COMPTON WYNIATES
Acreage: 1,038.
Population: 1911, 15; 1921, 32; 1931, 41.
This small parish forms a narrow strip, 3½ miles from
north-west to south-east with an average breadth of
½ mile, between Tysoe on the east and Whatcote and
Brailes on the west. The country is hilly, rising from
a little below the 300 ft. contour line in the north of
the parish to 450 ft. at the church and then steeply
above the hollow in which lies Compton House,
reaching 700 ft. in the east at Lady Elizabeth's Hill
and 730 ft. in the south at Broom Hill, close to the
southern end of the parish where it touches Oxfordshire.
There are many trees in the hedgerows and a few
small spinneys, but otherwise the country is open,
except for the park surrounding Compton House.
Sir William Compton began to form this park in about
1513, when he inclosed 100 acres of arable, destroying
two homesteads and putting three ploughs out of use. (fn. 1)
It was not, however, until 1519 that he obtained the
royal licence to impark his land in Compton. (fn. 2)
Compton House (fn. 3) stands in a dip surrounded by
low hills and cannot be seen from the public roadway
from Banbury, which passes south-west of it, until one
is within 300–400 yds. of it. It is of square courtyard
plan, facing nearly west, in which front is the main
entrance with a porch. The great hall is in the south
half of the east range, with the screens and entrance at
its north end, opposite the main gateway, the buttery,
great kitchen, &c., being north of this. The other
principal rooms, Dining-room (former Parlour),
Chapel, &c., are in the south range: the chapel has a
projecting sanctuary and west of this is the south-west
tower, rising higher than the rest of the house. The
north and west ranges, containing the less important
rooms, offices, &c., are narrower than the other two:
both have a number of turrets, projecting externally,
for staircases, garde-robes, &c. All this work is of the
early 16th century. At the north-east angle, overlapping both the original ranges, is another tower,
probably a later addition; and extending southwards
from it flanking the outside of the original east range
is an 18th-century range, perhaps incorporating some
earlier remains.
For its size the building is a low one. The roofs of
the wider east and south ranges rise higher than the
others, and the top of the north-east tower is level with
the ridge of the east range, but the south-west tower,
with its saddle-back roof and turrets, stands up prominently above the remainder, the skyline being further
broken by the many picturesque chimney-shafts. The
walls are of a warm red brick toned in places by weather
and age, with a good deal of diaper patterning in blue
brick. The use of stonework is almost at a minimum,
serving only for the windows and doorways, the quoins
of the west porch and south-west tower, and the copings
of the parapets. Although timber-framing was used
freely for internal partitions, it is only seen externally
in the two gable-heads of the west front. The gabled
roofs are covered by silvery-grey stone slabs.
It is suggested by some authorities that the present
early-16th-century building incorporates a still earlier
Tudor building, but this is not evident in the fabric or
from documentary records. What is known is that the
house was erected by Sir William Compton about 1520
or a little earlier. Leland states that he brought some
of the material from Fulbrook Castle (12 miles distant),
where he had been appointed keeper of the King's
park and manor. (fn. 4) Leland wrote, apparently from
hearsay, some 20 years later, after seeing the castle
himself, when, although in ruins, enough was standing
for him to describe it as 'a praty castle of stone and
brike'. Unfortunately he gave no details of what was
removed by Compton. Opinions differ as to how much
of the house, if any, came from Fulbrook: the roof of
the great hall and its great bay-window may be re-used
material, and possibly some of the lesser fittings and
minor parts of the fabric, but that any of the ornate
chimneys originally belonged to the castle is more than
doubtful, especially as the bricks of which they are
made appear to be of local origin.
The late Mr. Arthur Bolton's theory (fn. 5) that the
original house consisted of a plain quadrangular plan
without excrescences is feasible; also that the porch,
south-west tower, the extension of the south chapel,
and the various turrets were added by Compton himself
before 1528 in a modification of his first simple design.
In every case their walls abut the main walls of the
ranges with straight joints instead of being bonded in,
as might have been expected had the whole risen
together. Otherwise there is little or no difference in
the texture and sizes of the bricks, &c. It is probable
that the bricks were made on or near the site, including
those of the original chimney-shafts. That some of the
shafts were later additions is obvious. The ornate
ceilings in the south range may have been put in by
William, the first Earl of Northampton (d. 1630), but
if so they have had to be much restored in modern
times. He probably also effected other minor alterations such as windows and doorways, fire-places and
their chimneys.
The house suffered much damage in the Civil War
when it was occupied by the Parliamentary party
(1643) and an unsuccessful attempt to recapture it was
made in 1644 by Sir Charles Compton, brother of
Spencer the second Earl, who had been killed at the
battle of Hopton Heath in 1643. The building was
originally enclosed by a moat, the west arm being close
to the front and crossed by a bridge. Outside the moat
and lining the approach were ancient buildings, stables,
&c.; these were almost entirely ruined in the fight.
