The Battle of Neville's Cross, between England and Scotland, was planned in the castle's Baron's Hall.A grand Georgian country house B&B one mile from Bamburgh with afternoon teas, private garden, super-king beds & ample parking.Home to the Beaumont family since 1810, the Palladian building sits by the River Tyne at Bywell, Northumberland.Chillingham Castle is a 13th century, Grade I listed stronghold in Northumberland, famed for action and battles.Chipchase Castle is a rugged border castle of the 14th century consisting of a great Pele tower with corner turrets.Cragend Farm sits quietly on the edge of the famous Cragside Estate, Rothbury, near Alnwick and Bamburgh, in Northumberland, designed by Lord Armstrong of Cragside for his prize cattle.We’d like to welcome you to the Coach House and Gardens at Eggleston Hall, a Greek revival Georgian home redesigned in 1816 by Ignatius Bonomi, which overlooks the River Tees in outstanding surroundings.The Preston pele tower, which is owned by GJ Baker Cresswell, was built between 1392 and 1399, when warfare between England and Scotland was endemic.This impressive and complete 14th-century fortress of the powerful Nevills, with nine towers set in 200 acres of landscaped deer park and picturesque walled garden, has been home to Lord & Lady Barnard's family since 1626.Completed in 1735 by its owner, Sir Thomas Robinson, a leading amateur architect of his day, Rokeby Park represents the heyday of the Palladian-style country house.Situated in acres of immaculate gardens, the buildings feature outstanding examples of Georgian and Victorian Gothic architecture throughout the Main House and Chapels.Wynyard Hall is surrounded by 150 acres of historic parkland.
The site dates from the Anglo-Saxon period.This large, authentic Queen Anne house with medieval origins is home to an enthusiastic extended family and a haunting of ghosts.Elsing Hall is a grade 1 listed moated medieval manor house dating from about 1470.A visit to Elton Hall is like a walk through history as it reflects the changing tastes and vision of each generation, making it the unique and magical place it is today.This elegant, red-brick manor house in a Palladian style features two of the four original columns that enclosed a courtyard flanked by stables.The story of the building provides the clues that inform the conservation strategies and details.Late medieval manor, with C18 additions, adjacent to outer bailey of ruined Norman castle, destroyed 1173.Haughley Park is a Grade 1 listed red-brick manor house of 1620 set in gardens, park and woodland. The Great Hall, the heart of the House was built in 1485, when it would have served as the entire accommodation. These award winning gardens are family owned and maintained - visitors often express delight at the attention to detail displayed throughout and the intimate, peaceful atmosphere.Penns in the Rocks is an early 18th-century redbrick house, built for the family of William Penn of Pennsylvania.Penshurst Place has been home to the Sidney family since 1552 making it one of the oldest family-owned estates in England.Queen Anne/Jacobean revival-style building having many original features.Quex House was built in 1812, and many of the passions and interests of its builder John Powell Powell can still be seen today, including a collection of Napoleonic memorabilia, a collection of naval canon and the distinctive boat-shaped curve to two of the publicly accessible rooms.Restoration House is the amalgamation of two medieval buildings which were combined in the late 16th or early 17th-century to create a mansion house just outside the city wall of Rochester.170 years of continual planting by six generations of the same family has created a rich and valuable plant collection for visitors to enjoy at Riverhill.From its conception, Spencer House was recognised as one of the most sumptuous private residences ever built in London and a building of unique importance in the history of English architecture.Enchanting medieval timber-framed house in the pretty downland village of Bramber, with fine panelled interiors and five acres of beautiful gardens.Stansted Park is home to stunning weddings, forest walks, afternoon teas and some of the best events in the south! He was given the house by his father in 1908. Round-tower churches are a type of church found mainly in England, mostly in East Anglia; of about 185 surviving examples in the country, 124 are in Norfolk, 38 in Suffolk, six in Essex, three in Sussex and two each in Cambridgeshire and Berkshire.There is evidence of about 20 round-tower churches in Germany, of similar design and construction to those in East Anglia. It was fitted with its chiming clock in 1899.The base undertook work vital to the war effort before being closed for operations in 1946 and was decommissioned in 1949.Adjoining the churchyard is the Stalham Firehouse Museum, the second oldest firehouse in England.Close to the town, Sutton Mill is the tallest surviving windmill in England.
The red rose of Lancaster and the arms of John of Gaunt feature in the north transept window of the Grade 1 listed parish church, built during the 13Eventually the manor of Aylsham became the property of the Earls of Buckinghamshire, who also owned the nearby Blickling Estate. Courteenhall House, built in 1792, is a stunning example of classic Georgian architecture, built by Samuel Saxon.Deene Park has been the home of the Brudenell family for 500 years since 1514 and was the seat of the 7th Earl of Cardigan who led the Charge of the Light Brigade in 1854.Doddington is a much-loved family home, built between 1593 and 1600 by Robert Smythson for Thomas Tailor, who was a lawyer, the Recorder to the Bishop of Lincoln.Dowsby Hall, Lincolnshire, is a Jacobean house with a fine ashlar limestone east elevation, built probably around 1610 for the Burrell family. Foulis (Gaelic "Fo-glais" a streamlet) has of old been the home of Clan Munro. Farrer and Co Solicitors, 66 Lincoln's Inn Fields, London WC2A 3LH The eleven hundred acre, privately owned Bignor Park Estate is situated in stunning surroundings at the foot of the magnificent South Downs.Borde Hill combines outstanding vistas with tranquil outdoor garden rooms.The Charles Dickens Museum is the leading centre for the study, appreciation and enjoyment of the life and work of Charles Dickens (1812-1870).Charlton House illustrates a little-represented phase in the evolution of the English country house. Accompanied by the owner or the Head Gardener, visitors take a tour through a series of distinctive but linked garden rooms.Deep in a Cotswold valley, Owlpen Manor has been described as "the most beautiful place in England."