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Showing posts with label Princess Sophia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Princess Sophia. Show all posts

Wednesday, 21 September 2016

A Regency History guide to Athelhampton House in Dorset

Athelhampton House, Dorset
Athelhampton House, Dorset
Where is Athelhampton?

Athelhampton is a Tudor manor house situated near Dorchester in Dorset. 
 

A history of Athelhampton

The story of Athelhampton starts in 1485 when Sir William Martyn was granted the right to enclose his estate and deer park and build a stone manor with towers and crenellations—the battlements that give a castle its characteristic shape. The result was the Great Hall with a solar on one side, providing living accommodation, and a buttery on the other. Subsequent owners added the west wing and a gatehouse and extended the house to the rear.

View of Athelhampton House from the White Garden
View of Athelhampton House from the White Garden
About 100 years after the Great Hall was built, one of Sir William’s descendants, Nicholas Martyn, died without male heirs. He left the estate to his four daughters in equal shares and the house was split into separate dwellings. Sir Ralph Bankes of Corfe Castle acquired three of these shares by marriage and other means, but sold them to Sir Robert Long, 1st Baronet, to help finance his expensive new house at Kingston Lacy

This three-quarter share was subsequently inherited by Catherine Tylney-Long, who married the Duke of Wellington’s nephew, William Pole-Tylney-Long-Wellesley, 4th Earl of Mornington, in 1812. The Duke’s nephew only had a life interest in his wife’s property and so the house passed to her son William, 5th Earl of Mornington, on her death in 1825. He subsequently sold Athelhampton to George Wood who acquired the fourth share, reuniting the house once more. By now, the property was very run down, having been used by tenant farmers for many years. The gatehouse was demolished around 1862 and the Norman church was replaced by a new church before passing to a new owner, Alfred Cart de Lafontaine in 1891. 

Athelhampton House, Dorset
Athelhampton House, Dorset
De Lafontaine laid out formal gardens and restored the house but sold it on when he ran out of money. Eventually, the house was bought by the Cooke family who sold it in 2019.

The house was visited often by the author Thomas Hardy (1840-1928) and was once lived in by the Russian cubist artist Marevna—Marie Vorobieff—whose paintings are on display in a gallery in the house.

The Gardens, Athelhampton House, Dorset
The Gardens, Athelhampton House, Dorset
A change of ownership
 
Athelhampton House changed ownership in 2019. It still belongs to Historic Houses and is open to visitors, but its contents were sold at auction and I don't know how much of what I saw in 2016 is still the same as I haven't been back yet.
 
 

A tour of Athelhampton House as it was in 2016
 
There were a number of items on display which are of particular interest to the Georgian historian. Some rooms are only viewable from the doorway.

Front door, Athelhampton House, Dorset
Front door, Athelhampton House, Dorset
Great Hall

The Great Hall dates back to the late 15th century and includes some original heraldic glass. On the balcony, there is a George III mahogany organ.

The Great Hall, Athelhampton House, Dorset
The Great Hall, Athelhampton House, Dorset

King’s Ante Room

This little passage way includes some prints of Carlton House and a lovely portrait of George III’s fifth daughter, Princess Sophia.

Portrait of Princess Sophia, King's Ante Room,  Athelhampton House, Dorset
Portrait of Princess Sophia, King's Ante Room,
Athelhampton House, Dorset
Wine Cellar

Just inside the entrance to the wine cellar is a Coade stone torchère. This was part of a set of ten candlestick stands made by Coade and Sealy of Lambeth in 1810 for George, Prince of Wales, at Carlton House. Coade and Sealy was the artificial stone manufactory run by Eleanor Coade, one of the women featured in my forthcoming book, What Regency Women Did For Us. At this time, Eleanor had taken her cousin John Sealy into partnership, hence the name, Coade and Sealy.

The Wine Cellar, Athelhampton House, Dorset
The Wine Cellar, Athelhampton House, Dorset
Great Chamber

The Great Chamber, Athelhampton House, Dorset
The Great Chamber, Athelhampton House, Dorset
Library (now used as a billiard room)

This is one of the rooms that you can only view from the doorway. At the far end of the room is a Georgian globe which apparently shows the voyages of Captain Cook, but I couldn’t get close enough to see!

