This essay focuses on Salisbury House in London, the Strand palace built by Sir Robert Cecil, 1st Earl of Salisbury, between 1599 and 1612. So far neglected, a detailed history of this house can be based on the primary sources in the Salisbury archives at Hatfield House. The study begins with an investgation of Cecil’s role, one of the most important architectural patrons of his age. The evidence is then discussed of contemporary views of London, which are often an unquestioned base for the description of this vanished house. This leads a new identification of two series of plans of Salisbury House, which are analysed in the light of documentary sources as also re-configured and completed by reconstruction drawings. An examination of later ...
This article offers a case study of an early preservation campaign to save the remains of the fiftee...
Garrigou Grandchamp Pierre. Salisbury. The Houses of the Close, Royal Commission on the Historical M...
Book synopsis: Early generations of England’s illustrious Cecil family--particularly William Lord Bu...
This paper affords a complete analysis of the construction of the original Northampton (later Northu...
Originating from the author’s book on the Great Houses of the Strand: the Ruling Elite at home in Tu...
William Cecil held office for the first forty years of Queen Elizabeth's reign, and was the most po...
This paper is based on the authors’ longstanding interest in Northumberland House and follows two pr...
Book chapter based on my long-standing work on the Strand palaces in London. See book
Nostell Priory is one of the most important eighteenth-century buildings in northern England, with ...
The London house of the medieval bishops of Winchester in Southwark originated in the mid 12th centu...
This paper is based on the authors’ longstanding interest in Northumberland House and follows two pr...
This thesis analyses the architectural development of the nineteenth-century country house by consid...
This PhD dissertation is a biographical study of the life and political career of the second earl of...
Wanstead House was built by Colen Campbell between 1713-20 for Richard Child, later Viscount Castlem...
The thesis is on the transformation of Regent Street in London in the early nineteenth century. Rege...
This article offers a case study of an early preservation campaign to save the remains of the fiftee...
Garrigou Grandchamp Pierre. Salisbury. The Houses of the Close, Royal Commission on the Historical M...
Book synopsis: Early generations of England’s illustrious Cecil family--particularly William Lord Bu...
This paper affords a complete analysis of the construction of the original Northampton (later Northu...
Originating from the author’s book on the Great Houses of the Strand: the Ruling Elite at home in Tu...
William Cecil held office for the first forty years of Queen Elizabeth's reign, and was the most po...
This paper is based on the authors’ longstanding interest in Northumberland House and follows two pr...
Book chapter based on my long-standing work on the Strand palaces in London. See book
Nostell Priory is one of the most important eighteenth-century buildings in northern England, with ...
The London house of the medieval bishops of Winchester in Southwark originated in the mid 12th centu...
This paper is based on the authors’ longstanding interest in Northumberland House and follows two pr...
This thesis analyses the architectural development of the nineteenth-century country house by consid...
This PhD dissertation is a biographical study of the life and political career of the second earl of...
Wanstead House was built by Colen Campbell between 1713-20 for Richard Child, later Viscount Castlem...
The thesis is on the transformation of Regent Street in London in the early nineteenth century. Rege...
This article offers a case study of an early preservation campaign to save the remains of the fiftee...
Garrigou Grandchamp Pierre. Salisbury. The Houses of the Close, Royal Commission on the Historical M...
Book synopsis: Early generations of England’s illustrious Cecil family--particularly William Lord Bu...