National Trust Heritage Records Online

 

Temple of Concord and Victory (Grecian Temple), Stowe Landscape Garden

Record ID:  150281 / MNA129886
Record type:  Monument
Protected Status: Registered Park or Garden, Listed Building: Grade I
NT Property:  Stowe; London and South East
Civil Parish:  Stowe; Aylesbury Vale; Buckinghamshire
Grid Reference:  SP 6750 3771
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Summary

Classical Ionic temple originally known as The Grecian Temple comprising a pedimented portico leading to an internal cella and flanked by a peristyle. Built between 1747-9, modified between 1751-55, and re-edified as Temple of Concord and Victory between 1761-64. Built according to strict archaeological principles. Restored to 1760s arrangement by N.T. between 1994- 96. Site:150281*0

Identification Images (0)

Monument Types

  • IONIC TEMPLE (Mid 18th C to Late 19th C - 1747 AD to 1900 AD)
  • GARDEN TEMPLE (Mid 18th C - 1747 AD to 1749 AD)
  • IONIC TEMPLE (To 1749 AD and From 1755 AD)
  • IONIC TEMPLE (Mid 18th C to Late 19th C - 1763 AD to 1900 AD)

Description

Perhaps designed by Richard Temple (later to become Earl Temple) and built between 1747-49. It was initially known as the 'Grecian Temple, based on the Roman temple of the 1st century BC at Nimes in southern France, known as the Maison Carree, which in turn was a copy of the Graeco-Roman temple at Balbec in Syria. It was modified by the architect Borra between 1751-55 in the interests of archaeological accuracy. The eastern end was given a monumental porch or 'pronaos' and the side windows were blocked. The roof covering was also changed, from black-glazed clay tiles to Westmoreland slate.

It was re-edified in 1764 as the Temple of Concord and Victory in honour of the victory over the French in the Seven Years War. As part of this re-edification the sculpted tympanum of The Four Quarters of the World bringing their various products to Britania, carved by Peter Scheemakers, was moved from the Palladian Bridge in 1762 and inserted over the pronaos. The lead statue of Victory was added over the tympanum and flanking statues on the corner acroteria. Inside the 'cella' of the building a statue of Public Liberty was inserted and the walls were decorated with terracotta medallions commemorating the various battles of the wars against the French.

The Temple was restored to its 1760s appearance by the Trust in 1994-95. It is a rectangular building, the principal element consisting of a rectangular chamber or 'cella' with an 'aedicule' or shrine against the west wall originally housing the statue of Public Liberty (removed in 1845, the present statue - the 'Duchess' - was recovered from the quarry behind Home Farm). The cella is flanked externally by a 'peristyle' of 28 Ionic columns. Sixteen of these columns were removed in 1927 to create the school chapel and these columns were therefore recreated as part of the Trust's restoration programme. The whole construction - the cella and peristyle - is carried on a raised plinth faced with ashlar of local Helmdon stone. The plinth is actually a hollow construction, consisting of a series of arched stone vaults which carry the construction above. The pronaos leading to the door into the cella is therefore approached by a flight of stone steps, restored as part of the work in 1994-95.

(10) Ionic Temple 1749 by Earl Temple, as the Grecian Temple, renamed 1763 to celebrate the Peace of Paris. 6 fluted columned pedimented portico approached by flight of steps. Relief carving in pediment by Scheemakers. Peristyle columns removed to school chapel (q.v.).

(12) The designer of the largest and by far the grandest of Stowe’s temples remains unknown. The Grecian Temple, as it was first called, was begun in 1747 and roofed in 1749 within months of Lord Cobham’s death at the age of 74. Seeley’s 1788 guidebook ascribes the design to Kent, and goes on to say that the temple ‘was designed from the measurements, which it nearly follows, of the Maison Carree at Nismes’. Kent died in 1748, and neither documentary evidence nor stylistic grounds support the attribution. There are resemblances between the temple and the Maison Carrée, a Roman temple of the late first century bc, but this is not only not ‘Grecian’ but also pseudoperipteral (having an engaged peristyle, whereas the columns surrounding the Temple of Concord are free-standing) and of the Corinthian order, and therefore built on a quite different system of proportion from the Ionic temple at Stowe. (For their recent restoration, see p. 86.)

