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         Medieval England Regional History:     more books (45)
  1. Medical and Para-medical Manuscripts in the Cambridge Genizah Collections (Cambridge University Library Genizah Series) by Haskell D. Isaacs, 1994-10-28
  2. The Visigoths from the Migration Period to the Seventh Century: An Ethnographic Perspective (Studies in Historical Archaeoethnology)
  3. Franks and Alamanni in the Merovingian Period: An Ethnographic Perspective (Studies in Historical Archaeoethnology)

61. All Fields
4006 Seminar in medieval history Crime, Criminals, Justice and Society in 3206 B Canadian regional history The Canadian West M 1800-2100 Winter
http://www.carleton.ca/history/courses 05-06/list all by fields.htm
History courses for 2005-06 listed by field
Students in the BA and BA (Honours) programs must meet the department's "field distribution requirement" to ensure that their course of study includes adequate breadth. Courses are classified into five fields: (a) the world before 1750; (b) modern Europe; (c) North America; (d) Asia, Africa and Latin America; (d) ideas, culture and society. Beginning in 2005-06, students must successfully complete at least 0.5 credits in four of these five fields . This list shows the field classifications of undergraduate courses to be offered in 2005-06. Note that some courses are listed in two fields and can be counted in either of those fields, at the student's choice. HIST 3807 and HIST 3808 may not be used to fulfil the field distribution requirement.
Field a - The World before 1750
1001 B Western Civilization - Tu 1800-2100
2005 England during the Middle Ages - M-W-F 0830-0930
2600 History of Russia - M-W-F 0930-1030
2900 History of Ancient Greece - M 1730-1930
3101 Studies in Roman History - Tu 1430-1630 Winter
3704 Aztecs - M 1130-1430 Fall
4006 Seminar in Medieval History: "Crime, Criminals, Justice and Society in Later Medieval England" Tu 0830-1130

62. Timeline History Of North East England
Newcastle was the most important medieval port in the region as demonstrated The Millennium history of North East england by David Simpson is published
http://www.thenortheast.fsnet.co.uk/page49.htm
Timeline of North East England www.thenortheast.fsnet.co.uk Home The North East Map The Yorkshire Map Roots of the Region The Timeline Above: St. Aidan's Statue, Holy Island, Northumberland. Photo courtesy of freefoto.com Prime Minister Tony Blair and The Millennium History of North East England by David Simpson. Photo courtesy of The Northern Echo Back to top of page Timeline of North East History MEDIEVAL COAL AND INDUSTRY : NEWCASTLE AND THE NORTH EAST By David Simpson Mining Monks Medieval Mines Newcastle Leather and Coal Coals to Newcastle ... Medieval towns Coal had been mined in the region since ancient times but became more widespread in the 13th and 14th centuries. Among those to profit from coal were the Bishops of Durham and merchants of Newcastle. As a sea port, Newcastle could benefit from the trade because shallow coal seams lay close to the Tyne. Ports like Hartlepool and Stockton lay outside the coalfield and Sunderland coal lay deep underground. Nevertheless, Newcastle merchants still had to contend with the development of rival Tyneside ports.

63. Staff Research Interests
Benjamin Arnold is Professor of medieval history. A study of regional power11001350 (1992), and medieval Germany 500-1300 A political interpretation
http://www.reading.ac.uk/AcaDepts/lh/History/staff_dir/st_rsch.htm
Department of History
The University of Reading Staff Research Interests Professor Benjamin Arnold Benjamin Arnold is Professor of Medieval History. He is the author of German Knighthood 1050-1300 Princes and Territories in Medieval Germany Count and Bishop in Medieval Germany. A study of regional power 1100-1350 (1992), and Medieval Germany 500-1300: A political interpretation (1997), as well as a number of articles, chapters, papers and reviews on medieval Germany and medieval Europe. From 1999 to 2000, the Economic and Social Research Council (UK) will be funding his further researches into the social history of Germany. Professor Nicholas Atkin Nicholas Atkin is Senior Lecturer in History. In addition to numerous articles on twentieth-century France, he has published Church and Schools in Vichy France, 1940-1944 (New York, 1991), Pétain (London, 1998) and France at War, 1934-1944 (London, 2001 forthcoming). He is co-editor, with Frank Tallett, of Religion, Society and Politics in France since 1789 (London, 1991), Catholicism in England and France since 1789 (London, 1995) and the Right in France, 1789-1997 (London, 1998). He is currently finishing a study of French exiles in Britain during the Second World War as well as a history of European Catholicism, jointly written with Frank Tallett. His interests are primarily the political and religious history of twentieth-century France, in particular the Vichy years.

