RM2HNDM33–Detail of Mediaeval Decorated Panelling The Dining Room
RMFDJHGH–Hardy's Cottage, the birthplace in 1840 of novelist and poet Thomas Hardy , at Higher Brockhampton, near Dorchester, Dorset.
RMFDJHHG–Hardy's Cottage, the birthplace in 1840 of novelist and poet Thomas Hardy , at Higher Brockhampton, near Dorchester, Dorset.
RMFDJHFW–Hardy's Cottage, the birthplace in 1840 of novelist and poet Thomas Hardy , at Higher Brockhampton, near Dorchester, Dorset.
RMFDJHH7–Hardy's Cottage, the birthplace in 1840 of novelist and poet Thomas Hardy , at Higher Brockhampton, near Dorchester, Dorset.
RMFDJHBB–Hardy's Cottage, the birthplace in 1840 of novelist and poet Thomas Hardy , at Higher Brockhampton, near Dorchester, Dorset.
RMFDJHFR–Hardy's Cottage, the birthplace in 1840 of novelist and poet Thomas Hardy , at Higher Brockhampton, near Dorchester, Dorset.
RMFDJJFR–Shalford Mill on the Tillingbourne river, a tributary of the River Wey, Surrey. The watermill is eighteenth century and is one of the properties presented to the National Trust by the Ferguson Gang.
RMFDJJFM–Shalford Mill on the Tillingbourne river, a tributary of the River Wey, Surrey. The watermill is eighteenth century and is one of the properties presented to the National Trust by the Ferguson Gang.
RMFDJJXR–The Temple of Piety seen across the Moon and Half Crescent ponds at Studley Royal Garden, North Yorkshire.
RMFDJRAF–View across a wildflower meadow towards the Hall built between 1603 and 1620, with alterations in both the 18th and 19th centuries, at Gibside, Newcastle upon Tyne. George Bowes inherited the estate in 1722 and landscaped the grounds around Gibside Hall.
RMFDJGJK–The Oxford Bridge on a frosty day at Stowe Landscape Gardens, Buckinghamshire.
RMFDJTAE–View across the lake towards the east front with the 'transparent' portico at Osterley, Middlesex. The house, originally Elizabethan, was remodelled in 1760 - 80 by Robert Adam. The lake was created during the transformation of the formal garden into land
RMFDJT9H–Inside the semicircular Garden House in the Pleasure Grounds at Osterley, Middlesex. The Garden House was built in 1780 during the Robert Adam remodelling of the house.
RMFDJTA2–The Garden House, built in 1780 by Robert Adam, in the Pleasure Grounds at Osterley, Middlesex. The building has a semicircular front and Ionic pilasters.
RMFDJGJT–View towards the south front of the house, now used as a school, remodelled in the eighteenth century at Stowe Landscape Gardens, Buckinghamshire. Image shows property that is NOT National Trust owned
RMFDJJEW–A frosty winter scene with swans gliding on the water at the River Wey Navigations, Surrey.
RMFDJGJJ–The Oxford Bridge on a frosty day at Stowe Landscape Gardens, Buckinghamshire.
RMFDJJEX–The ruins of the fourteenth-century moated Scotney Castle, Lamberhurst, Kent, set amidst beautiful gardens.
RMFDJK8Y–
RMFDJP73–A view through the gate, on a frosty morning at Bateman's, Burwash, East Sussex. The Jacobean house was the home of author Rudyard Kipling, from 1902 to 1936.
RMFDJGJH–The Oxford Bridge with urns and rustic stonework on a frosty day at Stowe Landscape Gardens, Buckinghamshire.
RMFDJW05–A misty, winter view of a statue in front of the Temple of Piety at Studley Royal Water Garden, North Yorkshire. The gardens were created in 1716 by John Aislabie and continued by his son William in the later eighteenth century. The statue is of Cincinnat
RMFDJG44–Panoramic view of the Oxford Bridge on a frosty day at Stowe Landscape Gardens, Buckinghamshire.
RMFDJK8T–
RMFDJJEE–Walsham Gates and the lock keeper's cottage on the River Wey Navigations, Surrey.
RMFDJGJR–View towards the south front of the house, now used as a school, remodelled in the eighteenth century at Stowe Landscape Gardens, Buckinghamshire. Image shows property that is NOT National Trust owned
RMFDJN2B–The rotunda built in 1766, and daffodils in the park at Petworth House, West Sussex. The Ionic rotunda may have been designed by Matthew Brettingham probably inspired by Vanbrugh's rotundas.