In fact the Temple of Concord is not a copy of any known Greek or otherwise ancient temple, but rather a conflation of elements perhaps gathered from books available at the time, of which the Abbé Montfaucon’s L’Antiquité expliquée (1722) and the Rev. Richard Pococke’s A Description of the East and Other Countries (1745) are the most likely. The great series of publications which inspired the Neo-classical style in England – by Dawkins and Wood, and Stuart and Revett – were not published until the 1750s.

The Temple of Concord can thus best be called the first English building of Greek intention. It has been suggested that Lord Cobham’s nephew and heir, Richard Grenville, later Earl Temple, may himself have designed it. In his portrait by William Hoare of Bath of 1760, he holds a plan of the Temple of Concord, and on his return from the Grand Tour in 1732 he may well have visited Nîmes. Two years later he was one of the founders of the Society of Dilettanti, which later promoted Stuart and Revett’s publication.

The first recorded use of the term ‘Grecian’ at Stowe is a reference to the ‘Grecian diagonal’ in a bill in the garden accounts for 1747. This was the vista created from the Cobham Monument to the Grecian Temple, which must at that time have been under construction. There was no widespread fashion for ‘Grecian’ architecture at this time, but stylistic diversity is a notable characteristic of Lord Cobham’s garden buildings. He had already built in the Palladian, Antique Roman, Gothic, Chinese and Egyptian styles, and it may simply be that he wanted to add what was thought to be the style of ancient Greece to the collection.

The temple underwent almost immediate modification in order to render it more truly ‘Grecian’. A letter from Borra to Earl Temple dated 3 July 1752 marks his employment by Temple for the next two years to incorporate a pronaos (the vestibule formed at the eastern, entrance, end by the massive flanking inner walls), and to block the windows which had originally pierced the walls of the cella (principal space) of the temple and must have seemed incongruous from the start. In 1755 six of the many lead figures supplied to Lord Cobham by Van Nost for his parterre some years earlier were raised to ornament the four corners of the roof and the two pediments. At the same time the black glazed pantiles with which the roof had first been covered were replaced with lakeland green slates.

In the late 1750s Earl Temple derived great satisfaction from the progress of the Seven Years War, not least because its political direction was largely conducted by members of his own extended family (see p. 72). Between 1761, the year in which he resigned as Lord Privy Seal from the Pitt-Newcastle Ministry, and 1764, the Grecian Temple was once again in the hands of the builders, gradually assuming a new and powerful political significance and the dedication to Concord and Victory.

This process began in 1761 with the removal from the Palladian Bridge of Scheemakers’s massive rectangular stone relief, The Four Quarters of the World bringing their Various Products to Britannia. In 1761–2 it was reassembled by the mason William Emberly as a triangle to fit the eastern pediment, with additional sculpture including that to fit the tapering corners supplied by William Stevenson.

The colossal stone figure of Victory bestowing a garland of laurel, which stands on the apex of the sculptural pediment, was probably carved by James Lovell, who carved the models for the plasterers employed on the temple. In this position it supplanted what was probably one of Van Nost’s lead figures from the earlier garden, which is shown in the engraved views of the temple before its rededication. A number of different configurations of statues are shown on the roof in the many engravings and it is impossible from these or from other sources to tell whether a figure of Concord was added at the opposite end, or whether one of the lead figures persisted in that position. Lovell’s statue has now been reinstated and is accompanied by casts of the four original lead pediment figures, which are now at Anglesey Abbey in Cambridgeshire. The missing sixth figure has been cast from a roughly contemporaneous statue at Castle Howard in Yorkshire.

