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Ellingham And Ringwood RFC
Ellingham may refer to: Placenames * Ellingham, Hampshire, England **part of Ellingham, Harbridge and Ibsley civil parish ** Ellingham Priory * Ellingham, Norfolk, England **Ellingham Hall, Norfolk **Ellingham railway station *Ellingham, Northumberland, England ** Ellingham Hall, Northumberland Surname *Harold Ellingham (1897–1975), British physical chemist *Dr Martin Ellingham, fictional protagonist of the TV series '' Doc Martin'' See also * Ellingham diagram *Ellingham–Horton graph In the mathematical field of graph theory, the Ellingham–Horton graphs are two 3- regular graphs on 54 and 78 vertices: the Ellingham–Horton 54-graph and the Ellingham–Horton 78-graph. They are named after Joseph D. Horton and Mark N. Elli ...
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Ellingham, Hampshire
Ellingham is a small village near Ringwood in Hampshire, England, west of the New Forest National Park. It is in the civil parish of Ellingham, Harbridge and Ibsley. Ellingham is most famous for the story of Alice Lisle, who was executed by the infamous Judge Jeffreys in 1685, on the charge of harbouring fugitives after the defeat of the Monmouth Rebellion. Overview Ellingham is a small village near Ringwood in Hampshire. It contains the hamlet of Rockford, and Moyles Court, the large house which is now a school. The village and surrounding countryside are a large tourist attraction in the summer months. Much of the area around Ellingham was once farmland and woodland, but since the 1950s sand and gravel extraction has created a series of lakes known collectively as Blashford Lakes.Blashford Lakes
, Hampshire & Isle of Wight Wildlife ...
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Ellingham, Harbridge And Ibsley
Ellingham, Harbridge and Ibsley is a civil parish in the west of the English county of Hampshire. The population of the civil parish at the 2011 Census was 1,171. The civil parish was formed in 1974 by the amalgamation of the three titular villages which had all been civil parishes in their own right, it forms part of the New Forest District. The main geographical features of the area are the A338 road (connecting Poole and Bournemouth with Salisbury) and the Hampshire Avon. The nearest towns are Ringwood and Fordingbridge. Populated places in the parish include: * Ellingham *Furze Hill *Harbridge * Highwood *Ibsley * Linford *Linwood Linwood may refer to: Places Many of the place names for Linwood come from the presence of linden trees. Australia *Linwood, South Australia * Linnwood, Guildford, 11-35 Byron Road, Guildford, New South Wales Canada * Linwood, Ontario * Linwood, ... *Mockbeggar, Hampshire, Mockbeggar *Moyles Court School *Poulner *Rockford, Hampshire, Rockford ...
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Ellingham Priory
Ellingham Priory was a medieval monastic house in Ellingham, Hampshire, England. It was founded by William de Soleres in 1160. It was a cell to the Abbey of Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte in Normandy. The church of Ellingham formed part of the grant of William de Solers to Ellingham Priory. It was dissolved in 1414 and sold to Eton College Eton College () is a public school in Eton, Berkshire, England. It was founded in 1440 by Henry VI under the name ''Kynge's College of Our Ladye of Eton besyde Windesore'',Nevill, p. 3 ff. intended as a sister institution to King's College, ... in 1462.Ellingham Priory
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Ellingham, Norfolk
Ellingham is a village and civil parish in the English county of Norfolk. The village is located north-east of Bungay and south-east of Norwich, along the River Waveney. The majority of the population lies in the east of the parish in Kirby Row. History Ellingham's name is of Anglo-Saxon origin and derives from the Old English for either Ella's homestead or village or a settlement with an abudance of eels. Archaeological evidence suggests that Ellingham was the site of several roughly five Roman kilns, one of the kilns was operated by Regalis, who moved to the parish from Camulodunum. In the Domesday Book, Ellingham is listed as a settlement of 31 households in the hundred of Clavering. In 1086, the village was part of the East Anglian estates of King William I. Ellingham Mill was in operation from the Twelfth Century to 1964, grinding crops into either flour or animal feed. The mill still stands today and is awaiting a conservation plan from Norfolk Heritage. In the late ...
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Ellingham Hall, Norfolk
Ellingham Hall is an historic country house in the English county of Norfolk, near the town of Bungay, about northeast of London. It is located just north of the border with Suffolk and is sometimes misdescribed as lying in that county. It is situated in of countryside in the Waveney Valley just outside the village of Ellingham. Description Built from grey brick in the 18th century during the Georgian period, Ellingham Hall is a three-storey building with five bays, a large central doorway and ten bedrooms. It was modified in the Victorian period with the addition of a large window on either side with four rounded windows and parapet. Two bay wings stand on either side of the main building, standing two and a half stories high, with ground floor windows set in blank arches. At the rear is a Victorian ''porte-cochère'' set on Ionic columns. Ownership The hall was bought in 1799 by the Reverend William Johnson (d. 1807) from the trustees of Michael Hicks Beach. At the time t ...
