Later owners included Isabel, wife of Roger de Mortimer, and Richard of Cornwall, second son of King John.
Encumbered by very considerable debts, Sir Jacob sold the manor and, after a further succession of sales, it was bought by George Milward in the early 19th century.
[a][3][4] The small amount of secular building he undertook was mainly in London, or in the West, including Treberfydd in Wales,[5] and Quar Wood and Lechlade, both in Gloucestershire.
[12] They note the inspiration for the Cloister Court at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, a sequence of buildings Pearson constructed some twenty years later, almost at the end of his life.
[14] Historic England's listing record states that the ground floor interiors retain much of Pearson's original work.