Creating Paradise: The Building of the
English Country House, 1660-1880
Richard Wilson and Alan Mackley
| Building or rebuilding their houses was one
of the main concerns of the English nobility and gentry, some might say
their greatest achievement. This is the first book to look at the building
of country houses as a whole.
Creating Paradise shows why owners
embarked on building programmes, often following the Grand Tour or excursions
around other houses in England; where they looked for architectural inspiration
and assistance; and how the building work was actually done. It deals not
only with great houses, including Holkham and Castle Howard, but also the
diversity of smaller ones, such as Felbrigg and Dyrham, and shows the cost
not only of building but of decorating and furnishing houses and of making
their gardens. Creating Paradise is an important and original contribution
to its subject and a highly readable account of the attitude of the English
ruling class to its most important possession.
‘When one lives in Paradise, how hard it must be to ascend in heart and mind to heaven.’ LADY FREDERICK CAVENDISH, AT CLIVENDEN RICHARD WILSON is Reader in Economic History at the University of East Anglia. ALAN MACKLEY is an authority on the economic history of country house building. £25: January 2001: 400 pages 130 illustrations: ISBN 185285 252 6
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