spacer image Discounted Hotels

The Marlborough House Hotel
Oxford, Oxfordshire

Bookmark
This Hotel Guide
www.HotelsGuesthouses.co.uk

spacer image Home > England > Oxfordshire > Oxford > The Marlborough House Hotel spacer image
Over 25,000 Hotels
spacer image Oxford Hotels offer warm welcomes and a range of facilities. Most Hotels in Oxford have Secure Booking online. Find a Oxford Guest House or Bed and Breakfast that allows pets. Or a Oxford hotel with Disabled or Conference facilities. Check the rating of the Oxford Hotel, Guest House or Bed and Breakfast. Even find Oxford Self Catering via our accommodation guides.

»Home

Marlborough House Hotel is an immaculate built, spacious and is a privately owned hotel with its traditional design built in 1990 to fit in sympathetically with residential Victorian area. We are one of many high class Hotels in Oxford. Marlborough House Hotel is well situated being just 1.5 miles north of Oxford City Centre and a short walking distance from Summertown shopping centre and within easy reach of the motorways. Our aim is to provide high quality accommodation, suitable for caring guests, who prefer to be independent of meal times, but who seek limited self-catering facilities. We particularly cater for those who come to Oxford to study, visit or on business.


Room Rates
Rooms - £70.00 per Room

Awaiting Photo of The Marlborough House Hotel

 The Marlborough House Hotel
 321 Woodstock Road
 Oxford
 Oxfordshire
 OX2 7NY


When would you like to stay?

Rating -


Oxford is a city and local government district in Oxfordshire, England, with a population of 134,248 (2001 census). It is home to the University of Oxford, the oldest university in the English-speaking world. It is known as the "city of dreaming spires", a term coined by Matthew Arnold in reference to the harmonious architecture of the university buildings. The River Thames runs through Oxford, where for a distance of some 10 miles it is known as the Isis. Oxford was first occupied in Saxon times, and was initially known as "Oxenaforda". It began with the foundations of St Frideswide's nunnery in the 8th century, and was first mentioned in written records in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle for the year 912. In the 10th century Oxford became an important military frontier town between the kingdoms of Mercia and Wessex and was on several occasions raided by Danes. St Frideswide is the patron saint of both the city and university. Oxford grew up under the shadow of a convent, said to have been founded by St Frideswide as early as the eighth century. Its authentic history begins in 912, when it was occupied by Edward the Elder, King of the West Saxons. It was strongly fortified against the Danes, and again after the Norman Conquest, and the massive keep of the castle, the tower of St. Michael's Church (at the north gate), and a large portion of the city walls still remain to attest the importance of the city in the eleventh century. West of the town rose the splendid castle, and, in the meadows beneath, the no-less-splendid Augustinian Abbey of Osney: in the fields to the north the last of the Norman kings built the stately palace of Beaumont; the great church of St Frideswide was erected by the canons-regular who succeeded the nuns of St Frideswide; and many fine churches were built by the piety of the Norman earls.

 
Andorra - Argentina - Australia - Austria - Bahrain - Belgium - Bosnia and Herzegovina - Brazil - Brunei - Bulgaria - Cambodia
Canada - Channel Islands - China - Croatia - Cyprus - Czech Republic - Denmark - Dominican Republic - Egypt - England - Estonia
Finland - France - Germany - Greece - Greenland - Hungary - Iceland - India - Indonesia - Isle of Man - Israel
Italy - Jamaica - Japan - Kuwait - Latvia - Liechtenstein - Lithuania - Luxembourg - Macedonia - Malaysia - Malta
Mexico - Montenegro - Morocco - Nepal - Netherlands - New Zealand - Northern Ireland - Norway - Philippines - Poland - Portugal
Qatar - Republic of Ireland - Republic of Singapore - Romania - San Marino - Scotland - Serbia and Montenegro - Slovakia - Slovenia - Spain - Sultanate of Oman
Sweden - Switzerland - Taiwan - Thailand - Tunisia - Turkey - United Arab Emirates - United Kingdom - Uruguay - USA - Vietnam
Wales - West Indies - Zuid Africa (South Africa)
Terms & Ratings Explained