There's also Bristol Blue glass and the Harvey's sherry brand, John Cabot's ship (the Matthew) and his tower - he discovered Newfoundland, Brunel's SS Great Britain (the first ever iron-hulled passenger liner), Casualty was filmed there, King Edward II was tortured to death there in 1327 (in a VERY unpleasant way indeed

)
The first Test Tube Baby in the world, Louise Brown, was born in Bristol - Mrs R&W used to teach her - Louise went to the school she worked in.
In the churchyard of St Mary's Redcliffe (huge church with a spire about 200 yards from Temple Meads station) there is a piece of metal girder sticking out of the ground. It is a piece of tramline which ended up there when the tramline took a hit from a German bomb during the war and has been left as a memorial to the blitz.
Concord was mentioned, but there is also the Bristol-branded military aircraft (Blenheim, Beaufighter, Bulldog (WW1)) plus commercial planes; Britannia and the Brabazon. The Rolls-Royce and British Aerospace factories are still there - although I believe they only produce component parts today, rather than whole aircraft. My old dad and grandad worked in Rolls Royce factory in Filton.
There was also the (very) niche Bristol car manufacturer which was an off-spin of the aircraft works. It made very expensive cars until it sadly folded in 2020.
Now the bad stuff:
Bristol was strongly linked to the slave trade and the very regal Clifton area, with its huge Georgian mansions, was built mainly from money gained from that vile trade. Until recently there was a statue to Edward Colston in the city centre, but that was controvertially toppled and thrown into the river recently by BLM 'protesters' and their supporters, due to his links with slavery from which he made his fortune. He invested a lot of his money in the city, gifting the people the Colston Hall (now renamed the Bristol Beacon) and other public buildings with his dirty money.
Until recently (early 2000s?) Bristol was reputed to have the worst traffic congestion of any city in Europe. They got rid of the trams in the 1940s - the blitz caused too much damage and they didn't bother rebuilding the tramways.
... and worst of all, Bristol is the largest city in England NEVER to have had a football team in the top tier of English football since the formation of the Premier League. Lets see if we can change that - before I shuffle off please