Next, the blank walls of the pronaos and cella were furnished with a series of sixteen medallions, the majority of them based on subjects chosen by the Society of Arts for medals commemorating British victories. Most of these were designed by James ‘Athenian’ Stuart, and although as a member of the Society Earl Temple would have had known about this project, he is thought to have consulted Stuart directly in making this selection. Those on the walls of the pronaos were cast in terracotta by Lovell and represent Concordia civium (National Concord) and Concordia foederatum (Concord of the Allies: a British and a Prussian soldier hold between them a globe supporting a Victory). Over the door is an inscription from the Roman historian Valerius Maximus: "Quo Tempore Salus eorum in ultimas Augustias deducta nullum Ambitioni Locum relinquebat. The Times with such alarming Dangers fraught, Left not a Hope for any factious Thought. "Seeley’s 1762 guidebook

In the nineteenth century the exterior of the temple was painted with an ochre limewash which unified the Helmdon and Ashendon stones of the columns and walls with the stucco of the brick walls to the cella; Scheemakers’s Portland stone relief, and the pediment statues (variously Portland stone and lead) were also blended in by this method. The colour of the wash must have heightened the effect of the setting sun on the building described by Whately.

Within, the medallions were executed in terracotta and set into the walls within circular plaster frames ‘suspended’ from ribbon bows formed from strips of lead. The internal medallions are inscribed with lead lettering as follows (from the left of the door, clockwise), according to Seeley: "Quebec, Martinico &c., Louisbourg, Guadeloupe, &c., Montreal, Pondicherry, &c., naval victory off Belleisle, naval victory off Lagos, Crevelt and Minden, Felinghausen, Goree and Senegal, Crown Point, Niagara, and Fort du Quesne, Havannah and Manilla, Beau Sejour, Cherburgh, and Belleisle – executed from several of the Medals."

The ceiling was renewed in 1753–4 to a design by Borra based on those he had drawn for Dawkins and Wood’s publication on the ruins of Palmyra. The interior was an entirely neutral, stone-coloured room, relieved only by the blue and gold colouring of the great doors, noticed by M. Latapie in 1771 and recently reinstated according to the results of cross-sectional analysis of the paintwork.

In the recent restoration, the Trust has recreated the aedicule which completed the interior and formed the true focus of the building. Before it, on a low base, there stood from 1763 a figure of Public Liberty, in the place of honour reserved in classical temples for the deity, but this no longer survives at Stowe. Above the aedicule is an inscription from Valerius Maximus: "Candidis autem animis voluptatem praebuerint in conspicuo posita qua cuique magnifica merito contigerunt, A sweet Sensation touches ev’ry Breast Of Candour’s gen’rous Sentiment possest, When public Services with Honour due, Are gratefully mark’d out to public view." Seeley’s 1762 guide

A mutilated eighteenth-century draped torso discovered in a disused quarry on the newly acquired Home Farm Estate has been placed in the aedicule as a substitute for the missing figure of Public Liberty.

Seeley’s 1763 guidebook mentions for the first time two further statuary marble groups, both of which had been supplied originally for the 1st Duke of Chandos’s great house at Canons, near Edgware, in 1725. They were Scheemakers’s Venus and Apollo and Vertumnus and Pomona by his partner Laurent Delvaux, and they stood in the pronaos to either side of the doors. By the time of Nattes’s view of 1805 they had been replaced by two massive urns.

From the steps two oblique views complete the theme of political and imperial domination to the north, the soaring obelisk devoted to the memory of General Wolfe, military architect of the British victories over the French in Canada, and across the valley (via the Grecian Diagonal) the column celebrating one of its political architects, Lord Cobham.

The embellishment of the temple continued well into the nineteenth century. In the 1840s the 2nd Duke abolished the aedicule and its statue in favour of a new dais with a screen of granite columns. A plan to place bronze statues of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert on the dais to mark their visit in 1845 was abandoned in view of the Duke’s debts; the royal couple planted a pair of trees outside.

References

  • SNA64138 - Report: A Wainwright. 1989. National Trust Archaeological survey, Stowe, Thames and Chilterns region.

  • SNA64380 - Article in monograph: Patrick Eyres. Celebration and Dissent, Thomas Hollis, The Society of Arts, and Stowe Gardens. The Medal, No. 38, 2001.

