The Queen Elizabeth Oak is a large sessile oak tree in Cowdray Park near the village of Lodsworth in the Western Weald, West Sussex, England. It lies within the South Downs National Park. It has a girth of 12.5–12.8 metres (41–42 ft), and is about 800–1,000 years old. According to this estimate it began to grow in the 11th or 12th century AD. In June 2002, The Tree Council designated the Queen Elizabeth Oak, one of fifty Great British Trees, in recognition of its place in the national heritage. According to the Woodland Trust, the tree is the third largest sessile oak tree to be recorded in the United Kingdom after the Pontfadog Oak in Wales and the Marton Oak in Cheshire, although this tree is now fragmented.
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| - Koningin Elizabetheik (nl)
- Queen Elizabeth Oak (en)
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| - De Koningin Elizabetheik is een wintereik op het landgoed bij Lodsworth in het Engelse graafschap West Sussex. De omtrek van 12,5 m maakt deze boom de op een na dikste wintereik van Europa. De leeftijd wordt geschat tussen de 700 à 1000 jaar. De boom is vernoemd naar Elizabeth I. Volgens de overlevering zou de vorstin in 1591 de eik bezocht hebben. (nl)
- The Queen Elizabeth Oak is a large sessile oak tree in Cowdray Park near the village of Lodsworth in the Western Weald, West Sussex, England. It lies within the South Downs National Park. It has a girth of 12.5–12.8 metres (41–42 ft), and is about 800–1,000 years old. According to this estimate it began to grow in the 11th or 12th century AD. In June 2002, The Tree Council designated the Queen Elizabeth Oak, one of fifty Great British Trees, in recognition of its place in the national heritage. According to the Woodland Trust, the tree is the third largest sessile oak tree to be recorded in the United Kingdom after the Pontfadog Oak in Wales and the Marton Oak in Cheshire, although this tree is now fragmented. (en)
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| - Queen Elizabeth Oak in September 2008 (en)
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| - Cowdray Park near Lodsworth, West Sussex, England (en)
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| - The Queen Elizabeth Oak is a large sessile oak tree in Cowdray Park near the village of Lodsworth in the Western Weald, West Sussex, England. It lies within the South Downs National Park. It has a girth of 12.5–12.8 metres (41–42 ft), and is about 800–1,000 years old. According to this estimate it began to grow in the 11th or 12th century AD. In June 2002, The Tree Council designated the Queen Elizabeth Oak, one of fifty Great British Trees, in recognition of its place in the national heritage. According to the Woodland Trust, the tree is the third largest sessile oak tree to be recorded in the United Kingdom after the Pontfadog Oak in Wales and the Marton Oak in Cheshire, although this tree is now fragmented. According to legend, Queen Elizabeth I stood with an arrow ready in her bow waiting for a stag to be driven within range for her to shoot it, although she was unsuccessful. (en)
- De Koningin Elizabetheik is een wintereik op het landgoed bij Lodsworth in het Engelse graafschap West Sussex. De omtrek van 12,5 m maakt deze boom de op een na dikste wintereik van Europa. De leeftijd wordt geschat tussen de 700 à 1000 jaar. De boom is vernoemd naar Elizabeth I. Volgens de overlevering zou de vorstin in 1591 de eik bezocht hebben. (nl)
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| - Between 1000–1200 AD (en)
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| - POINT(-0.70065999031067 50.996131896973)
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