Mapledurham House
Mapledurham House | |
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Location | Mapledurham, Oxfordshire, England |
Coordinates | Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Built | c.1585 |
Governing body | Mapledurham Estate |
Listed Building – Grade I
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Official name: Mapledurham House | |
Designated | 24 October 1951 |
Reference no. | 1368944 |
Mapledurham House is an Elizabethan stately home located in the civil parish of Mapledurham in the English county of Oxfordshire. It is a grade I listed building, first listed on 24 October 1951.[1][2]
Contents
History and architecture
The property was first held by Michael Blount[2] and has remained in the Blount-Eyston family to this day.[3] Building was started around 1585, at the time of the Spanish Armada,[2] in the classic Elizabethan E-shape.[citation needed] It includes a late 18th century chapel built in the Strawberry Hill Gothic style for the recusant Roman Catholic owners of the house. Prior to the Catholic Emancipation, the owners would hide priests in its priest holes, some of which were only discovered in the 21st century, and secretly celebrate Mass with a makeshift altar hidden inside a writing desk.[3] The estate covers much of the village including Mapledurham Watermill and part of the church.
Art and Literary associations
The poet Alexander Pope was a frequent visitor to the house as he was enamoured of two daughters of the Blount family.[citation needed] The house and surrounding village were used for the filming of the 1976 film of The Eagle Has Landed and also for several television series, including Midsomer Murders.[4] It is also reputed to have been the inspiration for E. H. Shepard's illustrations of Toad Hall for Kenneth Grahame's The Wind in the Willows, although this is also claimed by Hardwick House.[citation needed]
Noise complaints
Sight-seeing helicopter flights run from the estate, with up to 70 short flights per day, caused complaints about noise levels, with one local resident describing it in 2013 as like being "in Vietnam during a high intensity attack". A representative of the estate responded by saying that they had taken account of the complaints by reducing the number of helicopter flight days from 20 to 10 per year.[5][6]
Gallery
References
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External links
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mapledurham House. |
- Map sources for Mapledurham House
- Mapledurham Estate website
- http://www.touruk.co.uk/houses/houseoxf_maple.htm
- http://www.britainexpress.com/Where_to_go_in_Britain/historic_houses/historic_houses8.htm
- http://thames.me.uk/s01190.htm
- http://www.theheritagetrail.co.uk/stately%20homes/mapledurham.htm
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- Pages with reference errors
- Articles with unsourced statements from October 2015
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- Country houses in Oxfordshire
- Grade I listed buildings in Oxfordshire
- Historic house museums in Oxfordshire
- Grade I listed houses
- Oxfordshire building and structure stubs