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Northamptonshire Holiday and Tourism Information
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Church of St. Peter at Irthlingborough - Photo:
Geoff Pick
CCL |
With rolling hills, vast tracts of farmland and a host
of great estates, landlocked Northamptonshire is often
referred to as the county of ‘squires and spires’. Yet
its bucolic charm contrasts sharply with the rushing
sprawl of its close neighbour, London.
Mostly agricultural and, in parts, unspoiled - its
emblem is the cowslip – the county has a tiny population
and is surrounded by no less than eight other counties,
blending with the Fens in the east and the Cotswolds in
the west.
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Among its greatest attractions are Silverstone - home of
the British Grand Prix – and Althorp House, the
Elizabethan ancestral home of the late Diana, Princess
of Wales.
Before the arrival of the Romans this turbulent county
was controlled by the British tribe known as the
Coritani and later became an important part of the
Anglo-Saxon Kingdom of Mercia.
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The Middle Ages brought fame to
the county through the manufacture of boots and
shoes and it was here that the footwear for
Cromwell’s vast army was stitched together.
When the Industrial Revolution arrived, the natural
resources of the region were eagerly utilised,
especially its reserves of iron ore in the Corby
area. |

Silverstone Racing Circuit - Photo:
Peter Roberts
CCL |
The county has many notable historic attractions and
among them, in the north-west, is Naseby, site of
arguably the most momentous battle of the English Civil
War in the 17th century. It sealed the fate of Charles
I, who had previously stayed at Daventry. After he was
finally defeated by Oliver Cromwell’s roundheads he was
incarcerated at Holdenby House.
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View towards Daventry Country Park across the
Reservoir - Photo:
Ian Rob
CCL |
The 1460 Battle of Northampton
at Hardingstone Fields also marked a significant
moment in English. It was here that the Yorkists
captured Henry V1 during the War of the Roses.
The county has a series of other
royal connections. Edward, second Duke of York -
killed at Agincourt at 1415 - is buried at
Fotheringhay. Richard III was born in the town’s
castle where Mary Queen of Scots was beheaded. |
At Northampton and Geddington are two of three surviving
‘Eleanor crosses’, built by Edward I in memory of his
wife, Queen Eleanor, who died in 1290. They mark the
places where her embalmed body rested on a 150-mile
journey from Nottingham to London.
At the Manor House in Ashby St Ledgers, the Catholic
conspirators Guy Fawkes and Robert Catesby dreamed up
the Gunpowder Plot, aiming to blow up the Houses of
Parliament in 1605.
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Northampton Guild Hall - Photo:
Ian Rob
CCL |
Althorp House is the most famous of all the county’s
country estates these days. One of England’s finest
country seats, it has been in the ownership of the
Spencer family for over 500 years and was home to a
youthful Princess Diana who is laid to rest at the Round
Oval in the heart of the mansion’s 500-acre park.
The Stables host an ever-popular exhibition entitled
‘Diana, a Celebration’ and inside the house is one of
the world’s most impressive collections of portraits,
including works by Reynolds, Rubens, Gainsborough and
Van Dyck.
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Cottesbrooke Hall, a magnificent 18th century mansion,
also has beautiful gardens and parkland and is reputed
to be the original of Jane Austen's 'Mansfield Park' .
It has a collection of 18th & 19th century English
sporting and equestrian pictures considered one of the
finest in England.
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Beyond such plush interiors, the
county boasts a litany of charming villages,
dramatic reservoirs, ancient churches, traditional
taverns, 2,000 miles of footpaths and a host of
sporting opportunities ranging from angling and
waterskiing to skydiving and hot-air ballooning. |

Corby Boating Lake - Photo:
Nigel Cox
CCL |
A must-see is the picturesque village of Stoke Bruerne,
cut in half by the Grand Union Canal, where there is a
canal museum.
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The Stock Bruerne Locks and Waterways Museum -
Photo:
Martin Clark
CCL |
Many of the region’s churches
date from medieval England, but some are older. All
Saint's at Brixworth, for example, was built in
680AD and is widely considered to be one of the
finest - and largest - Anglo Saxon churches in
England.
