Rushbrooke Hall (original) (raw)

About DBpedia

Rushbrooke Hall est une demeure seigneuriale britannique à Rushbrooke, Suffolk . Pendant plusieurs centaines d'années, c'est le siège familial de la famille Jermyn. Elle est démolie en 1961.

thumbnail

Property Value
dbo:abstract Rushbrooke Hall est une demeure seigneuriale britannique à Rushbrooke, Suffolk . Pendant plusieurs centaines d'années, c'est le siège familial de la famille Jermyn. Elle est démolie en 1961. (fr) Rushbrooke Hall was a British stately home in Rushbrooke, Suffolk. For several hundred years it was the family seat of the Jermyn family. It was demolished in 1961. The original manor house on the moated site to the south of the village of Rushbrooke is believed to have been constructed in the reign of King John. Originally named after the local landowning Rushbrooke family, between 1230 and 1703 the manor and estate was held by the Jermyn family. The older manor was largely demolished and remodeled in the mid-16th century by Sir Thomas Jermyn, to be replaced by a red brick, two storey building in the Tudor style. The new stately home was completed in about 1550, and was laid out in an E-shaped plan. It was constructed around a courtyard, about 30m square with the main range of the house running along the north side of the moat and two long projecting wings along the east and west sides. There were polygonal turrets, each three stories high, at the four corners of the wings. The entrance to the house was through an impressive central porch built of Barnack stone and decorated with armorial achievements. Major modernising alterations were made to the house in about 1735. The moated stately home was at the centre of a large ornamental garden and a parkland estate. An ornamental canal, 114 metres long, has since been infilled. The Jermyn family exercised considerable influence in Suffolk and Elizabeth I is recorded as having stayed at the house in 1578 and on at least one other occasion. The estate remained in the Jermyn family until the early 18th century, when it passed by marriage to Sir Robert Davers, 2nd Baronet. The Davers family held it until the death of Sir Charles Davers, 6th Baronet in 1806. It passed to Frederick Hervey, 1st Marquess of Bristol, who sold the house to Robert Rushbrooke, whose family owned the house until 1919. In 1938 ownership of the manor was taken over by the Rothschild family. In 1961 it was decided to demolish the house; shortly afterwards a fire devastated the building. Several of the remaining decorative features were used in St Edmund's Church, Bury St Edmunds. The moated site and some of the formal gardens are all that remain of the house. (en)
dbo:thumbnail wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Neale(1818)_p4.134_-_Rushbrooke_Hall,_Suffolk.jpg?width=300
dbo:wikiPageID 45381553 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength 3913 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID 1083715620 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink dbc:Jermyn_family dbr:Rothschild_family dbr:Elizabeth_I_of_England dbr:Frederick_Hervey,_1st_Marquess_of_Bristol dbc:Rothschild_family_residences dbc:British_country_houses_destroyed_in_the_20th_century dbr:Davers_baronets dbr:Barnack_stone dbr:Family_seat dbc:Former_country_houses_in_the_United_Kingdom dbc:Country_houses_in_Suffolk dbr:John,_King_of_England dbr:Thomas_Jermyn_(died_1552) dbr:Tudor_architecture dbr:Manor_house dbr:St_Edmund's_Church,_Bury_St_Edmunds dbr:Sir_Robert_Davers,_2nd_Baronet dbr:Sir_Charles_Davers,_6th_Baronet dbr:Stately_home dbr:Rushbrooke,_Suffolk dbr:File:Neale(1818)_p4.134_-_Rushbrooke_Hall,_Suffolk.jpg dbr:File:In_English_Homes_Vol_1_Rushbrooke..._the_entrance_31295001575223_0149.jpg
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate dbt:Coord dbt:Reflist dbt:Use_dmy_dates
dct:subject dbc:Jermyn_family dbc:Rothschild_family_residences dbc:British_country_houses_destroyed_in_the_20th_century dbc:Former_country_houses_in_the_United_Kingdom dbc:Country_houses_in_Suffolk
gold:hypernym dbr:Home
georss:point 52.2161 0.7663
rdf:type geo:SpatialThing dbo:Building
rdfs:comment Rushbrooke Hall est une demeure seigneuriale britannique à Rushbrooke, Suffolk . Pendant plusieurs centaines d'années, c'est le siège familial de la famille Jermyn. Elle est démolie en 1961. (fr) Rushbrooke Hall was a British stately home in Rushbrooke, Suffolk. For several hundred years it was the family seat of the Jermyn family. It was demolished in 1961. The original manor house on the moated site to the south of the village of Rushbrooke is believed to have been constructed in the reign of King John. Originally named after the local landowning Rushbrooke family, between 1230 and 1703 the manor and estate was held by the Jermyn family. The older manor was largely demolished and remodeled in the mid-16th century by Sir Thomas Jermyn, to be replaced by a red brick, two storey building in the Tudor style. The new stately home was completed in about 1550, and was laid out in an E-shaped plan. It was constructed around a courtyard, about 30m square with the main range of the house r (en)
rdfs:label Rushbrooke Hall (fr) Rushbrooke Hall (en)
owl:sameAs freebase:Rushbrooke Hall yago-res:Rushbrooke Hall wikidata:Rushbrooke Hall dbpedia-fr:Rushbrooke Hall https://global.dbpedia.org/id/xh3p
geo:geometry POINT(0.76630002260208 52.2160987854)
geo:lat 52.216099 (xsd:float)
geo:long 0.766300 (xsd:float)
prov:wasDerivedFrom wikipedia-en:Rushbrooke_Hall?oldid=1083715620&ns=0
foaf:depiction wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Neale(1818)_p4.134_-_Rushbrooke_Hall,_Suffolk.jpg wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/In_English_Homes_Vol_..._the_entrance_31295001575223_0149.jpg
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf wikipedia-en:Rushbrooke_Hall
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of dbr:Ambrose_Jermyn dbr:List_of_country_houses_in_the_United_Kingdom dbr:List_of_family_seats_of_English_nobility dbr:Rushbrooke,_West_Suffolk dbr:Rushbrooke_with_Rougham dbr:Clement_Higham dbr:George_Kirbye dbr:Thomas_Jermyn,_2nd_Baron_Jermyn dbr:Davers_baronets dbr:Baron_Jermyn dbr:Edward_Lewknor_(died_1556) dbr:Edward_Lewknor_(died_1605) dbr:Hartham_Park dbr:Henry_Woodhouse_(MP) dbr:Thomas_Jermyn_(died_1552) dbr:Thomas_Jermyn_(died_1659) dbr:St_Edmund's_Church,_Bury_St_Edmunds dbr:Ralph_Cudworth_(died_1624) dbr:Sir_Robert_Davers,_2nd_Baronet dbr:Robert_Jermyn dbr:Sheriff_of_Norfolk_and_Suffolk dbr:Sir_Charles_Davers,_6th_Baronet dbr:Sir_Jermyn_Davers,_4th_Baronet
is foaf:primaryTopic of wikipedia-en:Rushbrooke_Hall