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HamletTowns & Villages

Gilberts Grave

📷 Photo by N Chadwick · CC BY-SA 2.0 · Wikimedia Commons

This small Gloucestershire settlement revolves around St Mary's Church, an 11th-century Anglican structure that stands out as one of the finest Norman buildings in the area.

The church carries Grade I listing status and rewards a visit for its original features — the stonework and interior details remain excellent examples of medieval craftsmanship. The hamlet itself stays quiet and rural, giving you a genuine sense of how villages across this region have evolved over centuries.

The church provides a peaceful stopping point while you're exploring the wider Cotswolds, and the surrounding countryside offers gentle walking routes through typical English pastoral landscapes. What makes Gilberts Grave distinctive is that it functions as a working village rather than a tourist destination, which lends it an authenticity many visitors find appealing.

The hamlet sits very close to Bibury, a better-known Cotswold village just a short drive away, where you'll find cafes and shops if needed. Larger towns like Cirencester lie to the south and Cheltenham further west, making this location useful as part of a broader day out in central Cotswolds — you can combine quieter places like this with busier attractions elsewhere. Spring through autumn represents the best visiting period, when the countryside looks its most appealing and the church is typically more accessible.

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51.86742°N, 1.79634°W Data: osm