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NORTH EAST MPS
A list of MPs and constituencies in North East England including the political parties they represent and links to their official parliamentary contact pages. FAMOUS PEOPLE FROM THE NORTH EAST ‘A’ Æthelfrith was the grandson of King Ida (see also) whose kingdom of Bernicia was based in North East England. Æthelfrith’s capital was Din Guarie, a coastal fortress that was renamed Bebbanburgh meaning Bebba’s fort and now called Bamburgh. It was named from Æthelfrith’s wife, Queen Bebba. Æthelfrith seized control of therival
COAL MINING AND RAILWAY HISTORY Coal roads to steam railways. With the birth of the Newcastle Roads, the North East of England can easily claim to be the cradle of railways, but coal mining in the region also drove on the development of steam locomotives and the great railway age of steam. The greatest railway pioneers William Hedley, Timothy Hackworth, Edward Pease and THE KINGDOM OF NORTHUMBRIA King Aldfrith. On May 20 685, King Ecgfrith of Northumbria was killed fighting Brude, King of Caledonia. It symbolised an end to the period of Northumbrian expansion. One result of the defeat was the abandonment of yet another Northumbrian bishopric at Abercorn nearEdinburgh.
JARROW AND TYNE DOCK HISTORY Serving the industries of Tyne Dock was a local town and community that was also known as Tyne Dock that grew up on the dock’s eastern side. Today, Tyne Dock is best-known as the birthplace of the novelist Catherine Cookson who was born Catherine McMullen at Number 5 THE ROMAN CONQUEST OF THE NORTH North East England AD 43-121. For thousands of years people had explored and settled the region long before the Romans made their mark. When the Romans arrived, they found Britain was a land of tribes and hill forts. Much of the North and North-East was part of the territory of the Brigantes, a tribe led by a woman called Cartimandua.NORTH EAST GEOLOGY
The influence upon the landscape and history of North East England is apparent in so many ways. Many of the major themes of our history: industrial; border history; maritime links and several of the region’s most visually spectacular heritage sites have all been shaped by our region’s geological legacy. Hadrian’s Wall on theGreat Whin Sill.
DUNHOLM : THE BIRTH OF DURHAM Dunholm : The Birth of Durham 990 to 1031. The rising power of Wessex weakened the North of England in the last decade of the first millennium and left the region vulnerable to the attacks of Danes and Scots. The Community of St Cuthbert at Chester-le-Street, a remnant of Northumbria’s greater days, fled to Ripon in 995 to escape one suchraid.
DURHAM CATHEDRAL AND YORK MINSTER Two Great Cathedrals : A comparison of Durham Cathedral and York Minster. York Minster and Durham Cathedral are historically and architecturally two of the most important cathedrals in Europe. They were the only cathedrals in the North East and Yorkshire regions until Ripon’s Minster and Newcastle’s church of St Nicholas became cathedrals in 1836 and 1 882. HEBBURN AND MONKTON HISTORY Early spellings of the name Hebburn suggest that the name is Anglo-Saxon and that it meant the ‘high tumulus’ though where that tumulus was located is uncertain. Later, Hebburn was part of the land belonging to the Norman monastery at Jarrow and later still it belonged to the Willys and the Baxters. By 1562 it was the property ofRichard
NORTH EAST MPS
A list of MPs and constituencies in North East England including the political parties they represent and links to their official parliamentary contact pages. FAMOUS PEOPLE FROM THE NORTH EAST ‘A’ Æthelfrith was the grandson of King Ida (see also) whose kingdom of Bernicia was based in North East England. Æthelfrith’s capital was Din Guarie, a coastal fortress that was renamed Bebbanburgh meaning Bebba’s fort and now called Bamburgh. It was named from Æthelfrith’s wife, Queen Bebba. Æthelfrith seized control of therival
COAL MINING AND RAILWAY HISTORY Coal roads to steam railways. With the birth of the Newcastle Roads, the North East of England can easily claim to be the cradle of railways, but coal mining in the region also drove on the development of steam locomotives and the great railway age of steam. The greatest railway pioneers William Hedley, Timothy Hackworth, Edward Pease and THE KINGDOM OF NORTHUMBRIA King Aldfrith. On May 20 685, King Ecgfrith of Northumbria was killed fighting Brude, King of Caledonia. It symbolised an end to the period of Northumbrian expansion. One result of the defeat was the abandonment of yet another Northumbrian bishopric at Abercorn nearEdinburgh.
