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Home > New Search > Heveningham Hall (Heavingham Hall)

Heveningham Hall (Heavingham Hall)  England 
HEN-ing-um
Heveningham, Suffolk, England

Started 1770s
Completed 1784

Status: Fully Extant

Special Info / Location/ Date

Special Info
Phonetic Pronunciation of House Name
HEN-ing-um

Location
Country
England
District Today
Suffolk
 Historic County
 City / Town / Village
Heveningham
 Latitude
52.30859
 Longitude
1.44715

Date
Start Date
1770s
Completion Date
1784
Circa Date
Images

The Entrance Façade

Click on thumbnail for a larger view

The Entrance Façade
The Entrance Façade
Entrance Façade Detail
Entrance Façade Window
Detail of Entrance Façade Window
James Wyatt's Orangery
Statue on exterior of Orangery
Architects

Designed   Gardens
Date   late 20th century

Designed   Follies
Date   1990s

Designed   Completed interiors, including the Hall, for Sir Gerard Vanneck, Bt., after dismissal of Taylor
Date   completed by 1784

Designed   House
Date   1770s

Designed   Park, grounds, and follies, including landscaping the valley and creating in it a serpentine river. The stable yard is probably also due to Brown
Date   18th century

Extant / Listed / References

Extant
Extant Type
Fully Extant
Extant Details

Listed
House Listed As 
Grade I
Gardens Listed As  
Grade II*
On SAVE Britain's Heritage's List of Buildings at Risk
No
Country House:  Yes

References
Vitruvius Britannicus
Vitruvius Scoticus
J.B. Burke (Burke's Visitation of Seats)
Country Life
XXIII, 594, 1908. LVIII, 432, 472 plan, 508, 1925. CXLVI, 670, 1969.
J.P. Neale (Neale's Views of Seats)
Vol. IV, 1821.
Access / Ownership / Seat

Access
Open to Public Please note: Houses listed as being open "By Appointment" are usually country house hotels or B&Bs.
No
Historic Houses Association Member
Phone Number If calling from the U.S., delete the first "0" in British numbers.
Fax Number
Email
Website
Awards

Current Ownership
Current Ownership Type
Individual / Family Trust
Primary Current Ownership Use
Private Home
Current Ownership Use / Details
Heveningham was purchased in 1994 by Mr. and Mrs. Jon Hunt, who are restoring the House and grounds.

Seat ("Seat" is loosely defined as any family that occupied the house for a period of 2 years or more)
Today Seat of
Hunt family
A Past Seat(s) of
Heveningham family. Bence family, circa 1707-mid-18th century. Sir Gerard Vanneck, Bt., Lord Huntingfield, Vanneck family, mid-18th century until 1970.
Possible (Unsure) Seat of
History / Gardens & Park / Movies

