m (RAF North Witham)
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File:Grantham-25Jan20-11.jpg|The same outside, with a complete series of gargoyles.
 
File:Grantham-25Jan20-11.jpg|The same outside, with a complete series of gargoyles.
 
File:Grantham-25Jan20-12.jpg|Side view of the church. Each black spot is a gargoyle.
 
File:Grantham-25Jan20-12.jpg|Side view of the church. Each black spot is a gargoyle.
File:Grantham-25Jan20-13.jpg|Julia in the courtyard.
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File:Grantham-25Jan20-13.jpg|Julia in the graveyard.
 
File:Grantham-25Jan20-14.jpg|In the Hall court of this schoold, Sir [[Isaac Newton]] was taught.
 
File:Grantham-25Jan20-14.jpg|In the Hall court of this schoold, Sir [[Isaac Newton]] was taught.
 
File:Grantham-25Jan20-15.jpg|Grantham's street, by night.
 
File:Grantham-25Jan20-15.jpg|Grantham's street, by night.
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== Woolsthorpe Manor ==
 
== Woolsthorpe Manor ==
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<center><wz tip="Newton's tree being enclosed, Julia turned her attention to its more interesting neighbours.">[[File:Woolsthorpe-26Jan20-6.jpg|650px]]</wz></center>
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<gallery perrow=3 widths=200px>
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File:Woolsthorpe-26Jan20-3.jpg|The manor. The top right window is Newton's office (and bedroom).
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File:Woolsthorpe-26Jan20-1.jpg|Whoolstorpe is a little farm complex.
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File:Woolsthorpe-26Jan20-5.jpg|The highlight is understandably the tree...
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File:Woolsthorpe-26Jan20-2.jpg|which is itself falling under the weight of gravity.
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File:Woolsthorpe-26Jan20-8.jpg|A great source of inspiration for everybody, so it seems.
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File:Woolsthorpe-26Jan20-9.jpg|To what hangs a scientific revolution!
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File:Woolsthorpe-26Jan20-12.jpg|Believed to have been carved by Newton as a child.
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File:Woolsthorpe-26Jan20-14.jpg|Newton's desk...
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File:Woolsthorpe-26Jan20-15.jpg|and bed.
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File:Woolsthorpe-26Jan20-16.jpg|Discussing another assumed Newton's carving, this time, Wulfrum church in [[Grantham]].
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File:Woolsthorpe-26Jan20-13.jpg|Julia's input with a drawing of Newton carving the circle (so she followed the guide).
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File:Woolsthorpe-26Jan20-20.jpg|In the church was Newton was baptized.
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File:Woolsthorpe-26Jan20-19.jpg|Another carving from Newton, this time in Whoolstorpe village.
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File:Woolsthorpe-26Jan20-21.jpg|You have to know where to find it (behind the organ!)
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File:Woolsthorpe-26Jan20-22.jpg|Befitting gargoyle to Newton's mischievous mind?
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</gallery>

Revision as of 23:10, 22 February 2020

Contents

Ashby de la Zouche, Breedon, Grantham & Woolsthorpe Manor

Ashby de la Zouche

Ashby de la Zouche is a town in Leicestershire, peculiar for its fancy name of Britanny origin (Le Zouch) and significant for its castle, which was made famous by Walter Scott's Ivanhoe where a tournament is held in Ashby. It was destroyed during the English civil war. The Loudoun monument is another curiosity both in shape and in denomination.

AshbyDeLaZouche-24Jan20-10.jpg

The first stop on our 5th campervanning trip, we hadn't planned to stop there but drifted here as a result of an error in exiting the highway. The first night was spent in a nearby pub's parking. Ashby was a destination that was on our list anyway. We decided to re-join the English heritage charity on this occasion. Our short stay (~2h45) mainly covered the castle & the church with a loop passing by Our Lady of Lourdes and back from Market street (see trajectory)Screenshot 22-02-2020 193557.jpg.

Breedon on the Hill

Breedon on the Hill is a must-go destination in England, a village of very old origin, it hosts the wonderful Church of St Mary and St Hardulph on top of its hill, that hosts itself a large body of extremely rare and valuable Anglo-Saxon art, possibly the oldest in the country, also including the longest frieze of this era.

Breedon-25Jan20-1.jpg

It also features an unsettling skeleton sculpture, which has been unusual since the time it was put there, at the demand of George Shirley who set up this monument to grieve the loss in childbirth of his wife (Francesca) for whom he wrote this beautiful plea:

Death, which untimely tore thee from my bed
And robbed my home,
Shall one day give me back with thee to wed
In this thy tomb.

Grantham

Grantham is a town in England, famous for its association to Newton (many things are named after him), also being the birthplace of Margaret Thatcher as well as the first UK diesel engine.

Grantham-25Jan20-2.jpg

It was on our list of places to go for the Angel & Royal hotel, which has been in operation since 1203, making it one of the oldest hotels in the world. It is also known to have hosted a large number of royals in the past. At the occasion of this visit, however, although we ate in town (at the Japanese where I had authentic Wagu steak) we did not enter the place itself, focusing instead on Wulfram's church.

RAF North Witham

In Twyford wood, the American Station 479 was hiding warplane runways, from which, on 5 June (1944) at precisely 21.54, 20 aircraft departed to launch the invasion of Normandy. Their mission was to position radio-signaling beacons behind enemy lines to guide the main invasion aircraft.

Woolsthorpe Manor

Woolsthorpe-26Jan20-6.jpg