Cold Aston (also known as Aston Blank) is a village and civil parish in Gloucestershire, England, approximately 30km (20 miles) to the east of Gloucester. It lies in the Cotswolds, an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
History
Toponymy
The village was recorded as
Eastunæ between 716–43. It was listed in the
Domesday Book of 1086 as
Estone, the name coming from the
Old English ēast +
tūn meaning "eastern farmstead or estate". By the mid 13th century, the village was known as
Cold Aston. It was occasionally called
Great Aston, to distinguish it from the nearby
hamlet of Little Aston. From the 16th century, the name
Aston Blank took hold, the suffix "Blank" possibly deriving from the
Old French word
blanc, meaning "white" or "bare". In 1972, the parish officially became known as
Cold Aston again.
Governance
Cold Aston is part of the Bourton-on-the-Water
ward of the
district of
Cotswold, represented by
Councillors Sheila Jeffery and Len Wilkins, and by Charles Alfred Richard Gillams, all members of the
Conservative Party. Cold Aston is part of the
constituency of
Cotswold, represented at
parliament by Conservative
MP Geoffrey Clifton-Brown. It is part of the
South West England constituency of the
European Parliament.
Geography
Cold Aston is in the county of Gloucestershire and lies within the
Cotswolds, a range of hills designated an
Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. It is approximately 30km (20 miles) to the east of Gloucester. It is approximately 21km (13 miles) east of its
post town Cheltenham and about 4.5km (2.8 miles) west of
Bourton-on-the-Water. Nearby villages include
Turkdean,
Notgrove,
Clapton,
Naunton and
Lower Slaughter.
Landmarks
The village church is a
Norman church dedicated to
St Andrew. Its walls incorporate
Saxon stonework and the original church on this site may have been built in around AD 904. Much of the present church was restored in 1875.
The village pub, The Plough, is a 17th century Grade II listed building. It is the only pub between the three villages of Cold Aston, Turkdean and Notgrove. The pub's landlord claims that it is residence to a ghost named Old Harry.
Education
The village has one
primary school, Cold Aston Church of England Primary School, a
voluntary controlled school for children from the age of 4–11. In 2007, the school had 62 pupils.
References
External links