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Bishop Middleham lies in a valley about 9 miles south-west of Durham.
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Bishop and Middleham
Philpotts married in October 1804 and in 1805 became vicar of Stainton-le-Street, County Durham, where again he does not appear to have resided — he was appointed chaplain to Bishop Middleham, County Durham, in the succeeding year.
Between 1647 and 1650 Haselrig and his son brought a large amount of property in the north east which included the manors of Bishop # s Auckland, Middleham, Easingwoodborough and Wolsingham at a total cost of over £ 22, 500.
Nature Reserves managed by the Trust include Bishop Middleham Quarry, Hawthorn Dene and Low Barns, and include a range of important habitats, such as magnesian limestone grasslands, upland hay meadows and coastal denes.
Taylor was born in Bishop Middleham, the son of a gentleman farmer, and spent his youth in Witton-le-Wear with his stepmother at Witton Hall ( now Witton Tower ) in the high street.
It is clear that Bishop Middleham was on an important Roman period routeway ; the road known as Cades Road runs through the centre of the parish.
In 1146 Osbert, the nephew of Bishop Flambard, gave the Church of Middleham to the Prior and Convent at Durham, this is the first recorded mention of the village.
Bishop Middleham was one of the favourite residences of the Bishops of Durham, two of whom died here.
Bishop Middleham Football Club are an up and coming English football side that play in the Durham County Sunday Football League.
The Bishop Middleham Community Wildlife Garden ( 0. 87 hectares ) has been declared a designated Local Nature Reserve by Sedgefield council.
* Samuel Taylor Coleridge, the celebrated poet stayed in Bishop Middleham with Sara Hutchinson and her brother George in 1801.
Before the middle part of the Victorian era, when coal mining was at its height in County Durham, Cornforth was in the parish of Bishop Middleham.
It is situated to the east of Ferryhill, and lies within the ecclesiastical parish of Bishop Middleham The earliest settlement in Mainsforth may have been on Marble ( Narble Hill ).
* Henry Taylor ( 1800-1886 ), born in Bishop Middleham, spent his youth in Witton-le-Wear with his stepmother at Witton Hall ( now Witton Tower ) in the high street.
Bishop and lies
The Bishop of Sodor and Man, whose diocese lies outside of the United Kingdom, is an ex officio member of the Legislative Council of the Isle of Man.
The rector of Fiesole loves a widow lady, by whom he is not loved, and thinking to lie with her, lies with her maid, with whom the lady's brothers cause him to be found by his Bishop.
The community was named for Archbishop Jean-Baptiste Lamy, and lies within the Bishop John Lamy Spanish Land Grant, which dates back to the eighteenth century.
Asserbo Castle, which lies in the woods of Tisvilde Hegn, was founded by Bishop Absalon in the 12th century and was used as a monastery for monks of the Cistercian Order, originally invited from France.
It is not known to which bishop this refers though as the village lies within the ancient diocese of Lincoln it presumedly denotes property owned by the Bishop of Lincoln.
Not all of the Marilyns are even hills in the usual sense: one, the highest point of the Weald, lies within the East Sussex town of Crowborough, whilst the top of the Yorkshire Wolds, Bishop Wilton Wold lies alongside the A166 road.
Other works include the effigy of Bishop Leonardo Bonafede, which lies on the pavement of the church of the Certosa near Florence, and the group of the Virgin and Child and St Anne, executed in 1526 for the altar of Orsanmichele.
Bishop Absalon constructed the city's first castle on the island in 1166-67 at the site where Christiansborg Palace, the seat of the Danish Parliament lies today.
Bishop Nikita lies in a glass-covered sarcaphogus between the chapels of the Nativity of the Mother of God and Sts.
Bishop Reinhard von Würzburg confirms that the Cistercian abbey Bronnbach lies in the area of the Parish of Reicholzheim.
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