Dingestow Court

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TypeHouse
LocationDingestow, Monmouthshire, Wales
Coordinates51°47′00″N 2°47′52″W / 51.7834°N 2.7978°W / 51.7834; -2.7978
Builtc.1600 and 1845-6
Dingestow Court
"one of the county's major houses"
TypeHouse
LocationDingestow, Monmouthshire, Wales
Coordinates51°47′00″N 2°47′52″W / 51.7834°N 2.7978°W / 51.7834; -2.7978
Builtc.1600 and 1845-6
Built forSamuel Bosanquet
ArchitectLewis Vulliamy, Prichard and Seddon, and others
Architectural styleTudorbethan
Governing bodyPrivately owned
Listed Building – Grade II*
Official nameDingestow Court
Designated1 May 1952
Reference no.2061
Official nameDingestow Court
Designated1 February 2022
Reference no.PGW(Gt)1(Mon)
ListingGrade II*
Dingestow Court is located in Monmouthshire
Dingestow Court
Location of Dingestow Court in Monmouthshire

Dingestow Court, at Dingestow, Monmouthshire, Wales, is a Victorian country house with earlier origins and later additions. The architectural historian John Newman describes it as "one of the county's major houses" and Cadw notes its "entertaining confection of styles". The court is a Grade II* listed building.

The court has an "unusually complicated building history".[1] Its earliest origins are recorded by the Monmouthshire antiquarian Sir Joseph Bradney as being a manor owned by John ap James, a descendant of Sir Guyan le Grand, "a Norman adventurer who came into Wales at the conquest of Glamorgan".[2] The James family, later Jones,[2] constructed the precursor to the present building in the early sixteenth-century.[1] Part of the gatehouse range of this building survives.[3] The Joneses continued to occupy the court until the deaths in 1789 of Richard Jones, known as "Happy Dick" on account of his "liberality and geniality",[4] and, a few years later, of the last heiress, Mary, who died "a nun at Ghent".[4]

The estate was then bought, and the main house rebuilt by James Duberley.[3] Bradney records that Duberley (whom he dubs Duberly) was the son of a tailor from Monmouth and "amassed a large fortune" as a supplier of clothing to the Army.[2]

In 1801, the estate was acquired by Samuel Bosanquet of Essex.[1] Bradney records that the Bosanquets were French Huguenots[5] who had come to England following the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685 and established themselves as successful bankers.[5] In the mid-nineteenth century, Sir John Bosanquet commissioned Lewis Vulliamy to extend and restore the house.[3] This enlargement was followed, some twenty years later, with limited further additions, although much more extensive plans, by John Prichard and John Pollard Seddon, prepared for Sir John's son, another Samuel.[3] An east wing and interior re-modelling were undertaken, with the kitchen wing being added in 1927.[1]

Dingestow was for a century and a half the home of Brut y Brenhinedd a thirteenth-century Welsh version of Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae, currently deposited at the National Library of Wales, Aberystwyth.[6]

The court remains the private home of the Bosanquets[7] and is not open to the public, although the grounds are occasionally opened for charitable events.[8]

Architecture and description

Notes

Sources

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