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Fulbourn Manor

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Manor house in Cambridgeshire, England

Fulbourn Manor is a Grade II listed building in the English county of Cambridgeshire and the sole surviving manor of the Five Manors of Fulbourn.

History

The manor was built in 1788 or maybe earlier. An account from 1495 states that Richard Berkeley and his wife Anne Berkeley settled a debt of 1,000 marks with four manors of Fulbourn, which were stated as Zouches, Manners, Shardelowes and Fulbourn.

It was largely rebuilt around 1910 by Dudley Newman. Reconstruction preserved part of the 18th-century building.

References

  1. "Fulbourne Manor House Including the Ha Ha in the Garden". Historic England. Retrieved 6 July 2020.
  2. "Parks & Gardens UK - Fulbourn Manor House, Fulbourn, England Record Id: 4107".
  3. Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 2nd Edition. ISBN 9781461045205.
  4. Malim, Timothy John Power (January 2001). "Fulbourn Manor Estate: An Archaeological Survey - T. Malim".

52°10′57″N 0°13′24″E / 52.182631°N 0.223436°E / 52.182631; 0.223436


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