Rousham House

Coordinates: 51°54′48″N 1°18′18″W / 51.91333°N 1.30500°W / 51.91333; -1.30500
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Rousham House

Rousham House (also known as Rousham Park) is a country house at Rousham in Oxfordshire, England. The house, which has been continuously in the ownership of one family, was built circa 1635 and remodelled by William Kent in the 18th century in a free Gothic style. Further alterations were carried out in the 19th century.

The celebrated gardens are open to the public every day; the house is open by appointment.[1]

History

In the 1630s Sir Robert Dormer bought the manor of Rousham. He immediately began construction of the present house but work was halted by the start of the English Civil War. The Dormers were a Royalist family and the house was attacked by Parliamentary soldiers.[2]

In 1649 the estate was inherited by Robert Dormer's son, also Robert. He left the house much as his father had created it, only repairing the damage of the Civil War. However, he did more to restore the family fortunes by marrying twice, each time to an heiress. His second wife was the daughter of Sir Charles Cottrell, a high-ranking courtier of Charles II.

Colonel Robert Dormer-Cottrell, the grandson of the house's builder, inherited Rousham in 1719 and began the huge transformation of the gardens to its current appearance. Initially he employed Charles Bridgeman to lay out the gardens in the new and more naturalistic style that was becoming popular. Bridgeman's layout of the garden was completed circa 1737. Rousham was then inherited by the Colonel's brother, General James Dormer (1679–1741), who called in William Kent to further enhance and develop the garden that Bridgeman created. This Kent did with considerable success over the next four years.

On the death of James Dormer in 1741, unmarried and without issue, the estate passed to his first cousin Sir

crenellations and two wings containing a drawing room and a "delightful" library, according to Horace Walpole who said of Rousham in 1760 "it reinstated Kent with me; he has no where shewn so much taste".[5] The interiors were altered a century later but the hall, the principal room of the house, has survived alteration by successive generations unchanged, and remains as completed in the 17th century. Kent's exterior work is today almost as built, but in 1876 the original octagonal paned glazing was replaced with innovative large sheets of plate glass, during a heavy-handed restoration of the house by the architect James Piers St Aubyn
. The house contains fine collections of Jacobean and 18th-century furniture, paintings and statuary, all displayed in a domestic setting.

The river Cherwell

The gardens, created by Bridgeman and then Kent, overlook a curve of the River Cherwell. Bridgeman had laid out the garden, with meandering walks through the woods, and pools of varying degrees of formality. Kent's theme was to create and transform the naturalistic landscape created by Bridgeman by introducing 'Augustan' traits to recall the glories and atmosphere of ancient Rome. Thus the Roman Forum was to be recreated in the verdant English countryside. "The garden is Daphne in little", Walpole told George Montagu: "the sweetest little groves, streams, glades, porticoes, cascades, and river, imaginable; all the scenes are perfectly classic."[5]

The house and garden today

Statue based on the Dying Gaul (or Dying Gladiator) in Rome
Statue detail

Away and unseen from the house, Kent's garden extends past

cold bath and on to the next temple or arcade, each set in its own valley or glade, a succession of picturesque tableaux. The statues are by Peter Scheemakers.[6]

Among the most revealing and thought-provoking of the follies is a

doves and close by through a small gate is the parish church where generations of Cottrell-Dormers are buried. One memorial in the church commemorates three sons of the family killed in combat in the First World War
.

The house and grounds have been used as filming locations for productions including ITV's Lewis (episode "The Dead of Winter") and BBC's 2021 miniseries The Pursuit of Love.[7] English horticulturist Monty Don considers Rousham his favourite garden in England.[8]

Rousham House is still the home of the Cottrell-Dormer family.

References

  1. ^ Rousham Park website
  2. ^ A claim that Parliamentary soldiers stole lead from the roof needs to be substantiated. The relevant volume of the Victoria County History states that Royalist soldiers looted the village and Rousham House in 1644 and makes no mention of Parliamentary soldiers stealing from the house.
  3. ^ Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry, 15th Edition, ed. Pirie-Gordon, H., London, 1937, p.627
  4. ^ Dictionary of National Biography, Cotterell, Sir Charles (1612?–1702), master of the ceremonies and translator, by Sidney Lee. Published 1887.
  5. ^ a b Walpole to George Montagu, 19 July 1760
  6. ^ Dictionary of British Sculptors 1660-1851 by Peter Gunnis
  7. ^ Fox, Robin Lane (11 June 2021). "Financial Times: " 'The Pursuit of Love' - and flowers", 11 June 2021". Financial Times. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  8. ^ Around the World in 80 Gardens, episode 9

Sources and further reading

External links

51°54′48″N 1°18′18″W / 51.91333°N 1.30500°W / 51.91333; -1.30500