St Mary Bibury Glorious Cotswold Church
BIBURY | Where to travel in UK 2019 | How to travel in England 2019
Have you heard about Bibury? Bibury England seems to be a fairy village, the perfect place where to travel in UK 2019 or have a London day trip 2019. Bibury Cotswolds is one of the old villages in England 2019 where everybody seems to want to go if you travel in England 2019. In this England YouTube Video we will show you how to travel in UK 2019.
But is Bibury Gloucestershire what is seems or there is something else you need to know before you go? Is Bibury the most beautiful village in England 2019 for real? Arlington row in Bibury Cirencester is where you can find the beautiful English houses. Maybe you read about William Morris England or William Morris Bibury? He considered Bibury the most beautiful village in England.
In this England Travel Video Guide we also visit a cute cafe called William Morris Tea Room and Bed and Breakfast. We have famous cream tea there.
We also visit St Marys's Church Bibury where we find vintage and antiques. We call it Rainbow church because there is a rainbow on the window. The Cotswold explorer video is a must see!
Follow our England vlog 2019 to discover the truth about Bibury England! Is it worth it?
St Marys Church In The Cotswold Village Of Marshfield
St Mary's parish church in with its tower provides an important focal point that can be observed from numerous points in the village and is a landmark visible from miles around. The church is on the eastern side of the village. A church has stood on that site for more than 1,000 years. The first was dedicated to St Nicholas, and at west Marshfield there was another, of which no traces remain, to St Pancras. It is thought that a field called St Pancras Close marks the site. In Bristol Museum there is an ancient deed of about 1125 confirming to the Abbot of Tewkesbury various tithes and ecclesiastical benefices, among them Marshfield church, at that time very much smaller than the church we see today.
It is recorded in the annals of Tewkesbury Abbey that on 1 June 1242, in the reign of Henry III, Walter de Cantilupe, Bishop of Worcester, in whose diocese Marshfield then stood, came to dedicate a newly built church at Marshfield. The monks of Tewkesbury Abbey restored and rebuilt the church in the perpendicular style in about 1470. After the Dissolution of the Monasteries the right of presentation of the benefice was given to the warden and fellows of New College, Oxford, by Queen Mary, in lieu of property of which they had been robbed by Henry VIII of England. The college's first incumbent came into residence in 1642, only to be disposed during the English Civil War. New College still has the benefice in its gift.
A chalice of 1576 and a paten probably dating from 1695 are in regular use, and Communion plate given by the Long family in 1728, including two large flagons, is used for the Christmas Eve midnight service each year. The church was restored in 1860 and more carefully in 1887 and 1902-3 under Canon Trotman. The chapel of St Clement in the north aisle was restored to its original design in 1950 as a memorial to the late Major Pope of Ashwicke Hall, a considerable benefactor of Marshfield. A new cemetery to the north of the village was opened in 1932, the churchyard being full.
The Parish Register dates from 1558, the first years of Elizabeth I's reign. The first two volumes were indexed and fifty copies printed by a London antiquarian in the time of Canon Trotman. For the first 150 years entries were generally written in Latin and initially only baptisms were recorded, burials being first entered in 1567 and marriages five years later. Non-conformist worshippers in the village are served by Baptist and Congregational chapels, and by Hebron Hall. Conversion of an old barn into the present church hall was done in 1933 at a cost of £650.
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Cinematic (Sting) by Twin Musicom is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
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The Church of Saint Mary the Virgin, Bampton In The Cotswolds And Downton Abbey Filming Location
The Church of Saint Mary the Virgin, Bampton, Oxfordshire, is a Church of England parish church in the Diocese of Oxford that dates from the 12th century. It is on the site of a late Saxon Minster, the tower of which survives in the present church. It has a 13th-century spire, and a carved stone reredos of Christ and his Apostles from about 1400. It is a Grade I listed building.
