Ïã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê¼´Ê±¿ª½±

Chastleton House

The Cotswolds


Four miles southeast of Moreton-in-Marsh, signposted off the A44 halfway to Chipping Norton, Chastleton is one of England’s finest and most complete Jacobean houses. Built between 1607 and 1612 and barely altered since, it’s bursting with rare tapestries, family portraits and antique furniture; the Long Gallery is particularly resplendent. Outside, there’s a wonderful topiary garden. Free garden tours run most afternoons.


Ïã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê¼´Ê±¿ª½±'s must-see attractions

Nearby The Cotswolds attractions

1. Rollright Stones

3.16 MILES

Linked by a footpath through open fields, the ancient Rollright Stones stand to either side of an unnamed road 4 miles north of Chipping Norton. The most…

2. Bliss Tweed Mill

3.79 MILES

Chipping Norton's most striking landmark, the 1872 Bliss Tweed Mill dominates its western outskirts. Looking much more like a stately home than a factory,…

3. St Mary's Church

4.1 MILES

A classic Cotswold wool church, St Mary's has a magnificent Perpendicular nave and clerestory, several alabaster tombs and fluted, diamond-shaped pillars…

4. Chipping Norton Museum

4.25 MILES

Squeezed into the upper floor of a little house facing the imposing columns of the town hall, Chipping Norton’s volunteer-run museum is a small-scale and…

5. Cotswold Falconry Centre

4.88 MILES

Home to over 150 birds of prey (owl, vulture, eagle and, of course, falcon), this exciting spot stages displays of the ancient practice of falconry at 11…

6. Batsford Arboretum

4.92 MILES

Created from 1880 onwards by Bertie Mitford (Lord Redesdale), and later briefly home to his famous granddaughters, the Mitford sisters, these exotic 22…

7. Cotswolds Distillery

5.56 MILES

This ambitious, ecofriendly gin and whisky distillery sits tucked into the northern Cotswolds, 8 miles north of Chipping Norton. Join a tour of the…

8. Old Mill

6.63 MILES

Right on the River Eye, the Old Mill houses a cafe and crafts shop as well as a small museum, where you can find out all about the building’s former life…