Bordesley Hall, Birmingham

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Former namesBordesley Manor
Architectural styleMedieval, Georgian
Bordesley Hall
The ruin of Bordesley Hall by Philip Henry Witton Jr. in 1792 following the Priestley Riots.
Bordesley Hall, Birmingham is located in West Midlands county
Bordesley Hall, Birmingham
Location within West Midlands county
Former namesBordesley Manor
General information
TypeManor House
Architectural styleMedieval, Georgian
LocationBordesley, Warwickshire, England
Coordinates52°28′19.2″N 1°52′15.6″W / 52.472000°N 1.871000°W / 52.472000; -1.871000
Destroyed1791
Demolished1840

Bordesley Hall was an 18th-century manor house near Bordesley, Birmingham, which stood in a 15 hectare (40 acre) park south of the Coventry Road in an area between what is now Small Heath and Sparkbrook.[1] The Georgian house was the successor to an earlier medieval moated manor.[2]

Arising as early as the 7th century,[2] the ancient manor of Bordesley was recorded as Bordesleie or Bordeslea in 1175, an amalgamation of the Old English words Bord and leā, meaning 'Bord's clearing'.[3][4] Early records refer interchangeably to variants of Bordeslea and neighbouring Bordeshale or 'Bord's heath' now Balsall Heath.[5][6] Although now separate districts, the two appear to have originally been one and the same, with the names of both sharing a common origin, likely an Anglian personal name.[7][8][9]

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