Ticket #5967: untitled-part.html

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3        <title>newsletter</title>
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6<body><a href="http://legendpotencyx.co/isIgG9DCOWB32o7T7qoDEUsfn1I5nr6-X_q_xOGXatao3zxtUA"><img src="http://legendpotencyx.co/7b3aeabdd637d0bc65.jpg" /><img height="1" src="http://www.legendpotencyx.co/C6w_VT0z-Gt-qBEZbLYqIUPW0gxvKGYFIv9lGsdZI4NcHhpc6g" width="1" /></a>
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8<i style=" font-size:12px;">To view this emailer as a web page,<a href="http://legendpotencyx.co/7mBl5BHfKP9YU0mWFOYiweWF9gXwd3-XWw5VuDg__QZITmmYBQ" style=" font-size:12px;">Click Here to go to website</a></i><br />
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36<p style="color:#ffffff;font-size: 8px;">ter Cathedral had launched a bid to restore the baths and open an underground centre for visitors. In the late 2nd century, the ditch and rampart defences around the old fortress were replaced by a bank and wall enclosing a much larger area, some 92 acres (37 ha). Although most of the visible structure is older, the course of the Roman wall was used for Exeter&#39;s subsequent city walls. Thus about 70% of the Roman wall remains, and most of its route can be traced on foot. The Devonian Isca seems to have been most prosperous in the first half of the 4th century: more than a thousand Roman coins have been found around the city and there is evidence for copper and bronze working, a stock-yard, and markets for the livestock, crops, and pottery produced in the surrounding countryside. The dating of the coins so far discovered, however, suggests a rapid decline: virtually none have been discovered dated after the year 380. Medieval times See also:
37  Sub-Roman Britain, Saxon England, and Norman England Bishop Ussher identified the Cair Pensa vel Coyt, listed among the 28 cities of Britain by the History of the Britons, as Isca, although David Nash Ford read it as a reference to Penselwood and thought it more likely to be Lindinis (modern Ilchester). Nothing is certainly known of Exeter from the time of the Roman withdrawal from Britain around the year 410 until the seventh century. By that time, the city was held by the Saxons, who had arrived in Exeter after defeating the British Dumnonians at Peonnum in Somerset in 658. It seems likely that the Saxons maintained a quarter of the city for the Britons under their own laws around present-day Bartholomew Street, which was known as &quot;Britayne&quot; Street until 1637 in memory of its former occupa</p>
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