Originating from the author’s book on the Great Houses of the Strand: the Ruling Elite at home in Tudor and Jacobean London (Yale University Press, New Haven and London, forthcoming), this essay provides an overview of the so–called Strand palaces, a highly significant if much neglected chapter of London’s architecture. The Strand palace phenomenon, in which owning a residence close to Westminster became de rigueur after Henry VIII established a permanent court at Whitehall, itself originates from the far older “Bishops’ Inns”, metaphorical power houses of the high clergy strategically built along the Strand in the 13th century. The Strand was the ‘main channel of communication’ between London’s economic heart in the City and its political ...
Study of the development of the town house in London has focused mainly on the period following the ...
This article explores how the art and architecture of the New Palace of Westminster (home to the UK’...
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
This essay focuses on Salisbury House in London, the Strand palace built by Sir Robert Cecil, 1st Ea...
The luxury and scandal; the pleasures and pains of royalty have continually constructed and reconstr...
This essay takes the reader through the streets of London in 2012 to follow in the footsteps of Kin...
This paper affords a complete analysis of the construction of the original Northampton (later Northu...
Accession Day on 17 November was ‘a holidaye which passed all the popes holidayes’ and the Tilts wer...
The lifestyle of the monarchs was always different from that of the ordinary people. Instead of smal...
This paper concerns the roles of users and architecture in relation to history. Issues of site inclu...
This paper is based on the authors’ longstanding interest in Northumberland House and follows two pr...
Pénélope J. Corfield, Court and anti-court. London and the British monarchy in the eighteenth and ni...
This article explores the ways in which mid-Tudor writing addressed and imagined the city of London....
During his triumphal tour through Sicily, following victory in the battle of Tunis in 1535 Charles V...
Study of the development of the town house in London has focused mainly on the period following the ...
This article explores how the art and architecture of the New Palace of Westminster (home to the UK’...
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
This essay focuses on Salisbury House in London, the Strand palace built by Sir Robert Cecil, 1st Ea...
The luxury and scandal; the pleasures and pains of royalty have continually constructed and reconstr...
This essay takes the reader through the streets of London in 2012 to follow in the footsteps of Kin...
This paper affords a complete analysis of the construction of the original Northampton (later Northu...
Accession Day on 17 November was ‘a holidaye which passed all the popes holidayes’ and the Tilts wer...
The lifestyle of the monarchs was always different from that of the ordinary people. Instead of smal...
This paper concerns the roles of users and architecture in relation to history. Issues of site inclu...
This paper is based on the authors’ longstanding interest in Northumberland House and follows two pr...
Pénélope J. Corfield, Court and anti-court. London and the British monarchy in the eighteenth and ni...
This article explores the ways in which mid-Tudor writing addressed and imagined the city of London....
During his triumphal tour through Sicily, following victory in the battle of Tunis in 1535 Charles V...
Study of the development of the town house in London has focused mainly on the period following the ...
This article explores how the art and architecture of the New Palace of Westminster (home to the UK’...
This paper is based on the authors’ longstanding interest in Northumberland House and follows two pr...