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  1. The Palace of Placentia, Greenwich. The long lost Palace of Placentia in Greenwich, South East London was once the favourite royal residence of the Tudors. It was also the location where Sir Walter Raleigh placed his coat over the puddle to stop Queen Elizabeth’s feet from getting wet! When one thinks of royal palaces, the first that come to ...

  2. The Palace of Placentia, also known as Greenwich Palace, [1] was an English royal residence that was initially built by Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, in 1443. [2] [3] The palace was a place designed for pleasure, entertainment and an escape from the city. [4] It was located at Greenwich on the south bank of the River Thames, downstream from London.

  3. He covered the whole palace with a new facing of red brick. It became a favourite palace of the Tudors, partly because it was close to the royal shipyards on the River Thames. Henry VII's son, the future Henry VIII, was born at the palace on 28 June 1491. A View of the Ancient Royal Palace called Placentia, in East Greenwich ( PAI5655)

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  5. The Palace of Placentia, more commonly known as Greenwich Palace, was one of the most important palaces in Tudor England. It was built on the banks of the River Thames by Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, in 1443. King Henry VIII was born here in 1491, and it was in this palace that Queen Elizabeth I was born in the September of 1533.

  6. Greenwich Palace was the site of many significant Tudor events: the birthplace of Henry VIII (1491) and his daughters, Mary I (1516) and Elizabeth I (1533), it was also where the young Edward VI died (1553). Henry VIII married two of his wives, Katharine of Aragon (1509) and Anne of Cleves (1540) at Greenwich and it was there, too, that Anne ...

  7. A visitor to Greenwich in the 1670s would have seen the boarded up hulk of the king’s block, set amidst piles of demolished brick and stone from the Tudor palace and the Queen’s House surrounded by half-dug foundations. The site of the Palace was eventually to be built on and given, by Queen Mary II, as a hospital for seamen in the 1690s.

  8. The Queen's House was used by members of the royal family until 1805, when George III granted the Queen’s House to a charity for the orphans of seamen. In 1934 the building was taken over by the National Maritime Museum. Now the Queen's House is a beautiful art gallery, home to an ever-changing display of both historic and contemporary works ...

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