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Oxburgh Hall is a moated country house in Oxborough, Norfolk, England.The hall was built for Sir Edmund Bedingfeld who obtained a licence to crenellate in 1482. The Bedingfelds gained the manor of Oxborough through marriage in the early 15th century, and the family has lived at the hall since its construction, although ownership passed to the National Trust in 1952.
Oxborough is a village and civil parish in the English county of Norfolk, well known for its church and manor house Oxburgh Hall.It covers an area of 13.024 km 2 (5.029 sq mi) and had a population of 240 in 106 households in the 2001 census, [2] reducing to a population of 228 in 111 households at the 2011 Census.
Portrait of his mother, Elizabeth, Lady Bedingfield, at the age of 60 in 1650. He was the eldest son of Sir Henry Bedingfield of Oxburgh Hall (c. 1587 –1657) [1] by his second marriage to Elizabeth Houghton (1590–1662). [2]
Sir Edmund Bedingfield or Bedingfeld (1479/80 – 1553). [1] was the third son of Sir Edmund Bedingfield, Knight of the Bath (who had licence to build Oxburgh Hall, Norfolk in 1482), and his second wife Dame Margaret, daughter of Sir John Scott (Marshal of Calais), of Scot's Hall in Kent. [2]
Sir Henry Bedingfeld (1505–1583), at the age of 68 in 1573. Sir Henry Bedingfeld (1505 [1] –1583 [2]), also spelled Bedingfield, of Oxburgh Hall, King's Lynn, Norfolk, was a Privy Councillor to King Edward VI and Queen Mary I, Lieutenant of the Tower of London, and (in 1557) Vice-Chamberlain of the Household and Captain of the guards. [3]
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The hangings are now part of the Victoria and Albert Museum collection, although they are on permanent long-term loan at Oxburgh Hall. [3] It is thought that the embroideries were once kept at Cowdray Park, and were brought to Oxburgh in 1761 when Mary Browne married Richard Bedingfield. The Browne family seem to have inherited objects and ...