Somerset County Archery Association Sunday 16Th June 2019 in the Old Park of Dunster Castle, by Kind Permission of the National Trust

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Somerset County Archery Association Sunday 16Th June 2019 in the Old Park of Dunster Castle, by Kind Permission of the National Trust Somerset County Archery Association Senior County & Open Championships UK Record Status Rose Award Tournament The 72nd Annual Metting of the Somerset County Archery Association Sunday 16th June 2019 in the Old Park of Dunster Castle, by kind permission of the National Trust Head Judge Mrs P Tonkin Please note that there will be no parking allowed Judges Mr R.K.de B Nicholson on the left hand side of the road as you turn in from the Mr Phil Collins A39 all parking must be to the right (west) of the road Mr J Cunningham up to the castle. Please give yourself enough time to get Mr Gerrald Farrel all your gear onto the shooting area. Equipment inspection 09:30 a.m - By the Main Marquee York - Assembly 10.00 a.m. Sighters 10.15 a.m. Contact Name Club Round Bow Type Class A Paul Tuffs Bath Archers York Longbow B John Gallop Burnham Co of Archers York Longbow T16 C Keith Hingston Exeter Co Of Archers York Longbow D Myra Hingston Exeter Co Of Archers York Longbow A Chris Quinn Exeter Co Of Archers York Longbow B Chris Eccles The Longbow Club York Longbow T17 C Peter Offin Bowmen of Danesfield York Longbow D Terry Ives Canford Magna Bowmen York Longbow A Albert Kirk Bowflights Archery Club York Longbow B Seth Neill Redruth Archers York Longbow T18 C Maarten Porsch VZOS Santpoort York Longbow D Barry Gingnell Gordano Valley Archers York Longbow A Tony Davis Bowflights Archery Club York Longbow B Greg Jasper Largs York Longbow T19 C Steve Yates Bowmen of Guernsey York Longbow D Alex Gilmour Bath Archers York Longbow A Richard Hornsby Burnham Co of Archers York Longbow B David Anderson Bowbrook Archers York Longbow T20 C Kenny Hosegood Redruth Archers York Longbow D Bjarne Jacobsen Jersey Archery Society York Longbow A David Wills Surrey Bowman York Longbow B John Betts Margam York Longbow T21 C Chris Choping Exmouth York Longbow D Mark Cardy Lacetown Archers York Longbow A space York Space B space York Space T22 C space York Space D space York Space A Phillip Rees Exeter Co Of Archers York Barebow B Ian McLenaghan Nonsuch Bowmen York Barebow T23 C Mr Alan Holder Forest of Bere Bowmen York Barebow D Tan Quach S.A.L.T York Barebow A Lee Niblett Black and Gold Archers York Recurve B York Recurve space T24 C Matt Broom Lacetown Archers York Compound D Graham Baker Allington Castle Archers York Compound A Philip Short Meriden York Compound B John Learoyd Bowmen of Ina York Recurve T25 C Rikki Teml Tockington Archers York Compound D Wayne Champion St Kingsmark Bowmen York Compound A Mr Andrew Rees Ballands Bowmen York Barebow B Mr James Annall Bath Archers York Barebow T26 C Tony Reith Green Lane Archers York Compound D George McMillan AGB York Compound A David Mortimer Cleve Archers York Recurve B Ken Knowles Yeo Bowmen York Compound T27 C Micheal Pearce Bournmouth Archery Club York Compound D Robin Perry Tockington Archers York Compound A Stuart Sartain Rackets AC York Recurve B York Recurve space T28 C George Pengelly Wells City Archers York Compound D Graham Smith Tockington Archers York Compound A Peter Brookes Wellington Bowmen York Recurve B John Bowes Thomas Wall Archers York Recurve T29 C Clive Jeffery Allington Castle Archers York Compound D A Muggleston Fast & Loose Archery Club York Compound A Colin Watts Fast & Loose Archery Club York Recurve B John Taylor Forest of Bere Bowmen York Recurve T30 C Peter Ruddock Burnham Co of Archers York Compound D Steve Hammond Bath Archers York Compound A Ian Lee Parsons Bowmen of Ina York Recurve B Patrick Wright Hereford Co of Archers York Recurve T31 C Alex Hodgkinson Wells City Archers York Compound D Paul Birch S.A.L.T York Compound A Nick Chubb Coastal Archers York Recurve B York Recurve space T32 C Alan Robinson Minchinhampton York Compound D Liam Goodes Burnham Co of Archers York Compound A York