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Whiteway Colony is a residential community in the Cotswolds in the parish of Miserden near Stroud, Gloucestershire, United Kingdom.The community was founded in 1898 by Tolstoyans and today has no spare land available with over sixty homes and 120 colonists. [1]
In 2007 Rightmove bought 67% of Holiday Lettings Limited. [6] In May 2008, HBOS, one of the founding investors, sold its stake in Rightmove. [7] According to Forbes, Rightmove operates on a two-sided model which serves a vast "audience" for property listings on one side and 20,000 advertisers of available properties on the other side. [8]
Crossroads of narrow road near Stow-on-the-Wold, looking towards Lower Swell and the town. The house was designed by architect John Loughborough Pearson and built in 1856–59 for £8,000 (equivalent to £940,000 in 2023) for Reverend Robert William Hippisley, who was the local parish priest [6] (rector) (1844–1899).
Ellen is a well-known collector of multimillion-dollar homes, and owns several properties in Southern California. The Cotswolds is a popular spot for U.K. celebrities to pick up a country estate.
The area is noted for the wealth of its Cotswold stone houses of architectural and historic interest. [4] They include Lypiatt Park, formerly the home of Judge H. B. D. Woodcock and then of the late Modernist sculptor Lynn Chadwick; [5] Nether Lypiatt Manor, formerly the home of Violet Gordon-Woodhouse and Prince and Princess Michael of Kent; [6] Daneway (near Sapperton, but within the parish ...
Barn approx. 50m west of Manor Farmhouse Ablington, Bibury: Barn: Mid–late 16th century: 23 January 1952: 1155118: Barn approx. 50m west of Manor Farmhouse: Group of 6 monuments in the churchyard approx. 5m south of nave and west of porch to Church of St Mary
Asthall Manor is a gabled Jacobean Cotswold manor house in Asthall, Oxfordshire. It was built in about 1620 [1] and altered and enlarged in about 1916. [1] The house is Grade II listed on the National Heritage List for England. [2] Early in the 20th century, the house was the childhood home of the Mitford sisters.
Abbotswood house is the principal of the estate's buildings, a 22,000 square feet (2,000 m 2) Cotswold stone L-shaped house dating back to the 1867 construction. Lutyens' external work on the house is concentrated on the north-side of the south-wing, where a projecting gabled roof falling to near ground level protects the main entrance; and on the west-side of the same wing where a series of ...