The Library, Athelhampton House, Dorset
The Library, Athelhampton House, Dorset
King’s Room

The King's Room, Athelhampton House, Dorset
The King's Room, Athelhampton House, Dorset
Green Parlour

The Green Parlour, Athelhampton House, Dorset
The Green Parlour, Athelhampton House, Dorset
Dressing Room

There is a small collection of vintage clothing on display, including a Georgian dress and a Regency costume, though sadly, not easy to see from the doorway.

Vintage clothing in the Dressing Room, Athelhampton House, Dorset
Vintage clothing in the Dressing Room, Athelhampton House, Dorset
Georgian dress in the Dressing Room,  Athelhampton House, Dorset
Georgian dress in the Dressing Room,
Athelhampton House, Dorset
Yellow Bedroom Closet

Yellow Bedroom Closet, Athelhampton House, Dorset
Yellow Bedroom Closet, Athelhampton House, Dorset
Yellow Bedroom

Yellow Bedroom, Athelhampton House, Dorset
Yellow Bedroom, Athelhampton House, Dorset
State Bedroom

A rather dark picture of the State Bedroom, Athelhampton House, Dorset
A rather dark picture of the State Bedroom, Athelhampton House, Dorset
The Gardens

Although the formal gardens have no claim to Georgian origins as they were laid out in the 1890s, they are beautiful and well worth a visit. There are also other gardens formed later including The Canal and a bridge over the River Piddle leading to a short riverside walk. There is also a toll house within the grounds, beyond the Lime Walk.

Bridge over the River Piddle, Athelhampton House, Dorset
Bridge over the River Piddle, Athelhampton House, Dorset
The Great Court

The Great Court, Athelhampton House, Dorset
The Great Court, Athelhampton House, Dorset
The Corona

The Corona, Athelhampton House, Dorset
The Corona, Athelhampton House, Dorset
The Canal

The Canal, Athelhampton House, Dorset
The Canal, Athelhampton House, Dorset
The Dovecote

The dovecote was built in the early 16th century at the same time as the west wing.

The Dovecote, Athelhampton House, Dorset
The Dovecote, Athelhampton House, Dorset
Toll House

The Toll House at Athelhampton House, Dorset
The Toll House at Athelhampton House, Dorset
Last visited: June 2016.
Blog updated: July 2021.

Headshot of Rachel Knowles author with sea in background(2021)
Rachel Knowles writes faith-based Regency romance and historical non-fiction. She has been sharing her research on this blog since 2011. Rachel lives in the beautiful Georgian seaside town of Weymouth, Dorset, on the south coast of England, with her husband, Andrew.

Find out more about Rachel's books and sign up for her newsletter here.

If you have enjoyed this blog and want to encourage us and help us to keep making our research freely available, please buy us a virtual cup of coffee by clicking the button below.

 
Sources used include:
Cooke, Patrick, Athelhampton House & Gardens (Dorchester, 2010)

All photographs © Andrew Knowles - RegencyHistory.net

Thursday, 16 January 2014

Regency History’s guide to Kensington Palace

Kensington Palace
Kensington Palace (2017)
Where is it?

Kensington Palace is situated in Kensington Gardens in London.

History

Kensington Palace started life as a Jacobean mansion built around 1605. It was bought by William III and Mary II in 1689 and was transformed into a royal palace by Sir Christopher Wren so that the King and Queen could live away from the London air.

The palace is now in the care of Historic Royal Palaces.

Georgian connections

Kensington Palace  from The History of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
Kensington Palace
from The History of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
George I and George II both used Kensington Palace as one of their principal residences, but after the death of Queen Caroline in 1737, much of the palace fell into disrepair.

Neither George III, George IV nor William IV chose to live at Kensington Palace. They granted “Grace and Favour” apartments to courtiers and members of the royal family. These included:

Kensington Palace through the Gold Gates
Kensington Palace through the Gold Gates (2017)
Kensington Palace from Kensington Gardens
Kensington Palace from Kensington Gardens (2017)
Kensington Palace as a tourist attraction

Visiting royal palaces is not a new entertainment. Although not opened to the public until 1899, it was possible to see inside Kensington Palace during the Regency period.

