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  1. 6696165. Hatfield House är en lantegendom precis öster om staden Hatfield i Hertfordshire i England. Det nuvarande slottet byggdes under Jakob I:s regeringstid av Robert Cecil, som var kungens främste minister. Huset har varit i ätten Cecils ägo alltsedan dess. Nuvarande ägare är Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 7:e markis av Salisbury.

  2. De tuin van Hatfield House werd in de zeventiende eeuw ontworpen en aangelegd onder leiding John Tradescant de Oudere, Salomon de Claus en Thomas Chandler. Gedurende de geschiedenis werden de tuinen diverse malen opnieuw aangelegd, maar heeft tegenwoordig weer een "zeventiende eeuws karakter" met terrassen en omheiningen.

  3. Original location of Hatfield House, 1929, with Simon Gratz High School in the background. Built as a suburban villa in 1760, in what is now the Nicetown neighborhood of the city, Hatfield House operated as Catherine Mallon's Boarding School for Girls from 1806 to 1824. William J. Hay, who was the next owner, subsequently made major Greek ...

  4. Hatfield verfügt nur über wenig historische Bausubstanz. In erster Linie ist Hatfield House zu nennen. Baubeginn war 1497. König Heinrich VIII. machte es zu einer Königsresidenz und seine Tochter, Königin Elisabeth I. hielt sich häufig hier auf. Zu nennen wäre außerdem die Kirche St. Etheldreda.

  5. Hatfield (ancien nom : Bishop's Hatfield) est une ville du Hertfordshire, en Angleterre du Sud-Est. Elle est particulièrement connue pour être la terre d'accueil de Hatfield Palace , la résidence royale des Tudor ; Hatfield House , la maison séculaire de la famille Cecil ; le lieu de naissance du premier jet commercial, le De Havilland Comet et le lieu d' une catastrophe ferroviaire ...

  6. Hatfield Manor House is a remodelled 18th century Grade-I listed manor house in the town of Hatfield near Doncaster, South Yorkshire, which is based on an originally 12th century building. [1] The building is constructed of roughcast ashlar and brick with a Welsh slate roof. It is built to a T-shaped plan in 2 and 3 storeys.

  7. Queen Elizabeth's Oak was a tree in the grounds of Hatfield House, Hertfordshire, England. Elizabeth I is said to have been sitting beneath the tree when she was told of her accession to the throne in 1558. The tree was visited by Queen Victoria and Albert in 1846 and they were presented with a branch and an acorn from it as a memento.