Painswick House, originally known as "Buenos Ayres", was built early 18th century by Charles Hyett to escape the bad smog of Gloucester. The grounds ... read more
The house is mainly the creation of one man, Graham Baron Ash. He has the 16th century house considerably extended and remodelled in the 20th century, between the two ... read more
Oxburgh Hall was built around 1482 by Sir Edmund Bedingfield. Since then, the house has been continuously inhabited by the Catholic family Bedingfield. Today the ... read more
Owlpen Manor, a Tudor house, was built and rebuilt between 1450 and 1616, but the site dates back to the 9th century and to the de Olepenne family in 1174. It was sold ... read more
Osterley Park was built in the 18th century by the celebrated architect Robert Adam for the Child family. After WW II it was given to the National Trust by George ... read more
Osborne House was the summer retreat of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. They didn't like Brighton and to spent their summers on the Isle of Wight. The house was ... read more
Nunwell House, dating back to the 11th century, is a beautiful historic house in Tudor and Jacobean style. Set in 2 ha (5 acres) of tranquil gardens it is privately ... read more
Nunnington Hall as we see it today dates mainly from the 17th and 18th century, when it was owned by the Viscounts Preston. The last private owners, Margaret Rutson and ... read more
Nostell Priory is built in 1733 on the site of a medieval priory, and was commissioned by the Winn family. The interior were decorated by Robert Adams and contains an ... read more
Norton Conyers House was acquired by Sir Richard Graham in 1624, and is today still in the home of Sir James, the 11th baronet, and Lady Graham. The House, ... read more
Normanby Hall, set in a 122 ha (300 acres) country park, is owned by the Sheffield Family, former Dukes of Buckingham, and the original owners of Buckingham Palace. The ... read more
Newstead Abbey, a former Augustinian priory, is best known as the ancestral home of Lord Byron. It was granted in 1540 by Henry the VIII to Sir John Byron. It was sold ... read more
Newby Hall, an 18th century house, is the seat of the Compton family. With its stunning collections, its beautiful gardens, Adventure Playground and Miniature Railway, ... read more
Muncaster Castle is owned and lived-in by the Pennington family -Barons of Muncaster- for over 800 years. With its stunning collections and beautiful gardens, ... read more
Mount Stuart House is the ancestral home of the Marquesses of Bute was build in the 1870s, replacing an earlier house which burnt down shortly before. With its stunning ... read more
Mount Stewart was the Irish seat of the Marquesses of Londonderry (the Vane-Tempest-Stewart family). It is surrounded by a stunning garden remade by the Marchioness of ... read more
Mount Ephraim is well known for its 4 ha (10 acres) of stunning Edwardian terraced gardens in the beautiful Kent countryside. read more
Mount Edgcumbe House has been the seat of the Edgcumbe family since the 1550s until 1971. The 7th Earl sold the estate to the Cornwall County Council and Plymouth City ... read more
Mottistone Manor, in the hands of the National Trust, dates from the 15th or early 16th century, with additions in the 16th and 17th century. In the 1920s it was ... read more
Mottisfont Abbey is an 18th-century house with a medieval priory at its heart, surrounded by beautiful gardens. Maud Russell made Mottisfont her home in the 1930s, ... read more