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Your Places or Mine
Clive Aslet & John Goodall
30 episodes
3 days ago
Send us a text Phipps, Carnegie and Old Westbury Gardens In its turn of the 20th-century heyday, Long Island could boast no fewer than 900 country houses. Since then, most have disappeared, leaving Old Westbury Gardens in a unique position – the only house to have survived complete with its collections, garden and archive. Clive has just been there and shares its wonder with John, asking why the American country house is such a different beast form its counterparts in the UK. &nbs...
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History
Arts,
Places & Travel,
Society & Culture
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All content for Your Places or Mine is the property of Clive Aslet & John Goodall and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Send us a text Phipps, Carnegie and Old Westbury Gardens In its turn of the 20th-century heyday, Long Island could boast no fewer than 900 country houses. Since then, most have disappeared, leaving Old Westbury Gardens in a unique position – the only house to have survived complete with its collections, garden and archive. Clive has just been there and shares its wonder with John, asking why the American country house is such a different beast form its counterparts in the UK. &nbs...
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History
Arts,
Places & Travel,
Society & Culture
Episodes (20/30)
Your Places or Mine
Magnates and Mansions: Who Were The American Millionaires That Loved the British Country House?
Send us a text Phipps, Carnegie and Old Westbury Gardens In its turn of the 20th-century heyday, Long Island could boast no fewer than 900 country houses. Since then, most have disappeared, leaving Old Westbury Gardens in a unique position – the only house to have survived complete with its collections, garden and archive. Clive has just been there and shares its wonder with John, asking why the American country house is such a different beast form its counterparts in the UK. &nbs...
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4 days ago
1 hour 8 minutes

Your Places or Mine
A Spymaster's Lair: The Unmissable Splendour of Hatfield House
Send us a text Clive has just been to an event at Hatfield House, the palace to the North of London which stands as a monument to the political gene of the Cecil family. John is more than equal to discussing this great country house and its treasures, which the present Marquess and Marchioness of Salisbury are subtly making even more special. In the 16th-century, Robert Cecil inherited it from his father Lord Burghley, whom he followed as Queen Elizabeth’s chief minister. I...
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1 week ago
55 minutes

Your Places or Mine
Cathedral on Fire: The Rise, Fall, and Rebirth of Notre-Dame
Send us a text In 2019 a devastating fire consumed the cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris, one of the towering symbols of French identity, and it seemed that one of the greatest cultural monuments in Europe had, literally, gone up in smoke. But after only two short years, it has now been restored and John has been to see – and celebrate – the result. The old Notre Dame had evolved over many centuries and lived through dramatic times. Sacked during the Revolution, it was returned to...
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2 weeks ago
54 minutes

Your Places or Mine
The Story of the Bayeux Tapestry: A Threaded Tale of Heroes and Conquerors
Send us a text An extraordinary cultural loan is about to take place: soon, while its home in France is being improved, the Bayeux Tapestry will be displayed in the British Museum for two years. This will give members of the British public, along with visitors to London from overseas, the chance to get up close to one of the founding documents of England’s story. One of the foremost medievalists in the country, John is in a prime position to lead the discussion with Clive on this ...
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3 weeks ago
56 minutes

Your Places or Mine
War Memorials Of WW1: The Secret Meaning of The Stone
Send us a text In advance of Remembrance Sunday on November 11, Clive has been visiting the Commonwealth War Graves in France. The Imperial War Graves Commission, as it was called when established in 1917, was the brain child of Fabian Ware, a civil servant turned newspaper editor who commanded a Red Cross dressing station during the First World War and was therefore saw the horror at first hand. Ware realised that the hundreds of thousands of young men who died for Britain deserv...
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1 month ago
58 minutes