64. (NEEHI)
North East england history Institute. Modern British and European history,Late medieval English history, Northern Region Film and Television Archive
http://online.northumbria.ac.uk/faculties/art/humanities/cns/neehi/research.html
The AHRC Research Centre for North-East England and NEEHI
about us / contact home page events / conferences resources ...
membership
MA BY RESEARCH IN REGIONAL HISTORY
The MA by Research in Regional History is offered by each History department in the AHRC Centre for North-East England History. It offers the opportunity to study regional history both in a national and international context and in all periods from the Middle Ages to the twentieth century. Its aim is to provide students with training in research methods in regional history and the opportunity to undertake a substantial piece of research for their dissertation. Students have the option of registering at the institution whose specialist expertise most closely matches their own interests. The programme is intended to provide students with the skills to enable them to engage in further independent research at Ph.D. level.
click to enlarge The programme consists of three parts.
  • Approaches to Regional History is taught through workshops contributed by each History department in the centre. It covers general approaches to regional history; spatial and chronological definitions of regions; migration and ethnicity, regional economics, politics and religion, cultural identity, external relations and influences. The workshops will bring together all of the students on the MRes programme and some workshops will be hosted by individual departments whilst others will take place at the Centre's premises in Newcastle.
  • On other modules students are taught alongside students from other masters programmes in the university where they are registered. They receive a training in the handling of source material and the use of archives; research design and information management; and also in theoretical approaches to history.

65. (NEEHI)
history OF regional IDENTITIES IN NORTHEAST england Organised by The MedievalNorth East Seminar Group and The Literary and Philosophical Society of
http://online.northumbria.ac.uk/faculties/art/humanities/cns/neehi/events.html
THE AHRC Research Centre for North-East England and NEEHI
about us / contact research opportunities home page resources ...
membership
FORTHCOMING EVENTS
24 Nov 2005:
BRITISH ACADEMY RALEIGH LECTURE
With the title 'Mutualities and Obligations: changing social relationships in early modern England', the Raliegh Lecture is to be delivered this year by Professor Keith Wrightson, Professor of History at Yale University and Visiting Professor at the Centre for Northern Studies, Northumbria University. The venue will be the Mining Institute, Westgate Road, Newcastle upon Tyne.
To reserve a place, contact Audrey Fenwick at the NEEHI office.
31 Oct - 1 Nov 2005:
ISONOMY COLLOQUIUM
Isonomy is a method of surname analysis originally developed in biological anthropology to study historical genetics. The Centre's project is attempting to apply this technique to migration studies in order to questions which, by and alrge, cannot be answered directly from the census data e.g. the specific provenance of Irish migrants to the North-East, and residential and employment patterns of second- and later-generation Irish migrants.
Further details to be announced...

66. The History Of North West England MA For Entry In 2005
The history of North West england MA for entry in 2005 The University of North West history Core Course; The medieval Landscape of North West england;
http://www.manchester.ac.uk/degreeprogrammes/postgraduate/taught/171.htm
@import "http://www.manchester.ac.uk/css/feature.css"; This website will look much better in a web browser that supports web standards , but it is accessible to any browser or Internet device. Go to main content contact us help sitemap You are here Home Postgraduate
  • Home About us ... Intranet
  • Postgraduate Menu Related links Find a degree Contact Details
    Email
    pg-history @manchester.ac.uk
    Telephone Fax Website
    http://www.manchester.ac.uk/ar
    ts/subjectareas/history/postgr

    aduatestudy/
    Want to apply?
    The History of North West England MA for entry in 2005
    Level
    Postgraduate taught MA
    School
    School of Arts, Histories and Cultures (including Art History and Archaeology, Classics and Ancient History, Drama, English and American Studies, History, Music, Religions and Theology)
    Subject area
    History - more about our taught programmes in History
    Duration
    12 months (FT)
    Introduction Top
    This new programme, offered for the first time in 2004-5, exploits our exceptional concentration of research expertise in the history of the North West of England as a region from the Middle Ages right up to the twentieth century. The core course focuses on the particular archival, map-based and palaeographic skills needed to pursue regional history successfully. The optional courses, of which all candidates need to take three, range across the Landscape History of the North West in the Middle Ages, Town and Country in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth centuries, Provincial Towns in the region in the Long Eighteenth Century, Victorian Manchester and the Archaeology of the Industrial Revolution in the North West

