Kings Langley Palace
Kings Langley Palace | |
---|---|
![]() Former site of Kings Langley Palace | |
General information | |
Status | Demolished |
Type | Palace |
Town or city | Kings Langley, Hertfordshire |
Country | England |
Coordinates | 51°42′43″N 0°27′32″W / 51.71194°N 0.45889°W / 51.71194; -0.45889 |
Estimated completion | 1277 |
Demolished | 17th century |
Kings Langley Palace was a 13th-century royal palace which was located to the west of the
History
The origins of Kings Langley Palace are not known, but it is thought that the estate land was originally the property of the Manor of Chilterne Langley or Langley Chenduit. The estate would have part of a large, dense forest stretching from London out to
After Prince Edward was invested as


During the reign of
The author of
Later King Richard II celebrated Christmas there.[6] The palace was damaged by a serious fire in 1431;[13] accounts describe "a great and disastrous fire at the manor of our lady Joan the Queen at Langley" (referring to Joan of Navarre, wife of Henry IV) which was blamed on "the negligence and drowsiness of a ministrel and insufficient care of a lighted candle."[14] However, records of subsequent repair work to the buildings indicate that the palace was not entirely destroyed by the fire.[15] The last evidence of the palace being used for official occasions was in 1476 when William Wallingford, Abbot of St Albans Abbey, held a banquet there for the Bishop of Llandaff.[6]
The manor was transferred to
During the reign of Charles I, Kings Langley royal park was cleared to make way for agriculture and tenant farmers cultivated the land. By 1652 there were ten farmers on the estate.[17] In 1626, Charles I granted the Langley Estate to Sir Charles Morrison, owner of the estate of Cassiobury at nearby Watford who already held a lease on part of the land at Langley. Upon his death in 1628, the estate passed to his daughter, Elizabeth Morrison, and her husband Arthur Capell, 1st Baron Capell of Hadham. Capell, a Royalist in the English Civil War, was executed in 1649, and the estate was granted to a Parliamentarian, Robert Devereux, 3rd Earl of Essex. Following the Restoration, the Langley Estate was returned by the crown to the Capell family, granting it to Capell's son Arthur Capell and also creating him Earl of Essex.[18]
In the late 17th century the expansion of the London population meant that landowners in the surrounding country were increasingly turning their land to agricultural use to meet the demand for food and animal feed. Many parks eventually disappeared; Kings Langley Park did not feature on a 1675 map drawn by John Seller.[17]
The estate of Langley Palace remained in the possession of the Earls of Essex until 1900, when the 7th Earl, George Capell, sold the land to a Mr. E. N. Loyd of Langleybury.[6][19]
Remnants of the palace complex remained for many years after it ceased to be a royal residence, falling gradually into decay. The gatehouse and parts of the main building were still standing in 1591, and in his 1728 History of Hertfordshire, Nathanael Salmon states that "Here the rubbish of royalty exists" in reference to Kings Langley.[6] James Sargant Storer's 1816 account features an illustration of the "Remains of an Ancient Palace Kings Langley Herts" which is said to be a farm house which "exhibits the ancient bake-house and some other vestiges of the domestic offices of the palace."[20] A description published by John Murray in 1895 reports that "at Kings Langley some outer walls only exist of the once royal palace, erected by Henry III."[21]
Today, nothing remains of the royal palace; the site was occupied by the Rudolf Steiner School, which closed in March 2019.[13] A small display case of items from the palace era recovered during excavation could previously be seen in the school entrance hall. Buildings from King's Langley Priory were also used by the Steiner School.[22] Some ruins exist in the vicinity; ruined flint walls and fragments of stonework remain in the garden of house number 80, Langley Hill, which are thought to be part of a house built for Sir Charles Morrison around 1580 when he held a lease on the crown land.[23]

Architecture
The palace had a triple courtyard layout.[24] Accounts dating from August 1279 to November 1281, shortly after the estate became a royal possession, describe building work on the house which encompassed construction of chambers for the king and queen and for their son, Alphonso, Earl of Chester, paving the queen's cloister, planting of a vineyard, digging of a well and expansion of a moat. Further records list the construction of a new gateway (1282–1283); a wine cellar (1291–1292); louvres for the roof of the hall built by a carpenter, Henry of Bovingdon; a stone wall enclosing the court (1296–1297); and the addition of new fireplaces in two "great chambers". The palace had a bath house, domestic offices, a bakery, roasting house, great kitchen and "le Longrewe" ("the long house").[5] Between 1359 and 1370, further additions were made to the palace, which included a bath house and a new entrance gate at a cost of £3000, and Totternhoe Stone was used to pave the bath house and for a fireplace in the king's chamber.[10][25]
It appears from excavations in 1970 that the palace also had a huge underground wine cellar, situated under the present-day gymnasium;[13][26] this cellar is thought to have been built around 1291–1292 and was located on the west side of a kitchen court, opposite a bakehouse. Excavations also revealed the presence of a structure to the east of this which is thought to be a probable gatehouse.[27] This gatehouse opened out onto an approach road, now known as Langley Hill. Because the kitchens were located on the west side of the site, it is thought that the great hall of the palace ran on an east–west alignment.[28]
Records exists stating that a brickmaker to the king, William Veyse, was appointed in 1437 to produce bricks for Kings Langley Palace. In 1440 bricks from le Frithe, near St Albans, were used to make fireplaces and ovens in the palace, possibly as part of repair works following the fire of 1431. Veyse was also appointed in 1440 to supply bricks for a stone wall at the Tower of London.[14]
In Literature
Act III, Scene IV of William Shakespeare's play Richard II is set in the gardens of Kings Langley Palace, in which Queen Isabel learns of King Richard's imprisonment.[29]
References
- ^ (Storer 1816, p. 718)
- ^ Historic England. "Royal Palace (site of) (1005252)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 12 November 2015.
