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XII.—On the Stone Bridge at Hampton Court

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 November 2011

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Extract

The Palace of Hampton Court is a building to which even the most unimaginative person cannot be indifferent. Built by one of the greatest and most splendid of English statesmen, and completed by one of the most magnificent of our kings, it has always been a royal pleasure-house, recalling rather the intimate private life of our sovereigns than their formal acts of state. In four years' time it will complete its fourth century of existence, and though much of its first splendour has long perished, it remains essentially a royal building; no one could take it for anything but a palace. This being so, its careful preservation is a matter of public interest, and needs no urging in this room, but for this very reason it has been thought well to lay before the Society an account of an important piece of work now being carried out there, namely, the excavation and repair of the moat and the stone bridge which spans it at the west or entrance front of the palace

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1910

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References

page 310 note 1 Misc. Books: Exch. T. R. 243, p. 381.

page 314 note 1 Mr. Hope has since pointed out that the yale occurs as one of the supporters of the arms of the Lady Margaret Beaufort, mother of King Henry VII., on the contemporary gatehouses of her two foundations of St. John's College and Christ's College at Cambridge; the yale also forms the device of the original seal of the custos or master of Christ's College. The connexion of the yale with King Henry VII. and his son King Henry VIII. is thus clearly established.