
Your Places or Mine
A podcast about places and buildings, with tales about history and people. From author and publisher Clive Aslet and the architectural editor of Country Life, & John Goodall
Episodes
19 episodes
Hot History: The Great Fire of Northampton 1675
Everyone has heard about the Great Fire of London – but what about the Great Fire of Northampton…or Marlborough…or Blandford Forum? Fire has frequently wrought destruction on towns, cities and country houses, and this was particularly the...
•
Season 1
•
Episode 19
•
1:00:24

A Royal Romanian Affair: Why Charles III Treasures Transylvania
The then Prince of Wales first came to Transylvania in the late 1990s on an official visit. It’s the only time he’s come on business. He fell so much under the spell of the place that he bought a house here, in one of the wooden vil...
•
Season 1
•
Episode 18
•
54:02

Great British Builders: Lutyens, Wren and The City of London (LIVE at The Ned's Club)
For the first time in the history of this podcast, Your Places or Mine has gone on location. John and Clive have been invited to The Ned's Club, the amazing complex of hospitality venues, including restaurants, hotel and private members’ ...
•
Season 1
•
Episode 17
•
1:10:50

Sovereignty in Stone: The Kings of Windsor Castle
Windsor Castle has been imbued with symbolism since William the Conqueror founded it after the invasion of 1066. He took the name of Windsor from an existing Anglo-Saxon palace which stood on a different spot. On a bluff overlooking...
•
Season 1
•
Episode 16
•
50:18

12 Crosses That Remember a Queen (with History Alice)
This week YPOMPOD is joined by Alice Loxton — History Alice to her many followers — to discuss the extraordinary series of crosses that King Edward I built in memory of his queen, Eleanor of Castile in the 1290s. Eleanor died in Lincolnshire. H...
•
Episode 15
•
52:15

THE DOLLAR PRINCESSES WHO REVOLUTIONISED THE BRITISH COUNTRY HOUSE
The American girl was a phenomenon, charming, sporty, better educated than her European counterpart. talk on a wide range of subjects. Around sixty American girls became peeresses at the turn of the 20th century. ‘We are the dollar ...
•
Episode 14
•
1:01:41

RAMSGATE: THE MARSEILLE OF THE SOUTH EAST
In this summer episode of ypompod, we got to the seaside – to Ramsgate, beloved of Queen Victoria and now home to the biggest Wetherspoon’s (in an elegant neo-Greek building called the Royal Pavilion of 1913) on the face of the planet.
•
Episode 13
•
59:01

EWELME: A VILLAGE AND ITS VANISHED MEDIEVAL PALACE
Where is Ewelme Palace? It was one of the most splendid houses in the country when it was built in the 15th century but nothing of it now remains. There are, however, some of the ancillary buildings and monuments that went with a gr...
•
Episode 12
•
1:01:35

NATIONAL GALLERY: THE SAINSBURY WING AND A NEW CHAPTER
The National Gallery, now 200 years old, occupies one of the most famous buildings in London, on the north side of Trafalgar Square. This Greek Revival masterpiece by William Wilkins was designed to take account of the view of St Martin i...
•
Episode 11
•
56:58

MEDITERRANEAN CAPRICE IN SNOWDONIA: THE STORY OF PORTMEIRION
In this episode, Clive and John discuss the holiday village of Portmeirion, an improbable, festive vision of the Mediterranean built on a wooded peninsula of Snowdonia, whose centenary falls this year.Portmeirion was the creation of the...
•
Episode 10
•
54:53

CASTLE HOWARD: VANBRUGH'S PALACE REDISPLAYED
Castle Howard in Yorkshire is one of a select group of country houses which must be seen as complete works of art. Visitors to the great domed palace, set in the gentle landscape of the Howardian Hills north-east of York, may be bowled ov...
•
Episode 9
•
51:23

GLYNDEBOURNE: THE HOUSE THAT GAVE BIRTH TO THE OPERA FESTIVAL
Picnic hampers, black tie, world-class opera — it’s the season for Glyndebourne, the festival that sired the happy, uniquely British phenomenon of country house opera. This week Clive and John discuss the house from which it all began (still ce...
•
Episode 8
•
49:39

THE TOWER OF LONDON: THE MOST NOTORIOUS CASTLE IN ENGLAND
The Tower of London is one of the great sights of the capital, a place that is as steeped in history as it has sometimes been, through the numerous executions it has witnessed, drenched in blood. In this week’s episode of Your Places or M...
•
Episode 7
•
1:04:03

LUTYENS AND LADY EMILY: A MARRIAGE OF OPPOSITES
In his mid 20s, Lutyens fell passionately in love with Lady Emily Lytton, daughter of the Earl Lytton, a diplomat and Viceroy of India who had really wanted to be a poet. He pursued her ardently, writing letters that were romantic, delig...
•
Season 1
•
Episode 6
•
56:30

LUTYENS AND HUDSON: HUDDY AND NED
Sir Edwin (Ned) Lutyens’s old friend Edward Hudson founded Country Life in 1897. A London printer, he was not a countryman, but commissioned three country houses as well as the Country Life office in Covent Garden. Convinced of Luty...
•
Season 1
•
Episode 5
•
59:40

LUTYENS AND GERTRUDE JEKYLL: HOME AND GARDEN
The first of a series on the early-20th-century architect Sir Edwin Lutyens, this episode examines the relationship between the young Ned — gangly, witty, shy — and the craftswoman turned gardener Gertrude Jekyll, his senior by 25 years. ...
•
Season 1
•
Episode 4
•
57:59

THE MAJESTY AND SPLENDOUR OF WESTMINSTER HALL
Clive and John discuss one of the most spectacular medieval buildings in Britain, Westminster Hall. Originally built by William the Conqueror’s heir, the voracious William Rufus, it was a structure of immense ambition — said to be the biggest h...
•
Season 1
•
Episode 3
•
53:39

KING CHARLES III'S ROYAL PASSION FOR ARCHITECTURE
One of the greatest of HM the King’s many enthusiasms is architecture. He made his first pronouncements on the subject in 1984 with the famous ‘Carbuncle’ speech and has been championing the causes of tradition, community, Classicism and ...
•
Season 1
•
Episode 2
•
1:03:38
