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Pills kickin in - off for a coupla hours sleep
start afresh in the morning !:)
Hey !! that's close enough - thanks ! :)
Is it a stamp ?
england ?
https://teakdoor.com/Gallery/albums/u...10/new_one.jpg
I'm old. A bit visual challenged as is the PC thing to say.Quote:
Originally Posted by Happyman
So for me the pic could be anything from a nuclear reactor to a corn silo.;)
England it is
Norman?
14th C
Northumbria?
NOPE :)
come south
hertfordshire?
Getting closer - home counties
kent?
wrong side of the river :)
Essex?
Go West young man - go West !!!
was thinking Bucks
county indeed begins with a B :)
And its not Biddlesex ! :smileylaughing:
The 'Tunes' advert sprang to mind then !
Berks
Chaucer's son's pad?
Donnington
:party43:Thats the one ! Well done
Donnington Castle is a small, late 14th century stone fortified courtyard house, founded by Richard Abberbury the elder. Semi-rectangular in plan and flanked by four small round angle towers and two square interval towers, its east gate was protected by a portcullis but the D-shaped west end lacked protection. Built in two stages, in 1386 King Richard II granted Sir Richard a licence to build a castle in his own soil, at Donyngton. Added to the east gate, is a large three storey rectangular gatehouse, flanked by two, four storey drum towers and a barbican with a drawbridge that crossed the ditch to the fore. During the Civil War, King Charles I entrusted the castle to Colonel John Boys and he encased the house with extensive earthworks, flanked by huge star-shaped projections. In 1644 the besieging Parliamentarians began a half-hearted bombardment, which was vigorously defended until the war drew to a close and they were pulled back to Oxford. Crowning the steep-sided spur, the gatehouse with some repairs in brick, remains almost complete and the Civil War earthworks remain for the most part as scarps. Sadly because most of the buildings around the cobbled central courtyard were probably timber-framed, only the lower courses of the external walls remain.
Google Earth
51 25 10 68 N
1 20 18 19 W
A good view of the plan
cheers Happyman