Barrowden is a village in Rutland in the East Midlands of England.
The village's name means 'burial-mound hill'. There are a number of barrows in the area.
The population of the civil parish was 506 at the 2011 census.
There is a church, a village hall, a doctor's surgery and pharmacy, a community shop, a mobile library, a recreational field with cricket club and a pub, The Exeter Arms.
St Peter's Church, Barrowden is a Grade II* listed building. In an ancient tradition, rushes or hay are laid on the floors of nave and porch for St Peter's Day (29 June). Marianne Mason (1807–1884), a farmer's daughter who taught at the Baptist Sunday school in Barrowden, married Thomas Cook here on 2 March 1833.
The Rutland Round and Jurassic Way long-distance paths pass through the village. The village was served by Wakerley and Barrowden railway station from 1873 to 1966. The station was across the River Welland in the neighbouring parish of Wakerley, Northamptonshire.
Barrowden is part of Ketton ward on Rutland County Council.
Distance between:
London to Barrowden78 Miles / 125 Kms Liverpool to Barrowden114 Miles / 184 Kms