Tillage+land

  • 121Closeburn —    CLOSEBURN, a parish, in the county of Dumfries; containing 1530 inhabitants, of whom 123 are in the village, 2½ miles (S. S. E.) from Thornhill. This place, anciently called Kill Osburn, from Cella Osburni, was formerly remarkable for its very …

    A Topographical dictionary of Scotland

  • 122Yell, Mid and South —    YELL, MID and SOUTH, a parish, in the county of Shetland, 32 miles (N.) from Lerwick; containing, with the islands of Hascussay and Samphrey, 1705 inhabitants. This parish includes the middle and southern districts of the island of Yell, which …

    A Topographical dictionary of Scotland

  • 123Arundo donax — Giant Cane (Arundo donax) Scientific classification Kingdom: Plantae …

    Wikipedia

  • 124The Rodale Institute — was founded in 1947 by Jerome Irving Rodale as the Soil and Health Foundation. It continues as a 333 acre working organic crop farm with research trials and a visitor’s center near Kutztown, Pennsylvania. The Institute outreaches to farmers… …

    Wikipedia

  • 125Fuchū, Tokyo — Japanese city Name=Fuchū JapaneseName=府中市 Prefecture=Tokyo Region=Kantō Area km2=29.34 Population=236,491 PopDate=2003 Density km2=8060 Coords= LatitudeDegrees= 35 LatitudeMinutes= 40 LatitudeSeconds= LongtitudeDegrees= 139 LongtitudeMinutes= 28… …

    Wikipedia

  • 126Poland in Antiquity — Peoples belonging to numerous archeological cultures identified with Celtic, Germanic and Baltic tribes lived in various parts of Poland from about 400 BC. Other groups were no doubt also present, as ethnic composition of archeological cultures… …

    Wikipedia

  • 127Aztecs — • A surname applied to the tribe of the Mexica, or Chichimeca Mexitin, which occupied aboriginal Mexico, in more or less contiguous groups, at the beginning of the sixteenth century, when the Spaniards first came into contact with them Catholic… …

    Catholic encyclopedia

  • 128Bunkle and Preston —    BUNKLE and PRESTON, a parish, in the county of Berwick, 5 miles (N. N. E.) from Dunse; containing 648 inhabitants. The name of this place is derived from the Celtic word bon, signifying the foot or base, and kill, a cell or chapel; the word… …

    A Topographical dictionary of Scotland