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Anne of Cleves House formed part of her divorce settlement from Henry VIII in 1541, although she never actually lived there. The 16th century timber - framed Wealden hall - house contains wide - ranging collections of Sussex interest.
"You can see Lewes lying like a box of toys under a great amphitheatre of chalky hills." So wrote William Morris, one of the many to comment on the idyllic setting of this historic town.
A Tudor house with Georgian additions in downland park setting. Important English and European Old Master paintings, fine furniture and notable Sevres porcelain.
A 16thC Sussex brick and flint house around a courtyard. Interior features include a panelled Long Gallery, old masters' portraits, furniture, embroidery and 18thC bronzes.
The remains of a great Cluniac priory built from 1077 and destroyed on the orders of Henry VIII. There is a monument to the Battle of Lewes, a herb garden and display panels.
Open 2 April to 29 October: Weds & Sats 2:00 - 5:30pm A small weather-boarded house, the home of Leonard and Virginia Woolf until Leonard's death in 1969. The rooms reflect the life and times of the literary circle in which they moved.
Fully-restored station buildings and a standard-gauge steam engine pulling carriages along 1 mile of track. Museum and signal box. Trains are also diesel-hauled on certain days.