The work of repair was carried out by James, the
third Earl. Only a meticulous examination of the
fabric may decide the full extent of these repairs, but
at least the tall transomed windows at the west end of
the south range appear to be his work, as well as some
of the other windows, and perhaps the 'Barracks', the
long chamber in the roof of the south range. The
stables, &c., were swept away and probably the material
re-used for repairs and also possibly for the north-east
tower, which shows signs of having been constructed
from re-used material. It has thin walls for such a
structure and some of its windows have wooden
mullions and frames. Why it was designed as a tower
is not apparent. The Earl also rebuilt the church,
which had been wantonly destroyed by the Parliamentarians.
The long addition flanking the east range and containing the main staircase is usually allocated to the
reign of Queen Anne, but the date 1732 which is seen
on several rain-water heads about the house with the
initials I N for James, the fifth Earl of Northampton,
seems to be a more reliable clue to its age. It was
perhaps in part only a remodelling, as there is said to be
a date 1640 on the bay window of the stair-hall, (fn. 6) which
may indicate that Spencer, the second Earl, had added
a larger staircase here, as is likely, considering the small
size of the earlier stair-turrets. The end of the range
south of the stair-hall with a projecting south-east
turret also appears to have been added in the 17th century or earlier. The turret had a stair in the upper part
leading to the room east of the 'Barracks' and some of
its brick facing appears to be more weatherworn than
elsewhere. To the 18th century may be allocated the
plain brick parapets towards the quadrangle. Windows
in the quadrangle and elsewhere seem to have been
altered in the 18th century and to have been 'restored'
to their earlier Tudor style in the 19th century.
Late in the 18th century the building was neglected
and practically unoccupied, owing to the reduced circumstances of Spencer, the eighth Earl, after the 1768
election at Northampton, when he sold his furniture
and lived abroad. He had ordered Compton Wyniates
to be pulled down but fortunately his steward, John
Berrill, ignored his instructions and managed to keep
the fabric in tolerable repair until better days. A great
many of the windows were blocked either then or
earlier to avoid the tax, some say eight out of nine. In
the 19th century the house was deserted except for a
small part occupied by a farmer, but in 1867 Charles,
the third Marquess, began to recondition it. He called
in Sir M. Digby Wyatt, who rebuilt the main staircase
and 'Gothicized' the 18th-century windows, &c.
Ornamental plaster ceilings were restored and much of
the plain plaster on the timber-framed partitions and
ceilings was removed and other work done to render the
house habitable. During the century the moat was
filled in, except for a portion beyond the gardens north
of the house, and the gardens, with topiary of 1895,
and lawns were laid out. But the reparations were not
complete even after this and various Societies that
visited the house near or at the end of the century
record that the chapel was dismantled and its screens
whitewashed; but these were soon afterwards cleaned
up and now the building is regarded as one of the most
perfect and charming homely mansions in the country.
The principal front, facing a little south of due west,
shows the gabled ends of the north and south ranges
flush with the main wall, with turrets against their
outer angles, the porch and great entrance, to the north
of the middle of the length, between two projecting
turrets. All the turrets have splayed brick angles. The
walling is of thin red bricks—2 to 2½ in.—with wide
joints and there is a good deal of blue-brick diaper
patterning. The two gable-heads are of timber-framing in herring-bone pattern and have moulded tiebeams, with foiled sunk panels in the faces. Each has
an attractive oriel window with massive moulded sill
having relief carvings in front, moulded oak mullions
and top rail with battlementing. The walls of the front
have embattled parapets above a moulded stone stringcourse, enriched with occasional carvings, and moulded
stone copings.
The porch is a fairly shallow projection of brick with
a moulded stone plinth. The 9 ft.-wide entrance is all
of stone with deep moulded jambs including small
shafts with capitals and bases, and a wide hollow: the
inner order has a four-centred arch and spandrels carved
with tracery and shields, the northern with the castle
badge for Katherine of Aragon, and the southern the
Tudor portcullis: the outer order is square-headed and
has a moulded label enriched with carvings of roses,
pomegranates, beasts, lizards, &c. Above the middle
is an achievement of the arms of Henry VIII with a
dragon and greyhound as supporters and a crown in
high relief above the shield. It is set in a square panel
of brickwork formed by lifting the label to enclose it.
Between the archway and the buttresses are set carved
stone Tudor roses below crowns.
The upper window is of three cinquefoiled lights
in a square head. The parapet string-course, which is
plain except for carved beasts at the angles, is lifted up
about a foot over the window and is here enriched
with carved running foliage. The middle merlon of
the parapet, which is taller than the others, seems to
have carried another carved panel, perhaps an achievement of arms, now replaced by a 17th-century sundial.
