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  • |name=Edge Hill ...amlet in the parish of [[Ratley|Ratley and Upton]], [[Warwickshire]]. Edge Hill gave its name to the first battle of the Civil War, in which it was a promi
    4 KB (648 words) - 09:33, 21 April 2021

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  • ...bsp;feet above sea level, are Coombe Hill near [[Wendover]] and Haddington Hill in Wendover Woods. ...In its upper reaches it passes through [[Buckingham]], along the northern edge of [[Milton Keynes]] (where for a time it forms the boundary with Northampt
    11 KB (1,568 words) - 11:30, 9 June 2023
  • The modern town stands up the hill, climbing steeply 230 feet above the harbour onto limestone cliffs. Th ...old came to Scarborough and fought with the townsmen. He went up onto the hill which was above the town and built a huge pyre. Then with pitchforks they f
    21 KB (3,356 words) - 12:12, 4 November 2019
  • ...orthernmost point of [[Great Britain]] is [[Dunnet Head]] and its northern edge, {{map|ND202767|Easter Head}}. ...occupation. These include the Grey Cairns of Camster, the Stone Lud, the Hill O Many Stanes, a complex of sites around Loch Yarrows and over 100 brochs.
    13 KB (2,053 words) - 18:13, 8 February 2016
  • ...ills]], [[Rivey Hill]] above [[Linton, Cambridgeshire|Linton]], [[Rowley's Hill]] and the [[Madingley Hills]]. |S=Slip Inn Hill, SW of [[Odsey]]
    10 KB (1,429 words) - 17:11, 16 May 2020
  • ...s home to some of the most affluent areas of England, including [[Alderley Edge]], [[Wilmslow]], [[Prestbury, Cheshire|Prestbury]], [[Tarporley]]. [[Knutsf ...ges at several locations in Cheshire, such as Maiden Castle on [[Bickerton Hill]], [[Helsby]] Hillfort and Woodhouse Hillfort at [[Frodsham]].
    18 KB (2,625 words) - 09:43, 6 June 2019
  • # [[Crag Hill]], 2,753 feet ...t signs on the landscape are far older; the Castlerigg stone circle on the hill above [[Keswick]] has been dated to the Neolithic or early Bronze Ages.
    16 KB (2,422 words) - 13:18, 19 February 2019
  • ...of Derby''' is a [[Counties of the United Kingdom|shire]] at the northern edge of the [[Midlands]] and reaching northward into the [[Pennines]]. The sout While the south of Derbyshire is low-lying, from the northern edge of [[Derby]] the hills begin. The northern part of Derbyshire rises in high
    15 KB (2,269 words) - 13:44, 16 July 2019
  • ...> Its sister cliff is the 716-foot Little Hangman, which marks the western edge of coastal Exmoor. One of the features of the North Devon coast is that [[B
    20 KB (3,166 words) - 15:53, 10 April 2021
  • |picture=Bindon hill from the east.jpg |picture caption=Bindon Hill from Flowers Barrow
    35 KB (5,395 words) - 10:01, 27 October 2018
  • ...hshire]] to the east. The coast of the [[Solway Firth]] forms its southern edge. ...e:Burnswark Hill - geograph.org.uk - 19873.jpg|right|thumb|200px|Burnswark Hill, Annandale]]
    12 KB (1,860 words) - 20:16, 24 July 2018
  • At Fife's eastern edge, as it projects into the [[North Sea]], is [[St Andrews]], a former monasti ...] (hunting palace of the Scottish Kings), Kellie Castle near Pittenweem, [[Hill of Tarvit]] (a historical house), and in St Andrews alone St Andrews Castle
    11 KB (1,673 words) - 14:20, 6 May 2022
  • ...tershire are many fine towns, such as [[Cheltenham]] and [[Stroud]] at the edge of the hills, [[Cirencester]] in the Cotswolds and [[Tewkesbury]] on the Se ...part of the county are Tewkesbury, Cheltenham, Gloucester, Stroud (at the edge of the Cotswolds) and Bristol.
    16 KB (2,394 words) - 10:01, 3 November 2016
  • ...permarkets (Sainsbury's and Scotmid) located at the bottom of Corstorphine hill (Clermiston Road). [[Corstorphine Hill]] is one of the so-called "Seven Hills of Edinburgh". Queen Margaret Univer
    12 KB (1,925 words) - 10:21, 3 November 2016
  • ...The Mearns''' is a coastal [[Counties of the United Kingdom|shire]] at the edge of the [[Highlands]]. It lies on the [[North Sea]] coast, bounded to the n ...mer county town, [[Kincardine]], on the Devilly Burn below [[Strathfinella Hill]], in the Howe of the Mearns. Kincardine was a burgh with a Castle, but wh
    11 KB (1,747 words) - 12:58, 4 November 2016
  • Inland the fen ends only at the [[Lincoln Edge]], a long, straight running along Lincolnshire a thin, straight line to Lin *[[Hill Hundred]]
    22 KB (3,266 words) - 18:10, 16 May 2020
  • ...nverness-shire]] and on the east by [[Morayshire]]. The county's northern edge is on the sea, its coast washed by the Moray Firth. It has an area of just ...the largest lies on the eastern boundary and extends from about Lethca Bar Hill southward by [[Ardclach]] and [[Glenferness]] to the Bridge of Dulsie. The
    7 KB (1,181 words) - 19:13, 5 January 2021
  • |picture=Cheviot Hill countryside - geograph.org.uk - 290451.jpg ...the site of many battles, Northumberland became in 1603 not a shire on the edge but the heart of the land King James called "the [[Middle Shires]]".
    22 KB (3,198 words) - 09:29, 2 March 2016
  • The ancient lands of [[Sherwood Forest]] reach from the edge of Nottingham northwards towards Yorkshire. These lands in the centre and ...alley and that of the [[River Witham]] in the very east. The [[Pennines]] edge against the west of Nottinghamshire, emptying clouds and giving the county
    11 KB (1,644 words) - 18:44, 9 April 2019
  • [[File:Lyth Hill 01.jpg|thumb|right|220px|Countryside of mid-Shropshire.]] ...lso struck with dramatic hills, such as the [[Long Mynd]] and an enigmatic hill on its own in the midst of the shire, [[the Wrekin]].
    21 KB (3,153 words) - 16:33, 24 February 2022
  • [[File:Boxhill surrey viewfromtop.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Box Hill]] ...is the plain of the Low [[Weald]], rising in the extreme south-east to the edge of the hills of the High Weald. The Downs and the area to the south form pa
    34 KB (5,328 words) - 17:09, 19 January 2021
  • ...Fleet]], and is divided between Kirkcudbrightshire and Wigtownshire. Its edge is formed by the Machar projecting into the sea beyond which is Luce Bay. ...ith]] near [[Thornhill, Dumfriesshire|Thornhill]], a distance of 50 miles. Hill forts, cairns, standing stones, hut circles and crannogs or lake dwellings
    13 KB (2,064 words) - 14:08, 9 November 2015
  • |picture caption=Avebury Trusloe and Silbury Hill The highest point in the county is the Tan Hill–Milk Hill ridge in the [[Vale of Pewsey]], just to the north of [[Salisbury Plain]],
    13 KB (1,870 words) - 13:20, 20 August 2020
  • ...outhern part of the county is bordered by Gloucestershire and the northern edge of the [[Cotswolds]], and to the east is Warwickshire. There are two major *{{i-OpenSpace}} Walton Hill and the [[Clent Hills]]
    12 KB (1,791 words) - 21:21, 28 February 2021
  • At the western edge of The Burren, facing the Atlantic Ocean, are the [[Cliffs of Moher]]. The ...an Hill, Corofin, County Clare, Ireland.jpg|thumb|The Tau Cross at Roughan Hill near [[Corofin, County Clare|Corofin]], County Clare]]
    24 KB (3,510 words) - 13:29, 13 June 2017
  • |picture caption=Brandon Hill above Graiguenamagh [[Image:BrandonHill116.jpg|thumb|left|Brandon Hill at [[Graiguenamanagh]]]]
    47 KB (6,906 words) - 10:14, 16 February 2019
  • ...a hill. It is thought that the name was first given to a place on [[Boars Hill]] above [[Chilswell]], and the name was transferred to its present site whe ...aol, built by prisoners of the Napoleonic Wars in 1811 stands on the south edge of town next to the Thames. It has had various uses, most recently as a le
    20 KB (3,252 words) - 17:52, 19 May 2018
  • ...ngs of the city growing from Castle Hill, St Catherine's Hill and Windmill Hill.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.geo.ed.ac.uk/scotgaz/councils/councilfirst1. ...th Crombie Duthie of Ruthrieston in 1881. It has extensive gardens, a rose hill, boating pond, bandstand, and play area as well as Europe's second largest
    51 KB (7,818 words) - 20:24, 20 July 2017
  • ...x]]. It is one of the few rural villages left in Middlesex, standing on a hill surrounded on each side by open land. Harefield has its own suburb, South St Mary's stands on Church Hill at the edge of the village. It was built between the twelfth and nineteenth centuries,
    4 KB (655 words) - 17:12, 24 May 2016
  • ...r the Celtic Silures built hillforts overlooking it. In AD 75, on the very edge of their empire, the Roman legions built a Roman fort at [[Caerleon]] to de ...ried in rubble excavated from the railway tunnels that were dug under Stow Hill in the 1840s and no part of it is currently visible.<ref>{{cite web | publi
    14 KB (2,169 words) - 14:28, 12 January 2021
  • ...th-west of [[Middlesex]] and extends across all the farms southward to the edge of [[Ickenham]]. It is the largest parish in the Diocese and in the County ...ts spiritual heart for centuries. The Church, sited in Church Hill at the edge of the village was built over the course of several centuries, beginning in
    5 KB (897 words) - 20:16, 31 August 2016
  • There is a wonderful view across to [[Burley-on-the-Hill|Burley House]] from the north side of the village and from the south one ca The Old Hall in Middle Hambleton survives, now situated on the water's edge. It was built in 1611 in the then contemporary Jacobean style, and is all
    3 KB (499 words) - 20:13, 28 January 2016
  • The ruins of the Old Court House are located on Crocus Hill, the island's highest point. All that remains are the broken walls of a few At Cross Roads at the western edge of The Valley is Wallblake House, a plantation home built around 1787 that
    2 KB (261 words) - 20:24, 22 August 2012
  • "Usk Island" is a park at the edge of the river. (It is not an island in point of fact but the Welsh ''ynys'' The town's Welsh name ''Brynbuga'' ("Buga's Hill"), was first recorded in the 15th century.<ref>Hywel Wyn Owen, ''The Place-
    7 KB (1,140 words) - 19:34, 21 October 2019
  • * Bronze Age round barrow at Bill Hill. * [[Caesar's Camp, Bracknell|Caesar's Camp]], an Iron Age hill fort.
