Wednesday, August 9, 2023

Oxford and Hardwick Hall, 2023

We did a quick visit to Oxford and Hardwick Hall, both places we had visited when we lived in England about ten years ago.

We parked at a Park and Ride south of Oxford. It took us almost directly to Christ Church, one of the famous colleges that make up Oxford University. We were in town the final week of school, so many places were closed for study or events.

Christ Church College

A bit of the actual church at Christ Church

Christ Church's field

We walked from Christ Church up to the High Street in town. We had to go through a tricky gate.

Figuring out the gate

We wandered about and saw some famous sights, like the Radcliffe Camera, part of the Bodleian Library.

Radcliffe Camera

All Souls College next to the library

Brasenose College is on the other side

Some fancy decor on another college

In the center of the library is a statue of William Herbert, Earl of Pembroke, who served as Chancellor for the university.

William Herbert

Down one street is a copy of the Bridge of Sighs from Venice. Students use it to go to classes, so I am sure they sigh a lot on the bridge.

Oxford Bridge of Sighs

More fun architecture 

We walked into the quad of one of the smaller colleges, Saint Edmund Hall.

Hall Quad

Back on the High Street, we saw Magdalen College where C. S. Lewis taught before getting snagged by Cambridge in 1954.

Magdalen College

We tried to visit the Botanical Gardens but a private event was going on.

I bet your garden gate isn't this fancy

We had lunch and headed further north, stopping at Hardwick Hall. The original hall has fallen into ruins that are still on the estate.

Original Hardwick Hall

Another angle on the ruins

Bess of Hardwick (1527-1608) was born into a well-to-do family. After three marriages, she had increased her wealth substantially and built a new hall, with a wall and gardens around it. The locals had a rhyme for it, "Hardwick Hall, More glass than wall."

I bet your front gate isn't this fancy

Front of the hall

Back of the hall

Detail of one of the corners

The initials "ES" seem cryptic at first, but Bess of Hardwick's full first name is Elizabeth and one of her marriages made her Countess of Shrewsbury. 

More intriguing is a statue of Mary, Queen of Scots. Bess and her third husband, George Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury, became custodians of Mary in the late 1560s.

Mary, Queen of Scots

We wandered around the garden a bit and admired the flowers.

Bright and happy

Soft and sombre

A corner full of color

A mushroom tree?

More of the garden

View from the back of the house

Even though there was no playground, my son had a good time.

A happy tourist

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