The inner moulded stone archway contains a pair
of oak doors with linen-fold panels on the outer face
and with a wicket-door in the north leaf. In the side
walls between the two archways are doorways which
led to the moat; between these and the front arch are
stone benches. The plain inner archway, to the
quadrangle, is of stone and in the north wall is a doorway to the porter's lodge, which also had a peephole
now blocked.
The semi-octagonal turret just north of the porch
contains a stair-vice from the porter's lodge. The other
turret south of the porch is larger and has small square
quatrefoiled openings for garde-robes. Both are of the
same height as the main wall and have similar parapets.
The windows in the main wall and below the northern
gable are of normal height, of two, three, or four plain
lights in square heads with labels. But the windows
to the ground and first floors below the southern gable
are taller and have transoms, and the stories which they
light are higher; they are probably 17th-century repairs
or alterations. The southern flanking turret rises a
story higher and its embattled parapet dies on or
abuts the sloping side of the timber south gable.
The south-west tower is of three loftier stories and
stands up well above the rest of the building, with
similar crenellations. It is of rectangular plan but with
a complex of projecting turrets making an attractive
irregularity in the whole block. The north-west and
south-east turrets, containing stair-vices, rise above the
main level of the tower parapet. The main west wall
of the tower has a small three-light window to the
cellar or 'dungeon' and a very tall three-light window
to the first floor, probably a later alteration. The top
story has an older and wider four-light window with
cinquefoiled lights. In the angle of the above-mentioned turret with the west wall was a kind of lower
two-story turret or outbuilding shown on the 19thcentury plans but now removed. A doorway that
opened into it is now reduced to a small window. The
square west turret projecting south contains a series of
small chambers and does not rise above the towerparapet. The south-east turret, although it rises above
the main parapet as an individual entity, is absorbed
below in the main walls of the tower except in the
lowest story, where its western half forms a deep brickarched recess covering a three-light window lighting
the cellar: the eastern half is a hollow brick pier.

Plan of Compton Wyniates House
On the east side of the tower is another shallow projection, its south end flush with the chapel east of it.
It rises to the full height of the tower and contains
passages leading to the main spiral staircase north-east
of the tower. It has a Tudor entrance-doorway at the
foot of its south wall, with a window of three lights
immediately above. On the east side of its upper part
at the north end is an arched stone doorway from the
main spiral stair on to the flat roof of the chapel. It has
inner and outer doors and above it is a two-light
window with a label. Just south of it is a brick recess
of door-height with chamfered jambs and four-centred
head, its sill being about 2½ ft. above the lead flat. The
tower has a saddle-back roof with coped gables to north
and south behind the main parapet.
The south wall of the Sanctuary of the chapel
although flush with that of the above-mentioned projection does not show a straight joint between the two,
but the junction is covered by a rain-water pipe, of
which the head is dated 1725. The brick-work is
Tudor, but without diaper ornament. The tall south
window is of five lights under a four-centred main
head with a hood-mould having carved stops; it has a
transom, below which the lights are cinquefoiled as
they are in the main head. The aisles have groundand first-floor windows of three lights; the lower lights
have trefoiled heads and may be earlier than the upper,
which have cinquefoiled heads. The upper labels, like
that to the west porch, are enriched with a carved
running-vine pattern and there are carved stops. The
parapet string-course has a mask-carving over the great
window. The merlon above has been widened and
heightened (probably in the 17th century) to take a
sundial, which is flanked by stone scroll-work and
fleurs-de-lis in low relief.
East of the chapel the windows to the dining-room
(former parlour) and doorway are apparently modern.
The drawing-room above has a tall five-light window
and, above the doorway, a stone oriel window, both
probably Wyatt's work. Beyond this is the south end
of the outer east range with a projecting rectangular
turret at the angle. This appears to be of ancient brickwork, with diaper ornament; it rises three stories and
has the usual embattled parapet.
The rest of the east front, of two stories, said to have
had 18th-century sash windows originally, now has
mullioned windows by Wyatt and an embattled parapet.
The principal stair-hall has a very tall oriel window.
This range stops short internally of the north-east
tower in order to leave an open yard for windows to
the tower and the great kitchen. The tower has a
parapet level with the ridge of the great-hall range.
The walls are of old brickwork, apparently re-used,
and the main angles are splayed. At the south-east
angle is a projecting semi-octagonal stair-vice. The
tower overlaps the north-east angle of the original eastrange and the existence of the plinth of the range
within the tower shows that it was a later addition.
A number of the windows are of stone with labels, but
in the top story the openings have chamfered brick
jambs and flat heads with wooden frames: that on the
north side is a wide one with seven very narrow lights
formed by wood mullions. The north end of the older
east range, half hidden by the tower, is gabled in brick
with a chimney at the apex. Its exposed west angle is
splayed, stopped square at the top, and it has brick
windows with wood mullions and frames.
