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Longleat

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This article is about the stately home and related attractions. There is a separate article covering the Longleat Safari Park.
Longleat House, 2005
Longleat House, 2005

Longleat is an English country house, currently the seat of the Marquesses of Bath, adjacent to the village of Horningsham and near the towns of Warminster in Wiltshire and Frome in Somerset. It is noted for its Elizabethan country house, maze, landscaped parkland and safari park. The house is set in over 900 acres (3.6 km²) of parkland, landscaped by Capability Brown, with 8,000 acres (32 km²) of woods and farmland. It was the first stately home to open to the public, and also claims the first safari park outside Africa. The house was built by Sir John Thynne, and designed mainly by Robert Smythson, after the original priory was destroyed by fire in 1567. It took 12 years to complete and is widely regarded as one of the finest examples of Elizabethan architecture in Britain. Longleat is currently occupied by Alexander Thynn, 7th Marquess of Bath, a direct descendant. The BBC television show Animal Park is filmed here.

Contents

Attractions

The estate is open to the public with the various attractions being indiviually priced. A 'passport' ticket providing one admission to each attraction is available at a discount.

The hedge maze
The hedge maze
  • Garden and grounds
  • Safari park
  • Longleat House
  • Lord Bath's murals
  • Safari boat trip
  • Old Joe's mine
  • Motion simulators
  • Pets corner
  • Miniature railway
  • Butterfly garden
  • Hedge maze
  • Postman Pat village
  • Adventure castle
  • Blue Peter maze
  • King Arthur's mirror maze
  • The life and times of Henry, Lord Bath
  • Family Bygones
  • Mystical gardens
  • Stars of Animal Park Exhibition

Longleat House and the Thynnes

A View of Longleat, Jan Siberechts, 1675
A View of Longleat, Jan Siberechts, 1675

Longleat was purchased by Sir John Thynn in 1541. He was the first of the Thynne 'dynasty' - the family name changed from Thynn to Thynne in the 17th century, but the present head of the family reverted to the spelling Thynn in the 1980s.

  • Sir John Thynn (1515-1580) purchased Longleat which was previously an Augustinian priory. He was a builder with experience gained from working on Syon House, Bedwyn Broil and Somerset House. In April 1567 the original house caught fire and burnt down. A replacement house was effectively completed by 1580. Adrian Gaunt, Alan Maynard, Robert Smythson, the Earl of Hertford and Humpfrey Lovell all contributed to the new building but most of the design was Sir John's work.
  • Sir John Thynn, Junior (1555-1604)
  • Sir Thomas Thynn (1578-1639)
  • Sir James Thynn (1605-1670) who employed Sir Christopher Wren to do modifications to the house
  • Thomas Thynn (1646-1682)
  • Thomas Thynne, 1st Viscount Weymouth (1640-1714) and started the house's large book collection. Formal gardens, canals, fountains and parterres were created by George London with sculptures by Arnold Quellin and Chevalier David. The Best Gallery, Long Gallery, Old Library and Chapel were all added due to Wren.
  • Thomas Thynne, 2nd Viscount Weymouth (1710-1751) married Louisa Careret who is reputed to still reside at the house as a ghost
  • Thomas Thynne, 1st Marquess of Bath (1734-1796) employed Capability Brown who replaced the formal gardens with a landscaped park and dramatic drives and entrance roads.
  • Thomas Thynne, 2nd Marquess of Bath (1765-1837) employed Jeffry Wyatville to modernise the house and received advice from Humphrey Repton on the grounds. Wyatville demolished several parts of the house, including Wren's staircase, and replaced them with galleries and a grand staircase. He also constructed many outbuildings including the Orangery.
  • Henry Frederick Thynne, 3rd Marquess of Bath (1797-1837)
  • John Alexander Thynne, 4th Marquess of Bath (1831-1896) collected Italian fine arts. He employed John Crace, whose prior work included Brighton Pavilion, Woburn Abbey, Chatsworth House and the Palace of Westminster to add Italian renaissance style interiors.
  • Thomas Henry Thynne, 5th Marquess of Bath (1862-1946). During World War I, the house was used as a temporary hospital. During World War II, it became the evacuated Royal School for Daughters of Officers in the Army. An Americal hospital was also constructed on the grounds.
  • Henry Frederick Thynne, 6th Marquess of Bath (1905-1992). In 1947, death duties forced the sale of a large part of the Marquess' estates, in order to allow Longleat itself to survive he opened the house to public visitors. Russell Page redesigned the gardens around the house to allow for tourists. The safari park opened in 1966.
  • Alexander Thynn, 7th Marquess of Bath (born 1932) is an artist and mural painter with a penchant for mazes and labyrinths (he has created the hedge maze, the love labyrinth, the sun maze, the lunar labyrinth and King Arthur's maze).

The house is still used as the private residence of the Thynn family. The tour of the house comprises:

  • The Elizabethan Great Hall, with a minstrels' gallery
  • The lower east corridor, a wide room originally used as servant access to the main rooms. This now holds fine furniture and paintings. Also on display are two visitor books, one showing the signatures of Elizabeth II and Philip, the other Albert (George VI) and Elizabeth (the Queen Mother).
  • The ante-library, with a magnificent Venetian painting on the ceiling
  • The Red Library, which displays many of the 40,000 books in the house
  • The Breakfast Room, with a ceiling to match the ante-library
  • The Lower Dining Room
  • Stairs up, past a display of large early Meissen porcelain animals
  • The Bathroom and bath-bedroom: the bath is a cooper built lead lined tub. Originally filled by hand from buckets and drained the same way, taps and drains are now provided and the lead lining was replaced in 2005. The room holds the first plumbed in flush lavatory in the house.
  • The State Dining Room, with a Meissen porcelain centrepiece on the table to facilitate flagging conversations
  • The Saloon
  • The State Drawing Room, designed by Crace
  • The Robes Corridor
  • The Chinese Bedroom
  • The Music Room, with instruments including a barrel organ
  • The Prince of Wales Bedroom, so named because of a large painting of Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales the brother of Charles I
  • The upper west corridor
  • The Grand Staircase

Longleat Woods

Longleat Woods (grid reference ST795435) is a 249.9 hectare (617.4 acre) biological Site of Special Scientific Interest in Somerset, notified in 1972.

Trivia

  • The Bollywood film Mohabbatein was filmed at Longleat which served as the location for the Gurukul School.
  • Longleat staged the first ever British round of the Red Bull Air Race in 2005. The second event took place in 2006 but was cancelled at the last minute due to poor weather conditions.
  • A leat is an artificial waterway or channel such as that which supplies a watermill.

External links

Coordinates: 51.19035° N 2.29472° W

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Longleat from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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