BP vs Buckler

Master Timeline

Complete chronological account of the Great House Farm dispute, from medieval origins to present day. Each event links to supporting evidence where available.

114 timeline entries from 1100 to present_day, plus 40 evidence entries.

Date Location Event Document Reference Source / Link
1100 Llandough, Glamorgan Robert Fitzhamon grants the lordship of Llandough to the Walsche family, establishing feudal control of the area that includes the future Great House Farm. Evidence
1215 Llandough Church A substantial stone residence, Tŷ Mawr ('Great House'), is constructed beside St Dochdwy's church at Llandough as a manorial house, later known as Great House Farm. Evidence
1215 Monastic Estate Tewkesbury Abbey and the Prior of Cardiff hold Great House and its lands, taking tithes and agricultural income from Llandough for over three centuries. Evidence
1215 Great House Site — NE Slope Archaeological evidence confirms medieval occupation of the Great House site. Sherds of C12th, C13th, and early C14th pottery were found on the steep slope immediately NE of the house, implying contin... Evidence GGAT HER PRN 02038s via Archwilio RCAHMW Inventory Vol IV Part 2
1444 Raglan Sir William Thomas Herbert of Raglan purchases the manor and lordship of Llandough and St Mary Church, bringing them into the Herbert family's territorial network. Evidence
1536 Legal Chambers Sir Edward Carne, a lawyer and diplomat, purchases the Llandough lordship from the 2nd Earl of Worcester, continuing high‑status lay ownership of the manor. Evidence
1539 Great House Henry VIII's Dissolution of the Monasteries transfers Tewkesbury's ecclesiastical holdings, including Llandough lands, to the Crown as secular property. Evidence
1543 Estate Office Post‑Dissolution grants move Llandough through lay owners and into the wider Herbert–Pembroke orbit, later feeding into what becomes the Bute estate. Evidence
1552 Manorial Court The Bute–Pembroke estate treats itself as manorial lord, issuing leases for Llandough Farm (about 166 acres) and recording long‑standing occupiers as tenants. Evidence
1560 Great House Farm The Vaughan family, a minor gentry family, become the chief freehold farmers of Great House from the mid C16th. They occupy the property for over two centuries, until the late C18th. Several memorial ... Evidence GGAT HER PRN 02038s via Archwilio
1667 Great House Farm A Williams ancestor is admitted to Great House via the manorial court, paying a substantial entry fine remembered in family tradition as a purchase, while estate records treat it as leasehold. Evidence
1677 Estate Records Through marriage, the Llandough lordship passes into the Talbot estate at Penrice and Margam, while the Williams family continues in occupation at Great House. Evidence
1770 Estate Transfer Great House passes through elite owners, including Valentine Morris and Sir Mark Wood, before later consolidation into the Bute estate. Evidence
1794 Title Office Sir Mark Wood acquires title and treats Great House as a revenue asset within his wider property portfolio, before it is surveyed and later taken into Bute hands. Evidence
1800 Great House In the early C19th, the freehold of Great House is acquired by the Bute Estate — one of the largest landed estates in Wales, controlled by the Marquess of Bute. The manorial courts for Llandough and L... Evidence GGAT HER PRN 02038s via Archwilio RCAHMW Inventory Vol IV Part 2
1818 Estate Records Lambert Williams of Cardiff enters formal written agreements with the Bute estate between 1818 and 1835, evidencing the Williams family as a recognised legal entity in local property dealings. Evidence
1818 Estate Accounts Chief rents of Llandough are transferred into the manorial rental accounts, simplifying estate bookkeeping and packaging obligations for future buyers. Evidence
1820 Estate Offices A land exchange between the Marquess of Bute and Lord Plymouth in Llandough consolidates Great House within Bute's controlled block of estates. Evidence
1821 Rent Collection Llandough and Cogan appear in Bute rentals from 1821 onward, consolidating manorial rents under a single administrative ledger controlled by the estate. Evidence
1824 Survey Office Following Sir Mark Wood's property auction, surveyor David Stewart records Great House Farm under the alias 'Cedfin' in the Bute estate survey of Glamorgan holdings. Evidence
