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Petter And Galpin Collection (page 20)

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Honister Crag and Pass, c1870

Honister Crag and Pass, c1870. Honister Crag a fell in the Lake District of Cumbria is a Site of Special Scientific Interest. Honister Pass has one of the steepest gradients in the area

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Dungeon Ghyl, c1870

Dungeon Ghyl, c1870. Dungeon Ghyll waterfall in the Great Langdale valley of the Cumbrian Lake District. From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol. II"

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Coniston Water, c1870

Coniston Water, c1870. Third-largest lake in the Cumbrian Lake District. From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol. II". [Cassell, Petter & Galpin, London, c1870]

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Windermere, from above Ambleside, c1870

Windermere, from above Ambleside, c1870. Windermere lake in Cumbrias Lake District viewed above Ambleside. From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol. II"

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Dittisham, on the Dart, c1870

Dittisham, on the Dart, c1870. Fishing village on the west bank of the tidal River Dart. From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol. II". [Cassell, Petter & Galpin, London, c1870]

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Cawdor Castle, c1870

Cawdor Castle, c1870. 15th-century tower house in Cawdor, Scotland best known for its connection to William Shakespeares tragedy Macbeth. From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: The Gate of Honour, Caius College, c1870

The Gate of Honour, Caius College, c1870. Graduating students pass through the Gate of Honour on Caius Court at Caius College, Cambridge, added to existing structures by John Caius in 1565

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: South Stack Lighthouse, Holyhead, c1870

South Stack Lighthouse, Holyhead, c1870. South Stack Lighthouse on a small island on the coast of Holy Island, Anglesey, Wales built in 1809 by Daniel Asher Alexander to warn ships on the Irish sea

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Harlech Castle, c1870

Harlech Castle, c1870. Grade I-listed medieval fortification close to the Irish Sea by Edward I between 1282-1289, following the English Civil War, Parliament ordered its slighting

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: The Lime Walk, Trinity, c1870

The Lime Walk, Trinity, c1870. Lime walk at Trinity College, Oxford founded in 1555 by Sir Thomas Pope. From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol. II"

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Tower in the Schools Quadrangle, c1870

Tower in the Schools Quadrangle, c1870. Tower of the Five Orders at the Bodleian Library in Oxford built between 1613 and 1619

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: On a Highland Stream, c1870

On a Highland Stream, c1870. From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol. II". [Cassell, Petter & Galpin, London, c1870]

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Benvenue, c1870

Benvenue, c1870. Ben Venue, a mountain in the Trossachs area of Scotland. From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol. II". [Cassell, Petter & Galpin, London, c1870]

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: The Cloisters, Lincoln, c1870

The Cloisters, Lincoln, c1870. The Cloisters at Lincoln Cathedral built from 1072 in medieval Gothic style. From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol. II"

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Lincoln, from Canwick Hill, c1870

Lincoln, from Canwick Hill, c1870. View of Lincoln Cathedral from Canwick, a village in Lincolnshire, England. From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol. II"

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Durham Cathedral, from the River, c1870

Durham Cathedral, from the River, c1870. 11th century Norman Cathedral in Durham on the River Wear, a designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site. From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: The Norman Staircase, Canterbury, c1870

The Norman Staircase, Canterbury, c1870. 12th century Norman staircase at Kings School, Canterbury, traditionally Archbishops of Canterbury address the School from the staircase during visits

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Johnny Armstrongs Tower, c1870

Johnny Armstrongs Tower, c1870. Gilnockie Tower in Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland, built c1520 by Johnnie Armstrong, a Scottish raider and folk-hero who was captured

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Smailholm Tower, c1870

Smailholm Tower, c1870. Smailholm peel tower in the Scottish Borders, built to provide its occupants with protection from English raids. From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Howth, c1870

Howth, c1870. Originally a small rural fishing village, Howth, on the north side of Dublin Bay. grew to become a busy and comparatively affluent suburb of Dublin

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: The Twelve Pins of Binabola, c1870

The Twelve Pins of Binabola, c1870. The Twelve Bens or Twelve Pins, a quartzite mountain range in Connemara, County Galway, on the west coast of Ireland

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Clare Island, Clew Bay, c1870

Clare Island, Clew Bay, c1870. Clare Island at the entrance of Clew Bay in County Mayo, Ireland, famous as the home of pirate queen Grainne O Malley

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Gate at Chepstow, c1870

Gate at Chepstow, c1870. Gate at Chepstow Castle. From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol. II". [Cassell, Petter & Galpin, London, c1870]

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: The Courtyard, Penshurst, c1870

The Courtyard, Penshurst, c1870. Penshurst Place near Tonbridge, Kent, ancestral home of the Sidney family, birthplace of Elizabethan poet, courtier and soldier

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: St. Michaels Mount, Cornwall, c1870

St. Michaels Mount, Cornwall, c1870. St Michaels Mount is a small tidal island in Mounts Bay, Cornwall, England, From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol. I"

