Time Travellers GuidePeak Time Travellers
Peak District history leaps out at you from the ground – take a journey back
in time as you visit more than 5,000 years of human life and death, discovering
worlds that live on as archaeological monuments and historic buildings.
Arbor Low stone circle
Your journey takes you from Victorian lead mines, Elizabethan country houses
and Viking crosses to the tombs of the area's first farmers, Roman forts and prehistoric
hillforts.
Highlights include the New Stone Age
Arbor Low, famous as the Henge of the Peak, and the Normans’
Peveril Castle – home to Peveril of the Peak, while from our more recent past, there are splendid
country houses and fascinating historic villages. What’s more, this history speaks
from some of the Peak’s most beautiful countryside, well-served by
holiday accommodation, cafés and shops.
Peak Churches GuidePeak Churches
Christianity came to Derbyshire in the 600s AD but today, we have only tantalising
glimpses of that time - little survived the onslaught of the Norman invaders who
rebuilt churches and suppressed local traditions in favour of their own.
Since then, these places of worship have continually evolved and changed. None
are as they were originally and even the oldest should not be seen as a lifeless
monument, but as a tapestry of the community’s history where each generation has
left its mark.
St John's church, Tideswell - the Cathedral of the PeakHighlights include Tideswell's beautiful ‘
Cathedral of the Peak’and the shrouded effigies of Thomas Beresford’s alabaster family tomb at
St Edmund's in Fenny Bentley. Look out for Saxon and Norman fonts with distinctive carvings
of stylised humans, animals or dragons with fishy tails.
Peak Geology Guide
Peak Geology
People, animals and plants depend on the rocks for life. Geology determines whether
the land is wet or dry, windy or sheltered, fertile or sparse, woods, grass or
heather moorlands – no geology, no Peak District National Park!
Winnats Pass, CastletonUse the accessible
Peak Geology – the lands that time forgot guide to the geology of the Peak District to explore millions of years of history
in beautiful settings. From caves, crags, mountains and valleys to ghostly, abandoned
millstone works, the remains of ancient quarrying, agricultural field clearance
and SSSIs – the Peak District has it all!
The Guide shows how this land – once a tropical sea, with magnificent coral reefs
and red-hot lava flows – was formed and how it affects the way we live today.
Front Row of the Peak Guide
Peak Film and Literature – Front Row of the Peak
With its rugged crags, soft valleys and dramatic lighting, the Peak District
looms large on our screens and has inspired authors for centuries – from Jane
Austen
to Stephen Booth, Charlotte Brontë to Berlie Doherty and William Wordsworth to
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.
Filming Jane Eyre at Haddon HallNow actors and directors come, too – comic romance
Pride and Prejudice, dramatic
Jane Eyre, WWII classic
The Dam Busters, doctor drama
Peak Practice and hit comedy
The League of Gentlemen were all filmed in the Peak District and in autumn 2006, film crews moved
in
to shoot
The Other Boleyn Girl, starring leading American actors Scarlett Johansson and Natalie Portman.
Front Row of the Peak will guide you around the places that star in films, books
and TV, and help you blaze
your own trail through our creative and inspiring landscape.
The Bloody Peak Guide
Bloody Peak – the Bloody Peak
The White LadyWelcome to the witches, ghosts, highwaymen and horrors of the Bloody Peak. Do
the hairs rise on the back of your neck? They should... this is a most haunted
place!
A strange light at night, a suspicious breeze or the sound of distant voices
might
not be what you thought. Listen for the creak of floorboards in a haunted hotel,
drink with an apparition in a paranormal pub... you have been warned!
Now take a torch, some courage and step out into the darkening night... begin
your
exploration of the Peak District's haunted places and ghostly stories by using
our devilishly good guide,
The Bloody Peak.
Take a Walk On the Wild Side
Wild Peak – Take a Walk on the Wild Side
The Peak District is a unique place of stunning landscapes and an abundance
of wildlife, but different plants and animals need different conditions to live
and
that affects where you'll find them.
Wildlife in the Peak National Park
The
Take a Walk on the Wild Side Guide will help you to discover more about
the variety of landscapes and habitats of the Peak District, and enjoy getting
out to experience for yourself the area's birds, trees, flowers, butterflies,
fungi,
mammals and water creatures.
We suggest some magnificent
places to visit and give ideas about species to look out for.
The Collectable Peak GuidePeak Antiques – the Collectable Peak
The Peak District has a range of antiques shops, collectables fairs, exhibitions
and collections to satisfy even the most fervent antiques lover - from prestigious
collections
such as those at Chatsworth, Tissington
Hall and Sudbury Hall, which include fine
examples of the area's most distinctive specialities, Blue John and Black
Marble, through to local museums such as Eyam Museum and the Old House Museum
in Bakewell,
which give fascinating insights into community histories.
Blue John Tazza, Chatsworth
And of course, if you're in the
market to make a purchase or two yourself,
The Collectable Peak Guide can also direct
you to the renowned antiques centres
in Leek, Buxton and Ashbourne, as well as numerous antique shops throughout the
area.
Travelling between the Peak District's many antiques
centres and special collections is a treat in itself – the undulating green hills
and valleys are dotted with market towns and artists' studios, and jewelled with
stately homes.