Showing posts with label Blenheim Palace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blenheim Palace. Show all posts

Monday, 16 February 2015

Cotswold Country Houses: History and Grandeur along the Trail

Scattered through the Cotswolds are fine country mansions, manor houses and there is even a palace. Our network of public footpaths, which date from ancient times, often pass very close to them and here are some of the historic houses next to our routes.


Chastleton House from the churchyard, Oxfordshire Cotswolds
Chastleton House

Chastleton House is a Jacobean country house built between 1607 and 1612.  It was built by Walter Jones, a wealthy lawyer and wool merchant, with no expense spared.  But the family were Royalists during the English Civil War (1642-1651) and in the 18th century they supported the Jacobite cause, which aimed to restore a Stuart king to the throne removing the Hanoverian dynasty.  As a result the family was heavily fined for its political views.  Subsequently, their fortunes did not improve and when the National Trust took the house over in 1991, the interior was much the same as it had been in the 1612.  It remains so today, as the National Trust have done only essential repairs, thus retaining the unique 17th century atmosphere.

Our guided and self-guided day walk, ‘Adlestrop: Where for a moment a blackbird sang’ passes Chastleton House, and the house is open to the public on Wednesday to Sunday afternoon from early March to the end of October.

Blenheim Palace, Woodstock, Oxfordshire, in the Oxfordshire Cotswolds
Blenheim Palace

Blenheim Palace is the sumptuous home of the Dukes of Malborough.  The estate together with funds to build the palace were given to John Churchill, 1st Duke of Malborough, by Queen Anne and parliament, who were grateful for his victory over Louis XIV of France on 13 August 1704 at the Battle of Blenheim.  John Churchill went on to win other battles in the War of Spanish Succession (1701-1714) and the palace is a memorial to him and his military victories.
  
Set in a country estate, the view of the house and lake was described by Randolph Churchill as ‘The finest view in England’ to his future wife on her first visit.   Their son, Sir Winston Churchill(1864-1965) was born there and he is buried in the churchyard at Bladon, next to the estate.

We can arrange a short break of walks in and around Woodstock and Blenheim Palace. Walkers along Shakespeare’s Way and the Oxfordshire Way pass through the estate getting magnificent views of the lake and palace beyond.  The palace is open daily from mid-February to mid-December.

Sezincote House, near Moreton-in-the-Marsh, Cotswolds
Sezincote House

Sezincote House, which lies on the spring line at the eastern side of the North Cotswolds, was designed in the “Indian Style”, by the architect, Samuel Pepys Cockerell in 1805.  The gardens were designed by Humphrey Repton, the eminent horticulturalist who is considered the last of the great British landscape gardeners.  When the Prince Regent visited the house in 1807 he admired the unique combination of Hindu and Muslim architecture, and it is said that it influenced the design of his exotic oriental retreat, the Brighton Pavilion.

Our ‘Classic Cotswold tour passes Sezincote on the routes from Moreton-in-Marsh and Chipping Campden to Stow-on-the-Wold.

Abbotswood house and garden, Stow-on-the-Wold, north Cotswolds
Abbotswood House

Abbotswood is a lovely country house near Stow-on-the-Wold.  The estate dates back to 1253, but the current house was built in 1867.   Shortly afterwards it was remodelled and enlarged in 1902 by Edwin Lutyens, the eminent British architect who adapted traditional designs for modern day living.  Lutyens also designed the stunning gardens and these are open to the public in April when the rhododendrons in bloom and in October when the acers are in full autumn colour and at other times of the year – this photo was taken in mid-summer.  For people with deep pockets, the house together with the estate and 13 cottages was recently on the market for £30 million.

On our shortbreak based in Stow-on-the-Wold one of the walks passes through the estate.

Please contact Anne, to find out more or to book a walking holiday.

Happy hiking

Anne

Walk the Landscape

Wednesday, 10 July 2013

A Balmy Summer Day in Blenheim Park, Woodstock

Roofs of Old Woodstock
Roofs of Old Woodstock

Blenheim Palace from across Queen Pool
Blenheim Palace from across Queen Pool

Vanbrugh's Grand Bridge spanning Capability Brown's Lake
Vanbrugh's Grand Bridge spanning Capability Brown's Lake

Yellow waterlilies in a sheltered corner of the Lake at Blenheim
Yellow waterlilies in a sheltered corner of the Lake at Blenheim

Ancient trees in Blenheim Park - the inspiration for the Ents in Lord of the Rings
Ancient trees in Blenheim Park - the inspiration for the Ents in Lord of the Rings

Woodstock in Oxfordshire is a good place for a relaxing weekend with a visit to Blenheim Palace (a World Heritage Site) and walks through the magnificent Blenheim Park - that Randolph Churchill considered the 'Finest View in England'.

Happy walking
Anne
Walk the Landscape






Sunday, 21 August 2011

A Walk Through Blenheim Park

John Churchill, Duke of Marlborough (1650-1722), the aristocrat, politician and above all military commander, was a national hero.

In reward for his service to the country and for victories at the Battle of Blenheim (1702) and other battles in the War of Spanish Succession(1701 – 1714), Queen Anne and the Nation awarded him the manor of Woodstock, a Royal deer park, on which to build a palace.

The result was a sumptuous palace designed by the architect, Sir John Vanbrugh and a park designed by the landscape gardener, Capability Brown.

Ancient Rights of Way still pass through the Park allowing an impressive circular walk of 7 miles, with magnificent views across the Great Lake to the Grand Bridge and the Palace itself.

Blenheim Palace from Queen Pool
A cloudy and overcast start to the walk

Cycling towards the Column of Victory

Dappled shade

Sheep pastures under blue skies

Backwater reflections

The Grand Bridge

Blenheim Palace on a gorgeous summer afternoon

Best
Anne