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Castles in Carmarthenshire (12 P) Pages in category "Archaeological sites in Carmarthenshire" The following 11 pages are in this category, out of 11 total.
Also known as the "First Toronto Post Office" (it was the fourth post office in York, but the first one to serve the settlement when it became Toronto in 1834), it is one of the earliest surviving examples in Canada of a building purpose-built as a post office; typical of small, early 19th-century public buildings, combining public offices and ...
Near East Archaeological Society Bulletin: Near East Archaeological Society: 1958: 1 — 0739-0068: Near Eastern Archaeology: American Schools of Oriental Research: 1998: 4 — 2325-5404 (print) 1094-2076 (web) Norwegian Archaeological Review: Routledge: 1968: 2 — 0029-3652 (print) 1502-7678 (web) Old Kilkenny Review: Kilkenny Archaeological ...
The Ontario Archaeological Society is a registered charitable organization promoting the ethical practice of archaeology within the Province of Ontario, Canada. It is a public and professional society formed in 1958.
The Ontario Heritage Trust Building—also known as the Birkbeck Building or the Ontario Heritage Centre—at 10 Adelaide Street East in Toronto is the headquarters of the Ontario Heritage Trust. [1] It was used as the exterior of the "125th Precinct" in Lower Manhattan in the 2012 television series Beauty & the Beast.
Various archaeological artefacts have been uncovered locally, and can be seen in the County Museum. [ 4 ] Rhyd-y-gors Castle was constructed on the order of King William II 1087–1100, known as Rufus , by the Norman invader William Fitz Baldwin, Sheriff of Devon, in the late 11th century (1093–1094). [ 5 ]
Elizabethan/Jacobean Cloister garden and rare parapet walk at its centre; Cloister Garden, which based on an archaeological survey in 1999 took the possible age of the site back to the 13th century, with the discovery of a silver Long Cross Penny dating to the reign of Edward I; Upper Walled Garden (designed by Penelope Hobhouse), [10]
The Canadian Archeological Association (CAA; French: Association canadienne d'archéologie) is the primary archaeological organization in Canada. The CAA was founded in 1968 by a group of archaeologists that included William E. Taylor, the head of the Archaeology Division at the National Museum of Canada.