ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION
With such a history as
it can boast, having been
built and furnished in the
most magnificent and
sumptuous manner that the taste and ambition of
its first owner could devise, and having passed
from him into the hands of a king whose love of
splendid buildings became proverbial, it is not to
be wondered at that Hampton Court has always
been a favourite and carefully-maintained possession
of the Tudor, Stuart, and Hanoverian dynasties.
Even in the days of the Commonwealth its atmosphere and traditions moved the 'Lady Protectress' and her attendants to uncouth attempts at
regal dignity, and such alterations and losses as it
has experienced in its existence of nearly four hundred years have assuredly not been due to neglect.
When Wolsey began his great work in 1514,
the site was already occupied by a building consisting of a hall with a parlour, kitchen, buttery, and
stable, and a chapel which had a tower containing
two bells. After the fashion of the camerae of the
Hospitallers, the buildings differed in no essential
way from those of an ordinary mediaeval manorhouse, except, perhaps, in the relative importance
of the chapel. It is not likely that they were of
sufficient importance to influence the setting-out of
Wolsey's buildings, or that their incorporation in
the new work was ever contemplated; at any rate,
they have long ceased to exist, leaving no trace
behind them.
From 1514 to 1529 the work of building went
on under Wolsey's direction and at his expense,
although during the last few years the palace had
become the property of Henry VIII, and it is
hard to say at what point the king took up the
cardinal's design. The general setting-out of the
plan shows none of the passion for symmetry which
was to influence the English architects of Elizabeth's day, although the first or base court follows
a regular scheme, having a great gateway tower in
the middle of its west or outer side, and a second
gate-tower-the clock-tower-corresponding to it
on the east. On the east side of the second or clock
court is a third gateway, and the centre line of the
building passed through a fourth gateway on the
east front of the palace. The approach to the palace
being from the west, this front is more regular than
the rest, being flanked on the north and south by
projecting blocks of building, which are, however,
additions to the original design, and not of equal
size, bearing only a superficial resemblance to each
other. The apportionment of the various parts of
the building followed that of other great houses
of the time, the outer court being devoted to
lodgings for guests, long rows of chambers opening
to corridors running along the inner side of each
wing; while the second court contained the
principal sets of rooms, with the great hall on the
north side, adjoined on the east by the great chamber, and on the north and west by the kitchens and
domestic offices. The chapel stands to the east of
the great chamber, separated from it by a small
court, and approached by galleries.
The whole of the buildings are of brick, generally
of a deep red colour, but by no means uniform in
tint, and the wall-surfaces are varied by the insertion of black bricks set in a lattice pattern, often
very irregular, and sometimes without any definite
design. The string-courses, plinths and copings,
and the masonry of doorways and windows, are of
stone, for the most part called Reigate stone in
the original building accounts, but Caen stone
and Barnet stone are also mentioned. The bricks
appear to have been made on the spot in vast
quantities, and many references to them occur.
A long series of the building accounts has been
preserved, the earliest dating from 1514, but
unfortunately there are many gaps in them between
that year and 1529. After this date they are
fairly complete up to 1540. (fn. 1) On one point of
great interest they do not, however, give much
information, that is, who occupied the position of
architect or designer of the work. Certain overseers are mentioned, as James Bettes, 'master of
the works'; Master Lawrence Stubbes, paymaster
in 1515-16; and Mr. Henry Williams, priest,
'surveyor of the works,' the last-named probably
more nearly fulfilling the duties of a modern architect than the others; but in no case is it clear
that the actual designing was done by any of these.
In 1536-7 one Mr. Lubbyns is mentioned as
being paid £3 6s. 8d. as a half-year's wages, side
by side with an entry for 'paper Riall for plattes'
for his use; from which it would appear that he
certainly set out details of the work if he did not
design them.
It is clear that from the first the work was
pushed on with great energy. In 1514 there is
mention of the chapel and gallery, and in 1515 of
the great chamber, the king's dining chamber, the
new lodging without the gate, &c.; and by 1516
the buildings were so far advanced that Wolsey
could entertain the king at Hampton Court.
Labourers were collected from distant parts of the
country, Northamptonshire and Oxfordshire being
mentioned; and in the accounts for 1514 is a
payment 'for the statutes of the last parliament
bought, forasmuch as in them were comprised the
statute of labourers and artificers,' much as anyone
proposing to build at the present day might arm
himself with a copy of the London Building Act.
