BIBURY


'Bibury', a small village in Gloucestershire, England, is a typical and picturesque Cotswold village.
The artist and craftsman William Morris called Bibury "the most beautiful village in England" at the sight of the village's charm. Its honey-coloured 17th-century stone cottages with steep pitched roofs once provided housing for weavers who supplied cloth for fulling at nearby Arlington Mill. The mill now houses a folk and agricultural museum, containing a room dedicated to Morris.
The River Coln flows through the village, alongside the main street.
Bibury attractions include a trout farm (1902) where some 10 million rainbow trout are spawned yearly. The trout can be sampled at the Catherine Wheel, a small inn and pub.
In the late 19th century, George Witts recounted the discovery of Bibury Roman villa:[1]
:''In the year 1880 a Roman villa was accidentally discovered in the parish of Bibury, about six miles north-east of Cirencester. Some Roman pottery, coins, remnants of tesselated pavements, &c., were found, but as no examination has yet taken place, no description of the building can be given.''

Contents
Location
References
External links

Location


The parish church is located at Ordnance Survey mapping six-figure grid reference 'SP 118065'

References


1. Archaeological Handbook of Gloucestershire - ROMAN VILLAS Bill Thayer

External links





Bibury - Guide to the Cotswold village of Bibury

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