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Home > Archaeology Hertfordshire Publications Landscape history New releases > Lost Gardens of Hertfordshire
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Lost Gardens of Hertfordshire

The archaeology of designed landscapes

Author: Tom Williamson, Anne Rowe

Price: £18.99 £14.24 (free p&p)

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“This unique record of the shifting fortunes of Hertfordshire landowners and the changing fashions that shaped the county's parks and gardens presents evidence uncovered and collated by the authors through systematic work on key sites. Anne Rowe and Tom Williamson combine their deep knowledge of the Hertfordshire landscape to produce a collection of compelling case studies. From Henry VIII's fishponds and Francis Bacon's water gardens, through the parks and gardens of newly rich incomers in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, to the eighteenth‐century landscapes of Bridgeman and Brown, the research is clearly described and the results beautifully presented. This book is an invaluable addition to the county history and the wider literature of garden and landscape history, and a superb demonstration of historical landscape research carried out to the highest standards.”

-Deborah Spring,
Author

About the book

“This is an absorbing reference book, an ideal buy for anyone interested in the history of gardens and/or landscapes.” Geoffrey Hollis, U3A Newsletter

Archaeology can transform our knowledge of the history of gardens and designed landscapes. Terraces, viewing mounts, pools and other features of the great gardens laid out around elite residences at various times in the past can leave impressive earthwork traces; long‐lost walls and garden buildings may be revealed by aerial photography or remote sensing techniques such as Lidar. Landscape parks, moreover, often contain the fossilised traces of the working countryside that was swept away when they were created, providing important information about the ‘genius of the place’ which was consulted when they were first designed.

Hertfordshire is particularly rich in such remains. Proximity to London ensured, from an early date, an active land market and a rapid turn‐over of properties: where estates were amalgamated with neighbours and mansions demolished, traces of their gardens were often preserved under grass or woodland. And the county's moderately undulating terrain provided opportunities for – in some cases necessitated – large schemes of earth movement to provide level areas for lawns and parterres, or to create terraces.

  • More about the book

    In this fascinating and innovative study – the outcome of several decades of research – systematic field survey and the analysis of aerial photographs and Lidar images are combined with the evidence of early maps and documents to reconstruct the appearance and history of more than twenty of Hertfordshire's ‘lost gardens’. An archaeological approach also allows us to see garden history in new ways, revealing aspects of design and patterns of development not readily apparent in the kinds of evidence conventionally employed by garden historians.

    Clearly and accessibly written, and richly illustrated with a wealth of archaeological plans, aerial photographs, archive maps and early engravings and paintings, this book will be essential reading for all those interested in Hertfordshire's archaeology and garden history, as well as for students of garden and landscape history more generally.

  • View the table of contents

    Contents


     List of figuresvii
     Abbreviationsxiii
     Acknowledgementsxiv
       
     Introduction1
     Anstey Castle, Anstey54
     Benington Park, Benington57
     Blakesware, Ware65
     Coles Park, Westmill72
     Gobions, Brookmans Park83
     The Golden Parsonage, Great Gaddesden102
     Goldings, Bengeo and Waterford111
     Gorhambury: the Pond Yard, St Albans118
     Hadham Hall, Little Hadham129
     Hamels, Braughing and Westmill138
     Hunsdon Park Fishponds, Hunsdon150
     The Moatfield, Bushey156
     Moor Park, Rickmansworth164
     Offley Holes House, Preston, Hitchin176
     Popes, Hatfield183
     Rennesley Gardens, Wadesmill, Standon193
     Roxford: Grotto Wood, Hertingfordbury201
     Sacombe Park, Sacombe212
     Standon Lordship, Standon224
     Stanstead Bury, Stanstead Abbots235
     Tewin House, Tewin244
     Theobalds, Cheshunt251
     Tring Park, Tring263
     Weston Park, Weston277
       
     Bibliography287
     Index309

  • About the Author/s:

    Tom Williamson

    Tom Williamson is Emeritus Professor of Landscape History at the University of East Anglia. He has written widely on landscape archaeology, agricultural history, and the history of landscape design.

    He has extensive experience not only of archaeological and documentary research, but also of applying historical information in the conservation, restoration and interpretation of historic landscapes.

    Tom has worked on numerous occasions on legal cases, providing reports in rights of way and boundary disputes, and appearing in court as an expert witness.

    Other titles by this author

    • Hertfordshire: A landscape history – with Anne Rowe
    • The Origins of Hertfordshire
    • Rethinking Ancient Woodland - with Gerry Barnes
    • Trees in England - with Gerry Barnes and Toby Pillatt
    • Humphry Repton in Hertfordshire - edited with Susan Flood

    Anne Rowe

    Anne is a landscape historian who coordinated research for the Hertfordshire Gardens Trust alongside Tom Williamson for 24 years from 1998.  Publications include Medieval Parks of Hertfordshire (2009 & 2019), Hertfordshire: A landscape history, co-authored with Tom (2013), and Tudor & Early Stuart Parks of Hertfordshire (2019).  Awarded a PhD by publication in 2020, Anne has recently been working with the Hertfordshire Environmental Record Centre to update the county’s Ancient Woodland Inventory.

ISBN: 978-1-912260-75-1 Format: Paperback, 340pp Published: Feb 2026

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Any questions

Contact us at UH Press if you have any queries or would like to find out more about this book.

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  • Assembling Enclosure
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  • Farmers, Consumers, Innovators
  • Lady Anne Bacon
  • Lost Gardens of Hertfordshire
  • Place-Names and Landholding in Early Medieval England
  • Wearmouth and Jarrow

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