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  1. The Great Britain Historical Database holds most of the ingredients from which Vision of Britain was constructed, and much more besides. Material has been gathered since the late 1970s. The largest part of GBHDB is statistical, and the data are organised more conventionally than in Vision of Britain, in thousands of columns within hundreds of ...

  2. A VISION OF BRITIAN should be a textbook in all secondary and high schools core curriculum, taught concurrent of just after the politics course. It should be part of a required first year course in all architecture, civil engineering, political [science], and city planning schools.

  3. Units covering this place. Our historical statistics are always for precisely defined areas, usually administrative units, not "places". We know about the following units named after Britain . Each has its own "home page" with much more information. Click on a tick to go directly to a particular statistical theme. Administrative Area: Popu-.

  4. 101 NW - Cockermouth. 1868. 1:63360. Download. A vision of Britain through time...

  5. A vision of Britain from 1801 to now. Including maps, statistical trends and historical descriptions. Help using this website

  6. This part of Vision of Britain is about the census itself, including: Listings of all reports published from 1801 to 1961, and all tables in those reports. Unless you ask, we list only reports and tables for which we hold data or text. The contents of selected tables, with headings and notes. Full text: Abstracts 1801-41, Preliminary Reports ...

  7. Thrushelton Devon. Click on the map for other historical maps of this place. In 1870-72, John Marius Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales described Thrushelton like this: THRUSHELTON, a parish in Tavistock district, Devon; 2½ miles N of Coryton r. station, and 9 N of Tavistock. Post town, Lewdown, North Devon.