Your Places or Mine
The History of Salisbury Cathedral: How Did They Move a Medieval Marvel?
Send us a text Which cathedral is closest to the English heart? Impossible to say but it may be Salisbury, the subject of this week’s Your Places or Mine. On September 28 a special service will be held to celebrate the 800th anniversary of the dedication of the altars at Salisbury’s east end in 1225. To many people, Salisbury Cathedral approaches architectural perfection more nearly than any of the other cathedrals in England. It is the most harmonious; the spire is t...
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1 month ago
53 minutes

Your Places or Mine
Stucco and Style: John Nash’s Regent Street
Send us a text The creation of Regent Street under the Prince Regent is a rare instance of a master plan that reshaped London. It linked North and South, starting in the new Regent’s Park and ending at the Prince’s Carlton House on the edge of St James’s Park. Clive and John celebrate this extraordinary achievement, which sprang from the brain of the no less extraordinary John Nash. A triumph of the Picturesque Movement, the line of the Regent Street scheme remains unchanged and the Nash terr...
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1 month ago
54 minutes

Your Places or Mine
Golden Hills, Golden Stone: The Story of The Cotswolds
Send us a text Today, the Cotswolds are famous around the world, as can be seen from the number of celebrities making their homes here. They are a brand which commands instant recognition. This, however, is a recent phenomenon, and visitors from past centuries – such as the journalist and contrarian William Cobbett – did not take anything like such a favourable view. The change came with the Arts and Crafts Movement, many of whose leading lights loved the round-shouldered hi...
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1 month ago
58 minutes

Your Places or Mine
Sennowe Park: A Gilded Age Mansion
Send us a text Sennowe Park in North Norfolk is one of the most ebullient country houses built during the swaggering Edwardian decade at the beginning of the 20th century. It reflects the personality of the man for whom it was built, Thomas Cook, grandson of the Thomas Cook who founded the travel business. The latter, born in 1808, had been a Baptist evangelist and temperance campaigner. His epoch-making first excursion took place in 1841, when a special train took 570 people from Leice...
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1 month ago
1 hour

Your Places or Mine
The History of Bath, From Roman to Regency
Send us a text The Romans arrived at Bath in AD43, calling it Sulis Minerva – a combination of the goddess Minerva with the local deity of Sulis. They loved the hot springs, practically the only ones in the country, which gush from the ground at 40 degrees Celsius. Their bathing complex came to include a huge, vaulted structure, which collapsed at some point after the legions left Britannia. It became so derelict that the source of the spring was lost and only discovered ag...
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2 months ago
1 hour 3 minutes

Your Places or Mine
Privacy and Power in The Country House
Send us a text These days, privacy is high on the agenda. There are huge concerns over data, images, digital identity and personal space, all of which should be kept private. But how was this possible in previous ages when almost all of life took place in the presence of other people. This was as much the case for the social elite as it was for ordinary families. As court records of divorce cases in the 18th century reveal, very little happened that was not known to se...
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2 months ago
1 hour 1 minute

Your Places or Mine
Hot History: The Great Fire of Northampton 1675
Send us a text Everyone has heard about the Great Fire of London – but what about the Great Fire of Northampton…or Marlborough…or Blandford Forum? Fire has frequently wrought destruction on towns, cities and country houses, and this was particularly the case in the 17th century. Clive and John discuss why this should have been—what caused the fires, what the consequences were for the places concerned and how they were rebuilt. Northampton was a spectacular example, not only ...
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2 months ago
1 hour

Your Places or Mine
Charles III's Love Affair With Romania
Send us a text The then Prince of Wales first came to Transylvania in the late 1990s on an official visit. It’s the only time he’s come on business. He fell so much under the spell of the place that he bought a house here, in one of the wooden villages, settled, many centuries ago, by Saxons from Germany. Then he acquired another property, which he has turned into a comfortable, folksy lodge. He makes a private visit every year, if he can. Clive and John discuss...
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2 months ago
54 minutes

