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클라베르돈

클라베르돈 주변 최고의 워킹 & 하이킹 경로

4.5

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하이킹

Komoot에 등록된 클라베르돈 내 트레일 및 경로 컬렉션 중에서 하이킹과 워킹을 가장 멋지게 즐길 수 있는 곳을 알려드릴게요. 아래에서 각 경로의 상세 정보를 모두 확인한 후, 클라베르돈 속 자연에서 즐거운 시간을 누려보세요.

마지막 업데이트: 2월 19, 2026

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4.4

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1. Claverdon CP에서 출발하는 Henley-in-Arden 하이 스트리트 – 헨리 아이스크림 가게 순환 코스

15.6km

04:09

160m

160m

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초급용 하이킹. 모든 체력 수준에 적합. 실력과 관계없이 누구나 쉽게 갈 수 있는 길.

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초급용 하이킹. 모든 체력 수준에 적합. 실력과 관계없이 누구나 쉽게 갈 수 있는 길.

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Ian

8월 21, 2025, Church of St Mary the Virgin, Wolverton

Very simple, austere church. Doors were open in daylight. you can see how the walls are bowing outwards.

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Doors open in daylight. Check out the much older Saxon Font - with the shaft wider than the bowl. Try to ignore the ticking of that monstrous clock :-)

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Ice cream parlour and coffee/tea shop. Queues at busy times.

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Green Lane Bridge No 51 is a minor waterways place on the Stratford-on-Avon Canal (Southern Section) between Yarningale Aqueduct (2 miles and 3 furlongs and 5 locks to the northeast) and Edstone Aqueduct (southern end) (1 mile and 7¾ furlongs and 1 lock to the south). The nearest place in the direction of Yarningale Aqueduct is Preston Hill Farm Bridge No 50; 2¼ furlongs away. The nearest place in the direction of Edstone Aqueduct (southern end) is Footbridge No 52; 2¼ furlongs away.

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Henley-in-Arden's name is a reference to the former Forest of Arden, which once covered this area. The town is home to a variety of historic buildings, including some dating back to medieval times, and a wide variety of examples of different architectural styles. The famous mile-long High Street is a conservation area.

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Not at all a highlight ... it's had some bad luck over many many years and is currently no better than an eyesore.

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A peaceful place for a walk

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It's a peaceful place for a walk

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Try the rum and raisin

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The remains of a Medieval market cross which stands 100m north of St John's Church. The base, shaft and capital are composed of 3 separate stones; the shaft being morticed into the base and capital. On the 4 faces of the capital were niches, containing, 1. The Rood; 2. The Trinity; 3. St Peter with his key; the 4th has fallen away. The head of this ‘highly superstitious’ cross is reported to have been preserved from destruction by having been covered by a shed for many years. The empty niche probably once contained the Virgin and child. Towards the end of the last century a heavy iron palisade was erected around the cross for protection and at a later date the shaft was secured with iron supports. New iron railings were set up prior to 1933. Square socket on 2 steps. Octagonal shaft changing to square where it enters the socket stone. The head was in situ in 1863 but had fallen by 1894. The cross has been much restored. The complete shaft, (head missing), octagon base and steps, all considerably weathered. The shaft is supported by iron stays. The iron railings have now been removed, but the iron supports remain. The stone of the shaft is flaking away, but the base is still in fair condition

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St Luke's Church in Lowsonford was built in 1877 as a Chapel of Ease at a cost of £670.