    9 KB (1,426 words) - 12:27, 9 August 2019
  • ...[[Berwickshire]], 27 miles south-east of [[Edinburgh]]. It stands on the edge of the [[Lammermuir Hills]], on the Southern Upland Way. Below the town, on Castle Hill, stood the Crown Fort, a scene of many skirmishes over the years. It is sho
    6 KB (930 words) - 09:50, 30 September 2017
  • ...theatre, cinema and culture centre, with a public swimming pool is at the edge of the Meadows. ...istock ends suddenly with the Moor, a golf course occupying the top of the hill, giving way to open pasture grazed by sheep and Dartmoor ponies.
    19 KB (3,149 words) - 14:50, 27 January 2016
  • ...the [[Furness|Furness peninsula]] of [[Lancashire]], on the north-western edge of [[Morecambe Bay]]. It is Lancashire's northernmost large town and the c ...ng away from the coast. Ten miles or so to the north-east is the southern edge of the [[Lake District]].
    20 KB (2,896 words) - 09:57, 1 April 2023
  • By the library is a small mound, an Anglo-Saxon moot hill named "Seclow Mound". This has inspired some of the new town's street name ...ton Keynes (interviews) |last=Kitchen |first=Roger |authorlink= |coauthors=Hill, Marion |year=2007 |publisher=Living Archive |location=Milton Keynes |isbn=
    29 KB (4,444 words) - 18:50, 25 October 2022
  • The town lies on the eastern edge of the ancient forest of [[the Weald]], known in Anglo-Saxon days as "Andre ...n along the previous main thoroughfare in the town centre, the narrow East Hill. The Ring Road has recently been converted to two-way traffic again, to min
    13 KB (2,110 words) - 20:45, 27 January 2016
  • Built on the River Wye, and overlooked by [[Axe Edge Moor]], Buxton has a long history as a spa town due to its geothermal sprin [[File:View from Hall Bank to Corbar.jpg|thumb|left|Corbar Hill and the Dome]]
    14 KB (2,206 words) - 12:12, 23 June 2018
  • ...e built on a gentle slope rising to the north east, and at the brow of the hill a golf club has views looking south out over the town to the Clyde, and to ...of the town, and in 1894 a second railway station was opened higher up the hill on the West Highland Railway to [[Fort William]].<ref name="uds"/>
    5 KB (823 words) - 08:20, 23 September 2010
  • ...ence by the Post Office, and when it was laid down it stretched beyond the edge of what was then the urban area. Notwithstanding the limited relevance of ...litan "[[green belt]]",<ref name=london_040>{{Cite book|last=Dilys|first=M Hill|title=Urban Policy and Politics in Britain|publisher=St. Martin's Press|yea
    29 KB (4,342 words) - 22:23, 12 August 2023
  • The name "Mold" derives from Norman-French; ''mont hault'' means "high hill". The name is recorded as ''Mohald'' in a document of 1254. The Welsh lang ...gging a prehistoric mound at Bryn yr Ellyllon (''Fairies' '' or ''Goblins' Hill'') discovered a unique golden cape, which dates from 1900-1600 BC, in the B
    8 KB (1,214 words) - 20:51, 4 June 2019
  • The Tower of Bala ({{lang|cy|Tomen}}) is a tumulus or "moot-hill" 30 feet high by 50 feet in diameter, formerly thought to mark the site of Coleg y Bala is at the top of the hill on the road towards [[Llyn Celyn]]. There are several Chapels: notably - Ca
    4 KB (652 words) - 13:39, 28 January 2016
  • To the western edge of the city centre, occupying the areas of Blythswood Hill and Anderston, lies Glasgow's financial district, known officially as the I The Glasgow Necropolis Cemetery was created on a hill above the Cathedral of Saint Mungo in 1831. Routes curve through the landsc
    33 KB (5,163 words) - 10:45, 30 March 2016
  • ...[Strathmore]]. Its western flank is formed by the Knockie, a round grassy hill which is popular walk from the town. Blairgowrie developed over the centur ...ain of the Clan Rattray. The castle occupies a dominating position on the edge of the gorge above the river but is no longer occupied by a Rattray, having
    7 KB (1,141 words) - 18:19, 15 February 2018
  • ...ations for Oliver Cromwell, who is said to have planned the Battle of Edge Hill in the Globe Room of [http://www.yeoldereindeer.co.uk/ Ye Olde Reindeer Inn
    6 KB (878 words) - 18:14, 28 January 2018
  • *[[Cumnor Hill]], Berkshire * Rock Edge Nature Reserve
    16 KB (2,364 words) - 09:20, 30 January 2021
  • ...the Cotwolds are characterised by rolling countryside of green, windswept hill slopes grazed by contented flocks, the well-watwered valleys with farms and The highest point in the Cotswolds is [[Cleeve Hill]] in Gloucestershire, at 1,083 feet, which is that shire's [[county top]].
    11 KB (1,580 words) - 13:36, 7 March 2013
  • ...include [[Crawley]] to the north-east and [[Haywards Heath]] and [[Burgess Hill]] to the south-east. ...ea level in [[The Weald#The Low Weald|the Low Weald]], at the very western edge of the High Weald, with the Surrey Hills of the [[North Downs]] to the nort
    12 KB (2,014 words) - 12:47, 5 February 2019
  • ...ach side of the street, the outer edge of which was to be 44 feet from the edge of the houses. A 'plantation' was to be left in the centre of the thoroughf ...t land down by the [[River Bladnoch]], while the town and church were on a hill, 'an inversion of the usual arrangements'. Nothing remains of the structure
    21 KB (3,513 words) - 16:21, 29 January 2016
  • ...> Craig Phadraig, once an ancient Pictish or Gaelic hillfort is a 790-foot hill which offers hikes on a clear pathway through the wooded terrain.<ref>http: ...later tradition, murdered Malcolm's father Duncan I, and which stood on a hill half a mile to the north-east.
    23 KB (3,509 words) - 19:27, 24 September 2018
  • ...n endless loop with ''Liverpool Street'' Station in the east and ''Notting Hill Gate'' in the west. It now runs into a spur to ''[[Hammersmith]]'' before ...of the City and from Baker Street it heads north-west to ''[[Harrow on the Hill]]'', from which it breaks into two branches, one terminating at ''[[Uxbridg
    17 KB (2,485 words) - 22:49, 31 January 2023
  • ...s rising up to a height of around 230&nbsp;feet above sea-level at Everton Hill, which represents the southern boundary of the [[West Lancashire Coastal Pl ...e Professional Risk Managers' Guide to Financial Markets |publisher=McGraw Hill Professional|year= 2007 |url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=upN4A6jOpko
    56 KB (8,428 words) - 11:13, 27 June 2016
  • ...Your thumb is Crin y Gath or the Cats Back. Your first finger is Hatterall Hill. Your second finger is Ffawyddog with Bal Mawr at the knuckle. Your third f ...lip forms can be seen at Black Darren and Red Darren ('Darren' signifies 'edge' in Welsh) on the eastern side of the Hatterrall ridge west of Longtown.
