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 Outdoor heated pool secluded by privacy hedges and gardens. Photo: Ed Shepherd Photography/Savills

「King Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn Lived in This $10.5 Million Castle」的圖片搜索了局「King Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn Lived in This $10.5 Million Castle」的圖片搜索效果

 The 500-year-old Cotswold castle in rural South Gloucestershire already claims King Henry VIII, Anne Boleyn, and English Bible translator William Tyndale as prior guests. Now the listed 17翻譯社385-square-foot countryside estate beckons a new prominent owner and a new Shakespearean-style chapter worthy of its rich Renaissance-era past.

If ever there was a property with a past翻譯社 England’s Little Sodbury Manor wins residential gold. The 500-year-old Cotswold stone house was first home to William Tyndale, who is believed to have started the first English translation of the Bible within its walls in the 1520s. But its most notable occupants were none other than King Henry VIII and his queen Anne Boleyn, who stayed at the manor in 1535. While many original features remain, the residence翻譯社 located in rural South Gloucestershire, was renovated in the 1920s by Sir Harold Brakspear翻譯社 who also helped restore Windsor Castle. The 17,385-square-foot, three-story home showcases an entrance hall with a stone bolection chimney, a painted paneled drawing room, a great hall with a flagstone floor and a timber ceiling翻譯社 and a library with a ceiling cornice. Three staircases lead to the upper floors, which contain the master suite and four en suite bedrooms, each with a fireplace. Also on the second floor is a paneled former schoolroom. The ten-acre grounds include terraced gardens, manicured lawns and hedges, a boating lake翻譯社 and multiple water features. Additionally, the property boasts a swimming pool with a pavilion翻譯社 greenhouses, a tennis court, and a guesthouse. Only time will tell who will continue the home’s royal succession. Listed for $10.5 million翻譯社 this 17,385-square-foot home has 12 bedrooms and 7 baths.

 

The 16th century mansion retains its original Great Hall with double-height vaulted ceilings. Photo: Ed Shepherd Photography/Courtesy of Savills