Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Friends of York Walls website "York' City Walls Trail" – by The Friends of York Walls; A new audio guide using the Guide.AI app – "Introducing – "York’s City Walls Audio Trail"" – Friends of York Walls CIO. "York Walls Walk - Walking Tour of York City Walls", york-united-kingdom.co.uk "Theme: The York City Walls" on the History of ...
Location of York Castle (8) and the major features of York city walls (1: Bootham Bar, 2: Monk Bar, 3: Walmgate Bar, 4: Micklegate Bar, 5: Fishergate Bar, 6: Victoria Bar, 7: Multiangular Tower). York was a Viking capital in the 10th century, and continued as an important northern city in the 11th century. [ 6 ]
The station in use in 1861. The first York railway station was a temporary building on Queen Street outside the walls of the city.It was opened in 1839 by George Hudson's York and North Midland Railway and was the terminus of the original trunk route for trains to London, [2] via Derby and Birmingham.
The City Walls Experience at Micklegate Bar is located in the southern gatehouse of the historical city walls of York, England. It is operated by the Jorvik Group (part of York Archaeological Trust ) and uses maps, display screens and video presentations to tell the story of the fortifications surrounding the city.
The Anglian Tower is the lower portion of an early medieval tower on the city walls of York in the English county of North Yorkshire.It is located on the south-west (interior) face of the city walls, currently in the grounds of York City Library and accessible on foot both from there and the Museum Gardens.
The Davy Tower is a feature of the York city walls in England. The stone tower was built around 1250, probably at the end of a wall or earthwork leading to Castlegate, around the moat of York Castle. It was first recorded in 1315, and by 1424 the part of the city inside the walls was occupied by the York Franciscan Friary.
Roman wall and the west corner tower (the Multangular Tower) of the Roman legionary fort at York, with medieval additions above. A telltale layer of red Roman bricks can be seen at about head height. The Romans called the tribes in the region around York the Brigantes and the Parisii. York may have been on the border between these two tribes.
The multangular tower of York city walls is a multi-period structure based on the south-west corner tower of the Roman Legionary Fortress. It is within the York Museum Gardens . The Roman Bath pub and museum ( St Sampson's Square ) displays remains of the military bath-house.