, the festival won Major Festival of the Year in the UK Live Awards.

In 2025, band The Mary Wallopers had their set cancelled after it had started when they displayed a Palestinian flag.

Remove ads

Lineups

More information Edition, Year ...
Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads