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Lamb & Flag Passage runs through the south side of the building, connecting St Giles' with Museum Road, where there is an entrance to Keble College to the rear of the pub. The name of the pub comes from the symbol of Christ as the victorious Lamb of God ( Agnus Dei ) of the Book of Revelation, carrying a banner with a cross, and often gashed in ...
Shutford is a village and civil parish in the Cherwell district, in Oxfordshire, England, about 4.5 miles (7.2 km) west of Banbury. The village is about 475 feet (145 m) above sea level. The village is about 475 feet (145 m) above sea level.
The Turf Tavern is a pub in central Oxford, England.Its foundations and use as a malt house and drinking tavern date back to 1381. [citation needed] The low-beamed front bar area was put in place sometime in the 17th century. [1]
Freud café portico entrance. Freud (aka Freud's [1]) is a café-bar in a Victorian former church building at 119 Walton Street in Jericho, Oxford, England.. The Freud café is located opposite Great Clarendon Street and the Oxford University Press is also opposite to the south.
The pub has been called "the best known of all Thames pubs". [2]The timber-framed building dates back to 1352 and is of traditional construction [3] with a thatched roof.. The Barley Mow was photographed by Henry Taunt in 1877. [4]
On 28 April 1241, Lady Christina Pady, the daughter of Ralph Pady, a burgher (important citizen) and Oxford mill owner, [7] and the widow of both Laurence Kepeharme (died c.1208), the first Mayor of Oxford, [8] and Jordan Rufus (died c. 1241–50), bequeathed to St Frideswide's Priory the land and property on the High Street that would, by 1432, be an inn (Le Tabard).
The Eagle and Child, nicknamed "the Bird and Baby", [1] is a pub in St Giles', Oxford, England, owned by the Ellison Institute of Technology [2] and previously operated by Mitchells & Butlers as a Nicholson's pub. [3] The pub had been part of an endowment belonging to University College since the 17th century.
St Clement's is a district in Oxford, England, [1] on the east bank of the River Cherwell. [2] " St Clement's" is usually taken to describe a small triangular area from The Plain (a roundabout) bounded by the River Cherwell to the North, Cowley Road to the South, and the foot of Headington Hill to the East.