1840 Estate Registry Census and tithe records shift terminology from 'Great House' to 'Great House Farm,' downgrading the property from a seat of governance to a commercial agricultural unit. Evidence
1870 Great House Living Room The Williams family discovers a Roman soldier in full armor beneath the living room floor while replacing flagstones. This critical archaeological evidence is not formally recorded or disclosed. Evidence
1876 Estate Offices The Bute Estate carves out 33 acres from Great House Farm for Llandough Limeworks, treating the land as their own property to lease to industry, ignoring the Williams claim. Evidence
1880 Estate Records The property is systematically rebranded from 'Court House' to 'Grange' to 'Farm' in successive records, demoting occupants from gentry with tenure to mere tenant farmers. Evidence
1880 Great House — Rear Wing During building work at Great House, an extraordinary discovery is made under the floor of the rear wing: a cache of armour, later identified as medieval ironwork. The find is reported to the National... Evidence GGAT HER PRN 02038s via Archwilio — Supplementary Notes (R.F. Sugget, December 1988)
1897 Great House Farm / Lavernock Point Thomas Williams of Great House daily carts Guglielmo Marconi and his radio equipment to and from Lavernock Point by horse and cart. On 13 May 1897 Marconi transmits the first wireless signal across op Evidence
1897 Great House Farm / Lavernock Point Guglielmo Marconi slept at Great House Farm in a four-poster bed in May 1897 while conducting his wireless telegraphy experiments. Between 11-13 May 1897, the Williams family rode Marconi and his equi... Evidence [Source] [Source]
1900 Great House Farm Mary Williams is born into the family at Great House Farm, inheriting the Williams claim and continuing three centuries of unbroken occupation and assertion of ownership. Evidence
1915 Great House Farm / Grangetown Daniel Thomas, a quarryman in Grangetown who had obtained equitable title from Bute Estate in exchange for his own land in Llandaff, died in 1915. Bute Estates attempted to evict the Williams family f... Evidence [Source]
1916 Great House Farm, Llandough John Williams is granted an agricultural tenancy of Great House Farm by the Marquess of Bute, formalising the family's occupation under a Bute estate tenancy. Evidence
1920 Great House Farm Mary Williams marries Frederick Buckler but retains her maiden name, consistent with local custom and the family's understanding that the Williams lineage embodies the historic basis of title. Evidence
1926 Estate Sale The Marquess of Bute sells Great House Farm. Sale documents list it under Bute ownership, with no mention of the Williams family's three-century occupation or claim. Evidence
1926 Purchase Agreement The Penarth Estate Company purchases Great House Farm at auction, acquiring whatever title the Bute estate held, subject to the unresolved Williams possession and claim. Evidence
1930 Great House Farm Despite the 1926 sale, the Williams-Buckler family remains in continuous occupation, maintaining the property and asserting their ownership against external claims. Evidence
1949 Great House Farm, Llandough The tenancy of Great House Farm is intended to be transferred from John Williams to his son-in-law Frederick Buckler, reflecting the family's internal succession arrangements. Evidence
1953 Great House Farm Frederick Buckler makes the last known rent payment around 1953. From this point, the family pay nothing to any claimant, and their occupation becomes wholly adverse under limitation law. Evidence
1955 Title Office / Great House Farm Frederick Buckler's tenancy expires on 2 February 1955. Adverse possession begins unambiguously. The family attempts to register their possessory claim but lack the formal deeds the registry requires. Evidence
1959 Great House Farm, Llandough Mary Buckler, nee Williams, formally asserts a hereditary ownership claim to Great House Farm, contending that the family's centuries-old occupation gives rise to a superior equitable title not exting... Evidence
1962 Court — First Possession Order Western Ground Rents, predecessor to BP Pension Trust, obtains the first possession order against the Bucklers on 11 December 1962 (Judge Temple Morris QC). It is never enforced due to the family's re Evidence
