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Standing in Brantridge Forest, it was the seat of Alexander Cambridge, 1st Earl of Athlone (and brother of Queen Mary), and his wife, Princess Alice of Albany, the last surviving grandchild of Queen Victoria. They leased the house from Lord Cowdray from 1922 onwards.
Petworth House, Sussex Alexander the Great Taming Bucephalus is an 1826 history painting by the British artist Benjamin Robert Haydon . [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It depicts a scene from ancient history when Alexander the Great tamed his famous warhorse Bucephalus .
Balcombe Place is a Grade II* Listed Building, [1] built in 1856 [2] in West Sussex, with a south view across the Ouse Valley. It now forms part of The Balcombe Estate. [3] The architect was Henry Clutton. [4] [5] It was built for John Alexander Hankey, [6] [7] whose family had been living at Naylands, [8] [9] a house about 1 mile away.
Primary title Family seat Former seats Duke of Norfolk: Arundel Castle, Sussex and Carlton Towers, Yorkshire: Framlingham Castle, Bungay Castle, Clun Castle, Norfolk House, Worksop Manor
These are the arms of Wyndham of Orchard Wyndham differenced by a bordure wavy, for the illegitimacy of the 1st Baron Leconfield Benjamin Robert Haydon 1826 painting "Alexander the Great Taming Bucephalus" painted for Petworth House. Petworth House is a late 17th-century Grade I listed country house in the parish of Petworth, West Sussex, England.
The Hoo is a Neoclassical country house in Willingdon, in the Wealden district of East Sussex, England. It was designed by Edwin Lutyens in 1902 for Alexander Wedderburn, a wealthy lawyer. Considered one of Lutyens' best houses, it is a Grade I listed building.
The part of the plucky Brit is “not historically based on her, but Alexandra, the Countess of Sussex, was a real person,” Julia Schlaepfer, who plays Alex, tells TVLine. She recalls series ...
Brick facing was substituted for stucco, and the south-east wing was added. Alexander, who owned Aubrey House in London, died when he fell down the basement stairs of the house in 1916. Heathfield House is a Grade II* listed building. [3] In 1963 the estate was purchased by Gerald Moore, an oral surgeon, artist, and former child actor.