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Soulton Hall

Soulton Hall is a Tudor country house near Wem, England. It was a 16th century architectural project of Sir Rowland Hill, publisher of the Geneva Bible.[2] Hill was a statesman, polymath and philanthropist, later styled the "First Protestant Lord Mayor of London" because of his senior role in the Tudor statecraft that was needed to bring stability to England in the fall out of the Reformation. The building of the current Soulton Hall, undertaken during the tumult of the Reformation, is therefore associated with the political and social work required to incubate the subsequent English Renaissance.[3][4]

Soulton Hall
Location within Shropshire
Former namesSaulton, Suletune, Suleton, Soleton, Sulton, Sowton, Soughton[1]
General information
Architectural styleTudor architecture, Prodigy house, Renaissance architecture
Locationnear Wem, Shrewsbury, Shropshire
CountryEngland
Coordinates52°52′04″N 2°40′44″W / 52.8678°N 2.679°W / 52.8678; -2.679
Elevation125 m (410 ft)
Construction startedprior to 1017 for the manor, on the current site by the late 1300s, with the current hall (corps de logis of wider [lost/muted palace complex]) begun c. 1556
Completedby 1560
Technical details
MaterialSingle phase construction using Grinshill sandstone and Tudor brick, incorporating timber framing which reused older timbers in some cases
Design and construction
Architect(s)? Matthew Parker
Website
www.soultonhall.co.uk

Soulton Hall is understood to be constructed in an elaborate set of humanist codes drawing together concepts from classical antiquity, geometry, philosophy and scripture. It is further understood that the building influenced the architecture of many later buildings of similar style.[5]

With a hidden chapel in its basement, a priesthole, and bookcases hidden within its thick walls to hide heretical documents, Soulton Hall is likely to have served as a base for the conspiracy which led to the publication of the Geneva Bible, which bears the name of Rowland Hill on its frontispiece as publisher.[6]

The grounds of the hall contain archaeology of a lost theatre. Emerging scholarship[7][8][9] links the manor to Shakespeare,[10][11] and in particular the play As You Like It[12][13][14] which concerns the estate of a character called "Old Sir Rowland".[6][15] Sir Rowland Hill was a cousin of Shakespeare's mother Mary Arden by reason of the marriage of his heiresses Elizabeth Corbett to Robert Arden in the 1580s.[16][17]

Mentioned in the Norman Domesday Book, Soulton has housed a manor since late Anglo Saxon times, and a "lost castle" rediscovered in 2021[18] undergoing a multi-season archaeological investigation by DigVentures.

The modern manor incorporates a working farm pioneering various sustainable agriculture approaches, and also houses a series of contemporary monuments including standing stones and long barrow burial site.

Sir Rowland Hill's renaissance hall edit

A recent scholarly appraisal of the building said:

There must have been an important master mason behind the house's design; if only we knew more about the original build.[19]

Since that was written, more understanding has been shared and is emerging.

 
View of the Present Manor House of 1556 with door case of 1668 at Soulton

The present hall building was constructed between 1556 and 1560 by Sir Rowland Hill, but is only the corps de logis (private block) of a much bigger palace complex subsequently muted and lost in intervening stages of development. It is constructed of brick, produced at the site, with Grinshill stone dressings.[20]

 
Sir Rowland Hill: the first Protestant Lord Mayor of London, privy councillor, statesman, scholar, merchant, patron of art and philanthropist active through the reigns of Henry VIII, Edward VI, Mary I and Elizabeth I. He built Soulton Hall and published the Geneva Bible.

Hill was the first Protestant Lord Mayor of London in 1549, and, as Sheriff of London. Hill was the coordinator of the Geneva Bible project and an enthusiastic patron of the arts, in particular drama. He has been linked with the character of Old Sir Rowland in Shakespeare's As You Like It.[21][22][23] He was also involved in the case which established Parliamentary Privilege.[24]

House of state, literary connections and inspiration edit

Soulton was acquired by Hill and his protégé Thomas Leigh in 1556 from Thomas Lodge.[25] Lodge's son, also called Thomas Lodge, would have been familiar with the woods at Soulton.[26] Lodge Jr was the writer and dramatist, who wrote prose tale of Rosalynde, Euphues Golden Legacie, which, printed in 1590, would go on to be the acknowledged source from which William Shakespeare took inspiration when writing his pastoral comedy 'As You Like It'.

Hill was a close associate of Thomas Wriothesley, 1st Earl of Southampton[27] (whose grandson Henry Wriothesley, 3rd Earl of Southampton was the dedicatee of Shakespeare's sonnets) to the point of attending the private burial with the family on his death.

The third Earl's wife Elizabeth Vernon is associated with Hill via her grandfather, who shared his childhood with Rowland Hill with them both being baptised at Hodnet within a couple of years of each other, and both families having stationed links to the area. Another Vernon, Margaret Vernon, a daughter of George Vernon, was the wife of Sir Thomas Stanley, whose family reputedly patronised Shakespeare, and is and is also associated with the writer to whom their epitaphs have been attributed to the writer in St Bartholomew's Church in Tong, Shropshire.[28]

Within the building are traces of older Tudor or medieval building phases on the site, with timber materials re-used from predecessors of the manor's various halls. Examples of simple pargeting can be seen within the building.

To the east of the hall is what is now a walled garden, accessed by steps from the terrace on the north, or by a Tudor gate to the north.

At the front of the hall is a Pillared forecourt, again part of the 1550s design concept.

The evacuation of Sir Rowland's Library at Soulton edit

It has been suggested that Hill's statecraft involved the accumulation of state papers and culturally important texts at Soulton, which then passed, via the Alkington Cottons, into the Cotton Library (which includes the Beowulf manuscript and copies of Magna Carta) and this, along with the repeated memorialization of Sir Rowland Hill with Magna Carta, offers a potential explanation for the battle of Wem in the English Civil War during which Soulton was ransacked.[29]

The influence of Hill's publishing is underlined by the way the design on the Geneva Bible's frontispiece is understood to have been the inspiration for Benjamin Franklin's design for the Great Seal of the United States.[30]

Clandestine features edit

Humanist, Classical and Scripture Codes edit

 
Soulton Hall as it now stands, Sir Rowland Hill's pyramidal roof, battlements and cupola have not survived and the theatre court configuration has survived, though muted by closing gates, making new openings and making the north face seem more dominant in 1780s reforms.

Cosmati pavement and Rhombic dodecahedrons edit

The Tudor hall's unusual quoining relates to Anglo-Saxon architecture, while incorporating other features at that time only seen in the architecture of Corpus Christi College Cambridge. This together with its unusual strict geometry and the mathematical relationship between the hall and walled garden, represent a geometric philosophical allegory seen in stately architecture as diverse as the Anglo-Saxon Mercian royal crypt at Repton, and the Coronation Theatre of Henry III at Westminster Abbey with the Cosmati Pavement at its centre.[31]

The geometry is understood, as stated by James D. Wenn include commentary on sacred geometry:

 
The historian and buildings expert James D Wenn has observed the building is constructed in a code around the rhombic dodecahedron

Soulton's sermon in stones concerns the geometry of the rhombic dodecahedron — a solid that has certain ‘perfect’ characteristics, including that it can fill space (as cubes can), and is the 3D projection of a 4D Platonic Solid called the hyperdiamond. The former characteristic lends it an allegorical quality, because the concept of a civilised person fitting into a society, often represented by cubes, is made a little more complex and nuanced. Everybody can fit into a harmony, but it may take some patience — indeed, tolerance — to find the right fit. The connection to the fourth spatial dimension invokes ideas of God's power beyond the constraints of time, as discussed by ancient theologians such as Boethius. Even before Boethius, these ideas were discussed in ancient Greek philosophy. Plato's book Timaeus sought to reflect the harmony of the natural world, and by the invention of the Atlantis story (which later inspired Bacon), attempted to encourage civic harmony, too.[1]

Ellusis edit

 
The design of the whole precinct is intended to evoke the Telesterion (ca. 435 - 421 B.C.), a sacred hall at Eleusis used for the annual initiation ceremonies for the cult of Demeter and Persephone known as the Eleusinian Mysteries.

The whole precinct of the hall and linked courts to the north, east and south is matched to the geometry of the Telesterion at Ellusis, giving a compound of 55 yards square.[23] This shows conscious engagement with those Greek mysteries. At Soulton a nine grid is laid over the precinct to give compartments of 55 foot squares. The current hall itself if 55 foot cubed: a number which recurs at the Washington Monument, amongst other places.

These observations were first made in modern times by James D. Wenn.[32]

Dancing pavement edit

To the south of the current hall is a cobbled yard of Victorian date (1847). It is based on similar patterns seen at the preserved Tudor Hall at Plas Mawr it is likely the design was taken from Tudor features within the hall lost during subsequent renovations. Scholars have interpreted this as a dancing pavement linked to some of the ideas of harmony explored by Ptolemy.[33]

This pavement was installed by the 6x great grandmother of the current generation as cultural compensation for the loss of the Sir Rowland hill plasterwork ceilings which did not survive the mid 19th century.[34][35] Other buildings in the region have retained such ceilings, such as Plas Mawr in Conwy.

Epidaurus Court, a Tudor theatre space edit

A theatre court, modelled on the Ancient Theatre of Epidaurus, was built by Hill in the precinct of the house to the east of the current hall:[36] the hall itself forms the theatre screen.[37][38]

This was completed by 1560 and therefore predates Teatro Olimpico and the Elizabethan Theatres such as The Globe and The Rose.