1963 GEC-Marconi Telecommunications Site, Llandough The Marconi Company (by then part of English Electric) constructs a telecommunications facility adjacent to Great House Farm. Surveys proceed without investigating the Williams ownership claim or Roma Evidence
1963 Great House Farm The Barry and Vale Archaeological Group conducted the first recorded excavation on the Great House Farm site. They uncovered the corner of a substantial 12th- or 13th-century house, along with a gully... Evidence [Source]
1969 Great House Farm, Llandough Great House Farm is sold to BP Pension Trust Ltd as part of a portfolio transaction. The sale transfers the freehold interest to the BP corporate group, setting the stage for subsequent possession pro... Evidence
1970 Legal Office Mary Williams consults solicitors. Legal advice confirms the 1962 possession order was never enforced, the Limitation Act may have run in the family's favour, but court proceedings are essential to es Evidence
1970 Great House Farm, Llandough Llandough Primary School opens on land that formerly formed part of the Great House Farm holding, representing the first phase of development of the farm estate for public purposes. Evidence
1974 Court / Great House Farm BP Pension Trust Ltd applies to enforce the 1962 possession order. Mary files a defence asserting adverse possession. On 31 October 1974, BP Pension Trust issues unilateral licence letters to Mrs Buck Evidence
1974 Great House — Interior The ground floor of Great House is surveyed in unusual circumstances by H.J.T. of the Royal Commission on Ancient and Historical Monuments in Wales (RCAHMW). Much detail is then concealed and it is no... Evidence GGAT HER PRN 02038s via Archwilio RCAHMW Inventory Vol IV Part 2
1974 High Court, Wales and Chester District Judge Watkin Powell grants BP Pension Trust Ltd leave to enforce the 1962 possession order against the occupants of Great House Farm, clearing the procedural barrier to eviction proceedings. Evidence
1974 South Wales / Great House Farm Mary Buckler publicly opposes the threatened eviction through press coverage in South Wales, drawing attention to the family's long occupation and the disputed basis of BP's title. Evidence
1974 Great House Farm, Llandough BP Pension Trust Ltd and BP Properties Ltd issue letters to Mary Buckler purporting to grant her a licence to remain at Great House Farm rent-free for life, a document later central to the dispute ove... Evidence
1974 Great House Farm, Llandough The possession warrant against Mary Buckler is withdrawn following the issuance of the BP licence letters, and she remains in occupation of Great House Farm under the terms of the 1974 arrangement. Evidence
1974 Great House Farm / Cardiff County Court 1,700 people signed a petition for the preservation of Great House Farm. Meanwhile, BP Pension Trust Ltd obtained leave to execute the 1962 possession order. On 31 October 1974, BP wrote letters to Ma... Evidence [Source] [Source]
1975 Estate Agent's Office The estate interest is transferred by the head of the title chain. Mary Williams argues the sale cannot extinguish her adverse possession claim, which was asserted on record the previous year. Evidence
1976 Great House Farm New claimants demand rent. The Williams-Buckler family refuses, asserting continuous adverse possession since at least 1955, while owners rely on the unenforced 1962 order and the 1974 licence letter. Evidence
1978 Court Legal proceedings commence to determine possession, but again ownership is not adjudicated. The court focuses on narrow possession questions without resolving the fundamental ownership dispute. Evidence
1978 Archaeological Rescue Dig A small rescue excavation near Great House uncovers Roman remains, confirming archaeological significance, but the full extent is not disclosed and development pressures continue. Evidence
1979 Llandough, Glamorgan A Roman villa and bathhouse are uncovered during housing development works at Llandough on former Great House Farm land, confirming the site's significance as a substantial Roman settlement. Evidence
1979 Great House Farm Emergency excavations by Glamorgan-Gwent Archaeological Trust (GGAT) in April-May 1979 uncovered a previously unrecorded Roman villa at Great House Farm (NPRN 400051). The villa included at least five... Evidence [Source] [Source]
