BARLA Cumbria Cup - Definition. Was ist BARLA Cumbria Cup
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Was (wer) ist BARLA Cumbria Cup - definition


BARLA Cumbria Cup         
The BARLA Cumbria Cup is an amateur rugby league knock-out competition for clubs in the county of Cumbria. The cup is administered by the Cumberland Amateur Rugby League Association, a branch of the British Amateur Rugby League Association, and has been played for since 1982.
Mihály Barla         
HUNGARIAN WRITER
Mihaly Barla
Mihály Barla Slovene Miháo Barla (circa 1778 – February 4, 1824) was a Slovenian Lutheran pastor, writer, and poet.
History of Cumbria         
  • A [[Tesco]] store underwater in Carlisle during the January 2005 floods
  • A Border Reiver : statue in Carlisle
  • Galava Roman fort, Ambleside
  • Brantwood, overlooking Coniston Water, viewed from the steam yacht 'Gondola' – note the angled, corner windows designed to take in the views
  • The banks of [[Brocavum]] Roman fort in the foreground; [[Brougham Castle]] is in the background
  • Fibula]]e from the [[Penrith Hoard]], 10th century (British Museum)
  • Cairn circle, Oddendale
  •  Calder Abbey
  • [[Carlisle Castle]] – begun by William Rufus in 1092; rebuilt in stone under Henry I, 1122–35, and David I of Scotland, 1136–1153
  • Carlisle Cathedral : founded in 1133
  • [[Castlerigg Stone Circle]]
  • Possible position of Rheged
  • Claife Station on the western shore of [[Windermere]] – built in the 1790s with tinted windows angled to take in all the aesthetically pleasing views
  • The [[Crosby Garrett Helmet]] – (private collection)
  • Barrow-in-Furness]]
  • Workington Hall, the Curwens' family seat
  • Approximate extent of Domesday coverage : the district of Hougun, if indeed it was a district, may have covered the three peninsulas at the left of the pink area
  • Dove Cottage (Town End, Grasmere) – home of William and Dorothy Wordsworth, 1799–1808; home of Thomas De Quincey, 1809–1820
  • Furness Abbey, founded in 1123 by [[Stephen, King of England]], attacked by the Scots in 1322
  •  Gateway to the College at Kirkoswald
  • 'Giants Grave', St. Andrew's churchyard, Penrith, an unusual arrangement of two Viking-age cross-shafts with four hogbacks (in the foreground). In addition, there is a smaller, Viking-age, wheel-headed cross just visible in the background
  • The [[Gosforth Cross]], 10th-century Viking-age sculpture. (A replica of 1887, with clearer depictions of the decoration, may be found in the churchyard at [[Aspatria]], along with a replica of another cross, the original of which is at [[Dearham]])
  • So-called "Saint's tomb" (left), and "Warrior's tomb" (right), two hogbacks in St. Mary's church, Gosforth. Typically high and narrow Cumbrian style, in the shape of a building with a roof, eaves and walls. The Saint's tomb has a crucifixion on the end, the Warrior's tomb has a procession of armed men
  • Langdale Axe Factory]]
  • Greta Hall, Keswick – home of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, 1800–1804; home to Robert Southey, 1803–1843
  • [[Greystoke Castle]]. Held by the Greystoke family, then by the Dacres and inherited by the Howard family during Elizabeth I's reign. Photo:Simon Ledingham
  • Hadrian's Wall
  • Hardknott Roman Fort
  • Eden]] Valley between Appleby and Penrith, an area referred to affectionately as the heartland of [[Rheged]] in the praise poems of Taliesin
  • outline=silver}}
  • Iron Age roundhouse reconstruction
  • The [[Irton Cross]], Irton, Cumbria, early 9th century, Anglian (pre-Viking) sculpture
  • Kentmere Hall, an example of a Cumbrian Pele tower
  • Kents Bank, Cumbria
  •  Tomb of [[Thomas Dacre, 2nd Baron Dacre]] at [[Lanercost Priory]]
  • [[Little Meg]] – a Bronze Age ring cairn with spiral rock art
  • [[Loki]] stone, Kirkby Stephen parish church, part of a 10th-century Viking-age cross-shaft. But does it show Loki or Satan?
  • [[Long Meg and Her Daughters]]
  • The Anglo-Scottish marches
  • [[St Laurence's Church, Morland]] : with "the only tower of Anglo-Saxon character in the NW counties", according to Pevsner.<ref>Hyde (2010), p. 531.</ref> Tower possibly built by order of Siward, Earl of Northumbria, sometime between 1042 and 1055; nave possibly later (1120)
  • Napes Needle on [[Great Gable]], a favourite of the early climbers
  • Neolithic stone axe with handle from Ehenside Tarn (now in the British Museum)
  • The northeastern [[Irish Sea]], showing new settlements with Norse place names.
  • 220px
  • The [[Ormside bowl]], probably late 8th century and made in Northumbria; possibly looted from York by a Viking warrior and buried with him at Great Ormside
  • [[Penrith Castle]] : Richard, Duke of Gloucester, (later [[Richard III of England]]), was based here when Sheriff of Cumberland in the 1470s
  • Milefortlet 21 at Crosscanonby on the Cumbrian coast, with later, 18th-century, saltpans across the road to the left
  • Roman milestone still in situ by the A66 near Kirkby Thore
  • Location of Inglewood Forest, stretching from Carlisle to Penrith; it was the most northerly of the Royal forests
  • Birdoswald – showing partial blockage of main (east) gateway
  • Rydal Mount – home to Wordsworth 1813–1850. Hundreds of visitors came here to see him over the years
  •  Scots' Dike
  • St Mary's Church, Abbeytown : all that is left of [[Holmcultram Abbey]], founded by David I, King of Scots, and his son, Earl Henry, in 1150
  • The [[Staffordshire Moorlands Pan]] – an enamelled cooking and serving vessel, engraved with the names of four Hadrian's Wall forts sited in Cumbria (2nd century&nbsp;AD). See also the article on the [[Rudge Cup]] and Amiens skillet.
  • The Stanegate line is marked in red, to the south of the later Hadrian's Wall. (n.b. Brocavum is Brougham, not Kirkby Thore as given in the map)
  • Swarthy Hill, near Crosscanonby on the Solway coast – possible site of Iron Age hillfort, later the site of mile-fortlet&nbsp;21 in Roman times
  • Swinside stone circle
  • The Fish Hotel, Buttermere – where Mary Robinson worked
  • The Rere or [[Rey Cross]] on Stainmore
  • 2007 Grayrigg train derailment]]
  • St Patrick's]] birthplace
  • [[Wetheral Priory]] Gatehouse – all that remains of Wetheral Priory, founded by Ranulf le Meschin in 1106
  • Wray Castle – built by a Liverpool doctor who had married a rich wife. Constructed in 1840 at the head of Windermere. Associated with two key players of the National Trust : Canon Rawnsley and Beatrix Potter
  • Yanwath hall – a semi-fortified house near Penrith
ASPECT OF HISTORY
History of cumbria; 2009 Cumbria earthquake; Cumbrian earthquake; Draft:History of Medieval Cumbria
The history of Cumbria as a county of England begins with the Local Government Act 1972. Its territory and constituent parts however have a long history under various other administrative and historic units of governance.