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A Topographical Dictionary of England
… and potatoes, and the scenery is varied with hill and dale, wood and water. The river affords great facility for …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… as the sites of hunting-seats of King John; and "Fountain Dale" and "Rainworth" are both celebrated in the annals and …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… dales: among the latter, the most interesting is Bonsall Dale, of which the geological formation consists of four …
Calendar of Border Papers
… ryver, and hath her course doune Lyddisdall, soe as the dale hath the name of the ryver. The ryver is all Scottishe, …
Calendar of Border Papers
… Gerard Tailer and his brother [uppon] Will Eliott the dale and Geordie Simpson with their complices [for] xl kyne …
Calendar of Border Papers
… and hindrance of bothe those places of Beaucastle dale and Gilleslande, and this maye be done and amendede …
Calendar of Border Papers
… adventure to the east country for powder, but I find Mr Dale hath a grant, and his licence is required. I have …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… the parish. The village is on the acclivities of a narrow dale, and north of the road between Whitby and Guisborough. … a military work. Near a lake at the lower extremity of the dale is a salt-spring, the water of which is of a quality … saturated with moisture, and the surface varied hill and dale. The Gloucester and Ledbury canal wharf is a mile …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… 633 inhabitants. The name, a contraction of Botolph's Dale, is derived from Botolph, the tutelar saint of the chapel, and from the dale in which the place is situated. The town consists …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… that of Richard Pygott, in the reign of Mary. Samuel Dale, M.D., editor of the History and Antiquities of Harwich, …
Displaying 241 - 250 of 3554