1980 Court Possession proceedings drag on. The family argues that without determining ownership, any possession order is premature and procedurally unsafe, but their objection is not addressed. Evidence
1980 House of Commons Edward 'Ted' Rowlands MP spoke during the Leasehold Reform Act amendments debate in the House of Commons. He described Western Ground Rents and the BP Pension Fund as 'the most rapacious ground landlo... Evidence [Source]
1982 Property Transfer BP Properties Ltd is registered as proprietor of Great House Farm in November 1982, taking whatever title the chain provided. Mary Williams (Mrs Buckler) is still alive and in residence at the time of Evidence
1983 Great House Farm / Legal Office Mary Williams (Mrs Buckler) dies in 1983. Billy Buckler junior must now claim through her estate. The 1667 deed and later conveyances remain missing, preventing documentary proof of the family's posse Evidence
1984 BP Properties Offices BP Properties asserts title and relies on the 1974 licence letters issued by BP Pension Trust, its predecessor. The family never accepted or rejected those letters, and BP Properties now uses them to Evidence
1984 Cardiff Library The deed of transfer from Bute Estate to Daniel Thomas — the document establishing the equitable title arrangement for the Williams family — along with the index card went missing from Cardiff Library... Evidence [Source]
1985 Queen's Bench Division, Cardiff Proceedings before Hollis J in the Queen's Bench Division at Cardiff examine the adverse possession claim and the legal effect of the 1974 licence letters. The identity substitution from Mary Williams Evidence
1985 Heritage Investigation The family raises the 1870 Roman soldier discovery and requests Cadw investigate before any demolition, but officials say they need formal application and supporting evidence to list. Evidence
1986 Queen's Bench Division, Cardiff Hollis J gives judgment on 24 July 1986 in the Queen's Bench Division at Cardiff, ruling against the Bucklers. Fraud and identity-substitution allegations are noted but no investigation is ordered. Evidence
1986 Planning Department Following the Queen's Bench judgment, BP Properties applies for planning permission to demolish Great House Farm. The application proceeds without disclosing the Roman burial or the pending appeal. Evidence
1987 Court of Appeal (Civil Division) The Court of Appeal (Dillon LJ) delivers judgment on 31 July 1987 in BP Properties Ltd v Buckler. The appeal is dismissed. The 1974 unilateral licence letter ended adverse possession without need for Evidence
1987 Family Meeting After the Court of Appeal ruling, family members reveal that Frederick Buckler had negotiated or settled legal matters prior to his death without informing the family, causing a lasting rift. Evidence
1987 European Court Inquiry Following the Court of Appeal ruling, the family explores an application to the European Court of Human Rights under Article 1 Protocol 1, but face the argument that domestic remedies are not exhauste Evidence
1987 Llandough, Glamorgan Corinthian Close and Tuscan Close are constructed over the site of the Roman villa following unsuccessful preservation efforts, sealing the archaeology beneath residential housing. Evidence
1988 Great House Farm — Chainsaw Siege Five bailiffs and twenty police arrive at dawn. Billy blocks the drive with a car, bars doors and windows. He revs a chainsaw. In a four-hour siege, bailiffs smash the farmhouse doors with pickaxes. C Evidence
1988 Great House Farm — Forced Entry Bailiffs grab the running chainsaw through the broken door and disable it. The four-hour siege ends with police surging in. Branwen leaves with the three young children. Billy and friends hold the int Evidence
1988 Great House Farm — Final Eviction Billy is forcibly removed and taken to Llandough Hospital with injuries sustained during the eviction. Charges follow: assault on two bailiffs, criminal damage, and wanton or furious driving. He refus Evidence
1988 Llandough Hospital Billy Buckler lies injured in Llandough Hospital, refusing to leave for fear bailiffs will re-enter the farm. Branwen and three young children are in emergency accommodation. All possessions—and Mary' Evidence
1988 Hospital Billy Buckler is hospitalised with injuries from the forcible eviction. His pregnant wife Branwen and young children are homeless. All possessions remain sealed inside the empty farmhouse. Evidence
