Difference between revisions of "Template:Todaysimage"

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'''This month's image''' is:
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'''Today's featured image''' is:
  
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|[[File:{{#switch:{{CURRENTMONTH}}
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|[[File:{{FP-{{pickday}}|pic}}|left|thumb|300px|{{FP-{{pickday}}|cap}}]]
| 08=Dubbyhole Upper Townland - geograph.org.uk - 258443.jpg{{!}}Dubbyhole, [[County Londonderry|Co Londonderry]]
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| 09=Abingdon Berks St Helens.jpg{{!}}[[Abingdon]] from the Thames
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=={{pickday}}==  
| 10= Caerleon Amphitheatre.jpg{{!}}Roman Amphitheatre at [[Caerleon]], Monmouthshire
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{{FP-{{pickday}}|text}} ([[{{pickday}}|Read more]])''
| 11= Swale River at Richmond 01.JPG{{!}}The River Swale, near [[Richmond, Yorkshire]]
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|}<noinclude>[[Category:Front Page templates]]
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| 08='''Dubbyhole''' is a townland in [[Couty Londonderry]].
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| 09='''Abingdon''' (or Abingdon-on-Thames) is a market town in [[Berkshire]], of which county it is the county town. Abingdon is one of several places that claim to be Britain's oldest continuously-occupied town, with people having lived there for at least 6,000 years.
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Abingdon lies 5½ miles south of Oxford and five miles north of Didcot, in the flat valley of the Thames and is situated on the west (right) bank of that river, where the river Ock flows in from the Vale of White Horse. ''([[Abingdon|Read more]])''
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| 10='''Caerleon''' is a suburban village on the River Usk in [[Monmouthshire]].  It is by the northern outskirts of the city of [[Newport, Monmouthshire|Newport]].
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Caerleon is of great archaeological importance; it is most famous as the site a Roman legionary fortress known as ''Isca Augusta'' and an Iron Age hill fort.  Caerleon also has strong literary associations.  Geoffrey of Monmouth portrayed Caerleon one of the most important cities in Britain in his ''Historia Regum Britanniæ'', and Alfred Lord Tennyson wrote the ''Idylls of the King'' while staying in Caerleon. ''([[Caerleon|Read more]])''
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| 11='''Richmond''' is a pretty market town on the [[River Swale]] in the [[North Riding of Yorkshire]]. The town stands on the edge of the Yorkshire Dales National Park.  Richmond's picturesque appearance and historic buildings have made it a popular film and television location.
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The town was named after the Norman Conquest when it and the surounding lands were granted by William the Conqueror to a Breton nobleman.  It became the centre of a Liberty known as "Richmondshire".''([[Richmond, Yorkshire|Read more]])''
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Latest revision as of 22:06, 12 December 2014

Today's featured image is:

Lough Corrib

Lough Corrib

Lough Corrib is a lake of 68 square miles in the west of the Republic of Ireland, lying mostly in County Galway, with a small area of its northeast corner in County Mayo. The River Corrib or Galway River connects the lough to the sea at Galway. Corrib is the largest lough in the Republic, and second only to Lough Neagh on the island of Ireland.

The first known canal in Ireland was cut here in the 12th century. Known as the Friar's Cut, it allowed boats to pass from Lough Corrib to the sea at Galway. (Read more)