Castle Howard | |
---|---|
Type | Stately home |
Location | North Yorkshire, England |
Coordinates | 54°7′17″N 0°54′21″W / 54.12139°N 0.90583°W |
OS grid reference | SE 71635 70088 |
Built | 1701–1811 |
Architects | John Vanbrugh and Nicholas Hawksmoor |
Architectural style(s) | English Baroque |
Owner | Castle Howard Estate Limited[1] |
Website | castlehoward.co.uk |
Listed Building – Grade I | |
Official name | Castle Howard and East Court |
Designated | 25 January 1954 |
Reference no. | 1316030 |
Official name | Castle Howard |
Designated | 10 May 1984 |
Reference no. | 1001059 |
Location of Castle Howard in North Yorkshire |
Castle Howard is a stately home in North Yorkshire, England, within the civil parish of Henderskelfe, located 15 miles (24 km) north of York. It is a private residence and has been the home of the Carlisle branch of the Howard family for more than 300 years. Castle Howard is not a fortified structure, but the term "castle" is sometimes used in the name of an English country house that was built on the site of a former castle.
The house is familiar to television and film audiences as the fictional "Brideshead", both in Granada Television's 1981 adaptation of Evelyn Waugh's Brideshead Revisited and in a two-hour 2008 adaptation for cinema.
History
In 1577, the 4th Duke of Norfolk's third son, Lord William Howard, married his step-sister Elizabeth Dacre, youngest daughter of the 4th Baron Dacre. She brought with her the sizable estates of Henderskelfe in Yorkshire and Naworth Castle in Cumberland.[2]
Castle Howard was commissioned by the 3rd Earl of Carlisle, who was a male-line descendant of Lord William Howard. The site selected was part of the Henderskelfe estate. The creation of Castle Howard, began in 1699, with the start of design work by John Vanbrugh. It was completed with the decoration of the Long Gallery in 1811.[3]
The house is surrounded by a large estate which, at the time of the 7th Earl of Carlisle, covered over 13,000 acres (5,300 ha) and included the villages of Welburn, Bulmer, Slingsby, Terrington and Coneysthorpe.[4] The estate was served by its own railway station, Castle Howard station, from 1845 to the 1950s.[5]
While attending Girton College during the early Edwardian era, Lady Dorothy Georgiana Howard, the daughter of the 9th Earl and "Radical Countess" of Carlisle, befriended six of her fellow students, including the future archaeologist Gisela Richter and future candidate for Roman Catholic Sainthood Anna Abrikosova. All six were invited by Lady Dorothy to Castle Howard as guests during holidays.[6]
After the death of the 9th Earl in 1911, Castle Howard was inherited by his fifth son, Geoffrey Howard, with later earls having Naworth Castle as their northern country house. Henry 'Chips' Channon, the diarist and future Conservative MP, visited Castle Howard in August 1923 and recounted in his diary that 'The house is uncomfortable in the extreme and is badly kept up. Everywhere there are signs of decaying magnificence.' Channon added that 'The galleries are reminiscent of the Vatican with their hundreds of busts and statues of emperors and gods. The great library is an enormous narrow red room the length of the house and is hung with enough paintings to found a museum.'[7]
In 1952, Castle Howard was opened to the public by its then-owner, Lord Howard of Henderskelfe, a younger son of Geoffrey Howard. It is now owned by a Howard family company, Castle Howard Estate Limited,[1] and managed by the Hon. Nicholas Howard (the second son of Lord Howard of Henderskelfe) and his wife, Victoria.[8]
House
The 3rd Earl of Carlisle first spoke to William Talman, a leading architect, but commissioned Vanbrugh, a fellow member of the Kit-Cat Club, to design the building. Castle Howard was that gentleman-dilettante's first foray into architecture, but he was assisted by Nicholas Hawksmoor.[3]
Vanbrugh's design evolved into a Baroque structure with two symmetrical wings projecting to either side of a north–south axis. The crowning central dome was added to the design at a late stage, after building had begun. Construction began at the east end, with the East Wing constructed from 1701 to 1703, the east end of the Garden Front from 1701 to 1706, the Central Block (including dome) from 1703 to 1706, and the west end of the Garden Front from 1707 to 1709. All are exuberantly decorated in Baroque style, with coronets, cherubs, urns and cyphers, with Roman Doric pilasters on the north front and Corinthian on the south. Many interiors were decorated by Giovanni Antonio Pellegrini.[3]
The Earl then turned his energies to the surrounding garden and grounds. Although the complete design is shown in the third volume of Colen Campbell's Vitruvius Britannicus, published in 1725, the West Wing was not yet started when Vanbrugh died in 1726, despite his remonstration with the Earl. The house remained incomplete on the death of the 3rd Earl in 1738, but the remaining construction finally started at the direction of the 4th Earl.[3]
Vanbrugh's design was not completed: the West Wing was built in a contrasting Palladian style to a design by the 3rd Earl's son-in-law, Sir Thomas Robinson. The new wing remained incomplete, with no first floor or roof, at the death of the 4th Earl in 1758. Although a roof had been added, the interior remained undecorated by the death of Robinson in 1777. Rooms were completed stage by stage over the following decades, but the whole was not completed until 1811 under Charles Heathcote Tatham.[3]
