The collector Earls garden, Arundel Castle, W.Sussex
Opened by HRH The Prince of Wales
on 14th May 2008
The new formal garden at Arundel has been conceived as a light-hearted tribute to Thomas Howard, 14th Earl of Arundel (1585-1646), known as 'The Collector'. He died in exile in Padua during the English Civil War and though his body was brought back to England and buried in the Fitzalan Chapel at Arundel, the elaborate tomb which he had specified in his will was never erected. This garden, adjoining the church, may now be an appropriate memorial for the future.
The Collector Earl's Garden in Arundel Castle
An exciting new garden based on early 17th Century classical desings.
At the Collector Earl's Garden, Arundel Castle, Norfolk, UK
garden collector earl garden earl's Arundel castle plants fountain Norfolk uk england
Arundel Castle - Earl's Garden
Secrets of Great British Casltes - Arundel
Secrets Of Great British Castles
Season 2 - Episode 6
Arundel
Arundel Castle, E.Sussex. UK
Arundel Is one of the most beautiful towns in southern England. For it's small size it surprisingly pacts a lot into it. Apart from the castle there is a cathedral, and the amazing collector earl gardens.
The Beautiful Earl's Court Gardens
Our luxurious hotel that we stayed in in Earl's Court.
Royal Wedding Celebration in Arundel (West Sussex, England on the 19 May 2018)
Arundel Town Council hosted a live screening of the Royal Wedding in Herington's Field, Arundel.
The theme was Jewel in the Crown. Arundel celebrated in style with a unique bar boat from the Red Lion, which we had privilege to film on the day, and Chimney cake ice creams.
The Town Crier announced the Town's delight on the happy couple being named Duke and Duchess of Sussex!
It was an incredible day to film our project during Royal Wedding ceremony and at the same time to collaborate with Arundel Town Council. These are the moments we've captured during our breaks from main shoot. This will be a beautiful memory to all us of a such an exceptional day!
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arundel castle
Arundel Castle is a restored and remodelled medieval castle in Arundel, West Sussex, England. It was established by Roger de Montgomery on Christmas Day 1067.[1] Roger became the first to hold the earldom of Arundel by the graces of William the Conqueror. The castle was damaged in the English Civil War and then restored in the 18th and 19th centuries.[2]
From the 11th century, the castle has served as a home and has been in the ownership of the family of the Duke of Norfolk for over 400 years. It is the principal seat of the Howard family, whose heads have been first Earls of Arundel and then Dukes of Norfolk. It is a Grade I listed building.
Arundel Castle Gardens, 28 Sep 13
We've now been to Arundel 3 times, and all this year.
The first was when we got the train to there, and then walked up the River Arun as far as Amberley, before heading back via a section of the South Downs Way. A nice 12 mile walk.
Next time we again got the train there, but this time went the opposite way down the Arun to Littlehampton before getting the train back from there.
Last time was to see the castle and gardens. I'm not normally one for paying to get into stately homes and gardens, but this one I have to say was well worth the money - especially the amazing gardens. Here's some stills if interested -
Someone I know was working at the FCO years ago with one of the heirs to the Arundel estate. After the Great Storm of 1987 the heir came in one morning looking tired and, when acquaintance asked him what he'd been doing said he'd been clearing fallen trees on the estate. Acquaintance: did you lose many? Him: about 5,000.
Arundel Castle International Tournament Promo
The promo Kaos Historical media made in collaboration with Fabled Photography in 2018.
Deepdene Trip part two
Deepdene was an estate & country house, a hillside manor that descended from earlier Earls of Surrey throughout the middle ages to the 23rd Earl of Arundel & Surrey who became the 5th Duke of Norfolk in 1652, it was sold by his descendant the 11th Duke of Norfolk in 1808 to the Hope banking family.
Situated on the south eastern edge of the town, the Deepdene was the greatest of Dorkings Estates. Charles Howard Established his house at Dibden and laid out it's ornamental gardens in the mid 17th century. His family had owned most of the Manor of Dorking for centuries. His grandson, also Charles, built a paliadian mansion on the site in the 1760s and continued to spend his summers at the Deepdene even after becoming 10th Duke of Norfolk in 1777.
The 11th Duke chose to reside at other of his estates, however.
