Arriving at Highclere Castle |
Familiar view of Highclere Castle as Downton Abbey |
First question was where is
it? Highclere Castle is not in Yorkshire as one would imagine
but in Hampshire on the Berkshire - Hampshire border, just
off the A34 south of Newbury.
A folly known as Jackdaws Castle built 1743 |
We arrived at our destination early and caught a glimpse of the now very
familiar tower as we drove up the mile long driveway. We had timed
tickets for entry into the house so, with an hour and a half to
spare, we had the opportunity to either wander around the park designed by
Capability Brown, or admire the gardens and / or visit the Egyptian
Exhibition. An earlier Earl of Carnarvon had been a
very keen amateur archaeologist and along with his archaeological expert
Howard Carter had spent many years exploring the ancient Valley of the Kings,
where Egyptian pharaohs were buried. They had famously discovered the
Tomb of Tutankhamun (1336BC - 1327BC) and the story is recounted in the
cellars of the Castle, so I headed for the exhibition and found it very
interesting.
Waiting at the entrance |
Unfortunately photography wasn't
permitted inside Highclere Castle, otherwise I would have been snapping
away nineteen to the dozen. The first room that we saw was instantly
recognisable as Lord Grantham's study. It was the library which was
a very large room separated by tall gilded ionic columns, surrounded by
mahogany and gold bookcases with over 5,600 leather bound books. A
lot of the Castle furniture was used in the film, but a desk that had been put
by the window for Lord Grantham during the series, was no longer in
place - had it been antique furniture belonging to the Castle or
was it a film prop?
The date of building & family motto |
The soaring Neo Gothic Great Hall,
around which flow the state rooms was magnificent. It had
a feature stone fireplace and arched stone walls with a decorated
frieze all the way around featuring carved and painted heraldic
shields of the generations of the Carnarvon family. The
beautiful 17th century painted and hand tooled leather panels on the lower
walls was very unusual and very rare but it
softened the appearance of the room and made it look more
cosy. The whole image is even more impressive than how
it appears on the television because on the screen you don't see its
full height, that it has a glass roof and is surrounded by a stone
carved gallery at first floor level. The state dining room
was again very familiar with the large central dining table as well as
paintings, including the equestrian painting of King Charles I by Van
Dyke, on the walls. All it needed was the Crawley family to be seated
around the table and you'd be back in the period drama. We saw more
state rooms and some bedrooms but not the servants quarters.
The 'below stairs' area was created at the Ealing studios and many of the actors and actresses playing the servants hardly ever visited the castle.
The 'below stairs' area was created at the Ealing studios and many of the actors and actresses playing the servants hardly ever visited the castle.
After our self-guided
tour we all agreed that it had been a lovely day, and to finish we
would enjoy a cream tea in the converted stables at the back of the house, part
of the original Elizabethan Manor that hadn't had the Sir Charles Barry
make-over.
We found some tables and cast our eyes
round for Mr Carson, Thomas or Alfred. There wasn't a Butler or a Footman to be
seen. I reminded everyone of the lovely lines of the Dowager
Countess of Grantham "It's our job to create employment. An
aristocrat with no servants is as much use to the country as a glass
hammer." We all had to pitch in and do our own
fetching and carrying, which brought us quickly back into the modern
world to sitting around sipping tea and discussing which way of life we would
prefer.
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