The north wall of the north range is of brick and
has two intermediate low turrets. The windows are
of various kinds, probably because of later alterations:
most are brick openings with wood frames. Between
the north-west angle-turret and the next east intermediate turret is a modern two-storied addition as part
of the offices.
The many windows in the four walls of the quadrangle are varied in detail. The most prominent
feature is the large three-sided bay-window of the
great hall, at the south end of the east range. It is
generally agreed that this came from Fulbrook, though
it could hardly, from its appearance, be pre-1435. It is
of four double lights, two in the front, divided by a
master-mullion, and one in each splay, with very
depressed four-centred heads and each divided into
two lights which also have uncusped four-centred
heads. It has a transom at mid-height with similar
heads to the lights. The moulded label is carved with
a running pattern and human-head stops. Above the
label is a tall frieze of panels which are different in
style and more ornate than the window, and it also
shows signs of having been adapted to the present
position. The panels have cinquefoiled ogee heads and
crocketed hoods and finials, which are flanked by
trefoiled tracery-panels. There are eight of these panels
in the middle face of the bay, but the fourth from the
south is half as wide again as the others and incloses a
raised carving of a kind of fleur-de-lis; the splayed sides
of the bay have each five panels. Above this is a
moulded string-course with carved stops and a panelled
parapet with battlementing at the top.
The variations in detail in the other windows show
that they are of different dates. Possibly some came
from Fulbrook or elsewhere, but it is hard to say which;
others were made when the house was built, and others
again are later insertions or restorations, some of them
in place of 18th-century sash-windows.
North of the bay-window the great hall is well
lighted by four windows, two lower and two upper.
The entrance to the screens-passage has moulded jambs
and a four-centred arch in a square head with a label
having large square volute stops; its details are correct
for the early-16th century but its freshness and sharp
arrises suggest modern repair. North of the buttery
window is an outlet from the buttery through a boss
carved as a lion's head and below it a stone basin. All
the windows have square main heads with moulded
labels. Most of the brickwork in the wall is original,
with diaper ornament, but the parapet, from the baywindow northwards, is plain and of 18th-century
brickwork; at the north end it rises to a flush gablet
and chimney-stack. Two rain-water heads are dated
1732 with the initials I N.
In the south wall is a doorway opening into the
west aisle of the chapel; it is like that to the hall but
apparently older; immediately above it is a short
window of four uncusped four-centred lights. The
range of five first-floor windows all have the cinquefoiled heads which, with the greater exuberance of the
mouldings of the jambs, &c., suggest that these southern
windows are earlier than the others. The eastern,
lighting the drawing-room, is of four lights; two to the
ante-drawing-room over the chapel are of three and
have a wide solid space between them for a fire-place,
and two to 'Henry VIII's chamber' west of it are of two
and four lights respectively. The brickwork is original
but shows no diaper ornament now. In the south-west
corner of the quadrangle is another stair-turret with
a splayed angle; it has a bottom doorway and its brickwork, excepting the parapet, looks like that of the main
walls, which it abuts with straight joints. The windows
and doorways on the other two sides of the quadrangle
are of much the same type as those described, but many
are modern repairs or insertions.
The chimney-shafts, of which there are over forty,
form one of the most attractive features in the grouping
of the building. They vary somewhat in detail and
age. Most depend on their simplicity for their effectiveness and those that are treated with ornament do
not vie in richness with those of many other houses of
the same period. Most of the shafts are octagonal or
round, and nearly all have octagonal moulded bases.
Two of these bases have decorative panels in their sides.
If any of the chimneys came from Fulbrook Castle
they probably included these two. One is a single shaft
on the south side of the quadrangle above the antedrawing-room; this has quatrefoiled circular panels in
the base and a twisted round shaft. The other is above
the east excrescence of the south-west tower; its base
has trefoil-headed panels and the round shaft is treated
with zigzag ornament formed by a roll-mould. Probably the original caps were more elaborate than they
are now.
A row of three shafts near the last, above the east
wall of the tower, differ in themselves, the two outer
being round and having spiral ornament, each of a
different mould, and the middle octagonal with concave
sides. Another twisted shaft is north of the tower and
paired with it on a common moulded base is a square
shaft with pilasters in each face, probably 17th century.
Most of the others are plain octagons, but one, north
of the porch, has concave sides and is given one slight
twist at half height in a rather crude manner. Two to
the north-west of the tower are octagonal but were
heightened in square form in the 17th century. Near
the great bay-window and paired with an octagonal
shaft is an Elizabethan star-shaped shaft. Above the
west side of the north-east tower are two 17th-century
diagonal shafts and on the east side two square shafts,
probably later, like those of the 18th-century east range.
