Long gallery
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Long gallery is an architectural term given to a long, narrow room, often with a high ceiling. In British architecture, long galleries were popular in Elizabethan and Jacobean houses. They were often located on the upper floor of the great houses of the time, and stretched across the entire frontage of the building. They served several purposes: among others, they were used for entertaining guests, for taking exercise in the form of walking when the weather was inclement, and for displaying art collections.
Later long galleries were built in Victorian houses such as Nottingham Castle.
Notable long galleries in the U.K. can be seen at:
- Apethorpe Hall Conservation by English Heritage under way
- Aston Hall [1]
- Blickling Hall
- Burghley House
- Burton Agnes Hall [2]
- Burton Constable Hall [3]
- Haddon Hall [4]
- Ham House, compact and running from front to rear.
- Hardwick Hall, one of the largest.
- Hatfield House [5]
- Little Moreton Hall
- Longleat House (The long gallery is now called the Saloon)
- Montacute House [6]
- Osterley Park [7]
- Scone Palace [8]
- Syon House [9]
Reading
- The 'Long Gallery': Its Origins, Development, Use and Decoration by Rosalys Coope in Architectural History, Vol. 29, 1986 (1986), pp. 43-72+74-84