Places to see in ( Tideswell - UK )
Places to see in ( Tideswell - UK )
Tideswell is a village and civil parish in the Peak District of Derbyshire, in England. It lies 6 miles east of Buxton on the B6049, in a wide valley on a limestone plateau, at an altitude of 1,000 feet above sea level, and is within the District of Derbyshire Dales. The population (including Wheston) was 1,820 in 2001, increasing slightly to 1,827 at the 2011 Census, making it the second-largest settlement within the National Park, after Bakewell.
Tideswell is known locally as Tidza or Tidsa. In addition, local residents are known as Sawyeds, owing to a traditional story about a farmer who freed his prize cow from a gate in which it had become entangled, by sawing its head off. Today the story is re-enacted raucously and colourfully every Wakes week by a local mummers group called the Tidza Guisers.
In the Middle Ages, Tideswell was a market town known for lead mining. The Tideswell lead miners were renowned for their strength and were much prized by the military authorities. The Domesday Book of 1086 lists TIDESUUELLE as the King's land in the charge of William Peverel with fewer than five households.
Tideswell is now best known for its 14th-century parish church, the Church of St John the Baptist, known as the Cathedral of the Peak, which contains three 15th-century misericords. A sundial lies in the churchyard; it is positioned on steps which local historian Neville T. Sharpe thinks likely to be those of the village's market cross. A market and two-day fair were granted to the village in 1251. The Foljambe family, later the Foljambe baronets, were the principal landowners from the fourteenth to the eighteenth centuries.
The town has a week-long festival near the summer solstice known as the Wakes, culminating in Big Saturday, which includes a torchlight procession through the streets, led by a brass band playing a unique tune called the Tideswell Processional, and townsfolk dancing a traditional weaving dance.
( Tideswell - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Tideswell . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Tideswell - UK
Join us for more :
Norman Tomb with effigies... Cathedral of the Peak, Tideswell, u.k
Circa i320-i400: building interrupted by the Black Death catastrophe... Monks stealing lambs! Eighteen lambs killed within the church precepts, the monks carried off fourteen: were these Druid priests? Pope Innocent iv harshly fined the monks.... Disputes continuing til dissolution of monasteries by Henry viii.. Templar Monks too rich and powerful!
Tideswell 2009
Tideswell village, well dressings and church. The church, St John the Baptist, is often called 'the cathedral of the Peak'.
Peak District - Bakewell, Buxton, Tideswell and Castleton
Last weekend we headed to the wonderful Peak District, Derbyshire and here is part two of our adventures.
Join us for a tour of the Peak District National Park, taking in Bakewell, Buxton, Tideswell and Castleton.
Here are some notes about the area:
The Peak District National Park, Derbyshire was designated in 1951 as the first national park in the British Isles and welcomes an estimated 10 million visitors per year.
Firstly we visited Bakewell and in the video you will see The Rutland Arms, who boast that the famous Bakewell Pudding was first made there. The Bakewell Pudding is a jam pastry with an egg and ground almond enriched filling. Tasty!
Next we stopped at Buxton, a Georgian Spa town famous for its underground geothermal spring that has long been thought to have special, health properties and is now bottled and sold all over the world.
Next we stopped briefly at Tideswell where we show you the fourteenth century parish church, the Church of St John the Baptist, known as the Cathedral of the Peak.
Finally we stop at Castleton, home of the Peak Cavern, known as Devil's Arse and climb the steep hill up to Peveril Castle.
All music used in this video is royalty-free from and incompetech.com
FAQs: All footage was filmed using a Flip Mino and edited with Windows Movie Maker.
Weaseling in Cucklet Church, Eyam
Crawling through a cleft in the rock.
Tideswell Wakes Carnival 2014
Tideswell Carnival saw record number of visitors in 2014.
For more info visit
Tideswell Snow 26-03-13
The commute from Tideswell to Sheffield on the 26th March 2013. Fair play to Derbyshire county council for getting this road cleared following the horrendous snow drifts. This road was not passable 24 hours earlier in anything other than high clearance 4 wheel drives.
