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Lewes Castle is a medieval castle in the town of Lewes in East Sussex, England. Originally called Bray Castle, it occupies a commanding position guarding the gap in the South Downs cut by the River Ouse and occupied by the towns of Lewes and Cliffe. It stands on a man-made mount just to the north of the high street in Lewes, and is constructed ...
Numbers 11-40, Sussex Square and attached Railings The City of Brighton and Hove: Apartment: 1999: 13 October 1952: 1380970: Upload Photo: Numbers 41-50, Sussex Square and attached Railings
Nutrition (per serving): 320 calories, 20 g fat (4.5 g sat fat), 610 mg sodium, 12 g carbs (0 g fiber, 0 g sugar),18 g protein Chicken rings, one of White Castle's most iconic menu items, are also ...
Lewes Castle, Warenne's ancestral home, built in 1069. Warenne was the son and heir of William de Warenne, 5th Earl of Surrey, and Maud Marshal.His mother was the daughter of William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke and widow of Hugh Bigod, 3rd Earl of Norfolk, making Roger Bigod, 4th Earl of Norfolk his elder half-brother.
Coombe Place Offham, Hamsey, Lewes: Farmhouse: 1657: 17 March 1952: 1221911: Upload Photo: Hamsey House Cottage Yeomans Hamsey, Lewes: House: 19th century: 20 August ...
The left front of the house faces the gate of Lewes Castle. [2] A 1907 fire in Lewes High Street which spread for an hour and a half was contained before damaging Barbican House. [ 1 ] In 1952, the house became a Grade II* listed building .
The place-name "Lewes" is first attested in an Anglo-Saxon charter circa 961 AD, where it appears as Læwe.It appears as Lewes in the Domesday Book of 1086. [7] The addition of the <-s> suffix seems to have been part of a broader trend of Anglo-Norman scribes pluralising Anglo-Saxon place-names (a famous example being their rendering of Lunden as Londres, hence the modern French name for London).
Hailongtun, a rare example of a true castle in China. This is a list of castles in China.As feudalism in China had been largely superseded by centralised nation states since the Qin dynasty from 221 BC, most Chinese castles were not intended as residences of the nobility, but are more properly described as either fortresses or fortified vernacular and religious structures.