    9 KB (1,459 words) - 14:22, 6 April 2018
  • ...'' is a prosperous town or village in northern [[Surrey]]. It stands on a hill above the [[River Mole, Surrey|River Mole]]. Esher is largely suburban in c The Claremont estate lies at the southern edge of Esher and West End. It is now divided between Claremont Park, owned by
    6 KB (1,029 words) - 23:10, 4 June 2011
  • ..., a new industrial estate was built at Little Gornhay on the north-eastern edge of the town, and a new junction was added to the Link Road, with a distribu Since 2005, new, large edge-of-town retail outlets have begun to open, though apparently without undue
    8 KB (1,245 words) - 20:32, 28 October 2010
  • ...o whether [[Wolverhampton]] is within the Black Country or on its northern edge. One common definition of the Black Country is to include the whole of the *[[Brierley Hill]] ''(Staffordshire)''
    19 KB (3,051 words) - 07:41, 3 November 2017
  • ...hern part of the county. It is a suburban town contiguous with but at the edge of the wider conurbation. The town centre is at the stretch of Church Stree * [[Forty Hill]]
    5 KB (845 words) - 20:49, 15 January 2017
  • ...an intermediate single-platform station at Lower Edmonton, located at the edge of the village green. The service was infrequent and often required a chang .../anidea.co.uk/lower-edmonton/local/buryst.html |title=Bury Street and Bush Hill Park |website=Anidea.co.uk |date= |accessdate=2016-10-19}}</ref>
    30 KB (4,660 words) - 11:46, 21 April 2017
  • ...rne Hundred]] which has grown from an ancient village. It marks the outer edge of the metropolitan conurbation; its south and east face the unbroken towns ...p of the Harman's Brewery in Uxbridge. It had been built close to Primrose Hill Farm near the junction of the Ickenham Road and Kings End. Kings End was a
    23 KB (3,664 words) - 19:27, 9 November 2016
  • ...ichfield. At its southern edge are the remains of Castle Ring, an Iron Age hill fort, which is the highest point on the Chase. Several glacial erratic boul ...ers can look out for when riding on the chase, such as Kitbag hill, Rabbit hill, Quagmire bridge, Roots hall and Brocton shorts to name just a few.
    5 KB (834 words) - 09:37, 2 December 2016
  • ...ands of the [[Pennines]]. Leek itself is built on the slope and crown of a hill which is situated just a few miles south of [[The Roaches]]; a gritstone es ...n and shopping centre in the 1960s. The new cattle market was built on the edge of town adjacent to the railway station. Later, this was one of the station
    7 KB (1,046 words) - 23:02, 6 November 2010
  • '''Headingley''' is suburban village on the higher ground on the northern edge of [[Leeds]] in the [[West Riding of Yorkshire]]. It stands some two miles ...efore 1829. Land hereabouts was generally cheaper than that at Headingley Hill the affluent villas which had sprung up elsewhere had not spread this far,
    9 KB (1,370 words) - 09:18, 26 September 2019
  • ...lls in the surrounding area and from the sea, as the ancient church on the hill would have done in past days. The ancient St Patrick's Chapel stands in ruins on the cliff-edge, close to the parish church, St Peter's. Its walls stand against the weath
    3 KB (533 words) - 16:32, 7 September 2014
  • ...]]. It lies north-west of its larger near-neighbour [[Birmingham]] at the edge of the large conurbation formed by the two cities, the [[Black Country]] to ...h and Waterloo Road), followed a few years later by a section between Snow Hill and Bilston Street. However, the final section between Bilston Street and S
    20 KB (3,068 words) - 08:49, 1 July 2016
  • ...ts name the outcrops "tors", though locally "tor" is simply the name for a hill, and more than 160 of the hills of Dartmoor have the word ''tor'' in their ...e church standing 1,128.61 above sea level on top of a crag at the western edge of the moor.
    25 KB (3,925 words) - 17:57, 9 April 2019
  • ...itself, a little outside the ancient centre, is [[Arthur's Seat]], a rocky hill of 823 feet. ...0px|Arthur's Seat viewed across southern parts of Edinburgh from Blackford Hill]]
    44 KB (6,856 words) - 10:36, 30 March 2016
  • ...l, Cornwall|Pool]] and [[Redruth]]. Above the town rises its distinctive hill, Carn Brea, an almost unspoiled green space looking down on what was once a ...the Cornish language, in which it is called ''Cambron'', meaning "Crooked Hill".
    8 KB (1,228 words) - 13:17, 20 December 2010
  • The first signs of settlement in the Newquay area consist of a late Iron Age hill fort which exploited the nearby abundant resources (including deposits of i ...15th century, the village was called "Towan Blystra"—-"Towan" means sand hill/dune in Cornish-—but the anchorage was exposed to winds from the north ea
    14 KB (2,211 words) - 13:57, 27 January 2016
  • ...ead (hill)" (Welsh ''Penrhudd''), referring to the red sandstone of Beacon Hill. (The Modern Welsh name for the town is ''Penrhudd''.) ...semi detached houses mostly laid out in the late 19th century going up the hill.
    6 KB (982 words) - 14:07, 27 January 2016
  • Bermuda lies in the North Atlantic Ocean, near the western edge of the Sargasso Sea, in the open ocean. It has 64&nbsp;miles of coastline. File:Gibbs light.jpg|Gibbs Hill Lighthouse, still in daily use
    20 KB (3,116 words) - 23:39, 5 April 2020
  • ...populated south of England, led to it hosting three prisons: Albany, Camp Hill and Parkhurst, all located outside Newport near the main road to Cowes. Alb ...located to the west of, and adjacent to, Albany and Parkhurst, on the very edge of Parkhurst Forest, having been converted first to a borstal and later to
    23 KB (3,704 words) - 17:07, 29 November 2016
  • ...ham has a number of theatres, including the Grove Park Theatre on Vicarage Hill, the Riverside Studio Theatre at Wrexham Musical Theatre Society on Salop R ...urviving head gear in the north Wales coalfield. Just off the A483, on the edge of Wrexham, the Gresford Disaster Memorial stands witness to the 261 miners
    19 KB (3,139 words) - 18:10, 1 September 2022
  • ...l's Pensions Service Centre is near the town on Boythorpe Road, in Rowland Hill House. There is another Royal Mail building in the town on West Bars called
    7 KB (1,124 words) - 23:12, 20 November 2016
  • ...Man", are known as the [[Furness Fells]]. [[Gummer's How]] is a prominent hill in the east of the region. ...s peninsula reaches southward into the [[Irish Sea]] and marks the western edge of Morecambe Bay. The southern end of the peninsula is dominated by the bay
    11 KB (1,618 words) - 18:49, 29 September 2023
  • ...verston''' is a market town on the coast of [[Lancashire]], on the western edge of the [[River Leven, Lancashire|Leven estuary]] in the [[Furness]] area. ...ment to him—a replica of the third Eddystone Lighthouse—stands on Hoad Hill overlooking the town. Perhaps a more popularly known man of the town was th
    9 KB (1,305 words) - 14:44, 24 October 2015
  • ...' is a town in [[Derbyshire]]. It stands in the hills at the south-eastern edge of the [[Peak District]]. The former spa resort of [[Matlock Bath]] lies im ...The road has many local landmark buildings along it. From the foot of the hill at Crown Square travelling north:
    13 KB (1,941 words) - 08:16, 20 October 2017
  • ...c towns. It takes its name from a ''dún'' (fort), which once stood on the hill that dominates the town and on which Down Cathedral stands. Ptolemy, about Saint Patrick was reputedly buried here in 461 on Cathedral Hill, within the grounds of Down Cathedral. His grave is still a place of pilgri
    11 KB (1,709 words) - 12:36, 30 April 2018
  • ...uggest that the name is a corruption of two words which mean the Friars’ Hill, perhaps suggesting a religious house near what is now the Friars’ Vennel Dumfries lies at the edge of the [[Southern Uplands]]. The River Nith carves Nithsdale through these
    23 KB (3,773 words) - 15:21, 27 January 2016
  • The [[Stratford-upon-Avon Canal]] skirts the western edge of Shirley, and it is possible to walk along the canal to [[Kings Norton]] ...in Solihull Lodge, part of West Shirley, which was the site of an Iron Age Hill Fort, a fortified village protected by earth banks, dating back to the fir
    5 KB (802 words) - 07:34, 29 January 2016
  • ...ose to the borders of both [[Hampshire]] and [[Berkshire]]; at the western edge of the town the three counties meet. Camberley's suburbs include Crawley Hill, Heatherside (despite clearly being separated by the M3 Motorway), Yorktown
    1 KB (176 words) - 18:08, 23 February 2011
  • ...churches, the remains of an Augustinian priory are visible at the southern edge of the town. **[http://www.hillpark.net/ Hill Park Evangelical Baptist Church]
    11 KB (1,712 words) - 14:44, 19 May 2021
  • ...Hill]], [[Honor Oak]], [[Peckham]], [[Penge]], [[Sydenham Hill]], [[Tulse Hill]] and [[West Norwood]]. ...lwich''' is a mainly residential area next to [[West Norwood]] and [[Tulse Hill]].