Recurve space B Duncan Garner Bath Archers York Recurve T33 C Chris Hole Burnham Co of Archers York Compound D Bernie Dicks Bramcote Archery Club York Compound A Mark Tottle Puriton Gold York Recurve B Steve Glover Exmouth Archers York Compound T34 C Kevin Cassidy Forest of Bere Bowmen York Compound D Tony Smith Devizes Bowmen York Compound A Mark Smith Bath Archers York Recurve B John Neusinger Wellington Bowmen York Recurve T35 C Jimmy Sandoe Redruth Archers York Recurve D Chris Hassall Mid Somerset Bowmen York Recurve Hereford - Assembly 10.00 a.m. Sighters 10.15 a.m. A Gemma Underwood RTS Hereford Recurve B Vikki Gallop Bowmen of Hatch Hereford Recurve T36 C Sally Sandoe Redruth Archers Hereford Barebow D Anne Lewin Coastal Archers Hereford Recurve A Claire Hart Redruth Archers Hereford Recurve B Janet Ross Wells City Archers Hereford Recurve T37 C Hayley Goodes Burnham Co of Archers Hereford Compound D Charlie Cassidy F.O.B.B Hereford Compound A Sue Elkins Wells City Archers Hereford Recurve B Saira Chaudhry Exeter Co Of Archers Hereford Recurve T38 C Mollie Wix Lacetown Archers Hereford Compound D Judith Martin Midsomerset Bowmen Hereford Compound A Rachel Hemmings Wellington Bowmen Hereford Barebow B Karen Grassie Exeter Co Of Archers Hereford Barebow T39 C Vicky Burden Bowmen of Lychett Hereford Compound D Sarah Chalmers DCA Hereford Compound A Sharon Tideswell AGB Hereford Compound B Gina Elsworthy Exeter Co Of Archers Hereford Recurve T40 C Hannah Potter Coastal Archers Hereford Recurve D Zena Barker Redruth Archers Hereford Recurve A Nick "Rusty" Smith Frome Town Archers Hereford Barebow B Jill Ruby Jersey Archery Society Hereford Recurve T41 C Debbie Teml Tockington Archers Hereford Compound D Jane Reith Green Lane Archers Hereford Recurve A Clair Crook South Wansdyke Hereford Recurve B Lyn Anderson Bowbrook Archers Hereford Recurve T42 C Ben Cardy (J) Lacetown Archers Hereford Compound D Wendy Broom Lacetown Archers Hereford Compound A Hereford B Theresa Watts Fast & Loose Archery Club Hereford Recurve may not shoot T43 C Cecile Midrouillet Ashford Archers Hereford Compound D Tipaporn Walker Atkins Archers Hereford Compound A Neil Smith Laleham Archery Club Hereford Recurve B Alun Coates Black and Gold Archers Hereford Recurve T44 C Jennette Holder Forest of Bere Bowmen Hereford Compound D Ian Chambers Fosse Company of Archers Hereford Compound A Carol Williams Black and Gold Archers Hereford Recurve B Robert Damen Laleham Archery Club Hereford Barebow T45 C Mary Smith Bowmen of Hatch Hereford Compound D Hereford Compound space A Susan Coleman Black and Gold Archers Hereford Recurve B Clive Jarrett South Wandsdyke Hereford Recurve T46 C Karen Parsons Bowmen of Ina Hereford Recurve D Frances Smith Bowflights Archery Club Hereford Barebow A Niamh Chalmers DCA Hereford Longbow B Harriet Rutledge Atkins Archers Hereford Longbow T47 C Kay Deacon Bath Archers Hereford Longbow D Emma Martin Bowmen of Tors Hereford Longbow A Gerry Gilmour Bath Archers Hereford Longbow B Kathy McLenaghan Nonsuch Bowmen Hereford Longbow T48 C Judith Porsch VZOS Santpoort Hereford Longbow D Lyn Anderson Bowbrook Archers Hereford Barebow A Hereford Longbow Space B Sandra Willis Surrey Bowman Hereford Longbow T49 C Kathryn Sartain Racketts AC Hereford Longbow D April Kirk Bowflights Archery Club Hereford Longbow A Kathy Hammond Bath Archers Hereford Longbow B Katrina Horton The Longbow Club Hereford Longbow T50 C Alison Ward Leaves Green Bowan Hereford Longbow D Hereford Longbow Space National - Sighters 2.15 p.m. A Nick Walker Atkins Archers National Compound B Stephen Elson Wellington Bowmen National Recurve T51 C Jenna Morton Black and Gold Archers National Recurve D Theresa Watts Fast & Loose Archery Club National Recurve may shoot here A Frances Cooper Laleham Archery Club National Recurve B Amanda Clement Laleham Archery Club National Barebow T52 C Harriet Crook (J) South Wansdyke Archery Club National Recurve D Mark Wannacott Laleham Archery Club National Barebow A National Recurve Space B National Recurve Space T53 C National Recurve Space D National Recurve Space.
