May 2022

Issue 1

£9.99
Tax included.
Type: Print Edition

In Issue 1 of Tudor Places, we explore palaces, cathedrals, churches, Henrician forts and seaside resorts in our first issue, taking us from North Yorkshire to Devon and Warwickshire to the Kent coast. We speak to Tracy Borman, historian, author and joint Chief Curator at Historic Royal Palaces, about her work with the palaces, her love of Tudor buildings and the ways in which a knowledge and understanding of the built environment influences her fiction, and non-fiction, writing.

In our regular feature, A Trip to Tudor….., Sarah Morris, the Tudor Travel Guide, takes us to Suffolk and its wealth of Tudor places to visit, eat at and stay in – perfect for those planning a weekend, or longer, away. In Living at Old Hall, Brigitte Webster tells us how she, and her husband, Tom, came to be living in their Tudor manor house in rural Norfolk, and in Last Place, Alison Weir reveals her favourite Tudor places.

All this, plus news, book listings and more…….

Type: Print Edition

Articles include

Anne Boleyn's Apartments at the Tower of London

Anne Boleyn’s brief reign as Queen of England began, and ended, at the Tower of London, where Henry VIII had sumptuous new apartments built for her. Sadly, these are long gone. Dr Alden Gregory looks at what we know of Anne’s apartments – when and how they were built, and how they were furnished when Anne used them.

The Lost Palace of Oatlands

Tucked away in suburban Weybridge are the remains of Oatlands palace, which served as one of Henry VIII’s wedding venues. Dr Elizabeth Norton explores what this long-lost, spectacular building, with connections to
Henry VIII’s later queens, was like in its hey-day.

Henry VIII's Device Forts in Kent

In the late 1530s, in response to threats of invasion from the combined forces of Spain, France and Pope Paul III, Henry VIII issued a ‘Device’, or instruction, ordering the building of a network of coastal forts from Milford Haven to Hull. Julian Humphrys explores the history of three of the forts, Sandown, Walmer and Deal, built as part of the defensive barrier on the Kent coast, and highlights what to look for on a visit today.

Tenby - the most important Tudor town?

Nathen Amin argues that the modest seaside resort of Tenby, without which the Tudors may never have reached the throne, stands out, above the more obvious formidable castles and revered cathedrals, with a good claim to being the most important Tudor town – as well as his favourite Tudor location.

Ripon Cathedral and the Markenfield Family

Ripon Cathedral and Markenfield Hall, both connected to the Markenfield family, were sites of rebellion in the Rising of the North in 1569. Dr Emma J. Wells tells the story of the rise and fall of the Markenfields and looks at what remains today of them and this historic event, in chapels at Ripon and Markenfield.

The Building Projects of Cecily Bonville, Marchioness of Dorset

Cecily Bonville, born around 1459 and heiress to the wealthy baronies of Harington and Bonville, was one of a group of elite medieval women who commissioned and paid for building works, both secular and religious. Melita Thomas looks at the work undertaken for Cecily at Astley, Shute and Ottery St Mary.

Get started with a taster bundle

The taster bundle includes 3 issues of Tudor Places magazine jam-packed with articles on palaces, castles, cathedrals, manor houses, churches, military forts and more!

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