-
Nidd Hall was a 19th-century
country house, now a hotel, in the
village of
Nidd,
North Yorkshire, England. It is a
Grade II
listed building. It is constructed...
- Norse: níðingr/ᚾᛁᚦᛁᚴᛦ, Old English: nīðing, nīðgæst, or Old High German:
nidding).
Middle English retained a
cognate nithe,
meaning 'envy' (compare modern...
-
Nidd is a
small village and
civil parish in the
Harrogate district of
North Yorkshire, England. The po****tion of the
village taken at the 2011 census...
-
Nidd is a
village in Yorkshire, England.
Nidd may also
refer to:
River Nidd, a
tributary of the
River Ouse,
Yorkshire Níð, an Old
German term referring...
- The
Nidd Aqueduct is an
aqueduct or man-made
watercourse in
North Yorkshire, England. It
feeds water from
Angram and Scar
House reservoirs in
upper Nidderdale...
- The
River Nidd is a
tributary of the
River Ouse in the
English county of
North Yorkshire. It
rises in
Nidderdale at
Nidd Head
Spring on the
slopes of Great...
-
Nidd Gorge makes up a
section of the
River Nidd in
North Yorkshire, England, in
which the
river enters a deep
ravine with
sheer tree-covered
valley sides...
-
George Frederick Nidd (9
January 1870 –
September 1956) was an
English professional footballer, who pla**** for a
large number of
clubs in the Football...
- SS
Nidd was a
freight vessel built for the
Goole Steam Shipping Company in 1900. She was
built in 1900 by the
Cylde Shipbuilding Company Port
Glasgow as...
-
inherited the
Nidd Hall
estate but in 1902 he
resumed by
Royal licence the
surname of
Butler only. In 1911 he was
created Baron Mountgarret, of
Nidd in the West...