Duke of Suffolks Palace, Kingston upon Hull
Has been described as a Possible Palace (Royal), and also as a Possible Fortified Town House
There are no visible remains
Name | Duke of Suffolks Palace, Kingston upon Hull |
Alternative Names | Suffolk Palace; de la Poles House; Courthall |
Historic Country | Yorkshire |
Modern Authority | Kingston upon Hull; City of |
1974 Authority | Humberside |
Civil Parish | Kingston upon Hull |
Built 1296-1307 by Richard Oysel, second of Edward I's keepers of Hull, and passed to the de la Pole family circa 1330. The house was rebuilt circa 1380. An inventory of 1388 refers to a hall, summer hall, great chamber, numerous further chambers, a chapel, two wine cellars, a kitchen, a bakehouse, a granary and two dovecotes amongst various other buildings. Documentary sources from the mid 16th century describe the building as a mansion and depict it as a series of courtyards bounded by a wall and containing a gatehouse, great hall, and chamber blocks. The four storey gatehouse was built of brick and stone, as was the great hall which had a buttery and pantry to the east with a chamber above and a great chamber to the west. A magazine was recorded on the site in 1642. The majority of the buildings were demolished in the late 17th century, though the gatehouse survived until 1771. (PastScape)
Outstanding among the domestic houses of the town was the Pole family 'manorhouse' in Marketgate (later Lowgate). It was probably the house built at Myton for Edward I's keeper of Hull, which had been kept in repair in the early 14th century, and it presumably passed to the Poles when they acquired the manor of Myton about 1330. The house and grounds occupied a large, roughly triangular, area bounded by Marketgate, Bishopgate (now Bowlalley Lane), Beverley Street (a now-lost section of the street), and a common way running alongside the town wall. In 1347 the house (mansum) had a hall (aula) and chapel, and in the grounds was a 'gardenerhous'. The manor-house is said to have been rebuilt by Sir Michael de la Pole in the 1380s, and at about this time it became known as Courthall. An inventory of goods in the house in 1388 mentions the hall, the 'somerhalle', the chapel, a tower, and more than 20 chambers. (VCH)
Not scheduled
Not Listed
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | TA100288 |
Latitude | 53.7441101074219 |
Longitude | -0.332819998264313 |
Eastings | 510000 |
Northings | 428830 |