
The Devil’s Arse of Castleton: Echoes Beneath the Peak
At the edge of Castleton lies a vast opening in the earth—one of the largest cave entrances in Britain, and a place once known by a name few would use today.For centuries, Peak Cavern was called the “...
16 Apr 12min

The Nine Ladies of Stanton Moor: A Dance Turned to Stone
High on Stanton Moor, a small circle of weathered stones stands quietly among the heather. Known as the Nine Ladies, their origins lie deep in prehistory—but their meaning has long been shaped by stor...
16 Apr 14min

Cromford: The Mill That Invented Time
On the banks of the Derwent, Richard Arkwright built a new kind of landscape — one powered not by feudal obligation or aristocratic prestige, but by water, machinery, capital, and the disciplined mana...
27 Jan 6min

Peveril Castle: Stone, Feudalism & the View from the Edge
High above Castleton, the ruins of Peveril Castle overlook the Hope Valley — a fortress less defined by battles than by law, revenue, and administration. Built in the aftermath of the Norman Conquest,...
27 Jan 6min

Haddon Hall: Stone, Marriage & Power
Haddon Hall stands above the River Wye as one of England’s finest surviving medieval houses. From the Peverils to the Vernons and the Manners, the hall became a stage for marriage, inheritance, religi...
22 Jan 7min

Eyam: The Village That Chose to Stay
In 1665, the plague arrived in the Derbyshire village of Eyam inside a parcel of cloth from London. Faced with contagion, fear, and the risk of spreading disease across the region, the villagers made ...
21 Jan 7min

Navio: The Roman Fort in the Mist
High above the Hope Valley lie the remains of Navio — a Roman fort built not for spectacle, but for logistics. Positioned among lead mines, roads, and rugged frontier landscapes, Navio reveals how the...
21 Jan 7min



















