An 18th-century village home is up for sale for £3.5million.

The property, called Punchbowl, in Madehurst, near Arundel, was originally two cottages before being converted into a single home in the mid 20th-century.

It has both Victorian and Edwardian architecture inside the home alongside modern furnishings.

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On the ground floor there are a number of reception rooms for socialising and private use.

These include a study with bookshelves along the walls and a seating area next to a log burner, and a formal dining room which has a door leading out into the gardens.

At the centre of this room, which has oak parquet flooring and Edwardian-style ceiling skirting boards, is a formal wooden table.

The largest room on the ground floor is the kitchen, which has a central island worktop space in the centre and a bay window by the sink.

This room is 35 feet in depth with an open-pitch roof and exposed beams.

In the breakfast area of the room there is also an open brick hearth.

The Argus: There is an open hearth

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The first floor of the property is where the seven bedrooms are, including a master bedroom suite with some brick-exposed walls and an ensuite bathroom.

Two of the other bedrooms are also ensuite rooms, with the rest using the family bathrooms spread across the home.

Outside, homeowners have a number of outbuildings including a carport, a summer house and garages, with one of these having a studio flat upstairs.

The garden space also has a heated pool, a tennis court, lawns, raised flower beds and a terrace area for outdoor dining.

The Argus: The pool is heated

A spokesman for estate agent House said: "Punchbowl is a wonderfully expansive and characterful home set in the heart of the South Downs National Park, surrounded by bucolic, undulating scenery.

"The house has a late 18th-century core, with later Victorian and Edwardian additions built in a highly sympathetic manner."

The home is on the market for £3.5million.