The great hall is 23 ft. wide and 38 ft. long, including the northern screens-passage, which has a gallery
floor over it. The main north partition, a fine piece
of timber construction, divides the hall from the
buttery, &c., and great kitchen which, together, are
about the same length as the hall. The lower part of it
towards the screens is lined with two tiers of linen-fold
panelling and has doorways with carved arched and
square heads to the middle kitchen-passage, west
buttery, and east pantry (now a staircase). The greater
part of the middle tier is taken up by three openings.
The central has moulded posts and a four-centred arch
and looks like the upper half of a doorway but there
are no traces of there having ever been a lower half
although this is the only means of access from the first
floor to the gallery. The two side openings are in the
form of unglazed five-light windows with moulded
frames and mullions. The tie-beam is moulded and
has foiled panels in its face somewhat like those in the
external west gables. Above this the timbering is of
herring-bone pattern.
The screen is of five bays, two open and three closed.
The openings are wide and have four-centred arches,
the spandrels of which are richly carved with tracery,
foliage, and birds and beasts, and these heads are
flanked by running carving in the door-posts. The
archways are now closed by pairs of modern panelled
and carved doors and carved tympana with the arms
and crests of Compton, post-1812. The closed bays
are in two tiers of linen-fold panels divided by a broad
middle rail, the mitres being masons' joints.
Towards the hall the faces of the rails are carved,
in the side-bays with conventional vine and oak-leaf
ornament and in the middle bay with a representation
of a battle and a central shield carved with the arms of
Compton, a leopard between three helmets, quartering
a cheveron within a border bezanty with seven rosettes
on the border. In the sinister half are the two principal
knights, mounted and armoured, engaged face to face,
a standing figure behind the outer and four killed or
wounded men in the foreground. The dexter half has
four horsemen fighting in pairs with three prone
figures in the foreground. The rails have linen-fold
panels towards the screens-passage. The top-rail is
carved with running foliage, with brattishing above. (fn. 7)
The lighting is through the two ranges of windows
towards the quadrangle as well as the bay. There were
also at least three upper windows in the east wall,
now blocked.
The roof is of four bays; they are divided by moulded
principal rafters which are supported by curved braces;
these spring from short shafts which are attached to
wall-posts and have moulded capitals. There are no
corbels. The spandrels of the braces are variously
carved with conventional patterns and foliage. The
principals intersect the purlins and ridge-pole, and form
four compartments cross-wise, the upper deflected inwards from the lower: they may have been in one
plane at Fulbrook to cover a wider span. The moulded
cornice is deep, with a carved concave frieze and
embattled top member. The common rafters are also
moulded and covered with boarding. The floor is
paved with stone slabs set diagonally. In the east wall
is an 18th-century stone fire-place with a moulded
mantel and plain ogee-curved pilaster-jambs.
The buttery is inclosed by timber-framed partitions
which have engaged shafts on the external faces with
moulded caps. East of the buttery and passage is now
a staircase to the chamber above, which has a slightly
cambered, moulded oak open-timbered ceiling. This
type of ceiling is seen in other rooms including the
kitchen, which has a great west fire-place.
In the south range, next to the hall, is the diningroom, originally the parlour, 36 ft. long, which has an
18th-century north fire-place: its ceiling, now restored,
may date from the 17th century and has the Compton
arms. Above it is the drawing-room, of the same size.
This is lined with early-17th-century panelling brought
in the 19th century from Canonbury House, Islington.
It is in five tiers of square panels, each with a lozengeshaped centre formed by wide ribs. The chimney-piece
in the north wall is also from Canonbury. The stone
'Tudor' fire-place is modern; it is flanked by enriched
oak terminal pilasters supporting a carved torusmoulded shelf. The elaborately-carved overmantel is
of three bays divided by rather similar pilasters with
Corinthian capitals. A doorway in the north wall has
pilasters of the same type; another in the east wall has
fluted pilasters with Ionic capitals and moulded entablature: the doors are modern.
West of these comes the chapel, with the projecting
Sanctuary rising two stories in height and with narrow
east and west aisles and galleries. The northern half,
forming part of the south range, is of two stories, the
upper chamber being the ante-drawing-room. The
Sanctuary is divided from its aisles and from the north
half by screens of simple type, but the end-screen is
supplemented in an unusual manner below the toprail with friezes containing low-relief carvings. These
have been differently described by writers as the 'seven
deadly sins', 'a combat between monks and Satan', set
of 'Twelfth Night mummers', &c. One seems to show
a demon at the toothed mouth of hell confronting a
crowd of animals, another a line of eight soldiers with
halberds and other arms. As there are a number of
blanks, some of them having probably had the carvings
cut away, it is possible they came from Fulbrook or
elsewhere and may represent medieval mystery plays.
