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Distributed for University of Wales Press

St Fagans Castle

The Architectural and Social History of a Welsh Country House

The first comprehensive study of St Fagans Castle, an Elizabethan country house in Cardiff, Wales.

St Fagans Castle is significant as a grade I-listed building and has been home to St Fagans National Museum of History since 1948. The house was built by a local lawyer named Dr John Gibbon in about 1580, and broke new ground as one of the first symmetrical country houses in Wales, influenced by the Italian Renaissance. This study takes a multi-period and cross-disciplinary approach to telling the story of St Fagans, with chapters spanning the twelfth to the twentieth century and interrelated sections on architectural history, garden history, and ownership. Key themes explored in the work include the impact of the Italian Renaissance on country houses in Wales; whether there is anything architecturally distinctive about country houses in Wales, especially compared with English country houses; the contribution of women to architectural and garden developments at St Fagans; and the colonial connection at St Fagans.


296 pages | 64 photos and illustrations, 4 family trees, and 8 floorplans | 6.14 x 9.21 | © 2026

Architecture: British Architecture

History: British and Irish History, Military History


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Bethan Scorey is an architectural historian from Cardiff, with a particular interest in the country houses of Wales. She recently completed her PhD on St Fagans Castle at the Institute for the Study of Welsh Estates, Bangor University.

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