11th–16th centuries The name 'Chatsworth' is a corruption of ''Chetel's-worth'', meaning "the Court of Chetel". In the reign of
Edward the Confessor, a man of
Norse origin named Chetel (Danish-Norwegian: Ketil) held lands jointly with a
Saxon named Leotnoth in three townships: Ednesoure to the west of the Derwent, and Langoleie and Chetesuorde to the east. Chetel was deposed after the
Norman Conquest of 1066, and in the
Domesday Book of 1086 the
Manor of Chetesuorde is listed as the property of the Crown in the custody of William de Peverel. Bess died in 1608 and Chatsworth was passed to her eldest son,
Henry. The estate was purchased from Henry by his brother
William Cavendish, 1st Earl of Devonshire, for £10,000.
17th century shows Chatsworth part way through the 1st Duke's alterations. The south front has been rebuilt but the original east front survives. The baroque garden has been laid out, but only the first, smaller version of the Cascade has been built, and the Canal Pond has not been dug. The 1st Duke's stables are to the left of the house Few changes were made at Chatsworth until the mid-17th century.
William Cavendish, 3rd Earl of Devonshire, a staunch
Royalist, was expelled from the House of Lords in 1642. He left England for the safety of the continent and his estates were sequestered. Chatsworth was occupied by both sides during the
Civil War, and the 3rd Earl did not return to the house until
The Restoration of the monarchy. He reconstructed the principal rooms in an attempt to make them more comfortable, but the Elizabethan house was outdated and unsafe. The famed political philosopher
Thomas Hobbes spent the last four or five years of his life at Chatsworth Hall, then owned by
William Cavendish, 1st Duke of Devonshire. He had been a friend of the family for nearly 70 years, having taken a job tutoring the 2nd Earl shortly after graduating from
St John's College, Cambridge in 1608. Hobbes died at another Cavendish family estate,
Hardwick Hall, in December 1679. After his death, many of Hobbes' manuscripts were found at Chatsworth House. William Cavendish, 4th Earl of Devonshire, who became the 1st Duke in 1694 for helping to put
William of Orange on the English throne, was an advanced
Whig. He was forced to retire to Chatsworth during the reign of
King James II. This called for rebuilding the house, which began in 1687. Cavendish aimed initially to reconstruct only the south wing with the State Apartments and so decided to retain the Elizabethan courtyard plan, although its layout was becoming increasingly unfashionable. He enjoyed building and reconstructed the East Front, which included the Painted Hall and Long Gallery, followed by the West Front from 1699 to 1702. The North Front was completed in 1707 just before he died. The 1st Duke also had large
parterre gardens designed by
George London and
Henry Wise, who was later appointed by
Queen Anne as Royal Gardener at
Kensington Palace.
18th century aspect of Chatsworth's setting on the edge of the
Peak District William Cavendish, 2nd Duke of Devonshire, and
William Cavendish, 3rd Duke of Devonshire, made no changes to the house or gardens, but both contributed much to the collection found at Chatsworth at the time. Connoisseurs of the arts, they included in the collection paintings, Old Master drawings and prints, ancient coins and carved Greek and Roman sculptures. Palladian furniture designed by
William Kent was commissioned by the 3rd Duke when he had
Devonshire House in London rebuilt after a fire in 1733. When Devonshire House was sold and demolished in 1924, the furniture was transferred to Chatsworth.
The 4th Duke made great changes to the house and gardens. He decided the approach to the house should be from the west. He had the old stables and offices as well as parts of
Edensor village pulled down so they were not visible from the house, and replaced the 1st Duke's formal gardens with a more natural look, designed by
Capability Brown, which he helped bring into fashion. In 1748, the 4th Duke married
Lady Charlotte Boyle, the sole surviving heiress of
Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington. Lord Burlington was an accomplished architect in his own right with many works to his name including
Chiswick House. With his death, his important collection of architectural drawings and Inigo Jones masque designs, Old Master paintings and William Kent-designed furniture were transferred to the Dukes of Devonshire. This inheritance also brought many estates to the family. as Cynthia from
Spenser's
Faerie Queene by
Maria Cosway . In 1774,
William Cavendish, 5th Duke of Devonshire, married
Georgiana Spencer, famous as a socialite who gathered around her a large circle of literary and political friends. Thomas Gainsborough and Joshua Reynolds would paint her; the Gainsborough painting would be disposed of by the 5th Duke and be recovered much later, after many vicissitudes. The film
The Duchess portrayed their life together. Georgiana was the great-great-great-great aunt of
Diana, Princess of Wales; their lives, centuries apart, have been compared in tragedy.
