Type: Sites and monuments databases or inventories Publisher: Archaeology Data Service
Former conventual building, part of the Hospital of St. John, thought to date to the late 12th century and purchased by the Corporation in 1580; much altered circa 1623, when it was converted to a court house. The building has been used for council meetings by the Old Corporation since 161...
Type: Sites and monuments databases or inventories Publisher: Archaeology Data Service
Now Chapel Court. The earliest hospital on the site was a small unendowed establishment founded about the end of the 11th century. It ceased to exist during the 12th century and was superseded by the hospital erected by Bishop Robert between 1136 and 1166. This was known as the Lepers Hosp...
Type: Sites and monuments databases or inventories Publisher: Archaeology Data Service
Disused chapel, 15th century with 16th century alterations. It was the chapel of the hospital for the poor founded in 1398; refounded in 1597 and dissolved after 1752. Th rest of the hospital buildings were demolished in 1845.
Type: Sites and monuments databases or inventories Publisher: Archaeology Data Service
Site of Mediaeval hospital and post-Mediaeval Almshouse. Extant in 1189, it survived the Dissolution and was rebuilt in 1575. Demolished in 1862.
Type: Sites and monuments databases or inventories Publisher: Archaeology Data Service
This is the Hospital of the Holy Trinity, generally known as Whitgifts Hospital and it was built by Archbishop John Whitgift, in 1596-9. It is an unusually perfect example of the Elizabethan quadrangular style, has gabled gateways in the East and West fronts, and is two-storeyed of stone d...
Type: Sites and monuments databases or inventories Publisher: Archaeology Data Service
The hospital Spittal in the Street, built in 1396 for a warden and poor persons, was connected with the chantry chapel of St. Edmund, founded in 1343. The chantry was already known as the chapel of St. Edmund, Spittal of the Street, although there is apparently no documentary evidence of a...
Type: Sites and monuments databases or inventories Publisher: Archaeology Data Service
Disused chapel, 15th century with 16th century alterations. It was the chapel of the hospital for the poor founded in 1398; refounded in 1597 and dissolved after 1752. Th rest of the hospital buildings were demolished in 1845.
Type: Sites and monuments databases or inventories Publisher: Archaeology Data Service
Site of Mediaeval hospital and post-Mediaeval Almshouse. Extant in 1189, it survived the Dissolution and was rebuilt in 1575. Demolished in 1862.
Type: Sites and monuments databases or inventories Publisher: Archaeology Data Service
Now Chapel Court. The earliest hospital on the site was a small unendowed establishment founded about the end of the 11th century. It ceased to exist during the 12th century and was superseded by the hospital erected by Bishop Robert between 1136 and 1166. This was known as the Lepers Hosp...
Type: Sites and monuments databases or inventories Publisher: Archaeology Data Service
Hospital founded in 1601, and rebuilt in 1873-4. Its use was converted to an almshouse.