Coordinates: 51°10′57″N 3°26′45″W / 51.1825°N 3.4459°W / 51.1825; -3.4459
Dunster is a village, civil parish and former manor within the English county of Somerset, today just within the north-eastern boundary of the Exmoor National Park. It lies on the Bristol Channel coast 2.5 miles (4 km) south-southeast of Minehead and 20 miles (32 km) northwest of Taunton. The United Kingdom Census of 2011 recorded a parish population of 817.
Iron Age hillforts testify to occupation of the area for thousands of years. The village grew up around Dunster Castle which was built on the Tor by the Norman warrior William I de Moyon (d. post 1090) shortly after the Norman Conquest of 1066. The Castle is mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086. From that time it was the caput of the Feudal barony of Dunster. The Castle was remodelled on several occasions by the Luttrell family who were lords of the manor from the 14th to 20th centuries. The benedictine Dunster Priory was established in about 1100. The Priory Church of St George, dovecote and tithe barn are all relics from the Priory.
Dunster can refer to:
Flying, when all I want to do is die.
Feels like you're flying.
Oh god I wish that I could fly.
You wanna lift me up but
you don't know and you don't see
I'm stuck in my ways,
stuck in my ways.
Breathing, when all
I wanna do is drown.
You keep on breathing,
and I keep on sinking down.
You wanna lift me up but
you don't know and you don't see
I'm stuck in my ways,
stuck in my ways.
I'm stuck in my ways.
You keep on breathing,
and I keep on sinking down.
You wanna lift me up but
you don't know and you don't see
I'm stuck in my ways,
stuck in my ways.