Hotel Review - Cotswold House Hotel & Spa, Chipping Camden
If you want to experience the very best of the Cotswolds, then I would highly recommend a stay at the charming Cotswold House Hotel and Spa, everything about the hotel is stylish coupled with fantastic customer service.
If you are travelling like we did with the kids, then the private cottages are the perfect choice. Location wise, the town of Chipping Camden is within easy reach of Stratford Upon Avon, Oxford and the family attractions that the Cotswolds has to offer.
Cotswold House Hotel
The Ultimate Cotswold Getaway
Sensational Cotswold House & All Its Wonders
Take a trip through Cotswold House. Showcasing many wonders from the natural Cotswold beauty to the elegant house rooms and the exceptional dining from our talented chefs.
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Cotswolds House Hotel Chipping Campden
charm in England. Costwolds House Hotel is an exclusive establishment ideal to discover the natural landscapes England's. This small establishment is perfect to spend holidays or romantic short trips or to hold events in an exclusive and intimate atmosphere. Offering 28 rooms, the Costwolds House is located in a classic building built at the beginning of the 20th century. Its interior has a modern and friendly style, combining fine materials. Cotswolds House disposes of three gastronomic spaces.
Spa at the Cotswold House Chipping Campden Gloucestershire
Spa at the Cotswold House may encourage you to leave the house more often and explore the many attractions of Chipping Campden Gloucestershire. Choosing your new home can be a struggle. You need to find the right house in the right location. There are so many factors to consider from the house itself to the location. Look no further than
Cotswold House
The Square, High Street, Chipping Campden, Gloucestershire GL55 6AN Set in the heart of Chipping Campden, the prettiest town in the Cotswolds, Cotswold House & Spa blends traditional Regency architecture with contemporary design and superb comfort. 28 bedrooms with a range of styles to include garden cottages and suites some with private gardens and hot tubs, limestone baths and mood lighting. Temple Spa features include a hydrotherapy pool and hammam room as well as 6 treatment rooms for pure relaxation.
The King's Hotel, Chipping Campden
The Kings Hotel is a charming 18th century town house and wedding venue boasting distinctive and stylish accommodation.
Nestled in the heart of picturesque Chipping Campden, this is the perfect location to experience the beauty of the Cotswolds.
We stay at the Oat House in the Cotswolds
David Powell heads off to the glorious Cotswolds for YOUR HOLIDAY TV. He finds this wonderful country house near the beautiful village of Broadway and Moreton in Marsh. See more at YourHolidayTV.com
Cotswold Walks Chipping and Broad Campden
A Cotswold Walk in Chipping Campden is ideal for anyone who loves a day out in the Cotswolds but doesn't like crowds. It has everything to provide interest and sustenance for the day. This is a working village with some 'proper' shops selling groceries as well as local hostelries and pubs to feed and shelter you, along with a rich history. Sir Baptist Hicks built a fine mansion here adjacent to the church of St James, unfortunately it was burnt to the ground by Royalist Soldiers to prevent its use by the Roundheads that were hot on their heels. In his time Sir Baptist did a lot for Chipping Campden including the erection of the market hall for the use of local traders. Another fellow who was instrumental in the prosperity of the village was William Grevel who built a magnificent town house in the high street in 1360, and was influential in relocating the Arts and Craft Guild from London to here at a time when the wool trade was in decline and thereby providing an alternative revenue stream.
The beauty of the honey coloured Cotswold stone buildings speaks for itself and on the outskirts of town the period and thatched cottages adds icing to the cake. As if that wasn't enough this visit included a walk to Broad Campden a mile or so to the south. Whilst not having the same scale or amenities as its neighbour, it is never the less a delightful Cotswold village and well worth the little extra distance to walk.
The Feathered Nest Country Inn: Cotswolds Restaurant, Pub &
The Feathered Nest Country Inn, a country pub, restaurant and inn set in the picturesque village of Nether Westcote and nestled in the heart of the Cotswolds with marvellous views over the Evenlode Valley.
