The Tyne Bridge

The Sage

The Millennium Bridge

The High Level Bridge

14 Comments CherryPie on Oct 22nd 2013

Untitled

A Room with a View

A Room with a View

A Room with a View

14 Comments CherryPie on Oct 21st 2013

Autumn…the year’s last, loveliest smile.

William Cullen Bryant

Arley Arboretum

26 Comments CherryPie on Oct 20th 2013

Flodden Memorial

The English Heritage Angel Awards, celebrate the efforts of local people who saved historic buildings and local places.  They were founded by Andrew Lloyd Weber and are supported by the Telegraph.

The awards take place annually and the winners from the 2013 shortlist are due to be announced at an awards ceremony in London on 21st October 2013.  There were four categories in this years Angel Awards:

  • The best rescue or repair of a historic place of worship
  • The best rescue of a historic industrial building or site
  • The best craftsmanship employed on a heritage rescue
  • The best rescue of a listed building, scheduled monument, registered park, garden or battlefield, protected wreck site or conservation area

The ‘Remembering Flodden Project for Flodden Battlefield, Branxton, Northumberland’ was one of the projects that was shortlisted for ‘The Best Rescue of Any Other Type of Historic Building or Site‘:

An Excerpt from the Submission

  • Flodden is one of only three locations in the British Isles where a reigning monarch died in battle. Hastings and Bosworth are renowned but Flodden, where James IV of Scotland died in 1513, is less well-known.
  • A large granite cross erected in 1910 on top of Piper’s Hill became neglected and covered in weeds. A faded interpretation board gave a limited account of the battle and a short footpath to the monument was the only access to the battlefield. Visitors asked “Where is Flodden Field?”, then a little later “Is this all there is?” Flodden needed to be remembered.
  • In 2003 a group of local volunteers set up: Remembering Flodden Project. Permission was granted by the landowner for a new 2 km Battlefield Trail that was in turn funded by the Local Heritage Initiative. Seats and new interpretation boards describing aspects of the battle were positioned along the trail and a larger board and map installed at the car park.
  • Donations for an A3 leaflet help pay for the reprints and petrol for the mower that is used to cut the grass each week. Last year we produced a DVD, The Battle of Flodden – Then and Now and this year we will publish a battlefield guidebook. There is no visitor centre on the Battlefield but the village bought the disused phone box from BT for £1 and this is now ‘The Smallest Visitor Centre in the World’. It contains a detailed map of the routes taken to the battle by the two opposing armies, information about local places of interest that are relevant to the Flodden story and audio and WiFi links.
  • The rescue of this site started in 2003 and work has been ongoing since then. All work is done by a small group of local volunteers and the site has earned a Quality Assured commendation, and in 2012 won a Love Northumberland award. This year heralds the 500th anniversary of the Battle and as we approach, visitor numbers have increased tenfold (we expect 20,000 this year) and the Battlefield Trail is used for conducted walks and talks.

Find out more about Flodden Battlefield

See the Heritage List entry for Flodden Field

My review of the battlefield guidebook can be found here.

Sit & Rest a While

Flodden Visitor Centre

6 Comments CherryPie on Oct 19th 2013

The Magic Garden

Well perhaps not quite the first thing I see, the first thing I see would be my bedside table. The above photo is a view that I see as I go around opening the curtains in my house.  It is the view from my computer room.  How lucky am I ;-)

More ‘first thing I see’ can be found in the gallery.

16 Comments CherryPie on Oct 18th 2013

Durham Cathedral

Durham Cathedral

Durham Cross

6 Comments CherryPie on Oct 17th 2013

The Sanctuary Knocker

It is tempting to think of cathedrals simply as places of worship, but theire civic function was as a place of sanctuary. People who had committed a ‘great offence’, for example killing in self defence or escaping from prison, could clame sanctuary within the cathedral for 37 days. after which they either had to have solved their problems or were given a safe passage out of the country. The state of sanctuary was a bit like ‘refuge’ status today – one lost some of one’s rights as a citizen. Durham’s famous sanctuary knocker was allegedly what those claiming sanctuary had to grasp. The current knocker on the cathedral’s door is a replica; the original is on display inside the cathedral.*

*Durham World Heritage Site, A Guide to the Castle and Cathedral – Published in 2013 by Durham World Heritage Site.

18 Comments CherryPie on Oct 16th 2013

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