RMFDJG43–The Oxford Bridge on a frosty day at Stowe Landscape Gardens, Buckinghamshire.
RMFDJMGF–The Scullery at Castle Drogo, Devon. The washing up was done here in the three sinks beneath the long rows of plate racks, and food preparation happened on the tables. An enormous pestle and mortar can be seen in the foreground, against one of the two gra
RMFDJGJG–The Oxford Bridge with urns and rustic stonework on a frosty day at Stowe Landscape Gardens, Buckinghamshire.
RMFDJJFP–Shalford Mill on the Tillingbourne river, a tributary of the River Wey, Surrey. The watermill is eighteenth century and is one of the properties presented to the National Trust by the Ferguson Gang.
RMFDJJFT–Shalford Mill on the Tillingbourne river, a tributary of the River Wey, Surrey. The watermill is eighteenth century and is one of the properties presented to the National Trust by the Ferguson Gang.
RMFDJR9K–View across a wildflower meadow to the Orangery at Gibside, Newcastle upon Tyne. George Bowes inherited the estate in 1722 and landscaped the grounds around Gibside Hall.
RMFDJY9N–The Yew Walk with the house beyond at Antony, Cornwall.
RMFDJPKN–The early sixteenth-century half-timbered house, Smallhythe Place, the home of actress Ellen Terry from 1899 to 1928 at Tenterden, Kent.
RMFDJRAJ–View across a wildflower meadow towards the Hall built between 1603 and 1620, with alterations in both the 18th and 19th centuries, at Gibside, Newcastle upon Tyne. George Bowes inherited the estate in 1722 and landscaped the grounds around Gibside Hall.
RMFDJYRG–The Rotunda at Ickworth lit up at night, for a special opening during the outdoor cinema event 'Stately Screenings' sponsored by Sky and in association with BAFTA and Screen East.
RMFDJR9J–View across a wildflower meadow to the Orangery at Gibside, Newcastle upon Tyne. George Bowes inherited the estate in 1722 and landscaped the grounds around Gibside Hall.
RMFDJJEF–New Haw Lock and the keeper's cottage on the River Wey Navigations, Surrey.
RMFDJR9N–View across a wildflower meadow to the Orangery at Gibside, Newcastle upon Tyne. George Bowes inherited the estate in 1722 and landscaped the grounds around Gibside Hall.
RMFDJG41–The Oxford Bridge on a frosty day at Stowe Landscape Gardens, Buckinghamshire.
RMFDJG45–The Oxford Bridge on a frosty day at Stowe Landscape Gardens, Buckinghamshire.
RMFDJGJF–The Oxford Bridge on a frosty day at Stowe Landscape Gardens, Buckinghamshire.
RMFDJG42–The Oxford Bridge on a frosty day at Stowe Landscape Gardens, Buckinghamshire.
RMFDJGK6–View across the Octagon Lake towards the Lake Pavilions and Corinthian Arch at Stowe Landscape Gardens, Buckinghamshire.
RMFDK1TD–The domed ceiling of the Palladian Chapel, begun in 1760 to the design of James Paine, at Gibside, Newcastle upon Tyne. The interior was not completed until 1816.
RMFDJHF7–The Dining Room at Attingham Park, Shrewsbury, Shropshire, with the dining table laid for a formal dinner and with table decorations and candelabra.
RMFDJTB2–The view through the columns of the 'transparent' portico on the east front of the house, over the park at Osterley, Middlesex. Originally Elizabethan, the house was remodelled in 1760 - 80 by Robert Adam.
RMFDJTAJ–The east front with the 'transparent' portico at Osterley, Middlesex. The house, originally Elizabethan, was remodelled in 1760 - 80 by Robert Adam.
RMFDJTAH–The east front with the 'transparent' portico at Osterley, Middlesex. The house, originally Elizabethan, was remodelled in 1760 - 80 by Robert Adam.
RMFDJKRR–Detail of part of the Billiard Room with cues lined up against the William Morris Pimpernel wallpaper, and part of the scoreboard at Wightwick Manor, Wolverhampton, West Midlands.
RMFDJJHW–Topiary and wisteria in the Courtyard in May at Baddesley Clinton, Warwickshire.
