Hardwick Hall
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Hardwick Hall
Summary
Hardwick Hall is an art museum[1]. It ranks in the top 0.6% of art_museum entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (952 views/month, #10 of 1,666).[2]
Key Facts
- Hardwick Hall is located in Ault Hucknall[3].
- Hardwick Hall is in the country of United Kingdom[4].
- Hardwick Hall's instance of is recorded as art museum[5].
- Hardwick Hall's instance of is recorded as historic house museum[6].
- Hardwick Hall's instance of is recorded as English country house[7].
- Hardwick Hall's instance of is recorded as prodigy house[8].
- Hardwick Hall's architect is recorded as Robert Smythson[9].
- Hardwick Hall's architect is recorded as Bess of Hardwick[10].
- Hardwick Hall's maintained by is recorded as National Trust[11].
- Hardwick Hall is owned by Bess of Hardwick[12].
- Hardwick Hall is owned by National Trust[13].
- Hardwick Hall is operated by English Heritage[14].
- Hardwick Hall is operated by National Trust[15].
- Hardwick Hall's architectural style is recorded as Elizabethan architecture[16].
- The location of Hardwick Hall was Derbyshire[17].
- Hardwick Hall's postal code is recorded as S44 5QJ[18].
- Hardwick Hall is part of National Trust[19].
- Hardwick Hall's Commons category is recorded as Hardwick Hall[20].
- 1590 marks the founding of Hardwick Hall[21].
- Hardwick Hall's OS grid reference is recorded as SK4630563733[22].
- Hardwick Hall's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 53.168777, 'lon': -1.308742}[23].
- Hardwick Hall's official website is recorded as https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/hardwick-hall[24].
- Hardwick Hall's has facility is recorded as accessible toilet[25].
- Hardwick Hall's described at URL is recorded as https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/hardwick-hall[26].
- Hardwick Hall's described by source is recorded as The English House[27].
Body
Founding
1590 marks the founding of Hardwick Hall[21].
Identity
Hardwick Hall is part of National Trust[19].
Operations
Operators include English Heritage[14] and National Trust[15].
Ownership
Owners include Bess of Hardwick[12], a lady-in-waiting[28], 1527–1608[29], of Kingdom of England[30], specialised in politics[31] and National Trust[13], a national trust[32], in United Kingdom[33], founded in 1895[34], headquartered in Swindon[35].
Why It Matters
Hardwick Hall ranks in the top 0.6% of art_museum entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (952 views/month, #10 of 1,666).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[36]