Woodstock Palace was a royal residence in theEnglish town ofWoodstock,Oxfordshire.[1]
Henry I of England built a hunting lodge here and in 1129 he built 7 miles (11 km) of walls to create the first enclosed park, where lions and leopards were kept. The lodge became a palace under Henry's grandson,Henry II, who spent time here with his mistress,Rosamund Clifford.[1] Henry III frequently visited the palace for entertainment, including once in 1237 when he invited his long-confined cousinEleanor, Fair Maid of Brittany.[2]
Important events that took place at the palace or manor include:
A chapel or oratory was built forEleanor of Provence, the wife of Henry III, in 1250. The new chapel was dedicated to St Edward and located above the Queen's Chamber. Externally the chapel hadcrenellations.[5]
Henry VII rebuilt a part of the palace in the 1490s.[6] He spent over £4000 from his chamber account on building works at Woodstock.[7] The work was supervised by Master George Gainesford, Sheriff of Oxfordshire and others, and the mason was William Este of Oxford.[8] He modified the hall, a bay window for the Queen's chamber (forElizabeth of York), and, in 1507, the gatehouse. According toIsaac Wake the gatehouse had a carved Latin inscription recording that it was the work of Henry VII. The King's chamber also had a bay window (built by William Flower), and there was a chamber for his mother,Lady Margaret Beaufort.[9]
The new hall roof was constructed by a carpenter John Brian of Oxford in 1494. Brian complained that Henry VII had agreed to his drawing for the roof, but after he began cutting and shaping the timbers, Henry Dean, Prior of Llanthony (paymaster at the site) told him to make changes. Brian asked for another £9 to accommodate a change in the plan or "proposition" for the roof involving a round window.[10] Stone for Palace in the 1490s was brought from quarries atShirburn, Barrington,Taynton, andWindrush. Timber was brought fromBladon,Kirtlington, andSpelsbury. Bricks were made at Oxford and atBrill.[11]
William Este or East maintained the Palace for many years. In the reign ofHenry VIII,Sir Edward Chamberlain organised repairs to the newer buildings and to "Rosamund's Place". The roofs at Woodstock were repaired with lead taken from thePriory atCanons Ashby.Edward VI sent a carpenter called Thomas Cropper to survey and draw the buildings.[12]
Elizabeth I, as Princess or "Lady Elizabeth", was at Woodstock from 20 May 1554 to June 1555.[13] Her keeper wasHenry Bedingfeld ofOxburgh.[14] She is said to have been lodged in the upper floors of the gatehouse in 1554, and scratched inscriptions on the palace windows with a diamond ring, and written on a shutter with charcoal.[15] Including the verse:
Much suspected by me,
Nothing proved can be,
Quoth ELIZABETH the prisoner.[16]
Her words were noted by the travellersPaul Hentzner andHenri, Duke of Rohan in 1600. A chamber in the gatehouse had an arched oak ceiling, with carving, painted blue with gilt decoration, and was later known as Queen Elizabeth's Chamber.[17] According toJohn Foxe, Elizabeth envied the freedom of milkmaids at Woodstock who she could hear singing in the garden.[18]
Repairs made to the palace in 1576 included the plastering of several rooms. The accounts mention a courtyard with a fountain decorated in an earlier period withheraldic beasts, and a stairway to the great hall also featured four beasts.[19]
King James I and his wifeAnne of Denmark, her secretaryWilliam Fowler, andArbella Stuart came to Woodstock in September 1603 during a time of plague.[20]Sir Robert Cecil criticised the building as, "unwholsome, all the house standing upon springs. It is unsavoury, for there is no savour but of cows and pigs. It is uneaseful, for only the King and Queen with the privy chamber ladies and 3 or 4 of Scottish council are lodged in the house".[21] The court was at Woodstock again in September 1610.[22]
In 1611, King James I gave Woodstock Palace to his sonHenry Frederick, Prince of Wales,[23] who had a banqueting house built of leafy tree branches in the park, in which he held a dinner for his parents and his sisterPrincess Elizabeth in August 1612.[24][25] Henry paid for a poor boy from Woodstock to be apprenticed with Thomas Wilson, a shoemaker on theStrand who worked for the royal family.[26] On 19 February 1617, Woodstock was given toPrince Charles.[27]
In 1649, a survey was made of the manor buildings, mentioning, "a large gatehouse and a courtyard, on the north of which there is range of buildings called the Prince's Lodgings, on the east a spacious hall, adjoining to which there is a chapel and lodgings, known by the name of the Bishop's Lodgings, another courtyard called the Wardrobe, surrounded with the Lord Chamberlain's lodgings and wardrobe rooms, adjoining which is the Queen's Hall and the steward's lodgings. There is a fair staircase leading up to the Guard Chamber, to which joins the Presence Chamber, on the right hand of which is the King's withdrawing room, bedchamber and closet, on the right hand the Queen's lodgings". The rooms were then mostly empty of furnishings.[28]
Woodstock Palace was mostly destroyed during theEnglish Civil War.
In 1705,Benedict Leonard Calvert, 4th Baron Baltimore sold Woodstock Park tothe Crown, which was owned at the time by virtue of his wife,Charlotte Lee.[30] Charlotte Lee was the daughter of the1st Earl of Lichfield andLady Charlotte FitzRoy, the illegitimate daughter ofKing Charles II.[31]
Later in 1705, Parliament granted the royalmanor and honour (i.e.feudal barony) of Woodstock toJohn Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough (1650–1722), in recognition of his victory over the French at theBattle of Blenheim on 13 August 1704. The manor was to be held infeudal tenure from Queen Anne infree socage by service ofgrand serjeanty "of presenting at Windsor Castle, on the anniversary of the battle, a standard bearing the fleur-de-lys of France".[32] Aninescutcheon "of the Honour and Manor of Woodstock" was further granted by royal warrant in 1722 as anaugmentation of honour to his coat of arms and was borne at his funeral. By a further Royal Licence, 26 May 1817, the inescutcheon was added as an augmentation of honour to the arms of the Dukes of Marlborough,[29] and is still borne by them today. The arms comprise a Cross of St George surmounted by the royal arms of France.[33]
Blenheim Palace was built in the manor of Woodstock for the Duke as his new seat. Some stone from the old Palace was used.[1] The ruins of the old palace or manor house of Woodstock were removed in 1723.[34]
51°50′45″N01°21′50″W / 51.84583°N 1.36389°W /51.84583; -1.36389