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My last ever video with the DJI Spark.

Pixies Channel

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May 27, 2018
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All Saints' Church, Annesley is a parish church in the Church of England in Annesley, Nottinghamshire.
The church is Grade II* listed by the Department for Culture, Media & Sport as it is a particularly significant building of more than local interest. The church was erected in 1874 to a design by the architect Thomas Graham Jackson to replace the old church on the Annesley estate. Until 1942 services were held at both sites. The interior of the church was destroyed by fire in 1907 but was re-opened in 1909. The chief glories of the church are the Norman font and the East window. The church contains the achievement of arms of Patrick Chaworth, 3rd Viscount Chaworth which was moved here from the old church in 1874, as were many other monuments. The old Manor of Annesley is mentioned in the Domesday book of 1086 as Aneslie. The settlement is considered to date from soon after the first invasions of the ‘Angles’ into Mercia in the fifth or sixth centuries. The name is derived from the Old English Anna’s Lea (or Ley), Ley meaning a clearing or hillside in the wood and Anna or An being a pagan masculine name which would not have been used after Mercia became Christian. Anna was probably a younger son of a minor chieftain who wanted to establish his own manor: a clearing in the woods, with water, fuel and reasonable land for cultivation was found and the place became known as Anna’s Ley. Early on in his occupation of the area he would have set up a shrine to his favourite pagan god: this would have formed the basis for the first church. When Christianity reached the area, perhaps spreading west from the River Trent, in which Paulinus is believed to have baptised local people, a Saxon church was constructed. The Lord or Thane of Annesley at that time was Lavinot, who owned 100 acres of arable land, 180 acres of grazing land and 12 oxen. After the Conquest in 1066, King William I removed Lavinot and granted the Manor of Annesley to a Norman, Ralph Fitz Hubert. Under him, the Manor was held by a Breton, Richard Britto, who had also come to England with the Conqueror. Ralph Britto de Annesley (also known as Le Bret or Britain) succeeded Richard and took the name of his manor as his surname. The Fitz Hubert family interests ended in 1154 when Robert of that family was besieged and captured at Devizes Castle. He was hanged from the battlements like a common criminal for cruelties he had perpetrated whilst fighting for King Stephen. That disastrous monarch died the same year and was succeeded by Henry II, the first of the Plantagenet kings

 
Don't stop, the information then the video really came together along with the music. I like it.
Thank you for sharing.
 

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