Parlours in the basement and Rithmomachia Floor edit

 
Soulton Hall contains a board for Rithmomachia, also known as the Philosopher's Game, in the tiles of a basement room

Some of the basement rooms retain their original Tudor treatment, including flooring, indicating that these were 'polite' rooms, rather than service spaces.

One of these rooms (The Rithmomachia Room) contains in the tiles a games board for Rithmomachia, which is an early European bard game also known as The Philosopher's Game, an account of which Sir Rowland Hill printed with the title The most ancient and learned Playe, called the Philosopher's Game invented for the honest recreation of Students and other sober persons, in passing the tedious of tyme to the release of their labours, and the exercise of their Wittes.[39]

Abaton edit

The central room on the southern face of Soulton Hall has been identified as a classically-inspired 'abaton' medical incubation space; that room is inside a conceptual rhombicdodecaedron and also in a room that has a cross lantern effect designed into the configuration of the house.[40]

Priest hide edit

There is a priest hide on the principle floor of the house in the south west corner of the building in a turret containing several chimneys, in the interior of the room (believed to be Sir Rowland Hill's studiolo). It is not known whether this hiding place was ever used but provides evidence of early intent to use the building as a safehouse, from the time of its construction. More associated with the hiding of Catholics during the reign of Elizabeth I of England, the early date of the priest hole's inclusion in the architecture at Soulton combined with Rowland Hill's position suggests they were more likely intended for use to hide prominent protestants such as Matthew Parker from the inquisitions[41] of Mary I. Uniquely among protestant leaders Parker did not flee England yet somehow survived. His whereabouts, and that of his library during this time have always been a matter of speculation. It has thus been inferred that Parker may have been sheltered at Soulton by Rowland Hill, with whom he was later associated, not least by both being Commissioners for Ecclesiastical Causes at the dawn of Elizabeth I's reign.[42]

The history of the priest-hole has been memorialised by the addition of a modern plaque which says:

Behind this tablet lies a space believed to have been intended to be used to hide scholars and priests from the authorities during the turmoil of the sixteenth century.

This memorial honours all who have suffered persecution for their beliefs.[citation needed]

On the beams in this room there are also quotations from Michel de Montaigne.

Parker connection edit

These features of the hall's design may have been influenced by the scholarship of Hill's contemporary, historian and protestant theologian Matthew Parker of Cambridge.[43][31][23]

Well of Catharsis edit

The avenue between the eastern face of the hall and Soulton Bridge as a dressed springhead, which is a reference to the Well of Catharsis.[44]

Representation of Holy Amandal edit

Soulton is thought to have been copied by Francis Bacon when he built Verulam House. It is further thought that the construction of Soulton Hall (with its lost pyramidal roof) is done to represent a Holy Almandal.[45]

Concealed chapel edit

 
The east front of the house evokes Solomon's Temple.

The basement of the house contains a room called the 'Ædicule'; a concealed chapel in the east front (which is the only truly symmetrical face of the 1550s design and is intended to conjure Solomon's Temple).The central position of this room was prioritised so strongly that its doorway interrupts a load-bearing wall supporting the hall above, thus requiring that other walls had to be reinforced. It is the only room in the building to have a central window.[46] The house's alignment is taken from this room which addresses the range of dates possible for the celebration of Easter.[47]

The Sir Rowland Hill furniture edit

Sir Rowland Hills chair of estate, justice table, and bench - a suite of renaissance state furniture - has survived with its provenance in the hall at Soulton; this furniture shows deep familiarity with classical antiquity and shares stylistic details with a mid 16th century staircase.[48][49]

Other features edit

Curtilage buildings edit

The broader precinct incorporates a number of 18th-century farm buildings constituting a 'model farm' from the Regency Era Age of Improvement. Most intact among these is a linear range now known as Soulton Court bearing a 1783 datestone relating to later work, but incorporating an earlier manorial hall or courtroom of unknown date prior to the mid-1600s.

 
The Moot Hall
 
Exterior of Soulton Court
Aspects of the 'Soulton Court' Building, exteranly[clarification needed] dated 1783, but including older buildings

This courtroom is traditionally associated with an aborted witch trial of the 17th century.[50]

 
1668 door case: this restoration intervention on the building is an architectural essay on statecraft and the Restoration.

Restoration door case edit

In 1668 a semi-circular door case bearing the marital coat of arms of Thomas Hill, a descendant of Sir Rowland's and a friend of Samuel Pepys was added above the front door.

Lost buildings edit

A dovecot once existed to the south west of the garden wall which was dismantled by the end of the 1800s.

An octagonal horse engine existed in the 1780s buildings just outside the base court to the north west.

Landscape gardens edit

The landscape across the current farm and beyond to Hawkstone was recruited by Hill to make allegorical references to scripture.[citation needed]

Symbols edit

Coat of arms edit

The arms of Thomas Hill, sometime high sheriff of Shropshire were added above the senior door in 1668.

Flag and badge edit

The house flag is a square teal banner with an eight-pointed star inside a circle, with looping garlands between the points of the star: three of these garlands are shaded and five are not. This symbol is taken from the preserved Dancing Pavement on the site and found in documents in the hall's archive.[citation needed]

Linked buildings edit

 
Bach-y-Graig, Tremeirchion: a building built by a close associate of Hill's which is built only a few years after Soulton, and said to be derivative of it.

In the region edit

The house of Sir Rocard Clough and his Katheryn of Berain ("the mother of Wales"[51] whose son John has a dedication in Shakespeare's poem The Phoenix and the Turtle[52]) at Bachegraig/Bach-y-Graig[53] is understood to be 'the first brick house in Wales', built by Sir Rowland Hill's associate and fellow Mercer has been argued to have been based on Soulton Hall.[54]

 
Eighteenth century view of nearby Hawkstone Hall, a latter building by the Hill family developing the architectural language found at Soulton

Bach-y-Graig is acknowledged to be in an Antwerp style by Flemish craftsmen and were the first brick houses in Wales.[55][56] While Clough's house has been demolished it shows important features in the Soulton design that were altered in later phases.

The architectural and political project that Sir Rowland Hill instigated is understood to have continued to yield fruits in the immediate area, Hawkstone Abbey Farm and Hawkstone Hall are both buildings taking stylistic cues from the building.[citation needed] Attingham Park, also a Hill house, is also thought to be within the wider cultural project.[citation needed]

The house is historically associated with St Mary's Church, Edstaston: the name of the house and family is carved into the church porch in the 1600s signifying their patronage.[citation needed]

 
Wollaton Hall: built a generation later this may be continuing architectural traditions operating at Soulton by 1560

Further afield Wollaton Hall has been identified as a Prodigy House by Robert Smythson which may take cues from Soulton.[57]

The building is stylistically linked with Alkington Hall, a senior house of the Cotton family.

 
The south door of the church at Edstaston, with a curious carving above it

In London edit

The historian James D. Wenn has noted a close connection with Sir Christopher Wren's St Mary Abchurch, which is the same size and shape and echoing a dancing pavement outside.[23]

It has been suggested on this basis and for other reasons that Christopher Wren contributed to changes made to Soulton in the mid 17th century.[58]

In the United States edit

 
View of Rosewell, ca. 1900. This building in America is said to be derived from Soulton Hall.

Some affinity both architectural, and by family connections has been attributed to Soulton with various early colonial American buildings, in particular Rosewell (plantation) in Virginia,[59] while the Shirley Plantation, near Williamsburg Virginia is linked by family ownership of the Hill family.[60]

 
Shirley Plantation near Williamsburg, linked by family and style

History edit

Saxon and earlier edit

Within the manor is evidence of Bronze Age habitation, and some signs of Neolithic activity.[61]

 
1086 entry in Domesday Book
 
A grant of the manor of Soulton in 1299
Early documentary accounts of the Manor of Soulton

The name of the manor is Saxon and means either 'settlement with a plough' or 'settlement with reeds' or possibly 'settlement in/near a gully' .[62]

The manor of Soulton existed at the time of the Domesday Book in 1086 (see: PASE Domesday) and is recorded as "Svltune". The Domesday Book records the manor as having previously been freely held by Brihtric — most likely the same Brihtric who was the brother of Eadric Streona the Ealdorman of Mercia from 1007 to 1017. Both Brihtric and Eadric were slain by King Cnut on Christmas Day, 1017.

Based on its Domesday Book entry there are likely to have been buildings on or near to the site of the extant hall prior to the Norman Conquest, but these have yet to be identified archaeologically.

Post-Norman edit

A Norman (possibly Adulterine) castle was constructed approximately 300 meters to the north-east of the extant hall either during the Anarchy of the early 1100s,[63] or later, certainly by the 1250s.

The location is marked by a mound which can still be seen. This site is located around the point at which the roadway crosses a narrow gap in some wet terrain which would likely have had a strategic reason for establishing a fortification in that location. This building is believed to have burnt down at some point in the late 14th century.

A grant of the manor in 1299 indicates that some of the ancient marker posts marking the boundary with Wales formed part of the boundary of the manor.

The manor supported the clergy of the King's Chapel of St Michael in Shrewsbury Castle.

Post-1556 edit

Civil War edit

 
King King Charles I passed within sight of the house in the earliest days if the Civil War, and made a temporary capital nearby at Shrewsbury.

