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Domain > littleberkhamstedhistory.org.uk
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Is this malicious?
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DNS Resolutions
Date
IP Address
2016-08-18
46.249.205.23
(
ClassC
)
2024-07-14
188.240.191.161
(
ClassC
)
Port 80
HTTP/1.1 200 OKDate: Sun, 14 Jul 2024 17:45:13 GMTServer: ApacheUpgrade: h2,h2cConnection: Upgrade, closeVary: Accept-EncodingAccept-Ranges: noneTransfer-Encoding: chunkedContent-Type: text/html; charsetUTF-8 !doctype html>html langen-GB>head>meta charsetutf-8>meta http-equivx-ua-compatible contentIEedge>meta nameviewport contentwidthdevice-width, initial-scale1>link hrefapple-touch-icon.png relapple-touch-icon>link relstylesheet hrefcss/styles.css>link hrefhttps://fonts.googleapis.com/css?familyRoboto:500,500i,900,900i relstylesheet>link relstylesheet href//cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/cookieconsent2/3.0.3/cookieconsent.min.css>script src//cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/cookieconsent2/3.0.3/cookieconsent.min.js>/script>script>window.addEventListener(load, function(){window.cookieconsent.initialise({ palette: { popup: { background: #000 }, button: { background: #f1d600 } }, position: bottom-right})});/script>title>Little Berkhamsted - its Place in History/title>meta namedescription contentLittle Berkhamsted, its Place in History. A history of a Hertfordshire village.>/head>body>header> h1>Little Berkhamsted - its Place in History/h1>/header>nav> p classlogo>a href.>img srcimages/gryphon.jpg altGryphon width78 height88>/a>/p> label fordrop classtoggle>≡ Menu/label> input typecheckbox iddrop> ul> li>a href.>Home/a>/li> li>a href>Introduction and Latest Updates/a> ul> li classempty>a href>Introduction/a>/li> li>a hreflatest.php>Latest Updates/a>/li> /ul> /li> li classempty>a href>Before the Norman Conquest (1066)/a> ul> li>a href>The Viking Threat/a>/li> li>a href>King Alfred and the Danelaw/a>/li> li>a href>The Danish Kings of England (1016-1042)/a>/li> li>a href>Who were the Normans?/a>/li> li>a href>The role of “Berkhamsted” in the South-East of Hertfordshire/a>/li> /ul> /li> li classempty>a href>The Early Accounts of the Norman Conquest (1066)/a> ul> li>a href>The Bayeux Tapestry/a>/li> li>a href>Guy de Ponthieu, Bishop of Amiens – Carmen de Triumpho Normannico/a>/li> li>a href>William of Poitiers (within sight of London)/a>/li> li>a href>Orderic Vitalis/a>/li> li>a href>William of Jumieges - Historia Normannorum/a>/li> /ul> /li> li classempty>a href>The Effects of the Norman Conquest/a> ul> li>a href>The Early Effects/a>/li> li>a href>The Subsequent Effects/a>/li> li>a href>Continuing Effects/a>/li> /ul> /li> li classempty>a href>The Domesday Book (1086)/a> ul> li>a href>The Domesday Book/a> li>a href>The Hull University Project/a>/li> /ul> /li> li>a hrefdocuments.php>Other Historic Documents/a> ul> li>a hrefdocuments-hearth-tax.php>The Hearth Tax/a>/li> /ul> /li> li>a hreflords-of-the-manor.php>The Lords of the Manor/a> ul> li>a hreflords-chronology.php>Chronological Listing/a>/li> li classempty>a href>Falkes de Bréauté/a>/li> li classempty>a href>The Welds/a>/li> li classempty>a href>Elizabeth Fleetwood (nee Nevill)/a>/li> li classempty>a href>Thomas Dimsdale/a>/li> li classempty>a href>Occupants of the Manor House after its separation/a>/li> /ul> /li> li>a hrefst-andrews-church.php>St Andrew’s Church/a>/li> li>a hreftower.php>The Story of the Tower/a> ul> li>a hreftower-cromwell.php>The Cromwell Connection/a>/li> li classempty>a href>The Great Pit/a>/li> li classempty>a href>The “Brewhouse”/a>/li> li classempty>a href>John Stratton/a>/li> li classempty>a href>The Restoration and Modernisation/a>/li> li classempty>a href>The Listing - Grade II*/a>/li> li>a hrefdocs/StrattonsTowerNotes.pdf>Gardens Day Leaflet/a>/li> /ul> /li> li classempty>a href>Other Historic Buildings/a>/li> li classempty>a href>Old Photos/a>/li> li>a href>Historians/a> ul> li>a hrefhistorians-vch.php>The Victoria County History/a>/li> li>a hrefhistorians-baring.php>The Honorable Frank H Baring/a>/li> li>a hrefhistorians-johnston.php>C E Johnston (Charles)/a>/li> li classempty>a href>G J Turner/a>/li> li>a hrefhistorians-doree.php>Dr Stephen Doree/a>/li> /ul> /li> li>a hrefsearch-page.php>Search/a>/li> /ul>/nav>main> h2>Welcome to Little Berkhamsted - its Place in History/h2> p classundercon>This website is currently UNDER CONSTRUCTION so please check back for updates from time to time./p> figure classiHolder imax640> img srcimages/WilliamTheConqueror.jpg width640 height877 altWilliam the Conqueror> figcaption>This statue of William the Conqueror is at Falaise in Normandy, the place of his birth in 1028/figcaption> /figure> p>The Little Berkhamsted St Andrews Church Guide, published in 1972, states:/p> p>“em>So the years rolled by, Kings came to stay in Hertford Castle, armies marched from London along Ermin Street to the North, Queen Elisabeth lived under house arrest in Hatfield House, but Little Berkhamsted, tucked away off the beaten track, planted firmly on the top of a hill, hemmed in by thick forest, does not emerge to make even a ripple on the pages of history./em>”/p> p>Well, Little Berkhamsted may be an insignificant little village now but it most certainly did make very much more than “a ripple on the pages of history” - truly momentous events took place here, the most significant taking place exactly 950 years ago this year, 2016, an event which would determine the future course of British Society, up to the present time./p> p>It was here, in November or early December 1066, “when the Normans came within sight of London” (“em>statim ot Londonia conspectui pate bat/em>” - William of Poitiers, Duke William’s personal Chaplain), that the remnants of the Anglo-Saxon leadership left their refuge in London, to meet the Norman Duke William, and eventually to acknowledge that the death of the English King Harold and the decisive defeat of his army near Hastings, on 15 October, meant that the Normans, the descendants of the heathen Viking raiders who had terrorized Christian England since the end of the 8th Century, when the first Viking raiders had attacked the Priory on the Holy Island of Lindisfarne, burned the buildings, stolen the treasures and murdered the monks, had finally conquered England./p>!-- Start of StatCounter Code for Default Guide -->script>var sc_project11127542; var sc_invisible0; var sc_securityaa5dfd61; var scJsHost ((https: document.location.protocol) ? https://secure. : http://www.);document.write(sc+ript typetext/javascript src +scJsHost+statcounter.com/counter/counter.js>/+script>);/script>noscript> div classstatcounter>a titleshopify traffic stats hrefhttp://statcounter.com/shopify/ target_blank>img classstatcounter src//c.statcounter.com/11127542/0/aa5dfd61/0/ altshopify traffic stats>/a>/div>/noscript>!-- End of StatCounter Code for Default Guide -->/main>footer>Website developed for David A Cooper/footer>/body>/html>
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