The absence of the greater part of the building
accounts during the years when Wolsey was in
possession makes it impossible to determine the
order in which the various parts of his palace were
set up, but it is reasonable to suppose that the
principal buildings, the hall, chapel, great chamber,
&c., would be undertaken first. Henry added to
and rebuilt a certain amount of the cardinal's
work, but his additions were for the most part at
the south-east, on the ground now occupied by
Wren's buildings; and it seems probable that
when Wolsey finally left Hampton Court in 1529
its area was little less than it is at the present day.
The outer or base court as it now stands, a good
part of the Clock Court, the range of kitchens and
offices on the north, including the Lord Chamberlain's Court, the Master Carpenter's Court, the
Fish Court, &c., together with parts of the chapel
and perhaps some of the range to the north of the
Chapel Court, all seem to be in the main of his
time. His Great Hall, though no doubt a fine
building, was evidently not fine enough for the
king, who pulled it down in 1530 and finished the
splendid hall which now exists about 1535. At
the same time Henry seems to have remodelled,
and partly rebuilt, the fine range of rooms to the
east of the hall and the eastern range of the Clock
Court, and in 1535-6 he refitted the chapel,
adding the organ chamber on the south, but
apparently not rebuilding the chapel nor making
any important structural alteration. It is, indeed,
called in one place of the accounts the King's New
Chapel, but this does not necessarily imply a rebuilding; and in the entry relating to the enormous
sum of £451 spent on the wooden vault and the
royal 'holyday closettes,' the heading is for
'payntyng, gyltyng, and varnesshyng of the vought,'
and the making of pendants and other details.
The tennis court-the 'close tennys play' of
the accounts-and a 'close bowling alley,' at the
north-east of the palace, were among the first
additions made by the king in 1529, and he also
lost no time in adding new kitchens and offices,
being evidently no more content with the cardinal's
kitchens than with his Great Hall.
Of Henry's immediate successors neither Edward VI nor Mary has left any mark on the
palace, and Elizabeth is only commemorated by a
little work on the south front, close to the southwest angle of Wren's building, where a bay window bears her initials and the date 1568, and by
another panel on the east side of the entrance
gateway of the first court. Inigo Jones was
appointed surveyor of Hampton Court, among
other places, in 1615; and though there is no
record of anything done about this time to the
buildings, the block forming the east side of the
Chapel Court shows detail belonging to the early
years of the 17th century, and may preserve this
evidence of Jones's supervision. Charles I, in the
earlier years of his reign, was much occupied in
furnishing and adorning the palace and gardens,
but does not seem to have built anything of importance.
The extent of the buildings at the end of his
reign is very clearly set forth in the survey taken by
order of the Parliament in 1653, when it was proposed to sell the palace and its grounds in a
number of separate lots, and to pull down all the
buildings.
Beginning from the west,
a green court inclosed, being
the outer court, is first noted,
from which a bridge led
over the moat into the first
court, also called a green
court, that is, the present
Base or outer Court. The
ranges of buildings surrounding it are then noted, and a
description of the Pond Garden, or Pond Yard, on the
south follows. The Clock
Court-then the Fountain
Court-is next described, as
'paved with stone with a
ffountayne standing in midst
thereof,' with the buildings
round it, the great hall being
merely called a range of
building like the rest. Then
comes the Cloister Green
Court, on the site of the
present Fountain Court, with
the Privy Garden and the
Mount Garden to the south.
The chapel, with its court
and surrounding buildings, is
summarized as 'severall other
buildings, with the severall
yards or courts lying betweene and amongst the sayd
buildings.' The outlying
buildings are then noticed,
beginning at the north,
though here again the tennis
court &c. are not mentioned
by name; then comes the
Tilt-yard at the north-west,
with its five buildings or towers, and then the
projecting block at the south end of the west
front, with a 'greate howse of easement,' now
destroyed, standing over the moat. Finally the
buildings on the south, towards the river, are surveyed, the Feather House and Hott House, with
the Store Cellars, formerly the old Bowling Alley,
between them, and the Stillhouse and Water Gallery to the east of them. On the south side of
the Outer Green Court was the wood-yard, having
to the west the Privy bakehouse, the Poultry
Office, and the Scalding-house, and at the southwest angle of the same court a house called the
'Toye.' (fn. 2)
Hampton Court fortunately escaped the threatened destruction and became the residence of
Cromwell and the scene of his sorry court, passing
through the days of the Commonwealth with
much loss of its furniture and treasures, both by
the great sale which lasted from 1650 to 1653,
and by the peculations of Cromwell's family after
his death, but not suffering any material damage
in its buildings.

