Chipping Campden
Chipping Campden is the finest and most completely preserved of the Cotswold wool towns, a settlement in the north Cotswolds whose long main street of golden limestone buildings represents the accumulated wealth of the medieval wool trade at its most architecturally refined. The combination of the arched Market Hall, the Church of St James, the row of almshouses and the medieval and later domestic buildings of the High Street creates a townscape of exceptional consistency and beauty that is widely regarded as the most perfect example of the Cotswold building tradition.
The Church of St James at the end of the High Street is one of the finest Perpendicular Gothic churches in England, its tower and nave built with the wealth generated by the wool merchants whose memorial brasses inside record the extraordinary prosperity of this small town in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. The wool merchants of Chipping Campden were among the wealthiest businessmen in medieval England, their trade with the cloth merchants of Flanders and Italy providing the economic foundation for the architectural richness of the town.
The Arts and Crafts tradition at Chipping Campden, established when C R Ashbee brought his Guild of Handicraft from London to the town in 1902, provides the modern cultural dimension of a town whose medieval character has always attracted those seeking the best of English craftsmanship. The Guild tradition continues in the town's workshops and galleries and the annual Scuttlebrook Wake festival preserves local customs of considerable antiquity.