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A profile of Gloucestershire, England, highlighting attractions, history, and visitor information.
   
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Gloucestershire Travel Guide

NauntonGloucestershire is nebulously synonymous with the Cotswolds, a wonderful region of warm-toned stone cottages and delightful villages centred on the Cotswold escarpment. The escarpment itself runs for 100 miles from the outskirts of Bath north into Worcestershire.

Along the way it takes in some of the best scenery in rural England. The Cotswold Way long distance path runs the length of the region, and provides an enjoyable way to explore the villages and byways of the region.

The peculiar charm of Cotswold villages owes much to the honey-golden colour of the limestone used to build its houses. But the stone itself is nothing without the charm of the villages themselves.

Places like Bibury, with its trout hatchery in the middle of the village, and Northleach, with its superb medieval church, have about them an air of relaxed charm.

Northleach
Northleach

Many Cotswold villages have suffered from an overabundance of tourists, and places like Bourton-on-the-Water may be crowded in the summer months. Yet the Gloucestershire Cotswolds boast so many delightful small villages that you are sure to find an uncrowded corner even at the height of the tourist season.

Eastleach Martin
Footbridge at Eastleach Martin

Stow-on-the-Wold ("where the wind blows cold"!), is the highest point in the Cotswolds. The scene of the last battle of the English Civil War, Stow is centred on a picturesque village green, complete with stocks used for punishing criminals in years gone by. Though the square around the green is now ringed with antique stores and tea shops, Stow is a delight. A short walk from the green brings you to the parish church, where the door is encased in a living tree!

Moving from the charm of villages to the urban delights of Georgian high society brings us to Cheltenham. In its day Cheltenham was a popular spa town, and it boasts as many fine Georgian and Regency buildings as the more visited Bath to the south. Nearby Chedworth is the site of perhaps the finest Roman villa in England.

Tewkesbury, now bestrewn with fine antique shops, boasts a superb abbey church surrounded by half-timbered Tudor buildings. A few short miles away is Winchcombe, yet another delightful Cotswold village, and home to Sudeley Castle, where Queen Katherine Parr ended her days.

winchcombe
Winchcombe cottages

Nearby Belas Knap is one of the finest Neolithic chambered tombs in England. A short drive from Belas Knap brings you to not one, but two, of England's finest gardens, Hidcote and Kiftsgate, while just down the road is Hailes Abbey, where the Cistercians housed a vial of Christ's blood to attract medieval pilgrims. After Henry VIII disbanded the monasteries in the 16th century the "blood" was revealed to be a mixture of saffron and honey!

The city of Gloucester itself suffers from the 'benefits' of advancing civilization, but the Cathedral is superb, and the city boasts intriguing museums, including National Waterways Museum and the Museum of Advertising and Packaging. To the southwest lies Slimbridge, home of the Slimbridge Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust, where geese, swans, and other wildfowl breed in a protected environment. More dramatic is Berkeley Castle, the grim medieval fortress that was the final prison for King Edward II. It was here, in a small, squalid room just off the main entrance to the castle, that the unfortunate Edward was cruelly murdered by his captors in 1327. The interior of the castle is blissfully original. There is a 14th century great hall built just inside the castle wall, and a lovely 16th century wooden screen graces one end of the hall.

Related:
Cotswolds

Gloucestershire attractions map >>

Our Top 5:
Our personal top 5 historic places to visit in Gloucestershire - in no particular order:

  1. Berkeley Castle
  2. Sudeley Castle
  3. Deerhurst Saxon Church
  4. Tewkesbury Abbey
  5. Kiftsgate Court Gardens

Top Heritage Rated attractions in Gloucestershire:
Aside from the attractions mentioned above, these historic sites have also been awarded 4 Heritage Rating or 5 Heritage Rating in our Heritage Rating scheme for attractions.

HISTORIC CHURCHES
Buckland
Fairford
Gloucester Cathedral
Kempley
Odda's Chapel, Deerhurst

HISTORIC HOUSES
Chavenage House
Dyrham Park
Horton Court
Newark Park
Sezincote House
Snowshill Manor
Stanway House and Water Garden

PREHISTORIC
Notgrove Long Barrow
Belas Knap Long Barrow

OTHER
Hidcote Manor Garden

 

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Gloucestershire

Photo Features
Bibury - Hidcote Manor Gardens - Kiftsgate Gardens - Stanton

Featured attractions
Batsford Arboretum - Belas Knap - Berkeley Castle - Chedworth Roman Villa - Gloucester Cathedral - Hailes Abbey - Kiftsgate Manor Gardens - Snowshill Manor - Sudeley Castle - Trull House - Westbury Court Gardens - Westonbirt Arboretum - Winchcombe

 

 

 

  

HISTORY CORNER

Name the Historic attraction

Name the mystery historic attraction
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British Heritage Awards

Celebrate the best of British Heritage in our annual
British Heritage awards.

View this year's winners.

British History Quiz

This national celebration marked the centenery of the 1851 Great Exhibition



 Clue

This Day in British History

04 February, 1839

Opening of the Chartist National Convention

The Chartist movement was a major force in the long, gradual road to social reform in Victorian England - a forerunner of the trade union movement

Monarch Mayhem

Before this king came of age, England was ruled by a regency under his uncle, John of Gaunt



 Clue




Accommodation
Gloucestershire

The Cottage

Lydney
Self catering cottage

Delightful beamed cottage with its own lawned fenced garden. Spacious open plan sitting room with dining area and fitted kitchen. First floor: Double bedroom with … more >>
Sleeps 2

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Gloucestershire

Broadridge Mews

Cranham
Self catering cottage

This first floor mews cottage is located 2 miles from the village of Cranham near to Gloucester and can sleep four people in one bedroom. more >>
Sleeps 4

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Thornbury (Hotel)

Thornbury Castle

This Tudor castle stands serenely in 15 acres offering views of the Severn Estuary and the hills of South Gloucestershire and Wales. Fine old panelling, tapestries and paintings enrich the interior. There are 25 restored bedrooms, most overlooking the vineyard or the oldest Tudor garden in England. more >>

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Chipping Campden (Hotel)

Charingworth Manor

Charingworth Manor is situated in delightful gardens on a large private estate in the beautiful rolling Cotswolds countryside. The hotel is ideally situated for exploring the surrounding area including Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwick Castle, Banbury and Broadway. All bedrooms are individually designed and recently refurbished with tea and coffee making facilities in … more >>

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