Hampton Court Palace: Chapel Court from South-west Corner
Charles II made a good many internal altera
tions, of which some evidence yet remains, and
spent a great deal of money in refurnishing the
depleted rooms. He paid special attention to the
tennis court, which had evidently become somewhat old-fashioned, and the extent of his work at
the palace may be estimated from the fact that in
1662 nearly £8,000 was paid over to Hugh May,
master of the works, for charges and repairs.
In spite of all these changes, the buildings of
Hampton Court remained to the outward view
much as Henry VIII left them until the Revolution
of 1688. William III was at once attracted
by the quiet and secluded situation, but found the
palace itself old-fashioned, and not at all to his
taste, and soon decided to rebuild the old state
apartments, whose historical associations stood for
very little with him. Indeed, a far more extensive
scheme of rebuilding, having for its object the making of a new approach to the palace from the north,
on the line of the avenue in Bushey Park, was
contemplated; but, however fine the result might
and doubtless would have been, it is impossible to
regret its abandonment. As it is, the destruction
of the Cloister Court, which must have been, after
the hall and chapel, the finest part of the palace, is
infinitely regrettable; and though one would not
willingly spare any part of the old buildings, it is
to be wished that William could have decided to
sacrifice almost any other court of the palace than
this. The work was entrusted to Wren, who set
out a new court, now known as the Fountain
Court, on the old site, with great ranges of buildings on the south and east, 315 and 300 ft. long
respectively, harmonizing to some extent with the
older work in the use of red brick with stone
dressings, and in themselves very charming examples of his work, but undeniably out of scale and
character with the Tudor palace, to the picturesque irregularities of which their stiff classic
lines cannot adapt themselves. In spite of various
hindrances, quarrels with Talman the 'comptroller of the works,' and a good deal of injudicious
meddling on the part of his royal client, Wren
carried on the work, so that in 1691 it was in a
fair way to completion. One source of delay had
been the failure in the supply of Portland stone,
owing to the presence in the Channel of a victorious French fleet. The fitting up and decoration
of the new buildings was a lengthy and costly
business, Grinling Gibbons and Caius Gabriel
Cibber being employed among other less known
sculptors, Laguerre among the painters, and to Jean
Tijou and his assistant, Huntingdon Shaw, was
given the work of making the well-known gates
and screens of wrought-iron which inclosed the
gardens on the south. The works were brought
to a standstill for a time by the death of Queen
Mary in 1694, but begun again after the burning
of Whitehall in 1698, Verrio the painter being
first employed, as it seems, in 1699, and the work
of decoration was pushed on energetically. It
seems that the scheme already referred to of building a great new entrance court on the north, and
turning the great hall into a sort of vestibule, with
flights of stone steps leading up to it on the north
side, was now drawn up. It would have involved the
destruction of the great watching chamber and all
the eastern range of the Clock Court, as well as of
the great kitchens and much of the work near them;
and though the palace would thereby have obtained
a very stately faÇade and a dignified approach, the
wholesale destruction of the Tudor work would
have been an irreparable loss. There is ample
evidence, too, that it would not have stopped here,
and if William had lived he would probably have
rebuilt the whole palace, and thereby destroyed a
chapter of English history for which no masterpiece of Wren's creation could compensate us.
The problematical 'little gentleman in black
velvet' did good service to others than the Jacobites who drank his health. The year 1699 was
marked by a further attempt by Talman to discredit Wren, which came to nothing, and when
the king returned from Holland late in the year
he was full of admiration for what had been done.
Under Queen Anne the works continued, the most
important item being perhaps the refitting of the
chapel in 1710; but the unfortunate aversion of
the queen to paying the debts incurred by her
predecessor and herself made her reign a period of
ceaseless 'dunning' by the various artists employed, such as Verrio and Tijou (who appears as
John Tissue), and the builders and masons and
sculpture-merchants. Under the Georges various
works were carried on, and the fitting up of
Wren's buildings may be considered to have been
completed in the time of George I, which was
otherwise and less pleasantly signalized, as already
stated, by the disgraceful supersession of Wren in
his old age in favour of the incapable Benson.
