Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. The Palace of Placentia, also known as Greenwich Palace, was an English royal residence that was initially built by prince Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, in 1443. [2] [3] Over the centuries it took several different forms, until turned into a hospital in the 1690s.

  2. Greenwich Palace for the royal family became a haven from the smells, noise and disease of London. Were the Tudors the first kings and queens to live in Greenwich? A royal manor house had existed in Greenwich for centuries, even before King Henry V gifted the land to his brother Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester.

  3. 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! Ben Johnson.

    • Greenwich Palace, England1
    • Greenwich Palace, England2
    • Greenwich Palace, England3
    • Greenwich Palace, England4
    • Greenwich Palace, England5
  4. Greenwich Palace. What became Greenwich Palace was originally built by Humphrey Duke of Gloucester. He was granted the manor of Greenwich in 1427 and laid out a hunting park there; ten years later he began a house which was completed around 1439. Greenwich Palace was a special kind of residence known as a pleasaunce.

  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.

  6. Greenwich Palace – also known as the Palace of Placentia – became one of the most important palaces of the Tudor era, and was the birthplace of Henry VIII, Mary I and Elizabeth I.

  7. The Queen’s House is the jewel in the crown of Greenwich's UNESCO World Heritage Site. This bright white villa was at the cutting edge of architecture and design when it was completed in the 1630s.