Crosby, North Yorkshire
Crosby is a village and civil parish in the Hambleton district of the county of North Yorkshire, England.
Crosby is a village and civil parish in the Hambleton district of the county of North Yorkshire, England.
Cropredy Bridge is a bridge in north Oxfordshire that carries the minor road between Cropredy and the hamlet of Williamscot. It spans the River Cherwell, which is also the boundary between the civil parishes of Wardington (which includes Williamscot…
The Croome collection – the archive of the Earls of Coventry – came into public ownership in 2005 as part of the Acceptance in Lieu of Inheritance Tax Scheme, whereby the nation accepts valuable assets to set against tax liabilities. In 2006, after …
Crook and Willington was an urban district in County Durham, England from 1937 to 1974. It was created by a merger of the previous Crook and Willington urban districts, along with part of the disbanded Auckland Rural District. It later formed part o…
Crofton is a district in the London Borough of Bromley in southeast London, England.
Croft was a rural district in the North Riding of Yorkshire from 1894 to 1974.
Crockerhill is a hamlet in south Hampshire, England.
Crinow (Welsh: Crynwedd) is a village and parish in Pembrokeshire, Wales. It is situated 2 km east of Narberth. The parish is part of the community of Narberth.
Crindau Marina is a possible development in Crindau, Newport. The marina would provide opportunities for new housing, shops and leisure facilities focused around a waterside location. Newport Unlimited, the Newport urban regeneration company, have s…
The Crimes Town Gallery in Stoke Newington has been operating since July 2007. The gallery is run by Gavin Toye and Ben Newton who are both artists. In May 2008 Toye and Newton staged, "Walpurgisnacht" at their gallery, a group show featuring artist…
Strathearn Community Campus is the replacement building for the original Crieff High School in Crieff, Scotland and is one of the eleven secondary schools administered by Perth & Kinross Council. It is a six year comprehensive school offering a full…
Cridmore Bog is a 14.4 hectare Site of special scientific interest which is west of Godshill. The site was notified in 1985 for its biological features. It is adjacent to "The Wilderness", another SSSI in this area of the Isle of Wight
Cricket Field Lane is a cricket ground in Bishop's Stortford, Hertfordshire. The earliest recorded match on the ground was in 1862 between Bishop's Stortford and an All-England Eleven. In 1895 Hertfordshire played their first Minor Counties Champion…
Cribin Fawr is a mountain in Snowdonia, North Wales, situated approximately four miles to the south-west of Aran Fawddwy. It is one of the peaks in the Dyfi hills, a subgroup of the Cadair Idris group. It is a top of Maesglase, connected to its pare…
Cresselly Cricket Club Ground is a cricket ground in Cresselly, Pembrokeshire. The first recorded match on the ground was in 1979, when Welsh Schools played Irish Schools.
Creigiau Gleision North Top is a mountain in Snowdonia, Wales, near Capel Curig. It is a significant top on the Creigiau Gleision ridge, topping the north end of its crest.
Crean is a hamlet in west Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. It is situated three miles (5 km) east of Land's End.
Creag Odhar is a rocky mountain peak in the southern Highlands of Scotland, in Perthshire north of Aberfeldy. The name is Gaelic, from creag, meaning "crag" or "peak", and odhar, meaning "gray".
Crawleyside is a village in County Durham, in England.
Cratley is a lost village in Nottinghamshire, England. It may have been located close to North Laithes Farm at Kneesall although an alternative site east of Laund Wood has been suggested. Another name's for the settlement is Cratela, or Creilage. Tw…
Cranstackie is a mountain of 801 m in Sutherland, the northwestern tip of the Scottish Highlands. It is a Corbett located west of Loch Eriboll and northeast of Foinaven. Like Foinaven and Beinn Spionnaidh to the northeast, its top is covered with lo…
Cranborne Hundred was a hundred in the county of Dorset, England, containing the following parishes:
Cramble Cross is a public footpath through the English countryside.
Crailinghall is a village near Oxnam in the Scottish Borders area of Scotland, in the former Roxburghshire.
Craik is a hamlet in Craik Forest, by the Airhouse Burn in the Scottish Borders area of Scotland, close to Roberton, Scottish Borders (grid reference NT348084).
Craigysgafn is a rocky ridge and a top of Moelwyn Mawr that leads south from Moelwyn Mawr to Moelwyn Bach in Snowdonia, North Wales. It has several impressive gullies which lead directly down to the scree slopes above Llyn Stwlan.
Craignure is a station on Mull, on the Isle of Mull Railway line.
Craigmaroinn is a skerry in the North Sea near the Aberdeenshire coastline in Scotland. Craigmaroinn is situated midway between the coastal villages of Portlethen Village and Downies.
Craiglwyn is a top of Creigiau Gleision in Snowdonia, Wales, near Capel Curig.
Craigievar Estate is a modern housing estate situated in the suburb of East Craigs to the west of Edinburgh, Scotland.
Craigie Linn is a waterfall of Scotland.
Craig y Forwyn ("Maiden's Crag") is a crag that encloses the northern side of World's End, near the town of Llangollen in Denbighshire, Wales. It is part of the limestone escarpment that separates the Eglwyseg Valley from the higher Ruabon Moors and…
Craig y Forwyn (meaning "Maiden's Crag" in English) is a crag in Conwy County Borough, Wales, located less than a mile south of Llanddulas, near the village of Rhyd y Foel. It reaches a height of 110 metres (360 ft), and rock climbers have identifie…
Craig Eigiau is a top of Foel Grach in the Carneddau range in Snowdonia, North Wales, Wales.
Craig Cywarch is an extensive crag looming above Cwm Cywarch.
Craig Cwm Amarch is not synonymous with Craig y Cau but names the headwall of Cwm Amarch on Cadair Idris in the Snowdonia National Park, in Gwynedd, north-west Wales.