After passing through Sherborne on the way to
Plymouth, Sir
Walter Raleigh fell in love with the castle, and
Queen Elizabeth relinquished the estate, leasing it to Raleigh in 1592. Rather than refurbish the castle, Raleigh decided to build a new house for temporary visits. He completed
Sherborne Lodge, a four-storey rectangular building, in 1594. The antiquary
John Aubrey described the building as "a delicate Lodge in the park, of Brick, not big, but very convenient for its bignes, a place to retire from the Court in summer time, and to contemplate, etc." It had four polygonal corner turrets with angled masonry as if they were to serve for military defence, which Nicholas Cooper suggests "may be an obeisance to the old building". Its most progressive feature for its date was the entrance, disguised in one of the corner towers so as not to spoil the apparent symmetry of the facade, which was centred on a rectangular forecourt. The entrance vestibule also contained a winder stairwell and gave directly onto the hall. == 17th century ==