The English Landscape in the Twentieth CenturyHambledon Continuum, 2006 - 472 páginas The English landscape changed more radically in the twentieth century than it had over the previous thousand years. In this eye-opening book, Trevor Rowley shows vividly what changed and why. The countryside, now a dormitory or holiday destination, employed less than one percent of the population by 2000. In contrast, cities and towns, dominated by the megalopolis of London, expanded massively. Life, and the landscape, became ruled by the car. Regional identities disappeared as national chains and uniform building styles began to be found from Penzance to Carlisle. Uplands and country houses became theme parks often overrun by visitors. Two world wars and changing patterns of work and leisure also left their imprint. |
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The English Landscape | 1 |
The Age of the Car | 11 |
Taking Off | 53 |
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acres agricultural airfields airport architecture attractive became Blackpool Bramall Lane Britain British buildings built car park cent central church city centres club concrete construction cottages council country houses countryside created cricket demolished District early East England English Heritage English landscape facilities factory farming fields football Garden City golf courses Green Belt ground growth Hall Heathrow historic holiday industrial interwar land Lane large numbers leisure located London major Manchester miles military million monuments motor motorway National Trust nineteenth century opened Oxford Oxfordshire parish Peak District pier planning population Port Sunlight postwar railway redevelopment resorts ribbon development roads runways rural England Salisbury Plain scheme seaside Second World Second World War stadium station Stonehenge Street suburban suburbs survive Thames tower town centre traffic transport twentieth century Tyneham urban Victorian village visitors W. G. Hoskins