RMFDJYFX–Force Crag Mine, Borrowdale, Lake District, Cumbria. Force Crag was the last working metal mine in the Lake District until it closed in 1991, sorting lead, zinc and barytes from the rock. It is a Scheduled Ancient Monument and an SSSI.
RMFDJGJM–The Oxford Bridge on a frosty day at Stowe Landscape Gardens, Buckinghamshire.
RMFDJT9J–The Garden House, built in 1780 by Robert Adam, in the Pleasure Grounds at Osterley, Middlesex. The building has a semicircular front and Ionic pilasters.
RMFDJR9Y–Gibside Hall, Newcastle upon Tyne. The house was built between 1603 and 1620, with alterations in both the 18th and 19th centuries. George Bowes inherited the estate in 1722 and landscaped the grounds the Gibside Hall.
RMFDK1RD–Interior of the Stables completed in 1760, part of the estate at Gibside, Newcastle upon Tyne. George Bowes inherited Gibside in 1722 and developed the estate buildings and landscape.
RMFDJJEM–A frosty winter scene at the River Wey Navigations, Surrey.
RMFDJT9F–The east front with the 'transparent' portico at Osterley, Middlesex. The house, originally Elizabethan, was remodelled in 1760 - 80 by Robert Adam.
RMFDJT9G–The east front with the 'transparent' portico at Osterley, Middlesex. The house, originally Elizabethan, was remodelled in 1760 - 80 by Robert Adam.
RMFDJT9C–The east front with the 'transparent' portico at Osterley, Middlesex. The house, originally Elizabethan, was remodelled in 1760 - 80 by Robert Adam.
RMFDJTAR–The stable courtyard at Osterley, Middlesex. A stable existed here in Elizabethan times but the present buildings are an eighteenth-century adaptation using the old bricks and stonework of the original. The north range with the clock-tower contains the la
RMFDK1TF–Detail of the ceiling plasterwork in the Palladian Chapel, begun in 1760 to the design of James Paine, at Gibside, Newcastle upon Tyne. The interior was not completed until 1812.
RMFDK1TJ–Column capital and ceiling of the Palladian Chapel, begun in 1760 to the design of James Paine, at Gibside, Newcastle upon Tyne. The interior was not completed until 1812.
RMFDJT9K–The Garden House, built in 1780 by Robert Adam, in the Pleasure Grounds at Osterley, Middlesex. The building has a semicircular front and Ionic pilasters.
RMFDJYEX–Force Crag Mine, Borrowdale, Lake District, Cumbria. Force Crag was the last working metal mine in the Lake District until it closed in 1991, sorting lead, zinc and barytes from the rock. It is a Scheduled Ancient Monument and an SSSI.
RMFDK1TB–The domed ceiling of the Palladian Chapel, begun in 1760 to the design of James Paine, at Gibside, Newcastle upon Tyne. The interior was not completed until 1812.
RMFDK1TE–The domed ceiling of the Palladian Chapel, begun in 1760 to the design of James Paine, at Gibside, Newcastle upon Tyne. The interior was not completed until 1812.
RMFDK1TC–Ceiling and column detail of the Palladian Chapel, begun in 1760 to the design of James Paine, at Gibside, Newcastle upon Tyne. The interior was not completed until 1812.
RMFDJPRC–View from the Orangery over the landscape at Gibside, Newcastle upon Tyne.
RMFDJJEG–New Haw Lock and the keeper's cottage on the River Wey Navigations, Surrey.
RMFDJT9W–The Garden House, built in 1780 by Robert Adam, in the Pleasure Grounds at Osterley, Middlesex. The building has a semicircular front and Ionic pilasters.
RMFDJMGJ–The Manservant's Room with a wooden bed and bedside cupboard, and a radio at Castle Drogo, Devon.
RMFDJPTT–View down the Long Walk or Avenue of oak trees from the Chapel at Gibside, Newcastle upon Tyne. George Bowes inherited the estate in 1722 and landscaped the grounds around Gibside Hall.
RMFDJFCF–The three arches of the Screens Passage which connects the Great Hall to the Kitchen, Pantry and Buttery at Bodiam Castle, East Sussex, built between 1385 and 1388.
RMFDJHF6–Dining table and candelabra with floral arrangements and tableware in the Dining Room at Attingham Park, Shrewsbury, Shropshire.