In September 1642, Charles I passed within sight of Soulton Hall, and subsequently set up a temporary capital at Shrewsbury.[64]

In 1643, the first Parliamentary garrison in Shropshire was declared at nearby Wem.[65] On 17-18 October, the Royalists responded by sending a large force to the district, described as follows:

3 cannon, 2 drakes, one great mortarpiece that carried a 30ln. bullet, had 120 odd wagons and carriages laden with bread, biskett, bare and other provisions and theire armye being formydable as consistynge of neer 5,000.[66]

The Royalist attackers only formed up on one side, approaching Wem only from Soulton Road. The engagement does not seem to have been seriously interested in taking Wem with the commander, Lord Capel, light-heartedly smoking his pipe half a mile from the town on that road. The town was not taken and the manoeuvre lasted less than a day resulting in this couplet.

The women of Wem and a few musketeers. Beat the Lord Capel and all his Cavaliers.[67]

 
Prince Rupert of the Rhine was repeatedly in the area of Soulton in the early phases of the English Civil War.

It has been suggested that Hill's statecraft involved the accumulation of state papers and culturally important texts at Soulton, which then passed via the Alkington Cotton into the Cotton Library (which goes on to hold the Beowulf manuscript and copies of Magna Carta) and this, alongside the repeated traditional memorialization of Sir Rowland Hill with Magna Carta offers a potential explanation for the battle of Wem in the English Civil War during which Soulton was ransacked. [68]

The following February of 1643, Prince Rupert is recorded as being repeatedly in the district.[69][70][65]

Restoration edit

In the late 17th century Soulton had passed to Thomas Hill, who attended Oriel College, Oxford[71] matriculating in 1662, and went on to be made High Sheriff of Shropshire in 1680.[72] He was later made a commissioner in an act of Parliament in 1698.[73] He was buried in Wem Church with his wife Elizabeth, a member of the Corbet family.[74]

Another member of the family, Richard Hill was admitted to Grays Inn in 1657.[75]

Soulton Hall became the venue of an abortive witch trial some time around 1660. The suspected witch under accusation by local townsfolk of Wem was brought before Thomas Hill of Soulton, as justice of the district. The accused was spared any judicial processing as a witch and that allegation was dismissed, in contrast to the harsh persecutions of the time.[50]

Eighteenth century and later edit
 
Franklin's design for the First Great Seal of America, inspired by the Geneva Bible

There are records that Benjamin Franklin was in communication with the family and was aware of the place.[76]

There is an 1801 bridge on which Thomas Telford worked on the B5065, known as Soulton Bridge.[77][78]

There are also the remains of a water mill active from at least the 1300s until the mid-to-late 1800s near Soulton Wood.

The manor is still owned by the wider family of the original family of Sir Rowland Hill via female descent.

Culture edit

 
The arrest of Buckingham, referred to in Shakespeare's Richard III, took place on the edge of the manor.

In 1483, Henry Stafford, 2nd Duke of Buckingham was arrested on the edge of the manor following the failure of Buckingham's rebellion.[79][80][81] This incident is referred to by William Shakespeare in the play Richard III, in ACT IV, scene iv.[82]

Filming edit

There is periodic filming at the manor, including recently of BBC Countryfile .[83]

Contemporary drama and live performance edit

 
"The Sanctuary Theatre" at Soulton hosting its first performance: a new work by the National Youth Theatre of Great Britain

In 2020, during the crisis in live performance and theatre resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic, outdoor performance was reintroduced to Soulton.[84][85][86] The National Youth Theatre (NYT) gave their first live in person performance[87] since the restrictions following the lockdown that was brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic.[88] The play was a new, specially devised work called The Last Harvest[89] In 2021, the NYT returned with a performance of Animal Farm.[90]

In October 2021 Soulton Hall hosted an immersive performance of the Old English epic poem Beowulf, together with a selection of shorter pieces of Old English and Old Welsh poetry, by early medieval living history/reconstructive archaeology group Thegns of Mercia, titled Beowulf at the Barrow. The performance took place around the site, with the historic Moot Hall representing the great hall Heorot, and the Soulton Long Barrow representing the dragon's lair and Beowulf's own burial mound, serving as venue for the final sections of the poem.[91]

Public affairs edit

Michela Gove visited as Secretary of State for DEFRA in 2017.[92]

In 2021, during the North Shropshire by-election, the various candidates and media were headquartered at the manor.[93]

Dance edit

An eighteenth century dance, the Soulton Jigg, is linked to the manor and published in John Walsh's 1740 "The Second Book of the Compleat Country Dancing-Master".[94]

Material from the Soulton collection concerning its dancing pavement was loaned to the inaugural John Weaver Festival of Dance,[95] (marking the 350th anniversary of the birth of the Shropshire-born "Father of English ballet").

Literaturary and other publishing edit

The manor is referenced in the following books:

  • Regenesis: Feeding the World Without Devouring the Planet[96] by George Monbiot
  • Wilderland[97] and Hill and Dale,[98] both by Andrew Fusek Peters
  • Riding Out[99] by Simon Parker
  • How to Love Animals[100] by Henry Mance
  • Stones of the Magi by James D. Wenn (forthcoming)[101]
  • First Christmas by Katherine E. Smith[102][103]

Poetry edit

Merlin Fuhcher is the poet in residence.[104]

Archaeology edit

The manor includes various protected archaeology.

 
Archaeological aspects of the manor's history

An official excavation with DigVentures took place in June 2019.[18][105] The excavation of a mound (a scheduled ancient monument) revealed the existence of a structure which might be a castle from the 13th to 15th centuries, according to an archaeologist.[106] As the dig continued, medieval artifacts were also unearthed, including an ampulla, a necklace, cups, bowls, and jug handles. These have been dated to circa 1250.[107]

Heritage status edit

 
Sir Rowland Hill bust in the school at Market Drayton: the variation in the spelling of his name is notable, as is the style of the monument which would become popular from the early to mid-17th century,[108][109] and shows some resonance with the funerary monument of Shakespeare.

Soulton Hall is a listed building, along with its walled gardens, pillared forecourt and carved stone work. Soulton Bridge, crossing Soulton Brook is a Grade I listed structure, built in 1801 by Thomas Telford.

An ongoing project to improve the presentation of the hall and its history was begun in 2022 by the Ashton family with advice and guidance from architectural history consultant James Wenn of Byrga Geniht, involving re-furnishing rooms to a state more representative and sensitive to their Tudor heritage.

 
In the 1790s a column with a staue of 'Old Sir Rowland' was erected at Hawkstone, which looks towards Soulton. He is shown holding a copy of Magna Carta as he was in his 16th-century statue monument in London.

As part of this inscriptions have been added to the entry-way which encourage visitors toward consideration of the building's themes.

A plaque at the entrance to the hall reads:

Now, my co-mates and brothers in exile,
Hath not old custom made this life more sweet
Than that of painted pomp? Are not these woods
More free from peril than the envious court?'
Here feel we not the penalty of Adam

...
And this our life, exempt from public haunt,
Finds tongues in trees, books in the running brooks,
Sermons in stones, and good in everything.

- William Shakespeare, 'As You Like It', Act II, Scene 1. The Forest of Arden

It is believed that affairs of state that took place at Soulton in the time of Sir Rowland Hill, in the sixteenth century, inspired Shakespeare to write this play and shaped several others.

Gold lettering above the door reads:

UT ROSA FLOS FLORUM, SIC EST ISTA DOMUS DOMORUM [As the rose if the flower of flowers, so this is the house of houses]

Similar inscriptions can be found in the Chapter House of York Minster. and Westminster Abbey.

The connections of the building to the Classical philosophy and geometry of Ancient Greece are represented with an insctription from Isocrates echoing a 1600s carving on what is now Shrewsbury Library.

ἐὰν ᾖς φιλομαθής, ἔσει πολυμαθής,
[If you loving learning you will become wise]

 
James D. Wenn has identified relationships between the shrine of St Erkenwald and the east face of the building; Sir Rowland Hill spoke with anguish about iconoclasm during the Reformation at that monument.

There is a banner for St Erkenwald in the studiolo.

Contemporary monuments edit

 
The Modern Barrow at Soulton

Long Barrow edit

A modern long barrow, Soulton Long Barrow, has been constructed on farmland north of Soulton Hall. Begun in 2017, the site became operational in 2019.[110] The new monument was covered on an episode of BBC Countryfile, being visited by Matt Baker and Ellie Harrison in April 2019.[111]

Standing stones edit

Three megalithic limestone standing stones are located on the access route to the barrow. These were added to the approach route to the barrow in autumn 2017.[112] The stone for these monoliths, as with the barrow itself came from Churchfield Quarry, Oundle, near Peterborough. There is no deliberate alignment beyond way-marking for these standing stones. In 2020, a standing stone, with an alignment to the setting sun on the winter solstice, was added to the ritual landscape to acknowledge the suffering of the families impacted by the Coronavirus pandemic.[113][114]

Farm edit

 
View of Soulton: Wood - prior to "Old Sir Rowland" Hill acquiring it, it was owned by the family of the writer of the source book for As You Like It.

There is a farm at the manor, including Soulton Wood.

