Eastern (and most senior) face of Soulton Hall. Among several other intentions, this composition is understood to evoke Solomon's Temple and the ancient classical theatre at Epidaurus. The only symmetrical side of the house, its only central window is for the chapel and the alignment of the house is to Easter sunrise.
prior 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
Completed
by 1560
Technical details
Material
Single phase construction using Grinshill sandstone and Tudor brick, incorporating timber framing which reused older timbers in some cases
Soulton Hall is a Tudorcountry 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 ProtestantLord 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 that laid the path for the subsequent English Renaissance.[3][4]
Soulton Hall is understood to be constructed in a way that uses a set of humanistcodes[5] drawing together concepts from classical antiquity, geometry, philosophy and scripture; in this the building influenced the architecture of many later buildings of similar style.[6]
With a chapel in its basement,[7] a priesthole,[8] and bookcases hidden within its walls, Soulton Hall is said to be connected with work which led to the publication of the Geneva Bible, which bears the name of Rowland Hill on its frontispiece as publisher.[9]
The grounds of the hall contain archaeology of a lost theatre. The deeds[10] and scholarship[11][12][13] links the manor to Shakespeare,[14][15] and in particular the play As You Like It[16][17][18] which concerns the estate of a character called "Old Sir Rowland".[9][19] Sir Rowland Hill was a cousin of Shakespeare's mother Mary Arden by reason of the marriage of his heiress Elizabeth Corbett to Robert Arden in the 1580s.[20][21]
Mentioned in the NormanDomesday Book, Soulton has housed a manor since late Anglo Saxon times, and a "lost castle" rediscovered in 2021[22] undergoing a multi-season archaeological investigation by DigVentures.