Llanarth Court

Llanarth Court
General information
Town or city Llanarth
Country Wales Wales
Coordinates 51°47′22″N 2°53′58″W / 51.7894°N 2.8995°W / 51.7894; -2.8995Coordinates: 51°47′22″N 2°53′58″W / 51.7894°N 2.8995°W / 51.7894; -2.8995

Llanarth Court is a late-18th-century country house with substantial 19th-century alterations in Llanarth, Monmouthshire, Wales. The court was built for the Jones family of Treowen,[1] Monmouthshire and was subsequently the home of Ivor Herbert, 1st Baron Treowen, whose family still owns much of the Llanarth estate, although not the court itself. The court is a Grade II* listed building as of 5 June 1952.[2] It is now a private hospital.

History

The first house recorded on the property goes back to the early medieval period and was called Hendreobaith. It came into the possession of ancestors of the Jones family well before 1469. The family rebuilt the house as Llanarth Court in the seventeenth century. The current house was originally built around 1770 and was remodelled 1849–51 by Edward Habershon and his brother, W. G. Habershon, in the Italianate style. Llanarth Court was given to the Roman Catholic Church in 1948 and served as a Dominican school until it was closed around 1990 and later sold for conversion into a private hospital.[2]

Description

The court is a "monster Neo-classical house",[1] consisting of a three-storey, double pile block of thirteen bays. The entrance porch, reputedly modelled on the temple at Paestum,[1] has been removed. The Habershons' work included the rendering and much classical decoration. The interior has been modernised and institutionalised and contains "little of either the later eighteenth or the mid-nineteenth centuries".[3] It used to contain the original hall screen from Treowen, but, writing in 1999, Newman stated that the screen "is likely to be returned thither".[3]

The gatehouse to the court

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 The Buildings of Wales: Gwent/Monmouthshire, page 264
  2. 1 2 "Llanarth Court – Llanarth – Monmouthshire – Wales". British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 2016-04-29.
  3. 1 2 The Buildings of Wales: Gwent/Monmouthshire, page 265

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, April 30, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.