A large part of the house was destroyed by a fire which broke out on 9 November 1940. The dome, the central hall, the dining room and the state rooms on the east side were entirely destroyed. Antonio Pellegrini's ceiling decoration, the Fall of Phaeton, was lost when the dome collapsed. In total, twenty pictures (including two Tintorettos) and several valuable mirrors were lost. The fire took the Malton and York Fire Brigades eight hours to bring under control.[9]
Some of the devastated rooms have been restored over the following decades. In 1960–61 the dome was rebuilt, and in the following couple of years Pellegrini's Fall of Phaeton was recreated on the underside of the dome.[3] The East Wing remains a shell, although it has been re-roofed.[3]
In 2009 an underwater ground-source heat recovery system was installed under the castle's lake that halved the heating bill.[10]
According to figures released by the Association of Leading Visitor Attractions, over 269,000 people visited Castle Howard in 2019.[11]
In 2023, Great British Bake Off star Freya Cox collaborated with head chef Nathan Richardson-Kelly to create three seasonal vegan cakes for the castle Coffee Shop and Courtyard Café. The first cake, launched in January, is a vegan Black Forest Gateau. Cakes for spring and autumn were also planned and will be announced later in the year.[12]
Gardens
Castle Howard has extensive and diverse gardens.[13] There is a large formal garden immediately behind (i.e., on the south side of) the house. The house is prominently situated on a ridge and this was exploited in the development of an English landscape park, which adjoins and opens out from the formal garden. The gardens are Grade I listed on the National Register of Historic Parks and Gardens.[14]
Two major garden buildings are set in this landscape: the Temple of the Four Winds at the end of the garden, and the Mausoleum in the park. There is a lake on either side of the house. There is a woodland garden, Ray Wood (formerly Wray Wood), immediately east of the house, and a walled garden which contains decorative rose and flower gardens. The Ray Wood walls date from the 18th century and were restored in 2007.[15]
Further buildings outside the preserved gardens include Nicholas Hawksmoor's Pyramid, restored in 2015, an obelisk, and several follies and eyecatchers in the form of fortifications which have been restored in recent years. In nearby Pretty Wood, there are two more monuments, The Four Faces and a smaller pyramid by Hawksmoor.[16]
Located on the estate, but operating separately from the house and gardens and run by an entirely independent charitable trust, is the 127 acres (51 ha) Yorkshire Arboretum.[17]
Listed status
The house is Grade I listed[18] and there are many other listed structures on the estate, several of which are on the Heritage at Risk Register.[19]
Castle Howard as film location
Castle Howard appeared in film as Brideshead in both the 1981 television serial and 2008 film adaptations of Evelyn Waugh's novel Brideshead Revisited.[20]
It featured in Peter Ustinov's 1965 film Lady L[21] and it appeared as the Kremlin, in Galton and Simpson's 1966 film The Spy with a Cold Nose.[22] It was then used as the exterior set for Lady Lyndon's estate in Stanley Kubrick's 1975 film Barry Lyndon[23] and it appeared in the 1995 mini-series The Buccaneers.[21]
In 2003, a Time Team episode tried to discover traces of the old settlement of Henderskelf that had been demolished to make way for the castle.[24]
It was also used for the 2006 film Garfield: A Tail of Two Kitties.[25]
Rooms (Great Hall Entrance, Turquoise Drawing Room) were used for indoor scenes in the 2013 TV series Death Comes to Pemberley.[26] The castle and its grounds were used as the setting for the 2015 Bollywood film Shaandar[27] and in the 2016 ITV series Victoria.[21] The castle and mausoleum were used as the setting for the video for the 2018 Arctic Monkeys song "Four Out of Five".[28]
The castle was used as the setting for Clyvedon House, the family seat of the Duke of Hastings, in the Netflix series Bridgerton (2020).[21]
Gallery
- Monument to the 7th Earl of Carlisle, 1869–70 by Frederick Pepys Cockerell
- Approach with the Carrmire Gate at centre c. 1730 by Nicholas Hawksmoor, and the Pyramid Gate of 1719 by Vanbrugh on the skyline; wings added 1756 by Daniel Garrett
- The Great Obelisk, 1714, by Vanbrugh
- North front across the great lake
- The west wing, 1753–59, by Sir Thomas Robinson
- The south front
- "Four Faces" statue in Pretty Wood c. 1727 by Hawksmoor
- Folly depicting ruins
- Temple of the Four Winds 1724–1726 by Vanbrugh
- The Pyramid 1728 by Nicholas Hawksmoor
- The Atlas Fountain 1850, designed by William Andrews Nesfield, sculpted by John Thomas
- The Bridge 1744, by Daniel Garrett
- The Pyramid Gate 1719 by Vanbrugh, wings added 1756 by Daniel Garrett
- The Mausoleum designed by Hawksmoor in 1728–29, started in 1731 and completed in 1742
- The Stables courtyard, 1781–84 by John Carr
- The Mausoleum
- Castle Howard Turquoise Drawing Room
- Castle Howard The Great Hall by Vanbrugh, paintings by Giovanni Antonio Pellegrini, the dome recreated in 1961 after its destruction by fire in 1940, and repainted by Scott Ackerman Medd
- Castle Howard, Lady Georgiana's Dressing Room
- Castle Howard, Lady Georgiana's Bedroom
- Castle Howard, Crimson Dining Room
- Castle Howard Bedroom
- Castle Howard Chapel, altered and redecorated in 1875–78 by William Morris and Edward Burne-Jones
- Castle Howard Antique Passage by Vanbrugh
- The Octagon, in the Long Gallery 1802 by Charles Heathcote Tatham
- The Long Gallery 1802 by Charles Heathcote Tatham
- Castle Howard from the lake in c. 1910
- The Carrmire Gate on the approach in c. 1910
- South Lake
See also
- Hampton National Historic Site, an 18th-century US mansion said to have been inspired by Castle Howard.
