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Sevenhampton, Gloucestershire

Civil parishes in GloucestershireGloucestershire geography stubsUse British English from March 2015Villages in Gloucestershire
Sevenhampton church geograph.org.uk 120837
Sevenhampton church geograph.org.uk 120837

Sevenhampton is a village and civil parish in Cotswold District, Gloucestershire. The village population taken at the 2011 census was 333.The name of the village is believed to be derived from an older name, Sennington, which was still in use into the early modern period. The Church of St Andrew was built in the 12th century. It is a grade I listed building.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Sevenhampton, Gloucestershire (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Sevenhampton, Gloucestershire
Church Lane, Cotswold District Sevenhampton

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.891666666667 ° E -1.95 °
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Address

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Church Lane
GL54 5SW Cotswold District, Sevenhampton
England, United Kingdom
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Sevenhampton church geograph.org.uk 120837
Sevenhampton church geograph.org.uk 120837
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Nearby Places

Whittington Court
Whittington Court

Whittington Court is an Elizabethan manor house, five miles east of Cheltenham in Gloucestershire, England. Adjacent to the house is the Whittington parish church which dates from the 12th century and now dedicated to St Bartholomew.The origins of the site are unclear, but probably date back to Anglo-Saxon times; however, in 1948 the remains of a Roman villa were found in an adjacent field.The current building was probably begun by Richard Cotton's son John Cotton in 1556 on an earlier moated site. It was completed in anticipation of Queen Elizabeth I's visit to the house in 1592 en route to Sudeley Castle. Subsequently, passed to Sir John Denham, who married Anne Cotton and died 1669, and was Surveyor General to Charles II. It then passed through the female line to the Earls of Derby and by the mid-late 18th century belonged to Thomas Tracey the Member of Parliament for Gloucester, who died in 1770. Misses Timbrell and Mrs. Rebecca Lighbourne inherited the property but left no heir, the house passing to Mr. Walter Lawrence Morris and subsequently to his descendants who adopted the name Lawrence. Alterations and additions were made in the 16th, late 17th and early 18th centuries. In the mid-eighteenth century the estate was sold and became part of the Sandywell Park estate. The kitchen wing was added 1929. It is a grade I listed building.The interior of the house is Elizabethan and contain two carved overmantels from Sevenhampton Manor - one showing the arms of Lawrence Washington (1602–1652) (the stars and stripes).A barn dated 1614 and stable block are both grade II listed.Since 1972 a disused gardener's cottage at Whittington Court has been the home to The Whittington Press, a fine press which also publishes the journal Matrix on printing.