According to Feltham's Picture of London for 1818:
The palace is a large and splendid edifice of brick, and has a set of very handsome state apartments, and some beautiful staircases and ceilings, painted by Verrio and others. He continued: The whole may be seen any day except Sundays, by applying to the housekeeper, for a trifling douceur.1
The State Apartments

The King's Staircase

The King's Staircase, Kensington Palace
The King's Staircase, Kensington Palace (2012)
The Great Staircase, Kensington Palace, from The History of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
The Great Staircase, Kensington Palace, from The History
of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
Queen Caroline's Drawing Room

Queen Caroline's Drawing Room, Kensington Palace, from The History  of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819) The Queen's Bedchamber, Kensington Palace, from The History of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
Queen Caroline's Drawing Room, Kensington Palace, from The History
of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
The Queen's Bedchamber

The Queen's Bedchamber, Kensington Palace, from The History  of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
The Queen's Bedchamber, Kensington Palace, from The History
of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
The Queen's Dining Room

The Queen's Dining Room, Kensington Palace, from The History  of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
The Queen's Dining Room, Kensington Palace, from The History
of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
The Queen's Gallery

The Queen's Gallery, Kensington Palace
The Queen's Gallery, Kensington Palace (2017)
The Queen's Gallery, Kensington Palace, from The History of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
The Queen's Gallery, Kensington Palace, from The History
of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
The Presence Chamber

The Prescence Chamber, Kensington Palace, from The History  of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
The Prescence Chamber, Kensington Palace, from The History
of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
The Admirals' Gallery

The Admirals' Gallery, Kensington Palace, from The History
of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
The Cupola Room

The Cupola Room, Kensington Palace
The Cupola Room, Kensington Palace (2017)
The ceiling of the Cupola Room, Kensington Palace
The ceiling of the Cupola Room, Kensington Palace (2017)
The Cupola Room, Kensington Palace, from The History  of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
The Cupola Room, Kensington Palace, from The History
of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
The King's Drawing Room

The King's Drawing Room, Kensington Palace, from The History  of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
The King's Drawing Room, Kensington Palace, from The History
of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
Learning to play Hazard  in the King's Drawing Room, Kensington Palace
Learning to play Hazard
in the King's Drawing Room, Kensington Palace (2017)
The King's Closet

The King's Closet, Kensington Palace, from The History  of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
The King's Closet, Kensington Palace, from The History
of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
Queen Caroline's Closet

Queen Caroline's Closet, Kensington Palace, from The History of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
Queen Caroline's Closet, Kensington Palace, from The History
of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
The King's Gallery

The King's Gallery, Kensington Palace
The King's Gallery, Kensington Palace (2017)
The King's Gallery, Kensington Palace, from The History  of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
The King's Gallery, Kensington Palace, from The History
of the Royal Residences by WH Pyne (1819)
Victoria Revealed

Queen Victoria was born in Kensington Palace on 24 May 1819. It is believed that she was born in the North Drawing Room of her parents’ apartments.

Room in Kensington Palace where Queen Victoria was born with inset plaque stating her date of birth
Room where Queen Victoria was born , Kensington Palace (2014)
Victoria: A Royal Childhood

Victoria’s father, Edward, Duke of Kent, died suddenly less than a year after her birth, and Victoria and her mother were left virtually penniless. They returned to their apartments at Kensington Palace where Victoria was brought up in relative seclusion.

When William IV visited the palace in August 1836, he discovered that the Duchess of Kent had adopted some of the state rooms and altered them to suit herself. William was furious and publicly complained about the liberties his sister-in-law had taken and announced his wish that he would live long enough for Victoria to reach her 18th birthday, thereby preventing the Duchess from becoming regent. His wish was granted; he died just four weeks after Victoria turned 18.

This post was last updated 7 October 2019.

If you enjoyed this article, you might also enjoy my guides to Kensington Gardens and Kew Palace.

Headshot of Rachel Knowles author with sea in background(2021)
Rachel Knowles writes clean/Christian Regency era romance and historical non-fiction. She has been sharing her research on this blog since 2011. Rachel lives in the beautiful Georgian seaside town of Weymouth, Dorset, on the south coast of England, with her husband, Andrew.

Find out more about Rachel's books and sign up for her newsletter here.