19th century The
6th Duke (known as "the Bachelor Duke") was a passionate traveller, builder, gardener and collector, who transformed Chatsworth. In 1811 he inherited the title and eight major estates: Chatsworth and
Hardwick Hall in Derbyshire, Devonshire House,
Burlington House and
Chiswick House in London,
Bolton Abbey and
Londesborough Hall in Yorkshire, and
Lismore Castle in Ireland. These covered of land in England and Ireland. The Duke was a collector especially of sculpture and books. When he built the North Wing to the designs of
Sir Jeffry Wyatville, it included a purpose-built Sculpture Gallery to house his collection. He took over several rooms in the house to contain the entire libraries he was purchasing at auction. The 6th Duke loved to entertain, and the early 19th century saw a rise in popularity of country-house parties. In addition to a sculpture gallery, the new north wing housed an orangery, a theatre, a Turkish bath, a dairy, a vast new kitchen and numerous servants rooms. In 1830 the Duke increased the guest accommodation by converting suites of rooms into individual guest bedrooms. People invited to stay at Chatsworth spent their days hunting, riding, reading and playing billiards. In the evening formal dinners would take place, followed by music, charades and billiards or conversation in the smoking room for the men. Women would return to their bedroom many times during the day to change their outfits. The guest bedrooms on the east front at Chatsworth are the most complete set from the period to survive with their original furnishings. The Duke spent 47 years transforming the house and gardens. A
Latin inscription over the fireplace in the Painted Hall translates, "William Spencer, Duke of Devonshire, inherited this most beautiful house from his father in the year 1811, which had been begun in the year of English liberty 1688, and completed it in the year of his bereavement 1840." The year 1688 was that of the
Glorious Revolution, supported by the
Whig dynasties including the Cavendishes. The year 1840 brought the death of the Duke's beloved niece Blanche, who was married to his heir, the future
7th Duke. In 1844, the 6th Duke privately printed and published a book called
Handbook to Chatsworth and Hardwick, giving a history of the Cavendish family's two main estates. It was praised by Charles Dickens. In 1888, the
Los Angeles neighbourhood of
Chatsworth, California, was named after the estate.
20th century Social change and taxes in the early 20th century began to affect the Devonshires' lifestyle. When the
8th Duke died in 1908 over £500,000 of death duties became due. This was a small charge compared with that of 42 years later, but the estate was already burdened with debt from the 6th Duke's extravagances, the failure of the 7th Duke's business ventures at
Barrow-in-Furness, and the
great depression of British agriculture apparent since the 1870s. In 1912 the family sold 25 books printed by
William Caxton and a collection of 1,347 volumes of plays acquired by the 6th Duke, including four
Shakespeare folios and 39 Shakespeare
quartos, to the
Huntington Library in California. Tens of thousands of acres of land in
Somerset,
Sussex and Derbyshire were also sold during or just after the First World War. In December 1904,
King Charles I of Portugal and
Queen Maria Amélia stayed at Chatsworth House during their visit to Britain. It snowed almost constantly while they were there and the King reportedly started a
snowball fight, in which the assembled ladies joined enthusiastically, when he met the
Marquis of Soveral, the Portuguese
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to the
Court of St James's. In 1920 the family's London mansion,
Devonshire House, which occupied a site in
Piccadilly, was sold to developers and demolished. Much of its contents went to Chatsworth and a much smaller house at 2 Carlton Gardens near
The Mall was acquired. The Great
Conservatory in the garden at Chatsworth was demolished, as it needed 10 men to run it, huge quantities of coal to heat it and all the plants had died during the war, when no coal had been available for non-essential purposes. To reduce running costs further, there was talk of pulling down the 6th Duke's north wing, which was then seen as having no aesthetic or historical value, but nothing came of it.
Chiswick House – the celebrated
Palladian villa in the suburbs of West London that the Devonshires inherited when the
4th Duke married
Lord Burlington's daughter – was sold in 1929 for £80,000 to
Middlesex County Council and
Brentford and Chiswick Urban District Council. Nonetheless, life at Chatsworth continued much as before. The household was run by a
comptroller and domestic staff were still available, although more so in the countryside than the cities. The staff at Chatsworth at the time consisted of a butler, an under-butler, a groom of the chambers, a valet, three footmen, a housekeeper, the Duchess's maid, 11 housemaids, two sewing women, a cook, two kitchen maids, a vegetable maid, two or three scullery maids, two still-room maids, a dairy maid, six laundry maids and the Duchess's secretary. All these 38 or 39 people lived in the house. Daily staff included the odd man, an upholsterer, a scullery maid, two scrubbing women, a laundry porter, a steam boiler man, a coal man, two porter's lodge attendants, two night firemen, a night porter, two window cleaners, and a team of joiners, plumbers and electricians. The
Clerk of Works supervised the maintenance of the house and other properties on the estate. There were also grooms, chauffeurs and gamekeepers. The number of garden staff was somewhere between 80 in the 6th Duke's time and the 20 or so in the early 21st century. There was also a librarian, Francis Thompson, who wrote the first book-length account of Chatsworth since the 6th Duke's handbook. Most of the UK's country houses were put to institutional use in the Second World War. Some of those used as barracks were badly damaged, but the
