Pulteneys Inn
Has been described as a Possible Fortified Town House
There are no visible remains
Name | Pulteneys Inn |
Alternative Names | Pulteney House; Pountney's Inn; Manor of the Rose; Redde Roos; Red Rose |
Historic Country | London and Middlesex |
Modern Authority | City and County of the City of London |
1974 Authority | Greater London |
Civil Parish | City Of London |
Licence to crenellate issued, in 1341, to Johannes de Pulteneye, for 'mansum' in London. John de Pulteney was mayor of London 1330-33 and 1336. He also obtained, at the same time, licenses for Penshurst Place and Cheveley Pulteney House, situated in or near Candlewick Street, in the parish later called St. Lawrence Pountney in the City of London.
Pulteney's Inn, later know as the manor of the Rose, was (Sir John Pulteney's) principal residence, developed in the late 1330's with a crenellated range (possibly the hall) and a four-storeys tower at its upper end erected under a licence of 1341. The property was subsequently held by a number of distinguished magnates including the Black Prince, the earl of Arundel (1385-97), Edmund, duke of York, the dukes of Suffolk (1439-1504), and Edward, duke of Buckingham (1506-21). This was a mansion on the grandest scale, but though a late thirteenth/early fourteenth-century two-bay vaulted undercroft, narrow vaulted passage, and two small chambers in line were discovered in 1894, they were ruthlessly destroyed. (Emery p. 223)
Not scheduled
Not Listed
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | TQ327807 |
Latitude | 51.5106582641602 |
Longitude | -0.0889400020241737 |
Eastings | 532710 |
Northings | 180790 |