Saint Beornwald of Bampton was venerated as patron saint of Bampton from at least the 9th century until the Reformation. His feast day was 21 December. Given the degree of local patronage he may have been the founder of the church. Very little is known about Beornwald. Although early records call him saint, confessor, priest and martyr, even his tomb is now lost for certain. His shrine was probably in the north transept of the parish church, where some evidence of a former shrine remains.
William the Conqueror granted the original church to Leofric, Bishop of Exeter. The Diocese of Exeter was involved with St Mary's for many years afterwards. The church has been rebuilt and extended a number times, most recently in 1870 when the roof was given its present form.
The ancient parish was one of the largest in Oxfordshire, and included the townships of Weald, Lew, Aston, Cote, Shifford, Chimney and Lower Haddon. In 1857 the parish was split into the three ecclesiastical parishes of Bampton Proper, Bampton Lew and Bampton Aston, all now part of the united benefice of Bampton with Clanfield. In 1866 the parish was split into five civil parishes: Bampton, Lew, Aston and Cote, Shifford and Chimney.
St Mary's Rectory has a date-stone stating that it was built in 1546. It was altered in 1799 by the builder and architect Daniel Harris.
On 12 September 1955, St Mary's Church was designated as a Grade I listed building.[10]
Many scenes, including some of Downton Abbey's key events, have been filmed in and around the church in Bampton.
Main Music:-
It Came Upon a Midnight Clear by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
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Intro Title Music:-
Cinematic (Sting) by Twin Musicom is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
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My vacation! Calne England ,and having a wonderful interview with a beautiful lady.
Having the best time England is wonderful you haven't had a chance to come here you need to .
Cirencester Abbey Capital of Cotswolds
Cirencester Abbey or St Mary's Abbey, Cirencester in Gloucestershire.
Known as the capital of the Cotswolds because it lies at the heart of this beautifully and quintessentially English district
Cotwolds, UK Weekend Tour
*** We now offer custom Tour Itineraries for The Cotswolds. Message me for more details. ***
The Cotswolds is a very large area that’s covers roughly 800 square miles. Join us, as we take a weekend tour through Five counties (Gloucestershire, Oxfordshire, Warwickshire, Wiltshire and Worcestershire).
Throughout this tour, we visit the following locations:
- St. Martins Church in Bladon
- Blenhemim Palace in Woodstock, Oxfordshire
- Woodstock, Oxfordshire
- St. Kenelm’s Church in Minster Lovell
- St. Mary’s Church in Swinbrook
- Birbury in Gloucestershire
- St. Mary’s the Virgin Church in Bibury
- Burford
- Burford Almshouses
- St. John the Baptist Church in Burford
- Bourton-on-the-water in Gloucestershire
- St. Lawrence Church in Bourton-on-the-Water
- The Slaughters in Gloucestershire
- Stow-on-the-Wold
- St. Edwards Church in Stow-on-the-Wold
- Market Cross in Stow-on-the-Wold
- Rollright Stones in the Cotswolds
- Great Tew in Oxfordshire
- Long Compton in Warwickshire
- St. Peter and St. Paul Church in Long Compton
- Broadway Tower in Worcestershire
- The Town of Broadway in Worcestershire
- Chipping Campden in Gloucestershire
My vacation! Calne England UK absolutely the most beautiful place I have ever seen
Beautiful small village gorgeous. may 13th 2018 absolutely beautiful stunning England is gorgeous. My vacation.
England;'Pevency,Rye,Old Romney,Dugeness' 2008
Places to see in ( Painswick - UK )
Places to see in ( Painswick - UK )
Painswick is a town and civil parish in Gloucestershire, England. Originally the town grew on the wool trade, but it is now best known for its parish church's yew trees and the local Rococo Garden. The town is mainly constructed of locally quarried Cotswold stone. Many of the buildings feature south-facing attic rooms once used as weavers' workshops. Painswick stands on a hill in the Stroud district, overlooking one of the Five Valleys. Its narrow streets and traditional architecture make it the epitome of the English village.
