WEBVTT 00:46:59.000 --> 00:46:59.900 Re Walsingham Way--there is even a Walsingham Way Project, overseen in part by Norwich Cathedral, that has been underway since 2014 or so. 00:49:22.000 --> 00:49:22.900 Thank you in my neck of the woods there is the North Downs Way pilgrimage route between Winchester and Canterbury and the South Downs Way 00:51:46.000 --> 00:51:46.900 Beresford certainly looked at the fossilisation of field boundaries in 19th century urban expansion within leeds which was fascinating. Interestingly also, I’m an Urban Designer and today it would be best practice to preserve such features/boundaries in master plans. Ofcourse this wasn’t always the case in the post war period. 00:52:25.000 --> 00:52:25.900 'Dead Woman's Thorn was/is on the boundary between Eastnor and Ledbury in Herefordshire 00:52:47.000 --> 00:52:47.900 I never found out who the woman was! On trees, there is interesting stuff in Tim Ingold’s temporality of the landscape; in civil war people in towns and villages mention the destruction of particular trees 00:53:59.000 --> 00:53:59.900 Burials on boundaries go back to Anglo-Saxon times: see book by Andrew Reynolds on Deviant Burials 00:54:44.000 --> 00:54:44.900 Psalms were routinely sung during Elizabethan perambulations 00:56:20.000 --> 00:56:20.900 Virtual applause. 00:56:50.000 --> 00:56:50.900 Prof Whyte, that was super! Thank you! 00:57:07.000 --> 00:57:07.900 Thank you, that was great 👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿 00:57:40.000 --> 00:57:40.900 Thank you Dr. Whyte ❤ 00:58:00.000 --> 00:58:00.900 Thank you. What a great start! 00:58:12.000 --> 00:58:12.900 Hi everyone thanks for listening and for your questions and comments.