Broadlands
Broadlands, historic country estate situated on the River Test just south of the town of Romsey in Hampshire, England. The property includes a Palladian-style mansion that is considered to be one of the finest examples of Georgian architecture in all of England. Broadlands is perhaps best known as the home of 19th-century British Prime Minister Lord Palmerston (Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston) and later of statesman Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten, as well as the locale for the honeymoons of Princess Elizabeth (later Elizabeth II) and Philip, duke of Edinburgh (1947) and of Charles (later Charles III) and Diana, prince and princess of Wales (1981).
Description of the grounds
Broadlands comprises 460 acres (186 hectares) of land, originally owned by Romsey Abbey, called “Brode Landes,” from which the estate takes its name. The estate includes formal gardens, parks, stables, cottages, lodges, farmhouses, farmlands, grasslands, woodlands, and pleasure grounds. The latter, in the context of an English garden, are planned gardens made to look like nature.
Early history
Romsey Abbey was founded by Edward the Elder for his daughter Elflaeda as a Benedictine nunnery in 907, and she became its first abbess. In 1539 the house was separated from the abbey and surrendered to Henry VIII during the dissolution of monasteries (1536–40). The estate was purchased by Francis Fleming in 1547 and has been privately owned since then. Through marriage, Broadlands was passed from him to the St. Barbe family, who owned it for 117 years.
John St. Barbe made several improvements to the Elizabethan-designed redbrick manor before his death, but larger reconstructions at Broadlands did not begin until Henry Temple, 1st Viscount Palmerston, purchased the estate from St. Barbe’s nephew in 1736. Temple began the renovation of the formal gardens into a “gentle descent to the river.”
Transformation
Under the stewardship of Temple’s grandson Henry Temple, 2nd Viscount Palmerston, Broadlands underwent a major transformation to become the house and landscape as it is seen today. In 1767 he hired the famed architect and landscape designer Lancelot (“Capability”) Brown to carry out the renovation. In addition to applying his natural touch to the surrounding landscape, Brown squared the house in the Palladian style, added a portico, and encased the house in yellow-white brick, using a Flemish bond—wherein the bricks are laid so that the stretchers (the sides of the bricks) and headers (the ends of the bricks) alternate—to give the appearance of stone. In 1788 Brown’s son-in-law, architect Henry Holland, completed the project according to Brown’s plans by adding a second portico and a domed hall.
Later history
Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston, inherited Broadlands in 1802 and made improvements to the house and the workers’ cottages. At his death in 1865 the estate passed to his stepson, William Cowper-Temple, 1st Baron Mount Temple, then in 1888 to Cowper-Temple’s great-nephew, Evelyn Melbourne Ashley, whose only son, Wilfrid Ashley, 1st Lord Mount Temple, inherited the property in 1908. In 1939 Wilfred Ashley’s eldest daughter, Edwina, inherited Broadlands, which, through her 1922 marriage to Louis Mountbatten, passed into the Mountbatten family and later the Knatchbull family.
Since 1979 Broadlands has been the home of Norton Louis Philip Knatchbull, 3rd Earl Mountbatten of Burma, his wife, Penelope, Countess Mountbatten of Burma, and their family. They continue a tradition of opening Broadlands to the public during select dates in the summer, which Knatchbull’s grandfather, Louis Mountbatten, had begun in 1978.
Features of the interior
In the 21st century, visitors can walk the grounds and visit the house. Much of the art and furnishings remain on view. These include paintings by artists such as Henry Raeburn, Joshua Reynolds, and Anthony van Dyck; Greek and Roman sculptures; Georgian furniture; Meissen and Sèvres porcelain; and Wedgwood ware. There are also intricately designed plasterwork ceilings by Joseph Rose the elder throughout the staterooms. The house was added to the National Heritage List for England in 1957 for its exceptional architectural and historic interest.