James alexander sinclair biography sampler
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Folly building: how to make a folly work in your garden
Follies started appearing in gardens during the 17th century and, at the beginning, a folly was simply the remains of a previous building that just so happened to be loitering picturesquely in the grounds of large estates. Homeowners who envied the crumbling relics in their neighbour’s parkland then started building their own. The term ‘folly’ came to mean a building that has no particular purpose beyond looking good in the landscape: a sort of architectural Kardashian. They manifested themselves in many forms: a tumbledown dairy here, a ruined chapel there, possibly a glimpse of a turreted roofline through the trees, a crumbling bothy or a mausoleum. In fact, any old whim or fancy was fine.
Many of these historic follies still remain and continue to give great pleasure: for example, the gardens of Stowe House in Buckinghamshire are scattered with temples and monuments, while Painshill Park in Surrey has a pretty, complete se
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The English Garden September 2023 - Sample Issue
Grand designs at CHATSWORTH A LATE-SUMMER MASTERCLASS AT PELHAM PLANTS Help us find the NATION’S FAVOURITE GARDENS September inspiration ● Top 10 garden SHRUBS ● COURSES for gardeners ● The best COSMOS to grow ● 45 YEARS of Plant Heritage £5.99 GARDEN english THE SEPTEMBER 2023 www.theenglishgarden.co.uk For everyone who loves beautiful gardens
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Gardens
22 Chatsworth No good garden remains static, and at this grand old Derbyshire estate, Tom Stuart-Smith has been enlisted to revamp the venerable Rock Garden and other key areas to keep them fresh.
32 Rose Cottage Once the hard graft of a busy summer at his nursery, Pelham Plants in East Sussex, is over, Paul Seaborne can enjoy the clouds of colour and light in the private garden he’s designed for an autumn zenith.
41 The Beeches Owner Sandy Coppen constantly comes up with new ways to improve the unimprovable at this East Sussex walled gard
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Alexander Sinclair (1667?-1751) -- Drummond sperm?
James Dow Allen
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Let me direct your attention to the DF13 Y-haplogroup tree. It shows the agnatic descendants of DF13, a Great King of Western Bell Beaker. [url]https://www.yfull.com/tree/R-DF13/[/url] Look specifically at Y32809.
Or don't bother. YFull has very little to say about it:
> R-Y32809ZS4588 * ZS4584 * ZS4582+13 SNPs formed 2100 ybp, TMRCA 550 ybp info
> id:YF09335
> id:YF06937
The "TMRCA 550 ybp" shows the most recent common ancestor of this clade to have been born 1450 AD (error bars = 1000 AD to 1750 AD). That's rather recent in genealogical terms, especially when