67. The History Of North West England PG Dip For Entry In 2005
The history of North West england PG Dip for entry in 2005 The and NorthWest history Core Course; The medieval Landscape of North West england;
http://www.manchester.ac.uk/degreeprogrammes/postgraduate/taught/334.htm
@import "http://www.manchester.ac.uk/css/feature.css"; This website will look much better in a web browser that supports web standards , but it is accessible to any browser or Internet device. Go to main content contact us help sitemap You are here Home Postgraduate
  • Home About us ... Intranet
  • Postgraduate Menu Related links Find a degree Contact Details
    Email
    pg-history @manchester.ac.uk
    Telephone Fax Website
    http://www.manchester.ac.uk/ar
    ts/subjectareas/history/postgr

    aduatestudy/
    Want to apply?
    The History of North West England PG Dip for entry in 2005
    Level
    Postgraduate taught PG Dip
    School
    School of Arts, Histories and Cultures (including Art History and Archaeology, Classics and Ancient History, Drama, English and American Studies, History, Music, Religions and Theology)
    Subject area
    History - more about our taught programmes in History
    Duration
    18-36 months (PT)
    Introduction Top
    This new programme, offered for the first time in 2004-5, exploits our exceptional concentration of research expertise in the history of the North West of England as a region from the Middle Ages right up to the twentieth century. The core course focuses on the particular archival, mapbased and palaeographic skills needed to pursue regional history successfully. The optional courses, of which all candidates need to take three, range across the Landscape History of the North West in the Middle Ages, Town and Country in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth centuries, Provincial Towns in the region in the Long Eighteenth Century, Victorian Manchester and the Archaeology of the Industrial Revolution in the North West.

68. Chronicles And Society In Northern England In The Fourteenth Century
The far north of england saw a flourishing of historical writing in the On a regional level, the way in which the NorthEast perceived its past will be
http://www.dur.ac.uk/History/mcpproject.htm
Chronicles and Society in Northern England in the Fourteenth Century
The main aim of this project is to produce a new edition, with translation, of Sir Thomas Gray’s Scalacronica . A subsidiary aim is to produce scholarly articles relating the Scalacronica to other historical writing in the north of England in the fourteenth century. The far north of England saw a flourishing of historical writing in the fourteenth century. The most remarkable work is the Scalacronica , written in French by a layman, Thomas Gray. This is the only surviving historical work by a member of the fourteenth-century knightly class, and was started when he was a prisoner of war in Edinburgh. The fact that it is by a knight gives it a very special importance, for it provides a unique insight into the mentality of an educated aristocratic layman. Other surviving northern works include the Franscan ‘Lanercost’ chronicle (partly composed at Carlisle) and the work of the elusive friar Thomas Otterburn; the Historia Aurea, a universal history by John of Tynemouth, along the lines of Ranulph Higden’s

69. Untitled Document
JC Holt, Feudal Society and the Family in Early medieval england. Studies inthe Social history of the medieval English village (1964) and Warboys.
http://www.esh.ed.ac.uk/Courses_IB/Mid_Ages/land_est.html
Medieval British Landed Estates (Autumn Term) This D-course is complementary to and can only be taken in conjunction with the Category A course 'The "Middle" Ages: A New Perspective.' It will allow students to undertake in-depth investigations, based on primary documentary and archaeological materials, into aspects of British economic and social life in the period before- and during that phase of real economic growth from which emerged a distinctive "medieval" society (850-1340 AD). The course is divided into two term-length components. There will be three such term-length components on: Medieval British Landed Estates
Medieval British Towns
Medieval British Trade,
two of which will be taught each year on a rotational basis, in 2001-2 Medieval British Landed Estates being taught in the autumn term and Medieval British Towns in the spring term. Course Organization The course will be taught in each term in 3 x two-hour lectures/tutorials held in WRB room 217, weeks 1-3 to be followed by a period of supervised research which will provide the basis for an examinable project paper. Guidance for Students: Those Economic History/Economic and Social History honours and joint honours students taking the course will be required to produce A PROJECT-PAPER to be and submitted at the end of the tenth week of both the first and second term. Such written class work is included in the final mark accounting for 25%. At the end of the year, the course will be examined by a single two-hour paper from which TWO questions must be answered. The exam will account for 75% of the final mark.

