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Knock Iveagh: A personal narrative on a changing landscape

Posted on
20th February 202220th February 2022

By Claire Nolan The site of a prehistoric round cairn and reputedly the pre-Christian inauguration site of the Kings of Uíbh Eachach Cobha, Knock Iveagh in County Down, Northern Ireland,…Read More >

Knock Iveagh: A personal narrative on a changing landscape

The Historic Landscape – Friend or Foe?

Posted on
10th January 202211th January 2022

By Claire Nolan Despite a long and persistent tradition of landscape romanticism in Britain, previous critical studies of the ‘rural idyll’ [1][2] have clearly demonstrated that the countryside does not…Read More >

The Historic Landscape – Friend or Foe?

Cynddylan at the tipping point

Posted on
8th November 20218th November 2021

By Paul Brassley The intensity of a poem invites us to explore its implications. In this blog I argue that a short poem written nearly seventy years ago predicted many…Read More >

Cynddylan at the tipping point

Naming places: how children make the world their own

Posted on
31st January 20218th March 2021

By Jeremy Burchardt Place-name (toponym) research has a long and distinguished tradition in English historical scholarship, associated with the work of luminaries such as Margaret Gelling, Harry Thorpe and the…Read More >

Naming places: how children make the world their own

Technologies of Division

Posted on
24th November 2020

By Paul Brassley ‘Ah luuurrve the smell of napalm in the morning’ says one of the less attractive characters (are there any attractive ones?) in the film Apocalypse Now (Francis…Read More >

Technologies of Division

Wartime narratives of the English landscape: rurality and national identity in Went the Day Well (1942)

Posted on
2nd November 2020

By Jeremy Burchardt Films offer distinctive and in some respects unique opportunities for representing landscape and, as scholars such as David Lowenthal, David Matless and Paul Readman have amply demonstrated,…Read More >

Wartime narratives of the English landscape: rurality and national identity in Went the Day Well (1942)

‘A visit to the countryside is always accompanied by a feeling of unease; dread.’

Posted on
22nd October 2020

By Lottie Jacob and Jeremy Burchardt The countryside has long been a place intrinsic to the British national identity, from the Romantic movement through to the present day. And yet,…Read More >

‘A visit to the countryside is always accompanied by a feeling of unease; dread.’

Walking back through time: a landscape history of pathways

Posted on
21st September 202022nd October 2020

By Dr Eddie Procter For a while now I have been contemplating researching a comprehensive landscape history of paths, or at least the pathways of Britain. Paths, such an intrinsic…Read More >

Walking back through time: a landscape history of pathways

Pandemic landscapes – follow-up

Posted on
27th July 202027th July 2020

By Paul Readman It has become a truism to say that for many people, the experience of coronavirus has blurred the boundaries between work and home. My work moved indoors,…Read More >

Pandemic landscapes – follow-up

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