3 AA Rosettes; 5 AA Stars Highly Commended Inn; Beautiful South Pub of the Year 2013; AA Pub of the Year (England) 2011/2012; Cesar Award and more.
thefeatherednestinn.co.uk
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The Greenway Hotel and Spa in Cheltenham, Cotswolds, UK | Small Luxury Hotels of the World
A relaxing bolthole on the outskirts of Regency Cheltenham in Gloucestershire
Small Luxury Hotels of the World™ is an unrivalled portfolio of some of the world's finest small, independent hotels. Comprising over 520 hotels in more than 80 countries, the diversity of the individual hotels, and the experiences they offer, is exceptional.
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Cotswold House Hotel
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Chavenage House Near Tetbury In The Cotswolds.
Chavenage House is an Elizabethan era house 2.4 kilometres (1.5mi) northwest of Tetbury, in the Cotswolds area of Gloucestershire, England. The house was built in 1576 and is constructed of Cotswold stone, with a Cotswold stone tiled roof.
The estate of Chavenage was sold to Edward Stephens of Eastington in Gloucestershire in 1564. He built the house in the Elizabethan style, adding large windows to the south of the porch, much of the glass being obtained from redundant churches and monasteries in the area. On Edward's death, the estate passed to his son Richard and, on his death, to his second wife Anne, before his eldest son Nathaniel Stephens inherited it.
During the Civil War, Nathaniel Stephens raised troops and supported the Roundheads, and later became a member of Cromwell's parliament. Cromwell visited Chavenage House, and Stephens supported his planned regicide, and although he was not one of the signatories of Charles I's death warrant, he is nevertheless said to have died of remorse soon afterwards. It is also recounted that on the day of the Nathaniel's death, his ghost was seen leaving the house in a coach driven by a headless coachman dressed like the hapless king. The house is reputed to be one of the nation's most haunted homes.
In 1944, the house was requisitioned and housed American troops prior to the Normandy landings in France.
The house is an Elizabethan house and is a Grade I listed building. It was built originally in 1576 by Edward Stephens. It has an E-shaped plan with a porch at the centre of the east side. It is constructed of rubble stone with a stone slate roof and has two storeys and attics. It was enlarged in the seventeenth century and further extended in the eighteenth century by the Rev Richard Stephens, then again at the start of the 20th century. As these additions are in keeping with the original style and materials, they appear as one consistent building and the new areas are not obvious.
The interior has a former open great hall, but this has now had a ceiling installed, with an altered minstrels' gallery over a screen. This is sixteenth century as is the Renaissance style fireplace and the panelling and Gothic fireplace in the dining room. Other notable features of the house are the two tapestry rooms Cromwell's and Ireton's Room; the stained glass windows in the Great Hall; the Oak Room which has elaborate 1590 panelling. Additionally, there is an Edwardian wing, featuring a sprung-floored ballroom.
Close to the house is the family chapel which is included in the Grade I listing. It has a tower, built as a folly in the seventeenth century, with two stages, stepped diagonal buttresses and a parapet with embattlements. The main fabric of the chapel is eighteenth century and it has an undercover link to the house.
Chavenage has been used in films and for television programmes, including Barry Lyndon, The Ghost of Greville Lodge, the first Hercule Poirot story The Mysterious Affair at Styles; a 'Gotcha' for Noel's House Party, The Barchester Chronicles; Berkeley Square; Cider with Rosie; Grace & Favour; The House of Eliott; Casualty and Dracula. From 2008 the house featured as Candleford Manor in the BBC's Lark Rise to Candleford. Scenes from Bonekickers, Tess of the D'Urbervilles, starring Eddie Redmayne and In Love with Barbara were shot at Chavenage in 2008.
Recent credits include Rosamunde Pilcher's The Four Seasons, the BBC's Nightwatch and the CBBC's series Sparticles. Two productions were shot at Chavenage in 2013, The Unknown Heart, based on an idea by Rosamunde Pilcher as well the historical drama New Worlds (Channel 4), starring Jamie Dornan. Chavenage is Trenwith House in the new adaption of Winston Graham's Poldark (2015 TV series), starring Aidan Turner.
