Guiting Power

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Village road
Village road
The barn
The barn
Remains of Anglo-Saxon church
Remains of Anglo-Saxon church
Anglo-Saxon 'tumulus'
Anglo-Saxon 'tumulus'
St Michael's & All Angels, Guiting Power - Norman doorway
St Michael's & All Angels, Guiting Power - Norman doorway
Church tower
Church tower
The South door
The South door

Guiting Power is a small, unspoilt Gloucestershire village in the Cotswolds, England.

Contents

[edit] Location

It is picturesquely situated on the slopes above a small valley (formed by a tributary of the River Windrush) and its ancient cotswold stone buildings blend in with the surrounding countryside. There was a late Anglo-Saxon settlement on this site, at which time it was called Gyting Broc. The village is near Cheltenham and the parish church is located at Ordnance Survey grid reference SP 096246.

[edit] Facilities and features

The village is unusual for its size in having a Post Office, a village hall (with car park), a private nursery, a bakery and a village shop and two public houses. Nearby are the excavated foundations of the original Anglo-Saxon church and a large kerbed round barrow shown as tumulus on ordnance survey mapping.[1] To a large extent, the village owes its preservation to the Guiting Manor Amenity Trust, founded by Raymond Cochrane in the early 1970s.

The Wardens' Way passes through the village, on its 14 mile route from Bourton-on-the-Water to Winchcombe, passing close by the church. It joins the Oxfordshire Way to the Cotswold Way and can be combined with the Windrush Way to make a circular route. It passes through the Cotswold villages of Guiting Power, Naunton, Lower Slaughter and Upper Slaughter.

There is a 17 acre wetland nature reserve, where a rich flora and fauna thrive.

The parish church of St Michael and All Angels is situated on the South edge of the village. It is of Norman origin, with a later Victorian transept. The North and South doorways were preserved in the renovations at that time.

[edit] Hymn Tune

The hymn tune Guiting Power was written by John Barnard specifically for the hymn Christ triumphant, ever reigning by Michael Saward.

[edit] In popular culture

In the BBC alternate reality game computer game Jamie Kane the village appears as the site of Redburn manor.

[edit] Nearby places to visit

[edit] References

  1. ^ Guiting Power 3 round barrow. University of Bradford Division of Archaeological, Geographical and Environmental Sciences (1998-07-29). Retrieved on 2008-03-16.

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 51°55′N, 1°52′W