If you have enjoyed this blog and want to encourage me and help me to keep making my research freely available, please buy me a virtual cup of coffee by clicking the button below.

 
Note
1. From Feltham, John, The Picture of London for 1818 (1818)

Sources used:
Feltham, John, The Picture of London for 1818 (1818)
Humphrys, Julian, The private life of palaces (Historic Royal Palaces, 2006)
Pyne, WH, The history of the Royal Residences of Windsor Castle, St James's Palace, Carlton House, Kensington Palace, Hampton Court, Buckingham House and Frogmore (1819)

Kensington Palace official website

Photographs © RegencyHistory.net

Monday, 25 March 2013

Prince Ernest, Duke of Cumberland and King of Hanover (1771-1851)

HRH Ernest, Duke of Cumberland from A Biographical Memoir of Frederick,  Duke of York and Albany by J Watkins (1827)
HRH Ernest, Duke of Cumberland
from A Biographical Memoir of Frederick,
 Duke of York and Albany by J Watkins (1827)
Profile

Prince Ernest, Duke of Cumberland and King of Hanover (5 June 1771 – 18 November 1851) was the the fifth son of George III and Queen Charlotte and a younger brother of George IV.

Early years

Prince Ernest Augustus was born at Buckingham House on 5 June 1771. Ernest grew up at Kew, housed with his younger brothers, Augustus and Adolphus. The three Princes were made Knights of the Garter on 2 June 1786 and shortly after, were sent to the University of Göttingen to study.

Prince Ernest from The Lady's Magazine (1793)
Prince Ernest from The Lady's Magazine (1793)
Military action

Ernest was destined for a military career and entered the Hanoverian army in 1790 as a Lieutenant in the 9th Hanoverian Hussars. He saw fierce action against the French in Flanders and the Netherlands and on one occasion, was reported to have single-handedly carried a French officer from the battlefield as a prisoner of war. He was injured at the Battle of Tournai on 22 May 1794 and returned to England in 1796 with a permanently scarred face and the loss of sight in one eye.

Although commended for fighting bravely, he had a reputation for treating his men harshly and, despite regular promotion and being gazetted Field Marshal in 1813, he never saw active service abroad again.

Duke of Cumberland

On 23 April 1799, Ernest was made Duke of Cumberland and Teviotdale and Earl of Armagh and awarded a grant of £12000 a year by parliament.

Extreme politics

Ernest was a radical Tory, unwaveringly Protestant in outlook and an opponent of political reform. He was vehemently opposed to Catholic emancipation and when the Duke of Wellington found it expedient to support it, Ernest used his influence over George IV to persuade him against it. 
 
As a result of his interference, Wellington’s government resigned. But it was a short-lived victory. Ernest did not have enough backing to form a government of radical Tories. Wellington was recalled and the act was passed in 1829.
George IV from Memoirs of her late royal highness Charlotte Augusta by Robert Huish (1818)
George IV
from Memoirs of her late royal
highness Charlotte Augusta
by Robert Huish (1818)
Character and appearance

Ernest was tall and elegant in person; whilst his brothers had a tendency to corpulence, he remained thin. He had handsome features, though one eye was disfigured in war and in later years he grew broad, drooping whiskers to mask his battle scars.

In character, he was radical and outspoken. He was able to wield a great deal of influence over weaker minds, notably over his brother George IV, whom he pushed towards his own radical Tory policies.

He was also inclined to be malicious. His brother William IV said of him:
Ernest is not a bad fellow, but if anyone has a corn, he will be sure to tread on it.1
An unpopular marriage

On 29 May 1815, Ernest married Princess Frederica of Solms-Braunfels in Neustrelitz, whom he had met and fallen in love with a few years previously. Princess Frederica was a niece of Queen Charlotte’s who had been married twice before – to Prince Louis of Prussia and to Prince Frederick of Solms-Braunfels – and twice widowed. The marriage was solemnised again at Carlton House on 29 August 1815 but the Queen refused to receive the new Duchess.