Recommended publications
  • The Bath—Lincoln Trunk Road A46 (Upper Swainswick to A420 Cold Ashton Roundabout) (Detrunking) Order 1987
    Status: This is the original version (as it was originally made). This item of legislation is currently only available in its original format. STATUTORY INSTRUMENTS 1987 No.1800 HIGHWAYS, ENGLAND AND WALES The Bath—Lincoln Trunk Road A46 (Upper Swainswick to A420 Cold Ashton Roundabout) (Detrunking) Order 1987 Made - - - - 14th September 1987 Coming into force - - 6th November 1987 The Secretary of State for Transport makes this Order in exercise of powers conferred by section 10 of the Highways Act 1980(1), and now vested in him(2), and of all other enabling powers: 1. The length of the Trunk Road described in the Schedule to this Order and shown by broad striped hatching on the deposited plan shall cease to be a trunk road as from the date on which the Secretary of State notifies the County Council of Avon (who will become the highway authority responsible for that length) that the new trunk road is open for through traffic. 2. In this Order:— (1) all measurements of distance are measured along the route of the relevant highway; (i) “the deposited plan” means the plan in the plan folio marked “The Bath—Lincoln Trunk Road A46 (Upper Swainswick to A420 Cold Ashton Roundabout) (Detrunking) (Order) 1987” signed by authority of the Secretary of State and deposited at the Department of Transport, Romney House, 43 Marsham Street, London SW1P 3PY; (ii) “the new trunk road” means the highway which is being constructed by the Secretary of State in pursuance of the Bath—Lincoln Trunk Road A46 (Upper Swainswick to A420 Cold Ashton Roundabout) Order 1987(3).
    [Show full text]
  • Early Medieval Dykes (400 to 850 Ad)
    EARLY MEDIEVAL DYKES (400 TO 850 AD) A thesis submitted to the University of Manchester for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Faculty of Humanities 2015 Erik Grigg School of Arts, Languages and Cultures Contents Table of figures ................................................................................................ 3 Abstract ........................................................................................................... 6 Declaration ...................................................................................................... 7 Acknowledgments ........................................................................................... 9 1 INTRODUCTION AND METHODOLOGY ................................................. 10 1.1 The history of dyke studies ................................................................. 13 1.2 The methodology used to analyse dykes ............................................ 26 2 THE CHARACTERISTICS OF THE DYKES ............................................. 36 2.1 Identification and classification ........................................................... 37 2.2 Tables ................................................................................................. 39 2.3 Probable early-medieval dykes ........................................................... 42 2.4 Possible early-medieval dykes ........................................................... 48 2.5 Probable rebuilt prehistoric or Roman dykes ...................................... 51 2.6 Probable reused prehistoric
    [Show full text]
  • Scarth, H M, on the Traces of Camps and Ancient Earth-Works Still
    98 PAPERS, ETC. (Dn tjje €nm nf Cflni|i0 anil Slnrient (Bart|i-‘S)nrk0 still Existing arnnnii ’iatfj anil in tjjx jleigljlinarljanii. BY THE REV. H. M. SCARTH, M.A. rj^HERE are no traces of human labour so lasting as i mounds or earth-works— none which in all the vicissitudes through which society passes in the lapse of ages, retain their characters with so little variation—none which so completely defy the hand of time, and provoke less the ravages of man. While lofty buildings are de- stroyed for the sake of their materials, when they have once fallen into disuse, and few edifices are suffered to continue unless they can be converted to other purposes, and so turned to profitable account—the earth-work con- tinues the same, or with very little alteration, from the time that it was neglected, or abandoned as a place of defence, or forgotten as a boundary-line, or unused as a road, or ceased to be regarded as a place marking the repose of the dead, who it may be had fallen in battle. ON ANCIENT CAMPS AND EARTH-WORKS. 99 In certain places where the land is adapted for the purposes of agriculture, there these land-marks of the history of former ages have gradually been effaced by the use of the plough, or the soil spread around with the object of im- proving the fertility of the land ; but as earth-works for the most part occur on high lands, or barren hills, or on moors unsuited for cultivation, they remain much in the same state as when they ceased to be occupied for defen- sive and other purposes, except that the gradual decay of herbage, and its reproduction, as well as the washing of the rain and winter floods, tend in some degree to bring them gradually to a level surface.