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Origins of 1208, with later additions and alterations including windows and priest's doorway probably late C14, C16 sanctuary ring and iron-work, with C19 porch, vestry, Bell turret and restorations, including rebuilding of east end. MATERIALS: coursed lias stone rubble with ashlar east end, timber porch and bell turret, and plain-tile roof. STYLE: Early English and Decorated. PLAN: 3-bay nave with south porch, lower 2-bay chancel with north vestry. EXTERIOR: entrance: glazed and gabled south porch has decorative bargeboards, and traceried decoration to sides. Within is a double-chamfered, 4-centred arch and studded plank door with strap hinges, sanctuary ring and lock. Nave has chamfered plinth. South side: diagonal west buttress with off-sets; 2- and 3-light windows with trefoil-headed tracery in double-chamfered, 4-centred arches. North side: buttresses with off-sets between bays and diagonal buttress to west; westernmost window has 3 lights with Y-tracery to head in double-chamfered surround with hoodmould. North doorway to centre bay: plank door with double-chamfered pointed arch. Then a 2-light window with reticulated tracery. West end: central buttress with off-sets between 2 lancet lights in chamfered surrounds. Short bell turret with broach spire and pierced openings. Chancel: south side has double-chamfered plinth, partly renewed. Priest's entrance: plank door in double-chamfered, 4-centred arch; renewed ogee-headed lancet in chamfered surround and a 2-light window with reticulated tracery to head. North side: ogee-headed lancet; vestry has Decorated-style 2-light window. East end has 3-light window with Decorated-type tracery to head in double-chamfered surround with hood mould. INTERIOR: oak screen, much restored, has Perpendicular tracery to upper stage. Ogeed piscina. Wagon roofs. Octagonal font on octagonal plinth has quatrefoil decoration. Marble wall tablets with festoon embellishment to: Thomas Stanton`Lord of the Mannor' d.1701; his son Thomas, d.1719; and Thomas Stanton d.1664 and his wife Elizabeth d.1703. In north nave window are many fragments of medieval stained glass, some in other windows, south window of chancel has late Morris glass.

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The church of the HOLY TRINITY is a small building consisting of a chancel, nave, north aisle, and south porch. It is an early-13th-century structure with some later windows and a modern north aisle. The chancel (17¼ ft. by 11½ ft.) has an east window of c. 1330 of three trefoiled lights, the middle ogee-arched, and leaf-tracery in a two-centred head with an external hood-mould. In each side wall are two small original lancets, only 8 in. wide, with splayed round arches inside. The walls are of white sandstone ashlar with a chamfered plinth, and at the east angles are low shallow clasping buttresses. The roof is modern. The chancel arch is of two chamfered orders, the pointed head being of fairly small voussoirs: at the springing-level are 4 in. moulded abaci or imposts. The archway is probably of the early 14th century. The nave (about 28½ ft. by 18 ft.) has a modern north arcade of three bays with round pillars and square responds. In the south wall are two modern windows of three cinquefoiled pointed lights in a two-centred head. The south doorway between them, is of early13th-century date; it is two-centred and of two orders, the inner chamfered, the outer with a roll mould which, in the jambs, is provided with moulded capitals and bases: the jambs are partly restored and the outer order of the head has been rebuilt. The west wall has no piercing: it is gabled, with a repaired coping: above it is a stone bell-cote, modern except at its base, which indicates that there was an earlier bell-cote here. The nave walls are of ashlar like the chancel: the south wall has an original square buttress at the west end; another buttress at the east end is a later medieval addition. The west wall has a wide and shallow buttress (4 ft. 9 in. by 1 ft. 2 in.) in the middle, rising to nearly the top of the gable-head. There is another buttress, also old, in line with the north arcade-wall. The roofs, which are tiled, have modern timbers. Rain-water pipe-heads are dated 1873. The font is probably of the 13th century: it has a round bowl tapering downwards, on a high round, chamfered base, and a worn round step. The pulpit is modern, but has in it two panels of a 17th-century frieze carved with honeysuckle ornament; there are also two panels on the wall behind it. The communion plate includes a cup and cover paten of 1571. There are two bells; the larger is ancient without an inscription, the smaller is modern. The registers date from 1742. In 1586 Nicholas Bucke of Claverdon was summoned before the Privy Council on the petition of the inhabitants of Norton Lindsey for his 'outrageous conduct' in having 'disquieted the whole parish, ruined their church, cast down the doors, destroyed the windows and totally deprived them of divine service.

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Small town in the county of Warwickshire, which has only one high street and a lot of old houses.

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Born in Henley-in-Arden on 13th June 1771, he was the second of seven children of William and Mary James. His father was a solicitor and after being educated at The Kings School in Warwick, he trained and qualified as a solicitor in Birmingham, subsequently returning to Henley-in-Arden to work in his father’s practice. In 1793 he married Dinah Tarleton, the daughter of a local landowner and they lived at the Yew Trees in Henley-in-Arden and had eight children. The family’s fortune was detrimentally affected by the financial crisis of 1797 and James started a new career as a land agent representing many local estates, including the Earl of Warwick. Using his understanding of geology he advised clients to exploit the mineral wealth of their estates. He became a prominent colliery owner in South Staffordshire, which drew his attention to railways as a means of transport for both freight and passengers. He also had inherited a significant interest in the Stratford Canal.