1988 Emergency Accommodation Branwen and the children stay with relatives. The family's belongings, farm equipment, and Mary Williams' journal documenting visitors and events are sealed inside Great House. Evidence
1988 Legal Office The family's lawyers seek an emergency injunction to halt demolition pending heritage review and investigation of fraud allegations, but face procedural obstacles and time pressure. Evidence
1988 Court A temporary injunction is granted, halting demolition for a brief period while Cadw considers emergency listing and the family's appeal attempts proceed through legal channels. Evidence
1988 Cadw Offices Cadw conducts a rushed assessment of Great House Farm for emergency listing, but pressure from BP Properties and lack of accessible documentation impede the evaluation process. Evidence
1988 Press Conference The family appeals to the media and public, explaining that ownership was never determined, archaeological evidence was suppressed, and heritage protection has been denied. Evidence
1988 Community Meeting Local residents and councillors express outrage at the eviction and planned demolition, condemning BP Properties for destroying heritage and the authorities for enabling it. Evidence
1988 MP's Office Cardiff MP Alun Michael asks the Lord Chancellor to review the case, highlighting the failure to determine ownership and the procedural anomalies throughout the litigation. Evidence
1988 Heritage Waiting Period As days pass, the temporary injunction approaches expiry. Cadw has not granted emergency listing. BP Properties presses for the injunction to be lifted and demolition to proceed. Evidence
1988 Great House Farm — Demolition Hours after the final court ruling on 6 December 1988, BP's bulldozers move in overnight. Branwen and the children watch from a caravan nearby as their 800-year-old home is flattened. The site is desc Evidence
1988 Llandough Hospital / Magistrates Court Police take Billy Buckler from his hospital bed to face charges of assault on two bailiffs. He is aged 40, freed on bail. He faces additional charges of criminal damage and wanton or furious driving f Evidence
1988 Hospital / Court Lorries move onto the cleared site at 7:30am. The operation takes several days. The council's planning chief describes the area as looking like a battleground and authorises legal action to force BP t Evidence
1988 Demolished Site Officials report that the cleared farm site resembles a battleground. The local authority begins legal steps to require BP Properties to remove debris and restore basic order. Evidence
1988 Temporary Accommodation After losing the farmhouse and contents, the family live in temporary and borrowed accommodation. Billy estimates their lost belongings and livelihood at roughly thirty thousand pounds. Evidence
1988 Great House Farm — HER Record The Glamorgan-Gwent Historic Environment Record (PRN 02038s) independently confirms that Great House Farm was suddenly and completely demolished by B.P. Properties Ltd. on 6th December 1988 amid consi... Evidence GGAT HER PRN 02038s via Archwilio (https://archwilio.org.uk/her/chi3/report/page.php?watprn=GGAT02038s)
1988 Great House Farm, Llandough Following the demolition of Great House Farm, the final removal of the remaining Buckler occupants from the site takes place, ending the family's more than three centuries of occupation. Evidence
1988 Great House Farm — Demolition Rubble In the aftermath of the demolition, R.F. Sugget of the Royal Commission examines the rubble and notes significant losses. A fireplace jamb is since found among the debris. More notably, the carved dre... Evidence GGAT HER PRN 02038s — Supplementary Notes (R.F. Sugget, December 1988)
1989 Court A threatening-behaviour charge against Billy is withdrawn as out of time. Assault and driving allegations from the eviction events continue, and exclusion conditions remain in place. Evidence
1989 Court Billy pleads guilty to remaining charges and is freed, stating that he will continue to contest the loss of the family home and land despite the completed demolition. Evidence
1989 Demolition Site Site clearance in March removes remaining physical traces. Lorries export rubble over several days, leaving little to show future residents the contested history beneath. Evidence