JARROW AND TYNE DOCK HISTORY Serving the industries of Tyne Dock was a local town and community that was also known as Tyne Dock that grew up on the dock’s eastern side. Today, Tyne Dock is best-known as the birthplace of the novelist Catherine Cookson who was born Catherine McMullen at Number 5 THE ROMAN CONQUEST OF THE NORTH North East England AD 43-121. For thousands of years people had explored and settled the region long before the Romans made their mark. When the Romans arrived, they found Britain was a land of tribes and hill forts. Much of the North and North-East was part of the territory of the Brigantes, a tribe led by a woman called Cartimandua.NORTH EAST GEOLOGY
The influence upon the landscape and history of North East England is apparent in so many ways. Many of the major themes of our history: industrial; border history; maritime links and several of the region’s most visually spectacular heritage sites have all been shaped by our region’s geological legacy. Hadrian’s Wall on theGreat Whin Sill.
DUNHOLM : THE BIRTH OF DURHAM Dunholm : The Birth of Durham 990 to 1031. The rising power of Wessex weakened the North of England in the last decade of the first millennium and left the region vulnerable to the attacks of Danes and Scots. The Community of St Cuthbert at Chester-le-Street, a remnant of Northumbria’s greater days, fled to Ripon in 995 to escape one suchraid.
DURHAM CATHEDRAL AND YORK MINSTER Two Great Cathedrals : A comparison of Durham Cathedral and York Minster. York Minster and Durham Cathedral are historically and architecturally two of the most important cathedrals in Europe. They were the only cathedrals in the North East and Yorkshire regions until Ripon’s Minster and Newcastle’s church of St Nicholas became cathedrals in 1836 and 1 882. HEBBURN AND MONKTON HISTORY Early spellings of the name Hebburn suggest that the name is Anglo-Saxon and that it meant the ‘high tumulus’ though where that tumulus was located is uncertain. Later, Hebburn was part of the land belonging to the Norman monastery at Jarrow and later still it belonged to the Willys and the Baxters. By 1562 it was the property ofRichard
TWENTY NORTH EAST VILLAGES Twenty North East villages. DAVID SIMPSON explores twenty different villages across the region including some hidden away inside our North East towns. There are hundreds of fascinating and often beautiful villages of all kinds, scattered around the North East THE KINGDOM OF NORTHUMBRIA Kingdom of Northumbria 450AD-866AD. See also Northumbria in the Viking era 866-1066AD. Romans depart. For three and a half centuries Britain was under Roman rule. The Romans built roads, towns, forts and temples, bringing with them soldiers and cultures from across Europe. THE ROMAN CONQUEST OF THE NORTH North East England AD 43-121. For thousands of years people had explored and settled the region long before the Romans made their mark. When the Romans arrived, they found Britain was a land of tribes and hill forts. Much of the North and North-East was part of the territory of the Brigantes, a tribe led by a woman called Cartimandua. NORTH EAST ENGLAND 1901-1919 North East England 1901-1919. The industrial importance of the region was no more apparent than during the First World War, when military engineering and expertise greatly assisted the war effort. Coastal towns of the region were bombed by German battleships while far away in Europe many North East soldiers lost their lives.NORTH EAST COUNCILS
Links to the websites of local councils in North East England including the Councils of Durham; Northumberland and the City of Newcastle upon Tyne. CASTLES OF NORTH EAST ENGLAND Castles of the Coast. Tynemouth Castle is one of four splendid castles to adorn the North East coast between the Tyne and the Tweed. It stands high above the mouth of the Tyne and forms a splendid backdrop to the neighbouring sands of King Edward’s Bay. In a similar way to Durham Cathedral being enclosed within Durham Castle, the castle at HISTORY OF MIDDLESBROUGH The Birth of Middlesbrough ‘Mydilsburgh’ is the earliest recorded form of Middlesbrough’s name and dates to Saxon times. ‘Burgh’ refers to an ancient settlement, or perhaps a fort of pre-Saxon origin which may have been situated on slightly elevated land close to theTees.
