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You are here: Home Page > Europe > Great Britain - United Kingdom > England > Warwickshire |
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Warwickshire Vacations
This is
Shakespeare Country, and most of the visitors who flock to the
Warwickshire come in search of The Bard and his legacy. In truth
Shakespeare's home town of Stratford on Avon is an attractive place,
full of half-timbered buildings that have changed little from the
days when a reluctant young William Shakespeare attended grammar
school in an upper room of the old Guildhall.
About 8 miles to the northeast of Stratford is the county town of Warwick, home to Warwick Castle, which has been described as the perfect medieval castle. The first fortress here was erected by William the Conqueror, though nothing but the mound remains. The present castle was begun after Simon de Montfort's troops leveled the old one in 1264. The massive curtain walls are pierced by an iron portcullis, and murder holes look down from above the entry. There is an appropriately dismal dungeon, and a haunted room where murder was done. A fascinating "Edwardian Weekend" house party tableau by Madame Tussaud's graces the updated living quarters.
At Kenilworth is another of England's truly great medieval fortresses, begun by Geoffrey de Clinton about 1120. Kenilworth Castle was the site of Edward II's abdication and was later graced with the addition of John of Gaunt's Banqueting Hall. Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester and favourite of Elizabeth I, added the large residential block now known as the Leicester Building.
Moving from from grand castles to modest manors, Warwickshire is home to Baddesley Clinton, one of the most perfect examples of a moated medieval manor house in England. The house dates from the 14th century, and has been little altered since the 16th, with wonderful panelled rooms, family portraits, and a priest's hiding hole with a dramatic history.
Though the countryside of Warwickshire represents something of the idealised rural landscape of England, there are surprisingly few great gardens in the county. Instead, the countryside is peppered with stately homes and other less grand yet still appealing abodes. One such is Charlecote Park, owned by the De Lacey family for over 750 years. In a tale which may be false but ought to be true, a young William Shakespeare was caught poaching Thomas de Lacey's deer - Shakespeare later caricatured de Lacey in his Merry Wives of Windsor as "Justice Shallow".
Another
great house is at Packwood, where the fanciful yew trees and hedges
have been clipped to create a garden based on the Sermon on the
Mount. Ragley Hall is one of the great Palladian houses of England.
Designed in 1680 by Robert Hooke, the interior is especially notable
for its magnificent baroque plasterwork. Source: britainexpress.com
Things To Do and See in Warwickshire
Warwick Castle,
Warwick, Warwickshire one of the finest medieval castles in England, which served as the home to the mighty earls of Warwick, who were to play key roles in
the
Wars of the Roses and the Hundred Years War with France.
Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire most-visited Parish Churches and the site where William Shakespeare
was
baptized in 1564 and buried in 1616.
Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire should include taking in a play at this famous theater and a backstage tour
to
get an intriguing insight into props and costumes.
Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire where William Shakespeare was born, and gain insight into what life
was
like when the famous bard was a child.
Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire
Anne
Hathaway, Shakespeare's sweet-heart and wife.
You may also be interested in... - Traveler Reviews of Warwickshire - Top 10 Tourist Attractions in England - Photo Gallery & Map |
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