    [Show full text]
  • Paying for the Party
    PX_PARTY_HDS:PX_PARTY_HDS 16/4/08 11:48 Page 1 Paying for the Party Myths and realities in British political finance Michael Pinto-Duschinsky edited by Roger Gough Policy Exchange is an independent think tank whose mission is to develop and promote new policy ideas which will foster a free society based on strong communities, personal freedom, limited government, national self-confidence and an enterprise culture. Registered charity no: 1096300. Policy Exchange is committed to an evidence-based approach to policy development. We work in partnership with aca- demics and other experts and commission major studies involving thorough empirical research of alternative policy out- comes. We believe that the policy experience of other countries offers important lessons for government in the UK. We also believe that government has much to learn from business and the voluntary sector. Tru, stees Charles Moore (Chairman of the Board), Theodore Agnew, Richard Briance, Camilla Cavendish, Robin Edwards, Richard Ehrman, Virginia Fraser, Lizzie Noel, George Robinson, Andrew Sells, Tim Steel, Alice Thomson, Rachel Whetstone PX_PARTY_HDS:PX_PARTY_HDS 16/4/08 11:48 Page 2 About the author Dr Michael Pinto-Duschinsky is senior Nations, the European Union, Council of research fellow at Brunel University and a Europe, Commonwealth Secretariat, the recognised worldwide authority on politi- British Foreign and Commonwealth cal finance. A former fellow of Merton Office and the Home Office. He was a College, Oxford, and Pembroke College, founder governor of the Westminster Oxford, he is president of the International Foundation for Democracy. In 2006-07 he Political Science Association’s research was the lead witness before the Committee committee on political finance and politi- on Standards in Public Life in its review of cal corruption and a board member of the the Electoral Commission.
    [Show full text]
  • Past Present
    NORTH WANSDYKE PAST AND PRESENT KEYNSHAM AND SALTFORD LOCAL HISTORY SOCIETY No. 2, 1988 NORTH WANSDYKE PAST & PRESENT Journal of Keynsham & Saltford Local History Society Editor: Charles Browne 30 Walden Road, Keynsham, Bristol BS18 lQW Telephone: Keynsham 3116 CONTENTS Editorial 2 Jasper Tudor, 1431-1495, by Michael C E Bird 3 The Will of Jasper Tudor 9 The Tomb of Jasper Tudor, by Barbara J Lowe 11 Mary Fairclough Remembers, by Len Coggins 13 The Wells of Keynsham, by M C Fitter 17 Public Library Services in the Keynsham Area, by Linda Horne 23 Frank Millard, by Margaret Whitehead 28 Published by Keynsham & Saltford Local History Society No. 2, 1988 1 EDITORIAL The second volume of our JouPnaZ is concerned largely with the local history of Keynsham. This is not a matter of policy: it just happens that the papers submitted to the editor have covered subjects local to Keynsham. In future issues we hope to publish papers dealing with wider aspects of North Wansdyke history. So it is all the more welcome that Michael Bird's account of Jasper Tudor should set the Keynsham interest in the context of national and European history. It illustrates the value of local studies beyond their local interest. Thanks are due to Barbara J Lowe for providing at short notice her account of the excavations by Bristol Folk House Archaeological Society which located a tomb in Keynsham Abbey which is very likely that of Jasper Tudor. Local historians continue to be concerned that the County of Avon does not have a Record Office.
