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Art Periods
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- 2.First Civilizations
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Films to Buy
- The Age of Rubens
- Portrait Of Frans Hals*
- Matthew Merian
- Mexico: The Grandeur of New Spain
- Spanish Art: El Greco to Goya
- Baroque Painting in France and Italy
- Claude*
- Via Dolorosa (Stations of the Cross)
- Teaching on Site
- Evidence on Site: Boscobel House
- Chapels: The Buildings of Nonconformity
- All the World on Stage
- The Wizards of the Marvellous
- The Long Frontiers to the North
- The Southern Empire of Baroque
- From Rubens to Gainsborough
- The Baroque of Extremes
- Antoine Watteau: The Melancholia of Pleasure
- Star of Bethlehem
- George Stubbs
- The Hand of Adam
- Royal Rococo
Evidence on Site: Boscobel House
Where Charles II Hid from Parliament
10 minutes, color, age range: 9 - 14 years, #312
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Boscobel: house and farmyardPhoto: English Heritage
An introduction to a house where Charles II hid from the Roundheads. Boscobel, near Wolverhampton, England, was an isolated hunting lodge in a forest when the future king fled there after his defeat at Worcester in 1651. While Parliament's forces searched the area, Charles, dressed in servant's clothes, hid in an oak tree and later in a priest's hole within the house. This single dramatic event acted like a time-bomb on Boscobel. When the story became public after Charles's coronation, seventeenth-century tourists flocked to see the oak tree, tearing off branches as souvenirs and eventually killing it - but the house was unaffected. Not until it was sold in the early nineteenth century did the time-bomb explode.
The new owners celebrated Boscobel's past by remodeling the house as they thought it might have been in Charles's time. Their view of history was an entertaining mixture of fact and fiction, so many features of the house are not what they seem to be, and need close inspection before one can assess their origins. This documentary explains the complicated history of the house, and the effects of an historic event on a quiet country dwelling. It also raises questions about how we look at the past which are applicable to any site.
Part of the series Evidence on Site
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Credits
Director/Writer: Philip Sugg
English Heritage:
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