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Day
Trips From London
Blenheim Palace and Woodstock
Blenheim
Palace and the neighbouring village of Woodstock, in the county
of Oxfordshire, are set in lyrical countryside typifying the
quintessential English rural scene with sheep pastures, wooded
valleys, dry stone walls and weathered Cotswold stone buildings.
In villages like Woodstock it is still possible to imagine life
in the Middle Ages, so timeless do they seem.
Blenheim House
Colin Campbell
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The
History of Woodstock Manor
Woodstock has had royal connections going right back to Saxon
times. At the beginning of the 12th century King Henry I built
a residence and kept an exotic menagerie here. His grandson,
King Henry II, enlarged the royal manor and visited it with
his mistress, the Fair Rosamund. The legendary Black Prince,
eldest son of King Edward III was born at Woodstock Manor in
1330 and it remained as a royal residence until besieged and
badly damaged in the English Civil War.
Blenheim
Palace
At the beginning of the 18th century Queen Anne gave the manor
and estate to John Churchill, first Duke of Marlborough, in
gratitude for victories he had won, particularly at Blenheim
on the River Danube, against the French and Bavarian armies.
Not only was he given the estate, the Queen also promised to
pay for the building of a new house on the site.
The architect for the house
was Sir John Vanbrugh and building started in 1705. John Churchill
was married to Sarah who was a lady-in-waiting to the Queen,
a position that enabled her to keep Queen Anne to her promise
to finance the building. However, in 1710 she fell from royal
favour and the money stopped. By 1712 all work on the house
had ceased and only restarted two years later.
It seems that Sarah Churchill
was a difficult character and she had numerous disputes
with Vanbrugh who resigned in 1716. The Duke of Marlborough
died in 1722 but Sarah continued with the work on Blenheim
Palace for the remaining 22 years of her life, seeing
it as a tribute to her husband.
Blenheim Palace, set in a 2500
acre park that was redesigned later in the 18th century by Capability
Brown, has been described as a masterpiece of Vanbrugh's work.
It has magnificent room, the most celebrated of which is the
Long Library, originally designed as a picture gallery. The
Battle of Blenheim is commemorated in a ceiling painting in
the Great Hall and again in the Green Writing Room. There are
also portraits of the indomitable Sarah Churchill without whom
the palace would possibly never have been completed.
Sir Winston Churchill
Arthur Pan
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Sir
Winston Churchill
Perhaps the most famous person connected with Blenheim Palace
is Sir Winston Churchill. He was born at there on 30th November,
1874. Although the dukedom passed to his cousin, he apparently
was very attached to the place. He proposed to his future wife
Clementine beside the lake in the Temple of Diana. When he died
in 1965, his wish was to be buried in nearby Bladon Churchyard
alongside his parents. Twelve years later his wife Clementine
was laid beside him.
Visitors to Blenheim can see
the room where Churchill was born and also an Exhibition of
his life and work including a bronze of Sir Winston and his
wife, a painting by Churchill of the Palace, letters and photographs.
Buy the
The Complete Churchill Biography DVD set from the History
Channel.
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Copyright © 2003 Carol
Fisher. All Rights Reserved
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