Above the screen is a closed panelled partition shutting
off the ante-drawing-room from the Sanctuary; but
eight of the lower panels are hinged to open when
desired by the occupants of the chamber.
The chamber next west is known as 'Henry VIIIth's
bed-chamber' and has original roundels in the windows
with the arms and badges of the King and Katherine
of Aragon. The doorways are 18th-century restorations and have bolection-mouldings. This suite of
rooms in the range has ornate plastered ribbed ceilings,
probably of 17th-century origin but all restored.
West of the chapel, on the lower floor, is the most
important of the many spiral staircases; it leads up to
the Council Chamber in the tower and has a massive
central oak newel and 4 ft. solid oak treads. Light is
obtained by openings with solid frames and wooden
bars set diagonally.
The bottom chamber of the tower is often called a
dungeon or jail but was more probably an ordinary
cellar; it is floored with dark stone and has a low barred
window. Above the first-floor chamber in the tower is
'the Council Chamber', the reason for the name being
now unknown. It is lined with ancient oak vertical
boards; at the top and at mid-height are horizontal
bands of modern carving that probably replaced ancient
work. There are six arched doorways to the chamber,
three of them from stair-vices, including the great
circular newel-stair, others into closets and a chamber
behind the east Tudor fire-place. The ribbed ceiling
is either modern or a restoration.
The room above, in the saddle-back roof, has an
east fire-place and in the south wall a doorway from the
south-east vice; two other doorways from stair-vices
are on the north side of the chamber. There are
windows in the gable-ends and a south doorway on to
the roof of the south-west turret. The roof is ill-fitting
and, as suggested by Mr. A. T. Bolton, may have
been adapted from elsewhere. It is constructed in a
quasi-hammerbeam style of the late 15th century. The
east part of the cross-section is buried presumably in
the wall but the west part has an inset purlin which
carries short upright posts below the common rafters,
and also curved braces that form four-centred arches
below the collar-beams. The soffit of the slope from
the wall up to the purlin is boarded and divided into
panels by moulded ribs, the tops of the transverse ribs
being curved inwards to meet the side of the purlin.
The chamber is known as the Priests' Room, also the
'Upper Chapel', probably comparatively recent appellations, which have given rise to many unauthenticated
stories of 'Popish plots', 'hiding-holes', &c.
Other rooms in the west and north ranges have
Tudor fire-places and doorways, timber-framed partitions, and exposed ceiling joists.
Manor
There are in the Domesday survey of Warwickshire
eight entries of estates in 'Contone', and
the identification of these with the five
Comptons in the county, all in Kington
Hundred, is a matter of some difficulty. (fn. 8) Going by its
later history it seems most probable that Compton
Wyniates is represented by two estates, each held by
a subtenant Alwin. One of these, assessed at 3 hides,
was held by Turchil, (fn. 9) the other, of 1 hide, was held of
Robert de Stafford. (fn. 10)
The greater part of Turchil's estates came to the
Earl of Warwick, of whom in 1235 Philip held
½ knight's fee in 'Cumton'. (fn. 11) He is probably the
Philip de Cumpton who occurs in Warwickshire in
1205. (fn. 12) By 1242 Thomas de Cumpton was holding
the ½ fee in COMPTON WYNIATES of Thomas de
Arderne, and he of the earl. (fn. 13) On the death of William
Mauduit, Earl of Warwick, in 1268 Thomas de
Cumpton is named as tenant of this ½ fee; (fn. 14) but in 1279
Philip de Compton was lord of the manor and held it of
Thomas de Arderne, and he of the Earl of Warwick. (fn. 15)
No more, however, is heard of the Arderne mesne
lordship. Robert de Compton was lord in 1304 (fn. 16) and
1316, (fn. 17) and he, or another Robert, was one of the chief
taxpayers in the vill in 1332. (fn. 18) Thomas de Compton (fn. 19)
held the ½ fee in 1372, (fn. 20) and
Edmund in 1400; (fn. 21) he died
c. 1410, leaving a widow, Agnes,
and was followed by William
and Robert. (fn. 22) Robert died about
1480, having settled the manor
on his wife Agnes, who was still
living when their son Edmund
Compton died in 1493 holding
the manor, valued at 100s., as
of the manor of Brailes and
leaving a son William. (fn. 23) This Sir
William built the Manor House,
having grown rich in the King's service, and died in 1528,
leaving a son Peter, then aged 6, who was subsequently
in ward to Cardinal Wolsey. (fn. 24) He was still a minor in
the King's ward when he died on 30 January 1544,
being succeeded by his posthumous son Henry, born
on the following 14 July. (fn. 25) Henry was created Baron
Compton in 1572 and died seised of the manor in
1589. (fn. 26) His son William apparently contemplated
exchanging Compton Wyniates to the Queen for other
property, (fn. 27) but nothing came of the proposal. He was
created Earl of Northampton in 1618 and died in 1630,
having greatly increased his fortunes by marriage with
Elizabeth daughter of Sir John Spencer, Lord Mayor
of London. (fn. 28) His son Spencer was a loyal adherent
of the king and was killed at Hopton Heath in 1643. (fn. 29)
The manor then descended in the family to the ninth
Earl, Charles, who in 1812 was raised to the rank of
Marquess of Northampton, and has continued so to
descend, the present owner being the seventh Marquess
of Northampton.

