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Showing posts with the label moorland

Bakewell - Old Charm and Pudding

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Bakewell— old charm  and pudding Moorlands in the English countryside always bring back to my memory Emily Brontë’s ‘Wuthering Heights.’ There, she vividly described the nineteenth-century Yorkshire moorland as open, wild, and exposed, with untamed wind force and brooding character. The neighbouring Derbyshire moor, which we saw from Monsal Head, a Peak District viewpoint, was, in contrast, somewhat softer and more picturesque. Maybe because we saw it as tourists in the twenty-first century. On our way back, we took a brief halt at a small, charming town. It was a pleasant surprise, as I had no previous knowledge about the town and its breathtaking beauty. Nor had I come across the name of this town, which is so heavily wrapped with history right from the Anglo-Saxon era. Early settlement, dating back to the 9th–10th centuries, is associated with a cluster of warm springs along the River Wye. Archaeologists have even dis...

Lunch at the George Inn of Hathersage

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The George  (Inn of Hathersage) Hathersage is about ten 9miles from Sheffield in England. Situated strategically in the Peak District National Park, this small, picturesque village offers much more than initially expected—something we only realised when our son Arjun took us to The George for lunch. This majestic 500-year-old hotel sits right on the T-junction of the road descending from the medieval town of Bakewell. It also boasts a literary history. When Charlotte Brontë, the eldest and most prolific of the three surviving Brontë sisters of the nineteenth century, visited Hathersage in 1845, she stayed at The George. The hotel is believed to have inspired Charlotte Brontë’s renowned novel, ‘Jane Eyre’. The fictional ‘George Inn’ appears in her story. Descriptions of the inn’s interiors, such as ‘mantelpiece ornaments, furnishings, prints of George III and the Prince of Wales’, are based on her observations during her stay. The building dates back to the early fift...

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