When Daniel Defoe visited
Hamilton Palace in 1706, he remarked that 'the pictures, the furniture
and the decoration of every thing is not to be describ'd but by saying
that every thing is exquisitely fine and suitable to the genius of
the great possessors'. During the nineteenth century, the 10th
Duke's collecting activities made the Palace internationally famous,
a veritable treasure trove of amazing paintings, furniture and objets
d'art which travellers came from far and wide to admire. Now dispersed
throughout the world, many of these items are prime exhibits in important
museums, and a selection has been reassembled here, to give some idea
of the richness of that unique but vanished collection.