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York in the fifteenth Century
This marvellous image is from a watercoloured drawing dated 1914 by Edwin Ridsdale Tate.
A lot of it is, of course, guesswork but the picture helps to evoke a time when York was pre-eminent in the north.
The city is dominated the three great institutions - the Castle sitting in the foreground, the Minster at the back and then, slightly set apart, the Abbey and its grounds.
The number of other church buildings is also revealing - there were about forty parish churches as well as three friaries, a priory and St Leonard's Hospital.
Highlights
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King Edward II and York
Edward I failed to conquer the S…
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Inscription from Fortress Gate
This stone sat on one of the main…