Vedbygård is a former manor house located within the village of Ruds Vedby, 7 kilometres (4.3 mi) north-east of Høng, Sorø Municipality, Denmark.
He died the same year, leaving the estate to his son, Mikkel Jørgensen Rud, who was knighted by King Christopher, probably in connection with his coronation at Ribe in 1443, and served as his vassal (lensmand) at Kalundborg from 1453–1460, possibly also at Korsør 1458–1462.
In 1738, after the death of her second husband, Lene Grubbe sold Vedbygård to her nephew Joachim Hartwig Johann von Barner whom she owed money.
Vedbygård is a three-winged complex, still surrounded by moats and retaining much of the character of the Rud family's fortified manor house, in spite of numerous alterations and expansions over the centuries.
The north and south wings are in the Late Gothic style, with crow-stepped gables, and date from their reconstruction of the house in the years after the Count's Feud.
[2] The oldest part, the short south wing, integrates surviving elements of the older building which date back to the second half of the 15th century.
A small romantic pavilion with exposed timber framing, projecting from the east gable, is an addition from 1898 by Hans Jørgen Holm.
[2] The somewhat lower west wing was built in the 1750s, replacing a defensive wall and a tower, although only the south gable remain from that day, featuring the original windows and pilasters, in ashlar, and the cornice typical of their time.