  • SNA65592 - National Trust Report: Sarah Connor. 2003. The Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe, report of the archaeological watching brief over the laying of an electricity cable running from the rear of the tea room along the northern edge of the temple.

  • SNA67517 - Report: 31/3/1993. Stowe Temple of Concord and Victory All Party Parliamentary Arts and Heritage Group Visit Chronology, Proposals and Illustrations.

  • SNA67518 - Notes: Tim Knox. A Note to the Stowe Advisory Committee on the proposed seats for the Temple of Concord and Victory.

  • SNA67681 - Photograph - black and white: Angus Wainwright. Mrc-Apr 1992. Photos taken of brick vaults and artefacts below Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe.

  • SNA67682 - Photograph - black and white: Angus Wainwright. April 1992. Photographs taken of the pediment on Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe.

  • SNA68314 - Photograph - black and white: Gary Marshall. 1994-95. Photographs taken of roof and vaults of Temple of Concord and Victory at Stowe during restoration.

  • SZM10971 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 06/05/1995. Concord and Victory. Medallions - transcribing lead lettering.. TSLG646.

  • SZM11515 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Concord and Victory - squirrel nests, SE corner. 30CMS/10CM. TSLG 155.

  • SZM11579 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Concord and Victory - top of flue on W.wall of temple. 30CM/10CMS. TSLG 144.

  • SZM13573 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Concord and Victory - top of S.wall, 18thC boot prints. 30CM/10CMS. TSLG 164.

  • SZM14761 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Concord and Victory - trench to explore surfaces on SE. corner. 1M/20CMS. TSLG 126.

  • SZM15062 - Slide: Angus Wainwright. 01/04/1992. Concord and Victory - detail of pediment.. TSLG1287.

  • SZM15063 - Slide: Angus Wainwright. 01/04/1992. Concord and Victory - pediment.. TSLG1288.

  • SZM15282 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Concord and Victory - dead squirrel and nest, SE corner. 30CMS/10CM. TSLG 154.

  • SZM15748 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Temple of Concord and Victory - base below steps.. 1M/20CMS. TSLG 067.

  • SZM15850 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Concord and Victory - trench to explore surfaces on SE. corner. 1M/20CMS. TSLG 127.

  • SZM16641 - Slide: Angus Wainwright. 01/04/1992. Concord and Victory - detail of pediment.. TSLG1286.

  • SZM16972 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Concord and Victory - joists carrying ceiling. TSLG 145.

  • SZM17030 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 15/08/1996. Trench 19 on south west corner of Concord and Victory - showing buried 18th c.?soil and later deposi. TSLG939.

  • SZM17605 - Slide: Angus Wainwright. 01/02/1993. Concord and Victory - vaults.. TSLG1296.

  • SZM17987 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 06/05/1995. Concord and Victory. Medallions - holes for lead lettering. Gaudalope Medallion.. TSLG645.

  • SZM18609 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 06/05/1995. Concord and Victory. Medallions - holes for lead lettering. Martinique Medallion.. TSLG648.

  • SZM19088 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/07/1995. Concord and Victory - medallions, holes for lead lettering. TSLG489.

  • SZM19320 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Concord and Victory - roof construction, S.side. TSLG 152.

  • SZM19939 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Temple of Concord and Victory - base after removal of steps.. 1M/20CMS. TSLG 066.

  • SZM20050 - Slide: Angus Wainwright. 01/02/1993. Concord and Victory - vaults.. TSLG1296.

  • SZM20051 - Slide: Angus Wainwright. 01/02/1993. Concord and Victory - vaults.. TSLG1297.

  • SZM20632 - Slide: Angus Wainwright. 01/02/1993. Concord and Victory - vaults.. TSLG1294.

  • SZM21020 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 15/08/1996. Trench 19 on south west corner of Concord and Victory - showing buried 18th c.?soil and later deposi. TSLG940.

  • SZM23983 - Slide: R Mitchell. 19/08/1996. Aerial view - looking towards Concord and Victory.. TSLG908.