The farm practices no-till farming. This was covered in an episode of BBC Countryfile in April 2019 with Matt Baker.[111]

Research cooperation between Harper Adams University and Oxford University looking at the results of cultivation on Soil ecology, which used DNA sequencing of the soil biome has been hosted on the farm.[115]

The woodland is largely oak with some cherry and ash. In total the woodland covers about 50 acres and it is designated ancient woodland. Material from the wood was supplied for repair of the House of Commons after bomb damage in the Second World War.[116]

Gallery edit

Spellings edit

Before the modern spelling of 'Soulton', a wide variation in spelling can be observed:[1]

  • Suletune (Domesday Book, 1086)
  • Suleton' (Curia Regis Rolls 1200; Rotuli Hundredorum, 1255)
  • Soleton (Assize Rolls, 1271–2; Feudal Aids 1284-5A)
  • Sulton' (Assize Rolls 1271–2, 91–2)
  • Sulton (Feudal Aids 1431, 1470, 84; Calendar of Close Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office, 1703; Shropshire Parish Registers, 1809)
  • Solton' (1334, The Shropshire Lay Subsidy Roll of 1 Edward III)
  • Sowton (Saxton's Map of Shropshire, 1695 The County Maps from William Camden's Britannia 1695 by Robert Morden)
  • Soughton; 1672, The Shropshire Hearth-Tax Roll of 1672)
  • Soulton (1677, Shropshire Parish Register)
  • Saulton (artifacts at the building, 1800s)

See also edit

 
Hawkstone Abbey Farm, another Hill estates building

References and further reading edit

  • An excursion from Sidmouth to Chester in the summer of 1803 (1803) by Edmund Butcher. Whittingham.
  • Antiquities of Shropshire, Vol. 10 (1860) by Robert William Eyton. J.R. Smith,.
  • The Castles & Old Mansions of Shropshire (1868) by Frances Stackhouse Acton. Leake and Evans.
  • Memorials of Old Shropshire (1906) by Thomas Auden. Bemrose & Sons.
  • Transactions of the Shropshire Archaeological and Natural History Society, Volume 40 (1919). Shropshire Archaeological and Natural History Society.
  • Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society Held at Philadelphia (1939). American Philosophical Society. 1939
  • Burke's Guide to Country Houses: Reid, P. Herefordshire, Shropshire, Warwickshire, Worcestershire (1978) by Mark Bence-Jones, and Peter Reid. Burke's Peerage.
  • The Tudor and Stuart Legacy, 1530-1730 (1989) by Lawrence Garner. Swan Hill.
  • The World of the Country House in Seventeenth-century England (1999) by John Trevor Cliffe. Yale University Press.
  • Hills of Hawkstone (2005) by Joanna Hill. Phillimore & Co Ltd.
  • Shropshire (Pevsner Architectural Guides: Buildings of England) (2006) by John Newman. Yale University Press.
  • Design and Plan in the Country House: From Castle Donjons to Palladian Boxes (2008) by Andor Gomme, Austin Harvey Gomme, and Alison Maguire. Yale University Press.

