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  1. Mar 24, 2022 · Richmond Palace, much loved home to the Tudors and once a stunning grand palace but sadly only a gatehouse remains today. You can walk up to this impressive Tudor gatehouse built in 1501 by Henry VII. It started off as a substantial manor house in 1125 and became a royal manor house in 1327.

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  2. History map of England and Wales under the Tudors; illustrating the province of Canterbury, York, dioceses, Wales, the Shires, archiepiscopal Sees etc.

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  4. Not much of Henry VII's palace remains, but a walk around the area between Richmond Green and the Thames reveals a few sections of the Tudor structure.

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  5. History map of the British Isles 1603-1688; illustrating England and Wales: Approximate line of division between the royalists and the parliamentarians at the opening of the Civil War (1642), Route of William of Orange (1688), Route of the Young Pretender (1745); Scotland: Approximate line of division between the Highlands and the Lowlands ...

  6. Just off Richmond Green, the attractive remains of Richmond Palace – the main entrance and red-brick gatehouse – date to 1501. Henry VII’s arms are visible above the main gate: the monarch built the Tudor additions to the edifice, although the palace had been in use as a royal residence since 1125. Elizabeth I died here in 1603.

  7. Jan 10, 2020 · On the east side of the main buildings were the palace gardens, encircled by two-storey galleries, open at ground level and enclosed above, where the court could walk, play games, admire the gardens, watch the tennis etc.

  8. cadw.gov.wales › learn › sites-through-centuriesThe Tudors in Wales | Cadw

    The Tudor dynasty rumbled on through a complex lineage until the arrival of Henry’s daughter Elizabeth I, the powerful ‘Virgin Queen’. It came to an end with her death in 1603, by which time Britain was on the brink of the Civil Wars which were to inflict great damage to many of the castles of Wales.

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