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Bulkington and with
A new Rugby constituency was created, and a new constituency of Kenilworth and Southam formed to the south of Rugby, and as a result the town regained its pre-1983 status of returning its own member of parliament, albeit with the addition of the Bulkington Ward from Nuneaton.
Despite historically having stronger links with Bedworth, Bulkington forms part of the Nuneaton Urban Area.
Bulkington was mentioned in the Domesday Book as Bochintone, meaning " estate associated with a man called Bulca ".
The remaining historic buildings were threatened with demolition which led directly to the creation of the Bulkington Conservation Area in 1985, which covers Church Street and the area surrounding St James ’ Parish Church.
Bulkington elects a councillor to the county council along with part of Attleborough ward.
It also briefly included Bulkington, but in 1938 this merged with Bedworth.

Bulkington and Mary
Perkins was born to Thomas and Anna Perkins at Marston Jabbett in the parish of Bulkington, Warwickshire, England in 1558, the year in which the Protestant Elizabeth I succeeded her Catholic sister Mary as Queen of England.

Bulkington and village
Bulkington is a large village and former parish in the Nuneaton and Bedworth district of Warwickshire, UK.
The parish originally contained seven hamlets, two of which were subsumed by Bulkington village following residential building expansion which began in the 1930s.
Today Bulkington is largely a commuter village for larger nearby urban centres such as Coventry, Nuneaton, Bedworth, Hinckley and Leicester.
From 1894 to 1932 Bulkington functioned as an independent urban district ; however, the village lost its independence in 1932 under the Warwichshire Review Order, when it became part of the Rugby rural district.
Studley is sometimes claimed to be the largest village in England, however, this is incorrect as it is not even the largest village in Warwickshire, both Polesworth and Bulkington are larger.

Bulkington and .
Stagecoach also provides direct services to Nuneaton, Bulkington, Keresley, Atherstone, Hinckley & Leicester and a direct service to the University Hospital in Walsgrave, Coventry is provided by Travel de Courcey.
Starting at the northeastern suburbs of Coventry at junction 2 of the M6, the motorway crosses the Coventry Canal and then continues northeast past Bulkington and west of Wolvey before turning more easterly to run south of Hinckley.
Historically the main industry in Bulkington was ribbon weaving.
The early history of Bulkington can be traced to the 11th century where it is mentioned as among the estates of the Count of Meulan, overseen by his sub-tenant Salo.
Originally the parish of Bulkington consisted of two 5-hide vills in the south Bulkington and Barnacle, and in the north Marston, Weston and Bramcote.
Bulkington was the largest of these sub-divisions ( at 4 hides and 1 virgate ) and functioned as the centre of the manor ; however, by the late 13th century the centre of the manor had moved to Weston-in-Arden.
By 1285 the manor of Weston contained Bulkington, Bramcote, Barnacle, Ryton, Clifton, and Wibtoft.
Throughout the medieval period and until the late 18th century, the principal employment in Bulkington had been agriculture: of meadowland were recorded in 1086 ; further, windmills are recorded for Weston and Marston Jabbet, and a water mill in Bramcote.
However, in 1766 of common land were enclosed at Ryton, and 4 years later enclosure was applied to the remainder of land in Bulkington, totalling.
Because of this, ribbon weaving supplemented or replaced agriculture as the main source of income for the majority of Bulkington ’ s population.
This cottage industry had spread to Bulkington from the major centres of Coventry and Bedworth, where it had been introduced by the Huguenots in the 18th century.
The Bulkington Baptismal register, 1841 – 1861, records that: ' On Thursday, Aug 15th, 1861, six families comprising 27 members left for Quebec, Canada, in consequence of the continued depression of the Ribbon trade ….
Nonetheless, ribbon production continued in Bulkington into the middle of the 20th century, though through small factory production rather than as a cottage industry.
Bulkington is a ward of the Nuneaton and Bedworth local government district which, like the other wards in the district, is represented by 2 councillors.
Bulkington is represented by Desmond O ’ Brian and Julian Gutteridge, both Conservative.

has and connections
`` He has very good connections ''.
It occupies a central place in modern mathematics and has multiple conceptual connections with such diverse fields as complex analysis, topology and number theory.
Aberfoyle has connections to many historical figures such as Rob Roy and Mary, Queen of Scots.
The resulting tangle of blood vessels, often called a nidus ( Latin for " nest ") has no capillaries and abnormally direct connections between high-pressure arteries and low-pressure veins.
* General assessment: an extensive but antiquated telecommunications network inherited from the Soviet era ; quality has improved ; the Bulgaria Telecommunications Company's fixed-line monopoly terminated in 2005 when alternative fixed-line operators were given access to its network ; a drop in fixed-line connections in recent years has been more than offset by a sharp increase in mobile-cellular telephone use fostered by multiple service providers ; the number of cellular telephone subscriptions now exceeds the population
Bulgaria has delayed building some key highway connections since the 1990s, but European Union membership is a strong incentive for completion.
It has been suggested that Beowulf was first composed in the 7th century at Rendlesham in East Anglia, as the Sutton Hoo ship-burial also shows close connections with Scandinavia, and also that the East Anglian royal dynasty, the Wuffings, were descendants of the Geatish Wulfings.
* outside director-a director who, other than serving on the board, has no meaningful connections to the organization
One of the oldest and most accessible parts of combinatorics is graph theory, which also has numerous natural connections to other areas.
It incorporates the bijective approach and various tools in analysis, analytic number theory, and has connections with statistical mechanics.
The area has further connections to coding theory and geometric combinatorics.
Much of anthropological theory has originated in an appreciation of and interest in the tension between the local ( particular cultures ) and the global ( a universal human nature, or the web of connections between people in distinct places / circumstances ).
Another example has been proposed by Gerald Edelman called dynamic core hypothesis which puts emphasis on reentrant connections that reciprocally link areas of the brain in a massively parallel manner.
It has railroad connections to Bolesławiec and Legnica.
The microprocessor conventionally has a number of electrical connections called " pins " that can be used to select an " address " in the main memory, and another set of pins to read and write the data stored at that location.
Often, a serial bus can be operated at higher overall data rates than a parallel bus, despite having fewer electrical connections, because a serial bus inherently has no timing skew or crosstalk.
In the game Cesare has a stated desire to use both the Papal army and his family's political connections to usurp control over all of Italy.
This psychological approach has deep connections to the work of both Parker and Dewey and led to a resurgence of their ideas in second half of the century.
The simplest version of this theorem that suffices in practice for most needs, and has connections with the Löwenheim-Skolem theorem, says:
Few new jobs have been generated in the formal sector, however, because domestic private sector and foreign investment has dropped and coveted public-sector jobs have been reserved mostly for the small Honduran middle-class with political or military connections.
Such persistent connections reduce request latency perceptibly, because the client does not need to re-negotiate the TCP connection after the first request has been sent.
This interpretation has been formulated on sketchy and hypothetical etymological and historical connections.
Some sources blame connections in the television world for attracting crime to Hilversum, and the town has had to cope with mounting drug-related issues in a community with higher than average unemployment and ongoing housing shortage.
SNAV has 5 RHS200, RHS160 and RHS150 used in the connections between Naples and the islands of Capri and Ischia.

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