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Elevation of the south or 'court' front, William
Adam, c.1730
Begun in about 1684 by the 3rd
Duke and Duchess of Hamilton and carried through after the duke's
death in 1694 by Duchess Anne (1632-1716)
alone, Hamilton Palace underwent a major rebuilding programme in
the late 17th century. Dubbed by the family as 'The Great Design',
these works led to the creation of a U-plan mansion, with a deep
but open south-facing courtyard which, with the exception of the
south quarter, followed the outline of the existing late 16th-century
enclosed quadrangle. Under the direction of the architect James
Smith (c.1645-1731), the south quarter was removed entirely, the
east and west quarters were rebuilt as courtyard wings, while the
north wing was refaced and remodelled internally, its principal
external feature being the entrance portico.
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This engraving shows the 'court' or formal ceremonial
entrance front of the palace as rebuilt between 1693 and 1701 and
as existing in about 1730. Its central feature is the portico of
pedimented tetrastyle (that is, with four frontal columns) form,
at that date the first formal frontispiece of this style and scale
to appear in Scotland. Except in matters of relatively minor decorative
detail, the completed portico corresponds closely with the 1696
design, as do the south end walls of the wings in relation to
a 1693 design.
Part of a series of drawings by William Adam (1689-1748)
which were engraved and eventually published in 1812 under the title
of Vitruvius Scoticus, this is also
one of a number commissioned by the 5th Duke
of Hamilton (1703-43) who employed Adam to survey the mansion
as existing and to present proposals to enhance the old north front
of the palace, remodel the interior and reduce the long south-facing
wings from eight bays to five. A significant programme of interior
decoration was carried out in the east wing of the palace under
Adam's supervision, but even greater effort and expenditure at that
date was channelled into the building of Châtelherault.
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