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		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/thomas-bayes-probability-and-a-quiet-corner-of-tunbridge-wells/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/tw_cafe-scaled.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>Thomas Bayes</image:caption>
			<image:title>tw_cafe</image:title>
		</image:image>
	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/the-mountain-feud-mount-ephraim-vs-mount-sion/</loc>
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			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Gemini_Generated_Image_fhcoayfhcoayfhco-7-scaled-1.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>Atmospheric illustration for the latest WalkTW article</image:caption>
			<image:title>the-mountain-feud-mount-ephraim-vs-mount-sion</image:title>
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	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/10_movies_secretly_filmed_in_tunbridge_wells/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/secretly_fillmed_in_tunbridge_wells-scaled.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>A warm, hand-drawn editorial illustration showing a person relaxing on a sofa in a cosy, lamp-lit living room at dusk. They are watching an old television that displays a warm, golden scene of a Regency-era manor house. To the right, a Victorian sash window looks out onto the exact same manor house, but rendered in the cool, blue-grey tones of a real-world twilight in Tunbridge Wells.</image:caption>
			<image:title>secretly_fillmed_in_tunbridge_wells</image:title>
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	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/tunbridge_wells_twin_town_wisbaden/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/1781355882637.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>A vintage-style editorial illustration of the Royal Tunbridge Wells town sign, featuring a ghostly, sepia-toned double exposure reflection of four men shaking hands on a 1960s quayside.</image:caption>
			<image:title>The Quayside Memory</image:title>
		</image:image>
	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/the-horse-that-had-to-share-kents-white-stallion-in-tunbridge-wells/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/the-flag-tunbridge-wells-never-had-scaled.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>Vintage editorial watercolour and ink illustration of a heraldic white horse rearing on Wellington Rocks, next to a flagpole flying the gold and green heraldic banner of Tunbridge Wells overlooking the town&#039;s rooftops.</image:caption>
			<image:title>the-flag-tunbridge-wells-never-had</image:title>
		</image:image>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/the-moving-wood-of-swanscombe-1024x572.png</image:loc>
		</image:image>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/the-theatre-in-two-counties-1024x572.png</image:loc>
		</image:image>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/the-plaques-on-the-school-wall-1024x572.png</image:loc>
		</image:image>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/tunbridge_wells_coat_of_arms-765x1024.png</image:loc>
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	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/the_battle_of_little_mount_sion_two_pubs_one_title_no_resolution/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/compasses_and_grove_tavern.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>Vintage-style editorial watercolor and ink illustration of a narrow, quiet cobblestone street on a grey autumn afternoon in Little Mount Sion, Tunbridge Wells. On the left is the brick facade of The Compasses pub with amber light glowing from the window. On the right is the timber-hung facade of the Grove Tavern with its prominent black and yellow sign. The empty street stretches between them toward a church spire in the distant background.</image:caption>
			<image:title>compasses_and_grove_tavern</image:title>
		</image:image>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/god_compassethus-1024x1024.png</image:loc>
		</image:image>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/The_Night_Mrs_Pek_Dropped_Dead-1024x572.png</image:loc>
		</image:image>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/Across-the-Street-Josh-in-the-Cellar-1024x1024.png</image:loc>
		</image:image>
	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/the-man-who-actually-loved-it-here/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/man_who_loved_tunbridge_wells-scaled.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>The Man Who Actually Loved It Here</image:caption>
			<image:title>man_who_loved_tunbridge_wells</image:title>
		</image:image>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/still_life_then_and_now_richard_cobb-792x1024.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>A precise, evocative vintage editorial illustration 
in watercolour and ink. A single Tunbridge Wells 
street — Grove Hill Road — shown twice in one 
frame, divided vertically down the centre 
by the spine of an open book.

LEFT HALF — 1928. The same street in 
warm sepia tones: a small boy in a school 
cap and short trousers walks along the 
pavement, satchel swinging. The houses 
are the same Victorian terraces. A 
horse-drawn delivery cart is visible 
at the far end. Gas lamps. A woman 
in a cloche hat at a garden gate. 
The rooftops and bare trees are 
rendered in the same style as 
the cover of Still Life — 
loose watercolour wash, 
warm and slightly faded.

RIGHT HALF — 2026. The same street 
in slightly cooler, more present tones. 
The same houses — barely changed. 
A person walks the same pavement 
looking down at a smartphone, 
Google Maps open on the screen. 
The roofline is identical. 
The trees are bigger. 
Everything else is 
almost the same.

