Places to see in ( St. Andrews - UK )
Places to see in ( St. Andrews - UK )
St. Andrews is a seaside town northeast of Edinburgh, on Scotland’s east coast. It's known for its many golf courses, including the Old Course, with the landmark Swilcan Bridge at the 18th hole. The British Golf Museum chronicles the history of U.K. golf. On a headland nearby are the ruins of St. Andrews Castle, with its medieval bottle dungeon. Close to the castle is the University of St. Andrews, founded in 1413.
St. Andrews is a town on the east coast of Fife in Scotland, 10 miles (16 km) southeast of Dundee and 30 miles (50 km) northeast of Edinburgh. The town of St. Andrews is home to the University of St Andrews, the third oldest university in the English-speaking world and the oldest in Scotland. According to some rankings, it is ranked as the third best university in the United Kingdom, behind Oxbridge.
St. Andrews is named after Saint Andrew the Apostle. There has been an important church in St Andrews since at least the 8th century, and a bishopric since at least the 11th century . The settlement grew to the west of St Andrews cathedral with the southern side of the Scores to the north and the Kinness burn to the south. The burgh soon became the ecclesiastical capital of Scotland, a position which was held until the Scottish Reformation. The famous cathedral, the largest in Scotland, now lies in ruins.
St Andrews is also known worldwide as the home of golf. This is in part because the Royal and Ancient Golf Club, founded in 1754, exercises legislative authority over the game worldwide (except in the United States and Mexico), and also because the famous links (acquired by the town in 1894) is the most frequent venue for The Open Championship, the oldest of golf's four major championships.
Visitors travel to St Andrews in great numbers for several courses ranked amongst the finest in the world, as well as for the sandy beaches. The Martyrs Memorial, erected to the honour of Patrick Hamilton, George Wishart, and other martyrs of the Reformation epoch, stands at the west end of the Scores on a cliff overlooking the sea.
Alot to see in ( St. Andrews - UK ) such as :
British Golf Museum
Craigtoun Country Park
St Andrews Castle
St Andrews Cathedral
Museum of the University of St Andrews
Fife Coastal Path
Blackfriars, St Andrews
St Andrews Botanic Garden
St Andrews Aquarium
St Salvator's Chapel
St Andrews Preservation Trust Museum
St Andrews Museum
West Sands
Dairsie Castle
The Bell Pettigrew Museum
The Eden Club
Craigtoun Park
St Andrews Harbour Trust
St Athernase Church
Bell Pettigrew Museum
St Rule's Tower
Cameron Reservoir
Earlshall Castle
St Andrews Pier
( St. Andrews - UK) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of St. Andrews . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in St. Andrews - UK
Join us for more :
Greyfriars Hotel St Andrews
A quick overview of the facilities at Greyfriars Hotel St Andrews. To find out more visit
St Andrews Fife Scotland March 30th / 31st March 2016
A 2 day trip to St. Andrews in March 2016 .
On way up we stopped off at Kellie Castle a National Trust property in East Neuk of Fife . It is an old castle dating back to 16th centuary . It is rules in Scotland ( not England ) that no photos can be taken inside Nat Trust buildings but I managed a couple .
In afternoon we arrived In St Andrews at out Hotel .It was The Old Course Hotel originally built for the 1970 Open Championship but has been added on and refurbished since then .It is now owned by the American Kohler Hotels . It was built on the site of the old railway sheds .The tee shot at 17th entailed for very good golfers a shortcut over them with their drive .A Wooden hut at back of hotel has been constructed to have this same outline .
Later in afternoon I went out and took photos around the 18th and 17th greens .I took photo of the famous old bridge over the Swilken Burn .This bridge is where Nick Faldo ,Tom Watson .Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer were all photographed saying their farewells to the Open Championship .Now all golfers playing it get out their phones and take photos of themselves on the bridge . It must be the most photographed bridge in the world .
