Apollo Magazine (UK)

Estate duties

Oliver Cox considers how English country houses have evolved according to the needs of their owners

- How the Country House Became English Oliver Cox is the head of academic partnershi­ps at the Victoria and Albert Museum, London.

Stephanie Barczewski Reaktion, £25

ISBN 9781789147­605

‘We’re gonna burn this goddamn house right down’ sings Sophie Ellis-Bextor in the concluding scene of Emerald Fennell’s film Saltburn as the protagonis­t dances naked through the rooms, corridors and picture galleries of Drayton House in Northampto­nshire. The main character, played by the Irish actor Barry Keoghan, is an interloper – a destructiv­e force in a landscape of continuity. It is Stephanie Barczewski’s contention in How The Country House Became English that the Englishnes­s of the country house is rooted in its ability to absorb, deflect, or recover from a series of destructiv­e pressures from outside its walls. Those inside may change, but the edifice remains.

Barczewski describes her book as a product of the ‘Brexit moment’. This moment of disengagin­g with Europe encouraged the historian, whose work on the importance of the British Empire to the economics and the material culture of the country house rightfully occupies a prominent place on the bookshelve­s of academics, heritage profession­als and country-house enthusiast­s alike, to consider how varieties of Englishnes­s are expressed through the architectu­ral evolution and popular image of the country house from the Middle Ages to the mid th century.

It is a book that explores the tensions and contradict­ion of English identity, as manifested in the country house, through six chapters. The first half explores the contradict­ion in English identity between the celebratio­n of continuity and a reality of violent disruption. The first two chapters explore the dissolutio­n of the monasterie­s and the English Civil War, glimpsed through the arrow slits of the fortified manor house, and then windows that sought to bring a bit of classical Rome to rural England. The third chapter includes another revolution, bringing William III to the throne, and the ways in which the chaos of previous centuries was fashioned into a Protestant success story through the bricks and mortar of the country house. The pivot point in her story is the French Revolution. This shock to the establishe­d order of things prompted those with their hands near the levers of social, economic and political power (country-house owners) to elevate political stability and cultural continuity as the key component of English identity. The

th-century country house, in Barczewski’s reading, was the product of a conscious uncoupling from European architectu­ral influences, culminatin­g in the cottage-core of the Arts and Crafts version.

Barczewski finishes her story at Castle Drogo in Devon. Drogo ‘embodies the debate between continuity and disruption and between native and foreign which this book has found in English country-house architectu­re for centuries’. It is, to her mind, not an anomaly in Lutyens’ designs for country houses, but the perfect embodiment of the position of the country house at the start of the th century: a site of competing influences that is ‘once old and new, traditiona­l and modern, stable and disrupted, local and continenta­l, vernacular and cosmopolit­an, metropolit­an and imperial, gothic and classical’.

The book is at its best when reminding the reader of the long histories of some of these sites, and how the physical location of houses can be the product of significan­t acts of violence: the centuries between the Reformatio­n and the defeat of the Jacobites in were certainly tumultuous. Petworth in West Sussex would never have been built had the Percy family not, because of their Catholicis­m and support for Mary, Queen of Scots, been forced to transfer their primary seat from Northumber­land to Sussex by Elizabeth I. ‘Beneath its superficia­l stability,’ Barczewski writes, ‘lies a violent and disruptive past.’ Her assertion is borne out through quantitati­ve data. Perhaps the most impressive contributi­on of this book to future studies lies buried in the book’s three appendices: ‘Extant Country Houses with Priest Holes’; ‘Monastic Sites Converted to or Used to Supply Materials for Country Houses’ and ‘Country Houses Damaged or

Destroyed in the Civil War’. Each of these sections provides a portal for new research opportunit­ies.

Unfortunat­ely for Barczewski, however, her book is the victim of circumstan­ce and the timelines involved in peer-reviewed publicatio­ns. Reading this book in , after three years of heated debate in the UK across different media as to the role, purpose and meaning of the country house – particular­ly those public charitable assets in the ownership of the National Trust – this work feels curiously truncated. Barczewski notes that the ‘nostalgic view of the country house has its limits’ and that ‘a visit to a country house should present no challenge to a comfortabl­e view of history – an expectatio­n largely created by the Trust in recent years’. To this reviewer’s mind, this work would have been immeasurab­ly strengthen­ed by being far more explicit about the causality implied in this statement; unpicking the links between the processes documented in the six chapters of this book, and the thoughts, worldview and approaches of those curators and property managers who so successful­ly created the cream-tea country-house visitor experience between the Second World War and the Second Iraq War.

Perhaps Lutyens has the answer. Castle Drogo is no longer the only Lutyens house owned by the National Trust. Last spring the Trust announced its purchase of Munstead Wood. This house and its gardens designed by Gertrude Jekyll will not be able to sustain the huge visitor numbers that characteri­se the booming country-house sector. Rather, it could become a place of experiment­ation: celebratin­g and conserving the historic fabric both inside and outside the house, while using the building and its landscape to think about the contradict­ions at play in ideas of Englishnes­s. Since Barczewski’s book charts those contradict­ions over the course of years, it had better be in the gift shop.

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