The Anglican Church of St James at Chipping Campden in the Cotswold District of Gloucestershire, England, was built in the 15th century incorporating an earlier Norman church.
[3] The parish is part of the Vale and Cotswold Edge benefice within the Diocese of Gloucester.
[4] The building consists of a five-bay nave, three-bay chancel, two aisles and a five-stage west tower.
[5] The interior includes medieval altar frontals (c.1500), cope (c.1400) and 17th-century monuments includes a monument to silk merchant Sir Baptist Hicks and his family.
The includes a plaque to William Grevel, described as "the flower of the wool merchants of all England".