Harlaxton Manor ( 1831 ) 2021 - Lincolnshire ( Grantham ) I UK I Dron I 4k I DJI - FPV .

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  • Опубликовано: 14 ноя 2021
  • Harlaxton Manor is a country house located in Harlaxton, Lincolnshire, England. Its architecture, which combines elements of Jacobean and Elizabethan styles with symmetrical Baroque massing, renders the mansion unique among surviving Jacobethan manors. The property currently serves as the British campus for the University of Evansville and partners with Eastern Illinois University and Western Kentucky University.
    Harlaxton Manor is listed Grade I on the National Heritage List for England, as is its forecourt gateway and screen. The surrounding park and gardens are listed Grade II* on the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens.
    Harlaxton is first recorded in the Domesday Book as Harleston. The current mansion is the second Harlaxton Manor. The first was built on a different site during the 14th century and was used as a hunting lodge by John of Gaunt. By 1619, Sir Daniel de Ligne purchased the manor.[4] The original house was deserted after 1780; it was inherited by Gregory Gregory, and was torn down in 1857.
    The current house was built by Gregory between 1832 and 1854,[1] and it helped usher in a renaissance of Elizabethan architecture. The original architect, Anthony Salvin, was replaced by William Burn, who is responsible for its interior detailing. Upon Gregory's death, the manor passed to his cousin George Gregory and then in 1860 to a distant relative, John Sherwin-Gregory. Upon the death of Sherwin's wife in 1892, it passed to his godson Thomas Pearson-Gregory, who allowed it to fall into disrepair.
    The manor passed through several sets of disparate hands in the twentieth century. Abandoned by 1935, it was purchased two years later by Violet Van der Elst, a businesswoman and inventor, who made her money from developing the first brushless shaving cream and made her name by campaigning against capital punishment. She restored the house and had it wired for electricity. During the Second World War, it was requisitioned by the Royal Air Force as the officers' mess for RAF Harlaxton and later to house a company of the 1st Airborne Division.
    In 1948, Harlaxton was purchased by The Society of Jesus, who used it as a novitiate. Stanford University leased Harlaxton Manor from the Jesuits in 1965, and with only 80 students in its first year, it was the first American university in Great Britain. Students attended classes from Monday to Thursday, often travelling on the weekends, similar to the Harlaxton schedule today. Until 1969, Stanford used the Manor as part of its British study abroad programme, instructing students in British traditions, history, and culture. But the location was a problem. “We were too remote, too far from London, and it was just too expensive to get to London," so the programme relocated to Cliveden, Berkshire, between Oxford and London.[5][6]
    The University of Evansville began using the property in 1971 as its British campus, but it was owned by William Ridgway, a trustee of the university, until 1986. Immediately after the purchase, the University of Evansville began renovating the entire facility.
    Harlaxton is currently owned by the University of Evansville, operating as Harlaxton College, and hosts their study-abroad programme. Since 1984, Harlaxton Manor has also been the site of the annual Harlaxton Medieval Symposium, an interdisciplinary symposium on medieval art, literature and architecture.[7] It also serves as a study abroad university for English majors from Eastern Illinois University, Honors College students from Western Kentucky University, students at the Carol Martin Gatton Academy of Mathematics and Science in Kentucky, students from Baker University in Kansas, and honours programme students from Hannibal-LaGrange University.[8]
    harlaxton.co.uk/
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harlaxt...
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Комментарии • 7

  • @beatricesanfilippo6925
    @beatricesanfilippo6925 Год назад +1

    Beware of Hugh Crain but you must bring the Funko Pop of Qui-Gon Jinn

  • @imperialca7454
    @imperialca7454 Год назад +2

    I grew up in the gatehouse at the beginning of this video and my family still live there now. I never truly appreciated its beauty at times waking up to it every morning as it just became the norm, I met students at the campus and travelled to North America more as a result and fell in love with the skylines... go figure I now live in Canada and miss seeing this place more than anything.

    • @josephbenson6301
      @josephbenson6301 7 месяцев назад

      When I was at Harlaxton in 1989, the gatehouse was unsafe and strictly off limits, so... of course, a classmate (Jana) and I snuck in. They weren't wrong. Getting to the ground level from the basement where we entered, was fine... but at around 180, the ancient plaster-covered hay bales that were the stairs did not qualify as safe for me, so I never saw the top floor that crossed the road.
      I always thought it would have made a cool house though!

  • @swordfish356dt
    @swordfish356dt 2 года назад +2

    Nice work.

    • @LotyTuiTam
      @LotyTuiTam  2 года назад

      Thank you for watching and for the positive feedback ! :)

  • @andrelewis5860
    @andrelewis5860 Год назад +2

    The haunting (1999) is what makes me interested in this place...if only the gothic style interior from the movie was real to match the jacobean, baroque, elizabethan style architecture of harlaxton manor exterior 💯