Plate 2.42: Engravings of the Palace of Beaulieu (2 of 2)
12020-05-21T12:22:45+00:00Crystal B. Lakeb7829cc6981c2837dafd356811d9393ab4d81adc314Plates 2.41-2.42 of Vetusta Monumenta depict New Hall, Essex, renamed the Palace of Beaulieu by Henry VIII in 1517. Plate 2.41 shows the north façade of New Hall; Plate 2.42 presents a view of the internal quadrangle. Originally part of Waltham Abbey’s holdings, the manor at New Hall passed to the crown in the early fifteenth century but ceased to be a royal residence in 1573 when Elizabeth I granted the house to Thomas Radclyffe, 3rd Earl of Sussex, who remodeled the building. By the early eighteenth century, New Hall had fallen into disrepair. At the time of the prints’ publication in 1786, the entire façade of New Hall recorded in Plate 2.41 had been demolished, and all that remained was the south range depicted in Plate 2.42. Engravings by James Basire Sr. after George Vertue. 324 x 543 mm and 314 x 436 mm. Published by the Society of Antiquaries of London in 1786. Current location: the north wing, much altered, remains part of the New Hall School in Chelmsford, Essex, UK.plain2023-02-24T21:51:19+00:00Crystal B. Lakeb7829cc6981c2837dafd356811d9393ab4d81adc