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United Kingdom
England
West Midlands Region
Worcestershire
Wychavon
Elmley Castle

Great Comberton & Bredon Hill loop from Elmley Castle

Moderate

4.7

(24)

82

hikers

Great Comberton & Bredon Hill loop from Elmley Castle

03:36

12.6km

280m

Hiking

Embark on the Great Comberton & Bredon Hill loop from Elmley Castle, a moderate hike spanning 7.8 miles (12.6 km) with an elevation gain of 923 feet (281 metres). This varied route takes about 3 hours and 36 minutes to complete, leading you through meadows, open countryside, and woodlands like Cames Coombe. As you ascend Bredon Hill, you will find a mix of footpaths, road sections, and potentially muddy or uneven ground. From the 981-foot (299-meter) summit, you can enjoy expansive views across Worcestershire to the Malvern Hills, south into the Cotswolds, and over the Vale of Evesham.

For your visit, the Queen Elizabeth pub in Elmley Castle serves as a convenient starting and ending point for this loop. Be prepared for varying path conditions, as some sections can be muddy, and the ascent up Bredon Hill may be steep in parts. The trail also includes plank bridges over ditches, and you might encounter brambles and nettles in some areas.

This trail is notable for its rich history and diverse landscape. Bredon Hill itself is a significant landmark, once an Iron Age hillfort known as Kemerton Camp and later a Roman encampment. At its summit, you will find Parsons Folly, an 18th-century Gothic tower also referred to as the Banbury Stone. The route showcases the beauty of the northern Cotswolds and Worcestershire countryside, combining rolling hills, open fields, woodlands, and charming villages.

Last updated: April 23, 2026

Tips

Your route passes through protected areas

Please check local regulations for:

The Cotswolds AONB

Waypoints

A

Start point

Parking

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1

3.81 km

St Michael and All Angels Church, Great Comberton

Highlight • Other

The church of ST. MICHAEL consists of a chancel 23 ft. 6 in. by 14 ft. 6 in., with vestry and organ chamber, nave 29 ft. 3 in. by 21 ft. 3 in. and west tower 11 ft. by 8 ft. 6 in. The total length is 65 ft. 6 in., all the measurements being internal.

Some of the rubble masonry of the nave may perhaps be of early date, but the church appears to have been almost entirely rebuilt in the 14th century, beginning at the east end. Apart from some small alterations in the 15th century, it remained untouched till modern times, when the vestry and organ chamber were added and the east wall and chancel arch rebuilt.

The east window is modern and of three lights, and in the north wall are two 14th-century windows, both of two lights, the first having a pointed and traceried head and the second a square head and ogee lights. Between them is a priest's door, apparently of the early 15th century, with a moulded external label and large stops carved with crowned heads. Both this and the second window now open into the modern vestry. In the south wall is a twolight 14th-century window, similar to the first on the north, and at the west end a modern arch opening into the organ chamber. The pointed chancel arch and roof are modern, and in the east wall to the south of the altar is a 14th-century piscina with a trefoil ogee head, bowl and shelf.

The nave is lighted by two 14th-century windows in each wall; the eastern pair are of three trefoiled lights under a pointed head filled with trefoils. The western pair are similar, but of two lights only; the mullions and tracery are all restored, but the openings are original. (fn. 49) The tower arch is of rough construction, and is apparently in an unfinished state; it is the full height of the nave roof and is pointed, with broad roughly chamfered jambs. These are finished on the inside of the tower by chamfered imposts, from which spring arches supporting the side walls. They open into deep recesses formed by continuing the side walls of the nave to the west face of the tower. The northern has an irregular-shaped roof, plastered on the soffit, and in the south wall of the southern is a pointed window of two plain lights. The west window is pointed and of two lights with a quatrefoil in the head, and below it is an early 15th-century pointed west doorway with an external label and head stops of a man and woman. Within it is a small lobby with stone walls and an inner pointed doorway with chamfered jambs having voluted stop-chamfers.

The tower is three stages high and finished with an embattled parapet having crocketed pinnacles at the angles and large grotesque gargoyles at the angles of the parapet string. The ground stage is supported by two western buttresses stopping at the level of the second stage, which is lit by loops to the north and south. The bell-chamber has a two-light squareheaded window in each face with trefoiled ogee-headed lights of late 14th-century date. On the south face is a small sundial. There are six bells, the first, second, fourth and fifth by Matthew Bagley, 1687 (probably cast at Evesham); the third and sixth by Taylor of Loughborough, 1869 (the tenor being then added as a new bell). The nave roof is a good example of 14th-century work; it is of wagon form, all the rafters being trussed and having moulded plates, purlins and ridge-piece.
The early 15th-century font, under the tower, has an octagonal bowl, each face having a quatrefoil panel and a blank shield, a moulded necking and base. The communion table is Jacobean with turned legs, and there are two chairs of similar date, one with a carved head at the back being particularly good. The quire-stalls are largely made up of Jacobean panelling, and the benches in the nave are probably of the 16th century; they are quite plain, but unusually massive, even the book boards being some 2 in. thick.


The plate is modern, and consists of a cup, paten and flagon and a stand paten.

Tip by

2

7.73 km

Parsons Folly on Bredon Hill

Highlight • Monument

Historic Bredon Hill stands proud in isolation. From its 981-foot (299 m) summit you can gaze out across Worcestershire to the Malverns and south into the rolling Cotswolds. Scenic magnificence.

The hill was once an Iron Age hillfort, known as Kemerton Camp and it then became an important Roman encampment. In the 18th century, the squire of Kemerton Court erected a small stone tower, Parsons Folly. A number of ancient standing stones also adorn the hill.

Tip by

3

11.0 km

Elmley Castle Park

Highlight • Natural Monument

The PARK at Elmley, which belonged to the lords of Elmley Castle, was possibly made about 1234, for in that year Walter de Beauchamp received from the king a gift of ten does and three bucks for stocking his park at Elmley. In 1298 the wood in the park was worth 4s. yearly. Thomas de Beauchamp Earl of Warwick complained in 1349 that several persons, including Robert de Amyas, parson of the church of Great Comberton, had hunted in his free chase at Elmley Castle and carried away deer. The park was enlarged about 1480 by the addition of part of the demesne land of the manor called Court Close. In 1478 William Adams was appointed keeper of the park and warren at Elmley Castle. In 1480 John Mortimer was appointed master of the game in Elmley Park, and in 1484 John Hudelston succeeded to this office, but it was granted in the following year to Richard Naufan, and in 1488 to Sir John Savage. Henry VIII appointed Sir John Savage and his son John Savage keepers of the park and warren in 1512. Walter Walshe was appointed keeper in 1528. He died in 1538, and Thomas Evans and Rowland Morton both wrote to Cromwell asking for his aid in obtaining the position, the latter saying, 'if it please the King by your Lordship's mediation to prefer me, I and mine shall stand balanced in also et basso, live and die in your Lordship's retinue.' He also begs credence for his messenger 'and will give your Lordship £20.' Neither of these suppliants received the post, which was granted to Urian Brereton. The park was included in the sale to Christopher Savage, and remained in his family until 1822, when it was sold with the castle to Colonel Thomas Henry Hastings Davies. It now belongs to Lieut.-General Henry Fanshawe Davies, J.P., D.L.

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B

12.6 km

End point

Parking

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Way Types & Surfaces

Way Types

6.67 km

5.42 km

342 m

158 m

Surfaces

7.49 km

4.64 km

416 m

< 100 m

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Elevation

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Highest point (290 m)

Lowest point (50 m)

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Weather

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Thursday 9 July

34°C

16°C

0 %

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