Showing posts with label blogging friends. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blogging friends. Show all posts

Monday, May 09, 2011

At home with the Tudors - part 2

We had spent ages in the kitchens but it was time time to move on and look at some of the other rooms in Haddon Hall.  My favourite was the Long Gallery, with its mellow oak panelling, filled with light from the leaded windows.


The Long Gallery, 110 feet long and 17 feet wide, was built towards the end of the 16th century by Sir John Manners and his wife Dorothy, formerly Vernon, whose family owned the Hall, to celebrate their marriage and the joining of the two families.  There is a local legend that they eloped.


One of the things that we all admired was the use of wild flowers like cow parsley in displays around the hall


They looked so pretty and natural in plain glass vases in window sills and on polished wood surfaces.  I was so glad that I'd had my new camera in time to take photos here because I don't think my old one would have been up to the challenge.


The sun suddenly appeared, streaming through the windows of the Long Gallery, so we ventured outside to look at the gardens.


The grey stone walls of the hall looked wonderful against the lush green of the surrounding countryside.  Above Paul's photo of Diane, Rowan and I looking at the wonderful view.

The flowers too looked stunning against the grey stone

The one thing that  I particularly noticed about Haddon Hall was its windows with the wonderful light shining through so I've made a collage of some of them below,

After standing in the great hall watching the feast taking place for quite a while we decided to find a welcome cup of tea at the cafe and then make a visit to the gift shop before we left to go our separate ways towards home.  A good time was had by all!

In spite of the rain!!

Sunday, May 08, 2011

At Home with the Tudors - part 1

Yesterday saw our long awaited bloggy meeting with  Diane  and Rowan at the wonderful Haddon Hall which is close to Bakewell in Derbyshire.  In spite of the rain we managed to picnic close to the river on the edge of the car park at Cauldwell's Mill at Rowsley before setting off  for the Hall in time for its opening at midday.   We were looking forward to experiencing a Tudor re-enactment within the hall, of the cooking and preparation of a family dinner,  from - The Tudor Group

 I think Haddon is my favourite of all the famous Derbyshire Houses - and there are many!    It stands so majestically on its hill and is approached by an arched bridge over the river Wye. 

 There is then a flight of steps to the entrance - if you are lucky you may pass some little Tudor people on the way!


Through the entrance you are greeted by the loveliest courtyard - in here you feel protected and sheltered from the world outside.

At the top of the courtyard some of the servants were collecting herbs for the kitchen

The courtyard must seem such a huge expanse of stone to such a little one!

Inside the great hall where the food was to be served the male servants, often from high status families themselves, go through the moves of service which includes lots of  deferential bowing towards the head table, thought to be the manners of the day.  The higher status, pristine clothing and more graceful deference of the servants indicated the greater wealth and status of the owner of the house.


Female servants were quite rare at this period;  only nursemaids, wet nurses and outside laundry and dairy staff were female.  All the kitchen staff would have been male.  Of course, this wasn't possible to re-enact as there were many female members of the group, as TV Historian Ruth Goodman pointed out that the role she was playing would have most definitely been held by a man within that household.  'I'm sorry I'm a girl' she said with a twinkle in her eyes.  She really is a most charismatic woman holding the crowd fascinated as we waited for His Lordship and all his ladies  to come down from the Long Gallery to the dinner table.


I'm getting slightly ahead of myself  here as there was much to see elsewhere as the servants prepared for the feast and before we looked at the rest of the rooms in the hall and the gardens we hot-footed it straight to the kitchens to get in on the action.

I just loved this man's costume and hat.

Bread, salt and pickled onions!


The young man behind the basket of herbs had the thankless task of peeling the shell from quails eggs!

Lovely greens from the garden!


This lady was very interesting as she described to us the making of the different kinds of soap that were made for jobs like laundry, pot washing and the washing of metal pots and pans.  She also told us how to make a calendula lotion which was used mainly on the hands as a barrier against the washing up water.  As you can see, Diane, Rowan and I are fascinated.


I'll be back with more photos of the Hall and  gardens in my next post.