Antingham Hall is a Grade II listed building in the North Norfolk local planning authority area, England. First listed on 20 February 1952. Manor house.

Antingham Hall

WRENN ID
western-frieze-umber
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
North Norfolk
Country
England
Date first listed
20 February 1952
Type
Manor house
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

Antingham Hall is a manor house built in the 17th century and extensively remodeled in the 18th century. It features a brick construction with a pantile roof. The main range, dating from the 17th century, has a porch on the south side and an 18th-century outshut to the north. To the left, there is a single bay range from the 17th century that projects forward. At the rear of the main range, there is another long range at right angles, which includes some 17th-century brickwork.

The south facade consists of three bays and is two storeys high, with a flint plinth. The middle bay has an off-centre two-storey porch with an arched opening and a hood mould above it. The house features a six-panel door, and the 18th-century leaded casements are set in larger, blocked openings that once cut into the plinth. The south wall and porch are constructed in English bond with diaper work. There is an 18th-century leaded casement window on the first floor of the porch, and the gable is finely shaped with parapet gables. The right-hand gable end has a stack, and the right-hand gable wall is from the 18th century.

To the west of this range, there is a single bay two-storey range with 17th-century brickwork, now fitted with 18th-century casements on the south side. A 20th-century bay window is located to the west, and a 20th-century stack has been inserted in the south-west corner. Projecting north from the main roof is a long two-storey range with random fenestration, which includes a three-light mullioned and transomed window with ovolo moulding on the ground floor of the west wall. The west wall shows remains of diaper work, while the rest is likely from the 18th century. At the rear of the main range, there is a two-storey stair outshut featuring a late 18th-century sash window; the ground floor has been cut away to allow light into the hall.

Inside, beside the front door, there are re-sited Atlas figures with beards and strapwork at the base, now placed beside an arched overthrow that has egg and dart detail and vegetation in the spandrels. There is also part of a 17th-century stair that has been repositioned, featuring turned balusters and a decorated handrail.

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