We drove (OK, I drove) through Devon, with its impossibly narrow roads, and into Cornwall, arriving at Tintagal castle in the early evening.
I have marked the individual pictures here as being in the public domain: you can do what you like with them. The collection, however, is copyrighted by Liam Quin, so you cannot mirror it without permission.
There’s a local Web site, Tintagel Web, and the Castle itself is owned and maintained by English Heritage. If you visit Tintagel Castle you should be aware that it is not accessible to wheelchair users or people who have difficulty climbing, say, 100 steep steps.
Title: UK Holiday 06: Cornwall Day 1 (Tintagal Castle)
Total items: 76
Out of copyright (called public domain in the USA), hence royalty-free for all purposes usage credit requested, or as marked.
Ruins of Tintagel Castle 5: the great hall?
Not so great any more. And there’s an ugly new hotel in the view (extreme left)
An odd perspective, looking down past a cave mouth, with the sea in the background. This tunnel entrance may have led back into the castle.
The sea in the evening. [scheduled for deletion]
I turned away from the shore and photographed the field with its rocky outcrops.
Path through an arched gap in the hedge into the light.
We drove (OK, I drove) through Devon, with its impossibly narrow roads, and into Cornwall, arriving at Tintagal castle in the early evening.
I have marked the individual pictures here as being in the public domain: you can do what you like with them. The collection, however, is copyrighted by Liam Quin, so you cannot mirror it without permission.
There’s a local Web site, Tintagel Web, and the Castle itself is owned and maintained by English Heritage. If you visit Tintagel Castle you should be aware that it is not accessible to wheelchair users or people who have difficulty climbing, say, 100 steep steps.
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