Cotswold District

Coordinates: 51°43′08″N 1°58′05″W / 51.719°N 1.968°W / 51.719; -1.968

Cotswold District
Non-metropolitan district

Cotswold shown within Gloucestershire
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Constituent country England
Region South West England
Non-metropolitan county Gloucestershire
Status Non-metropolitan district
Admin HQ Cirencester
Incorporated 1 April 1974
Government
  Type Non-metropolitan district council
  Body Cotswold District Council
  Leadership Alternative - Sec.31 (Conservative)
  MPs Geoffrey Clifton-Brown
Area
  Total 449.6 sq mi (1,164.5 km2)
Area rank 20th (of 326)
Population (mid-2017 est.)
  Total 87,500
  Rank 279th (of 326)
  Density 190/sq mi (75/km2)
  Ethnicity 98.8% White
Time zone UTC0 (GMT)
  Summer (DST) UTC+1 (BST)
ONS code 23UC (ONS)
E07000079 (GSS)
OS grid reference SP0221002304
Website www.cotswold.gov.uk

Cotswold is a local government district in Gloucestershire in England. It is named after the wider Cotswolds region. Its main town is Cirencester.

It was formed on 1 April 1974 by the merger of the urban district of Cirencester with Cirencester Rural District, North Cotswold Rural District, Northleach Rural District and Tetbury Rural District. The population of the District at the time of the 2011 Census was about 83,000.[1]

Eighty per cent of the district lies within the River Thames catchment area, with the Thames itself and several tributaries including the River Windrush and River Leach running through the district. Lechlade in an important point on the river as the upstream limit of navigation. In the 2007 floods in the UK, rivers were the source of flooding of 53 per cent of the locations affected and the Thames at Lechlade reached record levels with over 100 reports of flooding.[2]

The District is spread over 450 square miles, with some 80% of the land located within the Cotswold Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.[3] [4] The much larger area referred to as the Cotswolds encompasses nearly 800 square miles,[5] over five counties: Gloucestershire, Oxfordshire, Warwickshire, Wiltshire, and Worcestershire.[6] This large Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty had a population of 139,000 in 2016.[7]

References

Media related to Cotswold at Wikimedia Commons

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