Horton Court
Horton Court is a stone-built 16th century manor house in Horton, near Chipping Sodbury, South Gloucestershire, England. It is a grade I listed building.[1] Originally a Norman manor, the current house was built in about 1521 by Rev. William Knight (d. 1547), Prothonotary to the Holy See, and later Bishop of Bath and Wells. It retains the 12th-century Norman hall, and displays some of the earliest Renaissance decorative motifs used in England. Within the grounds is a grade I listed ambulatory, built for William Knight around 1527–29.[2] It has been owned by the National Trust since 1949. As of 2021, it is available for holiday lets.[3] The parish church of St James the Elder is next door. HistorySee of SarumEarly in the 12th century Hubert de Rye donated the manor to the See of Sarum, which used the revenues to endow a prebend. An early Hubert of Ryes[4] is known in legend as the loyal vassal who saved the life of William the Conqueror in his flight from Valognes during a revolt in 1047.[5] He was the father of Eudo Dapifer. A man by the same name in 1164 donated the church of Aslackby, Lincolnshire, to the Knights Templar. The first known holder of the prebend was Robert de Beaufeu, around 1150. It is believed he was the builder of the Norman great hall, which still survives as the core of the present 16th-century house built by Rev. William Knight (1476–1547), a prebendary from 1517. Knight attended Oxford University and Ferrara University, Italy and travelled to Italy on many occasions on diplomatic missions for King Henry VIII (1509–1547). He attended the king at the Field of the Cloth of Gold in 1521, and in 1527 negotiated with the Pope over Henry's divorce from Catherine of Aragon. He was Bishop of Bath and Wells from 1541 until his death in 1547. During his travels he witnessed the art of the Italian Renaissance. He incorporated some of the motifs he had seen abroad into the new house he built in about 1521 at Horton around the Norman hall, and the house is thus one of the earliest English buildings, comparable to Sutton Place, Surrey, and Hampton Court, to show Renaissance design features, most notably in the grotesque jambs of the front door.[6] His armorials can be seen above the front door and over the entrance hall fireplace, and consist of two addorsed bird's necks and heads emerging from a demi-sun. The supporters are two grotesque mermaids. The crest, which surmounts the escutcheon directly, consists of a prothonotary's hat, which is similar to that of a cardinal, but is black with three rows of tassels in place of five.[7] The detached Italianate ambulatory or loggia built by Knight survives. PastonFollowing the Dissolution of the Monasteries Horton became crown property in 1550, and King Edward VI (1547–1553) granted it first to his uncle Protector Somerset and then in 1550 after his fall to Sir Edward Paston, the younger son of Sir John Paston the Younger (d.1504), by Margery Brews, daughter of Sir Thomas Brews,[8] who was knighted at the Battle of Stoke in 1487. Sir John's father John Paston (1421–1466), MP for Norfolk in 1460 and 1461, wrote the famous Paston Letters. Horton seems to be an ancestor of Sir Edward Paston (1550–1630), the second son (by Agnes Leigh, daughter of Sir John Leigh of Addington, Surrey and Stockwell) of Sir Thomas Paston, a Gentleman of the Privy Chamber, who in turn was the youngest nephew of Sir Edward Paston, the original grantee in 1550. Sir Thomas Paston's eldest brother Erasmus Paston (1502–1540) was the ancestor of Sir William Paston, 1st Baronet (c. 1610–1663), who was created a baronet in 1642, and whose son was Robert Paston, 1st Earl of Yarmouth (1631–1683). Sir Edward (d.1630), was a godson of King Edward VI. His baroque mural monument can be seen in Blofield Church, Norfolk, 4 miles east of Norwich. He built Appleton Hall, West Newton, Norfolk, where the family lived for several generations until a fire destroyed the house in 1767. They then moved to Horton Court in Gloucestershire.[9] Appleton Hall was later rebuilt and became part of the royal Sandringham Estate, where it was used as a guest house for royal visitors. It became dilapidated during World War II and was demolished in 1984. Paston family monumentsA monument in the neighbouring Parish Church of St James the Elder includes the following inscription:
Edward Somerset was fourth in descent from Edward Somerset, 4th Earl of Worcester (1553–1628) who had purchased Pauntley Court, near Newent, Gloucestershire, from Sir Henry Poole of Sapperton, Gloucestershire, whose family had inherited it by marriage to Eleanor Whittington, one of the five daughters of Thomas Whittington, eldest son of John Whittington (d.1525). John Paston had sometimes resided at Pauntley, which his second wife Anne Calvert must have held as her dower.[10] Other monuments in the north aisle of the church to the Paston family include:[11]
Sir George Throckmorton (1721–1767), only son of Sir Robert Throckmorton, 4th Baronet of Coughton Court, Warwickshire, married Anna Maria Paston, daughter and sole heiress of William Paston (d.1769) of Horton by his wife Mary Courtenay (d.1747), the heiress of Molland in Devon. Anna Maria was also a co-heiress of Thomas Arundell, 4th Baron Arundell of Wardour (1633–1712). BrookeThe last of the Pastons mortgaged Horton Court to FitzHerbert Brooke, Esq., of Stanshaw's Court, Yate, a solicitor, who foreclosed and became himself the proprietor of the manor soon after 1800. It was noted by Philip Bliss (1787–1857):[15]
The following mural tablet exists in the south transept of Old Sodbury Church:
RichardsHorton Court passed to his grandson Sir Frederick Richards (1833–1912), Admiral of the Fleet, who had married his daughter Lucy Fayle Brooke (d.1880), which marriage was without progeny. Richards made extensive alterations in 1884.[16] WillsIn 1937 Horton Court was purchased by Miss Hilda Proctor Wills (1880-13/5/1946), daughter of Sir George Alfred Wills, 1st Bt of Blagdon (1854–1928) by his wife Susan Britton Proctor (1856–1904).[17] She was thus a member of the Bristol-based Wills family, proprietors of the Imperial Tobacco Company of Bristol. When she died in 1946, she left the property to the National Trust in memory of her nephew Sir George Peter Vernon Wills, 3rd Baronet of Blagdon (1922–1945), of the Coldstream Guards, who had been killed in action in Italy.[18] FilmingHorton Court has been used as a filming location in several television series including the BBC's Poldark, The Living and the Dead[19] and Wolf Hall.[20] National TrustIt was listed in 1952. The house was empty from 2008 to 2011 but the National Trust opened the ground floor during July and August 2011 and were considering how to make it more readily accessible to the public.[21] Renovations began in 2018 and were completed in 2018,[22] at a cost of £1,770,000.[23] The property has been available for holiday lets since 2019.[24] Gallery
References
External linksMedia related to Horton Court at Wikimedia Commons |