Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
Jump to content

Acton Court

Coordinates: 51°33′20.5″N 2°28′2″W / 51.555694°N 2.46722°W / 51.555694; -2.46722
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

Acton Court
Acton Court, south front
LocationGloucestershire, England
Coordinates51°33′20.5″N 02°28′02″W / 51.555694°N 2.46722°W / 51.555694; -2.46722
Acton Court is located in Gloucestershire
Acton Court
Location in Gloucestershire
Acton Court, view from north-west
Acton Court, detail of west gable end

Acton Court is the historic manor house of the manor of Iron Acton in Gloucestershire, England. It is a grade I listed building[1] of Tudor architecture and was recently restored. It is situated, at some considerable distance from the village of Iron Acton and the parish church of St Michael, on Latteridge Lane, Iron Acton, South Gloucestershire, England. The Poyntz family owned the property from 1364 until 1680. Nicholas Poyntz (died 1557) added the East Wing onto the existing moated manor house shortly before 1535. Construction took about 9 months to complete. Subsequently, the wing was lavishly and fashionably decorated to impress Henry VIII. The king and his second wife, Anne Boleyn, stayed in the house in 1535, during a tour of the West Country. Building work continued at Acton Court until Nicholas died in 1557.

When the direct line of succession ended in 1680, the house was sold. It was reduced in size and converted for use as a tenanted farmhouse. Due to neglect, the house gradually fell into a dilapidated state. By the end of the 20th century, practically only the East Wing survived. However, the neglect resulted in a rare example of Tudor royal state apartments being preserved virtually intact. The house was purchased at auction in 1984 by Eva Dorothy Brown on behalf of the Bristol Visual and Environmental Group (BVEG).[2] An extensive restoration was completed only recently.

Prior to the restoration, English Heritage commissioned a comprehensive study, published as K. Rodwell and R. Bell, Acton Court: The evolution of an early Tudor courtier's house (2004). The monograph is now publicly available through the Archaeology Data Service

Further reading

  • Faulkner, Neil (May 2008). "'A goodly howse': the rebuilding of Acton Court". Current Archaeology. 19, No.2 (218): 14–21.
  • Rodwell, Kirsty; Bell, Robert (2001). Acton Court. The evolution of an early Tudor courtier's house. Swindon: English Heritage. ISBN 1-873-59263-9.

References

51°33′20.5″N 2°28′2″W / 51.555694°N 2.46722°W / 51.555694; -2.46722