    [Show full text]
  • Guide to the 1991 Samples
    UK Data Archive Study Number 7210 - Census 1991: Individual Sample of Anonymised Records for Great Britain (SARs) 1991 Samples of Anonymised Records Guide to the 1991 Samples Applicable to: 1991 Great Britain Individual SAR 1991 Northern Ireland Individual SAR 1991 Great Britain Household SAR 1991 Northern Ireland Household SAR This User Guide is drawn from material was previously available at http://www.ccsr.ac.uk/sars material restructured with minimal substantive edits May 2017 by Census Support, UK Data Service. Accordingly this document describes the data and data environment at the time of the first release. A small number of updates are noted in square brackets and footnotes to assist contemporary readers. Information about the background, population bases, national estimates of the design factors of the individual SARs and the Geography of the SARs was drawn from version 2 of the User Guide to the SARs (July 1994) Contents Foreword to the User Guide to the SARs, July 1994 1. Introduction 2. Background Information 2.1. The 1991 Census of Population: Great Britain 2.2. The 1991 Census of Population: Northern Ireland 2.3. Background to the Release of the SARs 2.4. Disclosure Control Measures in the 1991 SARs 2.4.1. Sampling as protection 2.4.2. Restricting geographical information 2.4.3. Suppression of data and grouping of categories 2.4.4. User obligations 2.5. Sampling in the 1991 SARs 2.6. Differences across UK Countries 2.6.5. Differences in the treatment of family variables. 2.6.6. Distance to work and previous address. 2.6.7.
    [Show full text]
  • Cartogram [1883 WORDS]
    Vol. 6: Dorling/Cartogram/entry Dorling, D. (forthcoming) Cartogram, Chapter in Monmonier, M., Collier, P., Cook, K., Kimerling, J. and Morrison, J. (Eds) Volume 6 of the History of Cartography: Cartography in the Twentieth Century, Chicago: Chicago University Press. [This is a pre-publication Draft, written in 2006, edited in 2009, edited again in 2012] Cartogram A cartogram can be thought of as a map in which at least one aspect of scale, such as distance or area, is deliberately distorted to be proportional to a variable of interest. In this sense, a conventional equal-area map is a type of area cartogram, and the Mercator projection is a cartogram insofar as it portrays land areas in proportion (albeit non-linearly) to their distances from the equator. According to this definition of cartograms, which treats them as a particular group of map projections, all conventional maps could be considered as cartograms. However, few images usually referred to as cartograms look like conventional maps. Many other definitions have been offered for cartograms. The cartography of cartograms during the twentieth century has been so multifaceted that no solid definition could emerge—and multiple meanings of the word continue to evolve. During the first three quarters of that century, it is likely that most people who drew cartograms believed that they were inventing something new, or at least inventing a new variant. This was because maps that were eventually accepted as cartograms did not arise from cartographic orthodoxy but were instead produced mainly by mavericks. Consequently, they were tolerated only in cartographic textbooks, where they were often dismissed as marginal, map-like objects rather than treated as true maps, and occasionally in the popular press, where they appealed to readers’ sense of irony.
    [Show full text]
  • Boundary Commission for England Proceedings At
    BOUNDARY COMMISSION FOR ENGLAND PROCEEDINGS AT THE 2018 REVIEW OF PARLIAMENTARY CONSTITUENCIES IN ENGLAND HELD AT CITY HALL, COLLEGE GREEN, BRISTOL BS1 5TR ON FRIDAY 18 NOVEMBER 2016 DAY TWO Before: Ms Anita Bickerdike, The Lead Assistant Commissioner ______________________________ Transcribed from audio by W B Gurney & Sons LLP 83 Victoria Street, London SW1H 0HW Telephone Number: 0203 585 4721/22 ______________________________ Time Noted: 9.00 am THE LEAD ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER: Good morning and welcome to day two of the public hearing into the Boundary Commission for England’s initial proposals for new constituency party boundaries. We have our first speaker booked for 10 o’clock, it is now 9 o’clock, so I will adjourn the hearing until 9.50 am - I understand there is a fire alarm test planned for 10 o’clock. We will recommence the hearing at 9.50 am. After an adjournment Time Noted: 10.00 am THE LEAD ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER: Welcome back. It is 10 o’clock. We do have a speaker who is due to speak at 10 o’clock. We do, however, have a fire alarm test planned for 10 o’clock, so I intend to call that speaker to actually come and give her presentation after that fire alarm has been concluded, so I will adjourn until after the fire alarm. After an adjournment THE LEAD ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER: Ms Marjorie Caw? MS CAW: Yes. THE LEAD ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER: Hello. Good morning. Would you like to come round to the lectern, please? Thank you. MS CAW: Hello. THE LEAD ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER: Good morning.
