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☕ Support the channel: https://buymeacoffee.com/imagined Welcome to a peaceful, early-morning walk through Burford, a medieval market town in the Cotswolds, Oxfordshire. Filmed at 6am on a quiet Bank Holiday, this video blends gentle footsteps with local history, folklore, and soft town ambience. 📍 Explore the route: https://www.google.com/maps/d/edit?mi... 📷 Photos: / everywhereisimagined If you enjoyed this walk, please like, comment, or subscribe, it helps others discover quiet moments like these. This text is an edited version of the captions (enable CC) in the video: Hello, and welcome to a peaceful walk through Burford in the Cotswolds. We start at the top of the hill and wander down the High Street, a place with Saxon roots first mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086. We pass the War Memorial, names cut in stone, each a life remembered. Shops, cottages, and former merchants’ houses lean gently; the architecture reflects quiet prosperity as sun catches brickwork and shadows fold behind us. Further down is the Tolsey (c.1520). Its half-timbered upper room once held the merchants’ court; tolls were collected and disputes settled here when cloth made Burford wealthy. The arcades sheltered traders from wind and rain; the town fire engine was once housed beneath, and a small prison occupied a lower room. After 1861, trustees led restoration, and today it’s the Tolsey Museum. On our right we pass the old Methodist church — once a private house of Cotswold stone, converted to a Wesleyan chapel in 1849, now returning to housing. We slip off the High Street into Church Lane, narrow and sheltered. Burford Grammar School began here in 1571; the lane sits within a designated conservation area. Ahead stand the Warwick Almshouses, founded in 1457 to house the poor of Burford — rebuilt in stone in 1828, part of a long tradition of charitable housing. We reach St John the Baptist (Grade I). Building began in the 12th century and was completed by the 15th. By then it was a wool church, financed by prosperous merchants and farmers. Inside, a chapel honours them. During the Civil War, mutinous soldiers — the Levellers — were imprisoned here; three were executed in the churchyard, remembered by a plaque. There’s also a memorial to Henry VIII’s barber-surgeon — in those days a trade that could mean anything from cutting hair to pulling teeth or amputating limbs. Through the gate we head into Lawrence Lane, named for the feared judge Sir Lawrence Tanfield (d. 1625). Folklore says he and his wife haunt the lanes in a fiery coach, and for two centuries locals burned their effigies each year. We carry on towards the River Windrush, which flows from the Cotswolds to the Thames. We pause beside a mute swan family — calm now, though swans can be protective of their young; a female typically lays six eggs, and the oldest recorded mute swan reached about 40 years. Back on the bridge we note the A361 to Lechlade and Stow-on-the-Wold, with the A40 nearby linking to Oxford and Cheltenham. The nearest train stations are Charlbury and Shipton-under-Wychwood, with bus services connecting local towns. Burford’s climate is mild: cool winters, gentle summer warmth, and frequent showers — layers help in every season. Tourism sustains many here alongside schools and local services. We loop once more away from the High Street into Witney Street, once a key eastern approach lined with mills and a Baptist chapel, now largely residential. After the pub we pass The Great House (Grade II, late-1600s English Baroque), commissioned by Dr John Castle on the former site of the Black Boy Inn. Nearby Sheep Street was the site of the Battle of Burford — a story for another time. Back to the High Street, we climb the hill one last time. Thanks for walking with me today — I hope this brought a little calm to your day. 0:00 Start 0:40 High Street & War Memorial 3:28 The Tolsey & museum 5:18 Methodist chapel, Church Lane & almshouses 8:12 St John the Baptist & Levellers 10:24 Lawrence Lane & Tanfield legend 11:28 River Windrush, bridge & travel tips 16:28 Witney Street & The Great House 19:08 Final climb & thanks #Burford #Cotswolds #WalkingTour #Oxfordshire #EnglandWalks #QuietWalks #ASMRWalking