1989 Community Meeting At a village meeting, residents condemn the demolition and seek ways to stop BP Properties profiting from redevelopment, but are told legal avenues to reverse or claw back are minimal. Evidence
1990 Press Room Press coverage moves on, presenting the case as finished: family out, house gone, site in BP's hands. Unresolved questions about missing deeds, licences, and adverse possession fade from public view. Evidence
1990 Glamorgan-Gwent HER The Glamorgan-Gwent Historic Environment Record compiles its official record of Great House Farm (PRN 02038s), synthesising archaeological assessments, the RCAHMW Inventory, and the supplementary note... Evidence GGAT HER PRN 02038s — Compiled 21-08-1991 GGATE000877: Great House Farm Archaeological Assessment (1990)
1990 Great House Farm Following the demolition, Glamorgan-Gwent Archaeological Trust (GGAT) excavated eight evaluation trenches across the proposed development area. The site was designated as being of 'medium-high archaeo... Evidence [Source]
1992 Great House Farm Full planning permission was obtained for the residential development of the Great House Farm site. Despite GGAT's 1990 evaluation designating the site of 'medium-high archaeological potential,' the p... Evidence [Source]
1993 Llandough, Glamorgan The Glamorgan Village Book records the 1979 discovery of the Roman villa at Llandough and notes that housing was subsequently constructed over the archaeological site, preserving the memory of the los... Evidence
1994 Major Excavation Site Major excavation at the former farm site uncovers a Roman villa and over eight hundred burials, confirming the land's national archaeological importance after the house is demolished. Evidence
1994 Great House Farm Cotswold Archaeological Trust (CAT, now Cotswold Archaeology) commissioned by Ideal Homes Wales Ltd to excavate the site. Originally planned for 0.1 ha, expanded to 0.22 ha. Work ceased September 1994... Evidence [Source] [Source]
1998 Great House Farm / Cardiff Cadw: Welsh Historic Monuments provided funding for full stratigraphic analysis of the 1994 excavation. The Ancient Monuments Board for Wales discussed the desirability of full post-excavation analysi... Evidence [Source]
2005 Heritage Website Heritage publications celebrate the Llandough archaeology but omit the eviction and demolition story. Modern residents live over the site unaware of the recent dispossession. Evidence
2005 Academic Publication The definitive excavation report by Neil Holbrook and Alan Thomas was published in Medieval Archaeology XLIX (2005), pp. 1-92 — eleven years after the 1994 excavation. The companion paper by Jeremy Kn... Evidence [Source] [Source]
2024 Family Communication Family accounts suggest Frederick Buckler may have secretly settled or sold interests before 1987, contributing to internal rupture and confusion over what was legally agreed. Evidence
2025 Legal Research Relatives assert Rhys Buckler's position as heir to manorial rights through the Williams-Buckler line. His disability raises questions about equal treatment of vulnerable heirs in the legal process. Evidence
2026 Ministry of Defence / WhatDoTheyKnow Sion Buckler (Ret'd Sgt, Manor of Llandough) filed a Freedom of Information request to the Ministry of Defence on 1 May 2026, asking about any involvement of UK Armed Forces personnel, including UK Sp... Evidence [Source]
1950S Great House Farm Gregory Joy (Western Ground Rents estate agent) persuaded Esther Williams to support a man named 'Bruce', an itinerant alcoholic. Bruce was given work and accommodation at the farm but soon left, stea... Evidence [Source]
Present Day Church View Close Church View Close now covers the site of Great House Farm, the Marconi base, and one of Wales's largest recorded burial excavations, yet no plaque or record notes the clearance or dispute. Evidence
Present Day Legal Archive Modern researchers examining the case identify a pattern: ownership never adjudicated, documents missing, archaeology suppressed, identity substituted between Mary Williams and Mrs Buckler, fraud unin Evidence
Present Day Academic Conference Legal scholars note the case exemplifies how procedural avoidance, missing documentation, and rushed demolition can circumvent substantive justice and heritage protection. Evidence
Present Day Public Inquiry Call Advocates call for a public inquiry to examine the combined effect of procedural avoidance, identity substitution, heritage omission, and irreversible consequence in the Great House Farm case. Evidence
