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The first recording of buildings on the site of Friars
Court dates back to 1142 and the establishment of the first
‘Hospitaller’ ‘in Oxfordshire by the charitable, religious
order of the Knights Templar Order of St. John of Jerusalem. An
‘Hospitaller’ was a place of rest for travellers and from it are
believed to derive the words ‘hospital’ and ‘hostel’. In a chronicle of 1338, Friars Court is mentioned as being
“... a small house with gardens, dovecote and adjacent crofts worth
30s a year”. This accommodated the preceptor (the only serving
brother), a chaplain, a steward, two servants and three pensioners. A few years later after the building of a bridge over the
River Thames at nearby Radcot (now the oldest surviving crossing to remain
standing), the increase in passing traffic must have had a strong influence
in making By the middle of the 15th century the “small
house” had become a stone-built hall with a ‘great
chamber’; a separate kitchen, with an adjoining building; latrines to the
east; a bake-house and a stone-built chapel with a walled garden to the
north. The house remained under auspices of the Order of The estate was still called a manor in 1803, though when
sold in 1835 it appears the new owner did not acquire the manorial rights
along with the house. Between that time and 1886 the house changed
considerably: the most significant alteration saw the existing spiral main
staircase replaced by a closed-string straight flight running between two
galleried landings; this required radical re-arrangement of rooms on all
floors and for one window in the façade to be blanked off. These sweeping
changes extended to creating more defined servants’ rooms in the
attics, the creation of a butler’s pantry and the installation of
indoor plumbing for the family. Externally, the two ’Gothic’
porches were added and the coach house built. Richard Willmer arrived at In 1990 some of the former
back rooms which include the old Laundry and Dairy were sympathetically
converted into a Tea Room and toilet facilities (including disabled) to
accommodate the growing number of people visiting In 2002
Friars Court was granted a Civil Ceremony license and there are now nine
areas within the house and gardens where weddings and other ceremonies may be
conducted. More
information about the history of the house, gardens and farm can be found in
the Display Rooms as well as ‘Friars Court – the Farm Guide’
which can be purchased from the Shop. Click on a picture to enlarge the image. The house
is not open to visitors. |
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