Syon Park fills the Thames riverside between Brentford and Isleworth and its stately home is the London address of the Duke
of Northumberland. The north-eastern part of the park was the scene of the Battles of Brentford in 1016 and 1642. In 1431
the English followers of the teachings of St Bridget of Sweden moved their headquarters here from Twickenham and built Syon
Abbey, which took its name from Mount Zion. There are few remnants of the abbey but archaeological surveys have located the
sites of some former outbuildings and determined that the main structure may have been almost as large as Salisbury Cathedral.
When Henry VIII dissolved the Catholic religious establishments he gave the estate to Edward Seymour, the uncle of his son,
the future Edward VI. During the first part of Edward’s brief reign, while the new king was still a child, Seymour was
made first Duke of Somerset and ‘Protector of England’, acting as sovereign in all but name. An admirer of Italian
Renaissance architecture, he built Syon House in that style over the foundations of the west end of the abbey church between
1547 and his death by execution in 1552. The house retains the abbey’s vaulted undercroft, below the Great Hall. Two
centuries later Sir Hugh Smithson, later the first Duke of Northumberland, inherited the estate through his wife, Elizabeth
Seymour. The couple employed Robert Adam to remodel the interior of the house and Capability Brown to landscape the grounds,
creating a showpiece that is now open to the public. Syon House is also available for private hire and as film location. It
featured in 1994’s historical drama The Madness Of King George and more recently in Gosford Park and The Golden Bowl.
In an effort to address west London’s ‘lack of profile’ compared with the East End, a recent tourism initiative is highlighting attractions such as Syon Park.
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