- Winterbourne Dauntsey
Winterbourne Dauntsey is a village in
Wiltshire ,England , nearSalisbury . It adjoinsWinterbourne Earls andWinterbourne Gunner .
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.
Winterbourne Dauntsey is a village in
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.
Winterbourne — may refer to:*Winterbourne (stream), an English term for a stream or river that is dry through the summer monthsPlaces England*Winterbourne, Berkshire *Winterbourne, Kent *Winterbourne, South Gloucestershire *Winterbourne Abbas, in… … Wikipedia
Winterbourne Gunner — is a small village in the UK but seems larger, as it joins on to Winterbourne Dauntsey, which itself is joined on to Winterbourne Earls. It is located in Wiltshire in England about five miles northeast of Salisbury situated on the A338. The… … Wikipedia
Winterbourne Earls — is a village in Wiltshire, England, near Salisbury. It adjoins Winterbourne Dauntsey … Wikipedia
River Bourne, Wiltshire — The River Bourne is a river in the English county of Wiltshire, and a tributary of the River Avon.The Bourne s source is at the eastern end of the Vale of Pewsey, near the village of Burbage. The river cuts through the chalk escarpment at… … Wikipedia
Dancey — Amongst the original followers of William the Conqueror at the 1066 Invasion of England was William de Anesi, from the village called Anizy in Calvados, Normandy, thought to be derived from the Gallo Roman personal name Anitius (of uncertain… … Surnames reference
Dansey — Amongst the original followers of William the Conqueror at the 1066 Invasion of England was William de Anesi, from the village called Anizy in Calvados, Normandy, thought to be derived from the Gallo Roman personal name Anitius (of uncertain… … Surnames reference
Dansie — Amongst the original followers of William the Conqueror at the 1066 Invasion of England was William de Anesi, from the village called Anizy in Calvados, Normandy, thought to be derived from the Gallo Roman personal name Anitius (of uncertain… … Surnames reference
Dantesia — Amongst the original followers of William the Conqueror at the 1066 Invasion of England was William de Anesi, from the village called Anizy in Calvados, Normandy, thought to be derived from the Gallo Roman personal name Anitius (of uncertain… … Surnames reference
Dauncey — Amongst the original followers of William the Conqueror at the 1066 Invasion of England was William de Anesi, from the village called Anizy in Calvados, Normandy, thought to be derived from the Gallo Roman personal name Anitius (of uncertain… … Surnames reference
De Andisie — Amongst the original followers of William the Conqueror at the 1066 Invasion of England was William de Anesi, from the village called Anizy in Calvados, Normandy, thought to be derived from the Gallo Roman personal name Anitius (of uncertain… … Surnames reference