  • SZM24102 - Slide: Angus Wainwright. 01/04/1992. Concord and Victory - detail of pediment.. TSLG1290.

  • SZM25581 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Concord and Victory - profile of mortared brick beneath steps.. 1M/20CMS. TSLG 121.

  • SZM25592 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Concord and Victory - roof hatch. TSLG 147.

  • SZM26451 - Slide: Gary Marshall. Concord and Victory medallions - holes for lead lettering.. TSLG649.

  • SZM27244 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Concord and Victory - top of S.wall, 18thC boot prints. 30CM/10CMS. TSLG 165.

  • SZM27402 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 15/08/1996. Trench 19 on south west corner of Concord and Victory - showing buried 18th c.? and later soil depos. TSLG943.

  • SZM27972 - Slide: Angus Wainwright. 01/07/1993. Concord and Victory - aedicule.. TSLG1291.

  • SZM30108 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Concord and Victory - showing mortared brick base for steps.. 1M/20CMS. TSLG 123.

  • SZM30681 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Concord and Victory - showing mortared brick base for steps.. 1M/20CMS. TSLG 124.

  • SZM30683 - Slide: Angus Wainwright. 01/03/1992. Concord and Victory - broken bottle.. 1M/20CMS. TSLG1293.

  • SZM30859 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. E.Pediment Concord and Victory - lead flashing during removal. TSLG 151.

  • SZM33749 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Concord and Victory - top of flue on W.wall of temple. 30CM/10CMS. TSLG 143.

  • SZM33971 - Slide: Angus Wainwright. 01/04/1992. View north from pediment, Concord.. TSLG1251.

  • SZM34319 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 03/03/1995. Plaster repairs to south wall of Concord and Victory. TSLG349.

  • SZM34621 - Slide: Angus Wainwright. 01/02/1993. Concord and Victory - vaults.. TSLG1295.

  • SZM34777 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Temple of Concord and Victory - lintel timbers.. 1M/20CMS. TSLG 068.

  • SZM35418 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Temple of Concord and Victory - base after removal of steps.. 1M/20CMS. TSLG 065.

  • SZM35977 - Slide: Angus Wainwright. 01/04/1992. Temple of Concorde and Victory. TSLG1106.

  • SZM36107 - Slide: R Mitchell. 18/07/1996. Aerial photo - North Front at Stowe - Temple of Concord and Victory top left.. TSLG880.

  • SZM37446 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Concord and Victory - E.Pediment - timber rafters. TSLG 156.

  • SZM37994 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Temple of Concord and Victory - lintel timbers. 22CM INTERVALS. TSLG 069.

  • SZM38571 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 06/05/1995. Concord and Victory. Medallions - holes for lead lettering. Havannah Manilla.. TSLG647.

  • SZM38766 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 15/08/1996. Trench 19 on south west corner of Concord and Victory.. TSLG941.

  • SZM38944 - Slide: Angus Wainwright. 01/04/1992. Concord and Victory - detail of pediment.. TSLG1289.

  • SZM39151 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Concord and Victory - profile of mortared brick below steps.. 1M/20CMS. TSLG 122.

  • SZM40805 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Concord and Victory - Relaying battens over felt on the roof. TSLG 128.

  • SZM41243 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Concord and Victory - top of flue on W.wall of temple. 30CM/10CMS. TSLG 142.

  • SZM42921 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Concord and Victory - Planking wall and mortared brick base. 1M/20CMS. TSLG 125.

  • SZM43531 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/07/1996. Spear head - possibly Saxon - discovered close to the steps of Concord and Victory in Grecian Valley. 20CMS. TSLG828.

  • SZM44194 - Slide: Angus Wainwright. 01/07/1993. Concord and Victory - aedicule.. TSLG1292.

  • SZM44241 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Concord and Victory - dead squirrel and nest, SE corner. 30CMS/10CM. TSLG 153.

  • SZM45113 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Concord and Victory - timber frame of W.Pediment.. 30CM/10CMS. TSLG 146.