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External links edit

soulton, hall, some, this, article, listed, sources, reliable, please, help, improve, this, article, looking, better, more, reliable, sources, unreliable, citations, challenged, removed, march, 2024, learn, when, remove, this, message, tudor, country, house, n. Some of this article s listed sources may not be reliable Please help improve this article by looking for better more reliable sources Unreliable citations may be challenged and removed March 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message Soulton Hall is a Tudor country house near Wem England It was a 16th century architectural project of Sir Rowland Hill publisher of the Geneva Bible 2 Hill was a statesman polymath and philanthropist later styled the First Protestant Lord Mayor of London because of his senior role in the Tudor statecraft that was needed to bring stability to England in the fall out of the Reformation The building of the current Soulton Hall undertaken during the tumult of the Reformation is therefore associated with the political and social work required to incubate the subsequent English Renaissance 3 4 Soulton HallLocation within ShropshireFormer namesSaulton Suletune Suleton Soleton Sulton Sowton Soughton 1 General informationArchitectural styleTudor architecture Prodigy house Renaissance architectureLocationnear Wem Shrewsbury ShropshireCountryEnglandCoordinates52 52 04 N 2 40 44 W 52 8678 N 2 679 W 52 8678 2 679Elevation125 m 410 ft Construction startedprior to 1017 for the manor on the current site by the late 1300s with the current hall corps de logis of wider lost muted palace complex begun c 1556Completedby 1560Technical detailsMaterialSingle phase construction using Grinshill sandstone and Tudor brick incorporating timber framing which reused older timbers in some casesDesign and constructionArchitect s Matthew ParkerWebsitewww wbr soultonhall wbr co wbr uk Soulton Hall is understood to be constructed in an elaborate set of humanist codes drawing together concepts from classical antiquity geometry philosophy and scripture It is further understood that the building influenced the architecture of many later buildings of similar style 5 With a hidden chapel in its basement a priesthole and bookcases hidden within its thick walls to hide heretical documents Soulton Hall is likely to have served as a base for the conspiracy which led to the publication of the Geneva Bible which bears the name of Rowland Hill on its frontispiece as publisher 6 The grounds of the hall contain archaeology of a lost theatre Emerging scholarship 7 8 9 links the manor to Shakespeare 10 11 and in particular the play As You Like It 12 13 14 which concerns the estate of a character called Old Sir Rowland 6 15 Sir Rowland Hill was a cousin of Shakespeare s mother Mary Arden by reason of the marriage of his heiresses Elizabeth Corbett to Robert Arden in the 1580s 16 17 Mentioned in the Norman Domesday Book Soulton has housed a manor since late Anglo Saxon times and a lost castle rediscovered in 2021 18 undergoing a multi season archaeological investigation by DigVentures The modern manor incorporates a working farm pioneering various sustainable agriculture approaches and also houses a series of contemporary monuments including standing stones and long barrow burial site Contents 1 Sir Rowland Hill s renaissance hall 1 1 House of state literary connections and inspiration 1 2 The evacuation of Sir Rowland s Library at Soulton 2 Clandestine features 2 1 Humanist Classical and Scripture Codes 2 1 1 Cosmati pavement and Rhombic dodecahedrons 2 2 Ellusis 2 3 Dancing pavement 2 4 Epidaurus Court a Tudor theatre space 2 5 Parlours in the basement and Rithmomachia Floor 2 6 Abaton 2 7 Priest hide 2 7 1 Parker connection 2 8 Well of Catharsis 2 9 Representation of Holy Amandal 2 10 Concealed chapel 3 The Sir Rowland Hill furniture 4 Other features 4 1 Curtilage buildings 4 2 Restoration door case 4 3 Lost buildings 4 4 Landscape gardens 5 Symbols 5 1 Coat of arms 5 2 Flag and badge 6 Linked buildings 6 1 In the region 6 1 1 In London 6 2 In the United States 7 History 7 1 Saxon and earlier 7 2 Post Norman 7 3 Post 1556 7 3 1 Civil War 7 3 2 Restoration 7 3 2 1 Eighteenth century and later 8 Culture 8 1 Filming 8 2 Contemporary drama and live performance 8 3 Public affairs 8 4 Dance 8 5 Literaturary and other publishing 8 6 Poetry 9 Archaeology 10 Heritage status 11 Contemporary monuments 11 1 Long Barrow 11 2 Standing stones 12 Farm 13 Gallery 14 Spellings 15 See also 16 References and further reading 17 References 18 External linksSir Rowland Hill s renaissance hall editA recent scholarly appraisal of the building said There must have been an important master mason behind the house s design if only we knew more about the original build 19 Since that was written more understanding has been shared and is emerging nbsp View of the Present Manor House of 1556 with door case of 1668 at Soulton The present hall building was constructed between 1556 and 1560 by Sir Rowland Hill but is only the corps de logis private block of a much bigger palace complex subsequently muted and lost in intervening stages of development It is constructed of brick produced at the site with Grinshill stone dressings 20 nbsp Sir Rowland Hill the first Protestant Lord Mayor of London privy councillor statesman scholar merchant patron of art and philanthropist active through the reigns of Henry VIII Edward VI Mary I and Elizabeth I He built Soulton Hall and published the Geneva Bible Hill was the first Protestant Lord Mayor of London in 1549 and as Sheriff of London Hill was the coordinator of the Geneva Bible project and an enthusiastic patron of the arts in particular drama He has been linked with the character of Old Sir Rowland in Shakespeare s As You Like It 21 22 23 He was also involved in the case which established Parliamentary Privilege 24 House of state literary connections and inspiration edit Soulton was acquired by Hill and his protege Thomas Leigh in 1556 from Thomas Lodge 25 Lodge s son also called Thomas Lodge would have been familiar with the woods at Soulton 26 Lodge Jr was the writer and dramatist who wrote prose tale of Rosalynde Euphues Golden Legacie which printed in 1590 would go on to be the acknowledged source from which William Shakespeare took inspiration when writing his pastoral comedy As You Like It Hill was a close associate of Thomas Wriothesley 1st Earl of Southampton 27 whose grandson Henry Wriothesley 3rd Earl of Southampton was the dedicatee of Shakespeare s sonnets to the point of attending the private burial with the family on his death The third Earl s wife Elizabeth Vernon is associated with Hill via her grandfather who shared his childhood with Rowland Hill with them both being baptised at Hodnet within a couple of years of each other and both families having stationed links to the area Another Vernon Margaret Vernon a daughter of George Vernon was the wife of Sir Thomas Stanley whose family reputedly patronised Shakespeare and is and is also associated with the writer to whom their epitaphs have been attributed to the writer in St Bartholomew s Church in Tong Shropshire 28 Within the building are traces of older Tudor or medieval building phases on the site with timber materials re used from predecessors of the manor s various halls Examples of simple pargeting can be seen within the building To the east of the hall is what is now a walled garden accessed by steps from the terrace on the north or by a Tudor gate to the north At the front of the hall is a Pillared forecourt again part of the 1550s design concept The evacuation of Sir Rowland s Library at Soulton edit It has been suggested that Hill s statecraft involved the accumulation of state papers and culturally important texts at Soulton which then passed via the Alkington Cottons into the Cotton Library which includes the Beowulf manuscript and copies of Magna Carta and this along with the repeated memorialization of Sir Rowland Hill with Magna Carta offers a potential explanation for the battle of Wem in the English Civil War during which Soulton was ransacked 29 The influence of Hill s publishing is underlined by the way the design on the Geneva Bible s frontispiece is understood to have been the inspiration for Benjamin Franklin s design for the Great Seal of the United States 30 Clandestine features editHumanist Classical and Scripture Codes edit nbsp Soulton Hall as it now stands Sir Rowland Hill s pyramidal roof battlements and cupola have not survived and the theatre court configuration has survived though muted by closing gates making new openings and making the north face seem more dominant in 1780s reforms Cosmati pavement and Rhombic dodecahedrons edit The Tudor hall s unusual quoining relates to Anglo Saxon architecture while incorporating other features at that time only seen in the architecture of Corpus Christi College Cambridge This together with its unusual strict geometry and the mathematical relationship between the hall and walled garden represent a geometric philosophical allegory seen in stately architecture as diverse as the Anglo Saxon Mercian royal crypt at Repton and the Coronation Theatre of Henry III at Westminster Abbey with the Cosmati Pavement at its centre 31 The geometry is understood as stated by James D Wenn include commentary on sacred geometry nbsp The historian and buildings expert James D Wenn has observed the building is constructed in a code around the rhombic dodecahedronSoulton s sermon in stones concerns the geometry of the rhombic dodecahedron a solid that has certain perfect characteristics including that it can fill space as cubes can and is the 3D projection of a 4D Platonic Solid called the hyperdiamond The former characteristic lends it an allegorical quality because the concept of a civilised person fitting into a society often represented by cubes is made a little more complex and nuanced Everybody can fit into a harmony but it may take some patience indeed tolerance to find the right fit The connection to the fourth spatial dimension invokes ideas of God s power beyond the constraints of time as discussed by ancient theologians such as Boethius Even before Boethius these ideas were discussed in ancient Greek philosophy Plato s book Timaeus sought to reflect the harmony of the natural world and by the invention of the Atlantis story which later inspired Bacon attempted to encourage civic harmony too 1 Ellusis edit nbsp The design of the whole precinct is intended to evoke the Telesterion ca 435 421 B C a sacred hall at Eleusis used for the annual initiation ceremonies for the cult of Demeter and Persephone known as the Eleusinian Mysteries The whole precinct of the hall and linked courts to the north east and south is matched to the geometry of the Telesterion at Ellusis giving a compound of 55 yards square 23 This shows conscious engagement with those Greek mysteries At Soulton a nine grid is laid over the precinct to give compartments of 55 foot squares The current hall itself if 55 foot cubed a number which recurs at the Washington Monument amongst other places These observations were first made in modern times by James D Wenn 32 Dancing pavement edit To the south of the current hall is a cobbled yard of Victorian date 1847 It is based on similar patterns seen at the preserved Tudor Hall at Plas Mawr it is likely the design was taken from Tudor features within the hall lost during subsequent renovations Scholars have interpreted this as a dancing pavement linked to some of the ideas of harmony explored by Ptolemy 33 This pavement was installed by the 6x great grandmother of the current generation as cultural compensation for the loss of the Sir Rowland hill plasterwork ceilings which did not survive the mid 19th century 34 35 Other buildings in the region have retained such ceilings such as Plas Mawr in Conwy Epidaurus Court a Tudor theatre space edit A theatre court modelled on the Ancient Theatre of Epidaurus was built by Hill in the precinct of the house to the east of the current hall 36 the hall itself forms the theatre screen 37 38 This was completed by 1560 and therefore predates Teatro Olimpico and the Elizabethan Theatres such as The Globe and The Rose Parlours in the basement