2010 04 13 Bells St Thomas
Outside St. Thomas Becket Church, Salisbury, UK, April 13, 2010
Top 15. Best Tourist Attractions in Salisbury - Travel England
Top 15. Best Tourist Attractions and Beautiful Places in Salisbury - Travel England: Salisbury Cathedral, Boscombe Down Aviation Collection, The Close, Mompesson House, Old Sarum, The Salisbury Museum, The Parish Church of St Thomas and St Edmund, Arundells, Wilton House, Salisbury Playhouse, Church of St. Mary and St. Nicholas, Larmer Tree Gardens, The Wardrobe, Longford Castle, Salisbury Arts Centre
Martin Rings the Bells at St Thomas's Church
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Best Attractions and Places to See in Salisbury,United Kingdom UK
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List of Best Things to do in Salisbury
Boscombe Down Aviation Collection
Salisbury Cathedral and Magna Carta
The Close
The Parish Church of St Thomas and St Edmund
Arundells
The Salisbury Museum
Wilton House
Mompesson House
Salisbury Playhouse
Old Sarum
St Thomas of Canterbury Great Whelnetham Bury St Edmunds
St Thomas of Canterbury Great Whelnetham Bury St Edmunds - village church in Suffolk England - a post card video
Cadeau spends 3 weeks in the UK!!!
A little video clip montage of my time in the UK.
Places I went while in the UK:
British Library
National Gallery
National Portrait Gallery
London Coliseum
Paddington Station
Windsor Castle
St. George's Chapel
Westminster Abbey
Jane Austen's House, Chawton
Jane Austen's mother and sister's grave
Winchester Cathedral
Beatles Store
Imperial War Museum
Churchill War Rooms
Churchill Museum
Courtauld Gallery
Charles Dickens Museum
Bloomsbury Walk
British Museum
King's Cross Station
National Gallery of Scotland
Edinburgh Castle
The Writers' Museum
Palace of Holyroodhouse
Robert Louis Stevenson's boyhood home
The Elephant House Café
Dr. Johnson's House
Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese
St. Paul's Cathedral
Roman Baths Museum
Jane Austen walking tour of Bath
Stonehenge
The Parish Church of St. Thomas & St. Edmund
Salisbury Cathedral
Globe Theatre
Southwark Cathedral-and-area walking tour
The Who Shop (and museum)
Ashmolean
The Kilns
BBC Television Centre
John Keats House
Dorchester County Museum
Grave of Emma Hardy and Thomas Hardy's heart
Max Gate
Maiden Castle
East Coker
Tower of London
Hampton Court Palace
Brighton Pavilion
Canterbury Cathedral
Dover Castle
London Eye
Big Ben
Outside of Buckingham Palace
Places to see in ( Amesbury - UK )
Places to see in ( Amesbury - UK )
Amesbury is a town and civil parish in Wiltshire, England. It is most famous for the prehistoric monument of Stonehenge which is in its parish, and for the discovery of the Amesbury Archer—dubbed the King of Stonehenge in the press—in 2002. It has been confirmed by archaeologists that it is the oldest continuously occupied settlement in the United Kingdom, having been first settled around 8820 BC.
King Alfred the Great left it in his will, a copy of which is in the British Library, to his youngest son Aethelweard (c.880-922). Eleanor of Provence, queen of England, died in Amesbury on 24 or 25 June 1291, and was buried in Amesbury Abbey. The parish includes the hamlets of Ratfyn and West Amesbury, and most of Boscombe Down military airfield.
Amesbury is located in southern Wiltshire, 7 miles (11 km) north of Salisbury on the A345. It sits in the River Avon valley on the southern fringes of Salisbury Plain and has historically been considered an important river crossing area on the road from London to Warminster and Exeter. This has continued into the present with the building of the A303 across the Avon next to the town. Originally the town developed around the water meadows next to several bends in the river, but in time has spread onto the valley hillsides and absorbed part of the military airfield at Boscombe Down.