On the West Sands is where the fimed the opening sequence for the film Chariots Of Fire .It was used as Broadstairs in Kent but is recognised as St Andrews by all those who know it .
Next day saw us go by bus to Crail .It is about 15 miles down the coast back to the East Nuek of Fife .The East Nuek which takes in Anstruther ,St Monans,Pittemweem and Lundin Links is a corner of Fife pretty well undiscovered by the tourists but is very beautiful with their little harbours .
The late afternoon took us back to St Andrews where I took another photo of that wee bridge !
Music in video is In A Persian Market by Blue Horizon .You may aske what does a Persian Market have to do with Scotland .Simple answer is nothing ! I just like the tune and it goes well with video .
I hope you enjoy it
Watch Old Course, St. Andrews, Scotland, Hidden Links Golf Tours - Old Course St Andrews
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Agnes Blackadder Hall - Campus Accommodation, St Andrews, United Kingdom, Review HD
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Located in St Andrews less than 10 minutes’ walk from the historical centre and the Royal & Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews, Agnes Blackadder Hall features accommodation with free private parking, a licensed bar and bar meals all available on site.
Each guest room comes with a wardrobe, a desk and tea and coffee making facilities. They all have a TV, bed linen and towels and an en suite bathroom with shower and hairdyer.
Wi-Fi is available on site at an extra cost. Local attractions include St Andrews Cathedral, 1.1 miles away, St Andrews Links Trust, 3 miles away, while the North Sea is 11 minutes’ walk away. Leuchars Railway Station is 4.8 miles away.
Coln Rogers St Andrews Part One
Places to visit in and around Stratford: Coln Rogers
Follow - from the road through the valley you can hear the river Coln murmur through the water-meadows below. Water swirls round the legs of drinking cattle, through the beds of yellow flags, between stepping-stones and past the church winding down to Bibury and the valley's end. This is Old England, Saxon settlements strung along a wooded valley each with it's ancient church: Coln St. Dennis, Coln Rogers, Winson, Bibury. Coln Rogers was the gift of a C12 knight, Roger of Gloster wounded at Walyeson, to the Abbey of Gloucester, for the good of his soul, in 1150. No more than small hamlet that follows the road, the church stands at the end of a narrow lane heading down towards the river.
The church is almost entirely late Saxon, only the Perpendicular tower, south porch and east wall have been added or substantially altered. Characteristic Saxon features betray a woodworking tradition adapted to stone. The angles of the nave have long-and-short work where upright and horizontal stones alternate vertically and the sides of the church have typical early flat pilasters. This is a rare survival, a pre-Conquest building with a 1000 years of history set amongst the water-meadows of a remote Cotswold valley.
The interior of the church is rather plain and indeed heavily restored but it does have a C15 figure of St. Margaret in stained glass and several good C19 windows by Heaton, Butler and Baynes. A substantial west gallery of 1910 supports the organ loft and an impressively primitive chancel arch divides the rectangular plan in two, a layout common to Saxon buildings of this date. On the south of the nave the pilaster is inscribed with a Saxon scratch-dial with five radii and the north wall of the nave has a small, round-headed Saxon window carved from a single block of stone. David Talbot Rice an expert in Byzantine art is buried to the north of the church and by peering over the north-west wall of the churchyard you will see the ruins of C14 building, possibly a priest's house.
The Coln valley is one of our ancient landscapes little altered through the centuries, long may it survive.
The Coln valley crosses the Fosseway just south of Northleach and is about an hours journey from Stratford-upon-Avon.
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St Andrews by Rufflets Hotel
This video was produced by Rufflets Country House Hotel to provide an insight to St Andrews and the surrounding area, showing there's more to the city than its rich golf history.
