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Tewkesbury,
a town in Gloucestershire, is located on the River Severn where
the river Avon joins it and where the locks and weirs along the route
of the Avon allowed river traffic to reach the Severn. Tewkesbury
takes its name from Saxon times where a Saxon founded a hermitage in
the seventh century. Theocsbury, as it would have been referred to,
owes its very existence and prosperity to its nearby rivers.
Visitors to
Tewkesbury will find several Tudor buildings including
Gloucestershire's oldest public house, The Black Bear. Tewkesbury High
Street is unique in its mix of old and new buildings and upon
exploration there is plenty of interesting architecture to see. 
This former market
town has seen its fair share of historic battles and if towns could
talk this would have plenty to tell. The Abbey Mill just off the High
Street served as a centre for flour milling for centuries. 
Tewkesbury is
popular with tourists during the summer months and with easy access to
the nearby M5 motorway it acts as a conduit for traffic taking scenic
routes through the Gloucestershire countryside. 
Tewkesbury plays host to a number of festivals. From February to October visitors can take part in a Winter Beer Festival, a Medieval Festival with real battle re-enactments and a fair, a water festival and the annual Mop Fair. For such a small town it has a significant events diary. The
Medieval Fair at Tewkesbury is Europe's largest free annual medieval
battle re-enactment and fair. Thousands of dedicated battled hardened
participants turn up for this. The spectacular scenes and focus of all this attention is to re-create the Battle of Tewkesbury which took place in 1471
The
Tewkesbury Abbey or The Abbey of the Blessed Virgin Mary, is the second
largest parish church in England and was a former Benedictine Monastery. Tewkesbury's
importance as a market town would have been made all the more obvious
to visitors by such an impressive structure. It's origins go back to
the monastery when the Abbey was surrendered to Henry VIII as part of
the dissolution of the monasteries. Generally
the monastic buildings were demolished but this town managed to buy
back the land and continue worshipping on the site. Although the Abbey
has changed significantly over the years it still dominates the
town. Tewkesbury
has its own modern industrial estate and the nearby Ashchurch army camp
is one of the largest depots of its kind in the UK..
www.tewkesbury.gov.uk
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