George II has left his mark on the east range of
the Clock Court, a good deal of work being done by
Kent at the time, c. 1730. The scheme for altering the Great Hall was now again brought forward,
but fortunately abandoned. After this time the
interest in the buildings gradually declined,
George III entirely abandoning Hampton Court,
and leaving it neglected. In spite of this certain
considerable repairs were carried out, such as the
rebuilding of the Great Gatehouse in 1773, and the
repair of the Great Hall in 1798. With the revival
of interest in archaeology the buildings naturally
received more attention, and at the present time
everything is admirably and systematically cared
for, about £5,000 a year being spent in repairs
and maintenance. The beginning of the reign
of Edward VII was marked by the making of a
fine and complete plan of all the buildings, from
which the plans which accompany this description
are reproduced by special permission.
The approach to the palace is now, as always,
from the west. The entrance to the precincts is
through a gate with stone piers, the work of Kent,
c. 1730, surmounted by lead figures of the lion
and unicorn and trophies of arms. The roadway
thence runs in a slanting direction to the main
entrance, the gatehouse on the west side of the first
court, passing on the left hand a long line of
late 17th-century brick buildings of two stories,
built for stabling and offices. In the past two
years the appearance of the entrance front of the
palace has been immensely improved by the clearing out of the wide moat between the wings at
either end of the front, which had been filled in
about 1690, and the uncovering and repair of the
stone bridge crossing it. This bridge was built in
1536 by Henry VIII, replacing a bridge probably
of wood, built by Wolsey, and from the full details
remaining in the building accounts it has been
possible to reproduce the lost portions, that is, the
parapets, pinnacles, and shield-bearing beasts set
thereon, with a high degree of certainty. The
gateway to which it leads was largely rebuilt in
1773, losing greatly in dignity and interest thereby. The old gatehouse, of which several drawings
exist, the most accurate being some measured drawings by Kent made about forty years before its
rebuilding, was of five stories, and much taller than
the present building. Instead of a single arch in
the middle it had two arches, a large one for carriages and a small one for foot passengers, opening
into the gate hall, and the large arch was in consequence not on the centre line of the gatehouse.
This affected the oriel window over it, which,
being set over the arch, was likewise not in the
middle of the elevation. The openwork parapet
above flanked by pinnacles has been reproduced in
the present gateway, and the octagonal angle turrets stand on their old bases. About 1873 a stone
vault was added to the gate hall, and the pinnacles
of the parapet continued downwards as buttresses,
precisely on the line of the parapets of the stone
bridge, which, as now restored,
butt against them.
As already noted, the wings at
each end of the moat are additions to the original design, but
are not of much later date, as the
outer wall of the moat, built
probably about 1537, is built
against them. A staircase leads
down into the south-west corner
of the moat from the south wing,
but there is now no evidence of
any sluice for emptying the moat
into the Thames, though something of the kind doubtless existed.
The buildings of the first court
are of two stories with embattled
parapets, the detail very simple,
and the ornament confined to
the pinnacles on the parapets
and the chimney-stacks. The
dark tint of the red brick walls
is accentuated by the black pointing in the joints, an original
feature, as may be proved by
the entries in the building accounts for burnt hay for colouring the pointing of the walls. The windows are
for the most part of three lights with uncusped
four-centred heads. Their stonework has been
very largely renewed, and none of the cut-brick
chimney-shafts are old. The gateways are the
chief architectural features, being of greater height
than the rest of the buildings, and having angle
turrets and panels of the royal arms over the
archways. They are further distinguished by the
large terra-cotta roundels with portraits of Roman
Emperors, of which there were originally ten in
the palace, made for Wolsey by Giovanni Maiano
in 1521. These, with the fine panel of Wolsey's
arms over the gateway in the Clock Court, are
the only examples of terra-cotta now to be seen
at Hampton Court; but that there must have
been more of it originally is clear, both from
documentary evidence and from the pieces of architectural detail now kept in the Great Kitchen,
having been dug up in the Round Kitchen Court
not many years since. One very ornamental feature, now almost entirely lost, was the leaden
cappings of the turrets; a good specimen still exists
on the garden front of the Clock Court, with
finial, crockets, and pinnacled buttresses. Such
cappings are called 'types' in the building accounts.

Hampton Court Palace: Terra-cotta Panel of Wolsey's Arms
Behind the north range of the first court lie
three small irregular courts, the Chamberlain's,
the Master Carpenter's, and the Fish Court.
