Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Mebyon Kernow" ¶ 5
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Cornwall and is
The latter title is especially suggestive of his role in forming several Franciscans who later became influential thinkers in the faculty, among them Saint Bonaventure, John of La Rochelle, Odo Rigaldus, William of Middleton and Richard Rufus of Cornwall.
The Beast of Bodmin, also known as The Beast of Bodmin Moor () is a phantom wild cat purported to live in Cornwall, in the United Kingdom.
Bodmin () is a civil parish and major town in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.
It was formerly the county town of Cornwall until the Crown Courts moved to Truro which is also the administrative centre ( before 1835 the county town was Launceston ).
Bodmin is one of the oldest towns in Cornwall, and the only large Cornish settlement recorded in the Domesday Book of the late 11th century.
The existing church building is dated 1469-72 and was until the building of Truro Cathedral the largest church in Cornwall.
The font of a type common in Cornwall is of the twelfth century: large and finely carved.
Bodmin is the home of NCB Radio, an Internet radio station which aims to bring a dedicated station to North Cornwall.
Bodmin Moor () is a granite moorland in northeastern Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.
Bodmin Moor is one of five granite plutons in Cornwall that make up part of the Cornubian batholith ( see also Geology of Cornwall ).
Bolventor () is a hamlet on Bodmin Moor in Cornwall, United Kingdom.
Today, the Cornish Nationalist Party is seen as more of a pressure group as they do not put up candidates for any elections, although their visibility and influence within Cornwall is negligible.
The Cornwall Wildlife Trust is a charitable organisation founded in 1962 that is concerned solely with Cornwall, United Kingdom.
Cornwall Wildlife Trust is part of The Wildlife Trusts partnership of 47 wildlife trusts in the United Kingdom.
The direction and work that the Trust currently does is guided by the Cornwall Biodiversity action plan.
The Trust is based at Allet near Truro in Cornwall.
The name " Cheddar " is not protected by the European Union, though the name " West Country Farmhouse Cheddar " has an EU Protected Designation of Origin, and may only be produced in Somerset, Devon, Dorset, and Cornwall, using milk sourced from those counties.
In the Palamedes and other works, the castle is eventually destroyed by King Mark of Cornwall after the loss of Arthur at the Battle of Camlann.
Although the court at Celliwig is the most prominent in remaining early Welsh manuscripts, the various versions of the Welsh Triads agree in giving Arthur multiple courts, one in each of the areas inhabited by the Britons: Cornwall, Wales and the Old North.
The prison is owned by the Duchy of Cornwall, and is operated by Her Majesty's Prison Service.

Cornwall and part
The Dumnonii are thought to have occupied relatively isolated territory in Cornwall, Devon, Somerset and possibly part of Dorset.
Relations between the United Kingdom and Ecuador were traditionally regarded as " low-key but cordial ", especially before the election of Rafael Correa ; the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall visited the country in 2009, as part of a tour celebrating the bicentenary of Charles Darwin.
) that Britain, Wales, and Cornwall, were the portion of Belinus, elder son of Dunwallo, and that that part of the Island, afterwards called England, was divided in three shares, viz.
The waters around the island are a marine nature reserve owned by Cornwall Wildlife Trust and form part of the Looe Voluntary Marine Conservation Area ( VMCA ).
* Cornwall, Devon, Somerset, and Dorset-the South West Peninsula ( western part of the West Country )
This is an ancient British midwinter celebration that occurs every year in Padstow and was originally part of the pagan heritage of midwinter celebrations that were regularly celebrated all over Cornwall where people would guise dance and disguise themselves by blackening up their faces or wearing masks.
" I do not find they have any foreign commerce, except it be what we call smuggling and roguing ; which I may say, is the reigning commerce of all this part of the English coast, from the mouth of the Thames to the Land's End in Cornwall.
Daphne du Maurier based many novels on this part of Cornwall, including Frenchman's Creek.
It is part of a chain of granite stretching through Cornwall, as far as the Isles of Scilly.
The Wessex Constitutional Convention and the Wessex Regionalist Party both do not believe that Cornwall should form part of a devolved Wessex region, the boundaries which remain unclear.
He soon made the announcement that on 12 December 1901, using a kite-supported antenna for reception, the message was received at Signal Hill in St John's, Newfoundland ( now part of Canada ), signals transmitted by the company's new high-power station at Poldhu, Cornwall.
Cornish is the adjective and demonym associated with Cornwall, the most southwesterly part of the United Kingdom.
The size of the region is shown by the fact that the northern part of Gloucestershire, near Chipping Campden, is as close to the Scottish border as it is to the tip of Cornwall.
The Cornish Rex is a genetic mutation that originated from a litter of kittens born in the 1950s on a farm in Cornwall, UK ; hence the first part of the breed's name.
The nearest secondary school is located in Fowey, part of the Cornwall LEA.
The campus is part of Cornwall College which is registered through Plymouth Polytechnic.
The report also states: " Cornwall has, however, been governed as part of England for a thousand years and, despite its individual character and strong sense of regional identity, there is no evidence that its people generally have a wish to see it separated for the purposes of government from the rest of England.
* Grade, a former parish in Cornwall, now part of Grade-Ruan
Prior to 1229, Heston was part of the parish of Gistleworth ( Isleworth ) before being taken by Henry III, who subsequently granted it to the Earl of Cornwall.
A WNW route passes London Heathrow Airport Terminals 1 – 3 and 5 as the Bath Road and a WSW route, the A30, passes Terminal 4, bypasses Staines and reaches the M25 ; the remainder is for the most part a minor route to Land's End, Cornwall.
However, since the account in the Gesta of the early part of his exile ( in Scotland, Cornwall and Ireland ) contains fantastic elements which suggest it is largely fictitious, it is hard to know if we can trust this.

0.096 seconds.