Recherche de Musées et Peintures

Salisbury (Royaume-Uni) / Royaume-Uni

Salisbury est une ville du Wiltshire en Angleterre, évêché suffragant de l’archevêque de Cantorbéry. Elle a le statut de Cité. Elle se trouve à une dizaine de kilomètres au sud de Stonehenge.

Mompesson House

Salisbury (Royaume-Uni) / Royaume-Uni

Mompesson House is an 18th-century house located in the Cathedral Close, Salisbury, Wiltshire, England. The house is Grade I listed. and has been in the ownership of the National Trust since 1975.

The Salisbury Museum

Salisbury (Royaume-Uni) / Royaume-Uni

The Salisbury Museum is a museum in Salisbury, Wiltshire, England. It houses one of the best collections relating to Stonehenge and local archaeology.The museum is housed in The King's House, a Grade I listed building, where King James I of England was entertained in 1610 and 1613. Set in the surroundings of the Cathedral Close, the museum faces the west front of Salisbury Cathedral. Previously at 40-42 St Ann Street, where it had been founded in 1860 by Dr Richard Fowler, FRS, it transferred to its current site in 1981.The original three-storey building, with mullioned and transomed windows, ornate plaster ceilings and a fine oak-balustraded staircase, houses the main temporary exhibition gallery with the ceramics gallery above. The arms of James I's eldest son, Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales, can be seen in a window in the Wedgwood gallery upstairs. The director of the museum is Adrian Green.

Salisbury Guildhall

Salisbury (Royaume-Uni) / Royaume-Uni

Salisbury Guildhall is an 18th-century municipal building in the Market Place, Salisbury, England. It is a Grade II* listed building and is the meeting place of the Salisbury City Council.

John Creasey

Salisbury (Royaume-Uni) / Royaume-Uni

John Creasey est un écrivain britannique de romans populaires. Il a utilisé au cours de sa carrière de nombreux pseudonymes dont les principaux sont Anthony Morton, Michael Halliday, Jeremy York, Normam Deane et J. J. Marric, pseudonyme sous lequel il remporte le Prix Edgar-Allan-Poe du meilleur roman en 1962.