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The Power and the Glory: The Country House Before the Great War

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Brought to you by Penguin.

Adrian Tinniswood opens the doors on the excess, intrigue and absurdities of life in the late Victorian and Edwardian country house

In the decades before the First World War, the owners of the nation’s stately homes revelled in a golden age of glory and glamour. Nothing lay beyond their reach in a world where privilege and hedonism went hand-in-hand with duty and honour.

This was a time when the ancestral seats of ancient nobility stood side-by-side with the fabulous palaces of Jewish bankers and Indian princes, when dukes and duchesses mixed with aristocratic society hostesses who had learned to dance in the chorus line and self-made millionaires who had been raised in the slums of Manchester and Birmingham.

The Power and the Glory explores the country house during this golden age, when Britain ruled over a quarter of the world’s population, when its stately homes were at their most opulent and when, for the privileged few, life in the country house was the best life of all.

'Glamour, scholarship and superlative storytelling [...] an enthralling read.'
LUCY WORSLEY

'A wonderful book.'
JUDITH FLANDERS

'Scintillating and brilliant, from a master of the subject.'
GARETH RUSSELL

Audible Audio

Published October 17, 2024

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About the author

Adrian Tinniswood

40 books65 followers
Adrian John Tinniswood OBE FSA (born 11 October 1954) is an English writer and historian. He is currently Professor of English Social History at the University of Buckingham.

Tinniswood studied English and Philosophy at Southampton University and was awarded an MPhil at Leicester University.

Tinniswood has often acted as a consultant to the National Trust, and has lectured at several universities including the University of Oxford and the University of California, Berkeley.

He was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE).

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Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews
Profile Image for Daniel Myatt.
992 reviews101 followers
March 4, 2025
It is a very enjoyable read but less enthralling than the other two country house history I've read from this author.

I found it a little more filled with facts and figures rather than gossip and details (does that make sense) and I found the houses detailed are often the same ones in each chapter where as before these books have opened up whole new country house names to me chapter after chapter.

It is still a wonderfully detailed account of life above and below stairs in Victorian Britain.
Profile Image for Mariama Thorlu-Bangura.
280 reviews6 followers
August 12, 2024
The Power and Glory is described as being a book about life in the English country house prior to WWI. The old money families and the new upstarts coexisting together in what has traditionally been the domain of Britain's landed gentry/aristocracy. Sounds interesting, doesn't it? Unfortunately the interest lasts for only so long, before the book just seems like one extremely long gossip column. I got tired one third of the way through. I guess I finally have to accept this particular author just isn't my cup of tea.

Thanks to NetGalley and Basic Books for access to this arc, which I voluntarily read (or tried to). All thoughts and opinions are my own.
1,210 reviews
November 13, 2024
As a North American who’s fairly obsessed with history, European history has held my attention in an incomparable way. The “English Country House” wasn’t something I grew up learning about, but has become a topic of much interest to me. Therefore, I was thankful to receive a copy of The Power and the Glory: Life in the English Country House Before the Great War and was very impressed by Mr Tinniswood’s writing talent and ability to make nonfiction read more like fiction, and engaging fiction at that.

I enjoyed my reading of this and learned a lot - it was my second time reading the author’s work and I will definitely be reading more.

Recommended to readers of English history, royal history, and/or classics from the time.



Thank you to Basic Books and NetGalley for the DRC


1,807 reviews35 followers
November 6, 2024
The Power and the Glory by Adrian Tinniswood offers a fascinating glimpse into English country homes and the lives of the wealthy within. Before the Great War, old money and nouveau riche meant country homes and high society. At first country homes were primarily owned by the British but 1900 brought changes such as for sale advertisements pointedly appealing to Americans. Jewish bankers and Indian rinces were also permitted into this exclusive realm. But that didn't mean foreigners were accepted as readily as their money.

Not only are specific homes described but also land laws, gardens, moats, ghosts, burglary, the invention of lawn mowers, the importance of keeping up appearances and leading by example (including Christian worship and philanthropy), and the benefits of being a servant in a country home.

Though classified as Art & Photography, there were no photographs in my digital copy. I have had the pleasure of visiting many such homes on my travels so could easily envision them when reading but still enjoy ogling photographs of atmospheric homes and gardens. The book is wonderfully written and clearly thoroughly researched and will appeal to those like myself besotted with this era. Country homes appeal to my passion for history and curiosity with snippets of unattainable mystery and intrigue. Great fun!

My sincere thank you to Basic Books and NetGalley for providing me with a digital copy of this captivating book.
Profile Image for Carlton.
677 reviews
September 15, 2025
Gossipy, anecdotal and readable. Tinniswood is very good at evoking the character of the time, for example when writing about supposed haunted houses, he writes:
Supernatural sightings tapped into a strain in the late Victorian psyche which reacted against the rationalism of the age, which, hearing the melancholy, long, withdrawing roar of the sea of faith, reached for any evidence that death was not the end.

I love the referencing of Matthew Arnold’s Dover Beach.

Unfortunately the book suffers from jumping around from chapter to chapter, providing interesting details about country houses and their owners, but in a seemingly haphazard fashion. The reader is treated to chapters on the nouveau riche, Americans, Jews (and “others” who are equated with Jews as they were foreigners), Country Life magazine, haunted (“headless history”) houses and on & on. Very engaging and informative, but leaving me with the impression that I was reading a series of interesting magazine articles, rather than a book.
Profile Image for Justin Evans.
1,716 reviews1,137 followers
September 8, 2025
Not sure what the audience for this is meant to be, but it's perfectly enjoyable reading--not too demanding, also not condescending. You'll note that some people complain that there isn't enough gossip, while others complain that it's mostly gossip. I thought there was a nice amount of gossip, as well as of architectural history and criticism, social history, and enjoyable little essays on everything from the adoption of the automobile to the Prince's peccadilloes.
Profile Image for Emma Dargue.
1,447 reviews54 followers
May 14, 2025
This was a good introduction to how the country house set worked from regency times to just after the first World War. Interesting facts I had heard about some of the families and stories in this book but overall a very enjoyable and informative book.
Profile Image for Susan  Longo.
114 reviews1 follower
November 17, 2025
Great title -I think that this was very well researched with alot of material but not all was satisfying based on the way it was organized. I did learn alot about some Country Houses I had never heard of in the UK -
Profile Image for Timc.
160 reviews
January 22, 2025
Very well researched. The book provided me with a much better understanding of the mindset of the English autocracy continuing to this day.... along with an improved disdain.
Profile Image for Biggus.
530 reviews8 followers
May 12, 2025
It doesn't work as a 'book'. It is like a series of Reader's Digest features. Interesting enough in themselves, but as a book, it just doesn't work.
Profile Image for Candy.
1,166 reviews16 followers
September 29, 2025
An interesting history lesson on the landed families coupled with "new money", this was a good book to read to expand previous knowledge on this topic as it delved into more nitty gritty details.
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews

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