Benjamin Britten - A Ceremony of Carols (Op. 28) - George Guest; Marisa Robles; St. John's Cambridge
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This is a re-upload of my 2013 posting of this wonderful recording, here with the missing parts restored, and at 1080p resolution.
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My earlier upload of contained some audio faults, notably a truncated Interlude (during Marisa Robles' harp solo). For this update I used the original CD issue which I imported from the US - the only digital format copy I could find on the planet.
Original version here:
The visuals are the same except for two photo substitutions.
Further details below:
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A Ceremony of Carols Op. 28, is a choral piece by Benjamin Britten, scored for three-part treble chorus, solo treble voices, and harp. The piece was written in 1942 while Britten was at sea, returning to England from the United States.
The piece was written at the same time as Britten's Hymn to St. Cecilia and is stylistically very similar. Originally conceived as a series of unrelated songs, it was later unified into one piece with the framing processional and recessional chant in unison based on the Gregorian antiphon Hodie Christus natus est, heard at the beginning and the end. A harp solo based on the chant, along with a few other motifs from Wolcum Yole, also serves to unify the composition. In addition the movements This Little Babe and Deo Gracias have the choir reflecting harp-like effects by employing a canon at the first in stretto (courtesy of Wikipedia).
Written for Christmas, it consists of eleven movements, with text from The English Galaxy of Shorter Poems, edited by Gerald Bullett; it is in Middle English.
To my ears, this is a marvellous performance under choirmaster and conductor George Guest at St. John's College, Cambridge, recorded in 1965. Marisa Robles' harp playing here is a delight.
Details of images (interspersed with my own photographs of various places in the Derbyshire Peak District National Park, England):
1. The Shrine of St. Ursula - a carved and gilded wooden reliquary containing oil on panel inserts (87x33x91 cm) by Hans Memling (c. 1433 - 1494). Dating to c.1489
2. (at 7:20) Angel Musicians - oil on panel by Hans Memling (c.1433 - 1494). Dating to c.1480s
3. (at 9:40) Choir stall carving (C19) by Advent Hunstone and at 10:13 C15 misericord at the Church of St. John the Baptist, Tideswell, Derbyshire, England.
4. (at 12:11) Images (not by me) from the enthronement in March 2013 at Canterbury Cathedral of Justin Welby, as the 105th Archbishop of Canterbury.
5. (at 14:56) at St. Peter's Basilica, Rome
6. (at 20:22) Adam and Eve (1511) fresco ceiling panel in the Vatican State Apartments - attributed to Raphael (or Raffaello Sanzio) (1483 - 1520)
7. (at 21:34) as 1. above.
INDEX of the Movements:
1. Procession (Hodie Christus natus est, Gregorian antiphon to the Magnificat at Second Vespers of Christmas)
2. 1:28 Wolcum Yole!
3. 2:48 There is no Rose (Trinity College MS 0.3.58, early C15)
4a. 5:22 That yonge child
4b. 7:13 Balulalow (The brothers Wedderburn, fl. 1548)
5. 8:32 As dew in Aprille (Sloane 2593, first quarter C15)
6. 9:37 This little Babe (from Robert Southwell's Newe Heaven, Newe Warre, 1595)
7. 11:00 Interlude (harp solo - Marisa Robles)
8. 15:02 In Freezing Winter Night (Southwell)
9. 19:06 Spring Carol (C16, also set by William Cornysh)
10. 20:22 Deo Gracias (Sloane 2593)
11. 21:33 Recession (Hodie)
Conductor: George Guest
Marisa Robles - Harp
Treble Soloists - John Bennett, Michael Matthews, Michael Turner
St. John's College Choir, Cambridge, England
A Decca (London) Recording (P) 1965
430 097-2
This Is Albion
We're often told that Albion is hard to define, though beautiful - and that our music speaks to people in ways that touch them deeply.
Here is a film that seeks to explain more of what we do. Voices from the choir describe our songs, our technique, our approach...
