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  • ...], whose fame arises from its association with hangings in past days; the "Tyburn Tree" stood by its banks. Another subterranean stream, the [[Tyburn Brook]], is quite separate though nearby, and is a tributary of the [[River
    5 KB (838 words) - 17:23, 10 June 2012

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  • ...ee Tuns'' in Brook-street in the parish of Holborn".) The "Ossulstone" at Tyburn is regarded as a likely candidate for the earliest "shiremoots". The county
    16 KB (2,522 words) - 17:27, 28 January 2023
  • ...its history, associations, and traditions'', Volume 2, p. 509.</ref>. The Tyburn is now entirely culverted, but it rises in what is now [[Swiss Cottage]] an The manor of Tyburn is mentioned in the [[Domesday Book]] (1086) as a possession of Barking Abb
    9 KB (1,369 words) - 16:51, 11 April 2017
  • ...nds. It ended at [[Lincoln]] when threatened with military action, and at Tyburn for those who remained defiant.
    6 KB (950 words) - 20:28, 25 September 2010
  • ...]]; an island formed by the dry ground between two branches of the [[River Tyburn]] and the Thames. Westminster Abbey was built here by King Edward the Confe
    9 KB (1,450 words) - 12:40, 20 March 2018
  • ...an, Elizabeth Sawyer, of witchcraft and she was subsequently executed at [[Tyburn]]; her story was told in a pamphlet by Henry Goodcole, and in a 1621 play e
    30 KB (4,660 words) - 11:46, 21 April 2017
  • ...t notorious Bowbearer during this period was Nicholas Tempest, executed at Tyburn in 1537 as one of the northern leaders of the Pilgrimage of Grace, the Roma
    10 KB (1,562 words) - 23:32, 9 December 2016
  • ...reason would not let him rest; his corpse was dug up and hung in chains at Tyburn.
    7 KB (1,182 words) - 22:49, 28 January 2016
  • ...], whose fame arises from its association with hangings in past days; the "Tyburn Tree" stood by its banks. Another subterranean stream, the [[Tyburn Brook]], is quite separate though nearby, and is a tributary of the [[River
    5 KB (838 words) - 17:23, 10 June 2012
  • ...the northeast corner near Marble Arch), close to the former site of the [[Tyburn]] gallows, and Rotten Row, which is the northern boundary of the site of th
    13 KB (2,029 words) - 12:15, 23 June 2018
  • ...d visitors. The rebellion ultimately failed and Arundell was beheaded at [[Tyburn]].
    10 KB (1,555 words) - 14:24, 26 May 2016
  • ...tholic: St Edmund Campion (named after a convert Jesuit priest executed at Tyburn for sedition in 1581). This church replaced the earlier Church of the Sacr
    9 KB (1,363 words) - 21:47, 24 September 2014
  • ...man Catholic priest, John Duckett, was arrested in Wolsingham and taken to Tyburn, where he was executed, and a memorial stands in the town.
    7 KB (1,162 words) - 11:27, 3 March 2019
  • ...'s Stone", an unmarked monolith, possibly pre-Roman, which was situated at Tyburn (the modern-day junction of the Edgware Road with Bayswater Road). It is po
    3 KB (449 words) - 15:12, 27 November 2019
  • ...12 stood another building which was demolished for the construction of the Tyburn Road, though a small section did remain until the First World War. ...nal]] was completed. It passed along the southern boundary of Erdington at Tyburn; in the examination of the Bill for the canal by the Parliamentary committe
    14 KB (2,234 words) - 13:46, 7 October 2015
  • *[[Middlesex]]: From the site of the [[Tyburn|Tyburn tree]], at the north-east corner of [[Hyde Park]], the Edgware Road begins,
    14 KB (2,158 words) - 14:11, 10 September 2019
  • ...mbre, who was Mayor of London in 1377 and 1378. Sir Nicholas was hanged at Tyburn in 1387, having been accused of treason.
    12 KB (1,886 words) - 14:19, 4 August 2015
  • ...Sedbergh, joined the Pilgrimage of Grace, and suffered death by hanging at Tyburn in June 1537.<ref>{{brithist|36237|Houses of Cistercian monks - Jervaulx}}<
    6 KB (946 words) - 12:37, 14 August 2015
  • ...h Prior Cockerell was implicated. When the revolt failed, he was hanged at Tyburn with the Prior of Bridlington, the Abbot of [[Jervaulx Abbey|Jervaulx]] and
    26 KB (4,136 words) - 19:31, 24 January 2018
  • ...ck Hall, a Jacobite rebel who was tried five times and finally executed at Tyburn for high treason on 13 July 1716. His initials are still carved over one o
    9 KB (1,424 words) - 19:16, 10 May 2018
  • ...own as Thorney (''Þorn ieg''), formed between two branches of the [[River Tyburn]] and the Thames. ...to be disinterred in January 1661 and posthumously hanged from a gibbet at Tyburn.
    30 KB (4,706 words) - 22:11, 20 May 2016

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