Mount Stuart House

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Mount Stuart House
Buteshire
Mount Stuart House 2018-08-25.jpg
East front of Mount Stuart House
Location
Grid reference: NS10855950
Location: 55°47’30"N, 5°1’7"W
Town: Rothesay
History
Built 1879–1900
For: the 3rd Marquess of Bute
by Sir Robert Rowand Anderson
Country house
Gothic Revival
Information
Owned by: The Marquess of Bute

Mount Stuart House, on the east coast of the Isle of Bute, Buteshire, is a country house built in the Gothic Revival style and the ancestral home of the Marquesses of Bute. It was designed by Sir Robert Rowand Anderson for the 3rd Marquess in the late 1870s,[1] replacing an earlier house by Alexander McGill, which burnt down in 1877. The house is a Category A listed building.[2]

Background

West front
Looking up in the Marble Hall

The house is the seat of the Stuarts of Bute, derived from the hereditary office "Steward of Bute" held since 1157. The family are direct male-line descendants of John Stewart, the illegitimate son of King Robert II of Scotland, the first Stewart King, by his mistress, Moira Leitch. By virtue of this descent, they are also descendants of Robert the Bruce, whose daughter Marjorie was mother of Robert II by her marriage to Walter Stewart, 6th High Steward of Scotland.

History

Chapel interior

The original house was built in 1719 for The 2nd Earl of Bute, but was rebuilt for John Crichton-Stuart, 3rd Marquess of Bute following a fire on 3 December 1877.[1] After his earlier creations of Cardiff Castle and Castell Coch in Glamorgan, the Marquess used many of the builders and workman he had employed in Glamorgan, including William Burges and much of that architect's team. Burges built an oratory at the house.[3] The main part of the present house is a flamboyant example of 19th-century Gothic Revival architecture, built in a reddish-brown stone. Mount Stuart's major features include the colonnaded Marble Hall at the centre of the main block and the Marble Chapel, which has an elaborate spired tower which is the tallest part of the building. Two earlier wings in a strikingly different style survive. They are much smaller in scale, have Georgian-style sash windows and are painted white.[4]

Much of the furniture was custom-designed for the house by Robert Weir Schultz in the early years of the 20th century. He also laid out many sections of the gardens.

The Mount Stuart House claims to have the world's first heated pool in any house;[2] it was also the first home in Scotland to be lit by electricity.[5]

The house holds The Bute Collection, a private collection of artwork and artefacts The Collection also houses archives, books, furniture, and silverwork reflecting the interests of the Bute family's various generations, including 25,000 books on topics including theology, botany, agriculture and Scottish history and literature.[6] In April 2016 it was announced that a Shakespeare First Folio had been discovered in the House's Library.[7] The folio belonged to Isaac Reed.[8]

The house is opened to the public.[9]

Outside links

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References

  • Stamp, Gavin (1981). Robert Weir Schultz, Architect, and His Work for the Marquesses of Bute: An Essay.