70. Personal Page Of Professor Hilary Carey - School Of History, UCD
Professor Hilary Carey. (Keith Cameron Professor of Australian history) in Later medieval england. Social history of Medicine 16.3 (2003) 481509.
http://www.ucd.ie/history/personalpages/carey.html
Professor Hilary Carey (Keith Cameron Professor
of Australian History) http://www.ucd.ie/austud - CONTACT DETAILS - Email: hilary.carey@ucd.ie Post: School of History,
John Henry Newman Building,
University College,
Belfield,
Dublin 4,
Ireland. Phone: Fax: - QUALIFICATIONS-
  • D. Phil. (Oxford) 1984
    B. A. (Sydney) 1980
- ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS-
  • 2005 - Keith Cameron Professor of Australian History, University College Dublin, Ireland.
    2002-04 - Deputy Head, School of Liberal Arts, University of Newcastle
    2004 - Visiting Fellow, Clare Hall, University of Cambridge (Oct - Dec.) 2004 -Visiting Fellow, SOPHI, University of Sydney (Jul. - Sept) 2002 - Associate Professor (Academic Level D), School of Liberal Arts, University of Sydney 2001 - Visiting Fellow, Humanities Research Centre, ANU 1996 - Visiting Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Divinity, University of St Andrews (Dec. - Jan. 1997) 1995 - Senior Lecturer (Academic Level C) History Department, University of Newcastle

71. LSU Libraries -- History Webliography
Fordham University Center for medieval Studies and history Department Internet in medieval england and Wales from the Centre for Metropolitan history
http://www.lib.lsu.edu/hum/history/european.html
History Resources European History Ancient, Medieval, and the Renaissance British and Irish Western European Eastern European and Russian Ancient, Medieval, and the Renaissance

72. Medieval Studies - WMU Libraries
Literature of medieval history, 19301975 A supplement to Louis John Paetow sA Guide to Late-medieval england 1377-1485.(Conference on British Studies
http://www.wmich.edu/library/sg/31/302/
Text Only Skip Navigation
Medieval Studies: Bibliographies
Almost all scholarly books, articles, and even most texts, dictionary listings, and encyclopedia entries provide bibliography. Although the most current bibliographical information can be found in serial bibliographies or the best recent article on a subject, retrospective bibliographies are a good place to begin searching. Some of these bibliographies were listed in "Introductions to Medieval Studies" and some will be listed in the listings of primary sources. The following monographs or multivolume works seek to gather, organize, and present what has been written on a particular subject.
34 resources available. - Restricted to WMU users - Open Access A World Bibliography of Bibliographies
1964-1974 : a List of Works Represented by Library of Congress Printed Catalog Cards : a Decennial Supplement to Theodore Besterman, a World Bibliography of Bibliographies. 2 v. Totowa, NJ: Rowman and Littlefield, 1977. Reference Z1002 .T67

73. MA In Local And Regional History
The study of history through the prism of locality and of region is as old as the This course will look at the history of southeastern england as a
http://www.sussex.ac.uk/history/1-2-4-5.html
Home A-Z Index People Reference Contact us
History
Home Admissions Teaching Research ... postgraduate admissions
MA in Local and Regional History
This MA is suspended for 2005/06. As an alternative please see the MA in Landscape History and Culture. The study of history through the prism of locality and of region is as old as the study of the past itself. It has always provided a sense of place and identity. More than that, local and regional history acts as a crucial testing ground through which great national events and trends can be understood in the direct ways in which they affect the everyday workings of a society. However locality and region have their own dynamics working, in turn, to influence the larger structures of society, economy, and culture. Programme Structure Full-time students take two courses offered in the Autumn Term, and two courses in the Spring Term. During the Summer Term students work under individual supervision towards a dissertation. Part-time students take the MA over two years, taking one course per term in the Autumn and Spring Terms and working towards their dissertation over their two Summer Terms. Teaching Each course is taught by weekly small-group seminars. In addition, students are encouraged to attend the weekly 'Work-in-Progress' seminar organised by the History Department featuring a range of guest speakers and internal speakers giving papers about their current research.

