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Beaumont Palace, Oxford. Copper plate engraving by Hawkins, published by Alexander Hogg, c. 1780. Beaumont Palace was built in c1130 as a royal palace by Henry I. It was donated to the Carmelites as the site of a monastery by Edward II, but fell into ruin after the Dissolution of the Monasteries. The ruins were used to provide building stone for Christ Church and St John's College and by 1820 nothing remained.
Unique Identifier
AR945022
Type
Image
Purpose
Public
Size
4688px × 3731px
Photo Credit
HIP / Art Resource, NY
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Tags
12TH CENTURY
19th century
Architecture
B&W
B/W
Beaumont Palace
Black & White
Black and white
Britain
British
building
BUILDINGS
CARMELITE
country
England
English
Engraving
Hawkins
LOCATION
Medieval
Monastery
Monochrome
NINETEENTH CENTURY
OXFORD
Oxfordshire
Palace
People
Print Collector4
religion
Religious
ROYAL PALACE
Ruin
RUINED
RUINS
TGN
The Print Collector