The open book sits in the centre — 
its spine the dividing line between 
then and now. Its cover illustration 
(the watercolour of rooftops) 
is visible on both sides.

Palette: warm sepia and ochre 
on the left, cool grey-green 
and slate on the right. 
The book spine glows 
slightly — the warm 
amber of old paper, 
the hinge of time.

Style: vintage editorial watercolour 
and ink, precise and quietly moving. </image:caption>
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	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/terms_and_conditions_walktw/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/a-guided-tour-group-in-royal-tunbridge-wells-by-a-signpost-for-the.jpg</image:loc>
			<image:caption>A guided tour group in Royal Tunbridge Wells by a signpost for The Pantiles and the Kent countryside</image:caption>
			<image:title>A guided tour group in Royal Tunbridge Wells by a signpost for The Pantiles and</image:title>
		</image:image>
	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/richard_cumberland-playwright_tunbridge_wells/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/The_Man_They_Laughed_At_Richard_Cumberland-scaled.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>A split vintage watercolour and ink illustration separated by a thin horizontal line. The top half shows a packed, brightly lit 1770s London theatre audience laughing at a theatrical character in an oversized wig on stage, while a somber gentleman watches from a box. The bottom half shows the same gentleman in 1788 sitting calmly at a desk writing a manuscript with a quill pen by an open window looking out at a quiet Tunbridge Wells street and common.</image:caption>
			<image:title>The_Man_They_Laughed_At_Richard_Cumberland</image:title>
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	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/romanovs_in_england_the_royal_connection_to_tunbridge_wells/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/romanov.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>A vintage watercolour and ink illustration of a Kent countryside lane split down the center by a subtle crease. On the left, a 1910s open-top motor car carries a family with luggage along the road, looking out at the distant High Weald hills. On the right, the exact same stretch of road is shown entirely empty under a slightly cooler, desaturated summer sky.</image:caption>
			<image:title>russians_who_never_arrived_tunbridge_wells_ and_romanovs</image:title>
		</image:image>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/Georgie_and_Nicky_The_Cousins_Who_Looked_Like_Twins-1024x559.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>A realistic historical photograph depicting King George V of Great Britain and Tsar Nicholas II of Russia standing side-by-side at an outdoor garden party. Both men possess striking physical similarities, including neatly trimmed, greying beards and prominent moustaches. They wear ornate, highly detailed military uniforms adorned with gold epaulets, sashes, and numerous medals. In the blurred background, other Edwardian-era guests mingle on the grounds of an estate.</image:caption>
		</image:image>
	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/7-curious-corners-of-royal-tunbridge-wells-youll-never-see-from-the-high-street/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/walktw_7_wonders-1-scaled.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>7-curious-corners-of-royal-tunbridge-wells-youll-never-see-from-the-high-street</image:caption>
			<image:title>7-curious-corners-of-royal-tunbridge-wells-youll-never-see-from-the-high-street</image:title>
		</image:image>
	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/the-russians-who-never-left-tunbridge-wells-best-kept-secret/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/russian_orthodox_church_inside_st_luke_church-scaled.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>A vintage watercolour and ink illustration of a red brick Victorian church on a grey English street in Tunbridge Wells. A person stands at the open, pointed-arch doorway, looking inside. The exterior is a muted, cold grey with an English parish noticeboard and a red pillar box, while the interior glows brightly with warm golden candlelight, showing Orthodox icons and rising incense.</image:caption>
			<image:title>russian_orthodox_church_inside_st_luke_church</image:title>
		</image:image>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/what_happens_inside-1024x572.png</image:loc>
		</image:image>
	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/russian_baroness_olga_in_tunbridge_wells_history/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/Olga-scaled.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>A vintage-style watercolour and ink illustration divided by a vertical window frame. The left side shows a warm, opulent 1910 Russian interior with a woman in a crimson gown playing a piano under a grand chandelier. The right side shows the same woman in 1925 on a muted, grey street in Tunbridge Wells, wearing a dark coat and cloche hat, looking back toward her past.</image:caption>
			<image:title>Baroness Olga Tunbridge Wells</image:title>
		</image:image>
	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/the-writers-who-watched-us-part-2-the-spy-who-came-to-take-the-waters/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/the_spy_who_came_on_water-scaled.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>Daniel Defoe in Tunbridge Wells</image:caption>
			<image:title>the_spy_who_came_on_water</image:title>
		</image:image>
	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/footsteps/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/2210729423.jpg</image:loc>
			<image:caption>Historic British town street suggesting the atmosphere of the planned walking route</image:caption>
		</image:image>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/2275003589.jpg</image:loc>
