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  1. ucklebury Common is one of the largest Commons in Southern England. It is privately owned by the Bucklebury Estate and stretches from Cold Ash (Bucklebury Alley) in the West to Southend Bradfield in the East. The Common extends to some 900 acres and includes the famous Avenue of Oaks at Chapel Row, ancient woodland at Holly Wood and one of the ...

  2. In 1995, the Middletons purchased Oak Acre, a Tudor-style manor house in Bucklebury, Berkshire. In 2002, the Middletons bought a flat in Chelsea, in which their children lived, which they eventually sold for £1.88 million in 2019. Carole and Michael Middleton are also the owners of a racehorse.

  3. www.buckleburyestate.com › bucklebury-galleryBucklebury Images

    Bucklebury History. Over the last 900 years there have been two owners of the Bucklebury Estate; Reading Abbey and the Winchcombe Family...

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › InkpenInkpen - Wikipedia

    Inkpen. /  51.377°N 1.468°W  / 51.377; -1.468. Inkpen is a village and civil parish in West Berkshire, 3.5 miles (5.6 km) southeast of Hungerford, most of the land of which is cultivated fields with scattered woodland once part of a former forest of Savernake. Inkpen has boundaries with Wiltshire and Hampshire, including parts of ...

  5. wikishire.co.uk › wiki › BuckleburyBucklebury - Wikishire

    Bucklebury was a royal manor owned by Edward the Confessor (reigned 1042–66). The village and parish church are recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086. [2] Henry I (reigned 1100–35) granted Bucklebury to the Cluniac Reading Abbey, which retained it until it surrendered all its lands to the Crown in the Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1540.

  6. 21 de mar. de 2021 · The land on which their manor stands used to belong to Reading Abbey, but was confiscated in 1540 when the Abbey was largely destroyed. It was then turned into an Elizabethan Manor House.