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Whitehall Palace in a Nutshell Whitehall Palace in a Nutshell
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Charlie Fenton
Charlie Fenton is on page 63 of 92
'The king's bed was made out of walnut. It was constructed over ten months at a cost if £83.3s.10d. (£24,957.50)... During 1542, his great bed of walnut wood at Whitehall was enlarged to measure 7 feet 6 inches long and 7 feet wide, to accommodate his increasing side.'
Jul 24, 2016 02:48AM Add a comment
Whitehall Palace in a Nutshell

Charlie Fenton
Charlie Fenton is on page 54 of 92
'By the early 19th century, the leases of the land were being reclaimed by the government, and the buildings put to use as government offices. The areas of Whitehall was transformed once again into the seat of the British government, as it remains today.'
Jul 24, 2016 02:45AM Add a comment
Whitehall Palace in a Nutshell

Charlie Fenton
Charlie Fenton is on page 53 of 92
'Amazingly, after the fire of 1698, the King Street Gate and Holbein Gate survived, and despite their inconvenience there was much affection for these structures. Proposals were made for diverting the traffic to save them, but the King Street Gate was deemed to be too great and obstruction and it was sadly demolished in 1723. Efforts to save Holbein Gate were more successful, for a little time at least'
Jul 24, 2016 02:43AM Add a comment
Whitehall Palace in a Nutshell

Charlie Fenton
Charlie Fenton is on page 52 of 92
'By early the next morning, the flames had reduced to ash all that stood in their way. Fifteen hours after the start of the fire, the flames were finally extinguished. But the fire-fighters should not have gone home. A gentle breeze re-ignited smouldering timbers, making the second day's blaze more ferocious than the first. On the palace's riverside, all the main buildings except the Banqueting House were lost.'
Jul 24, 2016 02:19AM Add a comment
Whitehall Palace in a Nutshell

Charlie Fenton
Charlie Fenton is on page 51 of 92
'It had survived the Great Fire of London in 1666 and thus seemed indestructible. However, thirty-two years later, during the day of Tuesday 4 January 1698, a Dutch laundress lit a quantity of charcoal on an open fire to dry some linen... As soon as the fire was spotted, palace staff were sent to fight the flames. Pumps produced no more than a dribble and the buckets of water thrown onto the fire had no effect.'
Jul 24, 2016 02:17AM Add a comment
Whitehall Palace in a Nutshell

Charlie Fenton
Charlie Fenton is on page 49 of 92
'On 9 April 1691, fire broke out in the Duke of Gloucester's lodgings at Whitehall, started by candles that had been lit by a maid. The fire quickly took hold in the oldest and most populated part of the place. A decision to blow up part of the palace was made, and it succeeded in stopping the fire. Sadly, the fire destroyed a large part of the old Tudor palace.'
Jul 24, 2016 02:13AM Add a comment
Whitehall Palace in a Nutshell

Charlie Fenton
Charlie Fenton is on page 47 of 92
'Whitehall Palace had a new master, although William and Mary had no real fondness of the now old palace; they thought it to be much too large for their needs. Whitehall, being in the heart of the biggest city in Europe, was damp, and the coal fire aggravated William's asthma. William and Mary soon moved to Hampton Court.'
Jul 23, 2016 02:33PM Add a comment
Whitehall Palace in a Nutshell

Charlie Fenton
Charlie Fenton is on page 42 of 92
'He was 'casually in the Privy Gallery at White-hall' speaking to the king, who asked him whether he had a crayon and paper. Evelyn 'presented him with both and then laying it on the window stool, he with his own hand, designed to me the plot for the future building of Whitehall, together with the Rooms of state and other particulars'...'
Jul 23, 2016 02:15PM Add a comment
Whitehall Palace in a Nutshell

Charlie Fenton
Charlie Fenton is on page 37 of 92
'Charles was taken to the stair tower at the north of the Banqueting House, where a window had been removed to make a door. From there, he stepped onto the scaffold... The king was swiftly beheaded. The death was met not with cheers, but with groans. The ghastly event over, the troops quickly moved to disperse the crowd. Whitehall had just seen its most famous and horrific moment.'
Jul 23, 2016 05:31AM Add a comment
Whitehall Palace in a Nutshell

