The Temple of Flora Stourton with Gasper, England

Listed Building Data

The Temple of Flora has been designated a Grade I listed building in England with the following information, which has been imported from the National Heritage List for England. Please note that not all available data may be shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.

List Entry ID
1318472
Listing Type
listed building
Grade
I
Date Listed
6 January 1966
Name
THE TEMPLE OF FLORA
Location
THE TEMPLE OF FLORA
Parish
Stourton with Gasper
District
Wiltshire
Grid Reference
ST 77423 34015
Easting
377422.6000
Northing
134014.8286

Listed Building Description

Text courtesy of Historic England. © Crown Copyright, reprinted under the Open Government License.

STOURTON WITH GASPER STOURHEAD GARDENS ST 73 SE (east side) 6/147 The Temple of Flora 6.1.66 GV I Temple. 1744-46 by Henry Flitcroft for Henry Hoare. Limestone ashlar and stucco, hipped slate roof. Tetrastyle Doric portico, entablature with triglyphs and bucrania, moulded pediment. Central double doors with 6 fielded panels in moulded architrave with broken pediment, Latin inscription from the Aeneid over door, large 12-pane sash either side. Side walls are blind, rendered. Rectangular interior has semi-circular niche on back wall containing a Coade stone copy of the Borghese Vase, made by Daniel Pincot c1772. Circular niches on side walls contain marble female busts. The Temple also contains an important contemporary group of altars and seats or pulvinaria, copies of those in Montfaucon's Supplement to Antiquity Explained, 1725. The Temple was one of Henry Hoare's first features in the gardens, pre-dating the lake, the mason responsible was William Privet of Chilmark. The Borghese Vase was originally in the Venetian Seat, dismantled 1790s by Colt Hoare. (K. Woodbridge, The Stourhead Landscape, 1982)

Listing NGR: ST7742334017