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  1. Sep 7, 2020 · The Palace of Whitehall was the primary residence of English monarchs from AD 1530 until 1698, located in Westminster, London. The site of the palace was bought by the Archbishop of York Walter de Grey during the 13th century, calling it York Place. York Place was enlarged for King Edward I and his entourage during renovation work to ...

  2. Aug 17, 2023 · Secrets of Henry VIII's Whitehall: The Archaeology of a Lost Palace. Date: 17 August 2023. Author: Alfred R J Hawkins. On January 4 1698 a catastrophic fire broke out in Whitehall Palace. The Banqueting House, arguably the most architecturally and artistically important part of the palace was saved and can still be seen today, but the rest of ...

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  4. Whitehall Palace was Charles I's principal residence. A sprawling assembly of mainly Tudor buildings, it comprised more than 2,000 rooms and occupied tens of acres of land on the bank of London's River Thames, around the present-day Ministry of Defence. One seventeenth-century visitor thought it the largest and ugliest palace in Europe.

  5. The Oxford Companion to British History. Whitehall palace as a royal residence lasted some 150 years. It began life as the London residence of the archbishops of York and was called York Place. Wolsey spent lavishly on it and, on his fall in 1529, it was seized by Henry VIII, who had lost the greater part of Westminster palace by fire in 1512.

  6. Does Whitehall Palace still exist? After two fires in the 1690s, all that remains intact of Whitehall Palace is its Banqueting Hall. There are, however, small bits of the original palace ...

  7. Palace of Whitehall. The Palace of Whitehall was the main home of the English kings and queens in London, from 1530 until 1698, when all except Inigo Jones 's 1622 Banqueting House was destroyed by fire. Before the fire, it was the largest palace in Europe, with over 1,500 rooms (at one time it was the largest building in the world).

  8. The Palace of Whitehall, in Westminster, was another palace that had once belonged to Cardinal Thomas Wolsey. King Henry VIII seized it when the Cardinal fell out of favour and transformed it into a magnificent royal residence. By the time of Henry's death, it was the largest palace in Europe. Queen Elizabeth I stayed at Whitehall Palace more ...

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