MENU
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Our blogs
  • Curators’ blog
  • Conservation blog
  • Gardeners’ blog
  • Authors
Skip to content
Historic Royal Palaces Blog
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Our blogs
  • Curators’ blog
  • Conservation blog
  • Gardeners’ blog
  • Authors

Tower of London

Hampton Court Palace

Banqueting House

Kensington Palace

Kew Palace

Hillsborough Castle

Tag: Earl of Rochester

The wine-fuelled destruction of Charles II’s sundial

The wine-fuelled destruction of Charles II’s...

via Curators' Blog on June 22, 2017
Hear, touch and feel the past in The Lost Palace, our interactive experience taking you on...
ExploreSearch | Comments | Recent | Tags
Explore our blogs
  • Our blogs
  • Curators' blog
  • Conservation blog
  • Gardeners' blog

About Us

  • Curators
  • Conservation

Search All Blogs

Caring Christmas Cleaning Collections conservation Discovery Environment exhibition explaining Fashion Gardens Georgians Hampton Court Palace Henry VIII history Kensington Palace Kings and Queens QATC Queen Victoria research Royal Ceremonial Dress Collection Tapestry Textiles Throne Canopy Tower of London

Latest Tweets

  • Last day of #LondonFashionWeek At HRP, we have one of the largest collections of royal clothing from Henry VIII’s… twitter.com/i/web/status/10977…

    19/02/19 08:30am

  • Explore the evolution of Diana, Princess of Wales’ style in a new display at #KensingtonPalace. Diana: Designing fo… twitter.com/i/web/status/10974…

    18/02/19 01:25pm

  • Mary I was born #OTD in 1516 to Katherine of Aragon and Henry VIII, their only surviving child. After her parents'… twitter.com/i/web/status/10974…

    18/02/19 10:44am

  • Our Blogs
  • Curators’ blog
  • Conservation blog
  • Gardeners’ blog
  • Authors
  • Visit our site

Copyright © Historic Royal Palaces 2019

Historic Royal Palaces is a Registered Charity (No. 1068852)

Historic Royal Palaces reserves the right to edit or delete any comments submitted to this blog without notice if comments are deemed to be spam, offensive, defamatory, libellous or attack a person individually.