Pen Y Ghent B&B - Bed and Breakfasts - £35 - Hotels United Kingdom Selside http://www.justigo.uk/hotels/united-kingdom/selside/penyghent-cottage_193956.html
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Pen Y Ghent B&B - Bed and Breakfasts - £35 - Hotels United Kingdom Selside http://www.justigo.uk/hotels/united-kingdom/selside/penyghent-cottage_193956.html
Pen Y Ghent B&B - Bed and Breakfasts - £35 - Hotels United Kingdom Selside http://www.justigo.uk/hotels/united-kingdom/selside/penyghent-cottage_193956.html
Seal Parrock - Vacation Homes - $58 - Hotels United Kingdom Selside http://www.justigo.us/hotels/united-kingdom/selside/seal-parrock_193862.html
Hillfoot Pet-Friendly Cottage, Selside, Yorkshire Dales (Ref 1014)
Hillfoot Pet-Friendly Cottage, Selside, Yorkshire Dales (Ref 1014)
Description: Situated in the small, unspoilt hamlet of Selside and about two and a half miles from Horton-in-Ribblesdale is this warm and welcoming cottage. This stone-built, semi-detached cottage was once a coaching inn and then a farmhouse and has now been carefully and tastefully refurbished to a high standard. The wood-burning stove and original timbers have been retained to give the property…
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Seventh century building discovered on Ingleborough
The flanks of Ingleborough in the Yorkshire Dales National Park have given up one of their secrets to a team of amateur archaeologists.
Members of the Ingleborough Archaeology Group spent weeks investigating a remote site on the side of one of the National Park’s famous Three Peaks to the west of Selside in Upper Ribblesdale.
And their work has resulted in the discovery of the first 7th century building to be positively identified in the National Park – and one of the first in the north of England.
Excavation supervisor Dr David Johnson said: “We uncovered a small, rectangular, partly stone-built building with two rooms and in it we found 16 pieces of charcoal impressed into the compacted soil floor.
“Two of these were sent for radiocarbon dating and returned identical dates – between AD660 and 780, which puts the end of the site’s use firmly within the Anglo-Saxon period. Read more.