THE BORDER REIVERS
Lawless Clans. Border history may well have been dominated by the political struggle between England and Scotland, but it would be wrong to assume that the story of the Borderland was always a saga of Englishman against Scot and vice versa. In Tudor and Elizabethan times the Anglo-Scottish Border counties, including Northumberland, were the home to the notorious Border Reivers, the lawless SUNDERLAND ‘OLD SUNDERLAND’ HISTORY Sundered Land. Of the three main places that came together to make up Sunderland (namely Monkwearmouth, Bishopwearmouth and Sunderland) it seems that Sunderland was, in the early stages, the least important.In truth, the present city centre of Sunderland was historically called Bishopwearmouth and was initially separate from Sunderland. The real Sunderland was a place further NORTH EAST HISTORY QUIZ NUMBER 1 John Miles, composer of the song ‘Music was my first love’ was born in which North East town in 1949? 12. Name the Monkseaton-born TV writer noted for Porridge, Auf Wiedersehen Pet, The Likely Lads and Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads? FAMOUS PEOPLE FROM THE NORTH EAST ‘A’ Æthelfrith was the grandson of King Ida (see also) whose kingdom of Bernicia was based in North East England. Æthelfrith’s capital was Din Guarie, a coastal fortress that was renamed Bebbanburgh meaning Bebba’s fort and now called Bamburgh. It was named from Æthelfrith’s wife, Queen Bebba. Æthelfrith seized control of therival
GEORDIE DICTIONARY A-B Poster print featuring a selection of mostly ‘Geordie’ dialect words and phrases from the North East of England. Fun to read and ‘larn’ the words even if ye divvent knaa hoo te’ taak Geordie reet. Mebbees ye’ll larn te taak proppa like, ye nivvor knaa. Printed on luxury 250 gsm silk . CASTLES OF NORTH EAST ENGLAND Castles of the Coast. Tynemouth Castle is one of four splendid castles to adorn the North East coast between the Tyne and the Tweed. It stands high above the mouth of the Tyne and forms a splendid backdrop to the neighbouring sands of King Edward’s Bay. In a similar way to Durham Cathedral being enclosed within Durham Castle, the castle at THE ROMAN CONQUEST OF THE NORTH North East England AD 43-121. For thousands of years people had explored and settled the region long before the Romans made their mark. When the Romans arrived, they found Britain was a land of tribes and hill forts. Much of the North and North-East was part of the territory of the Brigantes, a tribe led by a woman called Cartimandua.NORTH EAST SURNAMES
North East England surnames : Origins and meaning ARMSTRONG SURNAME. Border Reiver family. The name Armstrong, so numerous in the north of England is found throughout the English speaking world and will be forever famous as the surname of the first man on the moon. THE IRON INDUSTRY 1840 -1878 Age of the iron industry in the North East : 1840 to 1878. Small scale iron-making had been important since ancient times and was mined in the dales from at least the 12th Century in simple blast furnaces called bloomeries. It was smelted at Stanhope and later at Tow Law and Tudhoe and often found in mineral veins associated with lead mines. COAL MINING AND RAILWAY HISTORY Coal roads to steam railways. With the birth of the Newcastle Roads, the North East of England can easily claim to be the cradle of railways, but coal mining in the region also drove on the development of steam locomotives and the great railway age of steam. The greatest railway pioneers William Hedley, Timothy Hackworth, Edward Pease andTHE BORDER REIVERS
Lawless Clans. Border history may well have been dominated by the political struggle between England and Scotland, but it would be wrong to assume that the story of the Borderland was always a saga of Englishman against Scot and vice versa. In Tudor and Elizabethan times the Anglo-Scottish Border counties, including Northumberland, were the home to the notorious Border Reivers, the lawless TWENTY NORTH EAST VILLAGES Twenty North East villages. DAVID SIMPSON explores twenty different villages across the region including some hidden away inside our North East towns. There are hundreds of fascinating and often beautiful villages of all kinds, scattered around the North East of England from the Tweed to the Tees Valley. Most people live in the cities and townsWAHINGTON HISTORY
Lambton is named from the local family and place-name. Washington, Rickleton, Fatfield, Mount Pleasant, Harraton, Biddick and Barmston are all named from earlier places or villages, some of which had collieries with which they shared their names. Sulgrave and Barmston make up the eastern edge of the town of Washington. FAMOUS PEOPLE FROM THE NORTH EAST ‘A’ Æthelfrith was the grandson of King Ida (see also) whose kingdom of Bernicia was based in North East England. Æthelfrith’s capital was Din Guarie, a coastal fortress that was renamed Bebbanburgh meaning Bebba’s fort and now called Bamburgh. It was named from Æthelfrith’s wife, Queen Bebba. Æthelfrith seized control of therival