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Turnbury Castle, c1870

Turnbury Castle, c1870. Turnberry Castle on the coast of Kirkoswald in Ayrshire, Scotland was seat of the Earls of Carrick

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Doorway at Rivaux Abbey, c1870

Doorway at Rivaux Abbey, c1870. Cistercian abbey in Rievaulx, once a great abbey of England until seizure by Henry VIII in 1538 during the dissolution of the monasteries

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Glastonbury Abbey, c1870

Glastonbury Abbey, c1870. Glastonbury Abbey, rebuilt after fire in 1184 was by 14th century one of the richest and most powerful monasteries in England, associated with the legend of King Arthur

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Kynance Rocks, Cornwall, c1870

Kynance Rocks, Cornwall, c1870. Kynance Cove on the Lizard peninsula in Mounts Bay, Cornwall. From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol. I"

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: The Entrance to Fowey Harbour, c1870

The Entrance to Fowey Harbour, c1870. Estuary of the River Fowey, a natural harbour which enabled the town to become an important trading centre

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: The Thames from Richmond Hill, c1870

The Thames from Richmond Hill, c1870. Former royal deer park enclosed by Charles I on the river Thames in Richmond. From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol. I"

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: St. Pauls, from the Shot Tower, c1870

St. Pauls, from the Shot Tower, c1870
St. Paul s, from the Shot Tower, c1870. The Shot Tower at Lambeth built for Thomas Maltby & Co. in 1826. From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol. I"

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Blarney Castle, c1870

Blarney Castle, c1870. 15th century Blarney Castle built in 1446 by Cormac Laidir MacCarthy. From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol. I". [Cassell, Petter & Galpin, London, c1870]

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: The Vale of Avoca, c1870

The Vale of Avoca, c1870. From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol. I". [Cassell, Petter & Galpin, London, c1870]

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Melrose Abbey, c1870

Melrose Abbey, c1870. Ruined Cistercian monastery in Melrose, Roxburghshire in the Scottish Borders founded in 1136 at the request of King David I of Scotland

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: The Canongate Tolbooth, c1870

The Canongate Tolbooth, c1870. Canongate Tolbooth in Old Town, Edinburgh was built in 1591 by Sir Lewis Bellenden and restored by Robert Morham in 1875

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: The Monkey Tree. Burnham Beeches, c1870

The Monkey Tree. Burnham Beeches, c1870. Burnham Beeches, Site of Special Scientific Interest in Burnham, Buckinghamshire. From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol. I"

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Near Lymington, in the New Forest, c1870

Near Lymington, in the New Forest, c1870. Broken tree branch on Lymington River in the New Forest, Hampshire, an 18th century source of timber for the Royal Navy

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Oaks in Needwood Forest, c1870

Oaks in Needwood Forest, c1870. Ancient woodland in Staffordshire, largely lost at the end of the 18th century. From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol. I"

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Chee Tor, Chee Dale, c1870

Chee Tor, Chee Dale, c1870. Limestone rock formation in the Peak District of Derbyshire dating back to the Carboniferous period. From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol. I"

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: In Dove Dale, c1870

In Dove Dale, c1870. Dovedale valley in the Peak District of England cut by the River Dove into limestone rock. Tourism began in the 18th century

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Bodiam Castle, Sussex, c1870

Bodiam Castle, Sussex, c1870. 14th-century moated castle in East Sussex, England built in 1385 by Sir Edward Dalyngrigge, a knight of Edward III

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Stratford Church, and Shakespeares House, As It Was and As It Is, c1870

Stratford Church, and Shakespeares House, As It Was and As It Is, c1870. Church of the Holy Trinity, Straford-upon-Avon and Shakespeares 16th-century half-timbered house on Henley Street

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Houses Under the Castle, Warwick, c1870

Houses Under the Castle, Warwick, c1870
Houses Under the castle, Warwick, c1870. The Great Fire of Warwick in 1694 destroyed much of the medieval town, some medieval timber-framed buildings survive

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Warwick Castle, from the West, c1870

Warwick Castle, from the West, c1870. Medieval castle built by William the Conqueror in 1068 on the River Avon, rebuilt in stone in 12th century

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: Pool on the Llugwy, c1870

Pool on the Llugwy, c1870. The River Llugwy is a tributary of the River Conwy in Wales. From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol. I". [Cassell, Petter & Galpin, London, c1870]

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: The Banqueting Hall, Conway Castle, c1870

The Banqueting Hall, Conway Castle, c1870. 13th century medieval ruins of the banqueting hall at Conwy Castle, built by Edward I between 1283 and 1289

Background imagePetter And Galpin Collection: In Cedar Walk, Virginia Water, c1870

In Cedar Walk, Virginia Water, c1870. From " Picturesque Europe - The British Isles, Vol. I". [Cassell, Petter & Galpin, London, c1870]



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