Much Hadham Palace

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Much Hadham Palace
Hertfordshire
Location
Grid reference: TL43071973
Location: 51°51’28"N, -0°4’34"E
Village: Much Hadham
History
Country house
Information
Condition: Divided into three houses

Much Hadham House is a manor house adjacent to the church in Much Hadham in Hertfordshire, and which was formerly part of the estates of the Bishops of London.

The house today is a Grade II* listed building.[1]

History

The estate was originally established as the home of the Bishops of London before the Norman conquest in 1066.[2] In a later age it was the home of Owen Tudor and his wife, Catherine of Valois. It was the birthplace of their son, Edmund Tudor, 1st Earl of Richmond in about 1430.[3]

The present house dates to the early 16th century.

The estate was sequestrated during the Civil War in 1647 and then reverted to the Bishop of London at the Restoration of the Monarchy in 1660.[2] It became a lunatic asylum in 1817 until it passed back to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners in 1868.

The house was sold as a private house in 1888[2] and after the Second World War it became the home of Major Sir Edward Beddington-Behrens.[4]

The house is now a terrace of three homes, Palace House, Palace East and Palace West which are today in private ownership.[5]

References