THE ULTIMATE
discovery guide
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FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE, LEA HURST, DERBYSHIRE
Childhood home of Florence Nightingale. Though born in Florence, her family returned to England, and Lea Hurst was the family home and later on their summer home, in the area from which the family made its fortune in lead-mining. After the Crimean War, Florence returned again to Lea Hurst. See on the Map-olah Map: https://www.zeemaps.com/view?group=2653234&item=Lea_Hurst,_Florence_Nightingale
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ARBEIA ROMAN FORT, HADRIAN'S WALL, SOUTH SHIELDS
Site of the Arbeia Roman Fort built in 160 AD to supply the fortifications of Hadrian's Wall. Sea access led to supplies and trade with the rest of the Roman Empire leading to a cosmopolitan mix of peoples entering Britain from lands such as Spain, Germany and North Africa. Archaeological remains of the fort with a stunning reconstruction - see what Roman life was like in Roman Britain. See on the Map-olah Map: BEDDGELERT
Resting place of Gelert, Prince Llewelyn's faithful hound, who protected the Prince's heir from a fearsome wolf. The prince on return from a hunt found Gelert covered in blood and the heir nowhere to be seen, and so killed the hound. As Gelert yelped his last cry a child's cry was heard, and the heir was found unharmed with the body of the wolf nearby. The prince buried Gelert and never smiled again. See on the Map-olah Map: https://www.zeemaps.com/view?group=2653234&item=Beddgelert WORMHILL - 'DRAGON Hill'
Anglo-Saxon 'Dragon Hill' (Wyrma's Hill) - the hill where the dragon may have been said to have lived can be seen on the road to Miller's Dale, were the coils in the ground surrounding this small hill created by the dragon's tail? Wormhill's church is dedicated to St. Margaret of Antioch who had links to dragons, was the dedication to protect this Derbyshire village from the dragon? Find Wormhill the Dragon Village on the Map-Olah map: https://www.zeemaps.com/view?group=2653234&item=Wormhill DOLAUCOTHI, WELSH GOLD MINES
The earliest Welsh Gold mine. From 70 - 80 AD the Romans began mining gold in the area of the Cothi valley, Britain's mineral resources being one of the reasons for the Roman invasion. The Romans developed gold mining in the area for the next 40 to 50 years, using open cast and tunnelling techniques, and creating hydraulic systems to smash rocks to get at the ore. The mining area was also protected by a fort. Even when the Roman military left, Roman life in the area continued, with later gold finds having been discovered. See on the Map-olah Map: https://www.zeemaps.com/view?group=2653234&item=Welsh_Gold_-_Dolaucothi_Roman_Gold_Mines 1066 - THE LANDING OF THE NORMAN INVASION - PEVENSEY BAY.
Site of the landing of William Duke of Normandy's fleet of Norman forces prior to the Battle of Hastings, where the Anglo- Saxon Harold II was defeated and William became William I of England and thus William the Conqueror. The events are shown in the Bayeux Tapestry. Find Pevensey Bay in East Sussex, and step back to 1066, on the Map-Olah map: https://www.zeemaps.com/view?group=2653234&item=1066_-_Pevensey_Bay_-_Norman_Invasion CARDIFF CASTLE
Cardiff Castle the Norman Motte and Bailey Castle built on the site of four earlier Roman forts. The castle walls contain the remains of the earlier Roman walls, a reconstruction of the Roman gate forms the entrance to the castle. The castle became the property of the Bute family in the late 1700s, who transformed Cardiff into the world's leading coal exporting part, amassing a vast fortune, The 3rd marques of Bute was believed to be the richest man in the world in the 1860s, and he began the transformation of the castle's living quarters into a Victorian gothic fantasy palace. See on the Map-olah Map: https://www.zeemaps.com/view?group=2653234&item=Cardiff_Castle LOCH NESS, SOUTH WEST OF INVERNESS, HOME OF THR LOCH NESS MONSTER - NESSY
Home of Nessy / Nessie the Loch Ness Monster. A large water creature with numerous sightings in the Loch. Numerous attempts have been made to try and find Nessy using fleets of boats and radar / sonar. A lost dinosaur, a floating log, a large sturgeon or a feature of the local water currents? See on the Map-olah Map: https://www.zeemaps.com/view?group=2653234&item=Loch_Ness THE CORNISH PIXIES OF ST. ALLEN
A boy from the village of St. Allen just north of Truro is said to have recounted meeting the Cornish Piskies / Pixies. The boy wandered off to collect flowers in a small valley, lost the villagers couldn't find him for three days. When he was found, he wasn't aware that days had passed, unharmed he spoke of how he had followed a singing bird into the forest, where night fell and he thought he saw stars all around him. The boy then realised that the shining lights around him were the piskies, who led him down to a cave full of riches, gave him honey and sang him to sleep. On waking the boy was back in the valley. See on the Map-olah Map: https://www.zeemaps.com/view?group=2653234&item=Cornish_Pixies_of_St._Allen CARRICKFERGUS CASTLE
Norman castle overlooking Belfast Lough, besieged by Scots, Irish, English and French. Originally surrounded on three sides by water. Also the location of US naval hero John Paul Jones' capture of HMS Drake from the Royal Navy during the American War of Independence. See on the Map-olah Map: https://www.zeemaps.com/view?group=2653234&item=Carrickfergus_Castle |
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