- ^ a b "History of the Royal Palace". Kings Langley Local History & Museum Society. Archived from the original on 29 April 2015. Retrieved 14 November 2015.
- ^ a b (Neal 1977)
- ^ a b (Neal 1977, pp. 125–6)
- ^ a b c d e f "Parishes: King's Langley". British History Online. Victoria County History. 1908. Archived from the original on 2 May 2015. Retrieved 12 November 2015.
- ^ (Shields 2013)
- ^ May McKusack, The Fourteenth Century (Oxford History of England) 1959.2.
- ^ Walter Phelps Dodge. Piers Gaveston: a chapter of early constitutional history, 1899:179; May Kusack. The Fourteenth Century (Oxford History of England) 1959:47;
- ^ a b (Emery 2000, p. 257)
- ISBN 9780752496399. Retrieved 28 November 2015.
- ISBN 9781848687882.
- ^ a b c "Kings Langley Palace". The Dacorum Heritage Trust. Retrieved 24 July 2014.
- ^ a b "The Brickmakers of St Albans". Hertfordshire Genealogy. Retrieved 11 November 2015.
- ^ (Neal 1977, p. 126)
- ^ (Prince 2008, p. 16)
- ^ a b (Prince 2008, p. 32)
- ^
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Essex, Arthur Capel, 1st Earl of". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 9 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 781–782.
- ^ Shirley, Evelyn Philip (1867). Some Account of English Deer Parks: With Notes on the Management of Deer. J. Murray. Retrieved 14 November 2015.
- ^ (Storer 1816, p. 717)
- )
- ^ Munby, Lionel M. The History of Kings Langley
- ^ "Ruins of Langley Palace in the Garden of No 80 (York Ridge), Kings Langley". British Listed Buildings. Archived from the original on 14 November 2015. Retrieved 14 November 2015.
- ISBN 978-0-521-58131-8.
- ISBN 9781843833918. Retrieved 28 November 2015.
- ISBN 978-0-203-16522-5.
- ISBN 9780300096118. Retrieved 11 November 2015.
- ^ (Neal 1977, p. 143)
- ISBN 9780750966481. Retrieved 11 November 2015.
Bibliography
- Emery, Anthony (2000). "King's Langley Palace". Greater medieval houses of England and Wales, 1300-1500. Cambridge [England]: Cambridge University Press. p. 257. ISBN 9780521581318. Retrieved 28 November 2015.
- Long, Michael (2023). Palace Lives. Kings Langley Local History and Museum Society. ISBN 978-1838388829.
- Neal, David (1977). "Excavations at the Palace of Kings Langley, Hertfordshire 1974-1976" (PDF). Medieval Archaeology. 24. The Society for Medieval Archaeology. Retrieved 14 November 2015.
- Prince, Hugh (2008). "II: Elizabethan Parks". Parks in Hertfordshire since 1500. Hatfield: University of Hertfordshire Press. p. 16. ISBN 9780954218997. Retrieved 27 November 2015.
- Shields, Pamela (2013). Royal Hertfordshire Murders and Misdemeanours. Amberley Publishing Limited. ISBN 978-1445630571. Retrieved 16 November 2015.
- Storer, James Sargant (1816). "Abbey at King's Langley, Hertfordshire". the Antiquarian Itinerary. London. Retrieved 12 November 2015.