Buckinghamshire place-names: Difference between revisions

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* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buckinghamshire Wikipedia: Buckinghamshire].
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buckinghamshire Wikipedia: Buckinghamshire].


=== Also see ===
== Also see ==
* [[Robin Hood House (Little Gaddesden)]] which is in Buckinghamshire according to the county boundary data provided by the [http://www.county-borders.co.uk/ Historic Counties Trust] but in Hertfordshire according to other reliable sources.
* [[Robin Hood House (Little Gaddesden)]] which is in Buckinghamshire according to the county boundary data provided by the [http://www.county-borders.co.uk/ Historic Counties Trust] but in Hertfordshire according to other reliable sources.



Revision as of 14:21, 18 October 2018

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By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-06-19. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-10-18.

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County description

The Historic Counties Trust describes Buckinghamshire as follows:

A distinctively shaped inland county. The delightful Chiltern Hills, sweeping through the south of the county, give the shire much of its character; with beech woods in the west, rising to higher, more windswept landscape around Ivinghoe Beacon, and all full of pretty villages of flint and thatch. It provides fine walking country. The more gentle, pastoral Vale of Aylesbury lies north of the Chilterns. Buckinghamshire's short southern border is the River Thames, which above Slough is considered the finest stretch of that river. In the north of the county, along the Great Ouse, Milton Keynes spreads across the landscape; an ambitious, planned New Town of the 1970's, in sharp contrast to Buckingham to the west, an ancient and very picturesque town.

Main Towns: Aylesbury, Beaconsfiled, Buckingham, Chalfont St Giles, Eton, High Wycombe, Linslade, Marlow, Milton Keynes, Princes Risborough, Slough.
Main Rivers: Ouse, Ray, Thames, Colne, Chess, Wyte, Lovat, Lyde.
Highlights: Burnham Beeches; Cliveden Estate; Quaker Meeting House, Jordans; Waddesden Manor.
Highest Point: Haddington Hill, 297.18 m.
Area: 1929.54 km.[1]

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Lists and gazetteers

Background

Also see

Notes

  1. The Historic Counties Trust has kindly allowed me to quote its county descriptions in toto. I have converted square miles to km2 and feet to meters.