    [Show full text]
  • Local Authority District Codes
    UK Data Archive Study Number 6028 - British Household Panel Survey, Waves 1-18, 1991-2009: Conditional Access, Local Authority District Codes British Household Panel Survey, waves 1-18 (1991-2009) User Documentation: Local Authority District Codes (LADISTC) 05 November 2008 For more information contact: Birgitta Rabe [email protected] ++44-1206-874594 Institute for Social and Economic Research University of Essex Wivenhoe Park Colchester Essex CO4 3SQ Local Authority District Codes (wLADISTC) The local authority districts within the database are aggregated if their population falls below 120,000. This aggregation is on the same basis as that for the Census Sample of Anonymised (Individual) Records, and the codes used are the same as those given in Marsh, C. and Teague, A. 'Samples of anonymised records from the 1991 Census', Population Trends, 69, 17-26, 1992. Note that, for wLADISTC, only codes up to 278 are relevant. 1: City; Westminster 53: Newcastle upon Tyne 2: Camden 54: North Tyneside 3: Hackney 55: South Tyneside 4: Hammersmith & Fulham 56: Sunderland 5: Haringey 57: Birmingham 6: Islington 58: Coventry 7: Kensington & Chelsea 59: Dudley 8: Lambeth 60: Sandwell 9: Lewisham 61: Solihull 10: Newham 62: Walsall 11: Southwark 63: Wolverhampton 12: Tower Hamlets 64: Bradford 13: Wandsworth 65: Calderdale 14: Barking and Dagenham 66: Kirklees 15: Barnet 67: Leeds 16: Bexley 68: Wakefield 17: Brent 69: Bath; Kingswood; Wansdyke 18: Bromley 70: Bristol 19: Croydon 71: Northavon 20: Ealing 72: Woodspring 21: Enfield 73: Luton 22: Greenwich
    [Show full text]
  • The Lives of the Saints. with Introd. and Additional Lives of English Martyrs, Cornish, Scottish, and Welsh Saints, and a Full I
    * -* This Volume ronttiim Two Indices to the Sixteen Volumes of the work, one an Index of the Saints whose Lives are given, ami the other a Subject Index. First Edition fiiHished rSyj Second Edition , iSgy .... , New and Hevised Kditioti, i6 vols. ,, i9^'t- *- Appendix Vol. , Fronlispiece.j ^^^' * ' * THE 5LitiC0 of t|)c ^aint0 BY THE REV. S. BARINCJ-GOUU:), M.A. With Introduction and Additional Lives of English Martyrs, Cornish, Scottish, and Welsh Saints, and a full Index to the Entire Work New and Revised Edition ILLUSTRATED BY 473 ENGRAVINGS VOLUME THE SIXTEENTH SlppruDix Foluiuf EDINBURGH: JOHN GRANT 31 GEORGE IV BRIDGE 1914 * * BX 63 \ OjlLf Printed liy BAi.t.ANiVNK, Hanson »V Co. at the Dallaitlync Press, ICJinljurgh I *- -* CONTENTS PAGHS The Celtic Church and its Saints . 1-86 Brittany : its Pkincks and Saints . Pi uiGREES OF Saintly Families .... A Celtic and Eni;lish Kalendar of Saints Proper to the Welsh, Cornish, Scottish, Irish, Breton, and English People . Catalogue of the Materials Available for THE Pedigrees of the British Saints Err.\ta Index to Saints whose Lives are Given Index to Subjects -* VI Contents LIST OF ADDITIONAL LIVES C.IVEN IN THE CELTIC AND ENGLISH KALENDAR S, Calhvcn 288 S. Aaron 245 Cano}; 279 „ Ai'lliaiani .... 288 Caranoy or Carantoji 222 „ Alan 305 Caron '93 „ Aidan 177 Callian ., Albuiga .... 324 Calliciinc Aiidlcy 314 „ Alilalc 179 Cawrdaf 319 „ Alfred tlie Great . 285 Ceachvalla 213 „ Alfric 305 Ceitlio . 287 „ Alnicdlia .... 258 Cclynin, son of „ Aniacllilu .... 325 Cynyr F irfdrwcli 287 „ Arniel 264 Celynin, son of „ Arniilf 268 Ilelig 3'o „ Austell 243 Cewydd 245 „ Auxilius .
