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Items in England (results page 5)


England, the “predominant partner” of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, comprises along with Wales the southern, and by far the greater, portion of Great Britain, the largest of the European islands; it is separated from the Continent on the E. and S. by the North Sea and English Channel, and from Ireland on the W. by St. George's Channel, while Scotland forms its N. boundary; its greatest length N. and S. is 430 m., and greatest breadth (including Wales) 370. It is of an irregular triangular shape; has a long and highly-developed coast-line (1800 m.); is divided into 40 counties (with Wales 52); has numerous rivers with navigable estuaries, while transit is facilitated by a network of railways and canals; save the highlands in the N., and the Pennine Range running into Derby, England is composed (if we except the mountainland of Wales) of undulating plains, 80 per cent, of which is arable; while coal and iron are found in abundance, and copper, lead, zinc, and tin in lesser quantities; in the extent and variety of its textile factories, and in the production of machinery and other hardware goods, England is without an equal; the climate is mild and moist, and affected by draughts; but for the Gulf Stream, whose waters wash its western shores, it would probably resemble that of Labrador. Under a limited monarchy and a widely embracing franchise, the people of England enjoy an unrivalled political freedom. Since Henry VIII.'s time, the national religion has been an established Protestantism, but all forms are tolerated. In 1896 education was made free. The name England is derived from Engle-land, or land of the Angles, a Teutonic people who, with kindred Saxons and Jutes, came over from the mainland in the 5th century, and took possession of the island, driving Britons and Celts before them. Admixtures to the stock took place during the 11th century through the Danish and Norman conquests. E. annexed Wales in 1284, and was united with Scotland under one crown in 1603, and under one Parliament in 1707.

Population (1907) 27,000,000

From Nuttall Encylopædia, 1907

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38.—King’s Coty House
39.—Trevethy Stone
Plate III. Gloucester Cathedral. West Front and South Side.
Gloucester Cathedral Old Print - Wallpaper Version
Victorian Carol Singers
Byron’s Pool
Beech.
Reconstructed Interior of Fourteenth-century Hall (Penshurst, Kent).
41.—Constantine Tolman, Cornwall
42.—Wayland Smith’s Cave
44.—hare Stone, Cornwall
45.—Coronation Chair
47.—The Cheesewring, as seen from the North-west.
The Map of Berkshire
5. Castle Hedingham, Essex
Plan of Donnington Castle.
51.—Plan and Section of Chun Castle
The Coronation Chair
6. Castle Hedingham, Essex.
St. George’s Chapel, Windsor
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Places Shown

Berkshire; England

Bodmin Moor; Cornwall; England

Castle Hedingham; Essex; England

Chun Castle; Morvah; Cornwall; England

Constantine; Cornwall; England

Donnington; Berkshire; England

England

Gloucester; Gloucestershire; England

Grantchester; Cambridgeshire; England

Harestone; Stanmore; Cornwall; England

Liskeard; Cornwall; England

London; England

Maidstone; Kent; England

Penshurst; Kent; England

Selborne; Hampshire; England

Wayland’s Smithy Long Barrow; Lambourn; Berkshire; England

Westminster Abbey; Westminster; London; England

Windsor; Berkshire; England