Penshurst Place

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The Great Hall at Penshurst Place, circa 1915
The Great Hall at Penshurst Place, circa 1915

Penshurst Place is an historic building near Tonbridge in Kent, 32 miles (50 km) to the south east of London, England. It is the ancestral home of the Sidney family, and it and its gardens are open for public viewing.

The ancient village of Penshurst was within the manor of that name: the manor appears as Penecestre or Penchester, a name adopted by Stephen de Penecestre, Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports, who possessed the manor towards the end of the 13th century.

The present mansion was built in 1341 for Sir John de Pulteney at the time when such properties ceased to be castles: they were more dwellings that could be defended in an emergency. When Henry IV's third son, John, Duke of Bedford, occupied Penshurst, the second hall, known as the Buckingham Building, was built.

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[edit] The Sidney family

It was enlarged after 1552 when King Edward VI granted the house to Sir William Sidney (1482–1554), who had been a courtier to the King’s father, Henry VIII. Sir William's son Henry (1529–1586) married Lady Mary Dudley, whose family became implicated in the Lady Jane Grey affair, although Henry himself escaped any such implications. During his lifetime he added apartments and the "King’s Tower" to Penshurst. He also created what is now one of England's oldest private gardens.

Philip Sidney (1554–1586), Henry’s son, was born at Penshurst Place in 1554. He was buried in old St Paul's, in London, having died 25 days after a fatal wounding from a bullet in the thigh at the battle of Zutphen, but his tomb was destroyed in the great fire of London in 1666.

Philip's brother Robert Sidney now inherited Penshurst. His time there resulted in more additions to the state rooms, including an impressive "Long Gallery". He had also inherited the Earldom of Leicester: his descendants for the next seven generations continued to live at the mansion. By the 19th century the building was falling into disrepair, but a new occupant in 1818, Sir John Shelley-Sidney, and his son Philip began to restore it. The latter was created Baron De L'Isle and Dudley in 1835; the present peer is now the second Viscount, and it is to him and his father that much of the modern restoration is due, in spite of the house having suffered neglect during World War I. Today the house and gardens are open to the public.

[edit] Penshurst Place

It is possible to see in the house the evidence of occupation over its 670-year history:

  • The State Rooms, filled with a wonderful collection acquired by generations of the Sidney family.
  • The West Solar, or State Dining Room, part of the mediaeval building, contains an interesting collection of family portraits, furniture and porcelain.
  • The Queen Elizabeth Room, named after Queen Elizabeth I, with its display of early upholstered furniture.
  • The Tapestry Room
  • The Long Gallery, full of royal and family portraits
  • The Nether Gallery: with an array of arms and armour.

[edit] Cultural references

  • The house and its owners were paid a tribute in Ben Jonson's seventeenth century poem To Penshurst.
  • The Great Hall and other interior rooms were used as the interior sets for the 1992 television series Covington Cross.
  • The Baron's Hall was used as a set for the Hollywood film The Other Boleyn Girl based on the novel by Philippa Gregory.

[edit] External links

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