Robert Smythson, trained as a stone mason,…
April 1579 CE
Robert Smythson, trained as a stone mason, was by 1560 traveling England as a master mason leading his own team of masons.
He had moved in 1568 from London to Wiltshire to commence work on the new house at Longleat, a country estate adjacent to the village of Horningsham and near the towns of Warminster in Wiltshire and Frome in Somerset, for Sir John Thynne, where he will work for several years, carving personally much of the external detail; he is believed to have had a strong influence on the overall design of the stately building, widely regarded as one of the finest examples of Elizabethan architecture in Britain.
Longleat is set in over nine hundred acres (Three hundred and sixty-four hectares) of parkland, with eight thousand acres (thirty-two point thirty-seven square kilometers) of woods and farmland.
Thynne had purchased the original Augustinian priory after it was destroyed by fire in 1567; the new construction has taken twelve years to complete.
Its landscape designed in the eighteenth century by Capability Brown, Longleat is today widely regarded as one of the finest examples of Elizabethan architecture in Britain.