Whether you’re looking to host a birthday celebration, an anniversary or a celebration of life, Thrybergh Hall can provide the majestic setting your event deserves.
The name Thrybergh is believed to have its roots in the Anglo-Saxon period but no substantial explanation can be given as to its exact origin. In the Domesday Book it is referred to as Triberga. It can be concluded from early records that a ‘Lord of the Manor’ existed at Thrybergh at the time of the Saxon King Edward the Confessor (1004-1066) and one can imagine a small, self-supporting community clustered round the manor house and the church which lay within sixty yards of each other.
Whether you’re looking to host a birthday celebration, an anniversary or a celebration of life, Thrybergh Hall can provide the majestic setting your event deserves.
The name Thrybergh is believed to have its roots in the Anglo-Saxon period but no substantial explanation can be given as to its exact origin. In the Domesday Book it is referred to as Triberga. It can be concluded from early records that a ‘Lord of the Manor’ existed at Thrybergh at the time of the Saxon King Edward the Confessor (1004-1066) and one can imagine a small, self-supporting community clustered round the manor house and the church which lay within sixty yards of each other.