Cirencester, the Capital of the Cotswolds has the unmistakable air of a lively market town. Its street market, held in the large market place, is still a colourful twice-weekly feature of town life. The town’s origins lie in the Roman period, when as Corinium Dobunnorum it was one of the regional capitals of Roman Britain.
The award winning Corinium Museum tells this story, and although relatively little of the Roman town survives above ground, the large grassed over amphitheatre is worth a visit. The parish church of St John Baptist dominates the town centre on a scale which supports its title of ‘Cathedral of the Cotswolds’. One of the fine Cotswold wool churches, it is a lasting symbol of the town’s wealth and influence in medieval England. Its unique three-storied porch is the physical link between church and town; it was the town hall until 1897.
Cirencester also boasts an arts centre with workshops in a converted brewery, and there are regular craft fairs and antique markets. The town is fortunate too in its open spaces - the Abbey Grounds on the site of the old Abbey of St Mary, and the extensive 18th-century parkland landscape of Cirencester Park.
Must see and do
- Corinium Museum, Cirencester
- Brewery Arts, Cirencester
- Keynes Country Park/Cotswold Water Park, near Cirencester
- Bibury Trout Farm, Bibury
- Westonbirt Arboretum, Tetbury
- Kelmscott Manor, Kelmscott
- Chedworth Roman Villa, Chedworth
- Rodmarton Manor, Rodmarton
- Museum in the Park, Stroud
- Bristol Aero Collection, Kemble