English: St Mawes Castle Looking southwards from near the car park. The best preserved and most elaborately decorated of Henry VIIIs coastal fortresses, St Mawes was built to counter invasion threats from France and Spain. Its counterpart, Pendennis, is on the other side of the Fal estuary. The clover-leaf shaped fort fell easily to landward attack by Parliamentarian forces in 1646 and was not properly refortified until the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Dette og andre billeder på deres position på: OpenStreetMap
50.154910; -5.023700
Licensering
This image was taken from the Geograph project collection. See this photograph's page on the Geograph website for the photographer's contact details. The copyright on this image is owned by Trevor Rickard and is licensed for reuse under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 license.
at dele – at kopiere, distribuere og overføre værket
at remixe – at tilpasse værket
Under følgende vilkår:
kreditering – Du skal give passende kreditering, angive et link til licensen, og oplyse om der er foretaget ændringer. Du må gøre det på enhver fornuftig måde, men ikke på en måde der antyder at licensgiveren godkender dig eller din anvendelse.
deling på samme vilkår – Hvis du bearbejder, ændrer eller bygger videre på dette værk, skal du distribuere dine bidrag under den samme eller en kompatibel licens som originalen.
== {{int:filedesc}} == {{Information |description={{en|1=St Mawes Castle Looking southwards from near the car park. The best preserved and most elaborately decorated of Henry VIIIs coastal fortresses, St Mawes was built to counter invasion threats from
Denne fil indeholder ekstra information, som formentlig er tilføjet fra et digitalt kamera eller en skanner, der enten blev brugt til at skabe billede eller digitalisere det. Hvis filen har været ændret siden dens oprindelige tilblivelse, kan nogle detaljer muligvis ikke fuldt ud repræsentere det modificerede billede.