Stonor House

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Stonor House
Oxfordshire

View of Stonor House from the south.
Location
Location: 51°35’47"N, -0°55’46"W
Village: Stonor
History
Built 13th century onwards
Information
Condition: Good
Owned by: Lord Camoys
Website: stonor.com/

Stonor Park is an ancient country house within its own private deer park situated in a valley in the Chiltern Hills at Stonor in Oxfordshire, about four miles north of Henley-on-Thames and close to the county boundary with Buckinghamshire. It is the ancestral home and seat of the Stonor family, Baron Camoys. The current Lord Camoys who resides here is Ralph Stonor, 7th Baron Camoys.

The house has a 12th-century private chapel. The remains of a prehistoric stone circle are in the grounds. In the Early Modern Period it was a centre for recusancy in the Chilterns.

Setting

The house nestles in the Chiltern Hills. Behind the main house, there is a walled garden in an Italianate style on a rising slope, providing good views. Around the house is a park with a herd of fallow deer. Around the park are Almshill Wood, Balham's Wood and Kildridge Wood. The house and garden are open to the public.

History

Stonor House from the Deer Park. Stone circle visible on the right
Stonor Deer Park.

Stonor House has been the home of the Stonor family for more than eight centuries. In the house are displays of family portraits, tapestries, bronzes and ceramics. The house has a 12th-century private chapel built of flint and stone, with an early brick tower.

The house was probably begun after 1280 when Sir Richard Stoner (1250–1314) married his second wife, Margaret Harnhull.[1]

During and after the Reformation the Stonor family and some other local gentry were recusants, continuing to adhere to the Roman church. In 1581 the Jesuit priests Edmund Campion and Robert Parsons lived and worked at Stonor Park, and Campion's Decem Rationes was printed here on a secret press. On 4 August 1581 a raid on the house found the press. Campion and Parsons had left a few days earlier, but the elderly Lady Cecily Stonor, her son John, the Jesuit priest William Hartley, the printers and four servants were taken prisoner, and in 1585 Hartley was exiled.[2] Despite further prosecutions and fines the Stonors remained Roman Catholic throughout the 17th and 18th centuries, and enabled many local villagers to remain Roman Catholic by allowing them to attend Mass at their private chapel. Between 1716 and 1756 John Talbot Stonor, Vicar Apostolic of the Midland District used Stonor Park as his headquarters.[2]

The Stonor family's steadfast adherence to Roman Catholicism throughout the reformation led to their marginalization and relative impoverishment in subsequent centuries. This has inadvertently resulted in the preservation of the house in a relative unspoiled and unimproved state.[1]

Stone circle

The house was built on the site of a prehistoric stone circle or henge and this has given it its name. The remains of the circle are still visible, with one stone incorporated into the southeast corner of the chapel. The stones are a mixture of sarsens and puddingstone.[3] The current stone positions are the result of re-positioning during 17th-century landscaping and 20th-century reconstruction.[4] The site is listed as a folly in the Sites and Monuments Record (SMR) (PRN 2064)) .[5]

On film

Stonor has been used as a location for a number of film and television productions, including:

  • The Living Daylights (1987, a James Bond film).
  • Danny, the Champion of the World (1989), appearing as the home of millionaire Victor Hazell.[6]

The house today

The house and park re used for antique fairs, art exhibitions, craft shows, outdoor concerts and other community activities.

Lord Camoys maintains records of the house and family going back centuries, which provide a record of the community of recusants gathered around Stonor in the early modern period.

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Stonor House)

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Emery, Anthony (2006). Greater Mediæval Houses of England and Wales, 1300-1500: Southern England. 3. Cambridge University Press. pp. 170 note 8. http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=g7EXvaDEYioC&pg=PA170&dq=stonor+house&hl=en&sa=X&ei=vgmYT52zGsix0QW48J3-BQ&ved=0CF0Q6AEwBw#v=onepage&q=stonor%20house&f=false. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 Lobel, 1964, pages 98–115.
  3. Stonor stone circle Stonor estate website. Accessed April 2012
  4. Country Life article, May 7, 1981
  5. Stonor Park Stone Circle filed otes County Sites and Monuments Record Officer , Central Library, Westgate , Oxford OX1 1DJ . Accessed April 2012
  6. Danny, the Champion of the World at the Internet Movie Database

Books

  • Lobel, Mary D. (1964). A History of the County of Oxford: Volume 8: Lewknor and Pyrton Hundreds. pp. 98–115. 
  • Pevsner, Nikolaus; Sherwood, Jennifer (1974). The Buildings of England: Oxfordshire. Harmondsworth: Penguin. pp. 791–794. ISBN 0-14-071045-0.