Gloucestershire
Originally published during the early part of the twentieth century, the Cambridge County Geographies were designed to provide a series of concise guides to British regions. Aimed at the general reader, they combined a comprehensive approach to various aspects of physical and human geography with an emphasis on clarity. This guide to Gloucestershire by Herbert A. Evans was first published in 1909 and reissued as this second edition in 1914. The text is interspersed with numerous illustrative figures and also contains a list of the chief towns and villages within the county.
Product details
March 2013Paperback
9781107697393
168 pages
203 × 127 × 9 mm
0.19kg
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. County and shire. Origin and meaning of the words
- 2. General characteristics. Position and natural conditions
- 3. Size. Shape. Boundaries. Detached portions
- 4. Surface and general features
- 5. Watersheds and rivers
- 6. Geology and soil
- 7. Natural history
- 8. The estuary of the Severn
- 9. The port of Bristol
- 10. Climate
- 11. People - dialect, settlements, population
- 12. Agriculture - cultivations, stock
- 13. Industries
- 14. Mines
- 15. History of the county
- 16. Antiquities - prehistoric, Roman
- 17. Architecture - (a) ecclesiastical. Churches, cathedrals, abbeys
- 18. Architecture - (b) military. Castles
- 19. Architecture - (c) domestic. Famous seats, manor houses
- 20. Communications - past and present. Roads, railways, canals
- 21. Administration and divisions
- 22. Roll of honour of the county
- 23. The chief towns and villages of Gloucestershire.