Stydd Hall
Alternative namesStydd Castle
General information
Architectural styleElizabethan, Jacobean
Town or cityYeaveley
CountryEngland

Stydd Hall (Castle) is a country house located near to the village of Yeaveley, Derbyshire, 15 miles (24 km) west of Derby, close to the A515 between Wyaston to the north, Great Cubley to the south, Yeaveley to the east and Alkmonton to the northeast. Stydd had formerly been an independent township but has all but disappeared: the hall and a farm are all that remains.[1]

Stydd Hall is still occupied and in use as a farmhouse but had previously been described as in need of repair and restoration.[1]
The hall remains private property, but is visible from adjacent public footpaths.

History and buildings

It was originally a medieval fortified preceptory, of the Knights Hospitaller, known as Yeaveley Preceptory (or sometimes Stydd Preceptory) founded in 1190. The present site consists of a large moated platform, which supports the remains of the 13th-century chapel of St Mary and St John the Baptist, dissolved in 1540 as part of dissolution of the monasteries. The north wall, with its doorway and three lancet windows, stands to roof height. In the centre of the platform and built on the foundations of the domestic ranges of the preceptory, is a 17th-century brick tower house with a substantial quantity of medieval masonry in the south wall. The house is mainly Elizabethan or Jacobean in date, with mid-19th-century alterations. The chapel is a Grade I listed building.[2]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "STYDD HALL AND CHAPEL RUINS". Doomsday Reloaded. BBC. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  2. Historic England. "Remains of Chapel of SS Mary & John the Baptist (1109732)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 27 November 2012.

See also

52°57′26″N 1°44′43″W / 52.9573°N 1.7454°W / 52.9573; -1.7454


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