In 1808 Thomas Hope, one of the richest men in England, bought the Deepdene, he enlarged the house with orangeries, conservatories, a library and galleries, filling it with antiques sculptures and works of art. The Estate was further extended by the aquisition of the Chart park and Betchworth Castle Estates, which were incorporated into the Deepdene. During the ownership of Hope's son, M.P. Henry, the grounds stretched 12 miles from boxhill to brockham, further extension saw the mansion become the splendid renaissance-style palazzo where Disraeli wrote Coningsby. Towards the end of the century the Deepdene passed to the Duke of Newcastle who had married into the Hope family. He let it to Lily, Dowager Duchess of Marlborough and her nephew, Winston Churchill, often visited her there. In the 1920s the Estate was broken up as Maurice Chance developed some of the grounds for housing. the house became a grand hotel with 90 rooms, it closed in 1936. A bypass of the town (one of the 1st in the country), ruined the gardens. Occupied by the Southern Railway throughout the second world war, it never reverted to residential use.The Deepdene was sadly Demolished in 1967, now a modern office block occupies the site and all that remains of the Hope Treasure House is the family Mausoleum which was mysteriously buried to roof level,
DEEPDENE SOUTHERN RAILWAY WW2 UNDERGROUND HQ
Telephone Exchange and Control Centre.
During ww2, the southern railway commandered the Deepdene hotel, to utilise it for its wartime emergency HQ, in the hotel grounds was an existing network of natural caves, which were made suitable by adapting them for use as a bunker to house the telephone exchange & control centre, outside the bunker, concrete blocks with metal loops are still present for tethering the 99 foot ariel for the emergency conditions, a 4ft thick slab of concrete covered the complex, the tunnels were well ventilated and had radiators in each room to regulate the temperature, the southern railway manager Eustace Missenden lived nearby and had a swithboard ext in his house, during the air raids he spent many nights there with his wife.
The Beautiful Longford Castle - Dji Mavic Pro Drone
Longford Castle is located on the banks of the River Avon south of Salisbury, Wiltshire, England. It is the seat of the Earl of Radnor, and an example of the Elizabethan prodigy house.
In 1573 Thomas Gorges acquired the manor (at the time written Langford), which was originally owned by the Servington (or Cervington) family. Prior to this the existing mansion house had been damaged by fire. In c.1576 Thomas Gorges married Helena Snakenborg, the Swedish born dowager Marchioness of Northampton and Lady-in-waiting to Queen Elizabeth. They rebuilt the Longford property as a triangular Swedish pattern castle on the banks of the River Avon. The building work became very expensive due to problems with the subsoil. Sir Thomas Gorges, who was now governor of Hurst Castle, persuaded his wife to beg of the Queen a shipwreck he knew from the defeated Spanish Armada. The gift was granted and the gold and silver retrieved from the shipwreck funded the completion of the castle[2] under the final supervision of John Thorpe in 1591. The family lived in the castle for several years before its final completion.
The main building had several floors and was triangular with a round tower in each corner; the three towers representing the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost. There was a chapel, kitchen department, several boudoirs and sitting rooms, as well as bedrooms. Fresh cold water was pumped to various floors and there were water closets operating with rainwater. A park, fruit garden and kitchen garden were attached.
Davinci Resolve 15
Dji Mavic 2 Pro
Dji Phantom 4 Pro
Gopro session
Canon EOS 750D
Sony Handycam HDR PJ810E
#longfordcastle #castle
Arundel Castle
Trip to Arundel Castle
Created with MAGIX Fotos auf CD DVD
From the Parian to a pug: the Arundel Marbles in the Ashmoleun - Dr Alison Pollard
Introduced by Dr Michael Squire of King's College London and Dr Paul Roberts of the Ashmolean, Dr Alison Pollard discusses sculptures in the Ashmolean Museum in London on 28th June 2017.
1980s UK, Sussex, Arundel, Arundel Castle
From the Kinolibrary Archive Film collections. To order the clip clean and high res or to find out more visit Clip ref PZ38
1980s UK, Sussex, Arundel, Arundel Castle
swcwalks, swcwalk 100, Arundel Circular. 22/5/19.
This was a decent walk of unknown distance near Arundel, West Sussex. The 'official' distance is somewhere between 10-12 miles, depending on paths taken, so, based on journey time, the longer distance is most likely.
There is a lot of familiar scenery on this walk, albeit that the route varies to that in Book 1, walk 32. The whole is dominated by the Duke of Norfolk's seat, Arundel Castle and park, which is never far out of view. There's the River Arun, associated meadows and some woodland walking as well. There's a few churches, including a redundant one, and one providing shelter to a nest of Swallows! The Cuckoo was also heard, for the second time in a week, amazing!
Lunch was had to the rear of Burpham church, which, though early in the walk, provides a wonderful vista.
The return from Houghton Bridge initially follows a lane, leading to the church at North Stoke and then some meadows into South Stoke and Offham. This walker then chose to follow more lanes , passing the base of the Castle, into Arundel. An alternative route through the grounds of the Wildfowl and Wetland Trust is available.
Generally, a good walk that didn't pose any problems today, but there's one section where the Summer vegetation will be problematical and, of course, there's potential for flooding during the wetter months.
Arundel Castle Garden
Arundel Castle Garden
Arundel Castle Gardens August 2010