Though much repaired, and the least imposing
part of the 16th-century palace-all being part of
Wolsey's work-they are extremely picturesque,
and at the east of them are the two kitchens, fine
and lofty rooms with huge fireplaces, ovens, &c.,
and the remains of open-timbered roofs. The
chimney stacks and stepped copings over the fireplaces towards Tennis Court Lane are particularly
good specimens of Tudor brickwork, though the
shafts of the chimneys are modern. To the east
of the kitchens is the serving-place, a wide passage
into which hatches open from the kitchen, and
from which the dishes were taken to the north
door of the hall, across the long corridor which
connects the Round Kitchen Court with the three
small courts at the west. The windows of the
corridor are glazed, and have ventilating panes of
pierced leadwork copied from old specimens.
The Clock Court, formerly called the Fountain
Court, from a fountain set here by Wolsey and
altered by Henry VIII, is in some ways the most
interesting part of the palace, as giving some idea of
the appearance of the destroyed buildings to the
east of it, which contained the finest rooms other
than the hall and chapel. On the west and south
sides the work is Wolsey's, though the latter range
is masked by Wren's colonnade; on the east
Wolsey's work, much rebuilt by Henry, has been
considerably altered and refaced in the time of
George II, while the north side is taken up by
Henry's Great Hall, which, except for much external repair and the loss of its lantern and minor
fittings, remains in good preservation. Over the
entrance gateway at the north-west is the dial of
the clock from which the court takes its modern
name, a fine piece of 16th-century work, lately
repainted and repaired. The Great Hall stands over
a range of cellars, and having its floor at a considerable height above the level of the court, is approached by a flight of stone steps from the gatehall of the Clock Tower, leading to a fine door at
the south end of the screens. A similar flight of
steps on the north leads to the corresponding door,
and served as the entry from the kitchens and
butteries, &c., the disposition of the plan not allowing for these offices in the normal places at the
lower end of the hall. There was, however, a
pantry in this position, and the buttery was in the
cellars under the west end of the hall. The hall
measures 106 ft. by 40 ft., and is 45 ft. high to
the plate and 92 ft. to the top of the gable. It is
in seven bays, of which the eastern bay was occupied by the dais, the platform of which still remains, and is lighted by a splendid bay window on
the south, rising to the full height of the wall, with
a rich fan-vaulted stone ceiling and six tiers of
lights with tracery above in the head of the window. The other bays of the hall have large fourlight windows, and in the western bay are the
screens with a gallery over them; in both gable
ends of the hall are eight-light traceried windows,
with smaller windows in the gable above. All
these are filled with modern stained glass, nothing
of the old glass now remaining. The screen
is a very fine piece of woodwork, the treatment
of its two openings, with large round pillars on
either side having moulded capitals and bases, being
unusual. The details of the work are Gothic, and
the initials of Henry and Anne Boleyn sufficiently
mark its date; it is to be noted that its carver was
the same Richard Ridge of London who made the
Italianate pendants in the roof above. The original front of the gallery over the screen was long
since removed, but its place is now supplied by a
modern front. The roof of the hall is well known
as one of the richest and most splendid of English
roofs; its construction and outlines are Gothic, but
much of its ornament is Italian in style, though
made by English craftsmen. It has hammer-beam
trusses with arched braces springing from the
hammer beams to strengthen the collars, while the
spandrels above and below the collars, and below
the hammer beams, are filled with tracery. The
purlins are similarly strengthened by arched braces
with pendants, and the whole surface of the roof
is coved and panelled, and is everywhere enriched
with carving, colour, and gilding. The most
remarkable features are the sixteen great pendants, nearly 5 ft. long, below the hammer
beams, carved by Richard Ridge in 1534-5, at a
cost of 3s. 4d. each. The building accounts of
this roof are well worth study as a glossary of
mediaeval carpenter's terms. Externally the roof
is leaded, and is of much flatter pitch in the upper
part than the lower; its appearance is much injured
by the removal in the 18th century of the magnificent louvre or fumerel, a complete description of
which can be obtained from the building accounts.
Nothing equal to it is left to us.
To the east of the hall is the 'King's Great
Watching Chamber,' which, with the vaulted
cellar below it, was being built in 1534-5. It is
lighted by a range of windows set high in the wall
and a fine semicircular bay window on the southeast, and has a contemporary panelled ceiling
with shields modelled in papier mâché at the intersections of the moulded ribs.
