Castle Ashby
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Castle Ashby is the name of a civil parish, an estate village and the country house in rural Northamptonshire. Historically the village was set up to service the needs of Castle Ashby itself, the seat of the Marquess of Northampton. The village has one small pub-cum-hotel—"The Falcon".
The Castle is the result of a licence obtained in 1306, for Langton, Bishop of Coventry, to castellate his mansion in the village of Ashby.
The village contains many houses rebuilt from the 1860s onwards - and includes work by the architect E.F. Law - whose work can also be seen nearby at Horton Church.
Contents |
[edit] The house
The present rebuilding of Castle Ashby was started by Henry, 1st Lord Compton, in 1574 and was continued by his son, created Earl of Northampton. Queen Elizabeth I's first visit to the house was in 1600. Like other houses of its date, it was built in an E-shaped floorplan, a deep central porch and flight of steps forming the center stroke of the E. When King James and his Queen first stayed in 1605, the castle is documented as "Lord Compton's princely mansion", and in the household records we find that employed at this time were 83 household servants, four chaplains, three musicians and the Gardener of Ashby.
The parapet of stone lettering around the top of the house is dated 1624, and its Latin inscription runs as follows:
- NISI DOMINUS CUSTOS CUSTODIVERIT DOMUM FRUSTRA
- VIGILAT QUI CUSTODIT EAM: NISI DOMINUS AEDIFICAVERIT
- DOMUM IN VANUM LABORAVERUNT QUI AEDIFICANT EAM
The words are based on the 127th Psalm, "Except the Lord build the house they labour but in vain they who build it; except the Lord keep the house the watchman waketh but in vain".
By 1635 an ambitious classicising screen had been added across the open southern side of the courtyard, probably to make the two wings directly accessible to each another; its design deviates enough from Palladian canons to make it unlikely that Inigo Jones designed it;[1] Howard Colvin[2] suggested that a payment of £8 to "Cartor Surveyor" in the Earl's accounts, September 1631, may refer to Edward Carter, Jones's deputy at St. Paul's Cathedral, 1633-41. Work proceded at Castle Ashby until, as Colen Campbell the architect put it, "the Civil Wars put a stop to all Arts".
While the family was away fighting for the Royalist cause in the Civil War, the east side of the house was set on fire and severely damaged. The folklore is that an old woman known as Elspeth, who lived in the parvise over the north porch of the church, first noticed the blaze and alerted the village, thus saving the remainder of the house. The marks of the flames can still be clearly seen on the lintels of the windows. The contents of the house were looted and much damage sustained to the estate by the Parliamentarians.
In October 1695, King William III visited the house and introduced the Dutch custom of planting avenues: not only to add to the importance of the house, but also to improve the outlook from its windows. Within a month of the visit, Lord Northampton began the planting of four avenues opposite each face of the house—something that took 25 years.
As a result of Capability Brown's "return to nature" approach 35 years later, only two of these avenues now remain. Brown, the architect and landscape gardener, was called in during 1760. Apart from "altering" the avenues into small clumps of trees and doing away with the Elizabethan gardens, he enlarged the ponds overlooked by the house into ornamental lakes, dug a ha-ha, or sunken fence, around the park and built the dairy and the temple against the menagerie. In 1771-74 the Great Hall was rebuilt for the 8th Earl by John Johnson.[3]
It was not until the 1860s that any further substantial changes were carried out at the house, when Charles, the 3rd Marquess, and his wife brought in Sir Digby Wyatt, who made many changes to the interior of the house. Most of these were subsequently restored to their previous state by later generations who considered them ugly.
At this time the terraces round the house with their terracotta balustrading were laid out, and the Italian "golden gates" at the entrance to the front drive were hung on piers designed by Wyatt himself. Sadly, before all the changes were carried out, Lady Northampton died of consumption, giving rise to the pitiful Latin inscription in terracotta lettering beside the church: "To Theodosia, sweetest of wives…Begun in hope, finished in regret."
In 1867 the architect E.W. Godwin was called in to undertake further work; as a result, the Italianate Orangery and the Birmingham show houses were built to his designs. The old kitchen garden between them was also turned into an Italian garden with shaped beds divided by box edging, and the enormous kitchen garden beyond was walled in. Lodges were built approaching the station and at the entrance to the Avenue from the Northampton road. This latter pair, however, were pulled down in 1869, a year after their construction, for being too close together and were immediately rebuilt in their present position.
Later still, in the time of the 4th Marquess (1877–1897), extensive redecoration was carried out to the Long Gallery, Great Hall, Billiards Room and Chapel.
[edit] The House and grounds today
- The house today is the minor estate house—Compton Wynyates being the family's main residence; Castle Ashby is now used by the estate heir—currently the Earl Compton.
- The Castle Ashby estate, now managed by Lord Compton, remains one of the area's great landowners; the estate includes land in many of the neighbouring villages, such as Grendon, Denton and Yardley Hastings.
- The estate grounds also include a fine cricket pitch in front of the castle and a mile-long drive.
- The grounds are open daily to the public. The house is not usually open but viewing can be on appointment.
- The grounds provided the venue for the Greenbelt Christian music festival each year between 1984 and 1992.
- Two open-air concerts were given by Sir Elton John in the grounds in front of the house in July 2000.
- Local amateur acting group The Parish Players, drawn from various of the near-by villages, holds regular performances in the castle—a tradition carried on now for some years.
[edit] Bibliography
- Turner, Roger, Capability Brown and the Eighteenth Century English Landscape, 2nd ed. Phillimore, Chichester, 1999, pp. 112–114.
[edit] See also
[edit] Notes
[edit] External links