Easby Abbey - Richmond - Drone Junkees U.K
Great evening filming and photographing Easby Abbey and the Parish Church Of Saint Agatha. Lovely country walk along the edge of the river Swale and into Richmond for a cool drink or a brew. Well worth a visit, in good condition and well looked after.
Music kindly agreed for use by hillsongchurchsydney - Song - Oceans (Where Feet May Fail)
DISCLAIMER - This video is done for non-profit and is for ours and other peoples viewing and enjoyment only. This video is not to be used for commercial purposes and we own no copyright for any music used in our videos. Thanks to YouTube Videos
Gordon & Bleu
Drummer Boys Walk from Richmond
The famous Drummer Boys Walk, starting and finishing in Richmond, North Yorkshire, following the River Swale up to Easby Abbey and St Agatha’s Church. Back into Richmond to the Castle Walk and down by the waterfalls.
Music:
Lord of the Land by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution licence (
Source:
Artist:
Walking in Richmond North Yorkshire
Walking in Richmond North Yorkshire.
Walk in Richmond North Yorkshire from Richmond Marketplace past the entrance to Richmond Castle and down a short quaint street, then either go down the steep bank to the River Swale Waterfalls or along a footpath under the Richmond Castle walls.
If you take the higher route, there are lots of secluded seats to take in the beautiful North Yorkshire countryside views, and at the far end of the Richmond Castle walls is a narrow opening on the left which takes you back down to the river and on to River Swale Waterfalls, but be aware that these are steep steps and a lot of them.
At the bottom of the steps is a road overlooking the River Swale, turn left along to the River Swale Waterfalls. This is a great site for photography with a natural stone walkway elevated above the water to walk along.
Continue past the falls onto a pathway across a sports field with the road at the far end. Turn right onto the footpath along the roadside and cross onto the far side footpath when its safe to do so.
This takes you over the bridge to The Station, a former railway station which has been cleverly created to include 2 cinemas, a large restaurant with an elevated walkway right around the sides, public toilets, a tourist shop, art galleries, an award winning bakery, Richmond home brewery and an ice cream parlour.
There is a large public seating area to the rear with picnic tables.
Richmond public swimming pool is right across the road.
From here, continue the walk along a shared bike path towards Easby Abbey and the ancient church of St. Agatha alongside.
From here, climb the hill to the houses passing Easby Hall and turn left up the hill and along a narrow country lane to the highway which takes you back into Richmond Marketplace.
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please comment on what you would like us to make the next video about, and meanwhile here's our latest video to watch: Boars Head Bistro Coffee Shop and Boutique Hotel in Sunderland East End
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
A short walk to Easby Abbey from Richmond Station
In this video artist Andy Beck describes a short 2 mile walk starting at The Station in Richmond, North Yorkshire. It is a fairly simple and easy walk taking in the impressive ruins of Easby Abbey.
Andy Beck is the artist behind the multi award winning book, The Wainwrights in Colour. To order a copy do visit the website:
The parking at The Station is Pay and Display. for more details on The Station:
Maps © Data ©
7. Late Medieval Religion and Its Critics
Early Modern England: Politics, Religion, and Society under the Tudors and Stuarts (HIST 251)
In this lecture Professor Wrightson surveys the religious landscape of England during the later medieval period through to the reign of Henry VIII and the beginnings of the reformation. He notes that while the late medieval church was more vibrant and popular than many early triumphal analysis of the reformation allowed for, there were, nonetheless, critics of Catholicism within England. He traces the earlier opposition to the church as arising from three primary groups: those educated clerics and laymen who desired reform within the church, the small pockets of Lollards within England who opposed traditional religion, and the group of people influenced by European reformation thought who would later work to implement doctrinal change within the Church of England. Professor Wrightson also provides an analysis of late medieval piety and the role that the traditional church played in people's daily lives at the local level prior to the reformation.
00:00 - Chapter 1. Religion
05:08 - Chapter 2. The Pre-Reformation Church
14:51 - Chapter 3. Potential Weaknesses
29:31 - Chapter 4. Criticism
Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website:
This course was recorded in Fall 2009.
Easby Abbey , Easby , Richmond 125
rain stop Me
8. Reformation and Division, 1530-1558
Early Modern England: Politics, Religion, and Society under the Tudors and Stuarts (HIST 251)
Professor Wrightson examines the various stages of the reformation in England, beginning with the legislative, as opposed to doctrinal, reformation begun by Henry VIII in a quest to settle the Tudor succession. Wrightson shows how the jurisdictional transformation of the royal supremacy over the church resulted, gradually, in the introduction of true religious change. The role played by various personalities at Henry's court, and the manner in which the King's own preferences shaped the doctrines of the Church of England, are considered. Doctrinal change, in line with continental Protestant developments, accelerated under Edward VI, but was reversed by Mary I. However, Wrightson suggests that, by this time, many aspects of Protestantism had been internalized by part of the English population, especially the young, and so the reformation could not wholly be undone by Mary's short reign. The lecture ends with the accession of Elizabeth I in 1558, an event which presaged further religious change.
00:00 - Chapter 1. The English Reformation
04:36 - Chapter 2. A Gathering Crisis
13:18 - Chapter 3. The Royal Supremacy
20:12 - Chapter 4. The Henrician Reformation
34:13 - Chapter 5. The Edwardian Reformation
Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website:
This course was recorded in Fall 2009.