A palace's many uses

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A palace's many uses


Over time, the different royal palaces developed different functions.
Banqueting House, Whitehall

Although they include the biggest and best survivors, the Tower of London and Hampton Court Palace were only two among the many, many royal palaces of Tudor times.  Henry VIII owned over 60 houses and the court would visit them for periods varying between a few hours and a few months.  Over time, the different royal palaces developed different functions: the Palace of Westminster in London, for example, was for governance, and the Banqueting House in the neighbouring Palace of Whitehall for entertaining. 

Kew Palace exteriorThe Tower of London came to be used only in times of danger and on the night before a coronation.  Hampton Court Palace was for pleasure and sport, and tiny Kew Palace was suitable for convalescence and retirement away from the buzz of Windsor or Buckingham Palace.  This pattern of movement survives to some extent in today’s Royal Family: the Queen and her court are at Buckingham Palace for business, at Windsor for weekends, at Balmoral in the summer for holidays and at Sandringham for Christmas. 

In addition to the royal apartments, a palace always contained accommodation for courtiers.  The house built for Cardinal Wolsey included Base Court, 30 suites of lodgings used for grand visitors; William III’s courtiers squabbled over their allocation of lodgings in the newly rebuilt Hampton Court Palace at the end of the 17th century.  These suites of rooms, constantly being altered, enlarged or contracted, become separate apartments used by the residents of the palace given permission to live here ‘by the grace and favour of the monarch’ once the court no longer visited the palace.  It is still possible to stay in Hampton Court Palace today in the apartments (one in the Georgian kitchens, one in the Tudor confectioners’ office in Fish Court) managed as holiday houses by the Landmark Trust.    

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