London Inn of the Bishop of Chichester
Has been described as a Certain Palace (Bishop)
There are no visible remains
Name | London Inn of the Bishop of Chichester |
Alternative Names | |
Historic Country | London and Middlesex |
Modern Authority | London Borough of Camden |
1974 Authority | Greater London |
Civil Parish | Camden |
London Inn of the Bishop of Chichester. Land by New Temple given by Henry III upon which a 'noble house' erected by Ralph Neville, Bishop of Chichester (Henry III's Lord Chancellor), now occupied by Lincoln's Inn.
The establishment of this house helped to transform the area, then a relatively undeveloped suburb on the outskirts of London, into the important legal centre it is today. Functioning as the headquarters for the Lord Chancellor's legal team as well as his home when he was in London, there would have been a great hall, chapel, lodgings, kitchen, stables and possibly other ancillary buildings. (TimeTeam)
A Time Team evaluation discovered "the foundation trench of what Phil Harding described as a 'massive building … with beautiful painted window glass and Greensand mouldings around the windows and doors'. Stone-built, Phil reckoned it was probably the great hall of Ralph Neville's palace, an assessment aided by the discovery of a sherd of south Hertfordshire greyware pottery dating from the 12th-13th century under the wall's foundation." (TimeTeam)
Not scheduled
Not Listed
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | TQ309813 |
Latitude | 51.5164985656738 |
Longitude | -0.11438000202179 |
Eastings | 530900 |
Northings | 181300 |