Visitwiltshire Photo Library Album Content List

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Visitwiltshire Photo Library Album Content List VisitWiltshire Photo Library Album Content List Activities Cranborne Chase & West Wiltshire Downs AONB American Museum in Britain Cricklade Amesbury Crofton Beam Engines Architecture Cycling Arundells Edington Farm Shop Atwell-Wilson Motor Museum Eight Horse Power Autumn Emily’s Tea Room Avebury English Heritage Barons Charter Trail Festival & Events Bath Arms, Horningsham Film Locations Beams Fisherton Mill Beatons Tearooms & Bookshop Fishing Beechfield House Flowers Be Here in No Time Folly Row Café Big Skies Food & Drink Bird & Carter Farm Shop Frosty The Boathouse Gardens & Parks Boscombe Down Aviation Collection Groups Bowood House & Gardens Harvest Time Bradford on Avon The Henge Shop Bridge Tea Rooms Horses & Horse Riding Bridges Humorous & Quirky Caen Hill Locks Imber Calne Industrial Heritage Cambridge Wine Merchants Interiors Castle Combe Kennet & Avon Canal Castles Lacock The Chapter House Lady Margaret Hungerford Almshouses & Chippenham Schoolroom Lakes & Rivers Chippenham Folk Festival Christmas Langford Lakes Churches Larmer Tree Coate Water Country Park The Lock Inn Corsham Longleat Cotswolds AONB Ludgershall Cotswold Water Park Lydiard House & Park Cottages Made of England Countryside Magna Carta Malmesbury Silbury Hill Markets Spring Marlborough St Peter’s Church Marlborough McArthurGlen Designer Outlet Swindon Stately Homes Melksham Statues The Merchant’s House STEAM – Museum of the Great Western Railway Mere Stonehenge Misty Stonehenge ATV Monuments Stourhead Museums Studley Grange Butterfly World & Craft Village National Trust Summer Nature’s Bounty Sunrise & Sunset Nature Reserves Thatch Neal’s Yard Remedies Three Daggers, Edington Neston Farm Shop Timbrell’s Yard Time for Wiltshire Night Timeless Nature North Wessex Downs AONB Timeless Places Old Mill, Harnham Timeless Pleasures Old Wardour Castle Timeless Wonders Ox Row Inn Tisbury People Tourist Information Centres Peto Garden & Iford Manor Trees Press Pause Trowbridge Red Lion, East Chisenbury Trowbridge Museum Reflections Vale of Pewsey Rifles Berkshire & Wiltshire Museum Vaughan’s Kitchen Roly’s Fudge Pantry Villages Roves Farm Wadworth Brewery Royal Wootton Bassett Museum Sailing Walking Salisbury Warminster Salisbury Arts Centre West Kennet Long Barrow Salisbury Cathedral Westbury Salisbury Christmas Market Whatley Manor Hotel & Spa Salisbury Contemporary Craft & Heritage Festival White Horse Gypsy Caravans Salisbury Food & Drink Festival White Horses Salisbury Plain Wildlife Salisbury Playhouse Wilton Salisbury Racecourse Wilton House Savernake Forest Wilton Shopping Village Shearwater Lake Wilton Windmill Shopping Wilts & Berks Canal Signs & Signposts Wiltshire Museum Winter World Heritage Site Woolley Grange Hotel Wyvale Garden Centre Woodford Valley To receive links to any of these albums please contact Florence Wallace, PR Manager, [email protected] or tel. 01722 341309 or 07436 588860. Terms and Conditions of Use Photos may be used in print and/or online for the promotion of tourism to Wiltshire Any photos used must be credited to www.visitwiltshire.co.uk, unless otherwise stated in the title of the photo Photos are for use by the person/organisation to whom the links are sent only; photos and/or links may not be forwarded on to third parties Photos may not be sold on to third parties Photos may not be used on items that are subsequently sold – e.g. calendars, mugs etc. Please check with [email protected] if you have any queries. .
Recommended publications
  • The Perils of Periodization: Roman Ceramics in Britain After 400 CE KEITH J
    The Perils of Periodization: Roman Ceramics in Britain after 400 CE KEITH J. FITZPATRICK-MATTHEWS North Hertfordshire Museum [email protected] ROBIN FLEMING Boston College [email protected] Abstract: The post-Roman Britons of the fifth century are a good example of people invisible to archaeologists and historians, who have not recognized a distinctive material culture for them. We propose that this material does indeed exist, but has been wrongly characterized as ‘Late Roman’ or, worse, “Anglo-Saxon.” This pottery copied late-Roman forms, often poorly or in miniature, and these pots became increasingly odd over time; local production took over, often by poorly trained potters. Occasionally, potters made pots of “Anglo-Saxon” form using techniques inherited from Romano-British traditions. It is the effect of labeling the material “Anglo-Saxon” that has rendered it, its makers, and its users invisible. Key words: pottery, Romano-British, early medieval, fifth-century, sub-Roman Archaeologists rely on the well-dated, durable material culture of past populations to “see” them. When a society exists without such a mate- rial culture or when no artifacts are dateable to a period, its population effectively vanishes. This is what happens to the indigenous people of fifth-century, lowland Britain.1 Previously detectable through their build- ings, metalwork, coinage, and especially their ceramics, these people disappear from the archaeological record c. 400 CE. Historians, for their part, depend on texts to see people in the past. Unfortunately, the texts describing Britain in the fifth-century were largely written two, three, or even four hundred years after the fact.
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  • 31 Bus Time Schedule & Line Route
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  • RWB and Cricklade Community Area Background
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  • Bristol Harbour Information for Boaters
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  • Donhead St. Andrew - Census 1861
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  • Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Magazine
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  • The Herpetofauna of Wiltshire
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  • Wiltshire's Fun Facts • Did You Know Another Series of Poldark Is Being
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  • Caen Hill Biomanipulation
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