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Rodmarton Manor

Rodmarton Manor

A Cotswold Arts and Crafts house, one of the last great country houses to be built in the traditional way and containing beautiful furniture, ironwork, china and needlework specially made for the house. The large garden complements the house and contains many areas of great beauty and character including the magnificent herbaceous borders, topiary, roses, rockery and kitchen garden. Available as a film location and for small functions…

Sezincote

Sezincote

Exotic oriental water garden by Repton and Daniell. Large semi-circular orangery. House by S P Cockerell in Indian style was the inspiration for Brighton Pavilion…

Stanway House & Water Garden

Stanway House & Water Garden

"As perfect and pretty a Cotswold manor house as anyone is likely to see" (Fodor’s Great Britain 1998 guidebook). Stanway’s beautiful architecture, furniture, parkland and village are now complemented by the restored 18th century water garden and the magnificent fountain - 300 feet - making it the tallest garden fountain and gravity fountain in the world. Teas available. Beer for sale. Wedding reception venue…

Sudeley Castle Gardens & Exhibitions

Sudeley Castle Gardens & Exhibitions

Award-winning gardens and medieval ruins surround Sudeley Castle, nestled in the Cotswold Hills. Fascinating exhibitions explore Sudeley’s royal connections spanning over 1000 years; Katherine Parr is entombed in St Mary’s Church within the grounds. Tours of the private apartments are available on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays…

Whittington Court

Whittington Court

Elizabethan manor house. Family possessions including ceramics, antique and modern glass, fossils and fabrics…

Combe Sydenham Country Park

Combe Sydenham Country Park

Built in 1580 on the site of a monastic settlement. Deer Park and woodland walks…

Cothay Manor & Gardens

Cothay Manor & Gardens

The magical, romantic, gardens of Cothay surround what is said to be the most perfect example of a small classic medieval manor. Many garden rooms, each a garden in itself, are set off a 200yd yew walk. In addition there is a bog garden with azaleas, and drifts of primuli, fine trees, cottage garden, courtyards, and river walk. A plantsman’s paradise. The manor is open to groups throughout the year…

Milton Lodge Gardens

Milton Lodge Gardens

"The great glory of the gardens of Milton Lodge is their position high up on the slopes of the Mendip Hills to the north of Wells … with broad panoramas of Wells Cathedral and the Vale of Avalon", (Lanning Roper). Charming, mature, Grade II listed terraced garden dating from 1909. Replanned 1962 with mixed shrubs, herbaceous plants, old fashioned roses and ground cover; numerous climbers; old established yew hedges. Fine trees in garden and in 7-acre arboretum across old Bristol Road…

Bowood House & Gardens

Bowood House & Gardens

Bowood is the family home of the Marquis and Marchioness of Lansdowne. Begun c1720 for the Bridgeman family, the house was purchased by the 2nd Earl of Shelburne in 1754 and completed soon afterwards. Part of the house was demolished in 1955, leaving a perfectly proportioned Georgian home, over half of which is open to visitors. Robert Adam’s magnificent Diocletian wing contains a splendid library, the laboratory where Joseph Priestley discovered oxygen gas in 1774, the orangery, now a picture gallery, the Chapel and a sculpture gallery in which some of the famous Lansdowne Marbles are displayed. Among the family treasures shown in the numerous exhibition rooms are Georgian costumes, including Lord Byron’s Albanian dress; Victoriana; Indiana (the 5th Marquess was Viceroy 1888-94); and superb collections of watercolours, miniatures and jewellery. The House is set in one of the most beautiful parks in England. Over 2,000 acres of gardens and grounds were landscaped by ‘Capability’ Brown between 1762 and 1768, and are embellished with a Doric temple, a cascade, a pinetum and an arboretum. The Rhododendron Gardens are open for six weeks from late April to early June. All the walks have seats…

Corsham Court

Corsham Court

Corsham Court, a splendid Elizabethan house dating from 1582, was acquired in 1745 to display Sir Paul Methuen’s celebrated collection of 16th and 17th century Old Master paintings. This internationally renowned collection includes important works by Van Dyck, Carlo Dolci, Filippo Lippi, Salvator Rosa, Reynolds and Romney. Capability Brown was employed during the 1760’s to enlarge the house, creating the magnificent Picture Gallery and suite of State Rooms. These rooms still retain their original silk wall-hangings and furniture designed by Chippendale, Johnson, Cobb and the Adam brothers. Surrounding the Court are the delightful gardens and parkland which were initially designed by Brown and later completed by Humphry Repton. The gardens are particularly admired for the collection of magnolias, specimen trees and spring bulbs…