Frederica, Duchess of Cumberland from La Belle Assemblée (1830)
Frederica, Duchess of Cumberland
from La Belle Assemblée (1830)

The Queen disapproved of Princess Frederica who had been unofficially engaged to marry the Duke of Cambridge in 1797 but had become pregnant by the Prince of Solms-Braunfels and married him instead. Ernest’s marriage was very unpopular and parliament refused to increase his allowance, forcing the couple to live abroad, largely in Berlin, where their son George was born on 27 May 1819.

King of Hanover

When William IV died on 20 June 1837, his niece Victoria became Queen of England. But she could not accede to the throne in Hanover which could only pass to the male line, and so Ernest became King of Hanover. He entered his capital on 28 June and proceeded to attack the liberal constitution. He ruled autocratically, but listened to reasonable complaints and avoided any hint of revolution. Ernest was a good king and well-respected in Hanover and he successfully ruled during a very unsettled period in Europe.

A life of scandal

The Duke of Cumberland’s life was beset with scandal. On 31 May 1810, his valet was found dead and rumours circulated that he had murdered him, though the jury passed a verdict of suicide.

You can read more about the scandalous death of his valet here.

In 1813, he was involved in a political controversy over a parliamentary election in Weymouth. He was accused of influencing the outcome in favour of the Tories, which was considered improper behaviour for a member of the House of Lords.

Years later, he wrangled with Queen Victoria over some jewels that he declared were his by right under Queen Charlotte’s will and which his niece refused to give up. The bitter dialogue between the parties caused considerable embarrassment to the government and when Ernest visited England for three months in 1843, Queen Victoria showed her continued disapproval by only inviting him once to dinner.

Yet more scandal

In 1829, Ernest created a scandal over Lady Lyndhurst who claimed that he had tried to assault her and, when she resisted, had threatened to ruin her and her husband. The following year, he faced another over Lady Graves. Rumours of a relationship between Ernest and Lady Graves reached the ears of her estranged husband. Lord Graves wrote a note declaring that he did not believe them, but nevertheless committed suicide.

But the most serious scandal which confronted Ernest was in relation to his sister, Princess Sophia. His affection for her was judged by some to be unhealthily intense, and it gave rise to the rumour that he had fathered the illegitimate son she was said to have given birth to in 1800. Although this was almost definitely untrue, there are comments in her letters which hint at the possibility that he had tried to assault her.

Princess Sophia from A Biographical Memoir of Frederick,  Duke of York and Albany by John Watkins (1827)
Princess Sophia
from A Biographical Memoir of Frederick,
 Duke of York and Albany
by John Watkins (1827)
Death

Ernest outlived all his brothers but eventually died at Altes Palace in Hanover on 18 November 1851. He was succeeded in Hanover by his only son George, who had been blinded in an accident as a child. Ernest was buried on 26 November in the mausoleum at Herrenhausen, Hanover. Although despised in England, he was popular in Hanover and an equestrian statue was erected there in his memory, paid for by voluntary donations.

Headshot of Rachel Knowles author with sea in background(2021)
Rachel Knowles writes clean/Christian Regency era romance and historical non-fiction. She has been sharing her research on this blog since 2011. Rachel lives in the beautiful Georgian seaside town of Weymouth, Dorset, on the south coast of England, with her husband, Andrew.

Find out more about Rachel's books and sign up for her newsletter here.

If you have enjoyed this blog and want to encourage me and help me to keep making my research freely available, please buy me a virtual cup of coffee by clicking the button below.

 

Note
1. From The Letters of Queen Victoria (1908)

Sources used include:
Fulford, Roger, Royal Dukes (1933, revised 1973)
Hibbert, Christopher, George III (1998, Viking, Great Britain)
Hibbert, Christopher, George IV (1972, Longmans, 1973, Allen Lane, London)
Hibbert, Christopher, Queen Victoria (HarperCollins, 2000, London)
Huish, Robert, Memoirs of her late royal highness Charlotte Augusta (1818)
Palmer, Alan, Ernest Augustus (1771-1851), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, (Oxford University Press, 2004, online edn, May 2009, accessed 23 Mar 2013)
Victoria, Queen, The Letters of Queen Victoria, A Selection from Her Majesty's Correspondence between the years 1837 and 1861, edited Benson, AC and Esher, Viscount, Vol I 1837-1843 (1908)
Watkins, John, A Biographical Memoir of Frederick, Duke of York and Albany (1827, London)