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[[Image:lyddington Bede House.jpeg|thumb|right| Lyddington Bede House]]
[[Image:lyddington Bede House.jpeg|thumb|none|300px| Lyddington Bede House]]
[[Image:Photo26_26.jpg|thumb|none|300px|Lyddington Bede House and Church from the Orchid.]]
'''Lyddington Bede House''' is a historic house in [[Rutland]], [[England]], owned and opened to the public by [[English Heritage]].
'''Lyddington Bede House''' is a historic house in [[Rutland]], [[England]], owned and opened to the public by [[English Heritage]].
The existing a [[Grade I]] listed building is a part of a former palace of the [[Bishops of Lincoln]], situated close to the church in the village of [[Lyddington]].
The existing a [[Grade I]] listed building is a part of a former palace of the [[Bishops of Lincoln]], situated close to the church in the village of [[Lyddington]].

Revision as of 09:32, 29 April 2008

Lyddington Bede House
File:Photo26 26.jpg
Lyddington Bede House and Church from the Orchid.

Lyddington Bede House is a historic house in Rutland, England, owned and opened to the public by English Heritage. The existing a Grade I listed building is a part of a former palace of the Bishops of Lincoln, situated close to the church in the village of Lyddington.

After the Reformation, ownership passed to the Cecil family who made it their private house. By 1600 it had passed to Thomas Cecil, 1st Earl of Exeter, son of Lord Burghley, who converted it into an almshouse for twelve poor bedesmen and it continued in this use until 1930. A feature is the former bishops’ Great Chamber with its beautifully-carved ceiling cornice.

The remains of the fishponds of the bishop's palace are nearby.

Nearby English Heritage Attractions