There is evidence of settlement in the area as long ago as the Iron Age. This can be seen in the defensive earthworks atop nearby Painswick Beacon, which has wide views across the Severn Vale. The local monastery, Prinknash Abbey, was established in the 11th century. Painswick itself first appears in historical records in the Domesday Book of 1086, as Wiche, 'dairy-farm'. It continues to appear by this name into the thirteenth century. The form Painswik first appears in 1237, but must originate in the name of an earlier lord of the manor, Pain Fitzjohn (d. 1137). Pain was a common Anglo-Norman name (itself originating in paiën, Latin paganus, 'heathen').
During the first English Civil War (1642–45) Gloucester was a Parliamentarian stronghold of some strategic importance. Consequently, it was surrounded by forces loyal to the King. After the siege of Gloucester was broken on 5 September 1643, the Royalist army, which had been surrounding the city, encamped overnight at Painswick, with the King staying at Court House. Some damage was caused by the troops and a scar from two small cannonballs can still be seen on the tower of St. Mary's parish church.
The Church of England parish church of Saint Mary is a Grade I listed building. A priest in Painswick is noted in the Domesday Book and so it is assumed that there was also a church here at that time. Evidence suggests that it was built between 1042 and 1066 by Ernesi, a rich Anglo Saxon thegn who was then Lord of the Manor.
In the churchyard Painswick has a fine collection of chest tombs and monuments from the early 17th century onwards, carved in local stone by local craftsmen. The oldest tomb, with fossils on the top, is of William Loveday, Yeoman, dated 1623. Clifton-Taylor describes the churchyard, with its tombs and yews, as the grandest churchyard in England.
( Painswick - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Painswick . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Painswick - UK
Join us for more :
St Mary Painswick, Gloucestershire
a beuatiful little country village
My vacation! in England small village of Calne and the outside of the B&B we are staying at
Such a beautiful location England is gorgeous . May 13th 2018. My vacation.
My vacation! Calne England walking the trail absolutely beautiful must see may 13th 2018
The English countryside walking a trail in the small village of Calne England . absolutely beautiful views . My vacation.
Temple Guiting St Mary
Places to visit in and around Stratford: Temple Guiting
The villages of Temple Guiting and Guiting Power were known as Upper and Lower Guiting, they were renamed in the 19th century. Temple Guiting is built on the steep slopes of a valley through which the River Windrush flows.
Temple Guiting takes it's name from the Knights Templar who were given lands here by Gilbert de Lacy and Roger de Waterville in the middle of the 12th century. A Templar preceptory was founded to administer these properties, they built the present parish church in 1170.The preceptory consisted of serving brethren, a chaplain and one or more knights under a preceptor, a knight who gathered revenues to be sent to their order in Palestine. The Templars were suppressed by pope Clement V, on the 8th January 1308, the Templars were arrested under orders from Edward II who seized their properties. John de Coningston, the preceptor of Guiting was detained and sent to London, Templars were examined and tortured, eventually the belief that their master could grant absolution from sin brought the charge of heresy. They made a public abjuration of error in June 1311, were absolved and reconciled to the church but their lands were confiscated. John de Coningston and six other Templars did penance at monastries in the diocese of Worcester where they were maintained by a charge on their lands at Temple Guiting.
The south and north chancel walls of the church with their corbel table, the south wall of the nave, the winged lion corbel now in the chancel, some carved fragments in the porch and the capitals of the tower arch are survivors from the Templar church. In the 13th century the east end of the chancel was altered, the remains of two chancel windows and a corbel in the porch are of this period. 14th century work includes the north chapel with its piscina and aumbry, the low window of the south wall and the north and south chancel windows. The 15th and 16th centuries saw the addition of battlements, the east window, nave and north chapel windows, the priest's door and the font. The west tower and it's bells are 17th century. 18th century features include the westernmost nave windows, the north window of the north chapel, the Royal Arms, a hatchment and a gilded decalogue. The north porch and the chancel and north chapel arches are 19th century.