    13 KB (2,090 words) - 17:20, 12 June 2017
  • Though located on the very edge of Maidenhead, Bray is separate and still very much an idyllic British vill ...eyrow Green, Stud Green, Foxley Green, Touchen End, Braywoodside, Hawthorn Hill and Fifield.
    5 KB (883 words) - 11:07, 8 February 2019
  • Bridgwater stands, on the edge of the [[Somerset Levels]], in a level and well-wooded country, having to t ...ounty Council }}</ref> The town is in a level and well-wooded area, on the edge of the [[Somerset Levels]]. To the north are the [[Mendip Hills]] and on th
    36 KB (5,545 words) - 13:16, 21 March 2011
  • ...1864–1936), was destroyed by fire in 1896, then rebuilt in 1897 by Finch Hill, architect of the Britannia Theatre, in nearby Hoxton. The Builder of Decem *Harrison, P. (1985) ''Inside the Inner City: Life Under the Cutting Edge''. Penguin: Harmondsworth.
    16 KB (2,436 words) - 13:49, 28 January 2016
  • ...and Baldridgeburn. Private housing became focused to the north of Garvock Hill and on the site of West Pitcorthie Farm.<ref name="McEwan p87">McEwan ''Dun '''Hill House''' to the south of Dunfermline was built in 1623 for William Monteith
    20 KB (3,045 words) - 19:57, 25 January 2023
  • Kendal stands on the [[River Kent]], surrounded by low hills. It is near the edge of the Lake District National Park; when the National Park was formed in 19 *Castle Howe, Kendal's undisputed first castle, lies on the hill side over looking the town. The earthwork remains are sandwiched between Gi
    9 KB (1,450 words) - 12:53, 30 March 2011
  • ...bogs below [[Hugh Seat]] and passes by, almost unobserved, on the eastern edge of the town. ...ist Pip Hall, with poems by Meg Peacock, depicting a year in the life of a hill farmer.
    8 KB (1,231 words) - 12:40, 29 June 2017
  • ...Iron Age hill fort, with a later broch built in the Western quarter of the hill fort, and overlapping some of the defensive ditches of the original fort. T
    7 KB (1,109 words) - 13:09, 5 April 2018
  • '''Saddleworth''' is an area of villages, hamlets and moorland at the western edge of the [[West Riding of Yorkshire]]. It has also been constituted a civil ...The Obelisk on Alderman's Hill.jpg|right|thumb|200px|Obelisk on Alderman's Hill overlooking Greenfield]]
    11 KB (1,646 words) - 19:35, 28 July 2015
  • {{Infobox hill ...fellwalkers' route on the hill heads north from the summit to reach Plover hill before descending to join the bridleway that is Foxup Road.
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  • '''Oldham''' is a large town in south east [[Lancashire]]. It lies at the edge of the [[Pennines]] on elevated ground between the rivers [[River Irk|Irk]] ...re Neolithic flint arrow-heads and workings found at [[Werneth]] and Besom Hill, implying habitation 7–10,000 years ago.<ref name="Oldham 100"/> The Rom
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  • At the east end of Rickmansworth High Street at the bottom of Scots Hill is situated the Rickmansworth Sports Club. Initially this was the home of R There are public tennis Courts on the edge of Rickmansworth by Chorleywood House as well as Rickmansworth Lawn Tennis
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  • ...and spreading south of it, invisible to the rest of the village due to the hill over which the common spreads. East of the M25, within its great ring, is
    7 KB (1,104 words) - 13:57, 13 February 2017
  • '''Kings Langley''' is a village in [[Hertfordshire]] on the southern edge of the [[Chiltern Hills]] and now considered part of the London commuter be ...?compid=43274 British History On-line]</ref> and a palace was built on the hill above the village to its west with a deer park extending to its south.<ref
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  • ...road, follow the course of the River Bulbourne river valley at the western edge of the town. The New Town expansion took place up the valley sides and on t ...its setting in the landscape is from the top of Roughdown Common, a chalk hill to the south of the town, at {{getmap|TL049055|TL049055}}.
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  • ...St Albans is dominated by St Albans Catherdral, which stands on the steep hill above the [[River Ver]] and around which site the mediæval town grew. ...ng history of settlement. The Catuvellauni tribe had a settlement at Prae Hill a mile or so to the west and a major town, perhaps their capital at [[Wheat
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  • ...the Severn Estuary at [[Avonmouth]]; Royal Portbury Dock is on the western edge of the city boundary. In more recent years the economy has depended on the ...h Woods and Clifton Down on the side of the Avon Gorge, and on Kingsweston Hill, near Henbury.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bristol.gov.uk/ccm/content/Le
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  • ...er into [[Cambridgeshire]]. It is found in the midst of rural life, at the edge of the Hertfordshire Chalk Downs as they suddenly drop to the Cambridgeshir ...around the centre. The High Street and King Street, Fish Hill and Market Hill form the knot of pedestrianised shopping streets around which the town revo
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  • ...nown as '''Cheltenham Spa''', is a spa town in [[Gloucestershire]], on the edge of the [[Cotswolds]]. ...of bells hung for change ringing. The first is at St Christopher's (Warden Hill), the lightest ring of church bells in the world.<ref>[http://www.stcwh.pwp
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  • }}</ref>—runs along the western edge of the city, while the Itchen splits Southampton in two—east and west. Th ...the system carried water from Conduit Head (remnants of which survive near Hill Lane, Shirley) a mile to the site of the friary inside the town walls. The
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  • .... To the north of this line, encompassing the areas of Chineham and Pyotts Hill, is London clay.<ref>{{cite book | last=Stokes| first=Eric| coauthors=| tit ...ch as Lychpit, Chineham, Popley, Winklebury, Oakridge, Kempshott, Brighton Hill, Viables, South Ham, Black Dam and Hatch Warren.
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  • The [[River Teme]] runs across the northern edge of the town and marks the border with Shropshire. There is but one bridge, ...s gently to the Shropshire Plain. To the south of the town stands Llan Wen hill.
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  • ...e of its housing up onto the Downs in the south, covering Chain Hill, Edge Hill, Wantage Down, Furzewick Down and Lattin Down. The Edgehill Springs rise be
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  • |picture=View down the edge - geograph.org.uk - 1369370.jpg [[File:Blewburton Hill - geograph.org.uk - 721208.jpg|thumb|220px|right|Blewburton Fort]]
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  • ...all market town in the north-western corner of [[Berkshire]]. It is on the edge of the Thames Valley, between the [[River Thames]] and [[the Ridgeway]]. The name Faringdon means ''fern covered hill''. The Kings of the West Saxons are believed to have had an estate and hall
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  • [[File:White Horse 1 db.jpg|right|thumb|350px|From White Horse Hill down to the Vale]] ...[[Uffington#White Horse|White Horse of Uffington]], a huge and mysterious hill figure carved into the chalk hillside above Uffington.
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  • |picture caption=Shops on Mulfords Hill ...uilt on the grounds of Aldermaston Court which was located on the northern edge of the village. Numerous barracks, administration buildings and maintenance
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  • It is a small but confident Hampshire town, climbing up the hill to one side and dropping down to the River Test by the town's heart, and it ...ignificant detour and so commuting to these places is mostly by car. Lynch Hill Park, a small housing development, was used in a TV advert for Roysters cri
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  • ...x|Boundary marker for Camberwell Parish on the route of the Effra at Gipsy Hill, where the river was rediscovered in the 1920s]] ...el interceptor sewer', also known as the Effra sewer, running from [[Herne Hill]] eastwards under [[Peckham]] and [[New Cross]] to [[Deptford]].