Jane Seymour's badge occurs twice on the
ceiling, perhaps replacing that of Anne Boleyn.
At the north-west corner of the Watching
Chamber is a smaller room known as the Horn
Room; and in this, the Watching Chamber, and the
hall are preserved the finest of the tapestries for
which Wolsey's palace was famous. For a description of them see Mr. Law's History of Hampton
Court.
On the east side of the Clock Court ran a series
of five rooms opening from the Watching Chamber,
the King's Presence Chamber and his private rooms,
now so altered as to preserve little evidence of
their former arrangement. For the disposition of
the whole of Henry VIII's buildings round the
Cloister Green Court, whose site is now occupied
by the Fountain Court of William III, and the
queen's lodgings on the east front of the palace,
built for Anne Boleyn, but never occupied by her,
the evidence of old drawings and an outline plan
now at All Souls College, Oxford, and especially
the many references to them in the building
accounts, give very valuable materials which still
await a thorough working-out. The great galleries
of which mention is often made were evidently
splendid examples of this peculiarly English
feature, and of earlier date than any which have
come down to our times; indeed, those which are
recorded to have existed in Wolsey's palace, built
about 1515-16, are the earliest of which any
notice has survived in the kingdom.
To the east of the Watching Chamber is a small
court known as the Round Kitchen Court, from a
round building which, in its present condition,
appears to date from the 18th century; drawings
showing a scheme by Kent, c. 1730, for fitting it
up as a latrine, are extant. On the north and
east the court has a cloister, with a gallery over it,
leading to the chapel, which is on the east side,
and consists of a vestibule flanked by octagonal
turrets, with the royal pew in a gallery above,
and the chapel proper, an aisleless building of
four bays with an organ chamber on the southeast. The walls are of Wolsey's date, but the
organ chamber is an addition by Henry VIII; and
the vaulted wooden roof is also of his time. The
rest of the 16th-century fittings, except for a
beautiful ceiling over the stairs to the royal pew,
have been removed, after much damage in Cromwell's days, and the present fittings date from the
time of Anne and later. The panelling of the
vestibule and staircase, and the Corinthian altarpiece, are particularly good; but here, as in the
hall, the roof is the most notable feature, with its
coffered vault and three rows of gilded pendants,
round each of which are grouped four figures of
angels playing pipes, singing from scrolls, or holding sceptres. The west door of the chapel, opening to the cloister, has on either side a large stone
panel with the arms and initials of Henry VIII
and Jane Seymour, supported by angels, though it
seems that Anne Boleyn's arms were formerly here,
and from the nature of the supporters Mr. Law
suggests that the panels originally held the
cardinal's arms. The entry of the carving of a
crown for each of these panels in Henry VIII's
time bears out this suggestion; but otherwise this
work, though Italian in feeling, is notably inferior,
and hardly what one would expect from Wolsey's
workmen.
To the north of the chapel is the Chapel Court,
bounded on the north by the range of buildings
which were assigned to Prince Edward from 1537
onwards; they have suffered in recent years by
fire, and contain nothing of their old fittings.
Very little indeed remains in the palace of the
magnificent decoration which was famous throughout Europe in the 16th century. In the west
range of the Clock Court are some good linenpanelled rooms, and in the south range the rooms,
traditionally Wolsey's private lodging, have some
ceilings of the time; but the best idea of the
splendour of Wolsey's ornament is to be gained
from a room in the east range of the court, reached
from the Mantegna Gallery on the first floor of the
Fountain Court. This has a very rich geometrical
ceiling, the panels of which have only recently
been discovered to be of lead, with the 'gold and
byse' colouring characteristic of its date, a narrow
frieze with the cardinal's 'word' and badges,
and below it some oil paintings on panel, of the
Last Supper, the Scourging, the Bearing of the
Cross, and the Resurrection, perhaps the work of
Luca Penni or Toto del Nunziato. Below the
paintings the walls were doubtless covered with
hangings.
The south-east quarter of the palace is occupied
by the Fountain Court, the work of Sir Christopher
Wren. His buildings are in three stories, the
ground floor towards the court being occupied by
a cloister, and towards the gardens by ranges of
rooms, now private apartments. Queen Mary
seems to have used the walks of the cloister and
part of the south range as a greenhouse and
orangery, and Defoe mentions in his Tour
Through Great Britain that 'the lower part of
the house was all one as a greenhouse for some
time.' The principal apartments are on the first
or chamber floor, with a mezzanine or half-story
over, the area of which is thrown into the largest
rooms to increase their height. The third or attic
floor has always been divided into suites of rooms,
which still retain their official name of Galleries.