and Rithmomachia Floor edit nbsp Soulton Hall contains a board for Rithmomachia also known as the Philosopher s Game in the tiles of a basement room Some of the basement rooms retain their original Tudor treatment including flooring indicating that these were polite rooms rather than service spaces One of these rooms The Rithmomachia Room contains in the tiles a games board for Rithmomachia which is an early European bard game also known as The Philosopher s Game an account of which Sir Rowland Hill printed with the title The most ancient and learned Playe called the Philosopher s Game invented for the honest recreation of Students and other sober persons in passing the tedious of tyme to the release of their labours and the exercise of their Wittes 39 Abaton edit The central room on the southern face of Soulton Hall has been identified as a classically inspired abaton medical incubation space that room is inside a conceptual rhombicdodecaedron and also in a room that has a cross lantern effect designed into the configuration of the house 40 Priest hide edit There is a priest hide on the principle floor of the house in the south west corner of the building in a turret containing several chimneys in the interior of the room believed to be Sir Rowland Hill s studiolo It is not known whether this hiding place was ever used but provides evidence of early intent to use the building as a safehouse from the time of its construction More associated with the hiding of Catholics during the reign of Elizabeth I of England the early date of the priest hole s inclusion in the architecture at Soulton combined with Rowland Hill s position suggests they were more likely intended for use to hide prominent protestants such as Matthew Parker from the inquisitions 41 of Mary I Uniquely among protestant leaders Parker did not flee England yet somehow survived His whereabouts and that of his library during this time have always been a matter of speculation It has thus been inferred that Parker may have been sheltered at Soulton by Rowland Hill with whom he was later associated not least by both being Commissioners for Ecclesiastical Causes at the dawn of Elizabeth I s reign 42 The history of the priest hole has been memorialised by the addition of a modern plaque which says Behind this tablet lies a space believed to have been intended to be used to hide scholars and priests from the authorities during the turmoil of the sixteenth century This memorial honours all who have suffered persecution for their beliefs citation needed On the beams in this room there are also quotations from Michel de Montaigne Parker connection edit These features of the hall s design may have been influenced by the scholarship of Hill s contemporary historian and protestant theologian Matthew Parker of Cambridge 43 31 23 Well of Catharsis edit The avenue between the eastern face of the hall and Soulton Bridge as a dressed springhead which is a reference to the Well of Catharsis 44 Representation of Holy Amandal edit Soulton is thought to have been copied by Francis Bacon when he built Verulam House It is further thought that the construction of Soulton Hall with its lost pyramidal roof is done to represent a Holy Almandal 45 Concealed chapel edit nbsp The east front of the house evokes Solomon s Temple The basement of the house contains a room called the AEdicule a concealed chapel in the east front which is the only truly symmetrical face of the 1550s design and is intended to conjure Solomon s Temple The central position of this room was prioritised so strongly that its doorway interrupts a load bearing wall supporting the hall above thus requiring that other walls had to be reinforced It is the only room in the building to have a central window 46 The house s alignment is taken from this room which addresses the range of dates possible for the celebration of Easter 47 The Sir Rowland Hill furniture editSir Rowland Hills chair of estate justice table and bench a suite of renaissance state furniture has survived with its provenance in the hall at Soulton this furniture shows deep familiarity with classical antiquity and shares stylistic details with a mid 16th century staircase 48 49 Other features editCurtilage buildings edit The broader precinct incorporates a number of 18th century farm buildings constituting a model farm from the Regency Era Age of Improvement Most intact among these is a linear range now known as Soulton Court bearing a 1783 datestone relating to later work but incorporating an earlier manorial hall or courtroom of unknown date prior to the mid 1600s nbsp The Moot Hall nbsp Exterior of Soulton CourtAspects of the Soulton Court Building exteranly clarification needed dated 1783 but including older buildings This courtroom is traditionally associated with an aborted witch trial of the 17th century 50 nbsp 1668 door case this restoration intervention on the building is an architectural essay on statecraft and the Restoration Restoration door case edit In 1668 a semi circular door case bearing the marital coat of arms of Thomas Hill a descendant of Sir Rowland s and a friend of Samuel Pepys was added above the front door Lost buildings edit A dovecot once existed to the south west of the garden wall which was dismantled by the end of the 1800s An octagonal horse engine existed in the 1780s buildings just outside the base court to the north west Landscape gardens edit The landscape across the current farm and beyond to Hawkstone was recruited by Hill to make allegorical references to scripture citation needed Symbols editCoat of arms edit The arms of Thomas Hill sometime high sheriff of Shropshire were added above the senior door in 1668 Flag and badge edit The house flag is a square teal banner with an eight pointed star inside a circle with looping garlands between the points of the star three of these garlands are shaded and five are not This symbol is taken from the preserved Dancing Pavement on the site and found in documents in the hall s archive citation needed Linked buildings edit nbsp Bach y Graig Tremeirchion a building built by a close associate of Hill s which is built only a few years after Soulton and said to be derivative of it In the region editThe house of Sir Rocard Clough and his Katheryn of Berain the mother of Wales 51 whose son John has a dedication in Shakespeare s poem The Phoenix and the Turtle 52 at Bachegraig Bach y Graig 53 is understood to be the first brick house in Wales built by Sir Rowland Hill s associate and fellow Mercer has been argued to have been based on Soulton Hall 54 nbsp Eighteenth century view of nearby Hawkstone Hall a latter building by the Hill family developing the architectural language found at SoultonBach y Graig is acknowledged to be in an Antwerp style by Flemish craftsmen and were the first brick houses in Wales 55 56 While Clough s house has been demolished it shows important features in the Soulton design that were altered in later phases The architectural and political project that Sir Rowland Hill instigated is understood to have continued to yield fruits in the immediate area Hawkstone Abbey Farm and Hawkstone Hall are both buildings taking stylistic cues from the building citation needed Attingham Park also a Hill house is also thought to be within the wider cultural project citation needed The house is historically associated with St Mary s Church Edstaston the name of the house and family is carved into the church porch in the 1600s signifying their patronage citation needed nbsp Wollaton Hall built a generation later this may be continuing architectural traditions operating at Soulton by 1560 Further afield Wollaton Hall has been identified as a Prodigy House by Robert Smythson which may take cues from Soulton 57 The building is stylistically linked with Alkington Hall a senior house of the Cotton family nbsp The south door of the church at Edstaston with a curious carving above it In London edit The historian James D Wenn has noted a close connection with Sir Christopher Wren s St Mary Abchurch which is the same size and shape and echoing a dancing pavement outside 23 It has been suggested on this basis and for other reasons that Christopher Wren contributed to changes made to Soulton in the mid 17th century 58 In the United States edit nbsp View of Rosewell ca 1900 This building in America is said to be derived from Soulton Hall Some affinity both architectural and by family connections has been attributed to Soulton with various early colonial American buildings in particular Rosewell plantation in Virginia 59 while the Shirley Plantation near Williamsburg Virginia is linked by family ownership of the Hill family 60 nbsp Shirley Plantation near Williamsburg linked by family and styleHistory editSaxon and earlier edit Within the manor is evidence of Bronze Age habitation and some signs of Neolithic activity 61 nbsp 1086 entry in Domesday Book nbsp A grant of the manor of Soulton in 1299Early documentary accounts of the Manor of Soulton The name of the manor is Saxon and means either settlement with a plough or settlement with reeds or possibly settlement in near a gully 62 The manor of Soulton existed at the time of the Domesday Book in 1086 see PASE Domesday and is recorded as Svltune The Domesday Book records the manor as having previously been freely held by Brihtric most likely the same Brihtric who was the brother of Eadric Streona the Ealdorman of Mercia from 1007 to 1017 Both Brihtric and Eadric were slain by King Cnut on Christmas Day 1017 Based on its Domesday Book entry there are likely to have been buildings on or near to the site of the extant hall prior to the Norman Conquest but these have yet to be identified archaeologically Post Norman edit A Norman possibly Adulterine castle was constructed approximately 300 meters to the north east of the extant hall either during the Anarchy of the early 1100s 63 or later certainly by the 1250s The location is marked by a mound which can still be seen This site is located around the point at which the roadway crosses a narrow gap in some wet terrain which would likely have had a strategic reason for establishing a fortification in that location This building is believed to have burnt down at some point in the late 14th century A grant of the manor in 1299 indicates that some of the ancient marker posts marking the boundary with Wales formed part of the boundary of the manor The manor supported the clergy of the King s Chapel of St Michael in Shrewsbury Castle Post 1556 edit Civil War edit nbsp King King Charles I passed within sight of the house in the earliest days if the Civil War and made a temporary capital nearby at Shrewsbury In September 1642 Charles I passed within sight of Soulton Hall and subsequently set up a temporary capital at Shrewsbury 64 In 1643 the first Parliamentary garrison in Shropshire was declared at nearby Wem 65 On 17 18 October the Royalists responded by sending a large force to the district described as follows 3 cannon 2 drakes one great mortarpiece that carried a 30ln bullet had 120 odd wagons and carriages laden with bread biskett bare and other provisions and theire armye being formydable as consistynge of neer 5 000 66 The Royalist attackers only formed up on one side approaching Wem only from Soulton Road The engagement does not seem to have been seriously interested in taking Wem with the commander Lord Capel light heartedly smoking his pipe half a mile from the town on that road The town was not taken and the manoeuvre lasted less than a day resulting in this couplet The women of Wem and a few musketeers Beat the Lord Capel and all his Cavaliers 67 nbsp Prince Rupert of the Rhine was repeatedly in the area of Soulton in the early phases of the English Civil War It has been suggested that Hill s statecraft involved the accumulation of state papers and culturally important texts at Soulton which then passed via the Alkington Cotton into the Cotton Library which goes on to hold the Beowulf manuscript and copies of Magna Carta and this alongside the repeated traditional memorialization of Sir Rowland Hill with Magna Carta offers a potential explanation for the battle of Wem in the English Civil War during which Soulton was ransacked 68 The following February of 1643 Prince Rupert is recorded as being repeatedly