Web Designers In
STOW ON THE WOLD,
Gloucestershire.
Silk Wind Web designers offer residence of
Stow on the Wold
in Gloucestershire the chance to take advantage of using our Web
Designers in
Stow on the Wold where we will beat
any fees for design, maintenance and web design packages etc.
"If You
Want To Go Directly To Our Web Designers in
Stow on the Wold and other Cities and Towns in
Gloucestershire, then go to our
Web Designers In
Stow on the wold
page by going here:
Web Designers In
Stow On The Wold"
Our
main service is a web design, maintenance, optimization and
a Internet marketing service for
Stow on the Wold. This is a private service for
small / medium sized companies who already have their website(s) but require on-going up-dates, new pages added,
text / photos added, page optimization, monthly search
engine and directory submissions and on going internet
marketing.
SILK WIND SERVICES also offers a
web design, optimization and marketing service
including the package below:
Other Web Designers In
Stow on the Wold Services Includes:
-
Flash
banners and logos
-
Flash
Booking / Reservation And Contact Forms
-
Navigation Menus
-
General
Web Design & Marketing
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Website Maintenance.
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Adding Music Players.
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Logo, Flyer, Poster, Label and Party
Ticket Designing.
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Designing online newspaper / Magazine
style sections on your site so your readers
can access your articles online.
Our Web Designers in
Stow on the Wold services at
both the comfort of your office / home or anywhere in and around
Stow on the Wold in Gloucestershire.
If you are searching for Web Designers in
Stow on the Wold
and you would like to take advantage of our Web Designers offers for
residence of
Stow on the Wold in
Gloucestershire, then please
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and how save time and money.
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Stow On The Wold In Gloucestershire
About Stow on the Wold
"Stow on the Wold, where the wind blows cold"
So runs an old rhyme describing this historic Cotswold market town. Stow
on the Wold is the highest town in the Cotswolds at 790 feet above sea
level, which accounts for the somewhat unflattering rhyme, though, to be
honest, I've never found it to be windier or colder than anyplace else
in the region.
Stow is well placed at the junction of eight roads, one of them the
Roman Fosse Way. One of the first things you notice on entering Stow -
aside from relief at finally getting off the busy A429 - is the
remarkably large market square. The size of the square is a reminder of
Stow's heritage as the site of a major sheep market. Daniel Defoe
recorded that 20,000 sheep were sold during a single day.
There has been a market here since 1107, when Henry II granted a
charter, and changed the name of the town from Edwardstow. But the age
of the market square pales in relation to the age of the Royalist Hotel,
on Digbeth Street; it is reputedly the oldest inn in England, and claims
a history reaching as far back as 987AD. In the dining lounge is a
medieval fireplace showing "witch's marks"; signs meant to ward off
spells. There is also a resident ghost or two, and rumours of a secret
tunnel from the cellars, leading under the street.
St Edwards church, Stow on the Wold
The Royalist is not the only historic inn in Stow. The Kings Arms, on
the market square, hosted King Charles I before the Battle of Naseby.
More recently, it featured in the television production of Thomas
Hardy's Mayor of Casterbridge.
If the size of the market square is the first thing you notice, the
number of antique shops must be the second! Stow is one of the major
centres for antique shopping in southern England. Though there are
undoubted bargains available oif you know what you are looking for, most
of the shops cater to a ... shall we say... well-heeled clientel.
The alleys leading from the market square were intentionally built
narrow and winding, as a way to control sheep.
The lovely church of St Edward repays a visit many times over. The
church is primarily a product of the 11th century, though the tower was
remodelled in the 15th century. Quite apart from the lovely
architecture, the church bears visiting for its historical connection
with the Battle of Stow on the Wold, the final conflict of the English
Civil War.
In 1646 a Royalist army under Astley marched through the region in a
desperate attempt to join up with King Charles at Oxford. They were
brought to bay at Stow by a Parliamentary force. They fighting was
fierce, and deadly; the Royalists were routed, and over 1000 imprsoned
within the church.
So great was the slaughter that it was said that ducks were able to
bathe in the pools of blood that formed on the street leading away from
the market square. This is said to be the origin of the street's name; "Digbeth",
for "Duck's Bath". Though the tale of the origins of Digbeth Street may
be apocrophal, it is sobering to think that where antique shoppers now
jostle with baby carriages, men once fought and died.
There is more to St Edwards than this memory of conflict; take the time
to walk around the outside of the church to the north side. There a
small door peers between two massive old tree trunks. You almost expect
a gnome to peek around the door any minute.
Fancy aside, the church is quite enjoyable. The tower rises to 88 feet,
and boasts the heaviest peel of bells in all of Gloucestershire. In the
south aisle is a large painting of the Crucifixion by Gaspar de Craeyer
(1582-1669).
St Edwards Hall, in the market square, is a much later addition to the
architectural landscape of Stow, being built in 1878. The money for the
building came from funds left unclaimed in the town Savings Bank. The
Hall houses the public library and exhibitions of Civil War artefacts.
If you are searching for Web Designers in
Stow on the Wold
and you would like to take advantage of our Web Design offers for
residence of
Stow on the Wold in
Gloucestershire, then please
click here to find our
Web Designers In
Stow On The Wold
Click here to find our
Web Designers In
Stow On The Wold In Gloucestershire