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The Real Downton Abbey: Decline of the Country House Lifestyle
What might be in store for our favourite Downton Abbey characters as they enter 1920s? Clues lie in the real-life story of Brodsworth Hall.
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Many parents and carers want to enhance their child’s learning through exploring history at home but may not be sure where to start. We have asked our team of teachers and education experts for advice on how you can approach home learning. They share hints and tips on how to create the best learning environment for your children, different ways that learners can demonstrate their understanding and how to approach teaching a topic to children of different ages and abilities.
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Digital doubles: how to recreate a ruin for the cinema
Sutton Scardale Hall in Derbyshire doubled as Wayne Manor in 2016's Batman vs Superman. We spoke to the woman whose work helped get it onto the big screen.
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Take a look at our responses to some frequently asked questions concerning: The Partnership The Project Future Housing Consultation with the Public
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An Interview with Cressida Cowell
This year, our Halloween adventure trails have been inspired by Cressida Cowell, author of the best-selling Wizards of Once series. We caught up with her to find out how she ended up writing her books and where she gets her inspiration from. Plus, she gives us her expert tips on writing and illustrating.
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What to grow in a medieval herb garden
The infirmary herb garden in a medieval monastery grew a range of medicinal herbs - here are 9 plants that you’d find there that you can grow at home today.
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Description of Tintagel Castle
A description of Tintagel Castle, the ruins of which lie on both sides of an eroded neck of land dividing Tintagel island from the mainland.
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Marching 73 miles across the north of England, Hadrian's Wall is the former frontier of the Roman Empire and offers all sorts of opportunities for exploration.
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We can only make informed guesses about what prehistoric people believed, using evidence from the monuments and artefacts that have survived. There was no single or continuously developed belief system in prehistoric Britain. For long periods, however, there were religious practices concerning the dead, their afterlife, and their influence on the living.