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Lullingstone Roman Villa is a villa built during the Roman occupation of Britain, situated in Lullingstone near the village of Eynsford in Kent, south-eastern England. The villa is located in the Darent Valley , along with six others, including those at Crofton , Crayford and Dartford . [ 1 ]
Lullingstone is a rural hamlet in the civil parish of Eynsford, in the Sevenoaks district of Kent, England, located south east of Swanley. It is best known for its castle, Roman villa and its public golf course. Lullingstone was a civil parish until 1955. The parish was in Axstane Hundred and its successor Dartford Rural District.
The excavations at Lullingstone Roman Villa in 2012. Palmyra in 2008. Colledge's first experience of an archaeological dig was at Lullingstone Roman Villa in the late 1950s. He later recalled that Lt.-Col. Geoffrey Meates, who was in charge of the site, ran the excavations with military discipline. In 1960, Colledge visited the Middle East for ...
The Black Lullingstone Loop is a 4-mile perimeter walk, via Beechen Wood (a Site of Special Scientific Interest [12]), passing Lullingstone Roman Villa, Lullingstone Castle. It passes many of the ancient trees in the park. The Red Discovery Trail is a 1.5-mile child-friendly activity trail. The Blue Horse Trail is 4 miles. Other footpaths ...
"Frocester Court Roman Villa (113199)". Research records (formerly PastScape). Great Barrington Barrington: Historic England. "Great Barrington Villa (332436)". Research records (formerly PastScape). Great Lemhill Lechlade: Historic England. "Great Lemhill Villa (332221)". Research records (formerly PastScape). Great Rissington
The house, now known as Lullingstone Castle was built between 1543 and 1580 by Sir Percyvall Hart as Lullingstone House. It is a Grade II* listed building in red brick and of three storeys. Traces of the original 16th-century building can be seen in the north and east fronts, between which is the remodelled two-storey Queen Anne entrance front ...
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1966. "A Bronze Mount from the Roman Villa at Lullingstone, Kent", The Antiquaries Journal 46(1). 85–87. 1979. A corpus of wheel-thrown pottery in Anglo-Saxon graves; 1996. (with Hill, P.). Two Anglo-Saxon cemeteries at Beckford, Hereford and Worcester CBA Research Reports 103. ISBN 978-1-872414-69-0. 2008.