The Church of St. Mary Magdalene, Duns Tew
© Roger Sweet (view gallery)
The Church of St. Mary Magdalene has an Early English Gothic lancet window in the chancel. In the late 13th or early in the 14th century and again in the fifteenth century the church was extended, and since then parts of the church have been rebuilt, including the tower. 
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Period cottages in Main Street, Duns Tew
© Roger Sweet (view gallery)
Duns Tew is an attractive little village of a mixture of thatched and stone roofed cottages built mainly with a mixture of the local stones. The unusual name of the village is believed to have been derived from the Anglo-Saxon name 'Dunn'. 'Tew' is thought to mean 'ridge' and this part of the name is shared by two other nearby villages, namely Great and Little Tew. Image cannot be loaded
Period cottages in Main Street, Duns Tew
© Roger Sweet (view gallery)
Duns Tew is an attractive little village of a mixture of thatched and stone roofed cottages built mainly with a mixture of the local stones. The unusual name of the village is believed to have been derived from the Anglo-Saxon name 'Dunn'. 'Tew' is thought to mean 'ridge' and this part of the name is shared by two other nearby villages, namely Great and Little Tew. 
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