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Ashridge Executive Education

1959 establishments in EnglandAshridgeBusiness schools in EnglandEducational institutions established in 1959EngvarB from April 2018
Hult International Business SchoolLittle Gaddesden
GOC Berkhamsted & Frithsden 031 Ashridge House, Little Gaddesden (28454689336)
GOC Berkhamsted & Frithsden 031 Ashridge House, Little Gaddesden (28454689336)

Ashridge Executive Education (also known as the Ashridge Programme or Ashridge) is the executive education programme of Hult International Business School, housed in Hult's Ashridge Estate campus. Formerly an independent business school, known as Ashridge Business School, Ashridge completed an operational merger with Hult in 2015. Its activities include open and tailored executive education programmes, Master of Business Administration, Master of Science and diploma qualifications, as well as organisation consulting and applied research.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Ashridge Executive Education (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Ashridge Executive Education
Hillingdon Road, Dacorum Little Gaddesden

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Wikipedia: Ashridge Executive EducationContinue reading on Wikipedia

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N 51.799166666667 ° E -0.55972222222222 °
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Hillingdon Road
HP4 1NS Dacorum, Little Gaddesden
England, United Kingdom
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GOC Berkhamsted & Frithsden 031 Ashridge House, Little Gaddesden (28454689336)
GOC Berkhamsted & Frithsden 031 Ashridge House, Little Gaddesden (28454689336)
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Nearby Places

St Margaret's Convent, Hertfordshire
St Margaret's Convent, Hertfordshire

St Margaret's Convent was a convent of the Benedictine order near Great Gaddesden in Hertfordshire, England. Founded in 1160, it was abolished as a consequence of King Henry VIII's dissolution of the monasteries in the 1530s. It was also known as The Priory of Ivinghoe, St. Margaret's, in the Wood and Muresley Priory.It was founded by Henry de Blois, Bishop of Winchester. Some accounts point to an earlier foundation by Thomas Becket before 1129. It therefore predated the nearby Ashridge Priory. In 1280 King Edward I gave lands in Surrey to the convent, but it was always known for its poverty.Names of some of the prioresses survive, from Isoda, elected in 1250, to Margaret Hardwick, in place at the time of closure under the first Act of Suppression of 1535, when the convent had five nuns, and an annual income of £18 8s 9d. It was sold to Sir John Dauncey in 1538, along with the Manor of Muresley. It changed hands over the centuries, finally passing to the Earls of Bridgewater and Lord Brownlow in 1823.The buildings are described as being of Totternhoe stone with mullioned windows, square mouldings and trefoil-headed stained glass windows. The structure survived as a manor house until at least 1802, but had been almost completely demolished by 1862.Several place names persist from the convent, including St Margaret's Lane and Farm; and the district north-west of Great Gaddesden is still known as St Margaret's. The modern Buddhist monastery of Thai Forest Tradition, Amaravati Buddhist Monastery is situated only a quarter of a mile from the site.