1667 Acquisition of Great House Farm from the Herberts E001 View Evidence
1897 Marconi Wireless Telegraphy Experiments at Great House Farm E002 View Evidence
1916 Forced Tenancy: Bute Estate Imposes Yearly Agricultural Tenancy E003 View Evidence
1938 Reversion Sale of Great House Farm to Western Ground Rents E004 View Evidence
1974 Identity Fraud: BP Licence Letters Addressed to 'Mrs Buckler' E005 View Evidence
1978 Suppressed Newspaper Article and 1,700 Signature Petition E006 View Evidence
1982 Land Registration by BP Properties Ltd — Circular Logic E007 View Evidence
1984 State-Sanctioned Erasure: Title Deeds Removed from Cardiff Library E008 View Evidence
1987 Court of Appeal Judgment — BP Properties Ltd v Buckler [1987] EWCA Civ 2 E009 View Evidence
1988 HER Record GGAT02038s — Great House Farm Officially Documented E010 View Evidence
2026 ATB/RE: ATB/RE: Formal Notice Follow Up: Resolution of Historical Dispossession and Fraud – Great House Farm, Llandough, Vale of Glamorgan E011 View Evidence
2026 ATB/RE: Formal Notice Follow Up: Resolution of Historical Dispossession and Fraud – Great House Farm, Llandough, Vale of Glamorgan E012 View Evidence
2026 Automatic reply: Formal Notice Follow Up: Resolution of Historical Dispossession and Fraud – Great House Farm, Llandough, Vale of Glamorgan E013 View Evidence
2026 Automatic reply: Resolution of Historical Dispossession and Fraud – Great House Farm, Llandough, Vale of Glamorgan E014 View Evidence
2026 FORMAL NOTICE: State-Sanctioned Dispossession of Great House Farm (Former Estate WA231076) E015 View Evidence
2026 FORMAL NOTICE: Unlawful Dispossession of Great House Farm (Former Estate WA231076) E016 View Evidence
2026 Formal Notice Follow Up: Resolution of Historical Dispossession and Fraud – Great House Farm, Llandough, Vale of Glamorgan E017 View Evidence
2026 Freedom of Information Request F260213 E018 View Evidence
2026 Fwd: Formal Notice Follow Up: Resolution of Historical Dispossession and Fraud – Great House Farm, Llandough, Vale of Glamorgan E019 View Evidence
2026 Hey Kiro. Here's more on BP vs Buckler 1987 E020 View Evidence
2026 RE: Formal Notice Follow Up: Resolution of Historical Dispossession and Fraud – Great House Farm, Llandough, Vale of Glamorgan E021 View Evidence
2026 RE: Subject: Freedom of Information Request - Ty Mawr (Great House), Llandough, near Penarth (1938-1987) F260213 E022 View Evidence
2026 Re: ATB/RE: ATB/RE: Formal Notice Follow Up: Resolution of Historical Dispossession and Fraud – Great House Farm, Llandough, Vale of Glamorgan E023 View Evidence
2026 Re: ATB/RE: Formal Notice Follow Up: Resolution of Historical Dispossession and Fraud – Great House Farm, Llandough, Vale of Glamorgan E024 View Evidence
2026 Re: Reply to your email of September 2025 E025 View Evidence
2026 Re: Resolution of Historical Dispossession and Fraud – Great House Farm, Llandough, Vale of Glamorgan E026 View Evidence
2026 Re: Setting Aside BP vs Buckler 1987 on grounds of BP with our stolen paper title and identity fraud, court mistakes and procedural unfairness & more E027 View Evidence
2026 Re: Subject: Freedom of Information Request - Ty Mawr (Great House), Llandough, near Penarth (1938-1987) F260213 E028 View Evidence
2026 Re: Subject: Stage Two Complaint – Title WA231076 – Alleged Mistake in the Register E029 View Evidence
2026 Re: Title WA231076 / Ty Mawr Farm – Allegation of Fraud, Mistake and Request for Escalation to Legal E030 View Evidence
2026 Ref: TO130237 E031 View Evidence
2026 Resolution of Historical Dispossession and Fraud – Great House Farm, Llandough, Vale of Glamorgan E032 View Evidence
2026 FOI Request: MOD Involvement in 1988 Eviction (FOI2026.09019) E033 View Evidence
2005 Holbrook & Thomas (2005) — An Early-Medieval Monastic Cemetery at Llandough E034 View Evidence
2005 Knight (2005) — From Villa to Monastery: Llandough in Context E035 View Evidence
1980 Hansard: Ted Rowlands MP Condemns BP Pension Fund (22 May 1980) E036 View Evidence
1994 GGAT HER Assessment — 'Incompletely Understood' Building E037 View Evidence
1979 Roman Villa Discovery and Destruction (1979) E038 View Evidence
1994 Archwilio HER — Early Christian Cemetery GGAT02272s E039 View Evidence
1984 Missing Deed of Transfer — Cardiff Library (1984) E040 View Evidence