- published: 08 Oct 2016
- views: 1518029
Coordinates: 53°15′32″N 1°54′40″W / 53.259°N 1.911°W / 53.259; -1.911
Buxton is a spa town in Derbyshire, England. It has the highest elevation of any market town in England. Close to the county boundary with Cheshire to the west and Staffordshire to the south, Buxton is described as "the gateway to the Peak District National Park". A municipal borough until 1974, Buxton was then merged with other localities lying primarily to the north, including Glossop, to form the local government district and borough of High Peak within the county of Derbyshire. Economically, Buxton is within the sphere of influence of Greater Manchester.
Buxton is home to Poole's Cavern, an extensive limestone cavern open to the public, and St Ann's Well, fed by the geothermal spring bottled and sold internationally by Buxton Mineral Water Company. Also in the town is the Buxton Opera House, which hosts several music and theatre festivals each year. The Devonshire Campus of the University of Derby is housed in one of the town's historic buildings.
The Peak District is an upland area in England, most of which lies in northern Derbyshire but also includes parts of Cheshire, Greater Manchester, Staffordshire and Yorkshire.
An area of great diversity, it is split into the northern Dark Peak, where most of the moorland is found and whose geology is gritstone, and the southern White Peak, where most of the population lives and whose geology is mainly limestone.
The Peak District National Park became the first national park in the United Kingdom in 1951. With its proximity to the cities of Manchester and Sheffield and easy access by road and rail, it attracts millions of visitors every year.
The Peak District forms the southern end of the Pennines and much of the area is uplands above 1,000 feet (300 m), with a high point on Kinder Scout of 2,087 feet (636 m). Despite its name, the landscape generally lacks sharp peaks, being characterised by rounded hills and gritstone escarpments (the "edges"). The area is surrounded by major conurbations, including Huddersfield, Manchester, Sheffield, Derby and Stoke-on-Trent.
An opera house is a theatre building used for opera performances that consists of a stage, an orchestra pit, audience seating, and backstage facilities for costumes and set building. While some venues are constructed specifically for operas, other opera houses are part of larger performing arts centers.
The first public opera house came into existence in 1637 as the Teatro San Cassiano in Venice, Italy, in a country where opera has been popular through the centuries among ordinary people as well as wealthy patrons; it still has a large number of working opera houses. In contrast, there was no opera house in London when Henry Purcell was composing and the first opera house in Germany was built in Hamburg in 1678. Early United States opera houses served a variety of functions in towns and cities, hosting community dances, fairs, plays, and vaudeville shows as well as operas and other musical events.
In the 17th and 18th centuries, opera houses were often financed by rulers, nobles, and wealthy people who used patronage of the arts to endorse their political ambitions and social positions or prestige. With the rise of bourgeois and capitalist social forms in the 19th century, European culture moved away from its patronage system to a publicly supported system. In the 2000s, most opera and theatre companies raise funds from a combination of government and institutional grants, ticket sales, and private donations.
Free music or libre music is music that, like free software, can freely be copied, distributed and modified for any purpose. Thus free music is either in the public domain or licensed under a free license by the artist or copyright holder themselves, often as a method of promotion. It does not mean that there should be no fee involved. The word free refers to freedom (as in free software), not to price.
The Free Music Philosophy generally encourages creators to free music using whatever language or methods they wish. A Free Music Public License (FMPL) is available for those who prefer a formal approach. Some free music is licensed under licenses that are intended for software (like the GPL) or other writings (the GFDL). But there are also licenses especially for music and other works of art, such as EFF's Open Audio License, LinuxTag's Open Music License, the Free Art license and some of the Creative Commons Licences.
Before the advent of copyright law in the early 18th century and its subsequent application to music compositions first, all music was "free" according to the definitions used in free software or free music, since there were no copyright restrictions. In practice however, music reproduction was generally restricted to live performances and the legalities of playing other people's music was unclear in most jurisdictions. Copyright laws changed this gradually so much so that in the late 20th century, copying a few words of a musical composition or a few seconds of a sound recording, the two forms of music copyright, could be considered criminal infringement.
Royalty-free, or RF, refers to the right to use copyrighted material or intellectual property without the need to pay royalties or license fees for each use or per volume sold, or some time period of use or sales.
Many computer industry standards, especially those developed and submitted by industry consortium's or individual companies, involve royalties for the actual use of these standards. These royalties are typically charged on a "per port" basis, where the manufacturer of end-user devices has to pay a small fixed fee for each device sold, and also include a substantial annual fixed fee. With millions of devices sold each year, the royalties can amount to several millions of dollars, which is a significant burden for the manufacturer. Examples of such royalties-based standards include IEEE 1394, HDMI, and H.264/MPEG-4 AVC.