			<image:caption>Covered walkway creating a moody architectural detail for the tour experience</image:caption>
		</image:image>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/2242318075-1.jpg</image:loc>
			<image:caption>English landscape view evoking the wider Kent setting around Tunbridge Wells</image:caption>
		</image:image>
	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/about_walktw_discover_local_history/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/pedestrians-on-a-cobbled-street-with-historic-timber-framed-buildings-a.jpg</image:loc>
			<image:caption>Pedestrians on a cobbled street with historic timber-framed buildings, a red</image:caption>
		</image:image>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/2270399890.jpg</image:loc>
			<image:caption>British park pathway for walking tour atmosphere</image:caption>
		</image:image>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/people-in-modern-and-historical-dress-walk-along-the-colonnaded-street-of.jpg</image:loc>
			<image:caption>People in modern and historical dress walk along the colonnaded street of The</image:caption>
		</image:image>
	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/tunbridge_wells_capital_of_infidelity_part2/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/image.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>WalkTW modern theater</image:caption>
			<image:title>image</image:title>
		</image:image>
	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/william_makepeace_thackeray_in_tunbridge_wells/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/writer_who_invent_the_term_snob-scaled.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>The Man Who Ate Dinner Here and Invented the Word &quot;Snob&quot;</image:caption>
			<image:title>writer_who_invent_the_term_snob</image:title>
		</image:image>
	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/tunbridge_wells_the_capital_of_infidelity_part1/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/tunbridge_wells_capital_of_infidelity_part_one_two_sides_of_the_building.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>The Capital of Infidelity</image:caption>
			<image:title>tunbridge_wells_capital_of_infidelity_part_one_two_sides_of_the_building</image:title>
		</image:image>
	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/tunbridge_wells_capital_of_infidelity_part3/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/capital_of_infidelity_part2.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>Tunbridge Wells, the Capital of Infidelity Part 2</image:caption>
			<image:title>capital_of_infidelity_part2</image:title>
		</image:image>
	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/ten_tunbridge_wells_myths/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/ten_tunbridge_wells_myths.jpg</image:loc>
			<image:caption>ten_tunbridge_wells_myths</image:caption>
			<image:title>ten_tunbridge_wells_myths</image:title>
		</image:image>
	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/the-theatre-queen-of-the-pantiles/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Theater_on_pontiles-scaled-1.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>Historic theatre scene on the Pantiles in Royal Tunbridge Wells</image:caption>
			<image:title>Theater_on_pontiles-scaled-1</image:title>
		</image:image>
	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/move-over-david-attenborough-tunbridge-wells-had-the-original-eco-warrior/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/eliza_philips-1-scaled-1.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>Illustration for the Eliza Phillips blog post</image:caption>
			<image:title>eliza_philips-1-scaled-1</image:title>
		</image:image>
	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/pantiles_history_mud_and_majesty/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Gemini_Generated_Image_pt9n9dpt9n9dpt9n.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>Pantiles Mud and Royalties History</image:caption>
			<image:title>pantiles_history_mud_and_majesty</image:title>
		</image:image>
	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/walk_tw_tour-1024x559.png</image:loc>
		</image:image>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/the_chronicles-scaled.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>Historic English cityscape from above</image:caption>
		</image:image>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/2160701526.jpg</image:loc>
			<image:caption>Historic Oxford architecture from above</image:caption>
		</image:image>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/walk_tw_tour_2-edited.png</image:loc>
		</image:image>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-logo.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>WalkTW Logo</image:caption>
		</image:image>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/walktw_7_wonders-1-scaled.png</image:loc>
		</image:image>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/tw_background_photo.png</image:loc>
		</image:image>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/walk_tw_tour_2-scaled.png</image:loc>
		</image:image>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/walk_tw_tour-scaled.png</image:loc>
		</image:image>
	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/sarah_baker_theater2/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/1779393760404.png</image:loc>
			<image:caption>Sarah Theater war</image:caption>
			<image:title>sarah_theater</image:title>
		</image:image>
	</url>
	<url>
		<loc>https://walktw.co.uk/the-victorian-bio-hacker-buried-in-woodbury-park-cemetery/</loc>
		<image:image>
			<image:loc>https://walktw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/stetoscope-1-scaled.png</image:loc>
			<image:title>stetoscope</image:title>
		</image:image>
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