Church Farm Stow Bardolph | Rare Breeds Centre
A day out with with our little girl and our friends at Church Farm Stow Bardolph Rare Breeds Centre in Norfolk. We loved this place!
A Day At Rare Breeds Centre | VLOGUST Day 17 | Serena Christina
VLOGUST Day Seventeen - We spend it at the Rare Breeds Centre in Ashford, Kent.
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Exploring Norfolk | ohhitsonlyalice
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Weird Norfolk: The haunted goat's head of Strumpshaw
For almost 200 years, The Goat Inn was an integral part of village life in Strumpshaw, a bustling local whose name was a nod to its rural location rather than the haunted head of a goat which for decades refused to leave the pub where it was slaughtered.
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temple newsam farm part 1
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Harvest Farm Fall Festival - Pig Races
Come to Harvest Farm Fall Festival and cheer on your favorite pig - at the Pig Races!!
Harvest Farm Fall Festival is a great event for the whole family. Open weekends in October, with lots and lots of activities....HarvestFarm.net
Harvest Farm is a Denver Rescue Mission outreach focused on changing lives. There are 72 men working and living on the farm who are in the New Life Program - a rehabilitation program.
13. A Polarizing Society, 1560-1640
Early Modern England: Politics, Religion, and Society under the Tudors and Stuarts (HIST 251)
Professor Wrightson reviews the consequences of the economic and population changes discussed in the last lecture. While economic shifts allowed some members of English society, especially members of the gentry and the land-holding classes, to increase their wealth, they also (coupled with an expanding population and price inflation) resulted in the growth of poverty and vagrancy. Professor Wrightson discusses the relative wealth and economic pressures faced by various segments of the early modern population (providing specific examples) and suggests that, while society was becoming increasingly polarized between the poor and the wealthy, there was also a third group, the 'middling sort,' who were expanding in numbers and influence. Professor Wrightson concludes by touching on the rising levels of poverty in the period and government responses to it (culminating in the passage of the Poor Laws), as well as very real human element in these larger social and economic processes.
00:00 - Chapter 1. Effects of Economic Expansion on the Nobility and Gentry
06:47 - Chapter 2. The Tenantry
16:06 - Chapter 3. Trade
23:02 - Chapter 4. Social Polarization
37:24 - Chapter 5. Further Developments
Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website:
This course was recorded in Fall 2009.
14 The Boar's Head Tavern by Washington Irving, unabridged audiobook
Genre(s): Horror & Supernatural Fiction, Travel Fiction, General Fiction, Romance, Short Stories
The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent.
Washington IRVING (1783 - 1859)
The Sketch Book was first published in seven numbers/installments in the United States before being published in two volumes in London (1819-1820). The generally enthusiastic reception of Irving's sketches in England was unusual, since at the time British opinion of American literature was pretty low. Irving's sketches were formally innovative and successful--he is credited by literary historians as being the first American author to make a living as a professional author. In particular, as Irving explicitly makes reference to in a short essay concluding the second volume of the London edition, his intent was to create pieces that didn't necessarily hang together as a whole, but which were heterogeneous in nature. Irving's logic was that his miscellany was written for different humours and that his end was that it should contain something to suit each reader.
Apart from Rip Van Winkle and The Legend of Sleepy Hollow - the pieces which made both Irving and The Sketch Book famous - other tales include Roscoe, The Broken Heart, The Art of Book-making, A Royal Poet, The Spectre Bridegroom, Westminster Abbey, Little Britain, and John Bull. His stories were highly influenced by German folktales, with The Legend of Sleepy Hollow being inspired by a folktale recorded by Karl Musäus. Stories range from the maudlin (such as The Wife and The Widow and Her Son) to the picaresque (Little Britain) and the comical (The Mutability of Literature), but the common thread running through The Sketch Book - and a key part of its attraction to readers - is the personality of Irving's pseudonymous narrator, Geoffrey Crayon. Erudite, charming, and never one to make himself more interesting than his tales, Crayon holds The Sketch Book together through the sheer power of his personality - and Irving would, for the rest of his life, seamlessly enmesh Crayon's persona with his own public reputation. (Introduction by Wikipedia)
Washington Irving Playlist
00 - Preface - Easton
01 - The Author's Account of Himself - Bob Gonzalez
02 - The Voyage - Delmar H Dolbier
03 - Roscoe - Kristin Gjerløw
04 - The Wife - Kristin Gjerløw
05 - Rip Van Winkle - Bob Neufeld
06 - English Writers on America - Pamela Krantz
07 - Rural Life in England - Jean Bascom
08 - The Broken Heart - Mike Pelton
09 - The Art of Book-making - elfpen
10 - A Royal Poet - David Wales
11 - The Country Church - David Wales
12 - The Widow and her Son - NoelBadrian
13 - A Sunday in London - Bob Gonzalez
14 - The Boar's Head Tavern - ToddHW
15 - The Mutability of Literature - Grant Hurlock
16 - Rural Funerals - David Wales
17 - The Inn Kitchen - Bob Gonzalez
18 - The Spectre Bridegroom - Chiquito Crasto
19 - Westminster Abbey - David Wales
20 - Christmas - Easton
21 - The Stage-Coach - Anna Simon
22 - Christmas Eve - Easton Kristen McQuillin
23 - Christmas Day - David Wales
24 - The Christmas Dinner - David Wales
25 - London Antiques - Patti Cunningham
26 - Little Britain - David Wales
27 - Stratford-on-Avon - Pamela Krantz
28 - Traits of Indian Character - Anna Simon
29 - Philip of Pokanoket - L D Hamilton
30 - John Bull - Anna Simon
31 - The Pride of the Village - vikvenom
32 - The Angler - elfpen
33 - The Legend of Sleepy Hollow - Phil Chenevert
34 - L'Envoy - Easton
Audio Recording © courtesy of Librivox
This video: © Copyright 2013. PublicAudioLibrary. All Rights Reserved.