Englefield House
![Englefield House exterior view][float-right]Englefield House is a Grade II* listed Jacobean country house of late 16th-century origins, located in the village of Englefield, Berkshire, England, within a 14,000-acre estate registered as Grade II parkland.[1][2]
The house, substantially rebuilt and altered in the 1820s and 1850s–60s by architect Richard Armstrong, features Elizabethan and Victorian architectural elements including formal terraces and a surrounding landscaped park with woodland gardens.[1][3]
Originally the seat of the Englefield family from the medieval period, the estate was seized by Queen Elizabeth I in 1583 following Sir Francis Englefield's implication in the Throckmorton Plot, a Catholic conspiracy against the Crown, and subsequently passed to Sir Francis Walsingham before entering the Benyon family through marriage in the late 18th century, where it has remained in private ownership.[2][1][3]
The Benyons, descending from East India Company governor Richard Benyon, have maintained the property as their family home, with modern management under Richard and Zoe Benyon overseeing conservation and estate activities.[2][3]