in the district 69 70 65 Restoration edit In the late 17th century Soulton had passed to Thomas Hill who attended Oriel College Oxford 71 matriculating in 1662 and went on to be made High Sheriff of Shropshire in 1680 72 He was later made a commissioner in an act of Parliament in 1698 73 He was buried in Wem Church with his wife Elizabeth a member of the Corbet family 74 Another member of the family Richard Hill was admitted to Grays Inn in 1657 75 Soulton Hall became the venue of an abortive witch trial some time around 1660 The suspected witch under accusation by local townsfolk of Wem was brought before Thomas Hill of Soulton as justice of the district The accused was spared any judicial processing as a witch and that allegation was dismissed in contrast to the harsh persecutions of the time 50 Eighteenth century and later edit nbsp Franklin s design for the First Great Seal of America inspired by the Geneva Bible There are records that Benjamin Franklin was in communication with the family and was aware of the place 76 There is an 1801 bridge on which Thomas Telford worked on the B5065 known as Soulton Bridge 77 78 There are also the remains of a water mill active from at least the 1300s until the mid to late 1800s near Soulton Wood The manor is still owned by the wider family of the original family of Sir Rowland Hill via female descent Culture edit nbsp The arrest of Buckingham referred to in Shakespeare s Richard III took place on the edge of the manor In 1483 Henry Stafford 2nd Duke of Buckingham was arrested on the edge of the manor following the failure of Buckingham s rebellion 79 80 81 This incident is referred to by William Shakespeare in the play Richard III in ACT IV scene iv 82 Filming edit There is periodic filming at the manor including recently of BBC Countryfile 83 Contemporary drama and live performance edit nbsp The Sanctuary Theatre at Soulton hosting its first performance a new work by the National Youth Theatre of Great Britain In 2020 during the crisis in live performance and theatre resulting from the COVID 19 pandemic outdoor performance was reintroduced to Soulton 84 85 86 The National Youth Theatre NYT gave their first live in person performance 87 since the restrictions following the lockdown that was brought about by the COVID 19 pandemic 88 The play was a new specially devised work called The Last Harvest 89 In 2021 the NYT returned with a performance of Animal Farm 90 In October 2021 Soulton Hall hosted an immersive performance of the Old English epic poem Beowulf together with a selection of shorter pieces of Old English and Old Welsh poetry by early medieval living history reconstructive archaeology group Thegns of Mercia titled Beowulf at the Barrow The performance took place around the site with the historic Moot Hall representing the great hall Heorot and the Soulton Long Barrow representing the dragon s lair and Beowulf s own burial mound serving as venue for the final sections of the poem 91 Public affairs edit Michela Gove visited as Secretary of State for DEFRA in 2017 92 In 2021 during the North Shropshire by election the various candidates and media were headquartered at the manor 93 Dance edit An eighteenth century dance the Soulton Jigg is linked to the manor and published in John Walsh s 1740 The Second Book of the Compleat Country Dancing Master 94 Material from the Soulton collection concerning its dancing pavement was loaned to the inaugural John Weaver Festival of Dance 95 marking the 350th anniversary of the birth of the Shropshire born Father of English ballet Literaturary and other publishing edit The manor is referenced in the following books Regenesis Feeding the World Without Devouring the Planet 96 by George Monbiot Wilderland 97 and Hill and Dale 98 both by Andrew Fusek Peters Riding Out 99 by Simon Parker How to Love Animals 100 by Henry Mance Stones of the Magi by James D Wenn forthcoming 101 First Christmas by Katherine E Smith 102 103 Poetry edit Merlin Fuhcher is the poet in residence 104 Archaeology editThe manor includes various protected archaeology nbsp Archaeological aspects of the manor s history An official excavation with DigVentures took place in June 2019 18 105 The excavation of a mound a scheduled ancient monument revealed the existence of a structure which might be a castle from the 13th to 15th centuries according to an archaeologist 106 As the dig continued medieval artifacts were also unearthed including an ampulla a necklace cups bowls and jug handles These have been dated to circa 1250 107 Heritage status edit nbsp Sir Rowland Hill bust in the school at Market Drayton the variation in the spelling of his name is notable as is the style of the monument which would become popular from the early to mid 17th century 108 109 and shows some resonance with the funerary monument of Shakespeare Soulton Hall is a listed building along with its walled gardens pillared forecourt and carved stone work Soulton Bridge crossing Soulton Brook is a Grade I listed structure built in 1801 by Thomas Telford An ongoing project to improve the presentation of the hall and its history was begun in 2022 by the Ashton family with advice and guidance from architectural history consultant James Wenn of Byrga Geniht involving re furnishing rooms to a state more representative and sensitive to their Tudor heritage nbsp In the 1790s a column with a staue of Old Sir Rowland was erected at Hawkstone which looks towards Soulton He is shown holding a copy of Magna Carta as he was in his 16th century statue monument in London As part of this inscriptions have been added to the entry way which encourage visitors toward consideration of the building s themes A plaque at the entrance to the hall reads Now my co mates and brothers in exile Hath not old custom made this life more sweetThan that of painted pomp Are not these woodsMore free from peril than the envious court Here feel we not the penalty of Adam And this our life exempt from public haunt Finds tongues in trees books in the running brooks Sermons in stones and good in everything William Shakespeare As You Like It Act II Scene 1 The Forest of ArdenIt is believed that affairs of state that took place at Soulton in the time of Sir Rowland Hill in the sixteenth century inspired Shakespeare to write this play and shaped several others Gold lettering above the door reads UT ROSA FLOS FLORUM SIC EST ISTA DOMUS DOMORUM As the rose if the flower of flowers so this is the house of houses Similar inscriptions can be found in the Chapter House of York Minster and Westminster Abbey The connections of the building to the Classical philosophy and geometry of Ancient Greece are represented with an insctription from Isocrates echoing a 1600s carving on what is now Shrewsbury Library ἐὰn ᾖs filoma8hs ἔsei polyma8hs If you loving learning you will become wise nbsp James D Wenn has identified relationships between the shrine of St Erkenwald and the east face of the building Sir Rowland Hill spoke with anguish about iconoclasm during the Reformation at that monument There is a banner for St Erkenwald in the studiolo Contemporary monuments edit nbsp The Modern Barrow at Soulton Long Barrow edit Main article Soulton Long Barrow A modern long barrow Soulton Long Barrow has been constructed on farmland north of Soulton Hall Begun in 2017 the site became operational in 2019 110 The new monument was covered on an episode of BBC Countryfile being visited by Matt Baker and Ellie Harrison in April 2019 111 Standing stones edit Three megalithic limestone standing stones are located on the access route to the barrow These were added to the approach route to the barrow in autumn 2017 112 The stone for these monoliths as with the barrow itself came from Churchfield Quarry Oundle near Peterborough There is no deliberate alignment beyond way marking for these standing stones In 2020 a standing stone with an alignment to the setting sun on the winter solstice was added to the ritual landscape to acknowledge the suffering of the families impacted by the Coronavirus pandemic 113 114 Farm edit nbsp View of Soulton Wood prior to Old Sir Rowland Hill acquiring it it was owned by the family of the writer of the source book for As You Like It There is a farm at the manor including Soulton Wood The farm practices no till farming This was covered in an episode of BBC Countryfile in April 2019 with Matt Baker 111 Research cooperation between Harper Adams University and Oxford University looking at the results of cultivation on Soil ecology which used DNA sequencing of the soil biome has been hosted on the farm 115 The woodland is largely oak with some cherry and ash In total the woodland covers about 50 acres and it is designated ancient woodland Material from the wood was supplied for repair of the House of Commons after bomb damage in the Second World War 116 Gallery edit nbsp 1668 marital coat of arms above front door nbsp Blue Room in Soulton HallSpellings editBefore the modern spelling of Soulton a wide variation in spelling can be observed 1 Suletune Domesday Book 1086 Suleton Curia Regis Rolls 1200 Rotuli Hundredorum 1255 Soleton Assize Rolls 1271 2 Feudal Aids 1284 5A Sulton Assize Rolls 1271 2 91 2 Sulton Feudal Aids 1431 1470 84 Calendar of Close Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office 1703 Shropshire Parish Registers 1809 Solton 1334 The Shropshire Lay Subsidy Roll of 1 Edward III Sowton Saxton s Map of Shropshire 1695 The County Maps from William Camden s Britannia 1695 by Robert Morden Soughton 1672 The Shropshire Hearth Tax Roll of 1672 Soulton 1677 Shropshire Parish Register Saulton artifacts at the building 1800s See also edit nbsp Hawkstone Abbey Farm another Hill estates building Listed buildings in Wem Rural Hawkstone Park Hawkstone Hall Weston under Redcastle Old Market Hall Shrewsbury Sudeley Castle National Youth Theatre Worshipful Company of Mercers Mathew Parker RosewellReferences and further reading editAn excursion from Sidmouth to Chester in the summer of 1803 1803 by Edmund Butcher Whittingham Antiquities of Shropshire Vol 10 1860 by Robert William Eyton J R Smith The Castles amp Old Mansions of Shropshire 1868 by Frances Stackhouse Acton Leake and Evans Memorials of Old Shropshire 1906 by Thomas Auden Bemrose amp Sons Transactions of the Shropshire Archaeological and Natural History Society Volume 40 1919 Shropshire Archaeological and Natural History Society Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society Held at Philadelphia 1939 American Philosophical Society 1939 Burke s Guide to Country Houses Reid P Herefordshire Shropshire Warwickshire Worcestershire 1978 by Mark Bence Jones and Peter Reid Burke s Peerage The Tudor and Stuart Legacy 1530 1730 1989 by Lawrence Garner Swan Hill The World of the Country House in Seventeenth century England 1999 by John Trevor Cliffe Yale University Press Hills of Hawkstone 2005 by Joanna Hill Phillimore amp Co Ltd Shropshire Pevsner Architectural Guides Buildings of England 2006 by John Newman Yale University Press Design and Plan in the Country House From Castle Donjons to Palladian Boxes 2008 by Andor Gomme Austin Harvey Gomme and Alison Maguire Yale University Press References edit a b Soulton Place names CCash 29 May 2023 What it Means to Take a Covenant in Scotland Contracts Versus Promises in Religion and Law Cassidy Cash Retrieved 10 September 2023 Revealed Links between Shropshire country hall and the King s Coronation The Shropshire Star 21 April 2023 Retrieved 21 April 2023 Mccabe Helen 30 August 2023 Archaeological Excavations at Soulton Hall Wem Rural Parish www wemrural pc gov uk Retrieved 31 August 2023 Garnet as Emblem of Goodness Philosophical architecture from Henry III to George III retrieved 10 September 2023 a b Excavation resumes at Wem manor at the centre of medieval and Tudor history Whitchurch Herald 3 June 2023 Retrieved 9 June 2023 Sir Rowland Hill www wemcofe co uk Retrieved 14 January 2024 PRESS MENTION Shakespeare in Shropshire BYRGA GENIHT Country House Consultancy Retrieved 20 November 2023 Discovering the hidden Shakespearean ties of Soulton Hall in Wem Whitchurch Herald 23 December 2023 Retrieved 23 December 2023 Radio Shropshire Listen Live BBC Sounds www bbc co uk Retrieved 14 December 2023 Austin Sue 23 February 2024 Shropshire Day Natural beauty