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Colwick Hall, Colwick, Nottinghamshire, c1900s.
AR930530 
Colwick Hall, Colwick, Nottinghamshire, 1791. Artist: W & J Walker
AR930539 
Colwick Hall, Colwick, Nottinghamshire, c1892.
AR930548 
Bulwell Hall, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, c1868(?).
AR930389 
Thoresby Hall, Thoresby, Nottinghamshire, c1900s(?).
AR930222 
South-east view of Lenton Hall, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, 1867.
AR930107 
Clumber House and lake, Nottinghamshire, c1900s.
AR930503 
Hodsock Priory, Nottinghamshire, c1900s.
AR929880 
Bolsover Castle, Derbyshire, c1900s.
AR930361 
Clumber House, Clumber Park, Nottinghamshire, c1900. Artist: GW Wilson and Company
AR930512 
Wingerworth Hall, Derbyshire, c1900.
AR930299 
Riber Castle, Derbyshire, c1900.
AR930085 
'Rufford Abbey, Dukeries', Nottinghamshire, c1900s.
AR930101 
Stables and fort, Newstead Abbey, Nottinghamshire, c1950s. Artist: AW Bourne
AR930133 
Wollaton Hall, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, 1791. Artist: W & J Walker
AR930303 
West aspect of Newstead Abbey, Nottinghamshire, c1900. Artist: Henson & Co
AR930291 
Entrance to the stable block, Annesley Hall, Nottinghamshire, 1994. Artist: SJ Best
AR930331 
Wollaton Hall and Park Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, c1707. Artist: Johannes Kip
AR930305 
The Trent Building from Highfields Park, University of Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, c1950(?).
AR930192 
Chatsworth House, Derbyshire, c1900-1907.
AR930470 
Colwick Hall, Colwick, Nottinghamshire, c1900. 
Colwick Hall, Colwick, Nottinghamshire, c1900. Colwick Hall stands on a site which has been occupied ever since Saxon times. In the time of the Domesday survey it was held by a certain Waleraum. The first use of the name Colwick as a surname occurs when Reginald de Colwick witnessed a charter on 17 November, 1225. At this time rent seems to have been paid in weapons of war, for in 1280 'Sir Reginald de Colwyck' died (who had lived to be a centenarian). It was declared that he held his lands 'of the fee of Peveril by twelve barbed arrows when he came to Nottingham,' a tradition that continued so late as 1504 the when The Byrons held Colwick 'by the service of twelve crossbows yearly if asked for.' On the death of William de Colwick in 1362, the estate passed by the marriage of his daughter Joan, into the Byron family. The Byrons inhabited Colwick for more than 150 years before they moved to Newstead Abbey. They held it until about 1660, when it came into the possession of the Musters. All the older buildings disappeared when the present Hall was erected in 1775-6, soon after the coming-of-age of John Musters, (father of the husband of Byron's 'Mary.') There is a famous painting by George Stubbs of John and Sophia Musters riding at Colwick, showing the newly built hall in 1777. The house consisted of an elegant centre, crowned with a pediment, resting on four well proportioned Ionic pillars, and joined by two wings of one lofty storey with an entablature, supported by square pilasters, with plain capitols, and lightened much in its effect by a handsome balustraded parapet. It was built in 1776 by Samuel Stretton of Nottingham, from an architectural design of John Carr of York 
Unique Identifier AR930521 
Type Image 
Purpose Public 
Size 5253px × 3308px 
Photo Credit HIP / Art Resource, NY 
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Tags
18th century
1900s
19th century
20th century
Architecture
ART
ARTS
Britain
British
building
BUILDINGS
Carr
color
Colwick
Colwick Hall
country
COUNTRY HOUSE
eighteenth century
England
English
Exterior
geographical feature
Geography
JOHN
John Carr
Lake
LOCATION
NATURE
NEMPR Picture the Past
NINETEENTH CENTURY
nottinghamshire
OUTSIDE
Palladian
Palladianism
Photograph
Picture the Past
Plant
STATELY HOME
TGN
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Water