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・ White House Vegetable Garden
・ White House Visitors Office
・ White House, Bishkek
・ White Horse Historic District
・ White Horse Hotel
・ White Horse Hotel, Surry Hills
・ White Horse Inn (1948 film)
・ White Horse Inn (Broadway version)
・ White Horse Mountains
・ White Horse Neighs in the Western Wind
・ White horse of Kent
・ White Horse Pagoda, Dunhuang
・ White Horse Park
・ White Horse Prophecy
・ White Horse Rapids
White Horse Stone
・ White Horse Tavern
・ White Horse Tavern (Boston, Massachusetts)
・ White Horse Tavern (Coatesville, Pennsylvania)
・ White Horse Tavern (Douglassville, Pennsylvania)
・ White Horse Tavern (East Whiteland Township, Pennsylvania)
・ White Horse Tavern (New York City)
・ White Horse Tavern (Newport, Rhode Island)
・ White Horse Tavern, Cambridge
・ White Horse Temple
・ White Horse Wood
・ White Horse, California
・ White Horse, Dark Dragon
・ White Horse, New Jersey
・ White Horse, Pennsylvania


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White Horse Stone : ウィキペディア英語版
White Horse Stone

The Upper and Lower White Horse Stones are names given to two sarsen megaliths on Blue Bell Hill near Aylesford in the English county of Kent. They are generally considered to be fragmentary examples of the Neolithic chamber tomb group known as the Medway megaliths. The stones are said to be a monument to Horsa, a great warrior and King of Kent who supposedly died near the stone but is most likely fictional (see Horsa and Hengist articles for details), who used the White horse of Kent as his standard.
== Upper White Horse Stone ==

The Upper White Horse Stone () is 2.9 m long, 1.65 m high and about 0.6 m thick and stands just inside Westfield Wood, off the Pilgrims' Way. Close by it are nine smaller stones that stretch to the west for about 10 m.
There is no evidence of a covering barrow and it has been suggested that these much smaller stones were moved from the neighbouring field by local farmers. Its identification as a chambered long barrow like the other Medway megaliths is therefore uncertain although the shape certainly resembles a chamber wall stone.
In local tradition this is also the burial place of the Saxon leader Horsa. The standing stone is also considered by some visitors to resemble a horse's head. Both these links have been suggested as the source of the name. A connection with the white horse on Kent's "Invicta" coat of arms has also been invoked. Locals at the nearby public house in the early 1990s used to refer to the White Horse Stone as "The Ingá stone".

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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