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Examples
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It is called Ludgershall, and has a quiet out-of-the-world look.
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Instead, Sofie Magdalene turned to her eldest daughter, Alfhild, who the previous year had married Leslie Hansen, a Danish neighbor of theirs in Bexley, and was now living some 40 miles northwest of London in Ludgershall.
Storyteller Donald Sturrock 2010
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The couple spent most of their married life in the thatched cottage in Ludgershall that Alf had bought for her mother in the early days of the war, living “in great frugality on a tiny amount of capital” with their daughter Astri.92 Despite, or perhaps because of, his idiosyncrasies, Leslie had been completely absorbed into the Dahl family and they all felt protective of him.
Storyteller Donald Sturrock 2010
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I suppose John might have hoped to claim Ludgershall plus its castle because it looks as if it came to the family with John the elder's marriage to his second wife Sybilla, John jnr's mother.
The Greatest Knight, by Elizabeth Chadwick. Book review Carla 2007
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If Robert of Gloucester had not been trapped and captured in the waters of the river Test, and the Empress Maud in headlong flight with the remnant of her army into Gloucester, by way of Ludgershall and Devizes, the hunt for Adam Heriet might have gone on for a much longer time.
An Excellent Mystery Peters, Ellis, 1913- 1985
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If Robert of Gloucester had not been trapped and captured in the waters of the river Test, and the Empress Maud in headlong flight with the remnant of her army into Gloucester, by way of Ludgershall and Devizes, the hunt for Adam Heriet might have gone on for a much longer time.
An Excellent Mystery Peters, Ellis, 1913- 1985
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In Ludgershall there were no constituents to take him to task; to be able to go to Westminster when he wished added to the variety of life.
George Selwyn: His Letters and His Life Helen [Editor] Clergue
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The seat at Ludgershall was never in the nature of a true political representation, and even when Member for
George Selwyn: His Letters and His Life Helen [Editor] Clergue
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He lost his seat -- perhaps not without regret -- for he returned to the less irksome representation, if such it could be called, of Ludgershall.
George Selwyn: His Letters and His Life Helen [Editor] Clergue
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If the explorer has penetrated as far as Tidworth a train can be taken three miles across the Down to Ludgershall, a very ancient place near the
Wanderings in Wessex An Exploration of the Southern Realm from Itchen to Otter Edric Holmes
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