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  1. Carlton House. 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 ...

  2. Kate Heard, Senior Curator of Prints and Drawings, discusses this watercolour of the Blue Velvet Room at Carlton House. Views such as this one were crucial i...

    • 2 min
    • 11.6K
    • Royal Collection Trust
  3. Contact. (806) 747-2255. Floor Plans. Home. Floor Plans. Spacious Texas Tech Student Apartments. Feel right at home in an apartment created for you from top to bottom. Our community brings together convenience and contemporary designs that redefine student apartments in Lubbock, TX. Our one-bedroom apartments, two-bedroom apartments, and four ...

  4. During the next 30 out of the 42 years that George IV occupied Carlton House as his London residence, he was constantly engaged in alterations and improvements. The apartments on all floors were in a constant state of flux and the style of the interior decoration of Carlton House evolved over the years, although there were certain recurring ...

  5. 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. La casa se construyó a principios del para Henry Boyle, barón de Carlton, pasando a en dominio real cuando ...

  6. editions.covecollective.org › place › carlton-houseCarlton House | COVE

    Carlton House was the London residence of the Prince Regent from 1783 until his accession to the British throne as George IV in 1820. It was located on the south side of Pall Mall, alongside St. James’s Park.

  7. Carlton House occupied the site of today's Waterloo Place, which today extends into the space occupied by the Athenaeum Club and the Institute of Directors (formerly the United Services Club). Collections: After the destruction of Carlton House in 1827 much of the collections of the great house were dispersed to Buckingham Palace and Windsor ...