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Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016
... Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016 ... -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016
... Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016 ... -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016
... Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016 ... -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016
... Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016 ... -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016
... Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016 ... -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016
... Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016 ... -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016
... Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016 ... -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016
... Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016 ... -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016
... Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016 ... -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016
... Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016 ... -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016
... Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016 ... -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016
... Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016 ... -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Dorothy Wickham, Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016, 2016
... Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016 ...mason's mark, carlisle cathedral, stonemason -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016, 2016
... Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016 ...carlisle cathedral, mason's mark -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016, 2016
... Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral, 27 October 2016 ...carlisle cathedral, stoenmason, mason's mark -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral 27 October 2016
... Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral 27 October 2016 ...Carlisle and its cathedral. This cathedral church, which has stood on this site for over 800 years has a great story to tell. It is a story that can be traced back further still, to an even earlier church of the 7th century AD. Archaeological excavations on this site have taken the story back to Roman times. Today the dean and canons and other cathedral staff ensure that the worship of God remains the main work of this cathedral, while long-standing traditions of music, hospitality and education are also maintained. The story of this place is not so much about buildings, but about people. The buildings remain as evidence of the lives of people who lived and worked here and of what they believed and achieved. Until 1540 a community of Augustinian canons served the cathedral. They lived highly organized lives in monastic buildings suited to their needs. As canons rather than monks, they were freer to undertake pastoral and educational work. carlisle, cathedral, stonemasons, mason's marks -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral 27 October 2016
... Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral 27 October 2016 ...Carlisle and its cathedral. This cathedral church, which has stood on this site for over 800 years has a great story to tell. It is a story that can be traced back further still, to an even earlier church of the 7th century AD. Archaeological excavations on this site have taken the story back to Roman times. Today the dean and canons and other cathedral staff ensure that the worship of God remains the main work of this cathedral, while long-standing traditions of music, hospitality and education are also maintained. The story of this place is not so much about buildings, but about people. The buildings remain as evidence of the lives of people who lived and worked here and of what they believed and achieved. Until 1540 a community of Augustinian canons served the cathedral. They lived highly organized lives in monastic buildings suited to their needs. As canons rather than monks, they were freer to undertake pastoral and educational work. carlisle, cathedral, stonemasons, mason's marks -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral 27 October 2016
... Mason's Marks, Carlisle Cathedral 27 October 2016 ...Carlisle and its cathedral. This cathedral church, which has stood on this site for over 800 years has a great story to tell. It is a story that can be traced back further still, to an even earlier church of the 7th century AD. Archaeological excavations on this site have taken the story back to Roman times. Today the dean and canons and other cathedral staff ensure that the worship of God remains the main work of this cathedral, while long-standing traditions of music, hospitality and education are also maintained. The story of this place is not so much about buildings, but about people. The buildings remain as evidence of the lives of people who lived and worked here and of what they believed and achieved. Until 1540 a community of Augustinian canons served the cathedral. They lived highly organized lives in monastic buildings suited to their needs. As canons rather than monks, they were freer to undertake pastoral and educational work. carlisle, cathedral, stonemasons, mason's marks -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph, Otago Witness, Thomas Marks, Drummer at the Eureka Stockade, c1905
