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Cumbria |
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CumbriaCounty of northwest England, created in 1974 from Cumberland, Westmorland, the Furness district of northwest Lancashire, and the Sedbergh district of northwest Yorkshire. Area6,810 sq km/2,629 sq miTowns and citiesCarlisle (administrative headquarters), Barrow, Kendal, Penrith, Whitehaven, WorkingtonPhysicalScafell Pike (978 m/3,210 ft), the highest mountain in England; Helvellyn (950 m/3,118 ft); Lake Windermere, the largest lake in England (17 km/10.5 mi long, 1.6 km/1 mi wide), and other lakes (Derwentwater, Grasmere, Haweswater, Ullswater); the rivers Eden and DerwentFeaturesLake District National Park; Grizedale Forest sculpture project; Furness peninsula; western part of Hadrian's WallAgriculturein the north and east there is dairy farming; sheep are also reared; the West Cumberland Farmers is England's largest agricultural cooperativeIndustriesthe traditional coal, iron, and steel industries of the coast towns have been replaced by newer industries including chemicals, plastics, marine engineering, electronics, and shipbuilding (at Barrow-in-Furness, nuclear submarines and warships); tourism; salmon fishingPopulation(2001) 487,600Famous peopleSamuel Taylor Coleridge, Stan Laurel, Beatrix Potter, Thomas de Quincey, John Ruskin, Robert Southey, William Wordsworth
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Marshall, Out of Wedlock: Perceptions of a Cumbrian Social Problem in the Victorian Context," Northern History 31 (1995): 194-207; N. Discovering the artist's own work, however, has not been much easier than locating the tiny Cumbrian village on an English road map. Two finely detailed facades of overlapping green Cumbrian slate panels flank a U-shaped atrium which embraces the gardens while office wings to either side are suspended over a column-free cloister-like entrance hall. |
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