Compton. Sable a leopard or between three helms argent.
The Domesday estate of Robert de Stafford is presumably represented by the ½ knight's fee held by
Hervey de Stafford in 'Cumtona' in 1212. (fn. 30) In 1386
Thomas de Compton held a fee in Compton Wyniates
of Hugh, Earl of Stafford; (fn. 31) and this fee was held of
Earl Thomas in 1392 by Edmund de Compton,
Thomas Hayron, and Thomas Ancton, (fn. 32) the two latter
being presumably trustees. This ½ fee is last mentioned
in 1460 on the attainder of the Duke of Buckingham,
when it was said to be held by the heirs of Thomas de
Compton. (fn. 33) It seems to have been held throughout by
the same persons who held the Warwick fee.
In 1275 the Knights Templars of Balsall Preceptory
held 2 virgates in this vill, of which they had withdrawn
the service and suit due to the hundred court. (fn. 34) It is
not known from whom this land was acquired; it was
represented by a rent of 16s. 6d. paid from the manor
of Compton Wyniates to the Knights Hospitallers at
the time of the dissolution of the order, and was granted
in 1553 to Edward Aglionby and Henry Higford. (fn. 35)
Church
The parish church (fn. 36) consists of two equal aisles about
52½ ft. long and 29½ ft. broad together
and a west tower about 10¼ ft. square.
The main body was rebuilt about 1665, (fn. 37)
probably on the foundations of the previous church;
but the west tower, although altered in appearance, is
a survival of the earlier church, at leastin its lower part;
it is set exactly in the middle of the west front and the
middle arcade abuts its archway in an awkward manner,
a contrivance that would certainly not have been the
result of an entirely new design by the 17th-century
builder. The damaged funeral monuments suggest
that the previous church was ruined in the Civil War
so badly that little of the fabric could be saved.
The east wall has two gable-ends; in each is a
window of three trefoiled lights under a segmental
head and with a middle transom below which the lights
are also trefoiled. The external hood-moulds have
diamond-shaped volute stops with grinning apes' heads
carved in the centres. The wall is of coursed ashlar
and the coped gables have old bases for crosses and
moulded kneelers. At the angles are ancient diagonal
buttresses and another midway rebuts the central
arcade. There are later buttresses north and south
respectively of the two windows. A middle rain-water
head is inscribed I N 1665.
In the two middle bays of the side walls are windows,
each of four trefoiled lights under a square head with
an external label. The south labels have stops carved
with human and beast faces: the northern have return
stops, perhaps later repairs. The south doorway in the
westernmost bay has jambs and round head faced with
rusticated masonry, the hood-mould has large diamond
volute stops: the wall face below them is carved with a
large scrolled pattern in low relief and of the same
width as the stop. In it is an original oak-battened door.
The south wall, of ashlar, has a moulded plinth and
external entablature with an architrave, large frieze
and eaves-cornice, and the length is divided into four
bays by three shallow square pilasters rising from the
plinth. At the tops in the frieze are carved scrolled
devices in low relief and on the faces of the pilasters
below the architrave are large diamond patterns inclosing human masks. The north wall is of plain ashlar
with a similar plinth, and has had to be reinforced by
a later larger buttress. At the west angles are diagonal
buttresses like the east.
The middle arcade, of four bays, has pointed heads
of two hollow-chamfered orders with a hood-mould
on each face. The piers are of quatrefoil plan with
moulded octagonal bases, and moulded capitals changing to a semi-octagon above each foil or shaft of the pier;
they are carved with egg-and-dart ornament. There is
no west respond, because of the small archway to the
tower, the arch being carried on the corbel-capital, the
circular lower half of which forms a pendant below
the apex of the tower archway. Its convex soffit is
carved with a cross with filling-in of foliage and
scalloped ring ornament.
The walls and wagon-head ceilings are covered with
plaster and the roofs with stone tiles.
The west tower, midway against the double-gabled
main wall, is of three stages with plain weather stringcourses, the walls being of similar ashlar and having
diagonal buttresses at the west angles, of three stages
with normal tabling. They reach to the top of the
second main stage: above this to the top stage they are
treated as narrower diagonal pilasters in one vertical
face divided into four stages by moulded string-courses.
