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Stamford is a town and civil parish in the South Kesteven district of Lincolnshire, England. The population at the 2011 census was 19,701 [ 3 ] and estimated at 20,645 in 2019. [ 4 ] The town has 17th- and 18th-century stone buildings, older timber-framed buildings and five medieval parish churches. [ 5 ]
The University of Stamford was an academic institution founded in 1333 in ... Plaque by Brazenose gate commemorating its history. ... Stamford University (England)
The Stamford Mercury (also the Lincoln, Rutland and Stamford Mercury, the Rutland and Stamford Mercury, and the Rutland Mercury) based in Stamford, Lincolnshire, England, claims to be "Britain's oldest continuously published newspaper title", although this is disputed by Berrow's Worcester Journal which was established in 1690 and The London Gazette first published in 1665. [2]
The Stamford East railway station serviced the companies works. Blackstone potato digger The Anson Engine Museum in Poynton, Cheshire collection. Blackstone oil engine A restored Blackstone Swath Turner and Collector No. 2C (a.k.a. kicker, tedder) at Woolpit Steam Rally 2009, Suffolk, England; a reaper-binder partly visible on the left
Burghley House (/ ˈ b ɜːr l i / [1]) is a grand sixteenth-century English country house near Stamford, Lincolnshire.It is a leading example of the Elizabethan prodigy house, built and still lived in by the senior branch of the Cecil family and is Grade I listed.
Lincolnshire, England derived from the merging of the territory of the ancient Kingdom of Lindsey with that controlled by the Danelaw borough of Stamford.For some time the entire county was called 'Lindsey', and it is recorded as such in the Domesday Book.
St Leonard's Priory Remains of the priory church from Francis Peck's Academia tertia Anglicana (1727). St Leonard's Priory, Stamford was a priory [1] in Lincolnshire, England.It was built in Stamford, supposedly on the site of a monastery which was founded by St Wilfrid in 658 and destroyed in the Danish invasion.
The Earl of Stamford, created in 1628, an extinct title in the Peerage of England; Stamford A.F.C., an association football club in Stamford, Lincolnshire, England; Stamford Transportation Center, called "Stamford" by railway companies, in Stamford, Connecticut, U.S. Swissôtel The Stamford, a hotel in Singapore