GEORDIE DICTIONARY A-B Poster print featuring a selection of mostly ‘Geordie’ dialect words and phrases from the North East of England. Fun to read and ‘larn’ the words even if ye divvent knaa hoo te’ taak Geordie reet. Mebbees ye’ll larn te taak proppa like, ye nivvor knaa. Printed on luxury 250 gsm silk . CASTLES OF NORTH EAST ENGLAND Castles of the Coast. Tynemouth Castle is one of four splendid castles to adorn the North East coast between the Tyne and the Tweed. It stands high above the mouth of the Tyne and forms a splendid backdrop to the neighbouring sands of King Edward’s Bay. In a similar way to Durham Cathedral being enclosed within Durham Castle, the castle at THE ROMAN CONQUEST OF THE NORTH North East England AD 43-121. For thousands of years people had explored and settled the region long before the Romans made their mark. When the Romans arrived, they found Britain was a land of tribes and hill forts. Much of the North and North-East was part of the territory of the Brigantes, a tribe led by a woman called Cartimandua.NORTH EAST SURNAMES
North East England surnames : Origins and meaning ARMSTRONG SURNAME. Border Reiver family. The name Armstrong, so numerous in the north of England is found throughout the English speaking world and will be forever famous as the surname of the first man on the moon. THE IRON INDUSTRY 1840 -1878 Age of the iron industry in the North East : 1840 to 1878. Small scale iron-making had been important since ancient times and was mined in the dales from at least the 12th Century in simple blast furnaces called bloomeries. It was smelted at Stanhope and later at Tow Law and Tudhoe and often found in mineral veins associated with lead mines. COAL MINING AND RAILWAY HISTORY Coal roads to steam railways. With the birth of the Newcastle Roads, the North East of England can easily claim to be the cradle of railways, but coal mining in the region also drove on the development of steam locomotives and the great railway age of steam. The greatest railway pioneers William Hedley, Timothy Hackworth, Edward Pease andTHE BORDER REIVERS
Lawless Clans. Border history may well have been dominated by the political struggle between England and Scotland, but it would be wrong to assume that the story of the Borderland was always a saga of Englishman against Scot and vice versa. In Tudor and Elizabethan times the Anglo-Scottish Border counties, including Northumberland, were the home to the notorious Border Reivers, the lawless TWENTY NORTH EAST VILLAGES Twenty North East villages. DAVID SIMPSON explores twenty different villages across the region including some hidden away inside our North East towns. There are hundreds of fascinating and often beautiful villages of all kinds, scattered around the North East of England from the Tweed to the Tees Valley. Most people live in the cities and townsWAHINGTON HISTORY
Lambton is named from the local family and place-name. Washington, Rickleton, Fatfield, Mount Pleasant, Harraton, Biddick and Barmston are all named from earlier places or villages, some of which had collieries with which they shared their names. Sulgrave and Barmston make up the eastern edge of the town of Washington.NORTH EAST SURNAMES
North East England surnames : Origins and meaning ARMSTRONG SURNAME. Border Reiver family. The name Armstrong, so numerous in the north of England is found throughout the English speaking world and will be forever famous as the surname of the first man on the moon. TWENTY NORTH EAST VILLAGES Twenty North East villages. DAVID SIMPSON explores twenty different villages across the region including some hidden away inside our North East towns. There are hundreds of fascinating and often beautiful villages of all kinds, scattered around the North East of England from the Tweed to the Tees Valley. Most people live in the cities and towns NORTH EAST ENGLAND: THE 1950S AND 1960S North East England in the Fifties and Sixties 1950 to 1969. The 1950s and 1960s saw the advent of many things we now take for granted: rock ‘n’ roll, colour televisions, motorways, the contraceptive pill and concrete architecture. The Conservative Prime Minister, Harold Macmillan and former Stockton MP, claimed the British people “had THE IRON INDUSTRY 1840 -1878 Age of the iron industry in the North East : 1840 to 1878. Small scale iron-making had been important since ancient times and was mined in the dales from at least the 12th Century in simple blast furnaces called bloomeries. It was smelted at Stanhope and later at Tow Law and Tudhoe and often found in mineral veins associated with lead mines.THE BORDER REIVERS
Lawless Clans. Border history may well have been dominated by the political struggle between England and Scotland, but it would be wrong to assume that the story of the Borderland was always a saga of Englishman against Scot and vice versa. In Tudor and Elizabethan times the Anglo-Scottish Border counties, including Northumberland, were the home to the notorious Border Reivers, the lawlessNORTH EAST GEOLOGY
The influence upon the landscape and history of North East England is apparent in so many ways. Many of the major themes of our history: industrial; border history; maritime links and several of the region’s most visually spectacular heritage sites have all been shaped by our region’s geological legacy. Hadrian’s Wall on theGreat Whin Sill.
