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A vision of Britain through time... Search by placename to view statistics, maps, writings and more. Enter a full postcode or a place name (just a name, NO county) in the search box to access all our content for a place
21 ott 1989 · Charles III. 3.69. 58 ratings6 reviews. Makes a personal plea for urban development that preserves the unique character and tradition of towns and cities, arguing that architecture serves the aesthetic and practical needs of the average citizen. Genres Architecture Art British Literature Nonfiction Politics. 160 pages, Hardcover.
A Vision of Britain: A Personal View of Architecture. Charles (Prince of Wales) Doubleday, 1989 - Architecture - 160 pages. Prince Charles stresses the need to preserve the unique character of towns and cities, the desirability of reviewing existing planning laws, and the importance of providing architecture on a human scale.
Expert Search. Our home page allows simple searching by placename and postcode. Here you can widen searches by using wild-cards or looking for sound-alikes , and narrow searches by specifying the county or nation . You can directly search for administrative units or for descriptions from historical gazetteers:
A vision of Britain from 1801 to now. Including maps, statistical trends and historical descriptions. Help using this website
A Vision of Britain Through Time (hereafter Vision of Britain) is a web-based portal of the GBH-GIS Project. It is important to be clear that this portal is not a GIS in itself; rather, the GBH-GIS is what runs underneath it.
In 1870-72, John Marius Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales described Morchard Bishop like this: BISHOP-MORCHARD, or Morchard-Bishop, a village, a parish, and a subdistrict, in Crediton district, Devon. The village stands 2¼ miles ENE of a station on the North Devon railway, called Morchard Road, and 6½ miles NW of Crediton; and ...