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Hall Place

A Scheduled Monument in Wanborough, Swindon

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.5492 / 51°32'57"N

Longitude: -1.6912 / 1°41'28"W

OS Eastings: 421504.49754

OS Northings: 183412.627323

OS Grid: SU215834

Mapcode National: GBR 4VK.Z2T

Mapcode Global: VHC13.MBR7

Entry Name: Hall Place

Scheduled Date: 22 December 1976

Last Amended: 8 December 1997

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1016325

English Heritage Legacy ID: 28955

County: Swindon

Civil Parish: Wanborough

Built-Up Area: Wanborough

Traditional County: Wiltshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Wiltshire

Church of England Parish: Lyddington and Wanborough

Church of England Diocese: Bristol

Details

The monument includes the remains of a medieval mansion house known as Hall
Place, located on the eastern edge of the village of Wanborough. It is
situated on a north facing slope with views across the clay plain towards the
Upper Thames Valley.
Terraced into the slope are three large level platforms, on one of which the
house was located. The lowest platform is bordered by two ponds separated by a
causeway. Two further platforms are visible, terraced into the steep slope
south of the main complex and these are included in the scheduling.
The house was the home of the Polton family and there is a local tradition
that a chapel dedicated to St Ambrose was attached to the house.
All telegraph poles, fence posts and water troughs are excluded from the
scheduling although the ground beneath these features is included.

MAP EXTRACT
The site of the monument is shown on the attached map extract.

Source: Historic England

Reasons for Scheduling

Country houses of the late Tudor and early Jacobean period comprise a
distinctive group of buildings which differ in form, function, design and
architectural style from country houses of both earlier and later date. Built
after the dissolution of the monasteries they are the product of a particular
historical period in which a newly-emerged Protestant elite of lawyers,
courtiers, diplomats and other officials, mostly with close contacts at court,
competed with each other to demonstrate wealth, taste and loyalty to the
sovereign, often overstretching themselves financially. Their houses are a
development of the medieval hall with flanking wings and a gatehouse, often
looking inwards onto a courtyard; later examples tend to be built outwards,
typically on a U- or H-plan. The hall was transformed from a reception area to
an entrance vestibule and the long gallery and loggia were introduced. Many
houses were provided with state apartments and extensive lodgings for the
accommodation of royal visitors and their retinues.
Country houses of this period were normally constructed under the supervision
of one master-mason or a succession of masons, often combining a number of
designs drawn up by the master-mason, surveyor or by the employer himself.
Many designs and stylistic details were copied from Continental pattern-books,
particularly those published in the 1560s on French, Italian and Flemish
models; further architectural ideas were later spread by the use of foreign
craftsmen. Symmetry in both plan and elevation was an overriding principle,
often carried to extremes in the Elizabethan architectural `devices' in which
geometric forms were employed to express religious and philosophical ideas.
Elements of Classical architecture were drawn on individually rather than
applied strictly in unified orders. This complex network of influences
resulted in liberal and idiosyncratic combinations of architectural styles
which contrasted with the adoption of the architecture of the Italian
Renaissance, and with it the role of the architect, later in the 17th century.
About 5000 country houses are known to have been standing in 1675; of these
about 1000 are thought to survive, although most have been extensively altered
or rebuilt in subsequent centuries to meet new demands and tastes. Houses
which are uninhabited, and have thus been altered to a lesser degree, are much
rarer. Surviving country houses of the late Tudor and early Jacobean period
stand as an irreplaceable record of an architectural development which was
unique both to England and to a particular period in English history
characterised by a flourishing of artistic invention; they provide an insight
into politics, patronage and economics in the early post-medieval period. All
examples with significant surviving archaeological remains are considered to
be of national importance.

The medieval earthworks of Hall Place survive well and will contain
archaeological remains and environmental evidence relating to the monument and
the landscape in which it was constructed.

Source: Historic England

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