JARROW AND TYNE DOCK HISTORY Serving the industries of Tyne Dock was a local town and community that was also known as Tyne Dock that grew up on the dock’s eastern side. Today, Tyne Dock is best-known as the birthplace of the novelist Catherine Cookson who was born Catherine McMullen at Number 5 SUNDERLAND ‘OLD SUNDERLAND’ HISTORY Sundered Land. Of the three main places that came together to make up Sunderland (namely Monkwearmouth, Bishopwearmouth and Sunderland) it seems that Sunderland was, in the early stages, the least important.In truth, the present city centre of Sunderland was historically called Bishopwearmouth and was initially separate from Sunderland. The real Sunderland was a place further PELTON, OUSTON, HIGH HANDENHOLD HISTORY Pelton, Ouston, Urpeth and High Handenhold are villages and hamlets situated between Beamish and Chester-le-Street. Kibblesworth Common and the wooded valley of the River Team separate Urpeth and Ouston in the Chester-le-Street area from Kibblesworth village in Gateshead Borough to the north . Urpeth, near Beamish has an Anglo-Saxon name NORTH EAST HISTORY QUIZ NUMBER 1 John Miles, composer of the song ‘Music was my first love’ was born in which North East town in 1949? 12. Name the Monkseaton-born TV writer noted for Porridge, Auf Wiedersehen Pet, The Likely Lads and Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads? ENGLAND'S NORTH EAST Search Primary Menu Skip to content* Home North East
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* Rocking the region’s history * Geordie Fraser’s Geordie Phrases * Another Twenty North East villages * The River Tees: Viking frontier* View from the Top
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* North East Quiz Number 1: Test Your North East Knowledge * Get Busy Outdoors this Spring * Explore the magic of sculpture at Cheeseburn * Jewels of emotion admired beyond our inspirational shores * Stunning, timeless timelapse for the North East * North East Culture, Creativity and Connections * Sundered Land, New Castle, Goat’s Head : What’s in a NorthEast Place Name?
* Gateshead : Still in Newcastle’s shadow? * Land of Oak & Iron * A Taste of the Med in the Heart of Newcastle * Majestic marvels: the castles of North East England * Remembering the miners who gave their lives * Blessed with Beaches * Fiona finds colour in nature’s treasures of the deep * Twenty North East villages * Sarah creates a sense of place in colourful magical maps * Chalk, charcoal and jam sandwiches are a source of pride forartist Alfie
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* Fabulous festivals, fabulous food * ‘Oot on the streets’ with Peter for a touch of nostalgia * Speaking up about our past * Treasure troves of the coast an inspiration for Kate * New challenges found in every work for watercolour artist Stuart * Pam captures beauty, emotion and memories in paint * Holy Island ‘paradise’ is an inspiration for Emma * Sea and Sky : Artist finds inspiration in Craster coastline * Stoneman’s Cityscapes * Whisht! lads ‘ I’ll tell ye aboot the Tangled Worm * The ancient ‘broken’ counties of Tyne, Wear and Tees * A human is a bundle of energy gathering protons, neutrons andelectrons
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