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  1. Baynard's Castle refers to buildings on two neighbouring sites in the City of London, between where Blackfriars station and St Paul's Cathedral now stand. The first was a Norman fortification constructed by Ralph Baynard (fl. 1086), 1st feudal baron of Little Dunmow in Essex, and was demolished by King John in 1213.

  2. Baynard's Castle refers to buildings on two neighbouring sites in the City of London, between where Blackfriars station and St Paul's Cathedral now stand. The first was a Norman fortification constructed by Ralph Baynard ( fl. 1086), 1st feudal baron of Little Dunmow in Essex, and was demolished by King John in 1213.

  3. Baynard’s Castle was a large 15th century riverside mansion in the City of London which Henry VII extended and granted to the queens consort. Baynard’s Castle had been rebuilt by Henry Duke of Gloucester in the late 1420s.

  4. Robert Fitz Richard (1064–1136) was an Anglo-Norman feudal baron of Little Dunmow, Essex and constable of Baynard's Castle in the City of London. His feudal barony, the caput of which was at Little Dunmow in Essex, was granted to him by the king after it had been forfeited in 1110 by William Baynard, whose grandfather Ralph Baynard ...

  5. Baynard Castle may refer to: Baynard Castle, Cottingham, East Riding of Yorkshire; Baynard's Castle, London

  6. Hace 4 días · In the parish of St. Andrew Wardrobe and St. Bennetts, Paul's Wharf, part of and belonging to a place called Baynard's Castle, containing on the north side 40 ft., on the west side fronting a new street leading from Thames Street to the river, and on the south side extending to the river, in length from north to south 106 ft. and in ...

  7. Baynard’s Castle, one of two most strong Castels ( Stow 1:60) in London, has a long and storied history. Located on the banks of the Thames, it was built sometime in the late eleventh century by Baynard, a Norman who came over with William the Conqueror ( Weinreb and Hibbert 129 ).