
Apethorpe - Wikipedia
Apethorpe (pronounced App-thorp) [1] [2] is a village, civil parish, [3] former manor and ecclesiastical parish in Northamptonshire, England (in the North Northamptonshire district), …
Apethorpe Palace - Wikipedia
Apethorpe Palace (pronounced App-thorp), [1] [2] formerly known as "Apethorpe Hall", is a Grade I listed [3] country house, dating to the 15th century, close to Apethorpe, Northamptonshire. It …
Apethorpe Palace - English Heritage
Among England’s greatest stately homes, Apethorpe Palace is a private residence open during July and August for pre-booked tours only. Apethorpe Palace was owned by Elizabeth I; she …
Apethorpe Community Website - Living in Apethorpe
Apethorpe is a beautiful conservation village situated in North Northamptonshire. Many of the limestone cottages and houses are grade II listed. The village is recorded in the Domesday …
Apethorpe - British History Online
Apethorpe is a parish of 723 hectares in Rockingham Forest, the village lying near Willow Brook. It incorporates the former village of Hale, mentioned in Domesday Book and deserted as a …
Apethorpe | Villages in Northamptonshire
Apethorpe is a small village and civil parish in North Northamptonshire. It is located about 6 miles north of the town of Oundle and 11 miles west of Peterborough. Apethorpe is best known for …
Apethorpe Palace | Discover Northamptonshire
Among England’s greatest country houses, Apethorpe Palace holds a particularly important place in English history because of its ownership by, and role in, entertaining Tudor and Stuart …
Apethorpe Palace
Welcome to Apethorpe, the Jacobean Royal Residence Baron and Baroness Pfetten welcome you to explore the last surviving Jacobean Royal Residence. Gardens and State Rooms are …
Apethorpe, Northamptonshire - genealogy heraldry and history
Apethorpe, a parish in Northamptonshire, on an affluent of the river Nen, 5 miles SW of Wansford, under which it has a post office; money order and telegraph office, King's Cliffe. Acreage, …
Apethorpe Hall, Northamptonshire - Henry VIII Houses
Apethorpe was among the last of the houses acquired by Henry VIII, purchased from Lord Mountjoy in 1543. It was heavily rebuilt in the later sixteenth century and little is known of the …