<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<response><meta><generated>2026-04-06T13:42:31+01:00</generated><count>12,437</count><page>107</page><totalPages>415</totalPages><formats><json>https://marinefinds.org.uk/datalabs/terminology/objects/format/json</json><xml>https://marinefinds.org.uk/datalabs/terminology/objects/format/xml</xml><html>https://marinefinds.org.uk/datalabs/terminology/objects</html></formats></meta><objectTerms><objectTerm><id>3856</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>139772</ehID><term>COUNTER</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A flat-topped, often elongated, construction at which customers are served by staff in a commercial establishment such as a bank, shop, inn etc.</scopeNote><claUid>546</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>2791</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>137621</ehID><term>COUNTER APSE</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>The apse at the west end of the nave in a double-ended church.</scopeNote><claUid>546</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>10564</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>140537</ehID><term>Counter Balance Fort</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>9693</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>94117</ehID><term>COUNTER BOMBARDMENT BATTERY</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A coastal battery used for delivering fire at long distance thus forcing a warship threatening or bombarding shore installations to withdraw out of range.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>10594</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>140784</ehID><term>COUNTERMEASURES STATION</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A radio station set up to broadcast signals aimed at 'bending' or altering German navigation transmissions.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>2792</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>137622</ehID><term>COUNTERSCARP BANK</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A low bank on the edge of a defensive ditch on the side away from the main rampart.</scopeNote><claUid>546</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>6459</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>71857</ehID><term>COUNTESS OF HUNTINGDONS CHAPEL</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A place of worship for followers of the Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion, a Calvinistic Methodist sect founded in the 1740s by Selina Hastings, Countess of Huntingdon.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>4273</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>68785</ehID><term>COUNTING HOUSE</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>An accounts office, especially within an industrial or commercial complex.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7458</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>91644</ehID><term>COUNTRY CLUB</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A building, usually in a rural setting, with a range of facilities for the use of members.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>10695</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>142075</ehID><term>COUNTRY ESTATE</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>An area of privately owned land attached to, and incorporating, a country house and associated buildings.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>5651</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>70755</ehID><term>Country Hall</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>4431</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>68947</ehID><term>COUNTRY HOUSE</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>The rural residence of a country gentleman.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7459</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>91645</ehID><term>Country Mansion</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>10918</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>144605</ehID><term>COUNTRY PARK</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>An area of managed countryside designated for visitors to enjoy recreations, such as walking specified parks and trails, in a rural environment. Often provides public facilities such as parking, toilets, cafes and visitor information.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>11667</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>164105</ehID><term>COUNTY BOUNDARY</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>The limit line of a county.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7460</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>91646</ehID><term>COUNTY COURT</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A court established in England and Wales by Parliament in 1846 to decide minor civil disputes.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7461</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>91647</ehID><term>County Education Office</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7462</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>91648</ehID><term>County Gaol</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>4183</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>68692</ehID><term>COUNTY HALL</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A building from which the administration of a county is carried out by the County Council. It is also, historically, the site where the county quarter sessions and assizes were held.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7463</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>91649</ehID><term>County Library</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>5535</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>70602</ehID><term>County Stone</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>2793</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>137623</ehID><term>COUPLED ROOF</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A roof in which pairs of rafters are fixed to the ridge piece and the wall plates without any collars or tiebeams.</scopeNote><claUid>546</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>5133</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>70133</ehID><term>COURERY</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>Subsidiary settlement of lay brothers attached to some Carthusian monasteries.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>5653</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>70757</ehID><term>Court Hall</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>4215</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>68725</ehID><term>COURT HOUSE</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A building in which a judicial court is held.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>10267</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>135316</ehID><term>COURT OF REQUESTS</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A local civil court first established during the 17th Century by local Acts of Parliament to deal with minor cases of debt. Based on a model established during the reign of Henry VII.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7464</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>91650</ehID><term>Court Of Speech</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7465</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>91651</ehID><term>COURT ROOM</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A hall or chamber in which justice is administered.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7466</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>91652</ehID><term>Courthouse</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>11104</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>152713</ehID><term>COURTIERS HOUSE</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A house in which a member of the Royal Court lives.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm></objectTerms></response>
