Scotland's Lost Houses (Paperback)


Nothing is more poignant than the ruination of a once-grand house -except, perhaps, the photographs which today represent the only surviving evidence that such a property ever existed. Since 1945, it has been estimated that over 200 major houses have been lost in Scotland, amongst them some of its grandest works of architecture, like Hamilton Palace. The reasons for the losses were many: fire, dry rot, mining subsidence, or simply demolition when the cost of a stately home's upkeep became prohibitive. The architectural styles that fell victim to such destruction were similarly varied -from Scotch Baronial, typified by a house like Craigends, to a Palladian villa like Amisfield in East Lothian, or vast nineteenth-century Mixed Gothic properties like Perthshire's Abercairney and Millearne. Even some of the finest work by one of Scotland's greatest architects, Robert Adam, is gone forever with the loss of house like Mavisbank and Balbardie. But fortunately photographs remain, as a remarkably varied, often eerie record of these great lost houses. The lavish photographic content in Scotland's Lost Houses derives primarily from the archive of the National Monuments Record in Edinburgh, but also draws on Country Life's photographs, local archives, even the remarkable albums taken by a Perthshire demolition contractor in the '50s as he sought to memorialise his handiwork in dynamiting country houses. In this beautifully produced book, Ian Gow, the most distinguished authority on Scotland's historic houses, selects twenty of the country's most important lost houses, prefacing these with a comprehensive introductory survey of the whole era of destruction. For anyone who mourns the impoverishment of Scotland's architectural heritage by such large-scale post-war destruction, it will be a plangent and nostalgic experience.

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Product Description

Nothing is more poignant than the ruination of a once-grand house -except, perhaps, the photographs which today represent the only surviving evidence that such a property ever existed. Since 1945, it has been estimated that over 200 major houses have been lost in Scotland, amongst them some of its grandest works of architecture, like Hamilton Palace. The reasons for the losses were many: fire, dry rot, mining subsidence, or simply demolition when the cost of a stately home's upkeep became prohibitive. The architectural styles that fell victim to such destruction were similarly varied -from Scotch Baronial, typified by a house like Craigends, to a Palladian villa like Amisfield in East Lothian, or vast nineteenth-century Mixed Gothic properties like Perthshire's Abercairney and Millearne. Even some of the finest work by one of Scotland's greatest architects, Robert Adam, is gone forever with the loss of house like Mavisbank and Balbardie. But fortunately photographs remain, as a remarkably varied, often eerie record of these great lost houses. The lavish photographic content in Scotland's Lost Houses derives primarily from the archive of the National Monuments Record in Edinburgh, but also draws on Country Life's photographs, local archives, even the remarkable albums taken by a Perthshire demolition contractor in the '50s as he sought to memorialise his handiwork in dynamiting country houses. In this beautifully produced book, Ian Gow, the most distinguished authority on Scotland's historic houses, selects twenty of the country's most important lost houses, prefacing these with a comprehensive introductory survey of the whole era of destruction. For anyone who mourns the impoverishment of Scotland's architectural heritage by such large-scale post-war destruction, it will be a plangent and nostalgic experience.

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Aurum Press Ltd

Country of origin

United Kingdom

Release date

October 2008

Availability

Supplier out of stock. If you add this item to your wish list we will let you know when it becomes available.

First published

May 2009

Authors

Dimensions

305 x 248 x 16mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback

Pages

192

ISBN-13

978-1-84513-393-1

Barcode

9781845133931

Categories

LSN

1-84513-393-5



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