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Painswick is a town and civil parish in the Stroud District in Gloucestershire, England. Originally the town grew from the wool trade, but it is now best known for its parish church's yew trees and the local Rococo Garden.
Robins's painting allowed the garden to be restored in the 1990s under the direction of Painswick's owner, Lord Dickinson, who inherited the house in 1955. [6] [7] The garden is the only surviving garden of the rococo period which is open to the public. [3] It was designed and laid out in the 1740s. [8]
The Court House is a grade I listed house in Hale Lane, Painswick, Gloucestershire, England, within the Cotswolds.. The house was built in the late 16th century with additions in 1604, [1] for Thomas Gardener on the site of an earlier manor house.
Painswick House Painswick Rococo Garden, Thomas Robins the Elder, 1748. Benjamin Hyett (1708–1762) of Painswick House , Gloucestershire, was an eighteenth-century garden creator. Life
It was Pain fitzJohn, a relative of de Lacy, who is the namesake of the village of Painswick and the manor house. [2] Painswick Lodge has been the home of the Lord of the Manor for Painswick between 1530 and 1804, when the manorial rights were purchased by Thomas Croome , at which point the manor house for the area was at the nearby Beech Farm.
Painswick", in Ancient and Historical Monuments in the County of Gloucester: Iron Age and Romano-British Monuments in the Gloucestershire Cotswolds (London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1976), pp. 91-94. Media related to Painswick hill fort at Wikimedia Commons
Charles Hyett (1677 [1] – 1738), of Painswick House, near Gloucester, Gloucestershire, was an English politician.. He was born 10 April 1677, the eldest son of Benjamin Hyett (d. 1711), an attorney and clerk of the peace for Gloucestershire. [1]
Holcombe House was originally built for a wealthy clothier from Painswick in the late 1600s, [2] and was later enlarged and remodelled in the early 1900s by Detmar Blow in the Arts and Crafts manner. [3] The house was subject of a painting by Charles March Gere in 1926. [4]