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There are centuries of history in this medieval masterpiece

This castle that never was in Tewkesbury is a home fit for a king

Invest in this one of a kind property and you can be both King of the Castle and Lord of the Manor.

The Grade II* listed King John’s Castle in The Mythe at Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire, doesn’t just come with centuries of history, it also carries a title which is transferred from owner to owner – that of Lord of the Manor of Mythe and Mythe Hook.

The grand prefix doesn’t have the privileges of peerage, although one might like to drop it in when booking a table at an upmarket restaurant.

It does, however, come with the right to ferry people across the river in times of flood, which could be useful should the dramatic scenes of 2007, when both the Severn and the Avon, which meet in Tewkesbury, broke their banks and the town was submerged.

In spite of its thick walls and square tower giving it the look of one, , not in nature.

Locally it is referred to as the hunting lodge of King John, perhaps England’s least popular king.

But there have been structures on the site that pre-date John by nearly 1,000 years, going back to Roman times.

The first owner on record is Queen Matilda, wife of William the Conqueror.