If you've ever escaped into
a historical romance set in the Regency period in England, you are sure
to have heard of the Brighton Pavilion, the haunt of George, the Prince
of Wales and Prince Regent (he became King George IV). He and Mrs. Fitz-Herbert,
his morganatic wife, bought a small farm house in what was then the village
of Brighthelmstone. "Prinny's" penchant for sea bathing helped to transform
this small rural community into a mecca of high society.
... Over a period of nearly fifty years, from 1783 (when he was only 21) to his death in 1830, George transformed the simple home. First, the farmhouse was incorporated into the Marine Pavilion (architect Henry Holland created a neo-classical villa). In 1803, William Porden built the huge Royal Stables in the Indian style, which soon dwarfed the Pavilion itself. Finally, John Nash took seven years to add sumptuous state rooms to the Pavilion and recreate the exterior into the Indian/Chinese edifice we see today. |
![]() outside what is now the tea room |
![]() Banqueting Hall |
![]() Music Room |
...
Is it any wonder that many heroines in Georgette Heyer's romances swooned at their first sight of the interior of the Pavilion? Or perhaps it was the overheated rooms ("Prinny" believed in lots of central heating)? ... In 1830, when George died, it was taken over by the young Queen Victoria. However, she felt that she was too close to the "tourists" in Brighton, and bought a new summer home on the Isle of Wight. In 1850, she sold the Pavilion to the town of Brighton, taking all its interior furnishings with her - even the wallpaper! The Pavilion was then used for a number of mundane purposes for the next century or so(including as a hospital for wounded Indian soldiers ). When the town of Brighton decided to restore the Pavilion in 1980, a plea was made to the monarchy, and Queen Elizabeth II has slowly unearthed and returned most of the original interior fittings, furniture and other embellishments. It is worth a visit! |