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  1. Moreton-in-Marsh, Gloucestershire, GL56 9AW. Sezincote is a Mughal Indian palace set in the Cotswold Hills, created by the nabob Charles Cockerell in 1805. The house is surmounted by a copper dome and minarets, and set in a picturesque water garden with seven pools, waterfalls, a grotto and a temple to Surya, the Hindu Sun God.

  2. Sezincote House & Garden. Sezincote is a unique and extraordinary Indian house set amidst the Cotswold Hills. The architecture is in the Mogul style of Rajasthan, with a central dome, minarets, peacock-tail windows, jali-work railings and pavilions. A curving Orangery frames the Persian Garden of Paradise with its fountain and canals.

  3. Chastleton House (/ ˈ tʃ æ s əl t ən /) is a Jacobean country house at Chastleton, Oxfordshire, England, close to Moreton-in-Marsh (grid reference). It has been owned by the National Trust since 1991 and is a Grade I listed building .

  4. Arthur Dugdale. Colonel Arthur Dugdale CMG DSO TD (2 February 1869 – 27 April 1941) was a British Army officer. He was Commander of the Queen's Own Oxfordshire Hussars during the First World War. [1] Dugdale was born in Burnley, Lancashire, the son of James Dugdale (1835–1915). He was a first cousin of Conservative MP Thomas Dugdale, 1st ...

  5. Sezincote House, the seat of the Rushout Baronets of Sezincote. There have been two baronetcies held by persons with the surname Rushout, one in the Baronetage of England and one in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom. Both creations are extinct. Rushout baronets of Milnst, Kent: see Baron Northwick

  6. Samuel Pepys Cockerell (15 February 1753 – 12 July 1827) was an English architect.. He was a son of John Cockerell, of Bishop's Hull, Somerset, and the elder brother of Sir Charles Cockerell, 1st Baronet, for whom he designed the house he is best known for, Sezincote House, Gloucestershire, the uniquely Orientalising features of which inspired the more extravagant Brighton Pavilion.

  7. About. Sezincote is a unique and extraordinary Indian house set amidst the Cotswold Hills. The architecture is in the Mogul style of Rajasthan, with a central dome, minarets, peacock-tail windows, jali-work railings and pavilions. A curving Orangery frames the Persian Garden of Paradise with its fountain and canals.