Building    From 1245 

Savoy Palace

Categories: Property

British History Online informs that a house was "built by ... Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester, in 1245; but in the thirtieth year of Henry III. it was granted by the king to Peter, Count of Savoy ... " after whom it was then named.

King John II of France was a guest here when he died in April 1364.

On the 13th June 1381, the Palace of the Savoy was burned and destroyed by rebels under the leadership of Wat Tyler. The palace was not restored but modified to serve as a prison. In the early 1500s, funded from Henry VII's will, the Savoy was rebuilt as a hostel and hospital for the poor. But it was used more as barracks and a prison. Most of it was swept away for the construction of Waterloo Bridge and the Embankment.

Our picture shows the Savoy in about 1760. It's difficult to determine quite when it ceased to exist but the Picture source website tells the story (or did - it's now, 2024, a dead link).

This 1746 map shows the Savoy estate, darkly shaded, to the west (left) of Somerset House and Water Gate. Mapping this onto the current street plan, starting from the Embankment and travelling anti-clockwise, the boundary ran approximately: up the east side of the Waterloo Bridge approach road; along a line parallel to Strand but a little to the south; down Savoy Buildings and Savoy Hill, to Savoy Place which is about where the river front was (before the embankment was created); along the old river front to Waterloo Bridge.

That's what we got from the map but Wikipedia has some more details, which brings other areas in, such as the Savoy Hotel, Shell Mex House, the area around Burleigh House and the Lyceum Theatre and Somerset House.

That map shows 3 churches within the Savoy: French Church, Dutch Church and Gerin (illegible, German possibly?) Church, as well as "Jesuites Ground" and "St John". None of them where today's Savoy Chapel is.

See also: St Pauls German Evangelical Reformed Church and German Lutheran church in London.

2024: The history of the ownership of the Savoy is very well covered by A London Inheritance. Even just listing the owners gives a long list: Simon de Montfort; Peter, Earl of Savoy (from whom the estate got its name); a small religious establishment; Queen Eleanor of Provence; her son, Edmund, 1st Earl of Lancaster (1245-96) (at which the Savoy Estate became part of the Duchy of Lancaster); his son Thomas; Henry, another son of Edmund; Henry’s son Henry Grossmont: his daughter Blanche and her husband John of Gaunt; their son Henry Bolingbroke; Richard II; Henry Bolingbroke again in 1399, but now he's Henry IV.

A London Inheritance says "Henry IV defined that the estates belonging to the Duchy of Lancaster should be held by the Monarch as a private estate, separate to all other estates, and should descend through the Monarchy." And that's how it stands today.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Savoy Palace

Commemorated ati

Savoy - CRII

SH In the Savoy Palace in 1658 by order of Oliver Cromwell, the confession of...

Read More

Savoy - crown

SH Within these precincts stood the Palace of Savoy, the erection of which w...

Read More

Savoy - feathers

SH Here, John of Valois, King of France, when brought to England as a captiv...

Read More

Savoy Hotel - AR-MR

SH On the 13th June 1381, the Palace of the Savoy was burned and destroyed b...

Read More

Other Subjects

Sir Ebenezer Howard

Sir Ebenezer Howard

Founder of the garden city movement. Born 62 Fore Street. Travelled to America in 1871 where he tried farming and was in Chicago at the time that it was being rebuilt after a great fire. The new su...

Person, Architecture, Property, Social Welfare, USA

1 memorial
Walter Lawrence & Son Ltd

Walter Lawrence & Son Ltd

Building firm active in 1935.

Group, Property

2 memorials
James Edmondson

James Edmondson

Builder. Born in Clerkenwell, the son of a carpenter, Isaac, from Cumberland. His first major development was the streets around Sotheby Road in Highbury and he went on to develop areas of Crouch E...

Person, Property

1 memorial
W. & D. McGregor

W. & D. McGregor

Builders active in 1882.

Group, Property

1 memorial
Turkish baths at Imperial Hotel

Turkish baths at Imperial Hotel

The picture shows the frigidarium, with statues in niches near the tops of the columns. The Turkish baths, constructed as part of the 1913 extension to the Imperial Hotel, were the subject of an e...

Building, Community / Clubs, Property

1 memorial

Previously viewed

Robert Baden-Powell - Wimbledon

Robert Baden-Powell - Wimbledon

SW19, Windmill Road, Wimbledon Windmill Museum

The gray plaque is above the entrance to the windmill museum; the brown plaque is at the centre of the four windows towards the left of o...

3 subjects commemorated
Sun-dial from Waterloo Bridge

Sun-dial from Waterloo Bridge

NW3, Antrim Grove, Antrim Gardens

The baluster/sundial presents no interesting detail to photograph so we have instead presented a close-up of one of the crowned letters o...

1 subject commemorated
King Charles I

King Charles I

Born Fife. Until the age of 11 he was only the 'spare' but then his 18-year old brother Henry died (probably of typhoid) and Charles became the heir, ascending the throne in 1625 on the death of hi...

Person, Execution, Royalty, Seriously Famous, Scotland

13 memorials