Hartwell, Buckinghamshire

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Hartwell Church

Hartwell is a village in central Buckinghamshire. It is to the south of Aylesbury, by the village of Stone. At the 2011 Census the population was included in the civil parish of Stone with Bishopstone and Hartwell.

The village name is Anglo-Saxon in origin, and means "spring frequented by deer". In the Domesday Book of 1086 it was recorded as Herdeuuelle and Herdewelle.

The ruined Hartwell church was designed by the architect Henry Keene and completed in 1756. It is one of the most important early Gothic revival churches in the country and is Grade-II* listed. It has an octagonal centre with twin towers. In the north and south bays are rose windows, other windows are represented as ogee arches. In the clerestory are quatrefoil windows. Inside, the church once had a plaster fan vault but this has now fallen in, and the church's windows are boarded. Today the building appears more as a garden folly, than a former place of worship.

Attached to the estate is the former hamlet of Lower Hartwell.

Hartwell House

Main article: Hartwell House

Hartwell House in the village is a Grade-I listed building in a 90-acre park, part of the Hartwell Estate owned by the Ernest Cook Trust.[1] The house was once the residence of the exiled future king of France Louis XVIII. Since 2008 it has been leased to The National Trust and is run as a hotel by an independent company, Historic House Hotels Ltd.[2]

Bugle Quarry

Bugle Quarry is a geological Site of Special Scientific Interest, which has yielded important fossils from the Jurassic and Cretaceous, including dinosaur teeth.

References

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