was the weekend 'party house' of Ferdinand de Rothschild, where he entertained many famous and royal guests whilst showing off his diverse collections. Fluent in three languages, and considered "as much at home in Paris as in London", His collection of
Renaissance ''objets d'art'' from the house was bequeathed to the
British Museum, and under the terms of the bequest are still displayed there separately as the
Waddesdon Bequest. The
Holy Thorn Reliquary is a highlight of the collection, though its distinguished
provenance was unknown until after World War II. He willed Waddesdon Manor to
Alice Charlotte von Rothschild, his unmarried younger sister, who had lived with him there. Yet, 'towards the end of his life, Baron Ferdinand de Rothschild became increasingly concerned about the future of Waddesdon Manor', shown here in his quote from
The Red Book:"A
future generation may reap the chief benefit of a work which to me has been a labour of love, though I fear Waddesdon will share the fate of most properties whose owners have no descendants, and fall into decay. May the day yet be distant when weeds will spread over the garden, the terraces crumble into dust, the pictures and cabinets cross the Channel or the Atlantic, and the melancholy cry of the nigh-jar sound from the deserted towers" - Ferdinand de Rothschild, 1897Miss Alice, in turn, bequeathed the estate to their nephew,
James Armand de Rothschild. Following James' death, the manor passed to the
National Trust, in a special arrangement where the Rothschild family remain involved. ==References==