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Studley and Royal
The abbey is a Grade I listed building owned by the National Trust and part of the designated Studley Royal Park including the Ruins of Fountains Abbey UNESCO World Heritage Site.
As well as its racecourse and cathedral, Ripon is a tourist destination due to its close proximity to the UNESCO World Heritage Site the Studley Royal Park and Fountains Abbey.
Studley Royal Park
Although more widely known for his activities outside of Ripon, John Aislabie, during his time as Member of Parliament for Ripon, created the Studley Royal Park with its water garden and erected the obelisk ( designed by Nicholas Hawksmoor ).
John Aislabie or Aslabie (; 4 December 1670 18 June 1742 ) was a British politician, notable for his involvement in the South Sea Bubble and for creating the water garden at Studley Royal.
Some of the best known of these include ; Hadrian's Wall, Stonehenge, Avebury and Associated Sites, Tower of London, Jurassic Coast, Westminster, Saltaire, Ironbridge Gorge, Studley Royal Park and various others.
In the summer of 1816 Soane's and his late wife's mutual friend Barbara Hofland, persuaded him to take a holiday in Harrogate, there they visited Knaresborough, Plompton and its rocks, Ripon, Newby Hall, Fountains Abbey and Studley Royal Park, Castle Howard, Harewood House and Masham.
Lord Ripon survived her by two years and died of heart failure at Studley Royal Park in July 1909, aged 81.
He was buried at St Mary's, Studley Royal and was succeeded by his only son, Frederick.
* St Mary's, Studley Royal, North Yorkshire
Studley Royal including the ruins of Fountains Abbey is a designated World Heritage Site in North Yorkshire, England.
The 16th-century house at Studley Royal, rebuilt in Palladian style, as it appeared in 1880 ; it burned to the ground in 1946.
The water garden at Studley Royal created by John Aislabie in 1718 is one of the best surviving examples of a Georgian water garden in England.
St Mary's, on Lady Ripon's estate at Studley Royal, was commissioned in 1870 and work began in 1871.
This park once enclosed Studley Royal House, which was destroyed by fire in December 1716 and rebuilt.
* UNESCO entry for Studley Royal Park
* Studley Royal and Fountains Abbey — Gardens Guide
de: Studley Royal Water Garden
fr: Parc de Studley Royal
nl: Studley Royal Park
no: Studley Royal Park
sv: Studley Royal
* St Mary's, Studley Royal
# REDIRECT Studley Royal Park

Studley and Park
Since the War, Ripon has gone through some remodeling and has grown in size ; it attracts thousands of tourists each year who come to see its famous buildings with their long Christian heritage, nearby Studley Park, Ripon Racecourse, and in recent times the theme park Lightwater Valley.
Meantime Wekey conceived a plan for another bridge at Studley Park, to improve and shorten the trip to the City even further.
* Campion College, Studley Park Road, Kew, Melbourne
John Hodgson established a squatters run at Studley Park, on the eastern bank of the Yarra River, in 1840.
Access to Kew was originally via Bridge Road in Richmond, crossing the Hawthorn Bridge to Burwood Road, until the privately owned Studley Park Bridge ( nicknamed the Penny Bridge ) opened in 1857, connecting Church Street Richmond with Studley Park.
Studley Park, an extensive parkland which merges with the larger Yarra Bend Park, contains Dights Falls and features within it a golf course, sports grounds, and small pockets of natural forest.
* The Johnston Street, Studley Park Road bridge.
The punt can be seen in Chevalier's painting ' Studley Park at sunrise ' ( 1861 ).
East Collingwood was successful in its acquisition of Clifton Hill, and also unsuccessfully pursued the annexation of Studley Park.
Pridmore Park, Yarra Bank Reserve, Creswick Street Reserve and St James Park are in Hawthorn, Dickinsons Reserve, Yarra Bend Park, Studley Park Golf Course and Studley Park are in Kew.

Studley and Yorkshire
Studley House, also known as Burke Hall, built in 1857, was named after Hodgson's birthplace of Studley, Yorkshire and the house is now on the Register of the National Estate.
Fountains Hall is a country house near Ripon in North Yorkshire, England, located within the World Heritage Site at Studley Royal Park which include the ruins of Fountains Abbey.
Other notable buildings include Gayhurst House, Buckinghamshire ( 1858 65 ), Knightshayes Court ( 1867 74 ), the Church of Christ the Consoler ( 1870 76 ) and St Mary's, Studley Royal ( 1870 78 ) in Yorkshire, and Park House, Cardiff, ( 1871 80 ).

Studley and .
Originally located at the present location of Halifax City Hall, the college moved in 1886 to Carleton campus and spread gradually to occupy the Studley campus.
Henry Hicks Academic Administration Building, the heart of Dalhousie University's Studley CampusDalhousie University's primary campuses are situated in the city of Halifax, Nova Scotia, spanning the Halifax Peninsula near Halifax Harbour, while the Dalhousie University Agricultural Campus is located in rural Bible Hill, Nova Scotia, Canada.
The university is made up of four campuses, with Sexton and Carleton located near Downtown Halifax, while Studley is closer to the Northwest Arm.
Studley campus, which currently houses the majority of Dalhousie's faculties, was originally designed by Andrew R. Cobb.
Other sporting facilities includes Memorial Arena, home to the university's varsity hockey teams, Studley Gymnasium, the Sexton Gymnasium and field and the Langille Athletic Centre in Truro-Bible Hill.
" Our major objective was to contain Montana, and we did a terrible, terrible job of it " added defensive coach Chuck Studley.
* Henry O. Studley
Henry was born in Studley, Hanover County, Virginia on May 29, 1736.
The area also has much social housing ; the main estates are Lansdowne Green, Stockwell park, Studley, Spurgeon, Mursell and Stockwell Gardens.
In 1766, his mother inherited Hungerfords of Studley, where her brother had lived up until his death.
Computer Science moved into a new building on the Studley Campus in 1999.
** Dalhousie University's Studley Campus buildings include the Science Building, 1913 15 ; MacDonald Memorial Library, 1914 15 ; Shirreff Hall Women's Residence, 1920 ; Arts Building, 1921 22 ; Medical Science Laboratory, 1921 22 ; Provincial Archives Building, 1929 ; Gymnasium Building, 1931.
* Robertson, D. ( ed ), The Discovery of Hypnosis: The Complete Writings of James Braid, The Father of Hypnotherapy, National Council for Hypnotherapy, ( Studley ), 2009.
King's is dependent on Dalhousie University for some programs and its campus is located at the northwest corner of Dalhousie's Studley Campus.
* Stationer Thomas Marsh publishes Seneca's Tragedies in English, a collected edition of ten dramas written by Seneca the Younger ( or attributed to him ), translated by Jasper Heywood, John Studley, Alexander Neville, Thomas Newton, and Thomas Nuce.
Its influence has been detected in Spenser ’ s Faerie Queen, in John Studley ’ s translations of Seneca, in Christopher Marlowe ’ s Tamburlaine and Edward II, and many more.
He inherited the Studley estate from his mother's family in 1693, and started serious development of the garden around 1716, becoming the first in England to introduce natural landscaping.
It passes through Alcester, Studley, Redditch, Metchley Fort, Birmingham, Lichfield and Derby.

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