Queen Victoria and Prince Albert purchased this 342-acre estate in East Cowes, Isle of Wright, in 1845 for use as a summer vacation home, but after Queen Vic’s death in 1901, the house became the property of the state and transformed into a small, private museum in honor of the late queen.
The property went on sale in 2018 for a market price of about $701,000. Some have speculated a royal ghost haunts the halls which brought the price down from what many expected it would be but don’t take our word for it – it’s open to the public for tours.
Royal Palace of Madrid
While the Royal Palace of Madrid is the official residence of the Spanish royal family in the city of Madrid (go figure), it is now only used for state ceremonies. It has over 135,000 square meters of floor space, and contains a staggering three thousand, four hundred, and eighteen rooms – it is the largest functioning royal palace and the largest by floor area in Europe.
King Felipe VI and the rest of the royal family do not reside in the palace, choosing instead the significantly more modest Palace of Zarzuela on Madrid's outskirts. The current building was built between 1738 to 1755, after spending more than seven hundred years as outposts and fortresses, after suffering fires, invading armies, and numerous regime changes.
Bagshot Park
While it’s possible J.R.R. Tolkein took a little bit of naming inspiration for Bag End of Bagshot Row, The Shire, there’s nothing small or idyllic about this huge property. It’s a hunting lodge fit for a king built between 1631 and 1633 and taking up fifty-one acres of Windsor Great Park.
It’s taken several different forms over the centuries before becoming home to Prince Edward and his family. Incredibly, initial rent for the Prince’s family was only $5,600 a year, but after extensive renovations, that number skyrocketed to around a hundred thousand a year. That’s quite the upgrade.
Royal Palace of Amsterdam
One of three palaces in the Netherlands at the disposal of the monarch by Act of Parliament, the Royal Palace of Amsterdam is situated on the west side of Dam Square in the center of Amsterdam, opposite the World War II War Memorial and next to the Nieuwe Kerk, a 15th-century church. The palace was actually built as a city hall during the Dutch Golden Age in the 17th century.
The building became a royal palace of King Louis Napoleon during the early nineteenth century, and later of the Dutch Royal House. It has a number of notable features, such as a six-meter tall statue of Atlas carrying the globe, a large domed cupola, and two maps of the world on the marble floor.
Prince's Palace of Monaco
Built all the way back in 1191 as a Genoese fortress, the Prince's Palace of Monaco serves as the official residence of the Sovereign Prince of Monaco.
During the 19th and early 20th centuries, the palace and its owners (the same family that has been living and ruling Monaco for over seven hundred years) became symbols of the slightly risque glamour and decadence that were associated with Monte Carlo and the French Riviera, and that glamour became reality when film star Grace Kelly became a chatelaine (a “keeper”) of the palace in 1956. The palace, to this day, remains a residence of the current Prince of Monaco.