Articles in United Kingdom ( 43,772 )

43,772 Articles of interest in United Kingdom

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  • Clydebank College

    Clydebank College was a further education college in Clydebank, in West Dunbartonshire, Scotland. It is now part of the merged institution West College Scotland. Subjects offered for full-time study included: Administration and IT; Beauty Therapy; C…

  • Cluan Place

    Cluan Place (derived from Irish Cluain, meaning "meadow") is a Protestant working-class area in eastern inner-city Belfast, in Northern Ireland.

  • Clovenfords

    Clovenfords is a village in the Scottish Borders area of Scotland, a mile north of the hamlet of Caddonfoot and four miles west of the town Galashiels. The village sits on undulating grasslands and surrounding rolling hills.

  • Clothall

    Clothall is a village in the civil parish of Clothall and Luffenhall in Hertfordshire, England with a population of 358. It is situated 2.25 miles (3.62 km) south-east of Baldock, and is in the district of North Hertfordshire. The village contains t…

  • Clopton Bridge

    Clopton Bridge is located in Stratford-upon-Avon, England. It is a masonry arch bridge with 14 pointed spans the River Avon, crossing at the place where the river was forded in Saxon times, and which gave the town its name.

  • Cloghy

    Cloghy (/ˈklɔːx/ KLAWKH-ee; from Irish: Clochaigh, meaning "stony place"), also spelt Cloughey or Cloughy, is a small village and townland in County Down, Northern Ireland. It lies on the east (Irish Sea) coast of the Ards Peninsula, in the Boroug…

  • Clogh, County Antrim

    Clogh (from Irish An Chloch, meaning "the stone") is a small village in County Antrim, Northern Ireland, 9 miles from Ballymena. In the 2001 Census it had a population of 105 people. It is situated within the Glenravel ward of the Braid District of …

  • Clifton Viaduct

    Clifton Viaduct is a Grade II listed stone structure crossing the River Irwell in Clifton, Greater Manchester, and also the Manchester, Bolton and Bury Canal. It is known locally as the "13 Arches".

  • Clifton Hall Colliery

    Clifton Hall Colliery was one of two coal mines in Clifton (the other was Wet Earth Colliery) on the Manchester Coalfield, historically in Lancashire which was incorporated into the City of Salford in Greater Manchester, England in 1974.

  • Cliffe, Richmondshire

    Cliffe is a small village and civil parish in the Tees Valley near Piercebridge in the Richmondshire district of North Yorkshire, England, about 6 miles (10 km) west of Darlington, and 10 miles (16 km) north of Richmond and the Yorkshire Dales.

  • Cliffe Fort

    Cliffe Fort is a Royal Commission fort built in the 1860s on the edge of the Cliffe marshes on the Hoo Peninsula in north Kent, England to protect against invasion via the river Thames. It is opposite Coalhouse Fort in Essex: they are 2 km apart. Co…

  • Clayworth

    Clayworth is a village and civil parish in Nottinghamshire, England. At the time of the 2001 census it had a population of 319. The village is located 6 miles (9.7 km) north-east of Retford, on the River Idle. Clayworth appears as Clavord in the Doo…

  • Claypole, Lincolnshire

    Claypole is a village and civil parish in the South Kesteven district of Lincolnshire, England. It is situated 4 miles (6.4 km) south-east from the market town of Newark-on-Trent, just east of the Grantham to Newark stretch of the A1.

  • Claybrooke Magna

    Claybrooke Magna is a village and civil parish in the Harborough district of Leicestershire, England, close to the A5 trunk road. The village is located between junctions 20 and 21 of the M1, and the towns of Leicester, Rugby, Lutterworth and Market…

  • Clavering Castle

    Clavering Castle remains are situated in the small parish village of Clavering in the County of Essex, 50m north of the church of St Mary and St Clement on the southern bank of the River Stort, some 10 km south-west of Bishop's Stortford (grid refer…

  • Clarkson Memorial

    The Clarkson Memorial in Wisbech, Cambridgeshire, England commemorates Thomas Clarkson (1760 – 1846), a central figure in the campaign against the slave trade in the British empire, and a former native of Wisbech.

  • Clarendon Park, Leicester

    Clarendon Park is an area in the south of the city of Leicester. It is bordered by Welford Road to the west, London Road to the east, Victoria Park to the north and Knighton Road to the south. It is part of Castle Ward and the constituency of Leices…

  • Clan na Gael GAA (Armagh)

    Clan na Gael Gaelic Athletic Club (Irish: CLG Clan na Gael) is a Gaelic Athletic Association club situated in the town of Lurgan, County Armagh, Northern Ireland. The club's pitch, Davitt Park, is named in honour of Michael Davitt.

  • Claggan Park

    Claggan Park, also known as New Town Park, is a football ground in Fort William in the West Highlands of Scotland, which is the home ground of Highland Football League side Fort William F.C.. It is located on Achintee Road on the outskirts of the to…

  • Clach an Tiompain

    The Clach an Tiompain (in English, the "Sounding Stone") or The Eagle Stone is a small Class I Pictish stone located on a hill on the northern outskirts of Strathpeffer in Easter Ross, Scotland.

  • Portsmouth Academy for Girls

    Portsmouth Academy for Girls (formerly the City of Portsmouth Girls' School) is a secondary school with academy status for girls, located in Portsmouth, Hampshire, England. The school is located on St Mary's Road in the Portsmouth central sub distri…

  • City of Edinburgh Music School

    The City of Edinburgh Music School is a state-maintained music school in Scotland in Edinburgh, Scotland. Founded as the Lothian Specialist Music School in 1980, it changed its name in 1996 when Lothian Regional Council was dissolved into four separ…

  • City of Cambridge Rowing Club

    City of Cambridge Rowing Club (CCRC) is the oldest 'town' (or CRA) rowing and sculling club in Cambridge, UK, and with about 300 members, it has one of the largest active rowing memberships in the region.

  • City Road Cemetery

    The City Road Cemetery is a cemetery in the City of Sheffield, England that opened in May 1881 and was originally Intake Road Cemetery. Covering 100 acres (0.40 km2) it is the largest

  • City Canal

    The City Canal was a short, and short-lived, canal excavated across the Isle of Dogs in east London, linking two reaches of the River Thames.