Aylesbury: Attractions and more...
The King’s Head is a coaching inn, which was once a monastery or a guest house that has been near the market square since the fifteenth century.
The inn has a wide archway and a large cobbled stable yard.
The King’s Head has a big Tudor window with twenty lights and this window contains fragments of the fifteenth century glass which includes emblems of angels carrying Prince Edward who was killed at Tewksbury.
Waddesdon Manor is a Rothschild mansion built in 1889 for Baron Ferdinand de Rothschild to keep his vast collection of artistic values. The manor displays a beautiful collection of furniture, china and pictures.
One can visit the aviary and the Victorian formal gardens in the compound of the manor.
Buckinghamshire County Museum and Art Gallery is a fifteenth century building situated in the heart of Aylesbury.
The museum has eight theme areas including jewellery, clay and brick making, farming, lace making, villages of Buckinghamshire, Celts and Romans, Wood and Woodland and fossils.
There are more than twenty three thousand old photographs of locations in Buckinghamshire.
Related Contents
Other Attractions United Kingdom:
Ibstone (About 13.1 mi) - South West England (About 14.2 mi) - South East England (About 14.2 mi) - North West England (About 14.2 mi) - North East England (About 14.2 mi) - South Bank (About 14.2 mi)
More information United Kingdom:
| Ibstone - 13.1 mi | |
|
The Combstone Mill is the main attraction of Ibstone within the church dedicated to Saint Nicolas, and important movies such as Chitty Chitty Bang Bang were recorded here.
|
|
| South Bank - 14.2 mi | |
|
Natures World‘Natures World’ is a Botanic Center which consists of twenty-five acres of ‘organic gardens’, 400-meter long ‘working model’ of... |
|




