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Peeps at Royal Palaces of Great Britain

Chapter 2: PREFACE
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About This Book

The author provides an illustrated survey of England's and Scotland's principal royal residences, tracing their transformation from medieval fortresses into later palaces and describing architectural features, interior rooms, ceremonial functions, notable events, and losses to fire and demolition. Each chapter focuses on a particular site, outlining its layout, historical uses, and surviving monuments while noting vanished or altered structures. Brief architectural description and anecdotal historical incidents accompany plates and line drawings to give a compact account of how these residences developed and changed over time.

PREFACE

If a palace be a royal residence, as the dictionary defines it, then nearly all the famous castles of England would come under that title, for the Norman and Plantagenet Kings were constantly moving from one stronghold to another during the unsettled period of the Middle Ages. Until the fifteenth century, both the English and Scottish Kings resided in impregnable castles or fortified houses, but their sojourn was never long in one place. After the Wars of the Roses had crushed the power of the great nobles, it was no longer necessary for the monarch to dwell within a fortress, and it was then that the gracious and commodious palaces of Whitehall, Hampton Court, and Greenwich, arose in England. The Scottish Kings, having at the same time reached a greater control over their headstrong nobles, also began transforming their castles into palaces, and to erect Holyrood and Falkland to gratify their desire for more luxurious residences.

Within the compass of this small book, it would have been impossible to detail every castle in which a monarch ever resided, so that it has been thought better to confine attention to those palaces which were owned, and most constantly used by the Kings and Queens of England and Scotland.