RMFDJTY1–A winter view towards the east end of the Abbey church showing the great east window arch at Fountains Abbey, North Yorkshire. Remains of the monks' infirmary are visible in the foreground. The Cistercian community of monks was founded here in 1132 but wa
RMFDJPR2–View from the Long Walk to the Palladian Chapel, begun in 1760 to the design of James Paine, at Gibside, Newcastle upon Tyne. George Bowes inherited the estate in 1722 and landscaped the grounds around Gibside Hall.
RMFDJJHM–The Courtyard at Baddesley Clinton, Warwickshire, looking towards the Gatehouse Range and magnificent Great Parlour window. The Courtyard garden was created in 1889 by Edward Heneage Dering.
RMFDK1T3–Inside the Palladian Chapel, begun in 1760 to the design of James Paine, at Gibside, Newcastle upon Tyne. The interior was not completed until 1812. The mahogany pulpit is an unusual three-tier design with a sounding board shaped like an opened umbrella.
RMFDJK93–
RMFDJG9B–A ruined mine building with Clogwyn Brith beyond with the incline notch still visible on Hafod Y Llan farm, Snowdonia, Wales. The Cwm Erch copper mine was working from the seventeenth century until the early twentieth century, and was designated a Schedul
RMFDJT2T–Fountains Mill, the oldest building on the Fountains Abbey estate in North Yorkshire. The twelfth century cornmill was part of the community created by Cistercian monks until the dissolution in 1539.
RMFDJF4N–View from the recessed Ionic portico over the lawn to the West front at Basildon Park, built 1776-83 by John Carr for Francis Sykes, at Lower Basildon, Reading, Berkshire.
RMFDK1PG–Rhododendrons growing in front of the Hall at Gibside, Newcastle upon Tyne.
RMFDJTAT–The west or garden front of the house with curved stairs at Osterley, Middlesex. The house was originally Elizabethan, and remodelled in 1760 - 80 by Robert Adam.
RMFDJWJH–The Music Temple on an island in the lake at West Wycombe Park, Buckinghamshire. The temple has a Doric colonnade, and was designed by Nicholas Revett in the 1770s.
RMFDJW0M–A view along the River Skell in winter towards Fountains Abbey, North Yorkshire, a Cistercian community of monks from the twelfth century until the Dissolution in 1539. It is the largest monastic ruin in the country, and a World Heritage Site.
RMFDJKH4–The Dry Larder at Lanhydrock, Cornwall. This room was used for storing dry foodstuffs such as flour and sugar.
RMFDJGK5–View across the Octagon Lake towards the Lake Pavilions and Corinthian Arch at Stowe Landscape Gardens, Buckinghamshire.
RMFDJT9T–The Garden House, built in 1780 by Robert Adam, in the Pleasure Grounds at Osterley, Middlesex. The building has a semicircular front and Ionic pilasters.
RMFDJPTN–View down the Long Walk or Avenue of oak trees from the Chapel at Gibside, Newcastle upon Tyne. George Bowes inherited the estate in 1722 and landscaped the grounds around Gibside Hall.
RMFDJTB4–Oblique view of the west or garden front of the house with curved stairs at Osterley, Middlesex. The house was originally Elizabethan, and remodelled in 1760 - 80 by Robert Adam.
RMFDJMG7–The Kitchen at Castle Drogo, Devon, with the circular beechwood table designed by the architect of the house, Edwin Lutyens. The only natural light in the room comes from the circular lantern window above the table, echoing its shape.
RMFDJPTP–View down the Long Walk or Avenue of oak trees from the Chapel at Gibside, Newcastle upon Tyne. George Bowes inherited the estate in 1722 and landscaped the grounds around Gibside Hall.
RMFDJP3H–Colourful poppies in the cottage garden at Alfriston Clergy House, a fourteenth-century Wealden hall house in East Sussex.
RMFDJJEJ–Narrowboats moored on the bank at the River Wey Navigations, Surrey.
RMFDJFDT–Murder holes in the vaulted celing of the Gatehouse at Bodiam Castle, East Sussex, built between 1385 and 1388. Missiles or boiling liquids could be dropped through the holes onto any attacker below.
RMFDJTB5–The west or garden front of the house with curved stairs at Osterley, Middlesex. The house was originally Elizabethan, and remodelled in 1760 - 80 by Robert Adam.
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