If you don't know us yet - welcome! If you already did, do share... We hope we can sing for you all in person some time soon.
albionchoir.org.uk
Our sincere thanks to Soundhouse Media, Roger & Martin and everyone at Wirksworth Church (including the Vicar and Churchwardens) & Rotary, and everyone who helped to fund it
St John the Baptists Church Strensham
St John the Baptist's Church is a redundant Anglican church in the village of Strensham, Worcestershire, England. It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade I listed building,[1] and is under the care of the Churches Conservation Trust.[2] Clifton-Taylor includes the church in his list of 'best' English parish churches.[3]
Easter at St Luke's 2011
St Luke's invited its younger members of the congregation to its annual arts activty morning in the Hall on Good Friday. On Easter Sunday, the fruits of the event were revealed to all.
Benjamin Britten - A Ceremony of Carols (Op. 28) - George Guest; Marisa Robles; St. John's Cambridge
UPDATE: there were missing audio sections in this video. I have uploaded a new, fully-intact, recording at higher resolution here:
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I have not deleted this video because I greatly value the comments here, but I hope you enjoy the new, complete, one even more.
A Ceremony of Carols Op. 28, is a choral piece by Benjamin Britten, scored for three-part treble chorus, solo voices, and harp. Written for Christmas, it consists of eleven movements, with text from The English Galaxy of Shorter Poems, edited by Gerald Bullett; it is in Middle English.
To my ears, this is a marvellous performance under choirmaster and conductor George Guest at St. John's College, Cambridge, recorded in 1965. Marisa Robles' harp playing here is a delight.
Details of images (interspersed with my own photographs of various places in the Derbyshire Peak District National Park, England):
1. The Shrine of St. Ursula - a carved and gilded wooden reliquary containing oil on panel inserts (87x33x91 cm) by Hans Memling (c. 1433 - 1494). Dating to c.1489
2. (at 7:20) Angel Musicians - oil on panel by Hans Memling (c.1433 - 1494). Dating to c.1480s
3. (at 9:40) Choir stall carvings by Advent Huntstone at the Church of St. John the Baptist, Tideswell, Derbyshire, England.
4. (at 12:11) Images (not by me) from the enthronement in March 2013 at Canterbury Cathedral of Justin Welby, as the 105th Archbishop of Canterbury.
5. (at 14:27) at St. Peter's Basilica, Rome
6. (at 19:47) Adam and Eve (1511) fresco ceiling panel in the Vatican State Apartments - attributed to Raphael (or Raffaello Sanzio) (1483 - 1520)
7. (at 20:59) as 1. above.
Movements:
1. Procession (Hodie Christus natus est, Gregorian antiphon to the Magnificat at Second Vespers of Christmas)
2. Wolcum Yole!
3. There is no Rose (Trinity College MS 0.3.58, early 15c)
4a. That yonge child
4b. Balulalow (The brothers Wedderburn, fl. 1548)
5. As dew in Aprille (Sloane 2593, first quarter 15c)
6. This little Babe (from Robert Southwell's Newe Heaven, Newe Warre, 1595)
7. Interlude (harp solo)
8. In Freezing Winter Night (Southwell)
9. Spring Carol (16c., also set by William Cornysh)
10. Deo Gracias (Sloane 2593)
11. Recession (Hodie)
My apologies for a couple of small audio snafus (in the download I purchased) but I hope they do not detract too much.
Conductor: George Guest
Marisa Robles - Harp
Soloist, Treble Vocals -- John Bennett (7), Michael Matthews (3), Michael Turner (9)
St. John's College Choir, Cambridge, England
A Decca (London) Recording (P) 1965
Your Dronfield - St Johns Church, High Street, Dronfield, Derbyshire
St. John the Baptist Church of England Parish Church, Dronfield, dates from the 12th century and is at the heart of the town.
The Awakening (live with Albion choir)
Filmed live at Upper Chapel with Albion albionchoir.org.uk December 21st, 2012
The Awakening is taken from our self-titled debut album. You can buy it on CD or 12 heavy-weight white vinyl from each format comes with 3D glasses (old-school, like)
Filmed by Georgia Ball and Kate Nicholson
Edited by Georgia Ball
Rev. Patrick Adetuwo Funeral
#cannonstreet #cannonstreetmemorialbaptistchurch #patrick #patrickadetuwo #birmingham
A special Christmas message from Albion...
