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A history and tour of this exceptionally beautiful designed landscape in North Yorkshire.Dubbed "the Wonder of the North" in 1732, the National Trust's Fountains Abbey and Studley Royal Estate (now a World Heritage Site) encompasses one of the largest, most magnificent and beautiful designed landscapes ever created. This richly illustrated volume charts the landscape's history from the first arrival of prehistoric hunters, via medieval monasticism, the Dissolution of the monasteries, eighteenth-century aestheticism and scandal, and the first ages of mass tourism, to the present day. At the heart of the story lies the rise and fall of England's largest Cistercian monastery and how that shaped the origins of the Aislabie family's breathtaking gardens. Their Studley Royalwas at the forefront of every emergent landscape gardening fashion between 1670 and 1800. The book also describes the dramatic history of the family and the monumental scale of their achievements in this field, extending over many dozens of square miles of North Yorkshire - far beyond the limits of the garden as it is seen today (reduced to serve the more limited needs of Victorian day-trippers).The Wonder of the North brings social and garden history together with archaeology to reveal Fountains Abbey and Studley Royal - too often seen as "just" a ruined medieval monastery - as one of the world's greatest artistic creations. Mark Newman has been the National Trust's archaeological adviser for Fountains Abbey and Studley Royal estate since 1988. He was also resident there, living in Fountains Hall from 1988-1995.
Preface: The 'Wonder of the North'Priming the Canvas: Natural and Man-Made Landscapes Before 1132Utility and Sanctity: Fountains Abbey and its Surroundings 1132-1540From Dissolution to Resurrection: The Manors of Fountains and Studley, 1539-1667Founding a Dynasty: The Emergence of Studley RoyalEmerging Wonders: The Unfolding of a Designed Landscape, 1723-42Filling the Landscape: William Aislabie at Studley, 1742-67Beyond Studley's Domain: Kirkby Fleetham, Hackfall, Laver Banks and FountainsEstates Combined: Fountains and Studley, 1768-81Arcadia Declining: The Estate in the Earlier Nineteenth CenturyA Place of Popular Resort: The Rising Tide of VisitorsRelicts of Our Own DaysConclusion: A Future for Studley Royal
[A] uniquely complete and beautiful book...The book is produced to the very high standards which we expect of Boydell.