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The Old Exe Bridge is a ruined medieval arch bridge in Exeter in south-western England. Construction of the bridge began in 1190, and was completed by 1214. The bridge is the oldest surviving bridge of its size in England and the oldest bridge in Britain with a chapel still on it.
Exeter was a late 18th-century Georgian house near Leesburg, Virginia, that was listed on the National Register of Historic Places from 1973 to August 1980, when it was destroyed by fire and subsequently de-listed from the National Register. The house and its dependencies were unusually elaborate for northern Virginia.
Location County Type Appomattox River Bridge: 1930 2005-07-27 Appomattox: Appomattox: Blackford Bridge: 1889 2010-06-24 Lebanon vicinity: Russell: Bob White Covered Bridge: 1820, 1821 1973-05-22 Woolwine
The House That Moved is a historic building in Exeter, originally built in the late Middle Ages and relocated in 1961 when the entire street it was on was demolished to make way for a new bypass road linked to the replacement of the city's bridge over the River Exe.
On the site of the current Newcastle Swing Bridge, the medieval bridge was swept away in the Great Flood of Newcastle in 1771. Pulteney Bridge: Bath, Somerset: River Avon, Bristol: Built 1769-1774 Old Exe Bridge: Exeter, Devon
This Wise County, Virginia state location article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Location County Coordinates NC-38: Berry Hill Bridge Replaced Parker truss: 1914 1985 SR 880 and SR 1761 Dan River: Cascade, Virginia, and Eden, North Carolina: Pittsylvania County, Virginia, and Rockingham County, North Carolina: VA-1
The name Isca Dumnoniorum is a Latinization of a native Brittonic name describing flowing water, in reference to the River Exe.More exactly, the name seems to have originally meant "full of fish" (cf. Welsh pysg, pl. "fish"), [2] although it came to be a simple synonym for water (cf. Scottish whisky). [3]