Turweston is a village and civil parish in north-west Buckinghamshire, England. The village is beside the River Great Ouse, which bounds the parish to the north, west and south. Turweston is the most northwesterly parish in Buckinghamshire: the Ouse here forms the county boundary with Northamptonshire to the north and west and Oxfordshire to the south. Across the river, the Northamptonshire market town of Brackley is just west of Turweston, with the town centre about west of the village. The parish has an area of and had a population of 211 at the 2011 Census. The name reached its present form through Turvestone in the Domesday Book of 1086; Thurneston and Turnestone in the 14th century; Turston, Tereweston, Turveston and Tower Weston in the 17th century and Turson in the 18th century. It was built in 1630 and enlarged in 1910. Many of its rooms and passages have 17th-century oak panelling, there are three 17th-century fireplaces and a late 17th-century staircase with carved balusters.

Turweston House is an early 18th-century Georgian country house

Church and chapel

Church of England

The oldest parts of the Church of England parish church of the Assumption of the blesséd Virgin Mary are Norman. and a lancet west window.

Methodist

A Wesleyan chapel was built in Turweston in 1861.]]

Turweston has numerous stone cottages: several are 17th- One late 17th-century cottage used to be the post office but has now reverted to a private home. The village had a school: it too was in a converted house and has now been converted back to a private home.

The village has two stone barns: one 18th-century and the other either 18th- or 17th-century. Parliament passed the (53 Geo. 3. c. cxliv) and the land award was made in 1814. and is named after a family that leased the manor from the mid-19th century until at least the 1920s.