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  • ...veral times, but finally recombine around the town of [[Fordwich]], on the edge of the marshland north-east of the city. The Stour is navigable on the tida ...tiary sands overlain by London clay form St Thomas's Hill and St Stephen's Hill about a mile north-west of the city centre.<ref>Lyle, p. 15.</ref>
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  • ...Eastbourne and can be seen from most of the town. The hills run from the edge of [[Hampshire]] eastward separating the seaside strip of Sussex from the i ...of the foreshore owned by the crown. A whole new village was formed at the edge of the main town, comprising restaurants, shops and housing.
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  • Folkestone is located where the southern edge of the [[North Downs]], escarpment meets the sea. In contrast to the white ...-coast/towers/3.htm</ref> The Folkestone White Horse is carved on Cheriton Hill above the Channel Tunnel terminal.
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  • ...f its naval history. Above the town centre, Greenwich Park spreads up the hill, a popular place of resort and also the location of Royal Greenwich Observa ...entury with many grand houses, such as Vanbrugh castle established on Maze Hill, next to the park. From the Georgian period estates of houses were built ab
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  • ...ation stretching out from [[Birmingham]] and the [[Black Country]], by the edge of [[Cannock Chase]], a fine stretch of country designated an Area of Outst ...added for ease of pronunciation in later ages. The name may refer to Shoal Hill, north-west of the town.<ref>{{cite book
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  • ...wellings were built in the town, mainly at Bovally along the south eastern edge of the town. The large industrial estate at Aghanloo is 2 miles north of th ...tell of Saint Columba, who presided over a meeting of the Kings at Mullagh Hill near Limavady in 575 AD, a location which is now part of the Roe Park Golf
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  • ...n a minor B-road the town, in common with several other towns close to the edge of Wales, has assumed the title "Gateway to Wales". ...uctional Centres across Britain. The camp was situated in Slough Lane near Hill Farm and is now a small private housing site.
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  • ...er Country Park. Woodend and Witchwood Loch are situated on the north-west edge of Coatbridge. ...t below the ‘Slamannan plateau’ which neighbouring Airdrie sits on the edge of. The low-lying flat ground of Coatbridge was a vital factor in the sitin
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  • ...the beginning of the [[Peak District]] in the Derbyshire Dales, or at the edge of [[Stoke-on-Trent]] in [[Staffordshire]], about 40 miles south of [[Edale ...ing at [[Kirk Yetholm]] in [[Roxburghshire]]. It winds for 267 miles over hill and dale, through 287 gates, over 249 timber stiles and 183 stone stiles, a
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  • {{Infobox hill The name ''Snowdon'' is from the Old English for "snow hill", a name appearing as ''Snawdun'' in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle for 1095.<re
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  • ...ral dales which we know by the name of the "Yorkshire Dales". The southern edge of this area lies in [[Wharfedale]] and [[Airedale]]. The lower reaches of ...ted than by the hardy hillfolk of the Dales. There the men have tended the hill farms and prospered for centuries in spite of weather that would drive an o
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  • Coarse sandstones in the area are known as Addingham Edge and Bramhope Grits. The Otley Shell Beds become exposed at Otley Chevin. At ...eighboring [[Wensleydale]]. The Romans mined lead in the hills on Greenhow Hill overlooking Appletreewick until AD&nbsp;410.<ref name="Wharfe-Litton"/> Aft
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  • ...variety of attractive scenery as Farnham sits in the Surrey Hills, at the edge of the designated "area of outstanding natural beauty" and the North Downs ...bury Hill,<ref>[http://www.bvrunners.org.uk/crooksburyhill.aspx Crooksbury Hill], Farnham</ref> and further artefacts have been found, particularly at site
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  • ...ed to that of a Royal hunting lodge as Guildford was, at that time, at the edge of the afforested land of Windsor Great Park. It was visited on several occ ...d lawlessness commonly known as the "Guy Riots" The Guys would mass on the edge of the town from daybreak on November the fifth, wearing masks or bizarre d
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  • ...ctures on the future site of Milford were the mediæval chapel, and Summer Hill Farm, and its accompanying cottages.<ref name="McKay"/> ...n. The land was used in the 18th century as a gun battery, and its eastern edge was the site of the Royalist fort constructed by Charles I. In the 1930s it
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  • In St Albans the river has been canalised to run a the foot of the hill, its old course just a few feet away across a footpath turned into the broa ...und Pre Mill and The Pre Hotel on the A5183 (just west of St Albans on the edge of the Gorhambury Estate), which are a significant feature of the landscape
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  • ...s at the meeting of the rural with the suburban, with heavy housing at one edge running into Walton and farms at the other. ...around 200 BC a hugh defensive earthwork was erected on top of St Georges Hill, probably as a refuge camp against invaders coming up the Thames Valley.</b
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  • ...Age burial mounds on Winter Hill.<ref name="WHB">{{citation |title=Winter Hill Barrow|url=http://www.chorleyhistorysociety.co.uk/sys2011.htm|publisher=cho ...ton le Moors, described the position of the town amid the low hills on the edge of the West Pennine Moors south east of [[Rivington Pike]] (1,496 feet). Bo
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  • ...he [[River Soar]], and on the coal fields of Leicestershire. It is at the edge of the National Forest. [[File:Spinney Hills Park, Leicester.jpg|thumb|upright|Snow in Spinney Hill Park, Leicester]]
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  • ...of the [[Lincoln Edge]], where the [[River Witham]] breaks through it. The Edge is a limestone escarpment running north-south and rising to 200&nbsp;feet i ...nd the suburbs to the south and south-west. The aptly named street ''Steep Hill'' connects the two (although it is too steep for vehicular traffic, which m
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  • The town lies in the low lands of Lincolnshire, west of the [[Lincoln Edge]], so rises of ground are known. The old Great North Road cuts through the ...ere green fields. Green Hill on the A52 was well named, but no longer; the hill is occupied by a housing estate.
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  • ...is believed to be in the town centre close to where the present-day Market Hill is located. ...hire Wolds]]. The county town, [[Lincoln]], lies 25 miles south along the Edge.
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  • ...: Baldwin de Bollers, who built a castle at the top of Hen Domen or Castle Hill in 1223-4. ...hire and was in its founding days a stronghold guarding the border and the edge of the mountains.
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  • ...[[Birchgrove, Cardiff|Birchgrove]] to the south. To the north is [[Wenallt Hill]], part of Cardiff's unofficial "green belt". The area is served by Rhiwbin A Norman motte called the Twmpath rises near Rhiwbina's northernmost edge. To the north of Rhiwbina lies the steep, wooded Wenallt (750 feet) where C
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  • ...Botley]]), Chawley (at the top of Cumnor Hill), the Dean Court area on the edge of Botley and the outlying settlements of [[Chilswell]], [[Filchampstead]],
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  • ==Fèis Bharraigh & BarraFest - Live @ the Edge== ...nal and modern Scottish music held on Tangasdale machair, literally on the edge of the Atlantic Ocean.
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  • '''Kingston upon Thames''' is a large town in [[Surrey]], close to the edge of the metropolitan conurbation. It is the ancient market town and a town w John Galsworthy the author was born on Kingston Hill.
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  • ...new harbour with its two basins and eventually covered the entire Coulard Hill and providing the town's impressive profile when viewed from a distance. A large part of the town is built on the Coulard Hill which consists of pale grey and yellow sandstones and with these is associa
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  • ...lding a baronial court here in 1385 on the Longforgan or Hund Hill; a moot hill. The officials present were the same as those at of the sovereign's courts. ...gure of a youth in armour, either a son or an attendant squire. Around the edge of the stone a ribbon is carried which the following (Latin) inscription is
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  • {{Infobox hill ...a grassy plateau with a pronounced downward tilt to the west. The eastern edge is precipitous, curving around the head of Greenburn. On the journey to Gre
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  • ...d enters the [[Norfolk Broads]], all at sea level. Norwich is thus at the edge of those flat lands for which Norfolk is rightly famous and the rivers, tid [[File:ElmHill.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Elm Hill]]
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  • ...hite Cross which stands north of Poultry Farm at Hunts Gate at the western edge of the village and is a scheduled monument.<ref>{{cite web|title=White Cros
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  • {{Infobox hill Ben Macdhui lies on the southern edge of the [[Cairn Gorm]] plateau, on the boundary between [[Aberdeenshire]] an
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  • {{Infobox hill ...other proposed root is from Old Norse, the latter element from ''haugr'', "hill".
