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An exclusive enclave situated to the west of Belmont and bordering the Surrey boroughs of Epsom and Ewell and Reigate and
Banstead. The name, which refers to a Saxon landowner, may have originated as early as the eighth century. Cuddington is one
of the ‘finger parishes’ of Sutton, so-called for their elongated north-south shapes. By 1538 the parish had acquired
the stone church of St Mary, a manor house and a handful of productive farms. But this was the year in which Cuddington changed
forever when Henry VIII acquired the entire manor, obliterated all the existing buildings and commissioned the construction
of Nonsuch Palace. The lord of the manor received the priory of Isleworth in compensation for his loss. Although Nonsuch was
primarily intended as a hunting lodge, it was built and decorated to impressive standards of grandeur that were designed to
rival Chambord, the Loire palace of Francis I. Work was just about completed when Henry died in 1547. Nonsuch remained in
the possession of the Crown until Charles II gave it to his mistress Barbara Villiers, who demolished the palace in 1684 and
sold off the building materials. Nearly two centuries passed before civilisation returned with the creation of the suburb
of Worcester Park at the parish’s northern end, where a new St Mary’s was built in 1867 and rebuilt in 1895. The
modern locality of Cuddington, however, lies well to the south-east, where the borough of Sutton juts into Surrey. Wrapped
around Cuddington golf course, laid out in 1929, this is one of south London’s most select neighbourhoods. Progressively
developed with increasingly grand homes (but no community facilities) over the course of the twentieth century, even a bungalow
here can fetch over half a million pounds.
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