
The little book of Cornwall
Did you know?
In British law no officer or agent of the Crown, which includes both Westminster and the Anglican Church, can legally set foot upon Cornish soil without the express and joint permissions of the Duke of Cornwall and Cornwall's Stannary Parliament.
Dolly Pentreath (c. 1680-1777), is popularly regarded as the last true speaker of the Cornish language and her last words were reputedly 'Me ne vidn cewsel Sawznek!' ('I don't want to speak English!').
Penzance boasts the county's only officially designated promenade, which extends for just over a mile from the town harbour to Newlyn.
Founded in 1860 Warrens Bakery, a family-owned chain based in St Just in Penwith, supplies pasties to Fortnum & Mason.
Cornwall's flag is that of St Piran and shows a white cross which represents molten tin oozing out of a black rock which Piran used when building his fireplace.
Author: John Van der Kiste
Publisher: The History Press
ISBN: 9780752480954
Number of pages: 191
Dimensions: H199mm x W134mm
Original: $14.99
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$4.50The little book of Cornwall
Did you know?
In British law no officer or agent of the Crown, which includes both Westminster and the Anglican Church, can legally set foot upon Cornish soil without the express and joint permissions of the Duke of Cornwall and Cornwall's Stannary Parliament.
Dolly Pentreath (c. 1680-1777), is popularly regarded as the last true speaker of the Cornish language and her last words were reputedly 'Me ne vidn cewsel Sawznek!' ('I don't want to speak English!').
Penzance boasts the county's only officially designated promenade, which extends for just over a mile from the town harbour to Newlyn.
Founded in 1860 Warrens Bakery, a family-owned chain based in St Just in Penwith, supplies pasties to Fortnum & Mason.
Cornwall's flag is that of St Piran and shows a white cross which represents molten tin oozing out of a black rock which Piran used when building his fireplace.
Author: John Van der Kiste
Publisher: The History Press
ISBN: 9780752480954
Number of pages: 191
Dimensions: H199mm x W134mm
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Did you know?
In British law no officer or agent of the Crown, which includes both Westminster and the Anglican Church, can legally set foot upon Cornish soil without the express and joint permissions of the Duke of Cornwall and Cornwall's Stannary Parliament.
Dolly Pentreath (c. 1680-1777), is popularly regarded as the last true speaker of the Cornish language and her last words were reputedly 'Me ne vidn cewsel Sawznek!' ('I don't want to speak English!').
Penzance boasts the county's only officially designated promenade, which extends for just over a mile from the town harbour to Newlyn.
Founded in 1860 Warrens Bakery, a family-owned chain based in St Just in Penwith, supplies pasties to Fortnum & Mason.
Cornwall's flag is that of St Piran and shows a white cross which represents molten tin oozing out of a black rock which Piran used when building his fireplace.
Author: John Van der Kiste
Publisher: The History Press
ISBN: 9780752480954
Number of pages: 191
Dimensions: H199mm x W134mm
















