Tudors Much of the foundation stone for the palace came from
Chertsey Abbey, which was abandoned and fell into ruins after the
Dissolution of the Monasteries during the Protestant Reformation in England.
Henry VIII came to Oatlands on a progress in September 1514 and hunted stags on
Chertsey Meads. He acquired the house in 1538, and rebuilt it for
Anne of Cleves. The palace was built around three main adjoining quadrangular courtyards covering fourteen hectares and using an existing 15th-century moated manor house. A bed made for Anne of Cleves was described in
an inventory of Oatlands: Queen Anne's bed" had
curtains of crimson
cloth of gold and cloth of silver decorated with borders of purple velvet on the seams. It featured 108 embroidered badges of Anne and Henry and their crowned arms on the tester and ceeler. Henry VIII married
Katherine Howard in the palace on 28 July 1540. Henry's subsequent wife,
Katherine Parr, spent time at the Palace as well. Records of her writings include a letter sent from Oatlands to her brother,
William, Lord Parr, shortly after her marriage to the King in July 1543. Henry VIII was less mobile in his later years and a special ramp was built for him at Oatlands so he could mount his hunting horses.
Mary Tudor retreated to Oatlands after the end of her anticipated pregnancy. Her previous residence,
Hampton Court Palace, had housed the nursery staff that was assembled for the birth of the child. The announcement of the move to Oatlands (which was considerably smaller than Hampton) ended any hope at court of a happy outcome to the Queen's pregnancy. Elizabeth I employed her
Sergeant Painter Leonard Fryer to decorate the long gallery with a woodgrain pattern in 1598. After priming the panelling with
white lead paint, he painted imitation "flotherwoode", with gold and silver highlights on the mouldings, and arabesque patterns and paintwork of "markatree", perhaps resembling
marquetry. Fryer used "sweet varnish" to finish his work, chosen for its scent.
Anne of Denmark and her children Prince Henry and
Princess Elizabeth were in residence in August 1603.
Prince Charles came from
Dunfermline Palace to Oatlands in September 1604. The palace belonged to James I's wife
Anne of Denmark from August 1611. She built a
silkworm house and a vineyard, and employed
Inigo Jones to design an ornamental gateway from the Privy Garden to the Park. Work on site was supervised by
Robert Stickells and the Keeper
John Trevor. The gardener John Bonnall planted "new and rare fruits, flowers, herbs, and trees". The window of a silkworm house was decorated with the Queen's heraldry. Anne ordered a new garden wall to be rebuilt to make the "French garden" wider. Her art collection at Oatlands included portraits of her Danish nephews, her courtiers
Jean Drummond,
Mary Middlemore, and
Tom Durie. Her own portrait was painted by
Paul van Somer, showing her with her horse, held by an
African servant, hunting dogs around her feet, and the new gateway and the palace in the background.The queen's bed was "laced with parchment lace of gold and silver spaingled", and the bedchamber was lined with panels of satin laced with coloured silks. Furnishing included painted and gilt Italian style chairs, and other seating was upholstered in red velvet with her initials. Despite this luxury, Anne of Denmark was sometimes bored or melancholy, and wrote to King James that she was "weary of Oatlands, of my mares, of my deer, of my dogs, and of my vineyard". Two paintings from her collection at Oatlands are now held by the
Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, depicting
Christ and the woman at the well and
Christ and the Canaanite woman. The ambassador of Savoy, Antonio Scanese, Count of Scarnafes, arrived to visit Anne of Denmark at Oatlands on 3 October 1614. She provided a grand reception for the Venetian ambassador
Piero Contarini at Oatlands on 30 August 1618. He was welcomed and entertained by her Lord Chamberlain, the
Earl of Leicester, while they waited for the arrival of several noblewomen, including
Margaret Howard, Countess of Nottingham and the
Countess of Arundel. The Queen had planned a hunt, but it was rained off. At the end of the dinner there were sweetmeats, then they stood and toasted
Elizabeth, Electress Palatine and
Frederick V. For such occasions, the under-keeper
Ralph Dison borrowed furnishings from other palaces.
Henrietta Maria and her children Oatlands was one of the properties settled upon
Henrietta Maria on her marriage to Charles I. She used it as a country retreat, installing part of her art collection on site, employing
Ralph Grynder to make new furnishings and
John Tradescant the elder to remake the gardens. Henrietta Maria staged a pastoral
masque at the palace in August 1635. In August 1637 it was rumoured she was sickening with consumption (tuberculosis, which was frequently fatal as penicillin was not yet discovered). At Oatlands she was drinking asses' (donkeys) milk as a remedy. In 1646 Oatlands was a temporary home of the infant
Princess Henrietta of England, daughter of
Charles I of England and later Duchess of Orleans, sister-in-law of
Louis XIV. Her governess
Lady Dalkeith smuggled her into France in the summer of 1646 during the
English Civil War. ==House to hotel==