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Cornish Cliff Castles

The habit of building cliff castles or promontory forts as they are also known, may well have given the Cornish their first recorded name. The ‘Cornovii’, meaning promontory people, are thought to have been the Celtic tribe that first occupied…

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Padstow Lifeboats

With the longest coastline of any county in England Cornwall naturally has a strong tradition of seafaring but with the freedom and food that the sea provides comes perilous risk. The shores of the Cornish coast are littered with innumerable…

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The Smugglers of Padstow

Like so many of Cornwall’s coastal towns tales of the daring exploits of their seafaring men are part of Padstow’s historic narrative. Its intrinsic ties to the sea mean that at one time everyone in the town had a maritime…

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Prideaux Place

Padstow’s narrow streets boast many beautiful old buildings, from weather-worn fishermen’s cottages to ancient public houses with low ceilings and slanting doorways. Each one adds to the pretty harbours charm and character. But there is one particular building that sits…

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The Doom Bar

Where the sea leaps at the feet of terrific precipices and the Doom Bar snarls like an angry lion. A.G. Folliott-Stokes, 1931 The sandbar which once stretched across the mouth of the Camel Estuary from Stepper Point to St Enodoc…

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