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History

Before the Palace: the Manor of Hampton Court[edit]

The name Hampton Court[a] originally referred to the manor house and chapel maintained on the site of the current palace by the Order of Knights of the Hospital of Saint John of Jerusalem (known as the Knights Hospitaller)[b]. Established in Hampton since the 12th century, the Order developed their manor house at Hampton Court into one of their largest and best-appointed in England, and it was frequently used by the court of Edward III as alternative accommodation to Sheen Palace (the royal palace on the Thames at Richmond),[c] a way station and guest house for visitors en route upriver to the royal manor at Byfleet (constructed by Edward II in the early 14th century), and a guest house for royal pensioners.[2]

After the manor at Byfleet was dismantled in 1414 by Henry V, the importance of Hampton Court as a royal venue diminished. The Order leased the property for a time,[d] before retaining it as a country estate for the prior of the Knights Hospitallers, James Kendall. In 1494 Kendall arranged for the property to be leased to Giles Daubeney, a fellow member of the Privy Council. A favourite of Henry VII,[e] Daubeney sought to establish a seat near London and the new palace constructed by Henry at Richmond.[3]

Daubeney signed an 80-year lease for Hampton Court in 1494,

and was made Lord Chamberlain the following year.

[T 5, 7-9; R 20-21, THOP 150]





Henry VII favoured Westminster, Sheen, Greenwich and Windsor, in that order. T17 36 citing Ford L L, ‘Conciliar Politics and Administration in the Reign of Henry VII’ (unpublished PhD thesis, University of St Andrews 2001), Appendix 1

Elizabeth of York travelled to Hampton Court in December 1502 - pregnant with Katherine. T17 56-7 citing Okerlund A N, Elizabeth of York (Basingstoke, 2009) and Ford. Before she retired to the Tower to give birth and die of postpartum infection.   

[ ]

The Tudor Palace: Cardinal Wolsey and Henry VIII[edit]

The Palace during the Protectorate[edit]

The Palace rebuilt: Christopher Wren's [ ] for William and Mary[edit]

The Grace and Favour era[edit]

The Public Palace: Edward Jesse and the display of the Royal Collection[edit]

The Palace restored:[edit]

The Palace in the Modern era:[edit]

Hampton Court Palace pictures of inspired buildings[edit]

1860-1930 - Thurley 2003 p 308-309, 361

Kinmel Hall Derbyshire (1871-1874)

Buildings inspired by Hampton Court Palace[4]
Top row: 19th century examples; Bottom row: 20th century. Dates of construction shown.







References[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ The earliest reference to the name is the manor house referred to as 'Hampton Court' in the 1399 will of Richard Weynel, Vicar of Hampton.[1]
  2. ^ Precursor to the modern Order of St John.
  3. ^ In 1353 Edward III had paid for the Order's manor at Hampton Court to be repaired after his servants accidentally set fire to the roof.
  4. ^ The first recorded lease of the manor was to John Wode [W John_Wood_(speaker], the Yorkist Speaker of the House of Commons under Edward IV and vice-admiral for Richard III. The date of Wode’s lease is not known, only its re-granting on the same terms to Giles Daubeney in 1494.
  5. ^ Originally an esquire of Edward IV (and knighted in 1478), Daubeney formed part of the failed Buckingham's rebellion against Richard III, before escaping to Brittany with Henry Tudor and later fighting bravely at the Battle of Bosworth. Daubeney was rewarded by Henry VII, becoming a Privy Councillor, co-Master of the Mint and Lieutenant of Calais.

Citations[edit]

  1. ^ Garfield 1951, p. 8; Heath 2000, p. 13.
  2. ^ Thurley 2003, p. 4 sfnm error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFThurley2003 (help); Russell 2023, p. 19.
  3. ^ Thurley 2003, pp. 5, 7–9 sfnm error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFThurley2003 (help); Russell 2023, pp. 20–21; Thurley 2017, p. 150.
  4. ^ Thurley, Simon (2003). HCP WHOOO. something.

Sources[edit]

Chapman, Llewella (2017). Representing Henry’s Royal Palace: The Relationship between Film, Television and Hampton Court Palace (PhD thesis). University of East Anglia, School of Art, Media and American Studies.

Davis, John R. (2024). "An Act of 'Queenly Beneficence'? A Historical Investigation of the Opening of Hampton Court Palace to the Public in the Nineteenth Century". The Court Historian. 29 (1): 17–32.

Garside, Bernard (1951). The Manor Lordship and Great Parks of Hampton Court during the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries (with a description of Hampton Wick Fields and the Thames Islands). Richmond: Dimblebys of Richmond.

Heath, Gerald (2000). Hampton Court: the story of a village. Hampton Court Association. ISBN 978-0953870004.

Lipscomb, Suzannah. "Historical Authenticity and Interpretative Strategy at Hampton Court Palace". The Public Historian. 32 (3): 98–119 – via JSTOR.

Parker, Julia (2009). Reinvention and continuity in the making of an historic visitor attraction: control access and display at Hampton Court Palace,1838-1938 (PhD thesis). Kingston University, London.

Russell, Gareth (2023). The Palace: From the Tudors to the Windsors - 500 Years of History at Hampton Court. London: William Collins. ISBN 9780008436988.

Thurley, Simon (1993). The Royal Palaces of Tudor England. London: Yale University Press. ISBN 0300054203.

Thurley, Simon (2003). Hampton Court: A Social and Architectural History. London: Yale University Press. ISBN 0300102232.

Thurley, Simon (2017). Houses of Power: the Palaces that Shaped the Tudor World. London: Bantam Press. ISBN 9781784160494.

Thurley, Simon (2021). Palaces of Revolution: Life, Death & Art at the Stuart Court. London: William Collins. ISBN 9780008389994.

Worsley, Lucy; Souden, David (2005). Hampton Court Palace: the official illustrated history. London: Merrell. ISBN 9781858942827.

General works[edit]

Further reading[edit]

Select guide books (chronological order)[edit]

Articles[edit]