  • SZM45343 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/09/1994. Concord and Victory - trcing at 1:1 scale inscription on the frieze. TSLG490.

  • SZM45611 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. E.Pediment Concord and Victory - lead flashing during removal. TSLG 149.

  • SZM45612 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. E.Pediment Concord and Victory - lead flashing during removal. TSLG 150.

  • SZM4588 - Monograph: P. Inskip; P. Jenkins. 1990. An appraisal of the condition of the garden buildings at the time of acquisition by the National Trust.

  • SZM47155 - Slide: Angus Wainwright. 01/04/1992. Concord and Victory - detail of pediment.. TSLG1285.

  • SZM47225 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Concord and Victory - Relaying battens over felt on the roof. 30CM/10CM. TSLG 129.

  • SZM47260 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 01/01/1994. Concord and Victory - joists/paths for peristyle ceiling. 30cm/10cm. TSLG 157.

  • SZM48109 - Slide: Gary Marshall. 15/08/1996. Trench 19 on south west corner of Concord and Victory - showing buried 18th c.? And later soil deposits. TSLG942.

  • SZM52179 - Photograph - colour: O. Jessop. 20/12/2000. Stowe, T. Concorde & Victory, removal of concrete bases from old huts. TSLG3101. W.

  • SZM52180 - Photograph - colour: O. Jessop. 20/12/2000. Stowe, T. Concorde & Victory, removal of concrete bases for old school huts. TSLG3102. S.

  • SZM53114 - Photograph - colour: O.Jessop. 05/07/1994. Stowe, Temple of Concorde & Victory, restoration of pediment. TSLG3304. SE.

  • SZM53645 - Photograph - black and white: G.Marshall. 09/11/2001. Column bases/capitals from Temple of Concord & Victory, (inventory nos. 31-42), Stowe Gardens. 1M/20cms. 22.

  • SZM53646 - Photograph - black and white: G.Marshall. 09/11/2001. Granite column from Temple of Concord & Victory, (inventory nos. 25-30), Stowe Gardens. 1M/20cms. 23.

  • SZM54744 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3624.

  • SZM54745 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. RHL corner, Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3625.

  • SZM54746 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. RHL corner, Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3626.

  • SZM54747 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. RHL corner repair, west wall ext., Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3627.

  • SZM54748 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3628.

  • SZM54749 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3629.

  • SZM54750 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Dais and plinth, Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3630.

  • SZM54751 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. E. wall, niche & doorcase, Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3631.

  • SZM54752 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3632.

  • SZM54753 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Shelf, RHS, Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3633.

  • SZM54754 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Shelf, RHS, Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3634.

  • SZM54755 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3635.

  • SZM54756 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Test pit 1, Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3636.

  • SZM54757 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Inserted thickening, Vault J, Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3637.

  • SZM54758 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. View west, Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3638.

  • SZM54759 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3639.

  • SZM54760 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3640.

  • SZM54761 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3641.

  • SZM54762 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3642.

  • SZM54763 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3643.

  • SZM54764 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3644.

  • SZM54765 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3645.

  • SZM54766 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3646.

  • SZM54767 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3647.

  • SZM54768 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3648.

  • SZM54769 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3649.

  • SZM54770 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3650.

  • SZM54771 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3651.

  • SZM54772 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3652.

  • SZM54773 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3653.

  • SZM54774 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3654.

  • SZM54775 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3655.

  • SZM54776 - Slide: A. Hunn. 1993. Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe. TSLG3656.

  • SZM57335 - Unpublished document: Green Files (two), Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe.

  • SZM57336 - Measured Survey: Hunn A.. 1993/4. Measured drawings of Concord and Victory. Various.

  • SZM57337 - Report: Hunn A.. 1994. An archaeological report on some aspects of the Temple of Concord and Victory in Stowe Landscape Gardens.

  • SZM57338 - Measured Survey: P. Inskip; P. Jenkins. circa 1992. Survey sketches and measure survey of Concord and Victory.

  • SZM57339 - Article in monograph: Haslam R.. 1997. Concord restored and victory assured. 36.

