AN HISTORIC £65 million Grade II listed mansion house and estate in Basingstoke is up for sale.

Hackwood Park has been put on the market by Christie’s International Real Estate, with the price available on request.

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The last time the home was for sale 2016 it was reported to have a guide price of £65 million – believed to be the most expensive estate ever to be sold publicly on the market.

The 24-bedroom mansion with 20 bathrooms was built in 1683 and comes with a gym, sauna, outdoor and indoor pools, a library, stables, spa, tennis courts and staff quarters.

It is described by Christie’s as a mansion house which “commands majestic, uninterrupted views of the Hampshire countryside from its 260-acre demesne”.

The estate also comes with Grade II listed stables and coach house, four estate cottages, a deer park, parkland, and ancient woodland.

Christie’s said the historic estate “tells the story of the history of England, through its incarnation from royal deer park, to hunting lodge, to grand aristocratic residence”.

It adds: “The origins of Hackwood Estate date back to the 13th century. A restoration mansion, steeped in history and graced with Palladian order and symmetry, Hackwood is ready for the 21st century.”

An article on the history of the house, by Friends of the Willis Museum, states that the house was built in the style of a very large hunting lodge with a Tudor style banqueting hall and ancillary rooms, with much of the furniture supplied by Basingstoke craftsmen.

It was occupied by the Duke of Bolton until the family left in 1850 and the house was let with all of its furniture.

Tenants over the years have included Lord Westbury; the attorney general and chancellor of the exchequer, Charles Hoare; one of the brothers who founded the famous bank, the Earl of Wilton; the Queen of the Belgians and her family after they were evicted from their native land by the Germans in the First World War; and the Marquis Curzon, a retired viceroy of India.

In 1935 Hackwood estate was sold to Sir William Berry, who became Lord Camrose.

He used his home to entertain many rich and famous people, including royalty, ambassadors, prime ministers and entertainers.

He spent money renovating and refurbishing the house, before giving it to the Royal Canadian Army as a hospital, free of payment in 1940, with the condition that it would be restored to him after the war in the same condition.

More than 16,500 troops were treated there and by 1945 it had become the Basingstoke Neurological and Plastic Surgery Hospital, which later moved to Park Prewett Hospital in Rooksdown.

The Second Viscount Camrose, who inherited his father’s title, lived in the house with his wife Princess Aly Khan, whom he married aged 78 in 1986.

Princess Aly Khan, the mother of Aga Khan and his brother, inherited a life interest in Hackwood when Lord Camrose died.

Following her death in 1997, the family wanted to sell the house, its contents and the estate, but struggled to find a buyer.

Eventually, the furniture was sold and the properties were sold to a business consortium, which split the estate into small units.

The house, stable block, three cottages and 160 acres were sold to one buyer, preserving the historic mansion.

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