and culture help county celebrate its own patron saint s day www shropshirestar com Retrieved 23 February 2024 Soulton Hall Historic Houses Retrieved 31 October 2023 Radio Shropshire Listen Live BBC Sounds www bbc co uk Retrieved 17 November 2023 January 2024 www stmaryabchurch org uk Retrieved 18 November 2023 Robinson Daniel 2023 The Ceremonial Country of Shropshire 1 ed The Cartographic Arts Parishes Curdworth British History Online www british history ac uk Retrieved 9 December 2023 Austin Sue 29 January 2024 Shakespeare s links with Shropshire unveiled when and where you can hear about them www shropshirestar com Retrieved 30 January 2024 a b Dirty Weekend Dig into Shropshire s past at Soulton Hall DigVentures Retrieved 3 June 2019 Williams Gareth 1 June 2021 The Country Houses of Shropshire 1 ed Boydell and Brewer Limited doi 10 1017 9781800103474 220 ISBN 978 1 80010 347 4 D B Thompson Quarrying the Grinshill Stone for Buildings Bridges and Roads 1540 1768 2006 Byrd David G 1975 Shakespeare s familiarity between Sir Rowland and Duke Senior in As You Like It Shakespeare Quarterly 26 2 205 206 doi 10 2307 2869249 JSTOR 2869249 Tooley David 14 June 2023 Archaeologists coming closer to breaking the code of ancient Shropshire hall which folklore links to Shakespeare www shropshirestar com Retrieved 15 June 2023 a b c d August 2023 www stmaryabchurch org uk Retrieved 25 June 2023 HILL Sir Rowland by 1498 1561 of London and Hodnet Salop History of Parliament Online www historyofparliamentonline org Retrieved 22 November 2023 The National Archives Discovery Catalogue piece description Bargain and sale 1556 215 31 Shropshire Archives Soulton Rental held in Shropshire CountyArchive under reference 3421 1 Branch Laura 8 May 2017 Faith and Fraternity London Livery Companies and the Reformation 1510 1603 BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 33070 2 Sir Thomas Stanley d 1576 tong church org uk Retrieved 21 February 2023 Clare Ashford Mark Elliott sits in 14 12 2023 BBC Sounds www bbc co uk Retrieved 14 December 2023 dseverance 15 October 2019 The Geneva Bible The First English Study Bible Houston Christian University hc edu Retrieved 16 December 2023 a b The Garnet Code Thegns of Mercia Retrieved 21 April 2023 A Shakespeare Mystery Solved Who is Old Sir Rowland retrieved 17 February 2024 Shrewsbury School 15 March 2023 John Weaver Dance Festival Exhibition 2023 Incubation is the Prescription Renaissance Medicine in Text and Architecture retrieved 17 February 2024 A Shakespeare Mystery Solved Who is Old Sir Rowland retrieved 17 February 2024 Austin Sue 8 November 2023 Shropshire s remarkable connections with Shakespeare are fascinating www shropshirestar com Retrieved 9 November 2023 Archaeological dig unlocking the mysteries of historic site near Wem Whitchurch Herald 15 June 2023 Retrieved 15 June 2023 Incubation is the Prescription Renaissance Medicine in Text and Architecture retrieved 17 February 2024 Anton Schmid 1847 Literatur des Schachspiels a bibliogr gesammelt geordnet und mit Anmerkungen in German Oxford University Incubation is the Prescription Renaissance Medicine in Text and Architecture retrieved 17 February 2024 Garnet as Emblem of Goodness Philosophical architecture from Henry III to George III retrieved 14 September 2023 Garnet as Emblem of Goodness Philosophical architecture from Henry III to George III retrieved 14 September 2023 Austin Sue 21 April 2023 Revealed Links between Shropshire country hall and the King s Coronation www shropshirestar com Retrieved 21 April 2023 Incubation is the Prescription Renaissance Medicine in Text and Architecture retrieved 17 February 2024 Garnet as Emblem of Goodness Philosophical architecture from Henry III to George III retrieved 20 August 2023 A Shakespeare Mystery Solved Who is Old Sir Rowland retrieved 17 February 2024 A Shakespeare Mystery Solved Who is Old Sir Rowland retrieved 17 February 2024 Incubation is the Prescription Renaissance Medicine in Text and Architecture retrieved 17 February 2024 A Shakespeare Mystery Solved Who is Old Sir Rowland retrieved 17 February 2024 a b Salopian Shreds and Patches Harvard University 1881 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Mystery of the Nazi and the portrait of a Welsh lady BBC News 17 January 2014 Retrieved 26 November 2023 Salisbury Ancestors boydhouse com Retrieved 26 November 2023 Bach Y Graig B amp B St Asaph Bed and Breakfast North Wales Bach Y Graig Retrieved 26 November 2023 Garnet as Emblem of Goodness Philosophical architecture from Henry III to George III retrieved 21 August 2023 There was earlier extensive use of brick in the 1460s at Raglan Castle Scourfield Robert Haslam Richard 2013 Powys Montgomeryshire Radnorshire and Breconshire Yale University Press p 155 ISBN 978 0 300 18508 9 Garnet as Emblem of Goodness Philosophical architecture from Henry III to George III retrieved 21 February 2024 A Shakespeare Mystery Solved Who is Old Sir Rowland retrieved 21 February 2024 Proceedings American Philosophical Society vol 80 1939 American Philosophical Society ISBN 978 1 4223 7226 5 Descendants of Edward Hill abt 1590 15 MAY 1644 Outline Format www ourfamtree org Retrieved 17 December 2023 Soulton Hall on Twitter Twitter Retrieved 11 February 2017 English Place Name Society The University Press 1 January 1990 ISBN 9780904889147 Historic England Soulton moated site and formal garden remains 1017236 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 11 February 2017 Charles I Civil War Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 15 April 2023 a b Garbett Samuel 1818 The History of Wem And other Townships in Shropshire Franklin Shropshire s History Advanced Search Shropshire s History Advanced Search Retrieved 8 May 2020 Wem North Shropshire Shropshire Tourism Archived from the original on 10 July 2019 Retrieved 8 May 2020 Clare Ashford Mark Elliott sits in 14 12 2023 BBC Sounds www bbc co uk Retrieved 14 December 2023 Worton Jonathan June 2015 The Royalist and Parliamentarian War Effort in Shropshire During the First and Second English Civil Wars 1642 1648 PDF a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Prees Heath History www preesheathcommonreserve co uk Retrieved 15 April 2023 University of Oxford Oriel College Shadwell Charles Lancelot 1893 Registrum orielense an account of the members of Oriel College Oxford Harvard University London H Frowde No 1562 The London Gazette 4 November 1680 p 1 William III 1698 An Act for granting to His Majesty the Summ for disbanding the Army providing for the Navy and for other necessary Occasions Chapter IX Rot Parl 10 Gul III p 2 British History Online www british history ac uk Retrieved 15 April 2023 Cadbury Research Library Birmingham University XMYT The Mytton Papers 1730s 1740s MYT 7 1519A 240 Wem Foster Joseph 1889 The register of admissions to Gray s Inn 1521 1889 London Hansard Pub Union via Cornell University Library Founders Online To Benjamin Franklin from Benjamin Vaughan 9 January 1782 founders archives gov Retrieved 15 April 2023 Historic England Details from listed building database 1237047 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 10 February 2017 Stuff Good Soulton Bridge Wem Rural Shropshire britishlistedbuildings co uk Chrimes Henry VII p 25 n 5 Henry Stafford 2nd Duke of Buckingham 1454 1483 www luminarium org Retrieved 20 July 2023 Owen Hugh Blakeway John Brickdale 10 October 2018 A History of Shrewsbury Franklin Classics ISBN 978 0 342 06819 7 Richard III Entire Play shakespeare mit edu Retrieved 21 July 2023 Film Location in Shropshire www soultonhall co uk Midlands Today www bbc co uk Retrieved 15 August 2020 Wiegand Chris 6 August 2020 From an earth stage to a willow Globe theatre goes al fresco in the UK The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 8 August 2020 Jeremy Vine Planning Permission and Pantomimes BBC Sounds www bbc co uk Retrieved 8 August 2020 BBC One Midlands Today Evening News 22 10 2020 www bbc co uk Retrieved 26 October 2020 BBC Radio Shropshire Mid morning on BBC Radio Shropshire with Jim Hawkins 23 10 2020 www bbc co uk Retrieved 26 October 2020 BBC Radio Shropshire Mid morning on BBC Radio Shropshire with Jim Hawkins 16 10 2020 www bbc co uk Retrieved 26 October 2020 Animal Farm at Soulton Hall National Youth Theatre www nyt org uk Retrieved 22 April 2022 Beowulf at the Barrow Archaeodeath Howard Williams 4 October 2021 Binding art archaeology living history and contemporary commemoration the performance was unforgettable For me it revealed the wider potential for responsible well researched and carefully choreographed public engagement education and entertainment inspired by early medieval archaeology and poetry Austin Sue Environment minister Michael Gove praises progressive Shropshire farmer www shropshirestar com Retrieved 15 April 2023 Sleaze shoe leather and stately homes how Lib Dems won true blue North Shropshire The Independent 18 December 2021 Retrieved 15 April 2023 Soulton Jigg The Traditional Tune Archive www tunearch org Retrieved 11 February 2017 Limited Six Ticks John Weaver Festival of Dance 2023 03 17 19 30 www myshrewsbury co uk Retrieved 18 March 2023 Monbiot George 2022 Regenesis feeding the world without devouring the planet Toronto ISBN 978 0 7352 4039 1 OCLC 1251913057 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Peters Andrew 2016 Wilderland wildlife and wonder from the Shropshire borders Oswestry ISBN 978 1 911048 03 9 OCLC 1063614303 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Fusek Peters Andrew 2020 Hill and Dael My Shropshire Year S l Yew Tree Press ISBN 978 1 9163755 0 5 OCLC 1191187062 Parker Simon 2022 Riding Out a life affirming journey around the coast of Britain S l Summersdale Publishers ISBN 978 1 80007 499 6 OCLC 1276933900 Mance Henry 2021 How to love animals in a human shaped world London ISBN 978 1 78733 208 9 OCLC 1242839541 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Mccabe Helen 30 August 2023 Archaeological Excavations at Soulton Hall Wem Rural Parish www wemrural pc gov uk Retrieved 15 December 2023 Smith Katharine E 25 November 2023 First Christmas a novella 1st ed Heddon Publishing Neal Toby 31 October 2023 Christmas novella set in Shropshire www shropshirestar com Retrieved 6 November 2023 Fulcher Merlin 19 April 2021 Soulton poems with an extract from Modern Air Architectural Review Retrieved 20 October 2023 Soulton Hall archaeological dig hints at fascinating history Whitchurch Herald Retrieved 10 July 2019 Mysterious Mound at English Manor May Conceal Remains of Medieval Castle Smithsonian Magazine 9 August 2021 Retrieved 7 September 2022 Archaeologists at Soulton Hall have unearthed sandstone walls and trinkets likely left behind by religious pilgrims Soulton Unearthing a missing medieval castle in Shropshire DigVentures 23 November 2021 Retrieved 7 September 2022 It s not every day that archaeologists discover a long forgotten castle but that s exactly what our evidence is pointing to Kemp Brian 1980 English Church Monuments London Batsford p 77 ISBN 0713417358 Sherlock Peter 2008 Monuments and Memory in Early Modern England Aldershot Ashgate p 150 ISBN 9780754660934 Wainwright Oliver 18 March 2019 Tomb with a view why burial mounds are a better way to go The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 3 June 2019 a b BBC One Countryfile Shropshire BBC Retrieved 3 June 2019 Pugh James Three limestone monoliths mark a path to Shropshire s first long barrow in 5 000 years www shropshirestar com Retrieved 27 April 2018 Standing stone to be raised at Soulton Long Barrow for Covid 19 victims Whitchurch Herald Retrieved 1 August 2020 Bentley Charlotte Shropshire standing stone memorial built for Covid 19 victims and their families www shropshirestar com Retrieved 8 August 2020 English Country House Hotel near Shrewsbury Shropshire Accommodation www soultonhall co uk Soulton Wood Soulton Hall www soultonhall co uk External links editHistory page of official Soulton Hall website retrieved 29 November 2013 Historic England Details from listed building database 1236839 National Heritage List for England Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Soulton Hall amp oldid 1222884322, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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