-
Brioc (Breton: Brieg; Welsh: Briog; Cornish:
Breock; French: Brieuc; died c. 502) was a 5th-century
Welsh holy man who
became the
first abbot of Saint-Brieuc...
- St
Breock (Cornish: Nanssans) is a
village and a
civil parish in
north Cornwall, England,
United Kingdom. The
spelling St
Breoke was also
formerly in use...
- St
Breock Downs Monolith (or St
Breock Longstone; Cornish: Men Gurta) is the
largest and
heaviest prehistoric standing stone in Cornwall, England. It...
- Anthony-in-Meneage, St
Anthony in Roseland, St Austell, St Blazey, St
Blazey Gate, St
Breock, St Breward, St Buryan, St Cleer, St Clement, St Clether, St
Columb Major...
-
After searching amongst the
barrows of the
ancient kings of
Cornwall on St
Breock Downs, he
wades through the
bottomless Dozmary Pool on
Bodmin Moor until...
-
escheator of the
Leeward Islands in the
reign of
James II. The
Tyackes of St
Breock bore the arms: Arg. a
fesse (or a chevron)
between three bears'
heads couped...
-
feast of
Saint Vitalis and at Michaelmas. Wade was part of the
parish of St
Breock and the
river separated it from the
neighbouring parish of Egloshayle.[citation...
- John
Tredeneck (by 1508 – 1566), of
Tredinnick in St.
Breock, Cornwall, was an
English politician. He was a
Member of
Parliament (MP) for
Lostwithiel in...
- west of
Wadebridge in Cornwall, England. It is in the
civil parish of St
Breock.
Cornwall portal Ordnance Survey:
Landranger map
sheet 200
Newquay & Bodmin...
-
south of St
Breock, in Cornwall, England.
Pawton Quoit is a
Neolithic burial tomb
located about 4.66 km (2.90 mi)
south from St
Breock in a
field near...