Hill Hall
A singular house designed by a Tudor intellectual
Author(s)
Drury, Paul
Simpson, Richard
Language
EnglishAbstract
This is the complete history of a building that began as a hunting lodge, late in the eleventh century and that grew to be the principal house of the manor of Theydon Mount in Essex, a small country retreat within easy reach of London. In 1556, the house was acquired by Sir Thomas Smith (1512-77), a man of humble origins but precocious intellect who became Regius Professor of Civil Law at Cambridge at the age of thirty and Chancellor of the University two years later. He then forsook academic for political life, becoming Master of Requests to the Lord Protector Somerset. From 1557, Smith rebuilt the house in French-influenced classical style and decorated it with wall paintings of Cupid and Psyche and King Hezekiah, conveying complex messages of morality and affinity as part of a coherent programme of images in paint, glass and tiles. Four centuries on, the house was first used as an open prison, then, in 1969, largely gutted by fire and finally, in 1980, taken into the care of the Department of the Environment. Archaeological excavation and detailed recording of the surviving fabric took place prior to the restoration of the house and its mural paintings, the results of which are now presented in this copiously illustrated account of one of the most important and influential houses to be built in Elizabethan England.
Keywords
Tudor; house; Essex; Classical style; wall paintings; archaeological recordingISBN
9780854312917, 9780854312917Publisher
Society of Antiquaries of LondonPublisher website
https://www.sal.org.uk/Publication date and place
London, 2009Series
Reports of the Research Committee of the Society of Antiquaries of London, 76Classification
Architecture: residential and domestic buildings
c 1500 onwards to present day
Europe
Archaeology by period / region