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Hampton Court: A Social and Architectural History by Simon Thurley — book cover

Hampton Court: A Social and Architectural History

by Simon Thurley
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Overview

A complete and lavishly illustrated history of the spectacular palace that has been at the heart of British history since the Tudors Hampton Court-probably Britain's most important secular historic building complex-was a center of court life and politics from the late fifteenth to the middle of the eighteenth century. It was also a place of architectural innovation and the site of the most ambitious formal gardens ever built in Britain. This book offers the first history in over a century of Hampton Court, its gardens, and its parks. Lavishly illustrated, the book brings to life the entire history of the building, including the terrible fire of 1986 and the twentieth-century opening of the complex to the public. Simon Thurley, the unrivalled authority on Hampton Court's architecture, interior decoration, and history, sets the building in political and social context. He explores the lives and motivations of its builders, telling the stories of the architects and others who fulfilled the whims of kings and princes. In addition to throwing light on the character of court life, the book makes important new attributions to architects Hugh May, Nicholas Hawksmoor, William Talman, Colen Campbell, Edward Blore, and others.

Author Biography: Simon Thurley is Chief Executive of English Heritage, with responsibility for the supervision of most of England's historic buildings and sites.

Published for the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art. Also available by Simon Thurley: Whitehall Palace & The Royal Palaces of Tudor England.

Synopsis

A complete and lavishly illustrated history of the spectacular palace that has been at the heart of British history since the Tudors Hampton Court-probably Britain's most important secular historic building complex-was a center of court life and politics from the late fifteenth to the middle of the eighteenth century. It was also a place of architectural innovation and the site of the most ambitious formal gardens ever built in Britain. This book offers the first history in over a century of Hampton Court, its gardens, and its parks. Lavishly illustrated, the book brings to life the entire history of the building, including the terrible fire of 1986 and the twentieth-century opening of the complex to the public. Simon Thurley, the unrivalled authority on Hampton Court's architecture, interior decoration, and history, sets the building in political and social context. He explores the lives and motivations of its builders, telling the stories of the architects and others who fulfilled the whims of kings and princes. In addition to throwing light on the character of court life, the book makes important new attributions to architects Hugh May, Nicholas Hawksmoor, William Talman, Colen Campbell, Edward Blore, and others.

Author Biography: Simon Thurley is Chief Executive of English Heritage, with responsibility for the supervision of most of England's historic buildings and sites.

Published for the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art. Also available by Simon Thurley: Whitehall Palace & The Royal Palaces of Tudor England.

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Editorials

Daily Telegraph - Giles Worsley

“With the help of lavish illustrations and reconstructions, Thurley lays bare the history of the palace. . . . Simon Thurley’s account is unlikely to be superseded.”—Giles Worsley, Daily Telegraph (London)













Book Details

Published
January 1, 2004
Publisher
Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art
Pages
480
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780300102239

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