Gloucester HOTELS

Travel to Gloucester, - hotels selection and destination guides

You can choose and book suitable hotels in Gloucester from the TOP Gloucester HOTELS list or make search for hotels using the form. Our destination guides will provide you with information about Gloucester life, entertainment, history and other useful things for travel to Gloucester.

TOP Gloucester HOTELS

NEW COUNTY HOTEL
Rating: '
Rates: 137 to 157 
NEW COUNTY HOTEL
Macdonald Hatherley Manor
Rating: n/r
Rates: 120 to 329 
Macdonald Hatherley Manor
RAMADA RESORT GLOUCESTER
Rating: 3
Rates: 122 to 426 
RAMADA RESORT GLOUCESTER
HATTON COURT
Rating: 3
Rates: 225 to 256 
HATTON COURT
SLEEP INN TEWKESBURY
Rating: 1
Rates: 84 to 218 
SLEEP INN TEWKESBURY
HATHERLEY MANOR
Rating: n/r
Rates: 0 to 0 
HATHERLEY MANOR
Ramada Bowden Hall Gloucester
Rating: 3
Rates: 171 to 255 
Ramada Bowden Hall Gloucester
Ramada Hotel & Resort Gloucester
Rating: 3
Rates: 153 to 192 
Ramada Hotel & Resort Gloucester
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Gloucester guide

 For centuries life was good for GLOUCESTER . The Romans chose the spot for a garrison to guard the Severn and spy on Wales, and later for a colonia or home for retired soldiers - the highest status a provincial Roman town could dream of. Commercial prestige came with trade up the River Severn, which developed into one of the busiest trade routes in Europe. The city's political importance hit its peak under the Normans, when William the Conqueror met here frequently with his council of nobles. The Middle Ages saw Gloucester's rise as a religious centre, and the construction of what is now the cathedral, but also saw its political and economic decline: navigating the Severn as far up as Gloucester was so difficult that most trade gradually shifted south to Bristol. In a brave attempt to reverse the city's decline, a canal was opened in 1827 to link Gloucester to Sharpness, on a broader stretch of the Severn further south. Trade picked up for a time, but it was only a temporary stay of execution.

Today, the canal is busy once again, though this time with pleasure boats. The Victorian dockyards too have undergone a facelift and are touted as the city's great new tourist attraction, though Gloucester's most prominent sight is the cathedral , its tower visible for miles around. Few other buildings in the city have survived the ravages of history and the twentieth century, with the centre a mish-mash of medieval ruins swallowed up by ugly new buildings. A web of roads engulfs Gloucester, and if you're driving , the best advice is to head for the docks (well signposted) and park there. National Express runs buses from all neighbouring cities and beyond, and there are frequent local services from Cheltenham. Trains arrive every one or two hours at the station at Bruton Way, five minutes' walk east of the Cross, from London, Cheltenham, Cardiff, Worcester and Bristol; the bus station is right opposite.

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