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Lydney Park is a 17th-century country estate surrounding Lydney House, located at in the Forest of Dean district in , England. It is known for its and complex.


House and gardens
Lydney Park was bought in 1719 by Benjamin Bathurst, son of the Cofferer of the Household to Queen Anne, and has remained in the family since then. The original house was close to the main road, with a large deer park behind it which was previously part of the estate of White Cross Manor.

In 1875, Rev. William Hiley Bathurst built a new house in the centre of the deer park, with views over the . The new house was built by C. H. Howell, with a formal garden and shrubberies. The old house was demolished, apart from the buildings now occupied by the Taurus Crafts centre. Rev. Bathurst's grandson Charles, later Viscount Bledisloe, made some further changes to the garden before the house became used in the Second World War, first to house the Dutch royal family and then a girls' school. Lydney Park - Spring Gardens and Roman Remains, local guidebook (undated)

The current garden was developed after 1950 by the second Viscount Bledisloe and his family. Betty Fairfax Horsfall was also a involved in the re-design of many areas. There is a running along a secluded valley, planted with magnolias, rhododendrons, azaleas and other flowering shrubs. There is a paved terrace above and formal gardens which are popular in the Spring, when the daffodils bloom.

The gardens are private land, and are open to the public on certain days depending on time of year. The house also has a museum containing findings from the Roman site and artefacts from New Zealand collected by the first Viscount Bledisloe.


Archaeological remains
The area has an early British Iron Age –type , known as Lydney Camp, covering 4.5 . The dug there for , probably in the 3rd century AD, but apparently abandoned the workings as unproductive.
(2025). 9781846450297, Greenwood Publishing Group.
Open-cast mines, or , and tunnels still exist throughout the hill.

In the late 4th century, the Romans built a Romano-Celtic templeLocated at to , a divinity who is reflected by the later figures of and Nudd/ in Irish and Welsh mythology respectively. Lludd's name survives in the of Lydney. Several model dog images have been found there, indicating it was a ; dogs were associated with such shrines and may have been kept to lick wounds. The structure was a somewhat unusual design, rectangular rather than the usual square Romano-Celtic style temple. The end of the sanctuary or was not completely open, as usual; it had three rooms separated by stone walls. The walls of the cella were arched colonnades until a fault in the rock below caused the almost total collapse of the temple. It was rebuilt with solid walls. There was a fish-covered with an inscription that referred to 'Victorinus the Interpreter', probably an interpreter of . The temple was accompanied by a large courtyard guest house, a long building used as dormitory accommodation and an elaborate bath suite or .

excavated the site between 1928–9 with her husband

(2025). 9780854312191, Society of Antiquaries of London. .
and more excavations took place in 1980–1.Casey, P. J., B. Hoffmann, and J. Dore. "Excavations at the Roman temple in Lydney Park, Gloucestershire in 1980 and 1981." The Antiquaries Journal 79 (1999): 81-143.Wright, R. P. "A revised restoration of the inscription on the mosaic pavement found in the temple at Lydney Park, Gloucestershire." Britannia 16 (1985): 248-249. The finds included a hoard of imitation Roman coins which were thought to date from the 5th century, but are now believed to be 4th century artefacts. The excavation report includes an appendix, "The Name 'Nodens'", written by Oxford philologist J. R. R. Tolkien.

  • Wheeler, R.E.M. & T.V. (1932) Report on the excavation of the prehistoric, Roman and post-Roman site in Lydney Park, Gloucestershire. Oxford.


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