Northampton’s Church of the Holy Sepulchre is
England’s largest and best-preserved round church
while Rothwell’s Holy Trinity Church possesses one
of only two bone crypts in England. |
Northampton lies on the Nene and received its first
charter as far back as 1189. It boasts the biggest
market square in the country and a 19th century
cathedral designed by Pugin.
Even today the city specialises in the manufacture of
shoes and boots – a fact not lost on its football team,
nicknamed The Cobblers. Its Central Museum has an
astonishing collection of shoes through the ages,
including baby shoes from ancient times and some of the
biggest platform boots of the 1970s!
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Tourist
Information Centres:
Brackley
2 Bridge Street, Brackley, Northamptonshire, NN13 7EP
Tel: 01280 700111
E-mail:
tic@southnorthants.gov.uk
Corby
The Willows Art Centre, George Street, Corby, NN17 1QB
Tel: 01536 407507
E-mail:
tic@corby.gov.uk
Kettering
Coach House, Sheep Street, Kettering, Northamptonshire,
NN16 0AN
Tel: 01536 410266
E-mail:
tic@kettering.gov.uk
Northampton
The Guildhall, St. Giles Square, Northampton, NN1 1AX
Tel: 01604 838800 Fax: 01604 604180
E-mail:
tic@northampton.gov.uk
Oundle
14 West Street, Oundle, Northamptonshire, PE8 4EF
Tel: 01832 274333 Fax:
01832 273526
E-mail:
oundletic@east-northamptonshire.gov.uk
Useful
Links:
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Brackley Hotels |
Brackley Bed & Breakfast |
Brackley B&B |
Brixworth Hotels |
Brixworth Bed & Breakfast |
Brixworth B&B |
Corby
Hotels |
Corby Bed
& Breakfast |
Corby B&B
| Corby
Self catering cottages, apartments, flats |
Corby Camping
sites, camp grounds, caravan sites |
Daventry Hotels |
Daventry Bed & Breakfast |
Daventry B&B |
Daventry
Self catering cottages, apartments, flats |
Daventry
Camping sites, camp grounds, caravan sites |
Desborough Hotels |
Desborough Bed & Breakfast |
Desborough B&B |
East
Haddon Hotels |
East
Haddon Bed & Breakfast |
East
Haddon B&B |
Flore
Hotels |
Flore Bed
& Breakfast |
Flore B&B |
Flore Self catering cottages, apartments, flats |
Horton
Hotels |
Horton
Bed & Breakfast |
Horton
B&B |
Kettering Hotels |
Kettering Bed & Breakfast |
Kettering B&B |
Kettering Self catering cottages, apartments, flats
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Kettering Camping sites, camp grounds, caravan sites
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Market Harborough Hotels |
Market Harborough Bed & Breakfast |
Market Harborough B&B |
Market Harborough Self catering cottages, apartments,
flats |
Northampton Hotels |
Northampton Bed & Breakfast |
Northampton B&B |
Northampton Self catering cottages, apartments, flats
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Northampton Camping sites, camp grounds, caravan sites
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Oundle
Hotels |
Oundle
Bed & Breakfast |
Oundle
B&B |
Oundle Self catering cottages, apartments, flats |
Scaldwell Hotels |
Scaldwell Bed & Breakfast |
Scaldwell B&B |
Silverstone Hotels |
Silverstone Bed & Breakfast |
Silverstone B&B |
Silverstone Camping sites, camp grounds, caravan sites
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Stoke Bruerne Hotels |
Stoke Bruerne Bed & Breakfast |
Stoke Bruerne B&B |
Thrapston
Camping sites, camp grounds, caravan sites |
Towcester Hotels |
Towcester Bed & Breakfast |
Towcester B&B |
Towcester
Camping sites, camp grounds, caravan sites |
Wellingborough Hotels |
Wellingborough Bed & Breakfast |
Wellingborough B&B
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