Royalty-free standards do not include any "per-port" or "per-volume" charges or annual payments for the actual implementation of the standard, even though the text of the actual specification is typically protected by copyright and needs to be purchased from the standards body. Most open standards are royalty-free, and many proprietary standards are royalty-free as well. Examples of royalty-free standards include DisplayPort, VGA, VP8, and Matroska.
Actors: Ken Hughes (writer), Edgar Driver (actor), Ken Hughes (director), Michael Ingrams (actor), Charles Rolfe (actor), Howard Lang (actor), Edgar Lustgarten (actor), Alec C. Snowden (producer), Jack McNaughton (actor), Derek Holding (editor), Alexander Gauge (actor), Alan Robinson (actor), Verne Morgan (actor), Peter Dunlop (actor), Betty Carter (actress),
Genres: Crime, Short,Actors: Allan Lane (actor), Frank Albertson (actor), Russell Hicks (actor), Teddy Infuhr (actor), William 'Billy' Benedict (actor), Billy Bletcher (actor), Robert Armstrong (actor), Paul Harvey (actor), Roy Butler (actor), Tom Chatterton (actor), Johnny Duncan (actor), Edward Gargan (actor), Pat Gleason (actor), Jonathan Hale (actor), Matt McHugh (actor),
Genres: Comedy,Actors: Carlyle Moore Jr. (actor), Al Lloyd (actor), Ralph Bellamy (actor), John Arledge (actor), Dick Elliott (actor), Eddie Acuff (actor), Sol Gorss (actor), Creighton Hale (actor), Glen Cavender (actor), Oscar 'Dutch' Hendrian (actor), William Hopper (actor), Charles Anthony Hughes (actor), Jack Gardner (actor), John Litel (actor), Dennis Morgan (actor),
Plot: Federal Airlines ace pilot Chick Faber is grounded by Flight Superintendent Bill Graves when a doctor says his eyesight is failing. Aided by Mary Norvell and Nan Hudson, Graves persuades Chick to take a job as teacher in the school for airline hostesses, and Chick and Mary get married. He learns that the Army is going to test a stratosphere plane that he and Artie Dixon designed and feels that he should make the first flight but permission is refused.
Keywords: airline, airplane, airplane-accident, airport, ambulance, aviation, bar, bartender, binge-drinking, blackoutActors: King Baggot (director), King Baggot (actor), Howard Crampton (actor), King Baggot (actor), Frank Smith (actor), Irene Hunt (actress), King Baggot (writer), Jack Ridgeway (actor),
Genres: Crime, Drama, Romance, Short,BROTHER VS SISTER IN THE GREATEST CHALLENGE OF ALL Legitimate Tees: https://JoeWellerStore.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/joe_weller_ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/hellojoeweller Instagram: http://instagram.com/joe_weller_ SnapChat: thewellard Business: joewellerenquiries@gmail.com Thanks for watching!
What I would do, if Buxton Water closed down. TWITTER: https://twitter.com/joe_weller_ FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/hellojoeweller INSTAGRAM: http://instagram.com/joe_weller_ T-SHIRTS: https://joeweller.spreadshirt.co.uk THANKS TO @JustSayLuke for helping me with this and getting Ronaldo Chopped. Follow and SPAM him here: https://twitter.com/justsayluke Music: Royalty Free Music by: http://audiomicro.com/royalty-free-music Ronaldo Chop - Joe Weller (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uH9zaBl5YsE&feature;=c4-overview&list;=UULk9wddjT0F-HILLRFXodtg) MC Moyes - Joe Weller
Views Around Buxton, Derbyshire, August, 2016. Buxton is a spa town in Derbyshire, England. It has the highest elevation of any market town in England. Close to the county boundary with Cheshire to the west and Staffordshire to the south, Buxton is described as "the gateway to the Peak District National Park". To read more about Buxton, click here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buxton . This film features views from a walk around Buxton, it highlights the town's historic architecture, infrastructure, transport, natural features, art, history and culture. Within the film the following locations and features are identified: Palace Road, Buxton Railway Station, Station Road, River Wye, Hogshaw Viaduct, Spring Gardens, Fairfield Road, Ashwood Park, Terrace Road, The Crescent, St. Ann's W...
