Great Suffolk Street

What did № 7537 do at Great Suffolk Street?

By Legacy Team·

Suffolk Street's Royal Legacy Standing on Great Suffolk Street in Southwark, you're standing where power and privilege once converged in Tudor England. Thomas Brandon, Duke of Suffolk, transformed this very spot into more than just a nobleman's residence—Suffolk House became a seat of royal authority where Brandon exercised the extraordinary privilege of minting money, a power granted to him by his connection to Henry VII through his advantageous marriage to the king's daughter.

This wasn't merely a home; it was a practical center of economic control, where the clinking of coins being struck reflected Brandon's elevated status in the Tudor hierarchy. The house stood as a tangible symbol of how a well-placed marriage and royal favor could elevate a man to such prominence that even the machinery of the realm—literally the production of currency—operated from his own doorstep in this corner of medieval Southwark.

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