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Ellingham Railway Station
Ellingham is a former railway station in Ellingham, Norfolk. It was opened in 1863 as part of the Waveney Valley Line between Tivetshall and Beccles, Suffolk Suffolk () is a ceremonial county of England in East Anglia. It borders Norfolk to the north, Cambridgeshire to the west and Essex to the south; the North Sea lies to the east. The county town is Ipswich; other important towns include Lowes .... It was closed to passengers in 1953 and closed fully on 19 April 1965, when the last goods train called there. The station still stands much altered References External links Disused railway stations in Norfolk Former Great Eastern Railway stations Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1863 Railway stations in Great Britain closed in 1953 {{EastEngland-railstation-stub ...
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Ellingham, Northumberland
Ellingham is a civil parish in Northumberland Northumberland () is a county in Northern England, one of two counties in England which border with Scotland. Notable landmarks in the county include Alnwick Castle, Bamburgh Castle, Hadrian's Wall and Hexham Abbey. It is bordered by land ..., England. The population taken at the 2001 Census was 282, increasing slightly to 288 at the 2011 Census. References External links * GENUKI(Accessed: 24 November 2008) Villages in Northumberland Civil parishes in Northumberland {{Northumberland-geo-stub ...
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Ellingham Hall, Northumberland
Ellingham Hall, Northumberland is an English country house in the county of Northumberland, in the civil parish of Ellingham. The hall was built in the 17th century by Sir John Haggerston on the site of an earlier building. It was enlarged under the ownership of his successor, Edward Haggerston, but suffered severe damage in a fire that burned most of the East wing to the ground. The Haggerstons sheltered Catholic priests within secret tunnels and chambers during the persecutions of the Reformation.Our History
". Ellingham Hall. Accessed 18 December 2010
In the Second World War, the Ellingham estate was farmed by the Women ...
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Harold Ellingham
Harold Johann Thomas Ellingham, OBE, (1897–1975) was a British physical chemist, best known for his Ellingham diagrams, which summarize a large amount of information concerning extractive metallurgy.. Ellingham studied at the Royal College of Science from 1914 to 1916.Although the Royal College of Science had been formally merged with the Royal School of Mines and the City and Guilds Central Technical College in 1907 to form the Imperial College of Science and Technology, it retained an independent identity as a constituent college until 2002. He became a demonstrator at the college in 1919 and reader in physical chemistry in 1937. He was secretary of the Royal College of Science 1940–44 and of the Royal Institute of Chemistry 1944–63. He was made a fellow of Imperial College in 1949 and an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 1962.. Ellingham is best known for his diagrams plotting the Gibbs energy change for the reaction : M + O2  again ...
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Doc Martin
''Doc Martin'' is a British medical comedy drama television series starring Martin Clunes as Doctor Martin Ellingham. It was created by Dominic Minghella after the character of Dr Martin Bamford in the 2000 comedy film '' Saving Grace''. The programme is set in the fictional seaside village of Portwenn and filmed on location in the village of Port Isaac, Cornwall, United Kingdom, with most interior scenes shot in a converted local barn. Fern Cottage is used as the home and surgery of Doctor Ellingham. Nine series aired between 2004 and 2019, with a television film airing on Christmas Day in 2006. The ninth series aired on ITV from September 2019, and streamed in the United States and Canada on Acorn TV, PlutoTV and Tubi. The tenth (and final) series aired from 7 September 2022 to 26 October 2022; one last instalment, a Christmas special episode scheduled to air in December 2022, will be the programme's final episode. Plot Dr Martin Ellingham (Martin Clunes), a brilliant and ...
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Ellingham Diagram
An Ellingham diagram is a graph showing the temperature dependence of the stability of compounds. This analysis is usually used to evaluate the ease of reduction of metal oxides and sulfides. These diagrams were first constructed by Harold Ellingham in 1944.. In metallurgy, the Ellingham diagram is used to predict the equilibrium temperature between a metal, its oxide, and oxygen — and by extension, reactions of a metal with sulfur, nitrogen, and other non-metals. The diagrams are useful in predicting the conditions under which an ore will be reduced to its metal. The analysis is thermodynamic in nature and ignores reaction kinetics. Thus, processes that are predicted to be favourable by the Ellingham diagram can still be slow. Thermodynamics Ellingham diagrams are a particular graphical form of the principle that the thermodynamic feasibility of a reaction depends on the sign of Δ''G'', the Gibbs free energy change, which is equal to Δ''H − T''Δ''S'', where Δ''H'' is th ...
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