Powis Castle

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Powis Castle from the south, showing the distictive terraced gardens
Powis Castle from the south, showing the distictive terraced gardens

Powis Castle (Welsh: Castell Powis or Castell Coch) is a medieval castle, fortress and grand country mansion located near the town of Welshpool, in Powys, Mid Wales, United Kingdom. It is the residence of the Earl of Powis and is known for its extensive, attractive formal gardens, terraces, parkland and estate.

The property is under the care of the National Trust, who operate it under the name "Powis Castle & Garden".

The future Queen Victoria visited the castle during her progress through England and Wales in 1832.

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[edit] History

Little changed externally since the early Middle Ages, Powis, unlike the castles Conway, Caernarvon, Harlech and nearby Montgomery, which were all built to by the English to dominate and subdue the Welsh, was the fortress of a dynasty of Welsh princes. In 1266 four years after Edward I’s conquest of Wales, Owain ap Gruffydd ap Gwenwynwyn, the last hereditary prince of Powis, renounced his royal claim title and was granted the title of Baron de la Pole, (i.e. Pool or Powis Castle). (The ancient Kingdom of Powys covered the area of east Wales north of Brycheiniog and south of Gwynedd).

In 1587 a descendant sold the lordship and castle to Sir Edward Herbert (d. 1595) second son of the first Earl of Pembroke. Sir Edward’s wife was a Catholic and the family’s allegiance to Rome and to the Stuart kings was to shape its destiny for over a century. On 22 October 1644 Powis Castle was captured by Parliamentary troops and was not returned to the family until the restoration of Charles II.

The magnificent State bedroom was installed in about 1665 and further improvements were carried out during the 1670s and 1680s, possible under the direction of William Winde, who may also have designed the extraordinary terraced gardens. Winde’s employer was William, third Lord Powis (c.1626 – 1696), who was created Earl (1674) and then Marquess (1685) of Powis. Barred by his Catholic faith from high office under Charles II, Lord Powis became one of James II’s chief ministers and followed his master into exile in 1688. The second Marquess was reinstated in 1722, and on the death of the third Marquess in 1748, Powis was inherited by his Protestant kinsman, Henry Arthur Herbert of Oakly Park, Ludlow, who was made Earl of Powis by George II.

On 6 July 1756 Lord Lyttleton wrote that `About £3,000 laid out upon Powis Castle would make it the most august place in the kingdom.’ and in 1774 Sir John Cullum remarked: `(Powis’s) grand situation, its charming and magnificent Prospects, its extensive woody Parks of many hundred acres … render it one of the first Seats of the Kingdom.’

In 1784 Lord Powis’s daughter, Lady Henrietta Herbert, married Edward Clive the eldest son of Clive of India. Their marriage led to the union of the Clive and Powis estates in 1801, and in 1804 the earldom of Powis was recreated for the third time for Edward Clive. Edward then, in accordance with his uncle’s will, duly changed his name to Herbert. The Clive fortune paid for long overdue repairs to the castle which were carried out by Sir Robert Smirke. The garden and park were also improved. Part of Clive of India’s fine collection of old master pictures, French and English furniture, and Italian curiosities, were brought to the castle.

The final alterations to Powis Castle were undertaken at the beginning of the twentieth century by G. F. Bodley for George Herbert, fourth Earl of Powis (1862 – 1952) whose wife improved the garden which she felt had the potential to be `the most beautiful in England and Wales’. She died after a car accident in 1929 and Lord Powis also lost his two sons in the First and Second World Wars. On his death in 1952, he bequeathed the castle and gardens to the National Trust He was succeeded by his cousin, Edward Herbert (1889 – 1974), fifth Earl, whose widow, the Countess Powis, remained living in the dower house, and was succeeded in turn by Christian Victor Charles Herbert the sixth Earl. [1].

[edit] Notable features

[edit] Reynolds portrait

The castle contains the portrait Lady Henrietta Antonia Herbert, Countess of Powys (1758 – 1830) painted in 1777 by Sir Joshua Reynolds. Lady Henrietta was daughter of Henry Arthur, first Earl of Powis and wife of Edward, second Lord Clive. The hat and the lace scarf which she wears in the portrait are not shown in the engraving of 1778 (hung nearby) and appear to have been added by another hand.

[edit] The State Bedroom

A remarkable survival of the 1660s, the State Bedroom is the only one in Britain where a balustrade still rails off the bed alcove from the rest of the room. Such a design derives from the days when the English gentry wished to emulate the elaborate etiquette that regulated the court of Louis XIV at Versailles. When improvements to the castle were being considered in 1772, the architect Thomas Farnolls Pritchard recommended that the bedroom be wholly preserved. A visit to the castle by Charles II is still part of the family tradition.

The window latches in the shape of the Prince of Wales feathers commemorate the visit of the future King Edward VII. His son and daughter-in-law (later King George VI and Queen Mary, visited in 1909.

[edit] Clive of India’s Cat

Displayed in the Long Gallery, the marble group of a cat and snake, is Roman and dates from between 1st Century BC and 2nd Century AD. Representations of cats are rare in Roman art and the Powis group is unique amongst surviving classical sculpture. Two similar compositions in mosaic are known, from Pompeii and at The Vatican Museum, but these both depict a cat attacking a bird.

It seems most likely that the marble was purchased by Clive of India for his wife on his visit to Italy in 1774. The marble was quarried on the Greek island of Thasos and is distinctive for the large embedded crystals which make sculpting difficult.

[edit] The Garden

The garden at Powis has survived the eighteenth century reaction against the formality of earlier garden design, and Powis is thus one of the few places in Britain where a true baroque garden may still be fully appreciated. It seems the terraces were hewn from the rock in the early 1770s under the direction of Frenchman Adrian Duvall of Rouen, although William Winde may also have been involved, up until his death in 1722. The concept for formal or terraces was introduced into northern Europe from the gardens of 16th Century Italy.

It seem that Duval may well have been an expert in hydraulics, having been principally responsible for the impressive original water gardens, which were dismantled by 1809. One notable item salvaged from the garden fountains is the lead statue of “Fame”, attributed to the workshop of Dutchman John van Nost (d. 1729), and now situated in The Courtyard. The piece seems to have been struck from the same mould as the Pegasus and fame supplied by van Nost between 1705 and 1716 to Sir Nicholas Shireburn at Stonyhurst, Lancashire.

A great deal of work to restore and improve the gardens was undertaken from 1911 by Violet wife of the fourth Earl, including the laying out of of the formal gardens at the far south eastern corner.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Powis Castle, National Trust Guide Book, 1987

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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Coordinates: 52°39′05″N 3°09′29″W / 52.65139, -3.15806

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