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IT ALL STARTED IN 1934 The history of Tudor Dairies dates back to the early 1930’s when two brothers Harry & Arthur Fathers, purchased the Henley milk round and small grocers shop from Mrs Hewins, who had been trading under the Tudor Dairies name since 1893. They continued to deliver milk in Henley using left over milk to make cream, which was sold in the shop, with butter being sold in the market behind the Nags Head. In 1934 the brothers began experimenting with ice cream with the “know how” given to them by their mother who used to make ice cream for her shop in Rubery. Originally made by hand the ice cream was sold under the Henley Ice Cream brand. Word soon spread of this delicious ice cream made only with the very best ingredients, culminating in 1937 when Henley Ice Cream won the premier award, being voted the best ice cream in the U.K. The shop became ever more popular as the reputation of the ice cream grew and the shop was transformed into a Ice Cream Parlour. By 1938, the number of customers visiting the parlour brought the traffic in Henley to a standstill, requiring the introduction of a uniformed employee to direct traffic in the High Street. ICE CREAM PRODUCTION CEASED DURING THE WAR YEARS DUE TO LACK OF INGREDIENTS, AND THE PARLOUR WAS USED AS AN AIR RAID POST. After the war ice cream production continued on Wednesdays and Saturdays only, due to the shortage of Cornish cream, so goats milk was used. When Arthur & Harry Fathers retired in 1959, the business was sold to Ross Foods, who changed the emphasis of the Company from a small family run business producing a high quality ice cream, to one of a large concern manufacturing bulk products for the Supermarket chains. In February 1991 the Company changed hands when Ross Foods sold Tudor Dairies to a group of businessmen, but was placed into receivership in March 1997. It was at this time that it was taken back into private ownership by Cindy and Steve Brittan, who have the ice cream made on midlands farms to traditional recipes using only quality ingredients. OPENING TIMES OCT - FEB MON - FRI:8:30 A.M - 4:30 P.MSAT - SUN:8:30 A.M - 5:00 P.M MARCH - MAY MON - FRI:8:30 A.M - 5:00 P.MSAT - SUN:8:30 A.M - 5:30 P.M JUNE - SEPT MON - FRI:8:30 A.M - 6:30 P.MSAT - SUN:8:30 A.M - 7:30 P.M

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All Saints Preston Bagot has one of the most stunning outlooks of any church in the rural Midlands. Built in the mid-12th century for its ‘parish of the priests’ (Preston) which extended as far as what is now Henley-in-Arden, it quickly deteriorated when it was left with just a hamlet after De Montfort's castle church at Beaudesert claimed most of its patch. The church was saved in 1878 by the architect JA Chatwin who not so much restored a tumble-down chapel as created a small 'mediaeval' church. He heightened and lengthened it and added a Romanesque Chancel arch. The effect is delightful. All Saints has some marvellous Burne-Jones windows

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About 700 yards away from St. John's, lying at the foot of the hill known as the Mount stands the Norman church of St. Nicholas. The exact date of the church is unknown, but it is thought to be about 1170 and was probably built by Thurstan de Montfort, Lord of the Manor, who also built the powerful Norman castle on the Mount, no trace of which remains at the present day. It is probable that the present church was built on the site of a former church, in fact some authorities consider that the rope work carving on the north side of the chancel is Saxon. The two benefices of Henley-in-Arden and Beaudesert were combined in 1915 under one incumbent and services are now held regularly in both churches. Under a local arrangement Sunday services for the Roman Catholic congregation are also held in one of the two churches as there is no Roman Catholic church nearer than Wootton Wawen.

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The original church was built on the site in 1367. At that time the ecclesiastical parishes of Henley and Beaudesert were quite separate, the people of Henley having to travel two miles to the parish church at Wootton Wawen. The church in Henley was erected in order that the parishioners would not have to make the difficult and dangerous journey to the mother church at Wootton Wawen for their worship. No trace of the original building remains and the present church was built about 1443 in the Perpendicular style. It housed the Chapel of the Guild of St. John which was situated in the north aisle but further to the east than the present Memorial Chapel. The outside of the Church is essentially as it was in the 15th Century but the interior is very much changed.

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