Your Places or Mine
Great British Builders: Lutyens, Wren and The City of London (LIVE at The Ned's Club)
Send us a text For the first time in the history of this podcast, Your Places or Mine has gone on location. John and Clive have been invited to The Ned's Club, the amazing complex of hospitality venues, including restaurants, hotel and private members’ club, which occupies the former head office of the Midland Bank in the City of London. This provides the podcast with an opportunity to examine Britain’s commercial centre as it evolved between the Wars. Nearly every major fin...
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3 months ago
1 hour 10 minutes

Your Places or Mine
Sovereignty in Stone: The Kings of Windsor Castle
Send us a text Windsor Castle has been imbued with symbolism since William the Conqueror founded it after the invasion of 1066. He took the name of Windsor from an existing Anglo-Saxon palace which stood on a different spot. On a bluff overlooking the Thames, Windsor Castle continues to play a central role in Britain’s national identity, being a great inheritance from the Middle Ages, which no one generation could have the resources or imagination to build. It has always be...
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3 months ago
50 minutes

Your Places or Mine
12 Crosses That Remember a Queen (with History Alice)
Send us a text This week YPOMPOD is joined by Alice Loxton — History Alice to her many followers — to discuss the extraordinary series of crosses that King Edward I built in memory of his queen, Eleanor of Castile in the 1290s. Eleanor died in Lincolnshire. Her body was then carried back to London for burial, and at every place that the cortège stopped a beautiful cross was erected. The work of the royal masons, these crosses are of astonishing quality even though some stand in what are...
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3 months ago
52 minutes

Your Places or Mine
The Dollar Princesses Who Revolutionised The British Country House
Send us a text The American girl was a phenomenon, charming, sporty, better educated than her European counterpart. talk on a wide range of subjects. Around sixty American girls became peeresses at the turn of the 20th century. ‘We are the dollar princesses,’ ran a popular song. Crossing the Atlantic was no longer as perilous as it had been in earlier days. Huge fortunate had been made during the expansion of the United States after the Civil War. From the 1870s, arist...
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3 months ago
1 hour 1 minute

Your Places or Mine
Ramsgate: The Marseille Of The South East
Send us a text In this summer episode of ypompod, we got to the seaside – to Ramsgate, beloved of Queen Victoria and now home to the biggest Wetherspoon’s (in an elegant neo-Greek building called the Royal Pavilion of 1913) on the face of the planet. Five miles to the east of Ramsgate, connected by a continuous yellow carpet of sand, lies Margate, which developed as one of Britain’s first seaside resorts in the mid eighteenth century. Ramsgate did not get into its stride u...
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4 months ago
59 minutes

Your Places or Mine
Ewelme: A Village And Its Vanished Medieval Palace
Send us a text Where is Ewelme Palace? It was one of the most splendid houses in the country when it was built in the 15th century but nothing of it now remains. There are, however, some of the ancillary buildings and monuments that went with a great medieval estate. Its chatelaine Alice, Duchess of Suffolk, is remembered by one of the most beautiful tombs in the country. A granddaughter of the poet Geoffrey Chaucer, she became a great heiress when her first husband, t...
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4 months ago
1 hour 1 minute

Your Places or Mine
National Gallery: The Sainsbury Wing And A New Chapter
Send us a text The National Gallery, now 200 years old, occupies one of the most famous buildings in London, on the north side of Trafalgar Square. This Greek Revival masterpiece by William Wilkins was designed to take account of the view of St Martin in the Fields from Pall Mall—so unusually it was conceived as having been seen from the side. Clive and John discuss both Wilkins’s design and the Sainsbury Wing, added by Venturi, Scott Brown in the 1980s. This extension follo...
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4 months ago
56 minutes

Your Places or Mine
Send us a text Phipps, Carnegie and Old Westbury Gardens In its turn of the 20th-century heyday, Long Island could boast no fewer than 900 country houses. Since then, most have disappeared, leaving Old Westbury Gardens in a unique position – the only house to have survived complete with its collections, garden and archive. Clive has just been there and shares its wonder with John, asking why the American country house is such a different beast form its counterparts in the UK. &nbs...