About Bisham
Bisham is a village and civil parish in the Windsor and Maidenhead district of Berkshire. According to the 2001 census it had a population of 1,149. The village is on the River Thames, north of which is Marlow in Buckinghamshire with the post code of SL7. Bisham is home to one of Sport England's National Sports Centre.
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Since the Dissolution of the Monasteries, the manor house of Bisham has been known as Bisham Abbey. The abbey itself - which was actually a priory for most of its life, stood alongside and must have dominated the estate in its day. The building we now refer to as the Abbey. The manor house is based around an ancient preceptory built by the Knights Templar who owned the manor in the 13th century. The magnificent hall therefore dates from about 1260. There was a separate chapel somewhere nearby which predated the foundation of the abbey. The order was suppressed in 1307 and Edward II seized the place. He used it as a luxurious gaol for imprisoned dignitaries. Queen Elizabeth of Scots, wife of King Robert the Bruce, was here in 1310, along with her step-daughter Princess Marjorie and sister-in-law, Lady Christine of Carrick.
The great Hoby family took up residence in the early 16th century. From around 1557, Sir Philip Hoby erected the great dining hall and the suite of rooms to the north-west of the old hall. He was the one who added the fine bay window to its northern end. The imposing brick tower was added by his brother in 1560. Queen Elizabeth I spent a number of her years of imprisonment here during Bloody Mary's reign and, later, returned to visit Lady Hoby under happier circumstances. The latter owner has left the most enduring of legacies to the house: for her ghost still walk its corridors.


