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| Welcome
to Knightstone Manor |
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We
bought Knightstone
Manor in the year 2000. Since
we sold our yacht Adèle in 2007
we live most of our time at Knightstone. It is
situated outside Ottery St. Mary in Devon in
southwest England.
Knightstone was built by Thomas
de Bittlesgate in 1380 and today it
is one of the best preserved medieval
houses in Great Britain. |
As
a typical medieval Hall House, it has a central
Great Hall and other living and serving areas
surrounding it. Two wings together with the main
house create a central courtyard. At one end
is the former chapel, converted in the 16th century
to more living areas. The chapel was consecrated
by the bishop of Exeter in 1381. |
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The
original land was sold to Thomas de Bittlesgate
by Richard de Knightstone, son
of John. Obviously the name Knightstone
Manor,
comes from Richard. It belonged to the Bittlesgate
family for 100 years, but in 1494 the last Bittlesgate
died without issue and the property was inherited
by Lady
Cicely, Baroness Harington and Bonville.
Lady Cicely was married
to Thomas Grey, the
Marques of Dorset. He was Edward IV's
son in an illegitimate relationship with Elisabeth
Woodville. Until the 1560ies Knightstone Manor
belonged to the Grey family.
The church in Ottery St. Mary was built in 1350
(thirty years before Knightstone Manor) as a
smaller version of the cathedral in Exeter. In
Ottery St. Mary the bishop of Exeter organized
a college for priests and the buildings around
the church were all owned by the church and used
for educational purposes. In the late 15th century
a new magnificent aisle was added to the church
by Lady Cicely. The aisle is still today called
the Dorset aisle, from her title as the Marchioness
of Dorset. |
The Knightstone
estate was passed on to the son of
Thomas Grey and Lady Cicely, Henry Grey,
Marques of Dorset in
1530. He married Frances,
daughter of Charles Brandon, the duke of Suffolk
in his marriage with the widowed Queen of France,
Mary Tudor, the youngest surviving daughter of
Henry VII (who had visited Knightstone in 1497).
They got a daughter, Lady
Jane Grey, who became Queen of England
for nine days.
Henry VIII (son of Henry VII and consequently
Mary’s brother) passed away in 1547, and Edward
the VI, "The Boy King", inherited
the throne as the only son. He ruled from the
age of 9 until he passed away only 15 years
old. The successor to the throne should have
been Mary, eldest daugter of Henry VIII, but
Mary was fiercely Catholic, daughter of the
Catholic Catherine of Aragon and she later
married Philip of Spain. At that time England
had severed its ties with the Catholic Church
and many feared (rightly) that Mary would try
to stop Protestantism in England and turn back
the clock.
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The
Dukes of Northumberland and Suffolk (Henry Grey,
who had now also become duke of Suffolk) conspired
to put the Duke of Suffolk’s daughter Jane Grey
on the throne instead of Mary. Jane Grey had
a claim to the throne, as Henry VIII in his will
had declared that if Edward would pass away without
heirs, Jane Grey was third to the succession
after his daughters Mary and Elizabeth. The Dukes
of Northumberland and Suffolk got Edward VI to
write a will, while he was ill in bed, where
he declared that his cousin Lady Jane Grey should
inherit the kingdom instead of Mary.
Jane Grey was a strong believer
in the new Protestant religion. More importantly,
only15 years old, she could easily be
controlled by her father and the Duke of Northumberland.
Jane was installed as the new Queen of England
in 1553. The people as well as the nobility,
although most of them were Protestant as well,
were afraid that by circumventing the correct
order of inheritance to the throne, they would
invite anarchy in the country. A rebellion
took place and a huge army marched to London.
Jane was forced to abdicate after only 9 days
on the throne, and Mary was installed as the
rightful queen.
Jane was put in the Tower
of London, and would probably have remained there,
but a year later another rebellion took place
where the antagonists tried to reinstate Lady
Jane Grey on the throne. |
Queen
Mary realized that as long as Jane Grey remained
alive, she would provide a rallying point for
further rebellions, and so Jane was beheaded
in 1554. Soon thereafter her father was also
beheaded and the Grey family saga tragically
ended.
Queen Mary ruled until 1558,
when she passed away without heirs, and Elizabeth
I, her half-sister from Henry VIII marriage
to Anne Boleyn, succeeded her.
When the Duke of Suffolk was
beheaded in 1554, his estate passed to the crown.