... Thomas Marks, Drummer at the Eureka Stockade ...tommy marks, thomas marks, eureka stockade -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Masons' Marks, Old Sarum, England, English Heritage Site, 2016, 01 November 2016
... Masons' Marks, Old Sarum, England, English Heritage Site ...William the Conqueror inherited Old Sarum from the last Saxon king of England. It was an ideal site for a royal castle. It was here in 1070 that William paid off his army after a long and bitter campaign in northern England. It was here in 1086 that he called together all the major landholders in England so they could swear allegiance to him. It was a crucial moment. The Domesday Book was being written, a threatened Viking invasion had only just been averted and William's eldest son was in armed rebellion. Old Sarum was an important place where this Norman king of England held power. In 1794 the Ordnance Survey set out to check the accuracy of the first mapping of Southern England, which had begun ten years earlier. From a point just below Old Sarum Lieutenant William Mudge laid out a base-line 36,574 feet (11,253 metres) long. From each end of the line the positions of distant places were plotted using a huge theodolite made in 1791 by Jesse Ramsden. The accuracy of the process, which was repeated all over England, depended on Jesse Ramsden's craftsmanship and on William Mudge's surveying skill in setting out this first base-line from Old Sarum. The nearer end of Mudge's line is marked by an inscribed stone beside the modern A345 at Old Sarum. ordnance survey, william mudge, jesse ramsden, william the conqueror, old sarum, saxon, 1086, england -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Masons' Marks, Old Sarum, England, English Heritage Site, 2016, 01 November 2016
... Masons' Marks, Old Sarum, England, English Heritage Site ...William the Conqueror inherited Old Sarum from the last Saxon king of England. It was an ideal site for a royal castle. It was here in 1070 that William paid off his army after a long and bitter campaign in northern England. It was here in 1086 that he called together all the major landholders in England so they could swear allegiance to him. It was a crucial moment. The Domesday Book was being written, a threatened Viking invasion had only just been averted and William's eldest son was in armed rebellion. Old Sarum was an important place where this Norman king of England held power. In 1794 the Ordnance Survey set out to check the accuracy of the first mapping of Southern England, which had begun ten years earlier. From a point just below Old Sarum Lieutenant William Mudge laid out a base-line 36,574 feet (11,253 metres) long. From each end of the line the positions of distant places were plotted using a huge theodolite made in 1791 by Jesse Ramsden. The accuracy of the process, which was repeated all over England, depended on Jesse Ramsden's craftsmanship and on William Mudge's surveying skill in setting out this first base-line from Old Sarum. The nearer end of Mudge's line is marked by an inscribed stone beside the modern A345 at Old Sarum. ordnance survey, william mudge, jesse ramsden, william the conqueror, old sarum, saxon, 1086, england -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Masons' Marks, Old Sarum, England, English Heritage Site, 01 November 2016
... Masons' Marks, Old Sarum, England, English Heritage Site ...William the Conqueror inherited Old Sarum from the last Saxon king of England. It was an ideal site for a royal castle. It was here in 1070 that William paid off his army after a long and bitter campaign in northern England. It was here in 1086 that he called together all the major landholders in England so they could swear allegiance to him. It was a crucial moment. The Domesday Book was being written, a threatened Viking invasion had only just been averted and William's eldest son was in armed rebellion. Old Sarum was an important place where this Norman king of England held power. In 1794 the Ordnance Survey set out to check the accuracy of the first mapping of Southern England, which had begun ten years earlier. From a point just below Old Sarum Lieutenant William Mudge laid out a base-line 36,574 feet (11,253 metres) long. From each end of the line the positions of distant places were plotted using a huge theodolite made in 1791 by Jesse Ramsden. The accuracy of the process, which was repeated all over England, depended on Jesse Ramsden's craftsmanship and on William Mudge's surveying skill in setting out this first base-line from Old Sarum. The nearer end of Mudge's line is marked by an inscribed stone beside the modern A345 at Old Sarum. ordnance survey, william mudge, jesse ramsden, william the conqueror, old sarum, saxon, 1086, england -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Masons' Marks, Old Sarum, England, English Heritage Site, 2016, 01 November 2016
