The Court House in East Quantoxhead, Somerset, England has a medieval tower and other parts of the building which date from the 17th century.
[5] The only remaining section of the medieval house is the four-storey tower with battlements which was dated in a survey during 2003 by Historic England as coming from the late 14th or early 15th century.
[7] By the time George Luttrell inherited Dunster castle in 1571, it was dilapidated, with the family preferring to live at Court House.
He remarried to Silvestra Capps who persuaded him to expand the existing building with the addition of the south west wing and new porch.
[4][9] After Capps death in 1655 the house was leased as a farmhouse, and although some minor damage was done during the next few hundred years when it was used as a granary the only structural alteration was the addition of a door at wagon level to enable loading and unloading.
and other "sporting" memorabilia in the house includes oak staves used for glatting to catch Conger eels with dogs on the nearby beach at Kilve.
In the hall the fireplace mantel, which dates from 1629, bears the Luttrell coat of arms with soldiers on either side.
[4] The scenes are taken from a book Vita, Passio, et Resurrectio Jesu Christi published in Antwerp in 1566.