Snow Surprises St Andrews
Newhailes, Musselburgh, Scotland
Newhailes, Musselburgh, Scotland
Newhailes is an amazing survival story and is a dignified 17th-century home in authentic condition. Rather than attempt to re-create an immaculate dwelling, the NationalTrust has worked hard to keep the house untouched by modern hands. If you're hungry for Scottish history, Newhailes features prominently in the Scottish Enlightenment. The 18th-century designed landscape surrounding the house holds a few surprises of its own. Newhailes is a truly unique place to visit
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Old Photographs Machrihanish Scotland
Tour Scotland wee video of old photographs of Machrihanish village in Argyll, on the west coast. It is a short distance north of the tip of the Mull of Kintyre, which faces out towards Ireland and the Atlantic. Machrihanish has a classic links golf course designed by Old Tom Morris from St Andrews, Fife, with views towards the islands of Gigha, Islay and Jura. The Kintyre Way long distance walking footpath passes through the village from Campbeltown and carries on south towards the Scottish Wildlife Trust's Largiebaan Reserve. Coal was mined near the village; the Machrihanish Coalfield was one of Britain's smallest coalfields. Reginald Aubrey Fessenden built a radio transmitting station with a 400 foot high mast here in 1905 to transmit Wireless Telegraphy to a similar station at Brant Rock in Massachusetts, United States. An exchange of messages took place on 1 January 1906 but the mast blew down in a gale on 5 December 1906 and was never rebuilt. Machrihanish railway station opened in 1906 and finally closed in 1932. Weather data is collected from Machrihanish and broadcast in the Shipping Forecast. Of interest to folks with ancestry, genealogy or Scottish Family Roots in Scotland who may wish to visit one day.
Royal and Ancient Golf Club St. Andrews Fife Scotland Criminal Prosecution Case
MAINSTREAM NEWS MEDIA EXTRACTS: I
The sensational Carroll Foundation Trust and parallel Carroll Maryland Trust multi-billion dollar offshore money laundering bribery scandal which is encircling the beleaguered Lloyds Bank chairman Lord Blackwell has disclosed that this case is now regarded as one of the largest ever white collar organized crime bank fraud heist operations in living memory.
Sources have confirmed that the explosive FBI Scotland Yard cross-border criminal “standard of proof” prosecution files contain forensic specimen exhibits of forged and falsified Lloyds Bank accounts which are “directly linked” to the fraudulent incorporation of a Withers Worldwide law firm shadow “criminal parallel trust” which effectively impulsed the embezzlement of two hundred million dollars of the Carroll Foundation Trust’s huge treasury investment holdings that were held at the Queen’s bankers Coutts & Co and Barclays International.
Scotland Yard leaked sources have disclosed that the files have named the core cell high value suspects which includes Anthony Richard Clarke a trustee of the Carroll Foundation Trust who is currently trading under the corporate umbrella of a bewildering array of UK Companies House “registered” criminal front corporations based in a small suite of offices at 100 Pall Mall London close to Buckingham Palace and Scotland.
The Carroll Foundation Trust files are held within a complete lockdown at the FBI Washington DC field office and the Metropolitan Police Scotland Yard London under the supervision of the commissioner Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe who is known to have an intimate knowledge of this case which stretches the globe spanning a staggering sixteen years.
MAINSTREAM NEWS MEDIA EXTRACTS: II
The sensational Carroll Foundation Trust and parallel Carroll Maryland Trust multi-billion dollar tax fraud bribery scandal has disclosed that yet another UK Law Society firm has been named in the explosive criminal “standard of proof” prosecution files which are currently “held in custody” at Scotland Yard.
Sources have confirmed that the City of London law firm Penningtons Manches premises were penetrated by the FBI Scotland Yard targeted Withers Worldwide law firm crime syndicate which removed Carroll Foundation Trust settlement deeds archival records in what was a bungled attempt to destroy a forensic paper trail leading back to this massive City of London bank fraud heist that stretches the globe.
Further sources have said that the “Penningtons Manches blue file” dossiers contain compelling evidential material which surrounds the fraudulent incorporation of a Withers Worldwide law firm shadow “criminal parallel trust” that effectively embezzled a mind boggling two hundred million dollars of Gerald Carroll’s huge treasury investment holdings which were held the Queen’s bankers Coutts & Co and Barclays Bank.
