Tintagel
Tintagel photos (241 available)
Tintagel maps (2 available)
Tintagel books (10 available)
Truro Town Walk Guide
Paperback
St Austell Bay Photographic Memories
Paperback
Newquay to St Ives Photographic Memories
Paperback
- 3 photos on Tintagel appear in 1 Frith books - View photos of Tintagel
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Tintagel and Cornwall
Tintagel memories
Port Quinn visit
Having stayed with relatives at Port Quinn on Wednesday 12 September, we drove to Tintagel staying overnight in an hotel, just out of the town. We spent a wonderful Thursday in Tintagel and enjoyed a terrific time viewing this amazing building. So impressed were we that we have vowed to visit it again and again, for the atmosphere of the 1800's is captured perfectly in the National Trust site. Especially the beautiful and memorable garden, where my husband and I sat and wondered at the beauty of it all. The herb garden, the lawn, the borders, the stone well, the trees and idyllic and peaceful ambience. It is so beautiful and I am in love with it ...read more here
Contributed by Theresa Eagles
The old Post Office
My grandmother and all her children except my mother were evacuated to this area during and for some time after WWII. I have a picture taken outside what I believe to be the post office. I think perhaps it was on this street c1950.
Contributed by Steve Best
Cornwall memories
Port Quinn visit
Having stayed with relatives at Port Quinn on Wednesday 12 September, we drove to Tintagel staying overnight in an hotel, just out of the town. We spent a wonderful Thursday in Tintagel and enjoyed a terrific time viewing this amazing building. So impressed were we that we have vowed to visit it again and again, for the atmosphere of the 1800's is captured perfectly in the National Trust site. Especially the beautiful and memorable garden, where my husband and I sat and wondered at the beauty of it all. The herb garden, the lawn, the borders, the stone well, the trees and idyllic and peaceful ambience. It is so beautiful and I am in love with it ...read more here
A memory of Tintagel contributed by Theresa Eagles
The old Post Office
My grandmother and all her children except my mother were evacuated to this area during and for some time after WWII. I have a picture taken outside what I believe to be the post office. I think perhaps it was on this street c1950.
A memory of Tintagel contributed by Steve Best
Extracts From Tintagel & Cornwall books
This cliff-top headland is wild and picturesque, and legend associates it with King Arthur; there are certainly Dark Age remains here, including those of a monastery founded in about AD 500. The castle itself dates from c1145, and was built by Reginald, Earl of Cornwall, bastard son of Henry I.
An extract from from"50 Classics - Castles".
Perched on rocky cliffs five miles north-west of Camelford, Tintagel probably owes its survival to its association with the Arthurian legends. The castle itself dates from c1145, and was built by Reginald, Earl of Cornwall, a bastard son of Henry I. The ruins date from the 12th to the 15th centuries, and it was opened to the public in 1852.
An extract from from"English Castles".
The dramatic cliffs and ruined castle at Tintagel have been photographed from many angles over the years. Here we are looking from the ‘island’ back to the outer ward of the castle, with the access lane down the valley on the left. The building is now a café. The cliffside footpaths have since all changed as a result of rock falls over the intervening century. Another point of interest is the absence of the massive King Arthur’s Castle Hotel, which was built soon afterwards on the headland to the left.
An extract from from"Cornwall County Memories".
This scene has hardly changed for many years; the
beach at Polridmouth is still only accessible on foot.
Although we are just around the corner from St Austell
Bay, this photograph gives us a good view of the
prominent day mark erected in 1832 on the Gribbin
Head as an aid for shipping entering the bay.
An extract from from"St Austell Bay Photographic Memories".
The old pilchard-curing
cellar, or ‘palace’, beside the
shore in the foreground was
one of the largest in
Cornwall. However, by the
time of this early
photograph the harbour
seems already deserted by
the fishing fleet, perhaps in
favour of Mevagissey on the
far side of the bay.
An extract from from"St Austell Bay Photographic Memories".







