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Chester Pubs - Paul Hurley - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Harrogate Pubs - Paul Chrystal - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Coventry Pubs - Fred Luckett - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

The Four Heatons Through Time - Ian Littlechilds - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Newcastle-under-Lyme Pubs - Mervyn Edwards - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

City of London Pubs - Johnny Homer - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Canterbury Pubs - Johnny Homer - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Faces of Nottingham - Peter Mcconnochie - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Bramhall Through Time - Paul Chrystal - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Chloe & Co. - Gray Jolliffe - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Ford Tractors - Jonathan Whitlam - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Hills Tramroad: Blaenavon World Heritage Site - Chris Barber - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Perth Through Time - Jack Gillon - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Gates of the City of London - Alan Brooke - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Manchester Airport Through Time - Peter C. Brown - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Leeds Pubs - Paul Chrystal - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Redhill & Reigate Through Time - Roy Douglas - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Lincoln: A Potted History - Lorna Talbott - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Hampstead & Highgate in 50 Buildings - Lucy Mcmurdo - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Hampstead & Highgate in 50 Buildings - Lucy Mcmurdo - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

The two communities of Hampstead and Highgate, perched on London’s northern heights, are remarkable for their leafy, atmospheric narrow streets and stunning architecture. They act as a magnet to millionaires and superstars and boast some of the most exclusive and expensive addresses in London today. In this book, author Lucy McMurdo provides a well-illustrated and fascinating tour of the architectural highlights of both areas through the centuries.These desirable locations have been sought after not only for their clean air and waters, but for their magnificent views over the capital. People have settled here for hundreds of years and many of the shops and homes date back to the 1600s and 1700s. Evidence of Hampstead and Highgate’s historical importance is further demonstrated by the many ancient inns that line their streets, and remain in business today. Both areas have prosperous town centres and are full of boutiques, restaurants and bars. Their high streets continue to exude an air of luxury and wealth and attract many visitors.A major asset of these two ‘villages’ is their proximity to vast, open spaces such as Hampstead Heath with the magnificent Kenwood estate. Grand villas have always graced the heath’s perimeter and the houses of Keats and Freud are now open to the public. The graves and tombs of famous local residents are to be found in Highgate Cemetery, including authors, artists, musicians, writers, and even revolutionaries, such as Karl Marx.This accessible and engaging perspective will be of great interest to residents and visitors alike.

DKK 161.00
1

Islington & Clerkenwell in 50 Buildings - Lucy Mcmurdo - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Islington & Clerkenwell in 50 Buildings - Lucy Mcmurdo - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

The London districts of Islington and Clerkenwell are charming to explore. Within their streets are the greatest variety of architectural styles, ranging from Tudor, Georgian and Victorian to modernist and contemporary twenty-first-century design.In Islington & Clerkenwell in 50 Buildings, author Lucy McMurdo presents a well-illustrated and engaging perspective of the rich architectural heritage of both areas. Islington has a wonderful vibrancy. Its main thoroughfare of Upper Street overflows with bars, restaurants, cafés, pubs and clubs, giving rise to the nickname ‘Supper Street’. Hostelries have lined this street for centuries. It was here, on the main route into the capital, that herdsmen bringing cattle and sheep to Smithfield broke their journey from the north. Until the growth of industry in the 1800s, Islington was renowned for its river, springs and meadows, and a recreational destination for hunters and archers. Industrialisation resulted in an increasing population, transforming Islington’s character and replacing fields with terraced houses, Georgian squares, gin distilleries, warehouses, depots and factories.Neighbouring Clerkenwell has always been more densely populated. Until the 1530s it was famous for its monastery, priory and nunnery and, in the late 1600s, it was a haven for French Huguenot immigrants, and later refugees and workers from Ireland, Prussia and Italy. For hundreds of years the River Fleet acted as Clerkenwell’s main artery and, together with the district’s many springs, was a prime reason for the area’s development. The French Huguenots who settled here brought skills in watchmaking, precision engineering, printing, bookbinding and weaving – many of which are still found in the area today.

DKK 159.00
1

Look with your Eyes and Tell the World - Roy Calley - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Look with your Eyes and Tell the World - Roy Calley - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

North Korea is the country with the highest number of military and paramilitary personnel in the world (nine and a half million). International organisations have declared that human rights violations there have no parallel in the modern world. It is estimated that 10,000 people die in North Korean prison camps every year.How did this come about? And what is life really like for the country''s 26 million citizens? As a journalist who has visited the country and talked to the people on many occasions, Roy Calley is in a unique position to pull aside the veil to reveal the reality of life there.He explains how the nation changed virtually overnight from a Buddhist country to one embracing the ''Juche'' theory of total selfreliance after independence from Japan.He also analyses the central importance of ''victory'' in the Korean War (1950–53) to how the North Koreans - both those in absolute power and the people - view themselves.Some of the author''s observations of everyday life come as a shock: in Pyonyang, for example, we find very little poverty. This is one of the most modern cities in the world, but it is completely devoid of any type of commercialism. The people genuinely adore the Kim dynasty. There is no possibility of self-advancement - but the concept means nothing to the ordinary citizen. To come to terms with the world''s latest nuclear power we need to understand how she works. Roy Calley has gone inside to bring back a genuine report about one of the world’s least understood countries.

