English Heritage sites near Great Witcombe Parish

Great Witcombe Roman Villa

GREAT WITCOMBE ROMAN VILLA

1 miles from Great Witcombe Parish

The remains of a large and luxurious villa built about AD 250, with a bathhouse complex, perhaps the shrine of a water spirit, and mosaics.

Blackfriars

BLACKFRIARS

6 miles from Great Witcombe Parish

One of the most complete surviving Dominican friaries in England, later converted into a Tudor house and cloth factory. Notable features include the church and fine scissor-braced dormitory roof.

Greyfriars

GREYFRIARS

6 miles from Great Witcombe Parish

Substantial remains of an early Tudor friary church of Franciscan 'grey friars' founded in 1231.

Over Bridge

OVER BRIDGE

7 miles from Great Witcombe Parish

A single-arch stone bridge spanning the River Severn, built in 1825-30 by the great engineer Thomas Telford.

Belas Knap Long Barrow

BELAS KNAP LONG BARROW

10 miles from Great Witcombe Parish

A particularly fine example of a Neolithic long barrow of c.3800 BC, featuring a false entrance and side chambers. During excavations in the 1860s, the remains of 31 people were found in the chambers.

Odda's Chapel

ODDA'S CHAPEL

10 miles from Great Witcombe Parish

One of the most complete surviving Saxon churches in England, this chapel was built in 1056 by Earl Odda, and rediscovered in 1865 subsumed into a farmhouse. Nearby is the famous Saxon parish church.


Churches in Great Witcombe Parish

St Mary

Great Witcombe Gloucester
(01242) 321806
https://www.facebook.com/greenwaychurches/

For  the most up to date information about special services and events, please visit our Facebook page @greenwaychurches

St Mary's Great Witcombe with Bentham lies in a beautiful setting below the curving, heavily wooded slopes of the Cotswold escarpment. It's a great place to stop; a peaceful church in which to pray,to retreat from the busyness of the everyday, to soak in the sense of faithful witness to the Christian faith through many ages. Leaflets are available to help you interpret the features, old and new, including the dramatic Norman dog-tooth arch, and the late medieval stained glass windows with their particularly vivid colours. You can join a small and very friendly congregation for an early morning Prayer Book communion, or a monthly Family Service with people of all ages, sharing in more informal worship with instrumental music. Coffee and home-made cakes are served after worship each Sunday in the north chapel.
The church serves a varied parish of scattered dwellings -some along the Roman road as it climbs Birdlip Hill, one of the steeped parts of the Cotswold scarp slope. The now by-passed community of Little Witcombe forms the largest group of houses in the parish -near to the pub and shop.
The Cotswold Way path weaves its way through the woods at the top of the slope and we welcome a good number of visitors during the year to this sequestered spot; once discovered, never forgotten.


Enquiries about baptisms, weddings and burials should be made to the Vicar. The church can seat about 90 comfortably.

For helpful guidance about weddings, visit: www.yourchurchwedding.org


No churches found in Great Witcombe Parish