... Masons' Marks, Old Sarum, England, English Heritage Site ...William the Conqueror inherited Old Sarum from the last Saxon king of England. It was an ideal site for a royal castle. It was here in 1070 that William paid off his army after a long and bitter campaign in northern England. It was here in 1086 that he called together all the major landholders in England so they could swear allegiance to him. It was a crucial moment. The Domesday Book was being written, a threatened Viking invasion had only just been averted and William's eldest son was in armed rebellion. Old Sarum was an important place where this Norman king of England held power. In 1794 the Ordnance Survey set out to check the accuracy of the first mapping of Southern England, which had begun ten years earlier. From a point just below Old Sarum Lieutenant William Mudge laid out a base-line 36,574 feet (11,253 metres) long. From each end of the line the positions of distant places were plotted using a huge theodolite made in 1791 by Jesse Ramsden. The accuracy of the process, which was repeated all over England, depended on Jesse Ramsden's craftsmanship and on William Mudge's surveying skill in setting out this first base-line from Old Sarum. The nearer end of Mudge's line is marked by an inscribed stone beside the modern A345 at Old Sarum. ordnance survey, william mudge, jesse ramsden, william the conqueror, old sarum, saxon, 1086, england -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Masons' Marks, Old Sarum, England, English Heritage Site, 2016, 01 November 2016
... Masons' Marks, Old Sarum, England, English Heritage Site ...William the Conqueror inherited Old Sarum from the last Saxon king of England. It was an ideal site for a royal castle. It was here in 1070 that William paid off his army after a long and bitter campaign in northern England. It was here in 1086 that he called together all the major landholders in England so they could swear allegiance to him. It was a crucial moment. The Domesday Book was being written, a threatened Viking invasion had only just been averted and William's eldest son was in armed rebellion. Old Sarum was an important place where this Norman king of England held power. In 1794 the Ordnance Survey set out to check the accuracy of the first mapping of Southern England, which had begun ten years earlier. From a point just below Old Sarum Lieutenant William Mudge laid out a base-line 36,574 feet (11,253 metres) long. From each end of the line the positions of distant places were plotted using a huge theodolite made in 1791 by Jesse Ramsden. The accuracy of the process, which was repeated all over England, depended on Jesse Ramsden's craftsmanship and on William Mudge's surveying skill in setting out this first base-line from Old Sarum. The nearer end of Mudge's line is marked by an inscribed stone beside the modern A345 at Old Sarum. ordnance survey, william mudge, jesse ramsden, william the conqueror, old sarum, saxon, 1086, england -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Masons' Marks, Old Sarum, England, English Heritage Site, 2016, 01 November 2016
... Masons' Marks, Old Sarum, England, English Heritage Site ...William the Conqueror inherited Old Sarum from the last Saxon king of England. It was an ideal site for a royal castle. It was here in 1070 that William paid off his army after a long and bitter campaign in northern England. It was here in 1086 that he called together all the major landholders in England so they could swear allegiance to him. It was a crucial moment. The Domesday Book was being written, a threatened Viking invasion had only just been averted and William's eldest son was in armed rebellion. Old Sarum was an important place where this Norman king of England held power. In 1794 the Ordnance Survey set out to check the accuracy of the first mapping of Southern England, which had begun ten years earlier. From a point just below Old Sarum Lieutenant William Mudge laid out a base-line 36,574 feet (11,253 metres) long. From each end of the line the positions of distant places were plotted using a huge theodolite made in 1791 by Jesse Ramsden. The accuracy of the process, which was repeated all over England, depended on Jesse Ramsden's craftsmanship and on William Mudge's surveying skill in setting out this first base-line from Old Sarum. The nearer end of Mudge's line is marked by an inscribed stone beside the modern A345 at Old Sarum. ordnance survey, william mudge, jesse ramsden, william the conqueror, old sarum, saxon, 1086, england -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Digital Photograph, Architectural Stone Column at Stonemason's marks, interior columns, Grey Friars Presbyterian Church, Edinburgh, Scotland
... Architectural Stone Column at Stonemason's marks, interior ...A bluestone column used in architecturebluestone, architecture, grey friars presbyterian church, edinburgh, scotland -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Digital Photograph, Dorothy Wickham, Marks on edging near gutters, Lancaster Gate, London, UK, 2016, 19/09/2016
... Marks on edging near gutters, Lancaster Gate, London, UK ...masons marks, lancaster gate, london, stone -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Archive - Digital photograph, Marks on stone, Rosslyn Chapel, UK, Rosslyn Chapel was founded in 1446 by Sir William St Clair. The beauty of its setting, in rural Midlothian, and the mysterious symbolism of its ornate stonework have inspired, attracted and intrigued writers, artists and visitors ever since
... Marks on stone, Rosslyn Chapel, UK ...Rosslyn Chapel was founded in 1446 by Sir William St Clair. The beauty of its setting, in rural Midlothian, and the mysterious symbolism of its ornate stonework have inspired, attracted and intrigued writers, artists and visitors ever since.State Heritage Scotlandmasons' marks, chapel, scotland, masons, -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Digital Photograph, Marks on pavement stones, Durham, UK
... Marks on pavement stones, Durham, UK ... -
City of Ballarat Libraries
Postcard - Card Box Photographs, C. Marks and Co. Jewellers and Opticians, Sturt and Lydiard Streets
... C. Marks and Co. Jewellers and Opticians, Sturt and Lydiard ...Currently Allen Bros. Jewellers. Plate 217 Chuck Photo.c.marks & co., sturt street, lydiard street, building, commerical, persons