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worcester Hotel accommodation - Best prices, best places. Find the lowest hotel rates guaranteed! From luxury hotels to budget accommodations. We have the best deals and discounts for hotel rooms in worcester. Make your reservations Online.
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Worcester
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Fownes Hotel |
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Rooms From: £ 57.5
City Walls Rd, Worcester, WR1 2AP
This English town house hotel boasts the air of elegant and discreet luxury. This quality hotel offers excellent service and comfort conducive to relaxation and sheer pleasure.
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Great Western Hotel |
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Rooms From: £ 60
Shrub Hill Road, Worcester, WR4 9EF
Warm and friendly atmosphere ten minutes walk from city centre. Opposite Shrub Hill railway station, 1.5 miles from M5 J6 or 7.
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The Worcester Whitehouse Hotel |
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Rooms From: £ 35
Foregate Street, Worcester, WR1 1EA
The Worcester Whitehouse Hotel is situated in the heart of Worcester This three star hotel offers comfortable surroundings, exceptional quality of food and attentive service
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Hundred House Hotel |
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Rooms From: £ 55
Worcester Road, Worcester, WR6 6HS
We are a privately owned country hotel situated on the A443 Worcester to Tenbury Wells road. The hotel is situated in an exceptionally beautiful part of Worcestershire, between Abberley Hills and Woodbury Hills.
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Wood Norton Hall Hotel |
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Rooms From: £ 59.5
Wood Norton, Worcester, WR11 4YB
A superb quality hotel for business and pleasure and is within easy reach of Worcester, Cheltenham,and the Cotswolds This impressive Grade II listed Victorian Hotel stands in a countryside setting on the outskirts of the Riverside town
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Right at the heart of the county, both geographically and politically, WORCESTER is something of an architectural hotchpotch, its half-timbered Tudor and stone Georgian buildings standing cheek by jowl with some fairly charmless modern developments. Postwar clumsiness apart, the biggest single influence on the city has always been the River Severn, which flows along Worcester's west flank. It was the river that drew the Romans here and river-trade that made it an important settlement as early as Saxon times. The river's major drawback is its propensity to breach its banks, inundating parts of the city in murky water, though this has at least limited development along the riverside, leaving clear space to view the mighty cathedral , Worcester's star turn.
Worcester's skyline is dominated by the sandstone bulk of its Cathedral (daily 7.30am-6.30pm; £2 donation suggested), a rich stew of architectural styles that's best approached from the path that runs along the river's edge and through a gate marked with the city's flood levels. The present structure is the latest of several to stand on the site, but although the interior is mostly medieval, the Victorians remodelled the exterior. Inside, the nave is unexceptional except for its two west bays, which are an unusual - and unusually fine - example of the transitional period. They date to the 1160s. Moving on, the choir , built between 1220 and 1260, is a beautiful illustration of the Early English style, with a forest of slender pillars soaring over the intricately worked choir stalls. A stairway in the southwest transept leads down to the crypt , the oldest part of the cathedral, dating from the 1080s and the largest Norman crypt in the country. In addition, a doorway on the south side of the nave leads to the Cloisters , with their delightful roof bosses, and the circular, largely Norman Chapter House , which has the distinction of being the first such building constructed with the use of a central supporting pillar.
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