Our first visit is to the Grade I listed Loseley Park, where we enjoy a guided tour. This 16th-century manor house is nestled within thousands of acres of rolling countryside, with a colourful patchwork of gardens divided into stunning areas, including a walled garden, rose garden, white garden and vegetable garden. Renowned for its art collections and elegant interiors, the house itself was built in the reign of Elizabeth I and has been home to the More-Molyneux family for over 500 years. The Great Hall is the centrepiece, containing intricate panelling from Henry VIII’s Nonsuch Palace, carvings by Grinling Gibbons, a collection of royal and family portraits and even a minstrels’ gallery. Elsewhere, we discover one of the few paintings of Anne Boleyn, an 18th-century Vauxhall mirror and the King's Room and Queen's Room, used by James I and Elizabeth I respectively. With a Ploughman's lunch completing our time here, Loseley is a wonderful place to start our tour.
Next, we continue to Fulham Palace, lying on the north bank of the River Thames and featuring an idyllic botanic garden. The site has been a residence of the Bishops of London since AD 704, yet the original manor house was abandoned in the mid 13th century. Since then, different Bishops have remodelled, leading to an eclectic mix of architectural styles and tastes. Primarily used as a summertime retreat to escape the London crowds, the palace hosted a range of important visitors, from a lavish banquet for Elizabeth I to breakfast for George III, before it became a place of refuge during the two World Wars. Bishop Stopford was the last Bishop of London to live here in 1973, and we learn more during our guided tour while strolling through the Tudor great hall, Bishop's Library (look out for the secret door!) and the Victorian chapel.