The Compton family, who still live today…
1525 CE
The Compton family, who still live today in the private house known as Compton Wynyates, appear in records as resident on the site as early as 1204.
The family had continued to live in the manor house as knights and squires of the county until Sir Edmund Compton decided around 1481 to build a new family home, constructing it of bricks that have a glowing raspberry color of striking intensity.
Edmund's four-winged house around a central courtyard is recognizable by the thickness of the four-foot deep walls that form the core of the existing mansion.
This new fortified house had been fully moated, and parts of the moat form a pond in the garden today.
There was also a second moat (probably dry) and second drawbridge.
However, fortifications were not the only consideration for the new mansion—dark brick diapering and decorative moldings add variety to the façade.
Over the entrance the Royal Arms of England are supported by the dragon and greyhound of Henry VII and Henry VIII.The architect or mason builder is unknown.
Edmund had died young in 1493 and, as a consequence, his son William Compton became a ward of the crown, as was the custom.
At the court of Henry VII, the eleven-year-old, orphaned William Compton became a page to the two-year-old Prince Henry, thus began a close friendship which had continued after the prince succeeded as Henry VIII.
As a result of this lifelong friendship, Henry VIII has given William, who is also to become a military hero, many rewards, among them the ruinous Fulbroke Castle.
Numerous fittings at Fulbroke have been brought to embellish Compton Wynyates, including the huge bay window full of heraldic glass, which looks into the courtyard from the great hall; also from the castle came many of the mullioned windows with vine-patterned ornamentation.
It was at this time, around 1515, that the great entrance porch, chapel and many of the towers were built.
In fact, this was the start of the many additions over the next ten years which have been added to the house with no thought of symmetry, height or regularity.
The house has simply extended been wherever space within the confines of the moat permits.
The brick-fluted and twisted chimneys also date from this time and are one of the houses most notable features.
Unlike many other houses of the period, Compton Wynyates has not been greatly altered over the centuries.
This is because in 1574 its owner Henry Compton, 1st Baron Compton, will begin work on one of Britain's finest houses, Castle Ashby.
The Comptons will continued to lavish money on this new mansion for the next century or so; as a consequence, Compton Wynyates has survived almost intact as the perfect Tudor mansion, spared the constant improvements of successive generations.