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Essential
Architecture- London Hampton
Court |
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architect
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Thomas Wolsey and
Sir Christopher Wren |
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location
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in the London Borough of
Richmond upon Thames, south west London |
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date
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1616-1694 |
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style
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an interesting mix between
mediaeval Tudor and neoclassical
Elizabethan |
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construction
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brick, stone |
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type
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Palace |
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The
clock tower straddles the entrance between the inner and outer courts
Queen Mary's State Bedchamber is one of the rooms in
the section of the palace designed by Sir Christopher Wren
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Hampton Court in 1708, in the aerial view from Britannia Illustrata
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Christopher Wren's south front
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Hampton Court Palace is a former royal palace in the
London Borough of Richmond upon Thames, south west London, United
Kingdom. The palace is located 11.7 miles (18.9 km) south west of
Charing Cross and upstream of Central London on the River Thames. It is
currently open to the public as a major tourist attraction. The palace's
Home Park is the site of the annual Hampton Court Palace Flower Show.
History
The Knights Hospitaller had
operated a farm on the site since 1236. In 1505, the Lord Chamberlain,
Sir Giles Daubeney, leased the property and used it to entertain Henry
VII. King Henry the VIII built 49 other places around England similar in
style to Hampton Court, however none remain today.
Thomas Wolsey, then Archbishop
of York and Chief Minister to the King, took over the lease in 1514 and
rebuilt the 14th-century manor house over the next seven years
(1515–1521) to form the nucleus of the present palace. The few remaining
Tudor sections of Hampton Court, which were later overhauled and rebuilt
by Henry VIII, suggest that Wolsey intended it as an ideal Renaissance
cardinal's palace in the style of Italian architects such as il Filarete
and Leonardo da Vinci: rectilinear symmetrical planning, grand
apartments on a raised piano nobile, classical detailing. Jonathan Foyle
has suggested (see link) that is likely that Wolsey had been inspired by
Paolo Cortese's De Cardinalatu, a manual for cardinals that included
advice on palatial architecture, published in 1510. Planning elements of
long-lost structures at Hampton Court appear to have been based on
Renaissance geometrical programs, an Italian influence more subtle than
the famous terracotta busts of Roman emperors by Giovanni da Maiano that
survive in the great courtyard (illustration, right above).
The palace was appropriated by
Wolsey's master, Henry VIII, in about 1525, although the Cardinal
continued to live there until 1529. Henry added the Great Hall - which
was the last medieval Great Hall built for the English monarchy - and
the Royal Tennis Court, which was built and is still in use for the game
of real tennis, not the present-day version of the game.
In 1604, the Palace was the
site of King James I of England's meeting with representatives of the
English Puritans, known as the Hampton Court Conference; while agreement
with the Puritans was not reached, the meeting led to James's
commissioning of the King James Version of the Bible.
During the reign of William
and Mary, parts of Henry's additions were demolished, a new wing was
added (partly under the supervision of Sir Christopher Wren), and the
state apartments came into regular use. Half the Tudor palace was
replaced in a campaign that lasted from 1689–1694. After the Queen died,
William lost interest in the renovations, but it was at Hampton Court in
1702 that he fell from his horse, later dying from his injuries at
Kensington Palace. In later reigns, the state rooms were neglected, but
under George II and his queen, Caroline, further refurbishment took
place, with architects such as William Kent employed to design new
furnishings. The Queen's Private Apartments are still open to the public
and include her bathroom, bedroom, and private chapel.
From the reign of George III
in 1760, monarchs tended to favour other London homes, and Hampton Court
ceased to be a royal residence, although originally it housed 70
grace-and-favour residences; few remain occupied as of May 2006]], one
of them once homed Olave Baden-Powell, wife of the founder of the
Scouting movement.
In 1796, restoration work
began in the Great Hall. In 1838, Queen Victoria completed the
restoration and opened the palace to the public. A major fire in the
King's Apartments in 1986 led to a new programme of restoration work
that was completed in 1995.
Ghosts
Queen Jane Seymour gave birth to
Prince Edward, the future King Edward VI at Hampton Court in 1537 and
died there twelve days later, and her ghost is said to haunt the
staircase in the Palace still. Queen Catherine Howard was arrested there
in 1542 and is said to have run along the Long Gallery screaming for
King Henry VIII to save her, before his guards caught her and dragged
her away. A ghost is said to haunt the palace, sometimes screaming in
the same hallway. Others report seeing the notorious King Henry VIII and
Anne Boleyn.
In December 2003, it
transpired that in October a closed-circuit security camera at Hampton
Court had recorded an indistinct image of "a mysterious figure in a long
coat closing the fire doors." According to one report, "the palace...
maintained that the footage provided conclusive evidence that ghosts
exist." [1] A female palace visitor wrote in the visitor book that she
may have seen a ghost in that area during this time, also. Explanations
for the phenomena have ranged from a psychology researcher's suggestions
that it could have been "a member of the public thinking they were being
helpful by shutting the doors" to other researchers suggesting thermal
effects. According to the Toronto Ghosts and Hauntings Research Society,
the figure is not a ghost but a tour guide who later admitted to being
in a restricted area and closing the doors. [2]
The maze
Hampton Court is the site of
the world-famous Hampton Court Palace Hedge Maze. Planted sometime
between 1689 and 1695 by George London and Henry Wise for William III of
Orange, it covers a third of an acre (1300 m²) and contains half a mile
(800 m) of paths. It is possible that the current design replaced an
earlier maze planted for Thomas Cardinal Wolsey. It was originally
planted of hornbeam, although it has been repaired using many different
types of hedge.
The maze is in 60 acres
(243,000 m²) of riverside gardens. It has been described by many
authors, including Defoe, who inaccurately called it a labyrinth, and
the humorist Jerome K. Jerome, who wrote in Three Men in a Boat:
"We'll just go in here, so
that you can say you've been, but it's very simple. It's absurd to call
it a maze. You keep on taking the first turning to the right. We'll just
walk round for ten minutes, and then go and get some lunch."
...Harris kept on turning to the right, but
it seemed a long way, and his cousin said he supposed it was a very big
maze.
"Oh, one of the largest in Europe," said
Harris.
"Yes, it must be," replied the cousin,
"because we've walked a good two miles already."
Harris began to think it rather strange
himself, but he held on until, at last, they passed the half of a penny
bun on the ground that Harris's cousin swore he had noticed there seven
minutes ago.
Jerome exaggerates the hazards of the maze.
The maze has relatively few places at which the path forks, and at all
but one fork (in Jerome's time) the wrong choice led to a dead end at
the end of a short corridor. There are many larger and more elaborate
mazes nowadays. Recently, three new forking places (not shown on the
plan displayed just outside the entrance) have introduced more
possibilities of walking closed loops within the maze. The maze can
still, as Harris stated, be threaded from entrance to centre and back by
the method of always remaining in contact with the wall on one's right.
This method guides the traveller into (and then out of) some dead ends
and is thus not the shortest path, nor will it necessarily reach the
centre.
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links
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www.essential-architecture.com
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