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Madresfield Court
MADERS-FIELD
Madresfield, Worcestershire, England
Circa Date: 13th century core with 16th & 19th century additions
Status: Fully Extant
MADERS-FIELD
Madresfield, Worcestershire, England
Circa Date: 13th century core with 16th & 19th century additions
Status: Fully Extant
Special Info / Location/ Date
Special Info
Phonetic Pronunciation of House Name
MADERS-FIELD
Location
Country
England
District Today
Worcestershire
Historic County
City / Town / Village
Madresfield
Latitude
52.125446
Longitude
-2.2808
Date
Start Date
Completion Date
Circa Date
13th century core with 16th & 19th century additions
Images
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Architects
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
XXI, 450, 1907. CLXVIII, 1338, 1458, 1551, 1980.
J.P. Neale (Neale's Views of Seats)
Vol. V, 1822.
Access / Ownership / Seat
Access
Open to Public Please note: Houses listed as being open "By Appointment" are usually country house hotels or B&Bs.
Yes
Historic Houses Association Member
Phone Number If calling from the U.S., delete the first "0" in British numbers.
01905-830-680
Fax Number
Email
Website
Awards
Current Ownership
Current Ownership Type
Individual / Family Trust
Primary Current Ownership Use
Private Home
Current Ownership Use / Details
House is owned by The Trustees of Madresfield Estate.
Seat ("Seat" is loosely defined
as any family that occupied the house for a period of 2 years or more)
Today Seat of
Lady Rosalind Morrison
A Past Seat(s) of
Earl Beauchamp, Lygon family.
Possible (Unsure) Seat of
History / Gardens & Park / Movies
History
Earlier House(s) / Building(s)
House Replaced By
Built / Designed For
House & Family History
Madresfield Court is a large house of 160 rooms that has been the seat of the Lygon family, later Earls Beauchamp (the title is now extinct), for over 900 years. The moated house dates to the 13th century, with later additions, the largest number of which were constructed in the Elizabethan era, and the star of which is certainly the spectacular Tudor Hall. Evelyn Waugh (1903-66) was a frequent visitor to Madresfield in the 1920s and 1930s when he became a firm friend of Hugh Lygon, son of the 7th Earl Beauchamp, at Oxford. Many of the characteristics of Madresfield and its occupants were reproduced in Waugh's famous novel "Brideshead Revisited," first published in 1945. The character of Lord Marchmain was probably modeled on the 7th Earl Beauchamp, once Governor of New South Wales and later the leader of the Liberal Party in the House of Lords. Waugh, who very likely had an affair with Hugh Lygon, reversed the sexual preferences of Lord Marchmain with that of Lord Beauchamp; while the former had escaped to Venice to live with his Italian mistress, the latter was forced to flee England in 1931 and live in Venice and on the Continent after his father-in-law, Bendor, 2nd Duke of Westminster, threatened to publicly expose him as a practicing homosexual (homosexuality was then a criminal offence in England). When the horrified King George V was told of Beauchamp’s homosexuality, he reportedly said "I thought men like that shot themselves.” The Duke of Westminster, by all accounts an unattractive human being, apparently hoped to ruin the Liberal Party, of which Beauchamp was a leading light, by ruining Beauchamp (the Duke was a right-wing Tory). There was no public scandal, but Lord Beauchamp had to forfeit all his honours (he was made Lord Lieutenant of Gloucestershire in 1911, carried the Sword of State at the coronation of King George V in 1911, was made Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports in 1913, and a Knight of the Garter in 1914) and spent the remainder of his life in exile, dying in New York City in 1938 at the age of sixty-six. (The house most famously associated with "Brideshead Revisited" is Castle Howard in Yorkshire, where filming for the 1981 TV mini series and the 2008 theatrical movie took place). In Mar 2003 a dinghy was used by burglars to get across the moat at Madresfield and rob the house of many treasures, including art, silver, antiques, and porcelain. Scotland Yard later arrested two suspects and recovered a large number of decorative boxes and rock crystal objects.
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.
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.
Some contents were sold after the death of the 8th Earl Beauchamp’s widow in 1989, including Bernardo Bellot’s "View to Königstein," originally given to 1st Earl Beauchamp by the 3rd Viscount Palmerston, sold to a foreign party at Sotheby’s on Dec 11, 1991 for £3,410,000. In Mar 2003 antiques valued at £2 million were stolen from Madresfield. A reward of up to £100,000 was offered for their return. Two people were later arrested for the burglary and detectives from Scotland Yard's specialist arts and antiques unit also recovered a large number of decorative boxes and rock crystal stolen in the burglary. In the raid thieves used a dinghy to get across the moat and then loaded the boat with antiques, art, silver, and porcelain.
Comments
Gardens & Park
Garden, Park, Follies and Outbuildings
Chapel & Church
The Chapel (1902-23) was commissioned from Birmingham artists and craftsmen and is widely regarded as the most complete, and possibly the most lovely, of all British Arts and Crafts achievements. The Beauchamp family are shown in murals in tempera by Henry Payne, with the reredos by W.H. Bidlake, the panels and altar frontal by G.M. Gere, and glass quarries by M. Lamplugh.
Movies
Location for Movies / TV
"Revisiting Brideshead" (2005 - TV documentary on the TV series “Brideshead Revisited” [1981], segment "Castle Howard").
Bibliography
| Author | NA |
| Year Published | 1999 |
| Reference |
| Author | Sayer, Michael |
| Year Published | 1993 |
| Reference |
| Author | Hearn, Karen; Upstone, Robert; Waterfield, Giles |
| Year Published | 1998 |
| Reference |
Related Resources
There are no documents associated with this house.