  • SZM57350 - Article in serial: 1977. Stowe, Buckinghamshire: The house and garden buildings and their designers. 1977.

  • SZM57351 - Article in serial: 1992. A Work to Wonder At. 189.

  • SZM57352 - Listed Buildings Schedule (Greenback): Listed Buildings descriptions, Stowe Landscape Gardens.

  • SZM57353 - Monograph: 1997. Stowe Landscape Gardens Guidebook.

  • SZM57410 - Monograph: Bevington M.. 1994. Stowe - The Gardens and the Park.

  • SZM57563 - Photograph - black and white: S. Connor. 08/2003. Stowe, Concord & Victory, trench 538. N/A. 32. SW.

  • SZM57564 - Photograph - black and white: S. Connor. 08/2003. Stowe, Concord & Victory, trench 538. N/A. 33. SW.

  • SZM57565 - Photograph - black and white: S. Connor. 08/2003. Stowe, Concord & Victory, trench 538. N/A. 34. SW.

  • SZM57566 - Photograph - black and white: S. Connor. 08/2003. Stowe, Concord & Victory, trench 538. 1M/10cm. 35. ?.

  • SZM57567 - Photograph - black and white: S. Connor. 08/2003. Stowe, Concord & Victory, trench 538. 1M/10cm. 36. ?.

  • SZM58356 - Slide: S. Connor. July 2003. Stowe, View of section of trench 538, Concord & Victory. TSGL4457. N.

  • SZM58357 - Slide: S. Connor. July 2003. Stowe, View of section of trench 538, Concord & Victory. TSGL4458. N.

  • SZM58358 - Slide: S. Connor. July 2003. Stowe, View of section of trench 538 behind Concord & Victory. TSGL4459. NE.

  • SZM58359 - Slide: S. Connor. July 2003. Stowe, Trench 538, Concord & Victory. TSGL4460.

  • SZM58360 - Slide: S. Connor. July 2003. Stowe, Trench 538, Concord & Victory. TSGL4461.

  • SZM58361 - Slide: S. Connor. July 2003. Stowe, Trench 538, Concord & Victory. TSGL4462.

  • SZM58362 - Slide: S. Connor. July 2003. Stowe, Trench 538, Concord & Victory. TSGL4463. NE.

  • SZM6415 - Report: Angus Wainwright. 1989. The National Trust Archaeological Survey of Stowe, Buckinghamshire (Unpublished).

  • SZM947 - Graphic material: J C Nattes. 1805-1809. Views of Stowe.

Designations

Other Statuses and References

  • National Monuments Record Reference: SP63NE13

Associated Events

  • ENA2445 - Field Survey, Building recording, Concord and Victory, Stowe
  • ENA2535 - Archaeological Intervention, Watching Brief during the laying of an electricity
  • ENA2565 - Field Survey, Archaeological Survey of Stowe Park, Stowe Landscape Gardens
  • ENA2569 - Field Survey, Appraisal of garden buildings, Stowe Landscape Garden,1990
  • ENA2605 - Archaeological Intervention, Trenches south west of the Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe Landscape Gardens (trenches 8 and 9)
  • ENA2640 - Field Survey, Listed Building Descriptons, Stowe Landscape Garden
  • ENA2641 - Field Survey, Stowe Guide Book, Stowe Landscape Gardens
  • ENA2657 - Field Survey, Recording of trench 538, Stowe Landscape Gardens
  • ENA5998 - Archaeological Intervention, Watching brief over trench 1175 on the east side of Concord and Victory, Stowe Gardens
  • ENA6969 - Archaeological Intervention, Examination of the brick vaults below the Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe
  • ENA6995 - Archaeological Intervention, Watching brief over the restoration of the Temple of Concord and Victory
  • ENA8971 - Heritage Assessment, Architect's sketches of roof framing in the Temple of Concord and Victory, Stowe Gardens

Associated Finds

  • FNA5931 - WINE BOTTLE (Undated)

Related Records

https://heritagerecords.nationaltrust.org.uk/HBSMR/MonRecord.aspx?uid=MNA129886