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  1. Bray, occasionally Bray on Thames, is a suburban village and civil parish in the English county of Berkshire. It sits on the banks of the River Thames, to the southeast of Maidenhead of which it is a suburb. The village is mentioned in the comedic song "The Vicar of Bray".

  2. Bray is a village and civil parish in Windsor and Maidenhead, Berkshire, England. In 2001 there were 8,425 people living in Bray.

  3. About. A pretty riverside parish with a three-mile frontage on the Thames between Maidenhead and Windsor, Bray has become a very popular stopping place for visitors to the Royal Borough as it features a wealth of cottages and houses, fine dining and attractive riverbank properties.

  4. About. Bray is part of the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead. A pretty riverside parish with a three-mile frontage on the Thames between Maidenhead and Windsor, Bray has become a very popular stopping place for visitors to the Royal Borough as it features a wealth of cottages and houses, fine dining and attractive riverbank properties.

  5. 16 de ene. de 2020 · News. A weekend in Bray. By. Natasha Foges. - January 16, 2020. The riverside at Bray. Credit: Peter Lane/Alamy. It’s renowned for its Michelin-star restaurants, but this riverside idyll has much more in store. It’s not immediately obvious why the 16th-century Thameside village of Bray in Berkshire is one of the world’s gastronomic capitals.

  6. Bray, town (parish), Windsor and Maidenhead unitary authority, geographic and historic county of Berkshire, England. It lies on the River Thames, adjoining the towns of Maidenhead (northwest) and Windsor (southeast).

  7. Bray is most famous as the location of the only restaurants outside London with 3-Michelin stars, both Alain Roux’s Waterside Inn and Blumenthal’s Fat Duck. In centuries past, however, it was best known as the home of the ‘Singing Vicar of Bray,’ the star of a well-known ballad.