- give an
indication of the road's origin. In Wales, the
start of many
droveways, drovers'
roads are
often recognisable by
being deeply set into the countryside...
-
ancient droveways of Sus****
linked coastal and
downland communities in the
south with
summer pasture land in the
interior of the Weald. The
droveways were...
- free dictionary. Cañada (Spanish pronunciation: [kaˈɲaða],
Spanish for
droveway, drovers' road) may
refer to: Cañada de Gómez, a city in the
province of...
- cañadas
reales (meaning
royal droveways)
being 800
metres (2,625 ft) wide at
certain points. The land
within the
droveways is
publicly owned and protected...
- centuries,
possibly since the Iron Age, for
transhumance of
animals along droveways in the
summer months. Over the centuries,
deforestation for the shipbuilding...
- George's Hospital, Morpeth, also show
probable stock enclosures and
droveways, far less
substantial than the m****ive Iron Age
sites in the area. The...
- its way to
Lewes now
bears the
names The
Droveway, The
Drove and
Preston Drove. The
section called The
Droveway, on
which the
Goldstone Waterworks was built...
- the
defensive earthworks and
rivers mainly consisted of a
network of
droveways,
hollow ways,
pastures and
fields ****ociated with
cattle herding. Scattered...
- Weald, at Goringlee, near Coolham. This
route would have been used as a
droveways for
driving livestock,
especially pigs. The
parish of
Goring existed at...
-
crosses the site. In
addition there is a
reconstruction of a
prehistoric droveway used for
moving livestock. In 1991
Pryor published his
first book about...