The principal elevation is that facing east, 300 ft.
long and 60 ft. high, divided into twenty-three
bays, the seven middle bays forming a symmetrical
composition, more elaborately treated than the rest
and faced with Portland stone. The three in the
middle have on the ground floor square-headed
gateways, opening to a vestibule leading to the
cloisters of the Fountain Court, the piers between
the gateways being of Portland stone with drafted
joints, and serving as plinths for half-columns of
the Corinthian order, which with their cornice
frieze and architrave occupy the full height of the
first floor, and carry a pediment whose apex
reaches nearly to the top of the attic story. In
each bay between the columns are tall stone-framed
sash windows surmounted by cornices, and a band
of carved ornament equal in depth to the capitals
of the columns. The pediment incloses a group
of sculpture by Caius Gabriel Cibber, 'The
Triumph of Hercules over Envy,' carved between
1694 and 1696, for which the sculptor was paid
£400. The two bays on each side of the middle
three have square-headed windows on the ground
story, and flat pilasters instead of half-round
columns above. The cornice and band of carving
beneath it is continued across them, and the attic
stage above is divided by pilasters enriched with
carving, carrying up the lines of the pilasters on
the first floor. The attic windows are square,
fitted with sashes like the others, the heavy sashbars of which make a most attractive feature, and
the whole is finished with a stone balustrade,
divided into bays like the rest by panelled pilasters.
On either side of the seven stone-faced bays are
eight more simply treated, without pilasters and
with red-brick walling. The ground-floor windows
have low arched heads with prettily carved keystones, and the first-floor windows are like those in
the middle bays, but over them runs a line of
circular windows, lighting the half-story, and
having carved keystones of very good style. Immediately above is a cornice ranging with that in
the middle bays, but of much less depth and projection, and the treatment of the attic over has the
same modifications of the design of the middle bays
as that of the first floor.
The south elevation is of twenty-five bays, four
at either end projecting 8 ft. in front of the rest,
and has a stone-faced central composition of three
bays with Corinthian columns on the first floor
carrying a cornice inscribed 'Gulielmus et Maria
RR.F.' The treatment is simpler than that of the
east front, but, on the other hand, the seven bays
on either side are not mere repetitions of each
other, as on the east, but their middle bays have
pediments over the first-floor windows surmounted
by the royal arms of William and Mary supported
by cupids, and the bays on either side have swags
of fruit instead of the round half-story windows.
The arms seem to be Gabriel Cibber's work, but
much of the purely architectural decoration both
here and on the east front was probably done
by Grinling Gibbons, or under his supervision.
Various payments to him between 1691 and 1696
show that a great deal of the ornament on Wren's
building must be his work.
The least satisfactory part of the design is the
sky line, now unbroken except by rows of singularly unattractive chimneys, but originally a little
relief was given by four statues standing on the
middle bays of the balustrades on each face; they
were removed in the 18th century.
The elevations to the Fountain Court, although
following the same lines as those of the fronts, are
distinctly more attractive, partly no doubt from
the contrast of light and shade which their foursquare arrangement produces, but also because the
horizontal lines of the cornices over the first-floor
windows are here replaced by pediments, and the
open arches of the cloisters beneath, with their
well-carved keystones, (fn. 3) and lunettes filling the heads
of the arches, are far more effective, backed as they
are by the cloister walks, than the external range
of windows of the ground story. The round halfstory windows are here made the most ornamental
features of the elevations, being encircled by
wreaths of foliage over which are hung lions' skins,
arranged with a care for symmetry which is almost
comic, especially in the treatment of the tail of
the beast. The west elevation of the court is of
two stories only, and consists of the cloister walk
with a corridor above-the 'Communication
Gallery' of the old accounts-masking the older
buildings on the east of the Clock Court. (fn. 4)

Hampton Court Palace: Fountain Court From The North-West Corner
The internal arrangements have, from the point
of view of planning, almost as much interest as
those of the older buildings, both representing, it
must be assumed, the best traditions of their time.
