Longthorpe Tower

Longthorpe Tower
Longthorpe, England

Longthorpe Tower
Longthorpe Tower
Coordinates grid reference TL16209838
Type Tower
Site information
Owner English Heritage
Open to
the public
Yes
Condition Intact
Site history
Materials Stone

Longthorpe Tower is a 14th-century three-storey tower in the village of Longthorpe, famous for its well-preserved set of medieval murals.

Details

Longthorpe tower is located in the village of Longthorpe, now a residential area of Peterborough in the United Kingdom, about two miles (3 km) to the west of the city centre. At the start of the 14th century, Robert Thorpe built the tower an extension to an existing fortified manor house; Thorpe had worked his way to relative wealth through the local Peterborough Abbey, and the tower may have been something of a status symbol.[1] The tower has three stories, and the first floor was originally designed as living space for Thorpe.[2]

The tower is best known for its English medieval wall paintings, carried out around 1330.[3] The paintings show religious, secular and moral themes and the quality is comparatively good for a provincial work.[4] The paintings were whitewashed over around the time of the Reformation and remained hidden until their rediscovery in the 1940s.[5] Historian Clive Rouse considers that "no comparable scheme...of such completeness and of such early date exists in England".[6]

The property is now owned by English Heritage and is a Grade I listed building and a Scheduled Monument protected by law.[7]

See also

References

  1. Pettifer, p.167; Pounds, p.284.
  2. Pounds, p.284.
  3. Emery, p.475.
  4. Pettifer, p.167; Emery, p.475.
  5. Pettifer, p.167.
  6. Pounds, p.284.
  7. "Longthorpe Tower". Pastscape.org.uk. Retrieved 2008-01-04.

Bibliography

Further reading

Books

Journal articles

Guidebooks

External links

Media related to Longthorpe Tower at Wikimedia Commons

Coordinates: 52°34′15″N 0°17′13″W / 52.5708°N 0.2869°W / 52.5708; -0.2869

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