Charlie Fenton
Charlie Fenton is on page 31 of 92
'Elizabeth I made Whitehall Palace her principal residence for forty-four years. Her residency was the longest for a monarch in the palace's history, and it was left to Elizabeth to complete the building work started by her father, Henry VIII, freeing it from scaffolding. However, Elizabeth made very few architectural changes and her father's major building projects were never to be repeated.'
Jul 23, 2016 05:25AM Add a comment
Whitehall Palace in a Nutshell

Charlie Fenton
Charlie Fenton is on page 29 of 92
'It was within Whitehall Palace that court painter, Hans Holbein the Younger, created his largest and more important royal commission, known today as the Whitehall Mural. In it, Henry VIII was portrayed with his queen, Jane Seymour, and his parents, Henry VII and Elizabeth of York. Holbein painted the fresco on the wall of the king's Privy Chamber in 1537.'
Jul 23, 2016 05:22AM Add a comment
Whitehall Palace in a Nutshell

Charlie Fenton
Charlie Fenton is on page 22 of 92
'Broaching or opening the casks to remove the wine would allow air into the cask that would affect the taste of the wine, eventually souring it to vinegar. This changing taste of the wine meant that the main job of the cellar men and butlers was to ensure that the wine was fit for the table by watering, blending or adding sugar which matched the required taste for each dish being served.'
Jul 23, 2016 05:20AM Add a comment
Whitehall Palace in a Nutshell

Charlie Fenton
Charlie Fenton is on page 21 of 92
The Tudor court consumed some 300 barrels of wine every year. Wine was available to higher ranks of the court, with the best wines reserved for the king's table. Although we have contemporary recipes from all over the world, Henry VIII's favourite was red wine from Gascony in western France.'
Jul 23, 2016 05:17AM Add a comment
Whitehall Palace in a Nutshell

Charlie Fenton
Charlie Fenton is on page 14 of 92
'The cost of construction at Whitehall Palace was at least £30,000. To put this into context, the entire Palace of Nonsuch, built over the same period, cost about £24,000, and the whole of Bridewell Palace, built ten years earlier, was only £22,000... Henry, proud of his new headquarters, gained an Act of Parliament making it official that the new palace was the seat of the monarchy.'
Jul 23, 2016 05:11AM Add a comment
Whitehall Palace in a Nutshell

Charlie Fenton
Charlie Fenton is on page 11 of 92
'Henry continued the project, made possible with funds from the Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1538. Henry VIII was now the richest king ever to sit upon the throne. However, right up to the king's death in 1547, Whitehall was a permanent building site... In the end, it was left to Elizabeth I, Henry and Anne Boleyn's daughter, to complete the building that was started for her mother twenty-five years earlier.'
Jul 23, 2016 05:07AM Add a comment
Whitehall Palace in a Nutshell

Charlie Fenton
Charlie Fenton is on page 9 of 92
"Sir, you must no more call it York Place; that's past. For since the Cardinal fell, that title's lost; 'tis now the king's and called Whitehall." - Henry VIII Act 4 Scene 1. William Shakespeare. The king banned the name York Place, and the palace became known as Whitehall.'
Jul 23, 2016 05:00AM Add a comment
Whitehall Palace in a Nutshell

Charlie Fenton
Charlie Fenton is on page 5 of 92
'Wolsey's initial attentions to York Place were in celebration of his being installed as Cardinal in November 1516. He built a new outer Great Chamber, refurbished his Privy Chamber with a fashionable bay window and improved the chapel. He spent £1,250 (£475,000 today) on improvements at York Place. Visitors were overawed by the splendour and grandeur.'
Jul 23, 2016 04:10AM Add a comment
Whitehall Palace in a Nutshell

Charlie Fenton
Charlie Fenton is on page 3 of 92
'property north of Westminster was purchased in 1223 from the Abbey of Westminster by Hugh de Burgh... De Burgh transferred the property to trustees in 1230, these in turn sold it to Walter de Grey, Archbishop of York in 1241... in 1245, Walter de Grey gave the property to the See of York. It was then that it became the official London residence of the archbishop of York, under the name of York Place'
Jul 23, 2016 04:08AM Add a comment
Whitehall Palace in a Nutshell

Gayle McMartin Hulme
Gayle McMartin Hulme is starting
looking forward to this thank you Phil Roberts & kindle unlimited
Jun 04, 2016 12:15AM Add a comment
Whitehall Palace in a Nutshell