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50 Gems of Oxfordshire: The History & Heritage of the Most Iconic Places [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 96 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x165 mm, kaal: 314 g, 100 Illustrations
  • Sari: 50 Gems
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Nov-2022
  • Kirjastus: Amberley Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 1398109525
  • ISBN-13: 9781398109520
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 96 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x165 mm, kaal: 314 g, 100 Illustrations
  • Sari: 50 Gems
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Nov-2022
  • Kirjastus: Amberley Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 1398109525
  • ISBN-13: 9781398109520
Teised raamatud teemal:
Lavishly illustrated throughout, this book explores some of the best locations the county of Oxfordshire has to offer.

Oxfordshire is rich in many things—fine agricultural land and areas of dense woodland; delightful towns like Burford, Woodstock, Dorchester and Henley; the stately River Thames that bisects the county; the iron-stone villages of the northern border; the Oxford Canal meandering its way through remote countryside; splendid country houses at Blenheim, Chastleton and Rousham. The jewel in the crown is the city of Oxford itself, with its ancient honey-coloured buildings and dreaming spires. This book celebrates both Oxfordshire’s well-known glories, and also hidden gems such as the ruined manor at Hampton Gay, the brewery at Hook Norton, the glories of Wytham Woods, and the forge at Clifton Hampden. Highlighting these and other gems, this book gives an enticing picture of the rich variety of experiences and sights the county of Oxfordshire offers.
Map
4(1)
Introduction 5(3)
North Oxfordshire
8(33)
1 Asthall
8(1)
2 Barford St Michael and St John
9(2)
3 Binsey
11(1)
4 Blenheim Palace and Bladon
12(2)
5 Broughton Castle
14(2)
6 Burford
16(2)
7 Charlbury Railway Station
18(1)
8 Chastleton House
19(2)
9 Cogges Farm
21(1)
10 Godstow
22(2)
11 Hampton Gay
24(2)
12 Hook Norton
26(2)
13 Minster Lovell
28(1)
14 Great Rollright
29(1)
15 Shipton-on-Cherwell
30(2)
16 South Leigh
32(2)
17 Swinbrook and Widford
34(2)
18 Great Tew
36(1)
19 Thrupp
37(2)
20 Wychwood Forest
39(2)
The City of Oxford
41(21)
21 The Ashmolean Museum
41(1)
22 Blackwell's Bookshop
42(2)
23 The Botanic Garden
44(1)
24 The Cherwell and Punting
45(2)
25 Christ Church College, Oxford
47(2)
26 The Covered Market
49(1)
27 The High Street
50(1)
28 Keble College
51(2)
29 Magdalen College
53(2)
30 Oxford Castle and Prison
55(1)
31 Radcliffe Square
56(2)
32 The University and Pitt Rivers Museum
58(2)
33 Worcester College Gardens
60(2)
South Oxfordshire
62(34)
34 Bix Bottom
62(2)
35 Clifton Hampden
64(2)
36 Didcot Railway Centre
66(3)
37 Dorchester
69(3)
38 Ewelme
72(2)
39 Goring and Streatley
74(2)
40 Henley-on-Thames
76(2)
41 Iffley
78(1)
42 Kelmscott
79(1)
43 Newbridge: The Rose Revived
80(2)
44 Nuffield Place
82(2)
45 Rotherfield Greys
84(3)
46 Rycote Chapel
87(2)
47 Shotover Hill and Boars Hill
89(1)
48 Stoke Row and The Maharajah's Well
90(2)
49 Stonor Park
92(2)
50 Wytham Woods
94(2)
Acknowledgements 96
David Meara is a retired Church of England clergyman who worked in the Oxford Diocese for twenty-seven years, and then served as Rector of St. Brides Fleet Street and Archdeacon of London until 2014. He has made a lifetime study of Church movements and brasses and has published extensively on the subject. He has published on a range of topics, including Anglo-Scottish sleeper trains and the scuttling of German ships at Scapa Flow. His father-in-law fought in Burma in the Second World War.