-
Adlestrop (/ˈædəlstrɒp/) is a
village and
civil parish in the Cotswolds, 3
miles (5 km) east of Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire, England, on the county...
- "
Adlestrop" is a poem by
Edward Thomas. It is
based on a
railway journey Thomas took on 24 June 1914,
during which his
train briefly stopped at the now-closed...
-
Adlestrop railway station was a
railway station which served the
village of
Adlestrop in Gloucestershire, England,
between 1853 and 1966. It was on what...
- this time.
Thomas immortalised the (now-abandoned)
railway station at
Adlestrop in a poem of that name
after his
train made a stop at the
Cotswolds station...
-
privately owned village and
former civil parish, now in the
parish of
Adlestrop, in the
Cotswold district, in the
county of Gloucestershire, England,...
-
Adlestrop Railway Atlas | Homepage". New
Adlestrop Railway Atlas.
Archived from the
original on 21
February 2019. Fairhurst, Richard. "New
Adlestrop Railway...
- of
Chipping Norton. The
village of
Daylesford lies
nearby to the west,
Adlestrop to the north,
Cornwell to the east, and
Kingham to the south, The house...
-
ranks of the gentry, and C****andra was a
member of the
Leigh family of
Adlestrop and Longborough, with
connections to the
Barons Leighs of
Stoneleigh Abbey...
- Anglo-Saxon
suffix are "-throp", "-thrope", "-trop" and "-trip" (e.g.
Adlestrop and Southrope). Old
English (Anglo-Saxon) þrop is
cognate with Low-Saxon...
- People" by John
Hewett "Sedge-Warblers", "Women He Liked", "Haymaking", "
Adlestrop", "Will You Come?" and "Lights Out" by
Edward Thomas "All's
Going Well"...