Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Carlton House, sometimes Carlton Palace, was a mansion in Westminster, best known as the town residence of King George IV, particularly during the regency era and his time as prince regent. It faced the south side of Pall Mall, and its gardens abutted St James's Park in the St James's district of London.

  2. Planta principal. La Carlton House fue una mansión londinense que sirvió de hogar para el príncipe regente durante unas décadas. Se encontraba entre Pall Mall y The Mall, en el distrito St. James de la capital británica, al oeste de Trafalgar Square.

  3. Carlton House. Carlton House was a major renovation project of George IV before he became king and switched his attention to Buckingham Palace. Since the time of Henry VIII heirs to the throne had been awarded St James’s Palace as their London residence.

  4. www.exploringgb.co.uk › blog › carltonhouselondonExploring GB

    7 de dic. de 2023 · Exploring GB. Carlton House: King George IV’s Demolished Mansion in Westminster. This magnificent staircase was built at Carlton House, sometimes called Carlton Palace, in Westminster, London. It was the residence of George IV from 1783 to 1826.

  5. The history of Carlton House, the shortest-lived and yet the most tasteful and exquisite of Londons vanished royal residences, began in 1709 when the Royal Gardens, which were on the southern side of Pall Mall, were leased by the Crown to Henry Boyle, who was created Lord Carlton in 1714.

  6. Carlton House, on London’s Pall Mall, was presented to George when he came of age in 1783. Over the next forty years he created an elegant sequence of colourful interiors, rich in textiles, filled with masterpieces of furniture, sculpture, porcelain and paintings, many of them purchased in Paris in the aftermath of the French Revolution.

  7. Carlton House. The Prince’s apartments were in a constant state of evolution, with continuous rebuilding and redecoration in progress, in which the Regent took a personal interest. There was a drive towards ‘harmonisation’ of the décor – the colour of the walls was complemented by carefully chosen porcelain vases and newly upholstered ...