The land around Amesbury has been settled since prehistoric times, evidenced by the monument of Stonehenge. Other finds in the parish point to large scale prehistoric structures and settlements in the whole area, including Bluestonehenge at West Amesbury, the numerous other monuments around Stonehenge, the discovery of a Neolithic village in the neighbouring parish of Durrington by the Stonehenge Riverside Project, and continuing excavations at Boscombe Down where Wessex Archaeology found the Amesbury Archer and Boscombe Bowmen. They are now on display at Salisbury and South Wiltshire Museum. Amesbury is recognized as the oldest continuously occupied UK settlement.
The Church of England parish church of St Mary and St Melor is Grade I listed. It dates from the 12th century but was restored by William Butterfield in 1852-3. Amesbury Methodist Church was built in 1900, replacing an 1816 chapel. Christ the King Catholic church opened in 1985, replacing a 1933 building on a different site. Amesbury Baptist Church was built in 1997.
The mansion known as Amesbury Abbey is Grade I listed. It was built in 1834-1840 by architect Thomas Hopper for Sir Edmund Antrobus and replaced a house built in 1661 by John Webb for the 2nd Duke of Somerset. Diana's House and Kent House, gatehouses to the Abbey from the early 17th century, are both Grade II* listed. West Amesbury House is from the 15th century and is Grade I listed; it was remodelled in the early 20th century by Detmar Blow.
( Amesbury - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Amesbury . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Amesbury - UK
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Catholic Saints and the English Martyrs, England
Promoting the inspiring lives of the Saints and the Martyrs of the Universal Church showing original films produced by Mary's Dowry Productions. All of these films on a growing range of Saints and Martyrs are available to buy in Pal and NTSC format. This is a trailer for Mary's Dowry Productions and shows clips from our films on St. Francis of Assisi, Edmund Campion, Margaret Clitherow, Kateri Tekakwitha, Wilfrid, Alexandrina da Costa, Winifred, Anne Line, Nicholas Owen, Francesco Marto, Margaret Pole and more. Visit our website for more information - spreading the lives of these awesome heroes of the Universal Church!
2012-10-06 Swanage Bellringers - Magical Mystery Outing - Salisbury, St Martin
Swanage & Purbeck annual bellringers outing organised this year by David Haysom. David's Magical Mystery Tour a.k.a. The Sound of the 18th Century. Ringing Double Norwich Court Bob Major at St Martin, Salisbury (8) 13-2-4 in Fsharp.
Saint Margaret Ward FILM trailer, English Martyr, Mary's Dowry Productions
Saint Margaret Ward is one of three women canonised in a group known as the 40 Martyrs of England and Wales. As a young, single, Elizabethan English woman she decided to assist in the great work of preserving the persecuted Catholic Church in her beloved country of England.
Saint Margaret Ward was especially concerned about the fate of priests who illegally entered England to bring the outlawed Catholic Sacraments to the persecuted faithful. She worked with the underground Catholic network in England, planning routes and organising safe houses for the missionary priests, as well as sewing and distributing Sacramentals. Her own spiritual life was filled with zeal for the Truth, a love for the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass and a deep desire to see England return to its Catholic heritage and roots.
When Saint Margaret Ward heard about the plight of a Catholic priest imprisoned in Bridewell, she was alarmed to learn of his rejection of the Catholic Faith. Saint Margaret visited him, encouraging him in the Faith and his priesthood. She then planned a daring prison break. She secretly arranged with an Irish boatman an escape route as well as wrapping a rope around herself and smuggling it into the prison.
The priest escaped but fell to the ground from his cell and his shouts alerted the authorities. Although the priest managed to flee, Saint Margaret Ward and Blessed John Roche, the Irish boatman, were captured and imprisoned.
This young Catholic woman refused to deny the Catholic Faith or repent of her ‘crime’. She was sentenced to death and hanged at the infamous triple Tyburn gallows, a martyr for the Catholic Faith in England.
Learn about the inspiring life of Saint Margaret Ward set during the dangerous era of Elizabethan England in this new film, as seen on EWTN. Our film production style has been internationally praised for not only presenting information, details and facts but a prayerful and spiritual film experience.
Available on DVD from our online shop - Mary's Dowry Productions
Sunrise At Old Wardour Castle Mavic 2 Pro 4K
Wardour Castle is located at Wardour, on the boundaries of Tisbury and Donhead St Andrew in the English county of Wiltshire, about 15 miles (24 km) west of Salisbury. The castle was built in the 1390s and partially destroyed in 1643 and 1644 during the English Civil War. It is managed by English Heritage who have designated it as a Grade I listed building, and is open to the public.