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  • {{Infobox hill '''Holyhead Mountain''' is the highest hill on [[Holy Island, Anglesey]], and the [[County top|highest point]] in the c
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  • {{Infobox hill |name=Walbury Hill
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  • ...e 14th century Book of Taliesin. At this point the settlement was likely a hill fort, the mercantile nature of the settlement possibly developing under Hib ...control of the Earls of Pembroke, who strengthened the hill fort on Castle Hill by building the first stone walled castle. This enabled the town to grow as
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  • ...n bearing sloes in autumn. A bridleway crosses the woodland, and along the edge of the wood a footpath. Here [[the Ridgeway]] National Trail and [[Ickniel ...nning north down the scarp. Where the footpath runs from the lane, at the edge of the wood, is Hertfordshire's highest point, its [[county top]], at 801 f
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  • .../wilbury_walk.pdf Circular Walk (Wilbury Hill, Ickleford, Cadwell, Wilbury Hill)]''.</ref><ref name="Bra">R. Bradley, [http://thehumanjourney.net/pdf_store ...applied to a parallel lowland route above the spring-line at the northern edge of the chalk.<ref name="IWM">Icknield Way Morris Men, [http://www.icknieldw
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  • On the northern edge of the village is a large 14th century tithe barn, built for Beaulieu Abbey ==Badbury Hill==
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  • ...[[Guildford]]. It lies about two miles from the town centre, right on the edge of the ridge of hills that forms the [[North Downs]]. ...mained a relatively small settlement right up to the 1950s, when the Bushy Hill estate was built. This development of several hundred houses was originally
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  • ...long chalk ridge known as the [[Hog's Back]]. It lies close to the western edge of the county, towards the border with [[Hampshire]]. The parish has been ...ndy by the crossroads of the Guildford-Aldershot Road (the A323) and Hunts Hill Road and Glaziers Lane, the parish also includes the villages of [[Christma
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  • {{Infobox hill Slieve Donard sits at the north-eastern edge of the Mournes, overlooking Newcastle and Dundrum Bay. It has three subsidi
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  • ...ncashire]]. It lies to the north of the West Pennine Moors on the southern edge of the [[River Ribble|Ribble]] Valley, nine miles east of the city of [[Pre To the west, the wooded Billinge Hill in Witton Country Park is 804 feet high, while Royal Blackburn Hospital is
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  • ...sley''' is the largest town in [[Renfrewshire]]. It stands on the northern edge of the Gleniffer Braes, straddling the banks of the [[White Cart Water]], a ...ngs, mosaic floors and marble fonts. The church also contains a 3,040-pipe Hill Organ.
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  • The Imperial War Museum stands at the northern edge of Kennington on Lambeth Road, the leading museum of the wars of the Britis ...chester by way of the gap in the [[North Downs]] at [[Box Hill, Surrey|Box Hill]] near [[Dorking]]. Another Roman road branched off opposite Kennington Roa
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  • ...ians believe it to be derived from the ancient British language words for "edge of wood", as the surrounding area was once dense woodland. The same name is ...s to visit the Crystal Palace during the day and to take the tram down the hill to one of the 'twenty-five pubs to the square mile'<ref>Abbott, Peter (2002
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  • ...t is Oiseval ('east fell'), which reaches 951 feet, and Mullach Mòr ('big hill summit') at 1,185&nbsp;feet is due west of Conachair. Ruival ('red fell') 4 ...]], [[Sula Sgeir]], and the [[Barra Isles|Bishop's Isles]] at the southern edge of the Outer Hebrides.
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  • The main village was at the edge of the flood-plain of the River Thames, where the valley side starts to ris ...time most of the eastern part of the parish was emparked; a new road (New Hill) constructed to provide access to the residual village and the Turnpike Hig
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  • {{Infobox hill ...ip down to the bedrock, there are several tear-drop shaped hills above the edge of Lyn Cau. These geologically-important rocky outcrops are called roche mo
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  • ...haill, was reputed to have built a stronghold at the Hill of Allen, on the edge of the [[Bog of Allen]], which was then in Leinster.
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  • ...in road but otherwise half-way to the edge of Yeovil. It is barely up any hill as would justify its name but not on the river. It was once the centre of
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  • ...bn=9780948975868|page=21}}</ref> Bathampton Camp may have been an Iron Age hill fort or stock enclosure.<ref>{{cite book|last=Thomas|first=Rod|title=A Sacr ...nce. Having acquired all the land between his home and the top of Lansdown Hill, he created a garden over half a mile in length and built Beckford's Tower
    45 KB (7,203 words) - 09:14, 22 August 2017
  • ...inating landscape for many miles around is [[Glastonbury Tor]]; a solitary hill rising straight from the Levels, atop which stands a ruined mediæval chape ...k'', dating from 3838 BC and so 30&nbsp;years older.<ref>{{cite book |last=Hill-Cottingham |first=Pat |coauthors=Briggs, D., Brunning, R., King, A. & Rix,
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  • '''Wells''' is a cathedral city in [[Somerset]], on the southern edge of the [[Mendip Hills]]. Though the town has but 10,000 souls or thereabout ...the region, the Mendip UHF television transmitter, was installed on [[Pen Hill]] above Wells, reaching even higher at its tip that Somerset’s [[county t
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  • ...coast between the bounding high ground of [[Worlebury Hill]] and [[Bleadon Hill]]. It includes the suburbs of '''Oldmixon''', '''West Wick''' and [[Worle]] Weston's oldest structure is Worlebury Camp, on Worlebury Hill, dating from the Iron Age.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.megalithic.co.uk/a
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  • ...r the town the river is debated, but the Yeo in fact flows only around the edge of the town, not through its heart. ...e route of the old railway to Riverside Walk, Wyndham Hill and Summerhouse Hill forming the Yeovil Country Park.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.naturalengla
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  • [[File:Croy4.jpg|left|thumb|800px|Broad wiew from Croy Hill and the [[Antonine Wall]], over Kilsyth to the Kilsyth Hills]] ...ill (NS 7091 7610) as well as the Antonine Wall forts of Bar Hill and Croy Hill which are clearly visible from the present-day town.
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  • Wincanton is on the north east edge of [[Blackmore Vale]], 15 miles north east of [[Yeovil]], and 12 miles nort Windmill Hill was the site of a Bronze Age Beaker culture burial, and contemporary artefa
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  • ...he upper part of the moor continues into [[Black Hill, Peak District|Black Hill]], the highest point of Cheshire. ...keep the road clear of snow, and sometimes one will clear its side of the hill, but the snowploughs turn around at the top, leaving the other side blocked
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  • ...n the stretch of the Limpsfield road between Warlingham village and Botley Hill Farm). On a clear day all the major skyscrapers (including Canary Wharf, "t The village is close to the edge of the swollen metropolitan conurbation. Neighbouring villages include [[Sa
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  • '''Worcester Park''' is a town in [[Surrey]], in the edge of the metropolitan conurbation; contiguous with the surrounding towns in s ...ing estate beside Worcester Park Station, Parker's Field was a fine, green hill until the top half was built upon in the 1970s.
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  • |picture=Market Hill and parish church, Haverhill, Suffolk - geograph.org.uk - 63259.jpg |picture caption=Market Hill and parish church
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  • ...[[Ipswich]] and 22 miles south-east of [[Norwich]]. It is situated on the edge of the [[The Broads|Broads]], and is the major town of this part of the Suf ...cts/summarys/html98_9/cc2313.htm A Roman and Saxon settlement at Bloodmoor Hill, Pakefield, Lowestoft]. Retrieved 2009-11-28.</ref><ref name="wavlandscapeh
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  • |picture= Market Hill, Sudbury - geograph.org.uk - 900492.jpg |picture caption= Market Hill, Sudbury
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  • {{Infobox hill |picture caption=Helvellyn; Red Tarn is flanked by Striding Edge and Swirral Edge
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  • {{Infobox hill ...e, noting its similarity with ''[[Brown Willy]]'', the name of the highest hill on nearby [[Bodmin Moor]], and suggested that a watch for beacon fires used
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  • The Land Yeo rises on [[Dundry Hill]] and supplies [[Barrow Gurney Reservoirs]] before flowing through various ...o has its origins at several small springs on the western edge of [[Dundry Hill]].<ref name="somrivers"/> It is one of the small streams which feed Barrow
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  • {{Infobox hill ...The name is said to be derived from Old Norse, meaning “water over the edge”. There was too a village of Kinder which once lay on the slope of the p
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  • {{Infobox hill |name=Winter Hill
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  • {{Infobox hill |name=Cleeve Hill
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  • [[File:Falkland Hill 01.jpg|right|thumb|300px|East Lomond or Falkland Hill]] ...tain two prominent peaks, [[West Lomond]] and [[East Lomond]] (or Falkland Hill) (1,470 feet), which lie at either end of an escarpment roughly 4 miles lon
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  • ...port]], now one of Britain's busiest international airports, opened on the edge of the town in the 1940s, encouraging commercial and industrial growth. Aft ...d by main roads and railway lines. The nearby communities of Ifield, Pound Hill and Three Bridges were absorbed into the new town at different stages of it
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  • ...the 18th century, the Hampstead Ponds and the Highgate Ponds. At the south edge of Hampstead Heath these two streams flow underground as sewers which join In Charles Dickens’s Oliver Twist, Fagin's lair is on Saffron Hill, adjacent to the Fleet.