    [Show full text]
  • Maps -- by Region Or Country -- Eastern Hemisphere -- Europe
    G5702 EUROPE. REGIONS, NATURAL FEATURES, ETC. G5702 Alps see G6035+ .B3 Baltic Sea .B4 Baltic Shield .C3 Carpathian Mountains .C6 Coasts/Continental shelf .G4 Genoa, Gulf of .G7 Great Alföld .P9 Pyrenees .R5 Rhine River .S3 Scheldt River .T5 Tisza River 1971 G5722 WESTERN EUROPE. REGIONS, NATURAL G5722 FEATURES, ETC. .A7 Ardennes .A9 Autoroute E10 .F5 Flanders .G3 Gaul .M3 Meuse River 1972 G5741.S BRITISH ISLES. HISTORY G5741.S .S1 General .S2 To 1066 .S3 Medieval period, 1066-1485 .S33 Norman period, 1066-1154 .S35 Plantagenets, 1154-1399 .S37 15th century .S4 Modern period, 1485- .S45 16th century: Tudors, 1485-1603 .S5 17th century: Stuarts, 1603-1714 .S53 Commonwealth and protectorate, 1660-1688 .S54 18th century .S55 19th century .S6 20th century .S65 World War I .S7 World War II 1973 G5742 BRITISH ISLES. GREAT BRITAIN. REGIONS, G5742 NATURAL FEATURES, ETC. .C6 Continental shelf .I6 Irish Sea .N3 National Cycle Network 1974 G5752 ENGLAND. REGIONS, NATURAL FEATURES, ETC. G5752 .A3 Aire River .A42 Akeman Street .A43 Alde River .A7 Arun River .A75 Ashby Canal .A77 Ashdown Forest .A83 Avon, River [Gloucestershire-Avon] .A85 Avon, River [Leicestershire-Gloucestershire] .A87 Axholme, Isle of .A9 Aylesbury, Vale of .B3 Barnstaple Bay .B35 Basingstoke Canal .B36 Bassenthwaite Lake .B38 Baugh Fell .B385 Beachy Head .B386 Belvoir, Vale of .B387 Bere, Forest of .B39 Berkeley, Vale of .B4 Berkshire Downs .B42 Beult, River .B43 Bignor Hill .B44 Birmingham and Fazeley Canal .B45 Black Country .B48 Black Hill .B49 Blackdown Hills .B493 Blackmoor [Moor] .B495 Blackmoor Vale .B5 Bleaklow Hill .B54 Blenheim Park .B6 Bodmin Moor .B64 Border Forest Park .B66 Bourne Valley .B68 Bowland, Forest of .B7 Breckland .B715 Bredon Hill .B717 Brendon Hills .B72 Bridgewater Canal .B723 Bridgwater Bay .B724 Bridlington Bay .B725 Bristol Channel .B73 Broads, The .B76 Brown Clee Hill .B8 Burnham Beeches .B84 Burntwick Island .C34 Cam, River .C37 Cannock Chase .C38 Canvey Island [Island] 1975 G5752 ENGLAND.
    [Show full text]
  • Dan NORRIS Labour WANSDYKE '97
    Dan NORRIS Labour WANSDYKE '97- Majority: 4,799 (8.8%) over Conservative 7-way Description: The eastern end of the pre-'83 North Somerset constituency, extended in '95 to take in the Chew Valley; centered on Keynsham, between Bristol and Bath, with lots of affluent commuter villages, and the long-defunct Somerset coalfield around Radstock and Midsomer Norton which returned Labour MPs in '29 and '45; since its creation in '83 it was considered a Conservative stronghold and, had '97 been like '92, its Tory candidate was entitled to expect an 11,000-plus majority; the only hint of a possible looming change was Labour's overtaking the LibDems in second place in '92; Position: On Labour Party General Election Campaign Team '99-; ex: Bristol City Councillor '95-97, '89-92; Avon County Councillor '94-96; Outlook: A low-profiled loyalist occasionally inclined to stooge questions to the Prime Minister; mostly preoccupied with protecting his young people from local paedophiles; considered by Millbank to be a Westcountry specialist at LibDem-bashing; a third-time-lucky surprise winner; locally higher-profiled as "the acceptable face of socialism: undogmatic, thoughtful, interested" (BRISTOL EVENING POST); another of Labour's many local councillors with experience of the public sector, as a child- protection social worker, previously a teacher; in the Socialist Education Association, League Against Cruel Sports, formerly in Anti-Apartheid; History: The son of an active Labour-supporter and feminist mother, later a Labour councillor and Parliamentary
    [Show full text]