"Item Id","Item URI","Dublin Core:Title","Dublin Core:Subject","Dublin Core:Description","Dublin Core:Creator","Dublin Core:Source","Dublin Core:Publisher","Dublin Core:Date","Dublin Core:Contributor","Dublin Core:Rights","Dublin Core:Relation","Dublin Core:Format","Dublin Core:Language","Dublin Core:Type","Dublin Core:Identifier","Dublin Core:Coverage","Item Type Metadata:Lesson Plan Text","Item Type Metadata:Bibliography","Item Type Metadata:Biographical Text","Item Type Metadata:Occupation","Item Type Metadata:Death Date","Item Type Metadata:Birthplace","Item Type Metadata:Birth Date","Item Type Metadata:Participants","Item Type Metadata:Event Type","Item Type Metadata:URL","Item Type Metadata:Bit Rate/Frequency","Item Type Metadata:Interviewer","Item Type Metadata:Interviewee","Item Type Metadata:Location","Item Type Metadata:Transcription","Item Type Metadata:Local URL","Item Type Metadata:Original Format","Item Type Metadata:Physical Dimensions","Item Type Metadata:Duration","Item Type Metadata:Compression","Item Type Metadata:Producer","Item Type Metadata:Director","Item Type Metadata:Text","Item Type Metadata:Time Summary","Item Type Metadata:Email Body","Item Type Metadata:Subject Line","Item Type Metadata:From","Item Type Metadata:To","Item Type Metadata:CC","Item Type Metadata:BCC","Item Type Metadata:Number of Attachments","Item Type Metadata:Standards","Item Type Metadata:Objectives","Item Type Metadata:Materials",tags,file,itemType,collection,public,featured 7303,https://penninehorizons.org/items/show/7303,"Howsham Hall from the lawn - HLS05907","Architecture, Buildings, Hall, Horse drawn implement","Slide 2 - Sir William Bamburgh was the builder, about 1612, of Howsham Hall, taking the materials for the edifice, it has been said, from the ruins of Kirkham Priory which had fallen into his hands. For this act of sacriledge, these Bamburghs involved Howsham in a malison of St Hilda. A malison we may explain is the opposite of a benediction. As the story goes, St Hilda gathered up her skirts and let loose a malison in the house of Howsham. She decreed that the male heirs of the estate should perish from time to time. The decree has been sufficiently realised to give it credence as a legend. The male line of the Bamburghs died out , and later the last male by intermarriage with the Wentworths became extinct, and lastly, the late Colonel Sir George Chomley, 'the last of his line', whose widow erected the church to his memory in 1860. So much for the malison that o'er shadows Howsham.","George Hepworth","Hebden Bridge Literary & Scientific Society","Pennine Horizons Digital Archive","1905 , 1900s","Hebden Bridge Local History Society","PHDA - Hebden Bridge Local History Society","Pennine Horizons Digital Archive","TIFF file 8-bit","English (U.K.)","Documentary photograph",HLS05907.tif,"Yorkshire, UK",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Architecture,Buildings,Hall,Horse drawn implement",https://penninehorizons.org/files/original/403239759d1e284d88575e7841d7d212.jpg,"Still Image","Historic Homes of Yorkshire collection",1,0