The castle was built on land previously owned by the St Martin family, but when Sir Lawrence de St Martin died in 1385 it was handed over to John, the fifth Baron Lovell for reasons unknown.It was built using locally quarried Tisbury greensand, with William Wynford as the master mason,[2] after Baron Lovell had been granted permission by Richard II in 1392. It was inspired by the hexagonal castles then in fashion in parts of the Continent, particularly in France; but its own six-sided design is unique in Britain, as is its inclusion of several self-contained guest suites.
After the fall of the Lovell family following their support of the Lancastrian cause during the Wars of the Roses, the castle was confiscated in 1461 and passed through several owners until bought by Sir Thomas Arundell of Lanherne in 1544. The Arundells were an ancient and prominent Cornish family, the principal branches of which were seated at the manors of Lanherne, Trerice, Tolverne and Menadarva in Cornwall.[5] The family held several estates in Wiltshire. The castle was confiscated when Sir Thomas — a staunch Roman Catholic — was executed for treason in 1552, but in 1570 was bought back by his son, Sir Matthew Arundell, later a Sheriff and Custos Rotulorum of Dorset. The Arundells, led by Thomas Arundell, 1st Baron Arundell of Wardour, subsequently became known as some of the most active of the Catholic landowners in England at the time of the Reformation; thus they were naturally Royalists in the English Civil War. During that conflict, Thomas Arundell, 2nd Baron Arundell of Wardour, was away from home on the King’s business and had asked his wife, Lady Blanche Arundell, aged 61, to defend the castle with a garrison of 25 trained fighting men. On 2 May 1643 Sir Edward Hungerford, with 1,300 men of the Parliamentarian Army, demanded admittance to search for Royalists. He was refused and laid siege, setting about the walls with guns and mines. After five days the castle was threatened with complete destruction. Lady Arundell agreed to surrender, and the castle was placed under the command of Colonel Edmund Ludlow. Lord Arundell had died of his wounds after the Battle of Stratton, and his son, Henry 3rd Lord Arundell, next laid siege to his own castle, blew up much of it and obliged the Parliamentary garrison to surrender in March 1644.
The family slowly recovered power through the English Commonwealth and the Glorious Revolution, until the eighth Baron, Henry Arundell, borrowed sufficient funds to finance rebuilding. This was done by the prominent Palladian James Paine. Paine built Wardour New Castle, but left the Wardour Old Castle as an ornamental feature. In stylistic terms the New Castle is not a castle at all, but a symmetrical neoclassical country house with a main block built around a central staircase hall and two flanking wings. Paine integrated the ruins of the Old Castle into the surrounding parkland, intending it to be viewed as a romantic ruin.
The castles, old and new, have been featured in several films. The Old Castle appeared in the 1991 Kevin Costner feature Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, and more recently was used as a film location for The Journey to Aresmore released in 2016. The New Castle served as the dance school in Billy Elliot. The cover of Sting's album Ten Summoner's Tales was photographed inside Old Wardour Castle.
#OldWardourCastle
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SAINT WINIFRED, Catholic film, Welsh Saint, Winefried, DVD advert
Advert for a film about Welsh Saint Winifred produced by Mary's Dowry Productions, looking at the inspiring life of the Saint, her story and the many miracles that surround her. Available on DVD worldwide, visit us at Mary's Dowry Productions for more information and other Catholic films. As seen on EWTN.
John Henry Newman and the English Martyrs, Mary's Dowry Productions, films of the Martyrs
A selection of clips from various individual films presenting the lives of the English Martyrs by Mary's Dowry Productions combined with the powerful words of Blessed John Henry Newman who had a great love for the Catholic Martyrs of England and Wales.