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  • {{Infobox hill ...nichs".</ref> with its fine east facing corrie and pointed buttresses. The hill is not easily seen from any public road being situated in the centre of the
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  • ...distinguishes it from [[Old Sarum]], the original site of Salisbury win a hill-fort to the north of today's city. The city stands in south-eastern of Wiltshire, near the edge of [[Salisbury Plain]]. It sits where five rivers meet: the [[River Nadde
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  • ...roundabout on the A350 Malmesbury Road. There are also access points off Hill Corner Road (over fields) and Jacksom's Lane. **[http://www.heartofthetownchurch.org.uk/ Station Hill Baptist Chapel]
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  • {{Infobox hill The hill is well seen from [[Inverey]] and often appears as dark blue in colour, how
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  • {{Infobox hill |name=Beacon Hill
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  • '''Stourbridge''' is a town in [[Worcestershire]], a suburban town on the edge of the [[Black Country]] conurbation. Stourbridge is known as a centre of g ...h rural [[Shropshire]] close by to the west. The [[Clent Hills]], [[Kinver Edge]] and large areas of farmland lie to the south and west.
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  • {{quote|As a place-name Lairig Ghru remains an enigma. Lairig means hill pass, and map-makers of the nineteenth century solved the problem to their ...ght of suggestion is - therefore - that ''Lairig Ghru'' is certainly ''the hill pass'' (of something) and that ''something'' is probably related to the wat
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  • ...river in [[Buckinghamshire]] and [[Oxfordshire]]. It rises at [[Quainton]] Hill and flows west through a flat countryside for around 15 miles. It passes th ...iver Ray, to divert much of the water flow around the northern and western edge of Otmoor.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx
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  • ...1997) “The Welsh Three Thousand Foot Challenges: A Guide for Walkers and Hill Runners” Grey Stone Books, Darwen, Lancashire. ISBN 978-1902017020</ref [[File:Badgernet Snowdonia walks 1.JPG|right|thumb|170px|Southern edge. Waymarked path near Llyn Barfog]]
    14 KB (2,159 words) - 23:02, 29 January 2016
  • This is a defensive enclosure, built on a hill that forms the western end of a spur overlooking the valley at {{getmapecho ...and choughs on the sea cliffs, tree pipit and redstart along the woodland edge, and pied flycatcher and wood warbler in the Welsh oak woods.
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  • [[File:Aberdaron - Islyn Bakery.JPG|left|thumb|upright|Running up the hill]] ...tp://www.edgeofwaleswalk.co.uk/section6.htm "Llangwnnadl to Mynydd Mawr"]. Edge of Wales Walk. Retrieved 16 August 2009</ref> granite was quarried at Porth
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  • ...ire]], on the banks of the [[River Ogwen]] and on the A5 trunk road on the edge of [[Snowdonia]]. It is colloquially called ''Pesda'' by the locals. ...is to the east and north east of the A5 road with housing packed onto the hill-side in irregular rows, for the trunk road marked the boundary between Lord
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  • ...' Gunpowder Plot is said to have lived in the house Ardda'r Myneich (Monks Hill), whose ruins lie in the fields above the road between [[Porthlwyd]] and Do From here the original quarry tramway continued across the marshland to the edge of the River Conwy at Porth Llwyd wharf.
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  • {{Infobox hill ...hill top shaped like a chair", which perfectly describes the shape of the hill.<ref>{{cite book |last=Hawley |first=Robert |year=2008 |month=November/Dece
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  • {{Infobox hill ...N4572-crib-goch-to-snowdon crop b.jpg|right|thumb|upright=0.866|The "knife-edge" arête of Crib Goch with Snowdon behind]]
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  • Trefriw lies on the edge of [[Snowdonia]], on the B5106 road to the north-west of [[Llanrwst]], and ...om ''Tref Rhiw Las''; the name Tref Rhiw is normally rendered "Town of the Hill". Llywelyn Fawr donated a number of farms from the parish of Llanrhychwyn,
    19 KB (3,088 words) - 14:07, 9 February 2012
  • ...ill.jpg|right|thumb|350px|The Mendip Hills from Crook Peak to Shute Shelve Hill]] The highest hill in the range is [[Black Down, Somerset|Beacon Batch]] on Black Down, which
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  • The name Malvern is from the ancient British language meaning 'Bare-Hill',<ref name=Smart2009>{{cite book ...5}}</ref> the nearest modern equivalent being the Welsh ''moelfryn'' (bald hill).<ref>{{cite book
    26 KB (3,873 words) - 11:03, 30 January 2016
  • ...ce of the Tay is in the highland region of Perthshire, at the very western edge of the county on the slopes of [[Ben Lui]], then flows easterly across the File:Kinnoulltay.jpg|River Tay from Kinnoull Hill in Winter
    12 KB (1,922 words) - 07:40, 11 November 2020
  • ...tward through fields and open space to King George V Playing Fields at the edge of [[Totteridge]], forming the Middlesex-Hertfordshire boundary for some wa Out of Northolt on and upward to the heights of Harrow hill.</poem>
    15 KB (2,473 words) - 09:30, 21 April 2020
  • ...ield. It continues as the Driffield Beck, flowing around the south-western edge of [[Driffield]], where it is joined by the Driffield Trout Stream. After t ...Navigation. Scurf Dyke joins from the west, and is followed by Struncheon Hill lock, which marks the end of the Navigation, and the official start of the
    18 KB (2,936 words) - 12:33, 31 January 2016
  • [[File:Box Hill - geograph.org.uk - 382696.jpg|right|thumb|350px|Box Hill in the North Downs]] ...rey at 876&nbsp;feet. The [[County top|highest point]] in Kent, [[Betsom's Hill]], is in the Westerham Heights on the North Downs. East of the [[River Medw
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  • The highest point here is Butser Hill, reaching a height of 889 feet above sea level. ...outh, so the South Downs' scarp faces northwards: each is one half of the edge of the anciently worn-day Wealden Dome.
    18 KB (2,739 words) - 21:37, 25 January 2017
  • ...ins in [[Brecknockshire]]. It stands on the [[River Usk]], on the southern edge of the [[Black Mountains]] and in the eastern part of the ''Brecon Beacons The name Crickhowell is taken from that of the nearby Iron Age hill fort of [[Table Mountain|Crug Hywel]] above the town.
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  • ...n the banks of the [[River Calder, Yorkshire|River Calder]] on the eastern edge of the [[Pennines]], and its urban area had a population of 76,886 at 2001 ...iles southwest of the [[county town]], [[York]]. It stands on the eastern edge of the [[Pennines]] in the lower Calder Valley.
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  • ...resent the freeing of the Walbrook.<ref>Wat Tyler (2003), ''Dancing at the Edge of Chaos: a Spanner in the Works of Global Capitalism, in, Notes From Nowhe
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  • ...e|Ogden]]. The reservoir itself is sourced from water draining off Skirden Edge, through Skirden Clough, to the west and from the north the reservoir takes ...the side of Hebble Road at [[Wheatley, Yorkshire]] north of Halifax, near Hill Park Avenue, the stream disappears underground in culvert in woodland at {{
    2 KB (268 words) - 23:28, 4 March 2012
  • Harrogate stands at the edge of the Yorkshire Dales, with the Vale of York to the east and the upland Yo ...e immediate west of Harrogate, the Army Foundation College and RAF Menwith Hill, an electronic monitoring station.
    15 KB (2,371 words) - 16:51, 29 January 2016
  • ...e [[Domesday Book]] entry of 1086. The village is on [[Dartmoor]], at the edge of the National Park. ...the prettier part and its heart, lies to the south is at the bottom of the hill, houses and farms strung along a lane beside the Cholwell Brook, down to th
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  • {{Infobox hill |name=Cheeks Hill
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  • {{Infobox hill |name=Milk Hill
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  • {{infobox hill |name=Bald Hill
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  • {{Infobox hill |name=Ebrington Hill
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  • ...his stretch, a short stream flowing down Hortonsford Bottom from Langcombe Hill also joins the river from the south. Between Stingers Hill and Redlake the river turns southward into an area known as The Meadow, whe
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  • The '''Weald''' is the hill country spreading across parts of [[Surrey]], [[Sussex]] and [[Kent]] betwe ...nty top]]s of both Surrey and Sussex are in the High Weald, namely [[Leith Hill]] and [[Black Down, Sussex|Black Down]] respectively.
