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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.
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]
Oxburgh Hall, Norfolk, as rebuilt by Buckler Arms of Grandison sculpted on an oriel window at Oxburgh Hall, Norfolk.. Upon the death of his father on 22 November 1829, he succeeded as the 6th Baronet Bedingfeld, of Oxburgh, [3] becoming the head of a distinguished Roman Catholic family which had "for several generations formed alliances with some of the most illustrious families of the peerage."
He was the eldest son of Sir Henry Paston-Bedingfeld, 6th Baronet, of Oxburgh Hall, and heiress Margaret Paston, who inherited the Brailes estate in Warwickshire in 1841. [1] His younger brother, Raoul, married Katherine Gregory (née Walker) Stephens, widow of Henry Alexander Claremont Lyne-Stephens.
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Oxburgh Hall Monument in the Bedingfield Chapel of the Church of St John the Evangelist, Oxborough, to Sir Henry Bedingfield (1587-1657), Knight, and to Sir Henry Bedingfeld, 1st Baronet (1614–1685) The Bedingfeld, later Paston-Bedingfeld Baronetcy, of Oxburgh in the County of Norfolk, is a title in the Baronetage of England.
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