74. Medieval England - MavicaNET
Late medieval and Tudor history notes on alcohol, coins, London, occupations,pastimes and Parliamentary Origins in england. Later medieval england.
http://www.mavicanet.com/directory/eng/20884.html
selCatSelAlt="Deselect category"; selCatDesAlt="Select category"; selSitSelAlt="Deselect site"; selSitDesAlt="Select site";
MavicaNET - Multilingual Search Catalog MavicaNet Lite - Light version
Catalog

Belarusian Bulgarian Croatian Czech Danish Dutch English Estonian Finnish French German Greek Hungarian Icelandic Irish Italian Latvian Lithuanian Norwegian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian (cyr.) Serbian (lat.) Slovak Spanish Swedish Turkish Ukrainian Culture Science Historical Sciences History: By Periods ... History of England Medieval England
Sites

Sister categories ... Abbasid Caliphate Achaemenids Empire Ancient Chinese Empires Ancient East Ancient Greek World Ancient Maya Civilization Ancient Rome Ancient State Arab Caliphate Assyria Austro-Hungarian Empire (1867-... Aztecs Bloch, Marc Braudel, Fernan Brazilian Empire British Military History Byzantine Empire Caliphate of Cordoba Crusades (1096-1254) Delhi Sultanate Fatimids Empire Febvre, Lucien (1878-1956) France: 1648-1789 Monarchy French Empire German Democratic Republic (1... German Empire (1871-1945) Historical Persons: United Kin...

75. Landscape And Identity - Higham
Landscape history of northwest england in the first millennia and a half AD I also teach medieval Landscape history as both an undergraduate and
http://museum.man.ac.uk/landscape/higham.htm
Landscape history of north-west England in the first millennia and a half AD
Nick Higham (History)
A Frontier Landscape: The North West in the Middle Ages Malpas (Cheshire), a small medieval urban centre developed around the Norman motte or castle and a major church which was substantially rebuilt in the Late Middle Ages Kettleshulme, on the edge of the Pennines, was a manor which developed a degree of nucleated settlement and an open field system.
Swineyard Hall, High Legh: a moated sub-manorial centre which developed during the 13th and 14th centuries as the focus of a new estate pushing out into the waste. I also teach medieval Landscape History as both an undergraduate and postgraduate subject, providing a national overview at UG level and a regional perspective at PG. This has encouraged me to develop online learning so as to make visual information as accessible as possible to student groups and, in 2002-3, I developed virtual fieldtrips as a teaching resource, focusing on the open field system at Laxton in Nottinghamshire and my own research programme at Tatton, Cheshire. An exemplar from the latter is visible on my university web page, which I invite you to visit.
Nick Higham
nick.higham@manchester.ac.uk

76. UCC History
I am a lecturer in Heritage and history with a background in medieval historyand archaeology I am also interested in landscape/local/ regional history,
http://www.ucc.ac.uk/history/html/m_richardson.html
Search UCC's Website Virtual Campus Tour Contact UCC
Welcome UCC Home Introduction Events for new students Evening and Short courses History Staff Profiles Dr Hugo Frey Professor Keith Jenkins Dr Mark Bryant Dr Amanda Richardson ... Dr Sue Morgan Studying History Overview of the History Degree Entry Requirements Study Options Level One Modules ... Research Seminars Contacts
Hugo Frey
Admissions Tutor
and Head of Subject
e-mail: h.frey@ucc.ac.uk
Tel: 01243 816200 or Sue Morgan
Head of School
e-mail: s.morgan@ucc.ac.uk
Tel: 01243 816212 History
University College Chichester Bishop Otter Campus New Hall 108 College Lane Chichester West Sussex
Dr Amanda Richardson, BA Hons (UCW) MA (Soton) PhD (Soton)

77. England
Examination of the regional architectural styles in england and the causes medieval england An Aerial Survey UK Cambridge University Press 1979 Second
http://www.thevirtualbookshelf.com/?page=shop/cname&cname=england

