Woolcombe

From WikiPOBia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
(Clarified distinction btw. Woolcombe and Woolhampton (Hopefully))
(add reference list)
Line 1: Line 1:
''Woolcombe House'', in the fictional village in of ''Woolhampton'', Dorset, is the ancestral home of the [[Jack Aubrey|Aubrey]] family. The Aubreys have been lords of the manor and "buried at Woolhampton for many generations".<ref>O'Brian, Patrick. ''The Letter of Marque''. (c)1988 by Patrick O'Brian. First American Edition, 1990. W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. New York, NY: p.222</ref> In the [[Aubreyad]], the names "Woolcombe" and "Woolhampton" are used interchangeably to describe Aubrey's home, particularly in the earlier novels.  
''Woolcombe House'', in the fictional village in of ''Woolhampton'', Dorset, is the ancestral home of the [[Jack Aubrey|Aubrey]] family. The Aubreys have been lords of the manor and "buried at Woolhampton for many generations".<ref>O'Brian, Patrick. ''The Letter of Marque''. (c)1988 by Patrick O'Brian. First American Edition, 1990. W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. New York, NY: p.222</ref> In the [[Aubreyad]], the names "Woolcombe" and "Woolhampton" are used interchangeably to describe Aubrey's home, particularly in the earlier novels.  
   
   
 +
==References==
 +
<references/>
[[category:Fictional location]]
[[category:Fictional location]]
{{stub}}
{{stub}}

Revision as of 03:21, 18 November 2007

Woolcombe House, in the fictional village in of Woolhampton, Dorset, is the ancestral home of the Aubrey family. The Aubreys have been lords of the manor and "buried at Woolhampton for many generations".[1] In the Aubreyad, the names "Woolcombe" and "Woolhampton" are used interchangeably to describe Aubrey's home, particularly in the earlier novels.

References

  1. O'Brian, Patrick. The Letter of Marque. (c)1988 by Patrick O'Brian. First American Edition, 1990. W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. New York, NY: p.222


Personal tools