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Title of Cicerone (en-GB): "Cicerone Press | Guides for walkers, hikers, cyclists and trekkers"

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Hadrian's Wall stretches for approximately 73 miles (117km) across northern England, from the Solway Firth in Cumbria to Wallsend on Tyneside, and was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1987. Construction began in approximately 122 AD on the orders of Emperor Hadrian, and the Wall was intended to mark and defend the northern limit of Roman Britain. It remains the largest...

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Leave behind Girona's medieval walls, narrow cobbled streets and riverside lined with colourful houses, and you will find a network of trails twisting among volcanic cones, rocky gorges with spectacular waterfalls and long-forgotten ruins on the lush mountains of the Alta Garrotxa. Stretching north from the Pre-Pyrenees into the high peaks of the Girona Pyrenees, this corner of ...

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The Dolomites are often cited as the most dramatic and beautiful mountains in the world, and the splendour of the scenery is undeniable. The explosive shapes of the peaks and ridgelines, the ever-changing colours of the rock, the stunning contrast between seasons — these are just some of the factors that make this UNESCO World Heritage range stand apart from its Alpine counterpa...

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Perthshire has a reputation for shortbread and nice cups of tea, but push back from the main street of Pitlochry and you'll find something altogether wilder. In the words of Ronald Turnbull, walk out from Blair Atholl, stay on the tops for four or five days, and when your feet next touch tarmac you're somewhere north of Aberdeen. These are jolly green giants: soft-edged, wildflo...

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One of Britain's finest stretches of coastline, the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park takes in 186 miles of sea cliffs, sheltered coves, Iron Age hillforts and medieval towns. The south of the county packs some of its finest walking into a compact area, with routes easily completed in under three hours. These five short walks are taken from the Cicerone guidebook 15 Short Walks ...

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