Tintinhull Court
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tintinhull_Court an entity of type: Thing
Tintinhull Court in Tintinhull, Somerset, England, was built as a medieval parsonage for the Church of St Margaret. It has been designated as a Grade I listed building. The Hamstone building was re-modelled in 1678, 1777 and 1927, with the first of these being by the prior of nearby Montacute Priory. After the dissolution of the monasteries it became crown property belonging to Henry VIII who sold it to Sir William Petre who sold it in 1546 to the Napper family who owned it for the next 250 years from their purchase of it in 1546. During the 17th century they built Tintinhull House as a Dower House.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Tintinhull Court
rdf:langString
Tintinhull Court
rdf:langString
Tintinhull Court
xsd:float
50.97472381591797
xsd:float
-2.715555667877197
xsd:integer
23147747
xsd:integer
1119211608
rdf:langString
Medieval era
rdf:langString
Grade I Listed Building
xsd:date
1961-04-19
xsd:integer
426254
rdf:langString
Tintinhull, Somerset, England
rdf:langString
Somerset
xsd:string
50.97472222222222 -2.7155555555555555
rdf:langString
Tintinhull Court in Tintinhull, Somerset, England, was built as a medieval parsonage for the Church of St Margaret. It has been designated as a Grade I listed building. The Hamstone building was re-modelled in 1678, 1777 and 1927, with the first of these being by the prior of nearby Montacute Priory. After the dissolution of the monasteries it became crown property belonging to Henry VIII who sold it to Sir William Petre who sold it in 1546 to the Napper family who owned it for the next 250 years from their purchase of it in 1546. During the 17th century they built Tintinhull House as a Dower House. In 2009 the house was put up for sale with an asking price of around £2million.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
2590
<Geometry>
POINT(-2.7155556678772 50.974723815918)