Deene Park, the seat of the Brudenell family since 1514,[1] is a country manor located 5 miles (8 kilometres) north-east of Corby in the county of Northamptonshire, England.
The hall itself is a Grade I listed building dating back to the 14th century which has been modified several times since then to create the current structure.
[7] The manor house has been expanded around its courtyard from its sixteenth-century core, represented by its great hall, which was given its screen panelling and fireplace in 1571.
[8] The early 19th-century Bow Room contains the Brudenell library, collected in the 16th century by Sir Thomas Tresham and his son-in-law, Sir Thomas Brudenell, 1st Earl of Cardigan, though the collection no longer includes the manuscript of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales[9] or the last copy of Magna Carta in private hands.
The large gardens designed by David Nightingale Hicks feature a parterre overlooking the lake, and a newly planted avenue.