Treasure Houses of Britain
Enjoy a rare opportunity to explore five of Britain’s finest stately homes. Not only is exclusive access to some of the world’s best-loved buildings provided, but the treasures within will also be explored. Many tell a human story, including tapestries that celebrate the Battle of Blenheim, to a cabinet which the Medicis gave to the owners of Burghley, the greatest Elizabethan house in England.
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Treasure Houses of Britain on BBC Select
Episode 1: Burghley House
Burghley House is filled to the brim with fine art and exquisite antique treasures.
Burghley House was built by William Cecil, Lord High Treasurer to Elizabeth I, starting in 1555. It took 32 years. 450 years later, Burghley’s state rooms are filled with treasures including one of the finest collections of 17th century Italian
masterpieces, an exceptional display of Oriental and European ceramics, and fine furniture, all gathered by the Cecil family down the centuries.
Episode 2: Chatsworth
Chatsworth includes rooms lavishly decorated for a royal visit that never happened.
Chatsworth in the glorious Derbyshire countryside was built by the remarkable Bess of Hardwick and later altered by the first Duke of Devonshire. Now home to the twelfth Duke, and open to the public, its first floor is taken up with richly decorated state apartments built for a visit by King William III. But, despite the lavish welcome, the King never arrived.
Episode 3: Blenheim Palace
Blenheim was Winston Churchill’s birthplace and he’s buried at the palace’s tiny church.
Blenheim Palace was paid for by Parliament in 1705, as a grateful nation thanked John Churchill 1st Duke of Marlborough. Treasures include a tapestry which records the Battle of Blenheim where Marlborough defeated the Franco-Bavarian forces in the War of the Spanish Succession. Winston Churchill, who was born at Blenheim in 1874, is buried in the park at the tiny church of Bladon.
Episode 4: Holkham Hall
Holkham Hall was built specifically to house treasures collected by Thomas Coke.
Holkham Hall is a Palladian masterpiece commissioned by Thomas Coke, First Earl of Leicester. It took over 30 years to build. Coke spent years touring Europe and when he returned in 1718, he brought with him works of art, statues and manuscripts that now form a unique, priceless collection. But he had nowhere to put them. So, he built a grand house worthy of his new treasures.
Episode 5: Boughton
Avid collectors, the former and current owners of Broughton have filled it with treasures.
Beautiful Boughton House is home to the Duke of Buccleuch and Queensbury. His ancestors were collectors on a grand scale who managed to fill three houses in Scotland and two in England with treasures. Boughton is a storehouse of priceless artifacts, from tapestries and gilt tables to forty works by Van Dyck and cabinets by Andre-Charles Boulle. Now, the present Duke is adding to the collections.