History
Earlier House(s) / Building(s)
There was an earlier house on the site that was replaced with a three-story Queen Anne house of red brick with seven bays to the north and nine bays to the south; this house forms the recessed center of the current house.
House Replaced By
Built / Designed For
Rebuilt and greatly enlarged for Sir Gerard Vanneck, 2nd Bt.
House & Family History
The Vannecks, a wealthy family of Dutch descent, purchased the Heveningham Estate in the mid 18th century from the Bence family, who had been seated here since circa 1707. Sir Robert Taylor designed the majority of house in 1778 for Sir Gerard Vanneck. Taylor converted the earlier red brick Queen Anne house into an enormous house for Vanneck, incorporating much of the earlier house and extending its frontage from 80 feet to 260 feet. Christopher Hussey, writing in “English Country Houses: Mid Georgian, 1760-1800,” states that “Taylor’s work is, in essence, an exaggeration of Chambers’s contemporary treatment of the N. front of Somerset House, like it deriving from Inigo Jones. But hints from the garden front of Versailles may have contributed to this device for centering an over-long façade.” Taylor was dismissed and replaced by James Wyatt, who completed the interiors of Heveningham by 1784. Wyatt’s interiors at Heveningham belong to his Early Pantheon Period and include the Etruscan Room, with red-figure vase paintings by Biagio Rebecca in the Athenian style. The Library has a screen of columns and oval medallions of Shakespeare, Milton, Dryden, Homer, Virgil, Locke, and others, while the Dining Room has, against its back wall, shallow apses with painted reliefs by Rebecca. The most famous room at Heveningham is the Entrance Hall, routinely cited as one of the most beautiful rooms in England; it features screens of Sienna scagliola columns at each end, complemented by the same color scagliola pilasters, and retains its original apple green walls. Wyatt probably also designed much of the furniture for the House. Sir Joshua Vanneck, 3rd Baronet, was made 1st Lord Huntingfield in the Peerage of Ireland in 1798. The Vanneck family owned the House until 1970, when it was turned over to the Department of the Environment (later English Heritage), in poor condition, in lieu of death duties. During the 1970s Heveningham was open to the public and administered by The National Trust, though the Trust refused to take ownership of the House without a proper endowment. After no solution to public ownership was found, the House was closed to the public and the original furnishings (by then owned by English Heritage) were lent to Heaton Hall in Manchester, where it remains today (2008). In 1981 Heveningham was sold to an Iraqi businessman. Repair and conversion work were under way when, in 1984, an extensive fire damaged the East Wing. Restoration of this damage was incomplete in 1991 when the owner died. In 1994 the House and park were purchased by Mr. and Mrs. Jon Hunt for use as a family home. Robert Adam Architects were employed for the renovation and alteration of the house, the design of new outbuildings, and architectural elements in the park. In addition, the landscape architect Kim Wilkie was employed to restore and continue the design of the incomplete Capability Brown landscape. The state rooms are being restored, while minor changes are being made to the secondary rooms; upper floors will provide modern family accommodation. There was a fine Print Room at Heveningham, though it is unclear if this still exists today (2008).
Collections This field lists art objects that are currently or were previously in the collection of the house.

For information on the history of British currency, click here.  To use a chart that allows you to compare the purchasing power of money In Great Britain from 1264 to any other year, including the present, click here.  To use a currency conversion to see the current value of the British pound, click here.
In 1915 the contents of Heveningham were sold at auction. The collection of 18th century furniture originally designed for Heveningham is now at Heaton Hall, Manchester, on loan from English Heritage. Among the treasures at Heveningham was a library table designed by Thomas Hope.
Comments
Lionel Esher has called James Wyatt’s Vaulted Hall "the most beautiful room in England." Christopher Hussey, writing in “English Country Houses: Mid Georgian, 1760-1800,” cites the Hall at Heveningham as “Wyatt’s surviving masterpiece as an interior designer and perhaps, after Adam’s Anti-room at Syon, the finest room produced by English neo-classicism.” The length of the House, twenty-five bays, far surpasses the ordinary and contributes to the ranking of Heveningham as one of the most important country houses in Britain.

Gardens & Park
Garden, Park, Follies and Outbuildings
Lancelot Capability designed the Park, grounds, and follies, including landscaping the valley and creating in it a serpentine river. The grounds contain the 18th century Grade II-listed horseshoe-shaped Stables (probably designed by Brown), an icehouse (Grade II), and a temple, but the star is the James Wyatt-designed Grade I-listed Orangery, a sublime Neoclassical building. In 1999 landscape architect Kim Wilkie was employed to restore and continue the design of the incomplete Capability Brown landscape. Working closely with Kim Wilkie, Robert Adam Architects has designed (2000) a new eye-catcher temple, a boat house, a new classical bridge, a small orangery and belvedere in the walled garden, and extensions to the lodge houses.
Chapel & Church

Movies
Location for Movies / TV
"The Countess Alice" (1993). "Antiques Roadshow" (1994 - TV BBC documentary, episode 16.8).
Bibliography

Author   Kenworthy-Browne, John; Reid, Peter; Sayer, Michael; Watkin, David
Year Published   1981
Reference   pgs. 243, 245


Author   Colvin, Howard
Year Published   1995
Reference   pg. 1115


Author   Hussey, Christopher
Year Published   1956
Reference   pgs. 165, 167, 173, 174, 175, 176



There are no documents associated with this house.

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