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Publishers of (amongst other things) a series of small, inexpensive and 'popular' books about Cornwall, including archeolgical heritage, railways, and mining. Good starter books.
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Nice little site that includes information about the books available from Men-an-tol Studio, including all of Ian McNeil Cooke's books, and reprints of two 19th century antiquarian books, 'Illustrations Of Stone Circles, Cromlehs and other remains of the Aboriginal Britons in the West of Cornwall' by William Cotton (1827), and 'Specimens Of Ancient Cornish Crosses, Fonts, Etc' by F.C.Hingston (1850). Includes an order form for publications and details of how to order over the phone.
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Home to Devon Books, who publish Jeremy Butler's monumental 5 volume 'Dartmoor Atlas of Antiquities'. Also home to Cornwall Books who have published local classics such as Craig Weatherhill two field guides - 'Belerion: Ancient Sites of Land's End' – 1981, and 'Cornovia: Ancient Sites of Cornwall and Scilly' - 1985, revised 1997 & 2000. Couldn't see those two for sale though. Free Postage and packing on internet orders.
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Info on Constable's watercolour of Stonehenge
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Fantastic photo of the souterrain tunnel and some info
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Interesting picture - completely different to the ones I've seen.
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Not much info, but an interesting picture (certainly different to my rainy day in Scotland one)
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Nice aerial picture, and a little bit of info.
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Nice aerial picture, and a little bit of info.
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Nice aerial picture, and a little bit of info.
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Nice aerial picture, and a little bit of info.
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Nice aerial picture, and a little bit of info.
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Nice aerial picture, and a little bit of info.
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Nice aerial picture, and a little bit of info.
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Interesting pics and notes about the Calder Stones
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Previous 20 | Showing 61-75 of 75 links. Most recent first |
My real name is Martin, but there is already a Martin vigorously posting on this fantastic web site so I decided to use 'Pure Joy'; which was the title of the Teardrop Explodes and Julian Cope fanzine that I set up in 1988 and ran until 1991/2. Strangely my interest in ancient sites pre-dates the knowledge that Julian was also into them. However Julian's book has certainly led me to visit more, and plan holidays and pit-stops around places to visit! Studying History (and International Relations) at Uni and coming from the West Country led to a healthy fascination with ancient sites and the countryside.
I was born in 1970 in Colerne, a historic village between Bath and Chippenham (mentioned in the Domesday Book) and have spent time in Bath, Reading, Manchester, West Africa, and Ethiopia. I'm currently living near London, but itching to live in the countryside, preferably Cornwall, or Africa. Reality check! little money and inertia creep.
Most of my working life has been in the voluntary sector, usually by supporting voluntary and community groups with advice and information. I enjoy doing quite a bit of voluntary work with our Credit Union, and as an elected Council member of the National Trust.
I'm no photography expert but I like to take photos (nearly always black and white) of places I visit. Some of the earlier ones looked good but it was only with a £25 point and shoot camera that was amazing unreliable. I've now got an old Pentax SLR, but at the moment I refuse to use filters and special effects. You get what you see.
Up side of ancient site = the sense of history, the countryside, the walk, the sense of adventure, the tranquillity, and the weird things that sometimes happen.
Downside = the loneliness, territorial cows, and the cravings to get back to the countryside
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