Driving through Callington, Cornwall/Kernow (4K, 3840x2160, 50fps)

Driving through Callington, Cornwall/Kernov.
Driving on Granite Way, Tavistock Road, A390, Southern Road, A388, Saltash Road, Launceston Road.
Video quality: 4K, 3840x2160, 50fps
Music: A New Orleans Crawfish Boil
Callington (Cornish: Kelliwik) is a civil parish and town in east Cornwall, England, United Kingdom about 7 miles/11 km north of Saltash and 9 miles/14 km south of Launceston.
Callington has been postulated as one of the possible locations of the ancient site of Celliwig, associated with King Arthur.[8] Nearby ancient monuments include Castlewitch Henge, with a diameter of 96 m[9] and Cadsonbury Iron Age hillfort, as well as Dupath Well built in 1510 on the site of an ancient sacred spring.
Callington was recorded in the Domesday Book (1086); the manor had four hides of land and land for thirty ploughs. The lord had land for three ploughs with eleven serfs. Twenty-four villeins and fourteen smallholders had land for fifteen ploughs. There were also one and a half square leagues of pasture and a small amount of woodland. The income of the manor was £6 sterling.
In 1601 Robert Rolle (died 1633) purchased the manor of Callington, thereby gaining the pocket borough seat of Callington in Parliament, which in future served to promote the careers of many Rolles. He nominated to this seat his brother William Rolle (died 1652) in 1604 and 1614, his son Sir Henry Rolle (1589-1656), of Shapwick, in 1620 and 1624, his son-in-law Thomas Wise (died March 1641) of Sydenham in Devon, in 1625, and another son John Rolle (1598-1648),
In the 19th century, Callington was one of the most important mining areas in Great Britain. Deposits of silver were found nearby in Silver Valley. Today, the area is marked by mining remains, but there are no active mines. Granite is still quarried on Hingston Down.
The former Callington constituency, a rotten borough, elected two members to the unreformed House of Commons but was abolished by the Reform Act 1832. The town is now in the South East Cornwall constituency.
St Mary's Church was originally a chapel of ease to South Hill; it was consecrated in 1438 and then had two aisles and a buttressed tower; a second north aisle was added in 1882. Unusually for Cornwall there is a clerestory; the wagon roofs are old. The parish church contains the fine brass of Nicholas Assheton and his wife, 1466.
In the churchyard there is a Gothic lantern cross. It was first mentioned by the historian William Borlase in 1752. Each of the four faces of the cross head features a carved figure beneath an ogee arch. The heads of these figures have been chiselled off, no doubt in the Commonwealth period.

Пікірлер: 5

  • @DB71170
    @DB711702 жыл бұрын

    How much do they pay class 1 bud

  • @selfwastaken
    @selfwastaken2 жыл бұрын

    u drove past my old house

  • @selfwastaken

    @selfwastaken

    Жыл бұрын

    WHY DID I SAY THIS 1 YEAR AGO I WAS SO DUMB

  • @selfwastaken

    @selfwastaken

    Жыл бұрын

    i mean it doesnt matter im now in texas lol

  • @jennaluvhugs8252
    @jennaluvhugs82522 жыл бұрын

    What vehicle was this ?