MERRY CHRISTMAS FROM US ALL!!
-- solos: Martha Hayward and Jennifer Atkinson
-- arranged: Fraser Wilson
-- Filmed by Georgia Ball: linkedin.com/pub/georgia-ball/3b/5a7/64a
at Holy Trinity Church, Sheffield. holytrinitymillhouses.co.uk
-- albionchoir.org.uk
Songs of Praise, My Favourite Hymn | BBC One (28.10.2018)
Songs of Praise, My Favourite Hymn | BBC One (28.10.2018)
Katherine Jenkins introduces a feast of favourite hymns as the Songs of Praise presenters and the archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, reveal the hymns and worship songs that mean the most to them. The archbishop explains that his favourite has always remained close to his heart because it was the first hymn he sang after experiencing the love of God for himself and becoming a Christian.
Katherine explores the beautiful surroundings of the Royal Hospital Chelsea, home of the famous Chelsea Pensioners and designed by Sir Christopher Wren. She is shown around Wren's chapel in the heart of the community and meets a Chelsea Pensioner who is a regular in the congregation.
Chart-topping British country duo The Shires chat to Claire McCollum about growing up singing in churches and choirs and perform an exclusive version of their favourite hymn, Jerusalem.
Music:
How Great Thou Art from Holy Trinity Platt, Manchester
Lead Us Heavenly Father Lead Us from St Michael's Church, Southampton
And Can It Be from St Pol de Leon, Penzance
Heart of Worship by Philippa Hanna from St Thomas the Martyr's Church, Newcastle
Here Is Love, Vast as the Ocean from Our Lady's Church, York
Brother, Sister Let Me Serve You from St Elisabeth's Church, Reddish Jerusalem
The Lord's My Shepherd from St John the Baptist, Tideswell
Dear Lord and Father of Mankind from Christ Church, Port Sunlight.
Stories
Rev Steven Brookes and Chelsea Pensioner Tony Hunter
Katherine Jenkins explores the beautiful Chapel in the heart of the Royal Hospital Chelsea and meets Reverend Steven Brookes who talks her through the painting in the ceiling. The painting is of the resurrection of Jesus Christ on Easter morning by Sebastiano Ricci and paid for by Queen Anne. We also hear about the original purpose of the Royal Hospital.
Katherine Jenkins meets with Chelsea Pensioner Tony Hunter in the Chapel of the Royal Hospital Chelsea. Tony explains what you have to do to qualify as a Chelsea Pensioner, the scarlets they wear on ceremonial occasions and what the chapel means to Tony. We also hear of Tony’s favourite hymn and why he likes it which is Lead Us Heavenly Father, Lead Us.
Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby
Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby briefly explains why Charles Wesley’s AND CAN IT BE is his favourite hymn, explaining that it was the first hymn he sang after discovering the love of God for himself
Country Duo, The Shires
Claire McCollum meets with chart-topping British Country Duo The Shires about growing up singing in churches and choirs. Ben shares how much a part of his life music has been and Crissie talks to us about why they sing country music and reflects on her gospel choir days. The Shires and Crissie’s old choir (ACM) perform an exclusive version of their favourite hymn, Jerusalem.
Presenters' Favourite Hymns
Throughout the show the presenters share their favourite hymns and give us their reasons why.
Credits
Role Contributor
Presenter Katherine Jenkins
Presenter Claire McCollum
Executive Producer Cat Lewis
Executive Producer Emyr Afan
Producer David Waters
Series Producer Matthew Napier
Production Company Avanti Media
2009 Derby Cathedral
Derby Cathedral bell ringers win the 2009 Horsley Cup (the 6 bell striking competition).
Jerusalem in Wells in Jerusalem in...
The choral group ALBION sings their version of the classic English song 'Jerusalem' - arranged by Fraser Wilson - in the Cloisters of Wells Cathedral, UK, which date from 1480 and earlier. Quite an amazing experience!
copies can be purchased from
Tom Lutter Funeral
The funeral service of Thomas Lutter of the American Air Force service based in England. Ceremony held at Banbury Crematorium Oxfordshire. Video JSPV. because of the music played going into and out of the crematorium this may be restricted in certain countries