10th Duke, thinking that schoolgirls would make better tenants than soldiers, arranged for Chatsworth to be occupied by
Penrhos College, a girls'
public school in
Colwyn Bay, Wales. The contents were packed away in 11 days, and in September 1939, 300 girls and their mistresses moved in for a six-year stay. The whole house was used, including the state rooms, which were turned into dormitories. Condensation from the breath of the sleeping girls caused fungus to grow behind some of the pictures. The house was not very comfortable for so many people, with a shortage of hot water, but there were compensations, such as skating on the Canal Pond. The girls grew vegetables in the garden as a contribution to the war effort. During this period
Deneys Reitz, on an official trip to Britain in his capacity as Deputy Prime Minister of South Africa, reported being hosted by the
10th Duke in a factor's cottage on the estate because the main house was in use as a school. In May 1944
Kathleen Kennedy, sister of
John F. Kennedy, married
William Cavendish, Marquess of Hartington, elder son of the 10th Duke. However, he was killed in action in Belgium in September 1944 and Kathleen died in a plane crash in 1948. His younger brother Andrew became the
11th Duke in 1950. He was married to
Deborah Mitford, one of the
Mitford girls, sister to
Nancy Mitford,
Diana Mitford,
Pamela Mitford,
Unity Mitford and
Jessica Mitford. The modern history of Chatsworth begins in 1950. The family had yet to move back after the war. Although the 10th Duke had transferred his assets to his son during his lifetime in the hope of avoiding
death duties, the Duke died a few weeks too early for the lifetime exemption to apply and tax was charged at 80 per cent on the estate. The amount due was £7 million (equivalent to £ as of ). Some of the family's advisors considered the situation irretrievable and there was a proposal to transfer Chatsworth to the nation as a
Victoria and Albert Museum of
Northern England. Instead, the Duke decided to retain his family's home if he could. He sold tens of thousands of acres of land, transferred Hardwick Hall to the National Trust in lieu of tax, and sold some major works of art from Chatsworth. The family's Sussex house,
Compton Place, was let to a school. The effect of the death duties was mitigated to an extent by the historically low value of art in the post-war years and the increase in land values after 1950, during the post-war agricultural revival, and so on the face of it the losses were much less than 80 per cent in terms of physical assets. In Derbyshire were retained out of . The Bolton Abbey estate in Yorkshire and the Lismore Castle estate in Ireland remained in the family. It took 17 years to complete negotiations with the
Inland Revenue, interest being due in the meantime. The Chatsworth Estate is now managed by the Trustees of the Chatsworth Settlement, established in 1946. The 10th Duke was pessimistic about the future of houses like Chatsworth and made no plans to move back in after the war. After Penrhos College left in 1945, the only people who slept in the house were two housemaids, but over the winter of 1948–1949 the house was cleaned and tidied for reopening to the public by two Hungarian women, who had been Kathleen Kennedy's cook and housemaid in London, and a team of their compatriots. The house was Grade I listed in 1951 after the passage of the
Town and Country Planning Act 1947. The new trust was granted a 99-year lease of the house, its main contents, its grounds, its precincts and adjacent forestry, a total of . To legalise this, the Chatsworth House Trust pays a token rent of £1 a year. To facilitate the arrangement and build up a sufficient multi-million-pound endowment fund, the trustees sold works of art, mostly old masters' drawings, which had not been on regular display. The Cavendish family is represented on the House Trust's Council of Management, but most of the directors are not family members. The Duke pays a market rent for use of his private apartments in the house. The cost of running the house and grounds is about £4 million a year. Film of Chatsworth in 1945 is held by the
Cinema Museum in London. Ref HM0365.
21st century , bridge and house at Chatsworth, 2002 The 11th Duke died in 2004 and was succeeded by his son, the current Duke,
Peregrine Cavendish, 12th Duke of Devonshire. The 11th Duke's widow, the
Dowager Duchess of Devonshire, died on 24 September 2014. Until then she was active in promoting the estate and increasing its visitor income. She made many additions to the gardens, including the maze, the kitchen, the cottage gardens and several commissions of modern sculpture. As Deborah Mitford, she wrote seven books on various aspects of Chatsworth and its massive property. A structural survey in 2004 showed that major renovation was required. A £32 million programme of works was undertaken, including restoration of stonework, statues, paintings, tapestries and water features. The work, the most extensive for 200 years, took ten years and was completed in 2018. According to the Estate website, Chatsworth remains home to the 12th Duke and Duchess. They are involved in the operation through the Charitable Trust. The Devonshire Collection Archives stored at Chatsworth include 450 years of documents about the family and their two main estates. During the
2022 European heatwaves, a section of the Great Parterre that formerly occupied Chatsworth's South Lawn was revealed as the grass and soil dried out, showing the patterns of earthworks that had been used to construct it. As the lawn's grass has shorter roots, it dried out faster, creating a contrast that allows the structure to be viewed with the naked eye. ==Architecture==