The church has three panels of 15th century stained glass depicting Mary Magdalene, James the Lesser and the Virgin Mary. There is also a beautiful modern window by Tom Denny.
Temple Guiting lies between Stow-on-the Wold and Winchcombe about an hour from Stratford-upon-Avon, Adam Henson's Cotswold Farm Park is nearby.
bwthornton.co.uk
CREEPY HAUNTED CEMETERY 3AM CHALLENGE - St Mary’s Church, Reigate, England ????????
We went back to St. Mary’s church in Reigate, this time at night. It has been dubbed the most haunted church in Surrey, England.
There has been reports of people hearing a phantom choir at night when the church is locked & empty, a lady in a white dress that many people have seen, also a young girl dressed in 19th century clothes skipping though the graves.
For our day time video:
Cirencester Parish Church
mphillips.mp77@gmail.com
skype Mike knight
cotswolds beautiful place to visit
The Cotswolds is an area of England which is very Popular with both the English themselves and visitors from all over the world, the Cotswolds are well-known for gentle hillsides, sleepy villages and for being so 'typically English'
- Blenhemim Palace in Woodstock, Oxfordshire
- Woodstock, Oxfordshire
- St. Kenelm’s Church in Minster Lovell
- St. Mary’s Church in Swinbrook
- Birbury in Gloucestershire
- St. Mary’s the Virgin Church in Bibury
- Burford
- Burford Almshouses
- St. John the Baptist Church in Burford
- Bourton-on-the-water in Gloucestershire
- St. Lawrence Church in Bourton-on-the-Water
- The Slaughters in Gloucestershire
- Stow-on-the-Wold
- St. Edwards Church in Stow-on-the-Wold
- Market Cross in Stow-on-the-Wold
- Rollright Stones in the Cotswolds
- Great Tew in Oxfordshire
- Long Compton in Warwickshire
- St. Peter and St. Paul Church in Long Compton
- Broadway Tower in Worcestershire
- The Town of Broadway in Worcestershire
- Chipping Campden in Gloucestershire
Cotswolds, United Kingdom | By Aloha Robert #Cotswolds #England #UK
It’s such a charming little place and is one of those places most people who visit, pretty much fall in love with straight away!
The Cotswold hills were once made wealthy from the wool trade; the churchyard at Burford has tombs in the shape of wool bales and wool merchants’ houses of the 14–16th century can often be found hiding behind later fronts. To the south of Burford is Kelmscott Manor, while just across the river is Buscot Park. St Mary’s church at Fairford, to the west, is renowned for its stained glass; the ‘Last Judgment’ is a masterpiece. To the north, up the River Coln, is the beautiful village of Bibury. The weavers’ cottages of Arlington Row have gables and high-pitched roofs that are the very essence of the Cotswolds.
Places to visit
1. Stow-on-the-Wold, Cotswolds, England
2. Lower Slaughter, Cotswolds, England
3. Bourton-on-the-Water, Cotswolds, England
4. Burford, Cotswolds, England
5. Broadway, Cotswolds, England
6. Upper Slaughter, Cotswolds, England
7. Chipping Campden, Cotswolds, England
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About me:
I'm a filmmaker and I like traveling to many places in California looking for the most unique and impressive places to shoot videos. In fact, California is such an amazing state with so many places to visit like art museums and landmarks! But many people don't have the opportunity to visit California because it's very expensive to travel to the Golden State. Instead of traveling, I will take you on a tour to those places and my travel videos will show you a lot of scenic sights and monuments absolutely free on my Youtube Channel.
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Bibury Church Bells
bibury bells
Rye - England (HD1080p)
*** 'Rye' is a town in East Sussex, England, located two miles from the open sea at the confluence of three rivers ***