Winchester Royal Palace(s), Winchester
Has been described as a Certain Palace (Royal)
There are no visible remains
Name | Winchester Royal Palace(s), Winchester |
Alternative Names | Wintoniae |
Historic Country | Hampshire and the Isle of Wight |
Modern Authority | Hampshire (City of Winchester) |
1974 Authority | Hampshire |
Civil Parish | Winchester |
The great feudal gatherings at Winchester in pre- and immediately post-Conquest times were probably held at the great hall of the palace of the West Saxon Kings. No details of this building or its site are known but it proved inadequate for the needs of the Conqueror in his regular visitations to the city and in about 1070 he built a new hall and palace on either a new or extended site to the NW of the Cathedral on the south side of the High Street. This palace was destroyed in 1140 by Matilda and never rebuilt: in 1150 the site was assigned to the parish of St. Lawrence (HKW).
Local tradition has it that a supposed Norman pilaster bedded in the wall of a passage adjoining St. Lawrence's Church is the only remaining trace of William's palace (VCH).
References to Norman foundations, in one place overlaying the brickwork, possible remains of Williams palace at (i) No 32. The Square (Cadena Cafe) (ii) in the archway between The Square and the High Street (iii) beneath 20-21, The Square and (iv) in the cellars of the City Museum. Milner also notes foundations of a massive tower in the square south of market Street but this might be a reference to the finding of the tower of the Newminster.
Apart from a small fragment of undated walling in the cellars of the City Museum, the Norman pilaster in the wall of St. Lawrence's Church and a firebreast of reused material in a dress shop at SU 48092947 there are no remains of the palace (F1 FGA 21-APR-68).
William the Conqueror enlarged the royal palace towards High Street by taking in the western part of the New Minster precinct and a number of houses in High Street. He also closed a street where his kitchen was built, which appears to have been at the E. end of the palace site and previously had probably been the main public way from the High Street to the Old and New Minsters. As a result of this closure a new way leading to the minsters and the royal palace was created some yards to the E
through Thomasegate, on the line of the modern Market Street. (Keene 1990)
Not scheduled
Not Listed
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | SU481294 |
Latitude | 51.0621910095215 |
Longitude | -1.31456005573273 |
Eastings | 448130 |
Northings | 129430 |