Walls of Inner Courtyard to Eltham Palace, with Chambers Adjoining London, England

Listed Building Data

Walls of Inner Courtyard to Eltham Palace, with Chambers Adjoining has been designated a Grade I listed building in England with the following information, which has been imported from the National Heritage List for England. Please note that not all available data may be shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.

List Entry ID
1218900
Listing Type
listed building
Grade
I
Date Listed
8 June 1973
Name
WALLS OF INNER COURTYARD TO ELTHAM PALACE, WITH CHAMBERS ADJOINING
Location
WALLS OF INNER COURTYARD TO ELTHAM PALACE, WITH CHAMBERS ADJOINING, COURT YARD SE9
District
Greenwich
County
Greater London Authority
Grid Reference
TQ 42428 74058
Easting
542428.0000
Northing
174058.0000

Listed Building Description

Text courtesy of Historic England. © Crown Copyright, reprinted under the Open Government License.

  1. 4412 COURT YARD SE9 (South end)

Walls of inner courtyard to Eltham Palace, with chambers adjoining TQ 4274 53/W33A TQ 4273 59/W33A

I

  1. Palace founded by Bishop Antony Bec of Durham, circa 1300 but most of visible building now seems to be of late C15 or C16. Red brick walls on stone foundations of varying heights form a rough quadrangle around the Great Hall. The lower walls of a series of chambers built against the West Wall have recently been excavated. These are of roughly dressed stone, with smaller rubble filling, and rest on stone foundations. Some brick walling remains above. Part of floor of North-West room remains, sloping to a central gutter. A vaulted, drain- like passage runs west from well to wall above moat. Part of foundations of chapel exposed just South of well. Another passage, with 4-centred arched entrance, runs in from South-East angle. Inner North wall, of red brick, has small openings with gauged brick round arches. A short piece of wall, with 2 4-centred arches, runs south from South-east angle of bridge. From outside the walls are much higher, with 20 or 25 ft of stone foundation running down to moat, and about 8 ft of brick wall above, some of which is defined by pilasters, plinth and coping, forming sunk panels. Towers at angles at South-east a small square turret, largely brick; at north-east a small, square tower; at north-west a large, square projecting angle tower; and at south-west 5 brick turrets or large buttresses-with distinct diaper of blue headers. Also along West Wall a range of brick towers coming much lower on the stone foundation than the other walls. Passages, possibly drains, run out from these towers. A pair of squarer stone towers, with brick upper parts, about half way along West wall. Running out from South-west corner a tall passage or drain with ventilation holes. Brick buttress with diaper pattern to east of its issue.

Listing NGR: TQ4242874058