- Castle Howard railway station
- A more detailed architectural appraisal of Castle Howard is at John Vanbrugh.
- List of Baroque residences
References
- 1 2 Castle Howard Estate Limited
- ↑ "William Howard of Naworth Castle". Tudor Place. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "The Building of Castle Howard". www.castlehoward.co.uk. Archived from the original on 15 April 2010. Retrieved 8 May 2010.
- ↑ 'The Pride of Yorkshire' exhibition leaflet, Castle Howard, 2010
- ↑ Butt, R. V. J. (October 1995). The Directory of Railway Stations: details every public and private passenger station, halt, platform and stopping place, past and present (1st ed.). Sparkford: Patrick Stephens Ltd. ISBN 978-1-85260-508-7. OCLC 60251199. OL 11956311M.
- ↑ Gisela M. Richter (1972), My Memoirs: Recollections of an Archaeologist's Life, Published in Rome, pages 8–9.
- ↑ Channon, Henry (1967). Rhodes James, Robert (ed.). Chips: The Diaries of Sir Henry Channon. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. ISBN 978-1-85799-493-3.
- ↑ "First interview with Castle Howard's new chatelaine, Victoria Howard". The Times. 1 October 2017. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
- ↑ Hull Daily Mail, Monday 11 November 1940 p. 3
- ↑ "'Brideshead' house Castle Howard goes green". The Daily Telegraph. 31 August 2010. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 24 January 2015.
- ↑ "ALVA – Association of Leading Visitor Attractions". www.alva.org.uk. Retrieved 4 November 2020.
- ↑ "Great British Bake Off star teams up with stately home to create vegan cakes". uk.news.yahoo.com. Retrieved 8 February 2023.
- ↑ Leeuwin, Edward W. "Echoes of Arcadia. Rituals in the Arcadian Landscape of Castle Howard". Die Gartenkunst. Vol. 16, no. 1/2004. pp. 73–84. ISSN 0935-0519.
- ↑ Historic England. "Castle Howard (1001059)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 13 July 2020.
- ↑ "Stately home walls boost". York Press. Retrieved 7 August 2021.
- ↑ Historic England. "Castle Howard Pyramid in Pretty Wood (1149012)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 11 September 2022.
- ↑ "Home". Yorkshire Arboretum. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
- ↑ Historic England. "Castle Howard and East Court (1316030)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 13 July 2020.
- ↑ "The Mausoleum and bastion wall with gates and railings, Kirk Hill, Castle Howard Estate, Henderskelfe – Ryedale". Historic England: Heritage at Risk Register. Retrieved 11 September 2022.
- ↑ "Brideshead Revisited". Filmed in Yorkshire. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
- 1 2 3 4 "New exhibition celebrates Castle Howard on screen". Historic Houses. 5 May 2022. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
- ↑ "The Spy with a Cold Nose". British Film Locations. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
- ↑ "Barry Lyndon". Movie Locations. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
- ↑ "Time Team digs up Castle Howard". Gazette and Herald. 24 April 2002. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
- ↑ "Garfield: A Tail of Two Kitties". British Film Locations. Archived from the original on 10 September 2022. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
- ↑ "Death Comes to Pemberley". Screen Yorkshire. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
- ↑ "Visit Britain the Shaandaar way!". Be On The Road. 22 October 2015. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
- ↑ "Band film video at Castle Howard". York Press. 14 May 2018. Retrieved 10 September 2022.