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"A World Heritage Site" Britain has many fine historic houses, and a visit to Blenheim Palace will be one that stands out. It is one of the largest in Britain, is still in the hands of the original family and it is one of the best examples of a house within a landscape. It is recognised as a world heritage site. This was a gift, by a grateful nation, for military triumph against the French and Bavarians, given to John Churchill, the 1st Duke of Marlborough and built between 1705 and 1724. Later it was to be the birth place and childhood home of the British Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill, who is buried outside the grounds but not far away at St Martin's Church, Blaydon. Before this palace was built, it was the manor of Woodstock, sometimes referred to as the Palace of Woodstock. Henry I enclosed the deer park for hunting, Henry II housed his mistress Rosamund Clifford, "Fair Rosamund" there in a "bower and labyrinth"; a spring where she is said to have bathed remains, named after her. Queen Mary imprisoned Princess Elizabeth later to become Elizabeth _ here. It was built upon and changed many times. The manor remained in obscurity until bombarded and ruined by Oliver Cromwell's troops during the Civil War. The remains of the manor existed when the palace was being built and the architect Sir John Vanbrugh wanted to incorporate them into the landscape but the Duchess would not hear of it and they were swept away. The Duchess used to having her own way had wanted the architect Sir Christopher Wren to build the house but the Duke commissioned Sir John Vanbrugh at a chance meeting at the theatre. Sir John Vanbrugh and Nicholas Hawksmoor worked together and had recently created Castle Howard in Yorkshire. Problems over funding, the nation not being as generous as was first suggested, and difficulties between the Duchess and Vanbrugh, with the Duke away on military campaigns made it a difficult project. The Duchess banned Vanbrugh from the site in 1719 and it was finished by Hawksmoor. In the end most of the cost was covered by the Duke not the country. Blenheim was situated in a large park with undulating ground and a stream through, the mushy brook was crossed by a mammoth bridge (above on left) that contained over 30 rooms.
Today the palace and grounds are open to the public, can be hired for events, is used in many films and while the Duke retains final control over all matters in the running of the palace, the day-to-day control of commercial aspects are outsourced to Sodexho Prestige, a division of the French company Sodexho. Like his forebears John George Vanderbilt Spencer-Churchill, 11th Duke of Marlborough, lives for part of the year in the palace, with his family occupying the same suite of rooms as the 1st Duke and Duchess. He has been married 4 times, and had 6 children, 4 survive. After his death the title goes to his oldest son, but the control of Blenheim and the Trust goes directly to his grandson George John Godolphin Spencer-Churchill, Earl of Sunderland (born 28 July 1992) now aged 16, who is in line, after his father, to the Dukedom of Marlborough. There are two main entrances to Blenheim Palace, one just south of Woodstock on the Oxford Road and the other through the Triumphal Arch at the end of Park Street in Woodstock. There are various other entrances that are suitable for pedestrians.
Part of the formal gardens at Blenheim Palace What there is to see at Blenheim.
Annually they host the Blenheim International Horse Trials in the wider grounds which has a separate entrance. Four days of cross country with water jumps in the lakes, show jumping and dressage. See our diary pages for the exact date, usually during September each year.
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