OTELANDS, (Surrey) near Weybridge, was formerly a royal palace, wherein Henry D. of Glocester, 4th son to K. Cha. I. was born; and had a deer-park, which in the late civil wars was by the parliamentarians laid open, and the house demolished. In 1673, there was a brick wall remaining, which encompassed 10 acres; but there were then small traces of the chief pile, besides the gardener's lodge, wherein was the silk worm room raised by K. James the First's Queen; and it is now so decayed, that it hardly bears the figure of a good farm-house. In the park there was a paddock, where Q. Eliz. used to shoot with a cross-bow.