The State Apartments occupy the first and
principal floor of the buildings on three sides of
the Fountain Court, and their disposition shows
little advance on those of the Tudor palace. The
King's Great Staircase at the south-east corner of
the Clock Court leads to the King's Guard
Chamber in the projecting block at the west end of
the south front, overlooking the privy garden,
and from it a series of rooms runs eastward, opening one from another, the Presence Chamber, the
second Presence Chamber,
the Audience Chamber,
the King's Drawing-room,
and his State Bedroom.
These occupy rather more
than half of the width of
the range, the other part
towards the Fountain
Court being taken up
by the Great Gallery or
Council Chamber, which
can be entered from either
end of the king's suite
of rooms, at the southeast from the State Bedroom, and at the west,
through an anteroom,
from the second Presence
Chamber. On the west
side of the Fountain Court,
and opening to the north
side of the anteroom, is
the gallery which leads
to the Queen's Staircase
and State Rooms. These
are not so symmetrically
arranged as the king's
suite, the Guard Chamber and Presence Chamber, which occupy the
north side of the court,
opening through a lobby
to the Public Diningroom at the east, from
the south-east corner of
which the rest of the
Queen's Apartments are
reached, consisting of
three rooms, Audience
Chamber, Drawingroom, and Bedroom. These face eastward, and
occupy the middle of the east front, having the
Queen's Gallery to the south of them, while the
west side of this range, facing towards the Fountain Court, is divided into a set of small rooms,
the private apartments of the king and queen.
The three small rooms and a staircase at the angle
of the south-west wings are also private apartments, but open one from another, completing the
passage round the outer side of the two fronts.
The north end of the east front, beyond the Public
Dining-room, is occupied by a set of three rooms
and a stair, known as the Prince of Wales's Apartments. Practically the whole of the State Apartments have now become picture-galleries, and the
remains of their sumptuous decorations and furniture can claim at best only a divided attention.
The grandiose wall and ceiling paintings of Verrio
and Laguerre, however admired in their own day,
have lost their vogue, and it is impossible to look
at such decorations as those of the King's Staircase
without a certain impatience at the riot of feeble
allegory which they present. They are the work
of Verrio. A banquet of the gods occupies the
ceiling, and continues down the east wall, where it
merges into a medley of Roman history, in which
the twelve Caesars appear in the company of
Æneas, Romulus, and the Wolf, presided over by
the genius of Rome. On the north wall are Flora,
Iris, Ceres, Pan, Apollo, and the Muses, in a
crowd of cupids, nymphs, and river gods, and on
the south wall Julian the Apostate is talking to
Mercury. The Queen's Staircase is more simply,
but not more attractively, treated in monochrome,
with its ceiling painted to represent a dome, and
scrollwork and 'property' figures on its walls, the
work of Kent. Its wrought-iron handrails, however, like those of the King's Staircase, are another
matter, and very beautiful work of their kind.
The King's State Bedroom has a ceiling by Verrio,
with Diana watching the sleeping Endymion, and
a figure of Sleep, while in the King's Bedroom the
ceiling shows Mars and Venus. It is in Queen
Anne's Drawing-room, however, that the most
important remains of Verrio's work are to be
found, painted in 1704-5. On the ceiling the
queen appears in the character of Justice, with
scales and sword, attended by Neptune and
Britannia; on the west wall she is seated receiving
the homage of the four quarters of the globe; on
the north wall her husband, Prince George, stands
armed, and pointing to the British fleet; and on
the south wall Cupid is being drawn over the
waves by sea-horses. The wall pictures having
only been uncovered in 1899, after being hidden
for more than 150 years behind canvas, are
wonderfully fresh and brilliant, although a good
deal of repair has been carried out. In the
Queen's State Bedroom is a ceiling painted by
Thornhill, with Aurora rising from the ocean in
her chariot, and in the cornice are portraits of
George I, Queen Caroline, George II, and
Frederick Prince of Wales. The rooms are
panelled either to the full height or on the lower
parts only, the finest panelling being that of the
Great Gallery in which Raphael's cartoons used to
hang. This room was fitted up in 1699, and is
no less than 117 ft. long by 28 ft. high, and 24 ft.
wide, divided into six double bays by pairs of
Corinthian pilasters carrying a rich cornice, above
which hang the tapestries which take the place of
the original cartoons. All the details of the
woodwork are admirable, and only equalled by
their state of preservation, the oak being absolutely
sound and perfect; the carving is probably due to
Gibbons and his assistants, and many other
examples of equally beautiful work from his hand
are to be seen throughout the State Rooms. A
number of the chimney-pieces are, however, the
work of Kent about 1730.