I'm hanging like a bitch TWITTER: https://twitter.com/joe_weller_ FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/hellojoeweller Music: Royalty Free Music by: http://audiomicro.com/royalty-free-music Rob Scallon
E-mail Buxton: http://www.buxtonwater.co.uk/contact.aspx TWITTER: https://twitter.com/joe_weller_ FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/hellojoeweller INSTAGRAM: http://instagram.com/joe_weller_ T-SHIRTS: https://joeweller.spreadshirt.co.uk BUXTON ARMY Music: Royalty Free Music by: http://audiomicro.com/royalty-free-music
http://www.peakdistrictonline.co.uk Presents the new Buxton video covering the beautiful places to see and visit in this town. The Derbyshire Peak District market town of Buxton has a number of claims to fame; as well as being the Capital of the High Peak, it is also at over 1000ft above sea-level the highest town of its size in England, and has been a place of pilgrimage for centuries, venerated by those who have come for the reputedly magical curative powers of its Spa waters. Buxton History Our Neolithic ancestors had already populated the surrounding hills, leaving the marks of their passing at ancient gathering places like the Bull Ring, and at nearby Arbor Low over three thousand years before the Romans arrived in 70 AD and founded the settlement which they called Aqua Arnemeteia, me...
"Boy of Nine" is from Buxton's new album Nothing Here Seems Strange. Available for purchase: Amazon: http://amzn.to/wrbdG4 iTunes: http://bit.ly/A6m1yt Follow Buxton: http://www.buxtonband.com/ http://www.facebook.com/buxtonband http://twitter.com/buxtonband
Buxton,Derbyshire,Peak District,18th,May,2011,England.Buxton is a spa town,the highest elevated market town in England.Featured are Pavilion Gardens,Opera House.High Peak local government district.Poole's Cavern is a local attraction.Buxton was built around the River Wye.The Old Hall Hotel is one of the oldest buildings in Buxton.Cultural events take place at the Opera House.Tropical plants are housed in the conservatory at Pavilion Gardens.
http://tomscott.com - http://twitter.com/tomscott - In a disused quarry at Harpur Hill, near Buxton, there's a bright blue lagoon. It looks like a perfect place to cool off in summer. And it is, if you enjoy skin irritation and fungal infections. But the strange thing is: I arrived expecting to find it black, not blue... Why do I talk about dark and lonely water, and about fools ignoring signs? Watch this, which terrified the children of 1973: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XNPMYRlvySY Thanks to Chris Dymond, who was my camera operator for this trip to Sheffield, and who also gave me a lift out to the middle of the Peak District to film the place!
TWITTER: https://twitter.com/joe_weller_ FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/hellojoeweller INSTAGRAM: http://instagram.com/joe_weller_ T-SHIRTS: https://joeweller.spreadshirt.co.uk You could be the record holder! Take on the Buxton Barefoot Challenge and see if you can beat the high score! #BuxtonArmy Full Instructions: 1) Must be barefoot 2) Take a regular sized FULL bottle of Buxton and balance it on one of your feet (Make sure you do the challenge on a flat surface: grass = pro... carpet/indoors = amateur) 3) Then try to take as many steps as possible, whilst balancing the Buxton on your foot 4) Record how many steps you take as you're doing the challenge 5) Once the Buxton falls off your foot, it's game over and however many steps you've taken = your score If they don't sell Bu...
Richard suffers on public transport so looks at gadgets to alleviate his discomfort. To watch the full episode click here - http://www.channel4.com/programmes/gadget-man/on-demand/58397-002
Marvel at the wonders of the natural world with Monty Buggershop-Hooty, author of Cooking With A Top Hat and Wilderness Ponce.
Actor and comedian Adam Buxton joins Richard for a high-speed tour of Portugal's capital, with trams, rickshaw, funicular and fado, and a visit to a doll hospital. To watch the full episode click here - http://www.channel4.com/programmes/travel-man-48-hours-in/on-demand/64000-003
Actor and comedian Adam Buxton joins Richard for a high-speed tour of Portugal's capital, with trams, rickshaw, funicular and fado, and a visit to a doll hospital. To watch the full episode click here - http://www.channel4.com/programmes/travel-man-48-hours-in/on-demand/64000-003
A trip to Peak District (Blue John Cavern, Peveril Castle) and Buxton town in April 2015 Filmed with GoPro Hero 4 Silver
I stayed at the Palace Hotel in Buxton in August 2016. Two of us stayed for one night, bed and breakfast, which cost £89 with Booking.com. The hotel is an old building dating back to 1857, from the exterior it has an impressive gothic facade, inside the lobby and reception are quite spectacular, with marble columns and ornate decorative features. Being an old building the hotel also has some challenges, and there are many places where paint, plaster, fixtures and fittings simply need replacing. The hotel currently appears to be owned by Barcelo, although much of the online references to it, and branding at the hotel states Britannia are the owner. It will be a real benefit to the hotel if Barcelo are the new owners, as my previous impressions of Britannia owned properties have been tha...
Richard and comedian Adam Hills embark on a whirlwind visit in Istanbul, including a boat trip, a massage, a very close shave, and some haggling at the Grand Bazaar
Promotional video for Poole's Cavern in Buxton, Derbyshire.
Richard and Greg Davies clash with army tanks and head into space in the Russian capital. To watch the full episode click here http://www.channel4.com/programmes/travel-man-48-hours-in
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