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  2. Great Fulford - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Fulford

    Great Fulford House in 2015, view from south-east Great Fulford House, view from south-east. 1780 watercolour, British Library. [1] The later remodelling by James Wyatt in 1805 replaced the gables with battlements and added full height bay windows at the corners Tudor main entrance to courtyard pierced through east front, Great Fulford House.

  3. Bristol Archives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bristol_Archives

    Bristol Archives is part of Bristol Museums, along with Bristol Museum & Art Gallery, M Shed, Georgian House, Red Lodge, Blaise Castle, and Kings Weston Roman Villa. [5] The core opening hours are Tuesday - Friday, 9:30am-4pm. In addition, on the first two Saturdays of the month, Bristol Archives is open 10am-4pm. [6]

  4. Arnos Vale Cemetery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnos_Vale_Cemetery

    The reformer Raja Ram Mohan Roy (22 May 1772 – 27 September 1833) died at Bristol on 27 September 1833 and was first buried at Stapleton, but was reinterred in 1843 in the newly laid out Arnos Vale cemetery under the mausoleum designed by William Prinsep, which is a copy of an Indian tomb or chhatri (literally meaning umbrella). [14]

  5. Greenbank, Bristol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenbank,_Bristol

    Greenbank is a small informal district in the city of Bristol, England, nestling between Easton to the west, Eastville to the north-east, Clay Bottom and Rose Green to the east, and Whitehall to the south. The area is mainly one of 1890s terraced housing with some present millennium housing on the north eastern edge of the cemetery.

  6. St Werburgh's Church, Bristol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Werburgh's_Church,_Bristol

    St Werburgh's Church, Bristol, is a former church, now a climbing centre in the St Werburghs area of north-east central Bristol, England. It has been designated on the National Heritage List for England as a Grade II* listed building .

  7. What Is the Emergency Contact Trend? Here's Why People Are ...

    www.aol.com/emergency-contact-trend-heres-why...

    The emergency contact trend is believed to have started after Paiz posted a video on Jan. 31 of her partner repeatedly body-rolling on a medicine ball.

  8. Bunhill Fields - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bunhill_Fields

    Bunhill Fields is a former burial ground in central London, in the London Borough of Islington, just north of the City of London.What remains is about 1.6 hectares (4.0 acres) in extent [1] and the bulk of the site is a public garden maintained by the City of London Corporation.

  9. Whitchurch, Bristol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whitchurch,_Bristol

    The name means "the white church", and was first recorded in 1230. (Another source dated about 1500 may be a copy of a record dated to 1065). [2] The village in its present location dates from about the 12th century, when the centre of population of an older village named Filton, Filwood or Felton, west of the present village, moved to the present site. [3]