DKK 190.00
1

City of London in 50 Buildings - Lucy Mcmurdo - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

City of London in 50 Buildings - Lucy Mcmurdo - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Despite a history stretching back almost 2,000 years, the City of London is one of the world’s most modern, booming and yet unspoiled places to visit. Today it is teeming with those who work in London’s international financial, legal and insurance industries. Catering to their every need, the tiny ‘Square Mile’ is full of fine-dining establishments, cafés, cocktail bars, clubs, cultural venues and historic pubs. With street names including Poultry, Cornhill and Cheapside, it is impossible to ignore the City’s long and colourful history as a major commercial hub. Stretches of Roman wall, fort, amphitheatre and bathhouse also provide constant reminders of its past.In this book, author Lucy McMurdo guides us on a fascinating tour highlighting fifty of the City’s architectural treasures and landmarks from across the centuries. The City has a reputation for pageantry and tradition. It has its own government and Lord Mayor and is home to many livery companies and guilds. Great institutions are also based here, such as the Bank of England and Stock Exchange, as are some exceptional historic churches. With buildings of every style, age and height the City is an exciting destination, for its skyline changes constantly with new office towers. Today, many of them offer free viewing on their upper floors, revealing the fabulous London panorama. From here you see the City’s complex layout: narrow streets, ancient and ultra-modern buildings as well as Tower Bridge and UNESCO World Heritage Site the Tower of London.Illustrated throughout, City of London in 50 Buildings offers a superb and engaging portrait of the rich architectural heritage of the Square Mile.

DKK 159.00
1

Shoreditch and Hoxton in 50 Buildings - Lucy Mcmurdo - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Shoreditch and Hoxton in 50 Buildings - Lucy Mcmurdo - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Shoreditch, including neighbouring Hoxton, has a fascinating history, and contains a magnificent variety of buildings. Many have been turned into workspaces, apartments, arts centres, antiques emporiums, restaurants, markets and museums, including the Museum of the Home (formerly the Geffrye Museum), which occupies eighteenth-century almshouses, and the Old Truman Brewery complex, which today is filled with a vintage market and food stalls. Round the corner, the Victorian Spitalfields Market still thrives, albeit no longer as a fruit and veg market but as a dining and retail shopping area, and in Brick Lane there is the Jamme Masjid Mosque, which started life as a church, became a synagogue and is now a focal point for many Muslims living in the area. Shoreditch is not only home to the very first London council estate – Boundary Estate – but is also a major centre of industry and commerce and many new structures are appearing.In addition to their architectural merits many of the buildings have a story to tell, whether it is a connection with Jack the Ripper or the lives of refugees and immigrants who have always lived in Shoreditch’s streets – Huguenot weavers, Jews escaping persecution in Eastern Europe and, more recently, the Bangladeshi community – as well as East End Londoners. Shoreditch and Hoxton are furthermore associated with entertainment dating back to Elizabethan London’s theatres and filled today with bars, restaurants, cafés, clubs and galleries.Shoreditch and Hoxton in 50 Buildings explores the history of this fascinating area of East London through a selection of its most interesting buildings and structures, showing the changes that have taken place over the years. The book will appeal to all those who live in Shoreditch and Hoxton or who have an interest in the area.

DKK 161.00
1

1919 - A Land Fit for Heroes - Mike Hutton - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

1919 - A Land Fit for Heroes - Mike Hutton - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

The year 1919 has often been ignored in historians’ dizzy haste to enter the world of the Roaring Twenties but it was a year of enormous challenges and change. After a brief period of celebration after the Armistice, reality began to sink in. Returning servicemen were resentful at the prospect of unemployment and lack of available housing. Many of the troops had lost their jobs to women on lower rates of pay. Soon there were strikes, with soldiers and tanks on the streets of Britain. This is also the year in which The Troubles began in earnest.The Spanish Flu epidemic continued to take its toll. Even the gilded few were unhappy with rising taxation and a scarcity of servants. Worse, men who had made fortunes from the war had invaded their exclusive clubs. The bars and smoking rooms were full of regional accents and loud suits. Remarkably, something like 40 per cent of all the tax revenue the government raised in the twenties was swallowed up by the war bonds debt. The emerging ‘bright young things’ embraced sex, drugs and Dixieland jazz. Motor transport was replacing horses, whilst the first crossing of the Atlantic by air showed the way forward. There was entertainment to be had, with sport providing a popular outlet. Long queues formed outside cinemas to see the latest silent films. Theatres and music halls played to packed houses. It was a year of creativity and invention within the arts but also one of nostalgia for old Edwardian certainties. The nation rediscovered a love of shopping in the expanding number of department stores.The year was also a pause for breath after the horrors of war; a time to take stock before rushing into an uncertain future that was rapidly announcing itself.

DKK 192.00
1