Tour The Accommodation Tour The House

 

Below we take you on a tour of the private rooms, architecture and history of De Vere House.

The Front Door

Front Door

The emblems on the front door link the house to the De Vere family and their conflict during the Wars of the Roses.

The oak door and its smaller Judas gate were both installed in 1929, when the house was partially rebuilt and renovated. However, the door lintel dates back to the 15th century. On both sides of the front door are oak carved figures - these are huntsmen and would have carried a spear and a horn.

They date back to the early 15th century and were almost certainly moved from elsewhere within the house when it was extended between 1485 and 1500. There is a panel in the Duke of Bedford’s Book of Hours which shows two huntsmen wearing the same attire and carrying a spear and horn.

Above the door is a carved lintel showing the heraldic symbols of the 13th earl of Oxford. The star and boar emblems are common features on carved beams within Lavenham. The star was the emblem of the de Vere family and appears on their coat of arms. The boar was first associated with the de Vere family in the time of the 3rd earl of Oxford (the feet on his tomb in Hatfield Broadoak are resting on a boar) and is a pun on the family name: “verres” being the Latin word for a boar.

The carvings above the door lintel specifically relate to the 13th earl and (with the exception of the coats of arms on the church tower) are the only symbols connecting the earl with Lavenham.

The carving on the left is of a straw or wool jack, used to hold and strain wool as it was being washed. Washing wool in clean water was an important part of the manufacturing process and Water Street derived its name from the culvert which the de Vere family built to bring clean running water past the houses of the wool makers. The carving of a wool jack is a pun on the 13th earl’s name (John or Jack) and also links the earl to the wool trade.

The carving on the right is of a plait made of fish scales. The Baronies of Plaitz and of Scales came to the 13th earl of Oxford through his mother, Elizabeth Howard. It was of particular significance to the earl, as his mother had been forced to bequeath the title to Richard, duke of Gloucester (later Richard III), under duress and it was reinstated to the 13th earl, following an appeal to Parliament by John in 1486.


The Entrance Hall

Immediately on entering the hall, you can see to the right the stone gothic archway, which was the entrance to the west hall. The ceiling beams are intricately carved and date back to the late 15th century. Beyond the gothic arch is the stone spiral staircase with its carved brick hand rail. The hand-rail is a rare feature found only in two other houses in England, most famously at Oxburgh Hall. The 13th earl visited Oxburgh Hall in 1487, and it is quite likely that he or one of his retainers remembered the staircase and had it copied.

The staircase cuts through a large beam, which runs across the hall and continues into the dining room. This is part of the former front wall of the 14th century hall house, which was extended in the late 15th century. The carved ceiling beams also finish at this point, indicating that they were installed as part of this extension.

Before the division of the house into two and then later three dwellings in the 19th century, the hall would also have included the entrance to cross passages to the east wing. These passages have now been closed off, but the archways still remain opposite the staircase.

Opposite the staircase are portraits of Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, and Sir Francis Vere.The far end of the hall was rebuilt in 1929, using beams taken from elsewhere in the house during its partial demolition. Along both sides are a collection of sketches from Chancellor’s Monuments showing the tombs of the 3rd, 6th, 8th, 11th and 15th earls of Oxford and Alice Sergeaux, the wife of the 11th earl.

The Dining Room
Dining Room

Guests can enjoy their breakfast in the medieval dining room, complete with wall paintings, wall hangings, a log fire and a real suit of armour.

 

To your right on entering the dining room is a small medieval wall painting with later Elizabethan acanthus leaves painted over it, and to your left is the fireplace, with markings on the wall where the spit ropes have cut into the brickwork over the years.

Immediately in front of you is a wall hanging by Amanda Clement Robinson, depicting the history of the de Veres from the Norman Conquest to the end of the 16th century.

Above the wall hanging is a mullion window, which was blocked in 1780, when the house was extended along Water Street (now No. 58 Water Street).

The Edwardian section of the house contains many portraits and artifacts to commemorate the de Vere family
The Drawing Room

Drawing Room

The drawing room was renovated in 1929, and stepping from the dining room to the drawing room carries you forward over 400 years into the Edwardian period. In the centre of the drawing room is a large stone fireplace with a carving of the de Vere family motto “Vero nihil Verius” (the double pun on the de Vere name, which translates roughly as “nothing is truer than truth”).

On the walls are portraits of Aubrey, 20th earl of Oxford, Henry de Vere, 18th earl of Oxford, Horace Vere, Baron of Tilbury, Edward de Vere, 17th earl of Oxford, Aubrey, 16th earl of Oxford, Sir Francis Vere, Diana, 18th countess of Oxford, and Diana, 1st duchess of St Albans.
The Kitchen
Kitchen tiles
Aubrey de Vere, 1st Earl of Oxford, with Castle Hedingham in the background,
by Jonathan Waites.

The kitchen is a 20th century extension. Beneath the stud work on your right is the medieval boundary wall, which ran from the rear of the 14th century hall and formed part of a walled courtyard, including a well. The well is located in the back entrance to the kitchen and was filled in during the 19th century.

Above the kitchen range is a frieze of hand painted tiles by Johnathan Waites, including the 1st earl of Oxford on his charger, the coats of arms of the families connected to the 13th earl of Oxford and the de Vere symbols (star, boar, whistle and chair). Jonathan painted the tiles in the bathrooms in 10 Downing Street and his work maintains the link between the De Vere family and their former home in Downing Street.

The Hall Chamber

Beam

At the top of the spiral staircase, you can see a single beam that comes out of the wall at an angle of 45 degrees and continues into the attic. This beam is one of the roof joists for the 14th century hall, which ran across the back of the house. Photographs of the hall taken before and during its demolition show that it had a magnificent vaulted ceiling.

The north bedroom, known as the Hall Chamber, contains a fine example of carved beam-work. In the far corner, is the doorway to the garderobe, which had a connecting pipe to the medieval culvert below. On the opposite wall are two pictures: the first is a water colour by William Rose RA, of de Vere House in 1936; the second is a painting on silk by Amanda Clement Robinson, also of de Vere House.

The Attic

Finally, the attic rooms would have been used, at one time, as living-quarters for weavers. The construction of the rafters in the attic is of a particular design, which can be found in two other houses in Lavenham, and, almost certainly, all three roofs were renovated by the same carpenter between 1510 and 1530.