GREENWICH PALACE
&
THE OLD ROYAL NAVAL COLLEGE
TIMELINE OF KEY EVENTS
1427
The build of Bellacourt (a modest medieval manor house) was started by Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester.
The Duke, brother to King Henry V, was granted the Manor of Greenwich by his nephew, Henry VI.
1447
The Duke died in prison (accused of treason) and Margaret of Anjou, Consort to Henry VI, took over. She renamed it the Palace of Placentia (pleasant place).
Margaret enlarged the palace, put in windows, built a pier and laid down terra-cotta tiles bearing her royal monogram.
Placentia was confiscated from Margaret by Edward IV (an unpopular king), who ruled for 22 years. During his reign, he greatly enlarged and improved the buildings.
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The programme of alteration was undertaken by Robert Kettlewell, purveyor of works at Eltham Palace.
1461
1482
Edward IV invited the Observant Friars to establish a house at Greenwich – the first to be built in England – on a site adjoining the palace.
1491
Prince Henry (to become Henry VIII) was born at Greenwich Palace.
1505
Placentia was elevated from a manor to a palace by Henry VII. Old buildings were demolished and new ones built under the direction of master Robert Virtue.
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Greenwich Palace was a red-brick building, nothing like the one we see today.
1509
On 11th June 1509, seventeen-year-old King Henry VIII married twenty-three-year-old Catherine of Aragon, his brother Arthur’s widow, in the Queen’s Closet at Greenwich Palace.
1516-1547
Henry VIII threw the first masquerade party ever seen in England.
Henry commissioned new stables for his coursers and the horses he used for jousting and hunting.
Close to the stables, the king commissioned his great armoury mill. Up to this point, the top-quality armour worn by man and horse, both in the tiltyard and on the field of battle, had to be imported.
In 1515, Henry also constructed a mill, which marked the start of what was to be the Greenwich Armouries.
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An area was laid out of approximately 650ft long and 250 feet wide, and on its western edge were built permanent grandstands in the form of two towers and a linking gallery.
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Henry VIII’s Greenwich became a fully self-contained royal headquarters.
Mary I and Elizabeth I were both born at Greenwich Palace.