The latest disturbing insights into the Duke of Sutherland estate and Gerald Carroll Trust debacle which involves yet another law firm follows on from British and American media reports on the case which have revealed that major parts of the Gerald Carroll life tenant estate records were destroyed at the Pinney Talfourd law firm’s premises in Brentwood Essex.
Scotland Yard leaked sources have said that Haslers the accountancy firm with offices in Loughton Essex and Nassau Bahamas are known to be one of the pivotal “central actors” in this case spanning a staggering sixteen years.
The Carroll Foundation Trust files are held within a complete lockdown at the FBI Washington DC field office and the Metropolitan Police Scotland Yard London under the supervision of the commissioner Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe who is known to have an intimate knowledge of this case of international importance.
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Places to see in ( Crail - UK )
Places to see in ( Crail - UK )
Crail; Scottish Gaelic: Cathair Aile is a former royal burgh, parish and community council area in the East Neuk of Fife, Scotland. Crail probably dates from at least as far back as the Pictish period, as the place-name includes the Pictish/Brythonic element caer, 'fort'. According to Crail Parish Church's website (see external link below), the site on which the parish church is built appears to have religious associations that pre-date the parish church's foundation in early mediaeval times, as evidenced by a Dark Age cross-slab preserved in the church. The parish church was itself dedicated (in the 13th-century) to the early holy man St. Maelrubha of Applecross in Wester Ross.
Crail became a Royal Burgh in 1178 in the reign of King William the Lion. Robert the Bruce granted permission to hold markets on a Sunday, in the Marketgait, where the Mercat Cross now stands in Crail. This practice was still continuing in the 16th century, causing concern in the freshly puritanical circles of Edinburgh such that John Knox, visiting Crail on his way to St Andrews in 1559, was moved to deliver a sermon in Crail Parish Church, damning the fishermen of the East Neuk for working on a Sunday. (See Crail Parish Church website: external link below.) Despite the protests, the markets continued and were amongst the largest in Europe for their time.
Built around a harbour, Crail has a particular wealth of vernacular buildings from the 17th to early 19th centuries, many restored by the National Trust for Scotland, and is a favourite subject for artists. The most notable building in the town is the parish church, situated in the Marketgate - from the mid 13th century St Maelrubha's, in later medieval times St Mary's, but now, as part of the Church of Scotland's ministry, known just as Crail Parish Church. According to Crail Parish Church's website (see external link below) it was founded in the second half of the 12th century. From early in its history it belonged to the Cistercian Nunnery of St Clare in Haddington and remained the Nunnery's possession until the Reformation.
Though much altered, this is one of Scotland's most beautiful ancient churches. According to Crail Parish Church's website (see external link below) in its first form the church building consisted of an unaisled rectangular nave and chancel of romanesque design. In the early 13th century a fine western tower with small spire was added, and a double arcade of round pillars of variegated red sandstone in the nave. It was in this form in 1243 that the church was dedicated to St Maelrubha by the Bishop of St Andrews. (In later times it was known as St Mary's probably after a later dedication in a later period that disliked vestiges of the Celtic Church.) The side walls were rebuilt in Regency times, and the large pointed windows, filled with panes of clear glass held by astragals rather than leads, allow light to flood into the interior. The unaisled chancel, now housing a huge organ, has been shortened. The church retains some 17th-century woodwork.
Crail once had a royal castle above the harbour (perhaps this was the site of the 'fort'). The site is still visible as an open garden attached, but little or nothing of the structure survives above ground. A Victorian 'turret' jutting out from the garden wall recalls the Castle (visible in the photograph reproduced above). The Tolbooth is near the juncture of Tolbooth Wynd and the Marketgate. It stands on its own at the edge of the large marketplace with its mercat cross in the centre of the town - this is where the Sunday markets were once held.
