Bucklow Hill
Bucklow Hill is a village in Cheshire, England whose name originates from a slight rise in the road.[1] It is part of the civil parish of Mere and is located at the junction of the A5034 road and the B5569 road.
History
The Bucklow Hundred of Cheshire derives its name from this place.[1] Soldiers were mustered here in 1549 to reinforce the English troops in Scotland during the Rough Wooing.[1] A nonconformist chapel was founded at Bucklow Hill in the 19th century.[2]
gollark: ```lualocal function init(code) -- preallocate 64KiB of memory -- 64KiB is enough for anyone -- (TODO: allow moar somehow?) local memory = fill_arr(65536, 0) -- load code into memory, at start for i = 1, #code do memory[i] = code:byte(i) end return { memory = memory, registers = fill_arr(17, 0) }end```
gollark: Well, I decided to not have ROM and to dump program code into memory starting from location `0` because WHY NOT.
gollark: Maybe a general "flags" register, yes.
gollark: Hmm, what registers do I need other than general ones and the program counter?
gollark: Oh, and the assembly language can be based on S-expressions, like WASM, to be annoying.
References
- Henry Green (1859). Knutsford, Its Traditions and History: With Reminiscences, Anecdotes, and Notices of the Neighbourhood. London: Smith, Elder, & Company.
- Wilson, Linda (1999). ""Constrained by Zeal": Women in Mid‐NineteenthCentury Nonconformist Churches". Journal of religious history. 23 (2): 185–202.
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