Searching for "ARTHURS OVEN"

You searched for "ARTHURS OVEN" in our simplified list of the main towns and villages, but the match we found was not what you wanted. There are several other ways of finding places within Vision of Britain, so read on for detailed advice and 7 possible matches we have found for you:

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  • You have just searched a list of the main towns, villages and localities of Britain which we have kept as simple as possible. It is based on a much more detailed list of legally defined administrative units: counties, districts, parishes, wapentakes and so on. This is the real heart of our system, and you may be better off directly searching it. There are no units called "ARTHURS OVEN" (excluding any that have already been grouped into the places you have already searched), but administrative unit searches can be narrowed by area and type, and broadened using wild cards and "sound-alike" matching:



  • If you are looking for hills, rivers, castles ... or pretty much anything other than the "places" where people live and lived, you need to look in our collection of Historical Gazetteers. This contains the complete text of three gazetteers published in the late 19th century — over 90,000 entries. Although there are no descriptive gazetteer entries for placenames exactly matching your search term (other than those already linked to "places"), the following entries mention "ARTHURS OVEN":
    Place name County Entry Source
    Arthur's Oven or Arthur's O'on Stirlingshire Arthur's Oven or Arthur's O'on, a famous quondam Roman antiquity in Larbert parish, Stirlingshire, on a sloping Groome
    Arthur's Oven, or Arthur's O'on Stirlingshire Arthur's Oven , or Arthur's O'on , famous antique building, demolished in 1743, Larbert par., Stirlingshire, near Falkirk. Bartholomew
    Carron Stirlingshire Arthur's Oven, stood near it in the north-western vicinity of Carron Iron-works; and the two battles of Falkirk Groome
    Craigmillar Castle Midlothian Arthur's Seat, the S side of the city, the firth and the shores of Fife, Aberlady Bay, and the Pentlands; and itself consists of a lofty square keep or tower, an inner ivy-clad court, and a quadrangular embattled wall, 30 feet high, with circular corner towers-the whole engirt by an outer rampart or else, in places, by a moat. The 'new part,' to the W, was added so late as 1661; the keep must be older than 1427 (the earliest date preserved); but much of the building, as it stands to-day, was reared most likely after Groome
    Kilbarchan Renfrewshire Arthur's Seat at Edinburgh. The soil is mostly good, being on the lower ground alluvial, and elsewhere clay (S and SW) and gravel (N and NW). The underlying rocks are sandstone, basalt, volcanic ash, and limestone, with beds of coal and iron. The beds of economic value are all extensively worked, as is also a bed of a peculiar description of basalt, which has been found suitable for the construction of ovens Groome
    Larbert Stirlingshire Arthur's Oven, and separately noticed, was on the southern border; and Roman millstones and fragments of Roman pottery have Groome
    Stirlingshire Stirlingshire Arthur's Oven. See `The Agriculture of Stirlingshire,' by James Tait, in Trans. Highl. and Ag. Soc. (1884), and works Groome
    It may also be worth using "sound-alike" and wildcard searching to find names similar to your search term:



  • Place-names also appear in our collection of British travel writing. If the place-name you are interested in appears in our simplified list of "places", the search you have just done should lead you to mentions by travellers. However, many other places are mentioned, including places outside Britain and weird mis-spellings. You can search for them in the Travel Writing section of this site.


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