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London Inn of the Bishop of Ely 2

Also known as, or recorded in historical documents as;
Ely House; Ely Place in Oldborne

In the civil parish of Camden.
In the historic county of London and Middlesex.
Modern Authority of London Borough of Camden.
1974 county of Greater London.
Medieval County of Middlesex.

OS Map Grid Reference: TQ313816
Latitude 51.51868° Longitude -0.10725°

London Inn of the Bishop of Ely 2 has been described as a certain Palace.

There are masonry ruins/remnants remains.

This is a Grade 1 listed building protected by law*.

Description

London Inn of the Bishop of Ely. Ely house in Holborn, site given by John Kirkby (1286-90) but built by Bishop Thomas Arundel in C14. Plan made by Grose before demolition showing two-storeyed chapel on north side of a cloister with hall and ancillaries on its south side. Only the chapel survives.

At any early date the bishops had a house in the Temple, and in 1290 Bishop Kirkeby bequeathed an 'inn' or town house, called 'Le Bell,' and nine cottages in Holborn to his successors, on condition that a requiem Mass should be celebrated on the anniversary of his death. John Hotham, who was consecrated in 1316, added to this property. He played a leading part in State affairs during the troublous reign of Edward II., and was entrusted with the Great Seal when Edward III. was proclaimed king in 1327. About this time he bought a house and several parcels of land near his manor in Holborn in the suburb of London, consisting of a vineyard, kitchen garden, orchard, and enclosed pasture, all of which he settled on the see of Ely. By the sixteenth century it was a "handsome and commodious mansion," standing in twenty acres of ground, with the chapel, dedicated to St. Etheldreda, in an adjoining field. (Morewood, 1910)

John de Kirkeby, bishop of Ely from 1286 to 1290, left the land that Ely house is built on to his successors. William de Luda donated more land (1290 to 1298) & the chapel was built by 1303 (GLHER ref 201785). the house itself wasbuilt by 1320. in 1336, bishop John de Hotham added six messuages (a house & lands), two cellars & 40 acres of land. In 1373, bishop Thomas Arundel became bishop. he extended the house, building the cloisters & a gatehouse. The bishops used this building themselves until 1576, when they leased part to Sir Christopher Hatton for his use as a town or manor house (GLHER ref 082091). Used during the Civil War as prison & later a hospital. Substantial remains have been found in watching briefs by department of Greater London Archaeology 1990 at 31-32, 33 & 34 Ely Place. (Greater London HER)
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Sources of information, references and further reading
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The bibliography owes much to various bibliographies produced by John Kenyon for the Council for British Archaeology, the Castle Studies Group and others.
Suggestions for finding online and/or hard copies of bibliographical sources can be seen at this link.
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*The listed building may not be the actual medieval building, but a building on the site of, or incorporating fragments of, the described site.
This record last updated 26/07/2017 09:21:01

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