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  • ...150 feet above sea level in the valley of the [[River Roch]]. [[Blackstone Edge]], [[Saddleworth Moor]] and the South [[Pennines]] are close to the east, w ...[Manchester]]) to ''Eboracum'' ([[York]]), crossed the moors at Blackstone Edge.<ref name="tde">{{Citation|last=Lewis|first=Samuel|title=A Topographical Di
    18 KB (2,696 words) - 13:14, 8 June 2018
  • ...o the borders of [[Surrey]] and [[Kent]]. Its northern suburb of Baldwin's Hill lies across the border in Surrey. It lies 21 miles north-north-east of [[Br ...twick Airport]] is 10 miles from the town. Redhill Aerodrome and [[Biggin Hill Airport]] are both within half an hour's drive. Hammerwood Park has a helic
    15 KB (2,364 words) - 14:59, 31 July 2019
  • ...[[Earnscleugh Water]]. On the edge of the hill above the wood is Dabshead Hill, with the earthworks of a fort.
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  • Between the portals at Beussingue and Castle Hill in Folkestone the tunnel is 31 miles long, with two miles under land on the ...and deep as possible. The British terminal had to be located in the Castle Hill landslip, which consists of displaced and tipping blocks of lower chalk, gl
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  • The Cherwell rises at [[Hellidon]] near [[Arbury Hill]] in [[Northamptonshire]], the source of several rivers, and flows south th ...[[Hellidon]], two miles west of [[Charwelton]] near [[Daventry]]. Helidon Hill immediately north of the source forms a watershed: on the south side, the C
    12 KB (1,939 words) - 10:56, 19 October 2015
  • ...long; from its source in the [[Staffordshire Moorlands]], on the southern edge of [[Biddulph Moor]], it sweeps in a great loop through the heart of the Mi ...''rhyd''), meaning "ford" in various placenames along the Trent, such as [[Hill Ridware]].
    22 KB (3,473 words) - 12:10, 20 October 2017
  • ...thousands of spectators on the Brent in 1555. The Martyrs Memorial on East Hill commemorates Waid and other Kentish Martyrs. ...ast England Development Agency (SEEDA) purchased a 2.6 hectare site on the edge of the town which had been used by Unwins, an off licence chain that went i
    13 KB (2,160 words) - 20:52, 27 January 2016
  • ...[[Buckingham]], [[Milton Keynes]] (at [[Stony Stratford]] and the northern edge of the town), [[Newport Pagnell]] and [[Olney, Buckinghamshire|Olney]], the The Great Ouse and its meadows lie broad at the edge of St Neots. It is said that in Huntingdonshire the Great Ouse enters its
    30 KB (4,845 words) - 11:37, 31 January 2016
  • ...f [[Sussex]] and in part spilling over it. The town stands at the northern edge of the [[the Weald|High Weald]], the sandstone geology of which is exemplif ...}}</ref> by James Money at High Rocks uncovered the remains of a defensive hill-fort. It is thought that the site was occupied into the era of Roman Britai
    27 KB (4,233 words) - 16:05, 8 August 2016
  • ...e''' is a small coastal market town on the south coast of [[Kent]], on the edge of [[Romney Marsh]]. Its name simply means "Haven" or "Landing Place". ...ediæval and Georgian buildings, and an Anglo-Saxon / Norman church on the hill and seafront promenade. Hythe was once defended by two castles, [[Saltwood]
    10 KB (1,623 words) - 12:32, 27 November 2018
  • ...-mile drain which runs from Barton Mills to Denver along the south-eastern edge of the Fens, and was constructed in the 1950s and 1960s. During times of fl ...table as the ground surface had shrunk, and the engine sat at the top of a hill, rather than at the lowest point on the northern Fen. Consequently, a new e
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  • ...nd '''Little Raveley'''. Each is but a small group of cottages at the fen edge. ...[[Wood Walton]]. The Manor House is at the southeast end on the top of the hill, such as it is. Lower down are the Methodist Chapel and the school. At Whit
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  • ...tenth-longest river in the [[United Kingdom]]. From its source at [[Arbury Hill]] to [[Northampton]] the river falls a total of 300 feet in 17 miles. For t ...ern slope of [[Arbury Hill]] and in pools between Arbury Hill and Sharmans Hill there are three tributaries that converge at [[Dodford, Northamptonshire|Do
    20 KB (3,277 words) - 22:13, 13 January 2024
  • '''Everton''' is a small village in northern [[Bedfordshire]], on the very edge of [[Huntingdonshire]]. Everton has no shop but is home to a pub, The pub, Everton stand on top of [[Tempsford Hill]] on the Greensand Ridge Walk and is close to RAF Tempsford.
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  • The village is situated on a vantage hill ridge that provides vistas of pastureland and the hills of Snowdonia and th ...ty, inscribed within a circle, beneath which are two incised trefoils. The edge of the stone is ornamented with the classical fret seen on the Penmon Prior
    7 KB (1,049 words) - 17:35, 21 May 2012
  • ...burns in the Redhole Spring and Wike Head area of [[Pikenaze Moor]] at the edge of [[Yorkshire]] with [[Cheshire]], whence runs Salter's Brook south along ...ndstone. It is on the edge of the [[Peak District]] Dome, at the southern edge of the Pennine anticline. The Variscan uplift has caused much faulting and
    12 KB (1,760 words) - 14:30, 22 December 2016
  • ...ed after the [[River Clwyd]] in Denbighshire, whose Vale marks the western edge of the hills. The range includes a number of hills possessing Iron Age hill forts, including (from the north):
    3 KB (463 words) - 05:58, 25 May 2012
  • {{Infobox hill ...erionethshire]], within the [[Rhinogydd]] range. It is at the far western edge of the [[Snowdonia]] National Park, though not in Snowdonia itself. Moelfre
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  • ...n Copse. The West Berkshire Golf Course, on Buckham Hill, and the northern edge of RAF Welford are in Poughley.
    3 KB (487 words) - 16:58, 28 May 2012
  • |picture=Forge Hill, Hampstead Norreys - geograph.org.uk - 8729.jpg |picture caption=Forge Hill, Hampstead Norreys
    4 KB (631 words) - 21:22, 4 June 2012
  • ...it was founded before 1238 by the de Bohun family who were from St Ann’s Hill in nearby Midhurst. On the northern edge of Easebourne village on the A286 road Budgenor Lodge, recently converted i
    2 KB (302 words) - 21:31, 3 June 2012
  • |picture=Slades Hill looking east towards Enfield - geograph.org.uk - 748991.jpg ...f [[Oakwood, Middlesex|Oakwood]] to the west. The open countryside of Hog Hill and Trent Park lie to the north and northwest, while Enfield Golf Club spre
    1 KB (200 words) - 20:42, 15 January 2017
  • ...Air Force Vickers Valetta twin-engined training aircraft crashed at Tom's Hill just south of the village. Sixteen of the 17 airmen on board were killed. **2004: ''Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason'', the Greyhound pub (including a scene involving fox hunting cut
    5 KB (756 words) - 21:41, 5 June 2012
  • ...Darby Burn, which have gathered themselves together below Easteryardhouse Hill. The North Mediwn flows south from there, absorbing the Westruther Burn an The '''South Medwin''' rises in burns on the Bawdy Moss at the edge of Lanarkshire. It flows for some miles south along the border of Lanarksh
    1 KB (235 words) - 20:17, 11 June 2012
  • ...Man", are known as the [[Furness Fells]]. [[Gummer's How]] is a prominent hill in the east of the region. ...s peninsula reaches southward into the [[Irish Sea]] and marks the western edge of Morecambe Bay. The southern end of the peninsula is dominated by the bay
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  • *[[Silbury Hill]] ...100 BC, after which the ditch began to silt up naturally. Within the outer edge of the enclosed area is a circle of 56 pits, each about a 3'3" in diameter'
    53 KB (8,161 words) - 12:19, 18 May 2016
  • {{Infobox hill ...u from [[Braeriach]] to [[Cairn Toul]], with Monadh Mòr at the south-east edge. It has two tops, of which the highest summit is the north top, at 3,652 fe
    2 KB (288 words) - 16:53, 23 September 2018
  • ...s Strawberry Hill, Strawberry Bottom, Colony Bog, Lovelands Hill and Brock Hill. The River Hale from [[Bisley, Surrey|Bisley]] joins the Bourne early on it ...f Course before it passes through a narrow corridor on its way to St Ann's Hill, [[Chertsey]]. During this passage, the northern bank of the River Bourne r
    5 KB (825 words) - 23:48, 16 June 2012
  • ...ord]]. The parish includes the hamlet of [[Tower Hill, Hertfordshire|Tower Hill]]. The village centre is on a large green on the edge of nearby Chipperfield Common. It is a village with five pubs, three churc
    5 KB (847 words) - 20:12, 7 June 2016

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