Tolethorpe Hall
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tolethope Hall, Rutland, England, PE9 4BH is at grid reference TF023104, near Stamford, Lincolnshire and is the former home of the Browne family, of which Robert (c. 1550-c. 1633), a notable member, was born there. He was the leader of the Brownists, early advocates of a congregational form of organization for the Church of England. Having in 1580, attempted to set up a separate Church in Norwich, Norfolk, England, he was obliged to move to Middelburg in the Netherlands in 1581. See Congregational church. or, for more history with pictures, the Stamford Shakespeare site.
The hall and its gardens are now noted as an outdoor Shakespearian theatre. The hall itself stands on the middle of three terraces cut in sloping ground. Its raked auditorium is arranged on the lower one, looking outward across the lower terrace which forms the open air stage behind which, is the open country of the Gwash Valley. The auditorium is permanently covered. The Stamford Shakespeare Company presents a three-month season each summer. Normally there are two Shakespeare plays and one by another seventeenth century playwright.
Tolethorpe overlooks Little Casterton. It is about two miles from the A1 Great North Road. The grounds of Tolethorpe occupy about seven acres.
[edit] References
- Thorne, J.O. Chambers Biographical Dictionary (1969) ISBN 550160019.
- Cantor, Leonard, The Historic COUNTRY HOUSES of Leicestershire & Rutland (1998) Kairos Press, ISBN 1-871344-15-8
- Stamford Shakespeare Company
- Tolethorpe Hall – The American Connection gives some historical details about members of the Browne family who settled in America.