The Seven Sisters from the old coastguards cottage…
Park fence!
Flying log at Whistling Sands
Porth Y Cychod house
On to Anelog Mountain
Towards The Rivals - Yr Eifl
Porth Meudwy
Blue Tramzzzzz....
Landslide fence
Alexander von Humboldt
STS Sedov3
The Margaretha Green
Seven Sisters and the Beachy Head Lighthouse
The Seven Sisters
Three Red Doors and a Fence
Victoria station, Manchester
Shambles Square, Manchester
White Pass, Yukon Route train
Alaskan mountains from the 'Inside Passage'
Aberdaron beach
The beach huts of Abersoch
A Porth Y Cychod view
A Llŷn Peninsula view
Calendar picture fence on Lake Windermere.
Nebel und Träume
A Dovestones story
A Dove Stone Reservoir reflection
Kasprowy Wierch, Poland
A wet night in Krakow
Circular fence
Wray Castle
The skies above Kendal Castle
Little Switzerland perhaps
The light of the Tatra mountains
Krakow and its old main square at night
St. Mary's Basilica from the Cloth Hall, Krakow
A Krakow window.
Windermere Fence
and the fire goes on.....
Dove Stones in heat and drought
Saddleworth Moor on fire! (Pips)
Deuville sur Mer fence!
Light and shade at Zakopane
Portchester Castle
Tatra Mountains vista
Location
Lat, Lng:
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address: unknown
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address: unknown
See also...
See more...Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
925 visits
Eddisford Bridge, Clitheroe


A warm day takes me on now a rare outing to this wonderful Lancashire town and its River Ribble walk. Here we are at the start of our five mile round walk along both sides of this splendid river, seen here in drought conditions with my new Tokina 11-16mm. The bridge is the very old Edisford Bridge.
About Edisford Bridge, Clitheroe
Edisford Bridge incorporates the structure of a five arched bridge possibly dating from 1339, when a grant of pontage was made. Today the bridge has nine spans and is considerably wider than the original. It is thought that a timber bridge had been constructed on the same spot before that date. Edisford - "the nobleman's ford" or Anglo-Saxon nobleman - was the scene of an 1139 battle, where King David of Scotland's army fought and defeated the less numerous Lancastrians.
The 1339 bridge was 2.44m wide, later widened by 3.65m on the downstream side. It had pointed cutwaters. Its arches were Gothic in shape and each had three ribs. These can still be seen under the main arch. The four arches to the east (nearest Clitheroe) span the river, the others are over the meadow. The first is a squared Gothic ribbed arch made of sandstone. It spans 7.5m and rises 2.6m. The second span is the largest. It is a segmental circular arch, measuring 17.95m across and rising 4.2m. The next two arches are Gothic and ribbed, spanning 7.6m and 7.7m, and rising 2.47m and 2.56m. The following five spans are over land. Starting at the river, they measure 7.8m, 4.3m, 3m, 3m and 2.9m. Their rises are 1.85m, 1.7m, 1.4m, 1.2m and one metre. All are segmental circular arches.
The bridge is located about a mile west of Clitheroe Castle and is the subject of a noted painting by Turner.
www.transporttrust.com/heritage
About Edisford Bridge, Clitheroe
Edisford Bridge incorporates the structure of a five arched bridge possibly dating from 1339, when a grant of pontage was made. Today the bridge has nine spans and is considerably wider than the original. It is thought that a timber bridge had been constructed on the same spot before that date. Edisford - "the nobleman's ford" or Anglo-Saxon nobleman - was the scene of an 1139 battle, where King David of Scotland's army fought and defeated the less numerous Lancastrians.
The 1339 bridge was 2.44m wide, later widened by 3.65m on the downstream side. It had pointed cutwaters. Its arches were Gothic in shape and each had three ribs. These can still be seen under the main arch. The four arches to the east (nearest Clitheroe) span the river, the others are over the meadow. The first is a squared Gothic ribbed arch made of sandstone. It spans 7.5m and rises 2.6m. The second span is the largest. It is a segmental circular arch, measuring 17.95m across and rising 4.2m. The next two arches are Gothic and ribbed, spanning 7.6m and 7.7m, and rising 2.47m and 2.56m. The following five spans are over land. Starting at the river, they measure 7.8m, 4.3m, 3m, 3m and 2.9m. Their rises are 1.85m, 1.7m, 1.4m, 1.2m and one metre. All are segmental circular arches.
The bridge is located about a mile west of Clitheroe Castle and is the subject of a noted painting by Turner.
www.transporttrust.com/heritage
ROL/Photo, Tere79 Sa, Andrea Riberti, Diana Australis and 27 other people have particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Herb Riddle club has replied to Steve Paxton clubCheers, Herb
Herb Riddle club has replied to Rosalyn HilborneCheers, Herb
I love the tranquillity in it...
Greetz, Chrisiten.
Herb Riddle club has replied to Chris10 clubCheers, Herb
Herb Riddle club has replied to Daniela Brocca clubHerb Riddle club has replied to Keith Burton clubCheers, Herb
Thanks for the info Herb.
Herb Riddle club has replied to Jaap van 't Veen clubHerb Riddle club has replied to Peter Castell clubKeep well, Herb
Herb Riddle club has replied to Nora Caracci clubBest Wishes, Herb
have a nice Sunday, Herb → Marek-Ewjan
Herb Riddle club has replied to Marek Ewjan Stachows…Regards, Herb
Herb Riddle club has replied to Jeff FarleyCheers, Herb
Herb Riddle club has replied to polytropos clubVielen Dank für den Besuch, Herbert
polytropos club has replied to Herb Riddle clubJust like everyone else has said, a great picture with your new lens, and great countryside too.
Nice to share the information, although I do wonder how much of the original 1369 bridge remains, Certainly we are not looking at it in your picture!!
What has caught my eye is the stones in the bottom right hand corner. It looks like some kind of ford was there at one time. I have seen this kind of thing before, certainly dating back to before the bridge was built..
Also interesting that we could walk across the water, ii is so shallow today!
Best wishes
Peter
Herb Riddle club has replied to Peter_Private_Box clubBest Wishes, Herb
Sign-in to write a comment.