Within an ancient Roman city, patrician dwellings might be
very extensive, and luxurious. Such mansions on one hill in Rome became so
extensive that the term palatial was actually derived from the name Palatine
hill and is the etymological origin of "palace".
Renaissance villas such as Villa Rotonda near Vicenza were
an inspiration for many later mansions, especially during the
industrialisation.
Following the fall of Rome the practice of building
unfortified villas ceased. Today, the oldest inhabited mansions around the
world usually began their existence as fortified castles in the middle ages. As
social conditions slowly changed and stabilised fortifications were able to be
reduced, and over the centuries gave way to comfort. It became fashionable and
possible for homes to be beautiful rather than grim and forbidding. Hence the
modern mansion began to evolve.
In British English a mansion block refers to a block of
flats or apartments. In many parts of Asia, including Hong Kong and Japan, the
word mansion also refers to a block of apartments.
In Europe, from the 15th century onwards, a combination of
politics and advancements in modern weaponry negated the need for the
aristocracy to live in fortified castles. As a result many were transformed
into mansions without defences or demolished and rebuilt in a more modern,
undefended style. Due to intermarriage and primogeniture inheritance amongst
the aristocracy, it became common for one noble to often own several country
houses. These would be visited rotationally throughout the year as their owner
pursued the social and sporting circuit from country home to country home. Many
owners of a country house would also own a town mansion in their country's
capital city. These town mansions were referred to as 'houses' in London,
hotels in Paris and palaces in most European cities elsewhere. It might be
noted that sometimes the house of a clergyman was called a "mansion
house" e.g.by the Revd James Blair, Commissary in Virginia for the Bishop
of London, 1689-1745, a term related to the word "manse" commonly
used in the Church of Scotland and in Non-Conformist churches. H.G.Herklots,
The Church of England and the American Episcopal Church.
Harlaxton Manor, England, a 19th-century meeting of
Renaissance, Tudor and Gothic architecture produced Jacobethan - a popular form
of historicist mansion architecture.
As the 16th century progressed, and Renaissance styles of
architecture slowly spread across Europe, the last vestiges of castle
architecture and life changed; the central points of these great house, great
halls, became redundant as owners wished to live separately from their
servants, and no longer ate with them in a Great Hall. All evidence and odours
of cooking and staff were banished from the principal parts of the house into
distant wings, while the owners began to live in airy rooms, above the ground floor,
with privacy from their servants, who were now confined, unless required, to
their specifically delegated areas—often the ground and uppermost attic floors.
This was a period of great social change, as the educated prided themselves on
enlightenment.
The uses of these edifices paralleled that of the Roman
villas. It was vital for powerful people and families to keep in social contact
with each other as they were the primary moulders of society. The rounds of
visits and entertainments were an essential part of the societal process, as
painted in the novels of Jane Austen. State business was often discussed and
determined in informal settings. Times of revolution reversed this value.
During July/August 1789 a significant number of French country mansions chateaux
were destroyed by the rural population as part of the Great Fear - a symbolic
rejection of the feudal rights and restraints in effect under the ancient
régime.
Until World War I it was not unusual for a moderately sized
mansion in England such as Cliveden to have an indoor staff of 20 and an
outside staff of the same sizecitation needed and in ducal mansions such as
Chatsworth House the numbers could be far higher. In the great houses of Italy,
the number of retainers was often even greater than in England; whole families
plus extended relations would often inhabit warrens of rooms in basements and
attics. It is doubtful that a 19th-century Marchesa would even know the exact
number of individuals who served her. Most European mansions also were the hub of
vast estates. A true estate the medieval villa, French ville always contains at
least one complete village and its church. Large estates such as that of Woburn
Abbey have several villages attached.
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