Oxfordshire Travel Guide

Tourist Guide
Oxfordshire which includes street scenes
Banbury
Banbury featuring a statue or sculpture
Ashmolean Museum featuring heritage elements and heritage architecture
Broughton Castle featuring heritage architecture and a garden
Witness student life inside the world’s most illustrious university and explore the stunning natural landscape of the Cotswolds.

The county of Oxfordshire is known for its pleasant countryside and quaint villages, as well as being the setting for one of the most famous educational institutions in the world, theUniversity of Oxford, which dates back to the 11th century. Enjoy a rural retreat in the serene outskirts of this county, where you will encounter sleepy towns and bucolic landscapes.

Begin your exploration of the county in its most famous part, Oxford. Take a guided tour of the city to see its iconic landmarks and explore one of the university’s many colleges. Look around the Bodleian Library and see the remarkable architecture of the Radcliffe Camera, which was the first circular library in Britain.

The university also holds several captivating collections in its museums, such as the Ashmolean Museum and the Oxford University Museum of Natural History. Christ Church Cathedral, which is both a university chapel and the city’s cathedral, is a particularly popular and much photographed attraction, as is the pretty Bridge of Sighs, a stunning structure connecting two parts of Hertford College.

Oxfordshire’s tourist appeal doesn’t begin and end in the city there is plenty to do elsewhere in the county. Take a trip up to Blenheim Palace in Woodstock to see the stately 18th-century house occupied by the Dukes of Marlborough or go rambling in the Oxfordshire Cotswolds, a stunning region full of rolling hills, vast meadows and genteel villages. There are wineries and breweries here too, including those found in the hamlets of Henley-on-Thames and Witney.

The region is pleasant in summer with warm to hot temperatures and blue skies. In winter, it is mild with occasional flurries of snow that accentuate the charm of the old buildings and vast fields. Ride 60 miles (96.5 kilometers) northwest from London to Oxford on an hour-long train journey. Regular buses and coaches depart from different London locations 24 hours a day. Oxfordshire is bordered by Northamptonshire in the West Midlands region of England and the River Thames flows through parts of this scenic county.

Oxfordshire will peak your interest in the history of academia, while offering a taste of blissful rural England.

Popular cities in Oxfordshire

University Church of St Mary the Virgin showing heritage architecture, a church or cathedral and heritage elements
Oxford
Known for Universities, Historical and Museums
From boat trips along the River Thames to an acclaimed university and a lively nightlife scene, Oxford is an action-packed English city.

Reasons to visit

  • University of Oxford
  • Christ Church College
  • Bodleian Library
Broughton Castle which includes heritage architecture, a lake or waterhole and château or palace
Banbury
Known for Friendly people, Bars and Gardens

Reasons to visit

  • Hook Norton Brewery
  • Broughton Castle
  • Sulgrave Manor