Knightstone Manor was later the same year sold
to William Sherman from
Ottery St. Mary. He had built his wealth as a
wool merchant, and when he bought Knightstone
Manor, he undertook substantial restorations
of the manor. He put in the new windows in the
Great Hall and he was probably the one who replaced
the medieval screen in the hall with a
permanent dividing wall between the entrance
hall and the Great Hall. He also built the new
fireplace in the Great Hall, adorned by the initials
"GS" and "ES" after himself ("GS" stands for
“Gvilielmus”) and his wife Elizabeth, and the
year 1567. The medieval massive entrance door
and the magnificent ceiling in the Great Hall
were kept. |
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The son of William
and Elisabeth, John
Sherman, married Margaret
Drake of Ash, of Sir Francis Drake family (who
defeated the Spanish Armada 1588). The porch
still bears a stone, dated 1607, commemorating
their marriage. John and his eldest son Richard
both died on the same day in 1617. A brass plate
in Ottery St. Mary church still tells about John:
Did good to many, hurt
to none.
Friended the rich, reliev’d the poor
Was kind to all – who can do more?
That loved Hospitality
Yet loathed Prodigality…
Each dweller and each tenant roar’d
For such a neighbour, such a Lord…
His steps his church-path so could wear,
Six years beyond the common age
He walked here in Pilgrimage.
And then one month, one very day,
Took both the Sire and Son away.
(by William Browne, author of Brittania’s
Pastorals, who lived for many years at
Ottery)
John Sherman’s second son, Gideon, succeeded
to Knightstone in 1618, and he married a Coplestone (a local noble family). Knightstone then passed
on to the Coplestones (in 1627) and remained
in their ownership for two hundred years.
It is the Coplestone arms above the entrance
door, but with the date (1607) and initials representing
John Sherman’s marriage to Margaret Drake. The
reason for this is unclear, but could possibly
refer to Margaret still living in the house,
when the estate was passed to the Coplestones. |
The
Communion vessel at Ottery St. Mary Church bears
the arms of Coplestone quartering Drake of Ash
and is inscribed:
The
gift of Elizabeth, relict of Richard
Coplestone Esq. of Knightstone in this
parish, 1714.
In the church (at the south
chapel) we can also find floor slabs with brasses
of three members of the Sherman family, resembling
medieval knights.
During Gideon Sherman’s time
(1618–1627) a vaulted ceiling was built in
the Great Hall, covering the original medieval
beams. The ceiling later fell in, in the late
19th century, again exposing the original beams.
At the same time (around 1620) the porch was
added. The Coplestones also replaced the original
staircase to the Minstrel’s Gallery with the
new main staircase, and later built the more
elegant staircase in the Solar Wing.
From the Coplestone family Knightstone was passed to Stephen
Hawtrey (connected to Eton college)
and in 1803 it was sold to the
Reverend Dr.Joseph Drury, headmaster
of Harrow, in whose family it remained until
1886. In 1886 it was conveyed to Matthew
Ellis, who was succeeded by his son
in 1913.
In 1941 Colonel Reginald
Cooper acquired Knightstone Manor. Col.
Cooper restored the former glory and medieval
character of the gardens. His work both with
the interior and the gardens is well documented
among others in several articles in Country
Life (1950 editions). |
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Interior
Constructions |
The medieval building
from 1380 has remained more or less the same
during the centuries. Nothing has really been
added, but two gatehouses were removed around
1700. The masonry of the wings and part of the
Great Hall is medieval in origin, but the western
wall of the Great Hall (with the two large Tudor
windows) was replaced in the 1560ies. The beams
in the former Chapel, the Great Hall, the present
master bedroom, and in the Solar are all original.
The plaster frieze in the Great Hall is Jacobean.
The corbels at the foot of the ceiling beams
in the hall are Romanesque in character, made
of wood |
and
from the 14th century (when Knightstone Manor
was built). They were later incorporated into
the plasterwork by Gideon Sherman.
The main
entrance doorway to the porch is Renaissance
and probably the work of William Sherman in 1567.
Similar carvings have been found on the earliest
Tudor pews in Ottery Church. The flagstone paving
in the entrance hall is Tudor. The fireplace
in the Solar is from around 1500. The panelling
in the chapel bedroom is Jacobean. |
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Gardens
and Animals |
The gardens are a
main feature of Knightstone Manor. In its present
form they were created by Colonel Reginald Cooper,
and they are now lovingly retained and expanded
upon by our gardener, Lewis Atkin.
We have built up a vegetable
garden and have a few chickens that are laying
eggs. In the south field, two llamas Jan and
Eric, and two rare breed Jacob's sheep, Sanna
and Kina are happily grazing. |
Our
faithful dogs Nallah,
a Rhodesian Ridgeback and Chucky,
a brown Newfoundland enjoy full
run of the grounds.
In the parkland
to the west of Knightstone the badgers have a
home and can be seen at night time. And in the
pond nearby, the wild ducks are now staying with
us year after year. |
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