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Winchester Castle is a medieval building in Winchester, Hampshire, England. It was founded in 1067. It was founded in 1067. Only the Great Hall still stands; it houses a museum of the history of Winchester.
Winchester Great Hall is the only surviving part of Winchester Castle. The route passes through the towns of New Alresford , Hartley Wintney , Sandhurst , Bracknell and Ascot and the villages of Martyr Worthy , Itchen Abbas , Abbotstone , Upper Wield, Ellisfield, Bradley, Greywell, North Warnborough and Odiham .
Winchester Castle's Great Hall is an important site in British history; it was the location of the trial of Walter Raleigh and partially of the Bloody Assizes and it also contains a well-preserved imitative Arthurian Round Table.
The "Winchester Round Table" Edward I held one on the occasion of his marriage, and one in 1284 to celebrate his conquest of Wales; and is recorded as sponsoring several as late as 1304. One artefact that has survived from this fashion in England is the "Winchester Round Table" in the Great Hall at Winchester Castle.
The Winchester Round Table is a large tabletop hanging in Winchester Castle and bearing the names of various knights of Arthur's court, was probably created for a Round Table tournament. [18] The table is 5.5 metres (18 ft) in diameter and weighs 1.2 tonnes (2,600 lb). [ 19 ]
The Winchester Round Table in the Great Hall of Winchester Castle. Winchester is well known for the Great Hall of its castle, which was built in the 12th century. The Great Hall was rebuilt sometime between 1222 and 1235, and still exists in this form. It is famous for King Arthur's Round Table, which has hung in the hall from at least 1463 ...
Christmas Tree in St. George's Hall at Windsor Castle. ... In St. George's Hall stands a 20-foot-tall Christmas tree taken from Windsor Park and adorned with red and gold ornaments and glittering ...
Winchester Palace, 1660 drawing by Wenceslas Hollar. The palace remained in use until around 1700, when it was converted and divided into tenements and warehouses. These were mostly destroyed by fire in 1814. Part of the great hall, and the west gable end with its rose window became more visible after a 19th-century fire and 20th-century ...