An Inventory of the Ancient Monuments in Wales and Monmouthshire

An Inventory of the Ancient Monuments in Wales and Monmouthshire

Author: Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales

Publisher: Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales

Published: 1925

Total Pages: 246

ISBN-13:

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Almost every class of objects and type of constructions with which the student of Welsh antiquities becomes acquainted is represented within the county of Montgomery, though in their relative importance the various classes differ widely one from another, and some types are singularly deficient in characteristic examples. LIST OF PARISHES. The divisions adopted are those of the Civil Parishes in the Administrative County, following the arrangement in Table 11 of the Census Reports of England and Wales for the year 1901. Aberhafesp Aston Bausley Berriew Bettws Cedewen Brithdir (no entries) Caereinion Fechan (no entries) Carno Carreghofa Castle Caereinion Rural Castle Caereinion Urban Castlewright Cemmes Churchstoke Cletterwood Criggion Darowen Forden Grarthbeibio Guilsfield Within Guilsfield Without Hirnant Hope Hyssington Is y garreg Kerry Leighton Llanbrynmair Llandinam Llandrinio Llandysilio Llandyssil Llanerfyl Llanfair Caereinion Llanfechain Llanfihangel yng Ngwynfa Llanfyllin Llangadfan Llangruriff Llangynog Llangynyw Llanidloes Within Llanidloes Without Llanllugan Llanllwchaiarn Llanmerewig Llanrhaiadr ym Mochnant Llansantffraid Deuddwr Llansantffraid Pool Llanwddyn Llanwnog Llanwrin Llanwyddelan Machynlleth Manafon Meifod Middletown Mochdre Montgomery Newtown Penegoes Pennant Penstrowed Rhosgoch Snead Trefeglwys Tregynon Trelystan Trewrern Uppington Uwch y garreg Welshpool


Megaliths

Megaliths

Author: David Corio

Publisher: Vintage

Published: 2011-05-31

Total Pages:

ISBN-13: 9781446483046

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David Corio has systematically photographed the megalithic sites of England and Wales with the eye of a great landscape photographer as well as with the passion of an explorer in the ruins of an ancient culture. These photographs go to the heart of prehistoric England and reveal a profound sense of 'place'. The sites are revealed with all the beauty that invited Romantic speculation from the seventeenth century onwards as well as the encroaching modern world of distant urban skylines and protective barriers. Lai Ngan's text distils the mythical narratives that arose around these extraordinary structures and places as well as pointing to the recent astronomical and mathematical research which suggests their remarkable function in the prehistoric calendar. The photographs point to the beginning of architecture itself in Britain, with the suggestion of both sacred and secular function, layered in the fabulous tales of popular imagination.