From Page to Screen

Site menu

Syon House

Productions filmed at Syon House

Cranford (2007)
Hanbury Court

Back to top

History

Syon House shares its name with Syon Abbey, a medieval monastery of the Bridgettine Order, founded in 1414 or 1415, at the current Syon Park site, by King Henry V and completed by his son, Henry VI. In 1539, the abbey was surrendered to the English crown during the Dissolution of the Monasteries, and the monastic community was expelled.

In 1541 and part of the following year, Henry VIII's fifth wife, Catherine Howard, was brought to Syon for her long imprisonment. In February 1542, she was taken to the Tower of London and executed on charges of adultery.

In the late 17th century, Syon was in the possession of Charles Seymour, 6th Duke of Somerset, through his wife, Elizabeth Seymour (née Percy). After the future Queen Anne had a disagreement with her sister, Mary II, over her friendship with Sarah Churchill, Countess of Marlborough, she was evicted from her court residence at the Palace of Whitehall and stayed at Syon with her close friends, the Somersets, in 1692. Anne gave birth to a stillborn child there. Shortly after the birth, Mary came to visit her, again demanding that Anne dismiss the Countess of Marlborough, and stormed out again when Anne flatly refused.

In the 18th century, Hugh Percy, 1st Duke of Northumberland, commissioned architect and interior designer Robert Adam and landscape designer Lancelot "Capability" Brown to redesign the house and estate. Work began on the interior reconstruction project in 1762. Five large rooms on the west, south and east sides of the House, were completed before work ceased in 1769. A central rotunda, which Adams had intended for the interior courtyard space, was not implemented, due to cost.

This information sourced from Wikipedia

Back to top

Latest Flickr photos tagged 'Syon House'

More photos tagged 'Syon House' at Flickr

Back to top

London Road, Brentford, Middlesex
United Kingdom TW8 8JF