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COME TO THE COTSWOLDS | BROADWAY, COTSWOLDS VLOG | Scarlet Martin
Hello everybody and welcome back to my channel!
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The town we visited in this vlog is called Broadway in the Cotswolds and if you get the chance to visit then do as it is so so beautiful!
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Gardens of the Cotswolds - GardenTours.com
We start this tour on 22 May 2019 in London at the very comfortable Doubletree by Hilton West End Hotel where you will meet your tour leader and fellow garden visitors during complimentary welcome drinks. We spend the second day of the tour visiting the world famous Chelsea Flower Show where you will see first hand the work of some of the world’s best garden designers. Over the next 4 days we explore a number of exceptional historic and contemporary gardens in the Cotswolds. Boughton Castle, with a walled garden laid out by Gertrude Jekyll, Hidcote Manor, the Arts & Crafts masterpiece which is by far one of Britain’s greatest gardens, the all-organic garden at Snowshill as well as the contemporary gardens at Broughton Grange Estate are just four of the 10 gardens that we visit on this tour and which are sure to leave you with a lasting impression of these two regions of the UK. We return to London from the Cotswolds for the last night of the tour. For those that stay in London just a little longer we offer a complimentary visit to the newly opened Temperate House at Kew Gardens on May 28th, the last day of our tour.
Special Places to Stay The Cotswolds
Cotswold House, Oxford
Cotswold House, 363 Banbury Road, Oxford, Oxfordshire, OX2 7PL, England
Click on the blue link above to read more about the Cotswold House or to book your stay there.Or visit for bargain prices on many more hotels in Oxfordshire in the UK and around the globe.
Barnsley House Hotel Experience, Cotswolds
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Noel Arms Hotel Chipping Campden
Review of the Lygon Arms hotel in the Cotswolds - Travel Guide vs Booking
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10 very cool reasons to add Montreal to your travel list - Travel Guide vs Booking
10 very cool reasons to add Montreal to your travel list - Travel Guide vs Booking
A charming historic olde worlde hotel on Broadway? That would be a Broadway melody to savour. New York, alas, has little to offer in this regard.Broadway, Worcestershire, however, is quite another matter. This model Cotswold village, once on the must-see list of every US tourist, has a hotel that used to be one of our most celebrated.The last time I visited the Lygon Arms was towards the end of its heyday in the 1980s when it had been acquired by the Savoy Group. Both the Cotswold stone hotel – and the chocolate-box-pretty village in which it sits – were gorgeous and delightful. And it had everything a colourful, historic hotel should have, including a ghost.With a history dating back to the 1300s, it had – as you might expect – plenty of famous connections. Both King Charles I and Oliver Cromwell stayed here (Cromwell the night of the decisive Civil War Battle of Worcester). King Charles supposedly had a hidden staircase to his room through which female companions were brought for his delight.In the 1960s, the hotel’s scandalous image was burnished when Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor stayed before they became husband and wife (for the first time!).For the past couple of decades, the hotel regularly changed hands and sadly, the Lygon Arms went into a bit of a decline. Its acquisition by the company that owns Cliveden and Chewton Glen has led to a lavish refurbishment and ushered in a glorious new era: the Lygon Arms is back and better than ever.There are 86 rooms in various wings, a wonderful spa and an excellent swimming pool. It also has a very fine restaurant, situated in the large space where Cromwell famously spent the night.The Lygon Arms (lygonarmshotel.co.uk, 01386 852255), you would have to conclude, is a Broadway hit all over again. A picture-perfect spot for a hotel – handily placed for other lovely Cotswolds towns. Tip-top: no effort has been spared in the recent refurbishment, which has updated the rooms yet succeeded in retaining their period charm. The hotel has cleverly aimed at a smart, efficient brasserie style. The menu is appetising and affordable – the root vegetables, sage and red onion cobbler is just £15. Travel facts Lygon Arms, Worcestershire, B&B for 2 from £225.