Greys Court
Greys Court is a Tudor country house and gardens in the southern Chiltern Hills at Rotherfield Greys, near Henley-on-Thames in the county of Oxfordshire, England.[1] Now owned by the National Trust, it is located at grid reference SU725834, and is open to the public.
Overview
The name derives from an old connection to the Grey family, descendants of the Norman knight Anchetil de Greye. The estate or manor of Rotherfield Greys is referred to in the Domesday Book.[2]
The mainly Tudor-style house has a courtyard and gardens. The walled gardens contain old-fashioned roses and wisteria, an ornamental vegetable garden, maze (laid to grass with brick paths, dedicated by Archbishop Robert Runcie on 12 October 1981) and ice house. Within its grounds are the fortified tower built circa 1347, the only remains of the medieval castle, overlooking the gardens and surrounding countryside, as well as a Tudor wheelhouse.
The house remains furnished as a family home, with some outstanding 18th-century plasterwork interiors.
James Paul bought the house in 1688 and it passed via his son William's daughter's dowry to Sir William Stapleton, 4th Baronet in 1724. In 1937 the house was bought from the Stapletons by Sir Felix Brunner and his wife Lady Brunner (née Elizabeth Irving), the granddaughter of the Victorian actor-manager Sir Henry Irving. In 1969 the family donated the property to the National Trust, where Lady Brunner continued to live until her death in 2003.
Television
The house appeared in a 2012 episode of Downton Abbey when Crawley family visit the property, known to them as Eryholme. The house was used by the Dowager Duchess' late husband as a hunting lodge. When Lord Grantham could no longer afford Downton Abbey, he and Cora discuss moving the family there and renaming it Downton Place.
It also appeared in the ITV series Agatha Christie's Poirot in 2013. In the adaptation of Elephants Can Remember it is used as the home of one of the people Ariadne Oliver visits while investigating the case. The episode was screened on 9 June 2013.[3]
Greys Court also appeared for external shots as "Midsomer Priory" in the Series 14 episode of Midsomer Murders.[4]
See also
- House of Grey
- Castles in Great Britain and Ireland
- Nuffield Place, a nearby National Trust property
References
- ↑ "Grey's Court", TripAdvisor (UK), retrieved 29 August 2015
- ↑ Roy Martin Haines, « Grey, John de (d. 1214) », Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004.
- ↑ Agatha Christie: Poirot (1989–2013)
- ↑ www.acorndvd.com/midsomer-murders-complete-series-14.html
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Greys Court. |
- Greys Court information from the National Trust
- Greys Court on Twitter
- Information from Culture24
- A bird's-eye view of Greys Court Rotherfield Greys in the 17th or 18th century from Scran
- AboutBritain.com information
- TourUK information
- Gardens-Guide information
- Photos of Greys Court, Oxfordshire, petergoodearl.co.uk
- Castles Abbeys and Medieval Buildings information by Michael W. Cook
Coordinates: 51°32′41″N 0°57′21″W / 51.54485°N 0.95591°W