A visit to Kingston Lacy

in #blog7 years ago

Hello steemit community,

I hope everyone is well and swell, today i am going to be informing you of my trip Kingston Lacy that me and @youngboygus attended last weekend.To begin with let me talk to you about the history of Kingston Lacy.

Kingston Lacy is a country house in Wimborne Minster, Dorset, England. It was for a very long time the home of the Bankes family who lived nearby at Corfe Castle until its destruction in the English Civil War.

They started to lay the foundation for the house in early 1663 and was completed by the year 1665 by Ralph Bankes, son of Sir John Bankes, and the house was designed by the magnificent architect Sir Roger Pratt.

20180121_105604.png

20180121_105454.png

20180121_105532.png

As you walk through the entrance you should see straight ahead this astonishing fireplace that sets the feel for the rest of the place and makes you indulge for more.
20180107_123413.jpg

As you walk up these stairs you are met halfway by heaven itself, every step is made from marble that was imported from Italy.
20180107_123721.jpg

Once you reach the top of the staircase you are greeted by a stunning view of the colossal garden.
20180107_123746.jpg

Unfortunately at the time we visited the house, the third floor was closed so take a look at this stunning ceiling.
20180107_132300.jpg

This library holds the great knowledge of the Bankes family and the great history of England.
20180107_124432.jpg

20180107_131023.jpg

This is the room where enormous celebrations or important events were held. I mean you can clearly see this was the room where they went all in. This room was draped with multiple family portraits which were drawn with the finest paints available. The painting were put into the most exquisite gold frames. Furthermore the Bankes family put so much money into the ceilings of the house and not to forget the great tapestries.
20180107_130632.jpg

20180107_131419.jpg

20180107_130652.jpg

20180107_130942.jpg

This was the family dining room and it had a grand chandelier. It has a tube going all the way down to basement were you can call servants to serve dinner. Also at one point in time this was a bedroom and some guy died in it, but i cant remember his name.
20180107_130129.jpg

20180107_125405.jpg

20180107_130546.jpg

20180107_130450.jpg

20180107_130203.jpg

The doors that they used to enter the living room was so detailed, it took over a year to make and it was all done by hand. And each panel cost around 500 pounds which in todays money is ton load of money. On top of that they put marble all over the doors.
20180107_130406.jpg

All the pictures are taken by me and also big thanks to @youngboygus for helping me write all of this

if you would like to see more posts like this consider donating, thank you!

BCH - 1FbRqesnNK2rYAzimJwMkZEKcPP5EBMxNx
LTC - LKMMfpLtV9rsck78oUrsb7RBtF5ZTJx5VB
ETH - 0xFcB8C279a7B9423A8380666b7F5e3a4723222288

Sort:  

Thank you @sexydaddy for making a transfer to me for an upvote of 0.78% on this post! Half of your bid goes to @budgets which funds growth projects for Steem like our top 25 posts on Steem! The other half helps holders of Steem power earn about 60% APR on a delegation to me! For help, will you please visit https://jerrybanfield.com/contact/ because I check my discord server daily? To learn more about Steem, will you please use http://steem.guide/ because this URL forwards to my most recently updated complete Steem tutorial?

This post has received a 1.16 % upvote from @boomerang thanks to: @sexydaddy

everybody like this pic....?? yes or not??