The parapet is embattled, with returned copings to the
merlons, and its string-course has large gargoyles at
the angles and intermediate grotesque carvings. Below
the string-course the wall faces are carved with a band
in low relief as a quasi-fringe with a series of pendants.
The small archway from the main body has responds
and a pointed head of two chamfered orders with very
plain impost projections. The two lower stages have
no piercings, but the north, west, and south sides of
the bell-chamber have windows of two trefoiled pointed
lights and a plain spandrel in a two-centred head: the
hood-moulds have round volute stops. The jambs
and head are casement-moulded and the lights are
filled with pierced stone slabs instead of the usual
luffers. On the south wall, about half-way up, is a
rain-water head inscribed I N 1665.
The 17th-century oak staircase rises in four flights,
one against each wall, from floor to bell-chamber, there
being no intermediate floors: the bottom newel is flat
with a shaped head.
The communion table is set against the east respond
of the arcade.
The font, of the date of the church, is of veined
purple-grey marble; the basin is of oval plan.
The pulpit, a high one of the 18th century, at the
middle of the south wall between the windows, has a
sounding board. The seating is of 'box-pew' type,
with a central block and one against each side-wall.
There are several interesting alabaster monuments
against the eastern parts of the north and south walls,
on low stone tables.
The first on the north side is the damaged recumbent
effigy of a lady of late-15th-century date: the head,
shoulders and hands (in prayer) are missing. She wears
a close gown with pleated tight sleeves, loose girdle,
and a mantle. This is probably Dame Werburge, the
wife of the next. The second is of a knight of c. 1530
in plate armour except for the skirt of mail: he wears a
collar with foliage ornament and a pendant on his breast
with a double rose: a misericord (dagger) on his right and
a sword (only a scrap of the scabbard left). His head
with long hair rests on his helm. Missing are the hands
and the lower parts of the legs from the knees. These
fragments are said to have belonged to the tomb of
Sir William Compton, died 1528.
The next is an armoured knight of late-16th-century
date, said to be Sir Henry Compton, first Baron
Compton, died 1589. He wears very full trunk hose
but the legs below are missing and the head is badly
defaced.
The two on the south side are ladies of the same
period, both badly mutilated. One is probably the first
wife of Sir Henry Compton, Dame Frances. She is
dressed in a close bodice with a pleated basque below
the belt and a farthingale and, over all, a fur-trimmed
mantle. The head and hands are missing. The other
wears a small ruff, a gown in one piece with a full
pleated skirt and over all a fur-trimmed mantle with
loose sleeves. The face is badly damaged, the hands
missing and the lower part of the figure broken in two.
She is probably Sir Henry's second wife, Dame Anne
(Spencer). The heads of the last three rest on embroidered cushions.
On the north wall is a mural tablet to Sir William
Compton, third son of Spencer, Earl of Northampton,
and Governor of Banbury Castle in 1645. He died
1663. A floor slab with a brass plate marks the place
of his burial. There are also some later floor slabs with
inscriptions.
On the north wall are suspended a funeral helmet,
a doublet, gauntlets, probably from the early-16th-century monument, and several banners. There is also
the sword of Lord Spencer Compton of the Royal
Horse Guards, killed at Ypres, 13 May 1915, and a
marble and alabaster monument to the fifth Marquess
of Northampton, Lord Lieutenant of the County, died
1913, the first of the family since 1768 to make
Compton Wyniates his home. On the walls are
17 hatchments and other painted achievements of
arms, four having late-17th- or early-18th-century
frames with pediments.
The single bell is dated 1847.
The communion plate bears the hall-mark for 1719
and was given by James, Lord Compton, in 1720.
The registers begin in 1683.
Advowson
Philip de Compton was patron of the church in
1279, at which time the rector held
2 virgates. (fn. 38) The church was valued
in 1291 at £5 6s. 8d., (fn. 39) and the
advowson continued in the hands of the Comptons
until 1348; (fn. 40) but in the following year presentation
was made by Ralph, Baron of Stafford. (fn. 41) He also
presented in 1355 and 1359, in which year he made
over his right in the advowson to William Peyto. (fn. 42)
William presented in 1370, as did Sir John Peyto in
1390, but by 1395 the patronage had returned to
Edmund de Compton and from that time onwards it
descended with the manor. (fn. 43) The benefice was valued
at £10 in 1535. (fn. 44) Since the beginning of the 19th
century the rectory has been united with the vicarage
of Tysoe, the combined benefice being in the gift of
the Marquess of Northampton.
Sir William Compton, who died in 1528, desired
his executors to found two chantries at Compton, (fn. 45)
future priests being presented by the Abbot of Winchcombe; there is, however, no evidence that any such
chantries were established.