A full length film of John Henry Newman can now be downloaded (rent or buy) from Mary's Dowry Productions:
Also available on DVD:
Full length films of these Martyrs and more are available on DVD worldwide through Mary's Dowry Productions, a Catholic film production company in the South of England. Music in this trailer is taken from the film God's Champion: Saint Edmund Campion by Mary's Dowry Productions, available on DVD, runtime 30 minutes. Martyrs represented in this trailer include Saint Edmund Campion, a Jesuit priest executed at Tyburn by order of Queen Elizabeth I for his part in the mission into England and bringing the outlawed Catholic Mass to the Elizabethan people; Sts Edmund Gennings and Polydore Plasden, two young Catholic priests executed in 1591; St. Swithun Wells, a Catholic Layman hanged outside his own home with St. Edmund Gennings; St. Margaret Ward, a young Catholic woman of the 1580's hanged at Tyburn with other young Catholics for refusing to deny their Catholic Faith and for helping Catholic priests; St. Margaret Clitherow, a Catholic wife and mother from York who was crushed to death by law for hiding Catholic priests and providing safe houses; St. Nicholas Owen the maker of priest holes which saved the lives of many hundreds of Catholics during the persecutions of Catholic in British history and Saint Anne Line who was hanged at Tyburn for organising outlawed Masses and refusing to deny the Catholic Faith. Get to know the inspiring and dramatic lives of our English Martyrs through film that presents history, fact, devotion and details, produced by Mary's Dowry Productions. Visit us online for more information and find us on Amazon. Mary's Dowry Productions makes original films of the English Martyrs to help spread devotion to these great men and women of history and the truths of the Catholic Faith.
Full list of DVDs posting worldwide in all region formats:
Margaret Pole Countess of Salisbury, English Martyr, Tudors
Film on DVD about the life and Martyrdom of Margaret Pole, Countess of Salisbury who was beheaded at Tower Hill. Produced by and available from Mary's Dowry Productions and Amazon. Visit us online for more information at Mary's Dowry Productions. Historical, infromative, devotional. OUT NOW
Blessed Alexandrina Maria da Costa, Mystic, Victim Soul, a film of her life
DVD available about Blessed Alexandrina Maria da Costa who has a fascinating and important life. A contempory, mystic and victim soul beatified in 2004. Available worldwide on DVD - English language; information, facts, details, devotion. Out now and available through Mary's Dowry Productions and AMAZON.
Organ Demonstration - St. Edmundsbury Cathedral
James Thomas, Director of Music, demonstrates the 2010 Harrison & Harrison organ for participants of the 26th Annual English Organs Tour after evensong on July 20, 2014
St Gregory Church, Sudbury, Suffolk
Mike visits the beautiful Church of St Gregory, Sudbury, Suffolk on a sunny 16th February 2016.
Salisbury
Salisbury (/ˈsɔːlzbri/ SAWLZ-bree, /ˈsɒlzbri/ SOLZ-bree - a cognate of Salzburg, or locally /ˈsɔːzbri/) is a cathedral city in Wiltshire, England, and the only city within the county. It is the second largest settlement in the county by population, between Chippenham at 35,800 and Swindon at 209,156. It has also been called New Sarum /ˌnjuː ˈsɛərəm/ to distinguish it from the original site of settlement to the north of the city at Old Sarum, but this alternative name is not in common use.
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Making movies of Saint Edmund Campion and the English Martyrs
Making Catholic movies (on a budget), filming process, style, inspiration - St. John Fisher film trailer. Mary's Dowry Productions. The finished film about St. John Fisher is available on DVD through Mary's Dowry Productions and AMAZON.
Godalming
Godalming is a historic market town, civil parish and administrative centre of the Borough of Waverley in Surrey, England, 4 miles SSW of Guildford, traversing the banks of the River Wey in a hilly, heavily wooded part of the outer London commuter belt and Green Belt which is the Greensand Ridge. Godalming is 30.5 mi southwest of London and shares a three-way twinning arrangement with the towns of Joigny in France and Mayen in Germany. Friendship links are in place with the state of Georgia and Moscow. James Oglethorpe of Godalming was the founder of the colony of Georgia.
Godalming is regarded as an expensive residential town, partly due to its visual appeal, favourable transport links and high proportion of private housing. In recent years it has been ranked the UK's third most desirable property hotspot, voted the fourth best area of the UK in which to live and judged in 2013 to have the highest quality of life in Great Britain.
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Article text available under CC-BY-SA
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