78. University Of York - Dept. Of History
Tempus, 2000); Political Life in medieval england, 13001450 (Macmillan, 1995) L. Clark (Parliamentary history occasional publication, 2004)
http://www.york.ac.uk/depts/hist/staff/ormrod.shtml
You are here:
Home
Staff W. Mark Ormrod
Text-Only Version
W. Mark Ormrod BA (London), DPhil (Oxon), FRHistS
Office: King's Manor K/G81, Vanbrugh College V/209
Tel: Internal 3913 or 2985 External (01904) 43-3913 or (01904) 43-2985
Fax: (01904) 433918 or 432986
Email: wmo1@york.ac.uk
Mark Ormrod is a Professor in the Department of History and Head of Department. His research interests lie in the political structures and ideas of later medieval England. He is an editor of Fourteenth-Century England general editor of York Medieval Press , and associate editor of the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
Research Interests
Having worked originally on the administrative and constitutional history of the reign of Edward III of England, Mark Ormrod has widened the chronological and geographical scope of his research and writing to look at a number of the special features of late medieval politics and political ideas. He spent the late 1980s and early '90s working on fiscality in the later medieval state, helping to develop a database of this material and devising methodological and conceptual structures through which to examine the subject in a comparative manner across time and space. While working on this project, he also wrote an 'ideas' piece entitled

79. University Of York - Dept. Of History
Women in england c. 12751525 Documentary Sources. Office King s Manor K/284Tel (01904) 43-3945 medieval england A Social history 1250-1550
http://www.york.ac.uk/depts/hist/staff/goldberg.shtml
You are here:
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Staff Jeremy Goldberg
Text-Only Version
Jeremy Goldberg MA (Cantab and York), PhD (Cantab)
Office: King's Manor K/284
Tel:
Fax:
Email:
pjg3@york.ac.uk
Web Page: Teaching web page Jeremy Goldberg is a Reader in the Department of History and a member of the Medieval Urban Household Research Project. His research focuses upon later medieval English social and cultural history; women’s and gender history.
Research Interests
Jeremy Goldberg has published extensively in the area of women’s work, nuptiality, and the family in later medieval England, but his interests range widely within the fields of social and cultural history. Recent work includes articles variously on guild drama and its relation to civic government, prostitution, masculinity in the workshop, servanthood, and the social context of variously the Lutterell Psalter and a York Book of Hours. He is particularly committed to interdisciplinary approaches and is increasingly sensitive to the value of applying analytical tools derived from other disciplines to the reading of historical sources. He has recently completed a mongraph study of a disputed marriage case from the court of York. Current work is focused on the house and bourgeois identity. Following from this he hopes to write a book on later medieval English family life.
Resources available for research students in York
The JB Morrell Library holds a good run of county record society editions of primary sources and offers Acta Sanctorum online . The Borthwick Institute for Archives contains an unrivalled collection of Church court records, a rich collection of regional wills, and substantial materials relating to diocesan administration. Additional medieval archival sources are housed within the City Archives, the York Minster Library, and the Merchant Adventurers' archive.

80. Historic Northumberland Northumberland Northumbria England UK GB (page 16)
history, prehistoric, roman, anglo saxon, medieval, industrial, heritage, Northumberland is england s Border Country , a land of history and heritage
http://www.northumberland.gov.uk/vg/historic.html
Northumberland Movie Historic Northumberland
Northumberland is "England's Border Country", a land of history and heritage set amidst some of the loveliest scenery in Britain. Today it still contains many reminders of some of the country's most important historical periods.
The history of Northumberland is described in this website under the following periods.
PREHISTORIC (3000BC - 100AD)
Including: Cup and Ring marks; Circles, Cairns and Forts.
ROMAN (100AD - 400AD)
Including: Hadrian's Wall; Roman Forts; Roman Museums; Hadrian's Wall Path.
ANGLO-SAXON (500AD - 900AD)
Including: Christian Heritage.
MEDIEVAL (1000AD - 1600AD)
Including: Battlefields and Castles; Reivers (The border family clans). INDUSTRIAL HERITAGE (1700AD - ONWARDS) Including: Industrial Heritage Attractions; Railway Heritage Attractions; Famous Industrialists. Other topics covered: FAMOUS NORTHUMBRIANS (600AD - PRESENT DAY) CULTURAL HERITAGE Including: Northumbrian Tartan; Flag; Language; Music; Ghosts and Legends; Food and Drink. HISTORIC ATTRACTIONS Including: Museums and Galleries; Castles; Battlefields; Country Houses; Hadrian's Wall and Forts; Christian Heritage.

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