St Cwyfan’s Church (known in Welsh as Eglwys Cwyfan) is a 12th-century church on a tidal island named Cribinau, near ...
Trewrach Cottage pet friendly self catering holiday cottage in Dinas Cross, Pembrokeshire, sleeping 4 people, from £407 per ...
2 Sunny Hill in Porthgain, Pembrokeshire, sleeps four guests in two bedrooms. 2 Sunny Hill has a kitchen with an electric oven and hob, microwave, dishwasher, a utility with fridge/freezer, washing ...
Sea Pickle Cottage pet friendly self catering holiday cottage in Llangwm, Pembrokeshire, sleeping 4 people, from £289 per ...
Llys-Yr-Onnen self catering holiday cottage in Carmarthen, Carmarthenshire, sleeping 4 people, from £278 per week. Part of the Britain Express travel guide to Dyfed.
Solace Lodge in Stalham, Norfolk, can sleep four guests in two bedrooms. The living areas in this reverse-level property consist of a first-floor open-plan living space with kitchen, dining area and ...
Clarence Riverside, Royal William Yard rests in Plymouth, Devon, sleeping four in two bedrooms. The living areas in the property consist of a first-floor kitchen with oven, ceramic hob, microwave, ...
Tea, that most quintessential of English drinks, is a relative latecomer to British shores. Although the custom of drinking tea dates back to the third millennium BC in China, it was not until the mid ...
Ramsey Cottage in St Ishmael's can sleep six people in three bedrooms. The open-plan living areas include a kitchen housing an electric oven and ceramic hob, microwave, fridge, dishwasher, a dining ...
The Fairy Bridge is an early 19th-century single-arched stone bridge that once carried the Waternish Peninsula road across a tributary of the Bay River, north of Dunvegan. The bridge stands at a site ...
An acte restoring to the crown the ancient jurisdiction over the state ecclesiastical and spiritual and abolishing all foreign power repugnant to the same. Most humbly beseech your most excellent ...
Our look at the lives of people in the fields of art, architecture, science, and literature throughout British history. From Geoffrey Chaucer to William Morris, Christopher Wren to Isaac Newton.