Aubrey House
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Aubrey_House an entity of type: Thing
Aubrey House is a large 18th-century detached house with two acres of gardens in the Campden Hill area of Holland Park in west London, W8. It is a private residence. Known for a long time as Notting Hill House, by the 1860s it had been named Aubrey House, after Aubrey de Vere who held the manor of Kensington at the time of the Domesday Book. The core of the house is thought to date to 1698; it was remodelled by Sir Edward Lloyd between 1745 and 1754. The house became a centre for radical thought and a haunt for political exiles in the 1860s under Clementia and Peter Alfred Taylor; Giuseppe Garibaldi stayed at the house in 1864 and meetings of the nascent British women's suffrage campaign were held at Aubrey House. The house served as a hospital during the First World War and later became t
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Aubrey House
rdf:langString
Aubrey House
rdf:langString
Aubrey House
xsd:float
51.50579833984375
xsd:float
-0.2025888860225677
xsd:integer
37805899
xsd:integer
1079065417
rdf:langString
true
rdf:langString
right
rdf:langString
#FFFFF0
xsd:integer
17
rdf:langString
Aubrey House
rdf:langString
Grade II* listed building
xsd:date
1949-07-29
xsd:integer
1188804
rdf:langString
Aubrey House
rdf:langString
Holland Park, West London, England
rdf:langString
Greater London
rdf:langString
"Those monthly [other sources say fortnightly] parties during the London season were unique and very enjoyable, for Mentia and her husband … were admirably free of class prejudice in persons and opinions, so that all kinds of literary people—refugees from several countries—artists and humble lovers of social enjoyment, mingled with supporters of 'causes' of all kinds"
rdf:langString
right
rdf:langString
From the autobiography of Elizabeth Malleson
xsd:integer
300
xsd:string
51.50579722222222 -0.20258888888888887
rdf:langString
Aubrey House is a large 18th-century detached house with two acres of gardens in the Campden Hill area of Holland Park in west London, W8. It is a private residence. Known for a long time as Notting Hill House, by the 1860s it had been named Aubrey House, after Aubrey de Vere who held the manor of Kensington at the time of the Domesday Book. The core of the house is thought to date to 1698; it was remodelled by Sir Edward Lloyd between 1745 and 1754. The house became a centre for radical thought and a haunt for political exiles in the 1860s under Clementia and Peter Alfred Taylor; Giuseppe Garibaldi stayed at the house in 1864 and meetings of the nascent British women's suffrage campaign were held at Aubrey House. The house served as a hospital during the First World War and later became the most expensive property ever sold in London upon its 1997 sale to the publisher and philanthropist Sigrid Rausing.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
13740
<Geometry>
POINT(-0.20258888602257 51.505798339844)