The Crail Museum and Heritage Centre, largely staffed by volunteers and open every day in summer, is sited in a neighbouring building, also of historical interest, at the top of Tolbooth Wynd. (See external link below.) It houses temporary exhibitions and has a permanent exhibition on HMS Jackdaw. On permanent display in the Burgh Room is the ceremonial robe worn by the provost of the Burgh of Crail before the reorganisation of local government in Scotland in 1975. (Before 1975 each Scottish burgh was governed by a town council headed by a provost.) Entry to Crail Museum is free but donations are accepted. On Sunday afternoons in summer the museum is the leaving point for guided tours of Crail, led by volunteer guides.
( Crail - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Crail . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Crail - UK
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Is British wildlife important?: Grey seals
Is British wildlife important? It’s a good question. David ventures to the Lincolnshire coast to mull over the answer in the company of grey seals. Enjoy!
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References
Hebridean Whale and Dolphin Conservation Trust. 2016. From:
JNCC. 2016. Grey sea. From:
MacKenzie , Eero, Ojaveer. 2011. Could Seals Prevent Cod Recovery in the Baltic Sea? PLOS. From:
SMRU. 2004. Sea Mammal Research Unit Scientific Report. Published by the Sea Mammal Research Unit. From:
SNH. 2016. Naturally Scottish: Seals. From:
Thompson, D. & Härkönen, T. (IUCN SSC Pinniped Specialist Group). 2008. Halichoerus grypus. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2008. From:
Trites, A. 1997. The Role of Pinnipeds in the Ecosystem. From:
Aerial views of Leigh Woods near Bristol, UK
Flying over Leigh Woods National Nature Reserve near Bristol, UK
Dudmaston Estate, National Trust
Skycast Media visited Dudmaston Hall on a beautiful spring afternoon. The grounds and property made a great shoowreel with the drone. Visit National Trust
Street Sledge at St Andrews Bristol
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Easy to use and quick to learn, Street Sledge turns the smallest slope into an action-packed adventure somewhere between go-karting and winter sledging! Grab your board, grab your mates and get going.
We had an awesome day at St Andrews park Bristol.
If you want to experience the new Street Sledge head to one of our retailers or jump onto our website!
Winter Drive From Cowdenbeath Fife To Kinross Perthshire Scotland
Tour Scotland Winter travel video of a road trip drive, with music, mainly on the B996 road, from the HIgh Street in Cowdenbeath, Fife, to the High Street on ancestry visit to Kinross, Perthshire.The B996 is not the fastest road from this part of into Fife into the Perthshire, but it certainly used to be. Before the construction of the parallel M90 motorway, this was the only serious road north towards Perth. The B996 number has now been used for all the sections of former A90 that weren't candidates for transference to another A road; consequently the road appears and disappears, hidden under a handful of other routes. So all the B996 is doing is joining up the dots; a bit unfair really for a road which was so important for so long.
Schottland 1. Teil - August 2013
Schottland 1. Teil - The Forth Bridges, Melrose Abbey, St. Andrews, Aberdeen, Crathes Castle, Balmoral Castle
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Scotland's Caddies - Nationalities
These Scottish caddies have caddied for every nationality, except possibly Russians, and they have an opinion about them all. Scotland's Caddies is a 69-minute DVD available for purchase at
Rosslyn Chapel, Scotland
Aerial footage of Rosslyn Chapel, Scotland.
Rosslyn Chapel, formally known as the Collegiate Chapel of St Matthew, is a 15th-century chapel located at the village of Roslin, Midlothian, Scotland.
Rosslyn Chapel was founded in 1446 as a place of worship and services continue to be held here weekly. The Chapel has also been a popular destination for visitors for generations. By the late 18th-century, it was starting to appear on itineraries and its profile greatly increased after the publication of Dan Brown’s novel, The Da Vinci Code, in 2003, and the subsequent film. Rosslyn Chapel Trust was established in 1995 to care for the Chapel and oversee its conservation and public access.
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