Houses of Guinness

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A01=Adrian Tinniswood
architecture
Author_Adrian Tinniswood
beer
Category=AMK
Category=AMKS
Category=NHT
Dublin
Edwardian architecture
English history
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Georgian architecture
Guinness
Guinness Storehouse
Hampstead Heath
Ireland history
Kenwood
London
Netflix
powerful families
Stout
Tinniswood
UK history

Product details

  • ISBN 9781785516078
  • Dimensions: 196 x 250mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Nov 2025
  • Publisher: Scala Arts & Heritage Publishers Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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'Tinniswood has created a tome of architectural brilliance, uncomfortable historical truths, and a complicated legacy of power and philanthropy.' – The Irish Times

Step inside the historic homes of the Guinness family and enter a world of power, privilege and palatial living.
 
The Guinnesses became famous as brewers, philanthropists and socialites, but they also created some of the most distinctive homes in Britain and Ireland, where they lived, loved and entertained in high style.
 
Royalty was a frequent visitor to Ashford Castle and Elveden Hall. At Luggala Oonagh Guinness welcomed rock stars, actors and artists. At Biddesden Bryan Guinness lived the life of an urbane country squire, while at Kelvedon his cousin Honor left her husband Chips Channon to play the country gentleman while she ran off with her land agent. The family’s Dublin mansions – Farmleigh, St Anne’s and 80 St Stephen’s Green – were a byword for grandeur and opulence. And the Guinnesses spent a fortune buying two spectacular country houses, Kenwood and Castletown, not to live in, but simply to save them from destruction and to give them away.
 
Adrian Tinniswood, the bestselling historian of the country house, opens the door to castles and mansions that once belonged to the greatest brewing dynasty the world has ever seen.

'Tinniswood … [is] an erudite historian of country-house life in all its anecdote-worthy vagaries.' – Financial Times

'We are in the company of a confident and skilled historian who understands the mores of his era and wears his learning lightly…' – Virginia Nicholson, The Times

'Few authors can combine serious social history with the sometimes sad and often hilarious narratives of country-house life in the way that Tinniswood can.' – Jeremy Musson

Adrian Tinniswood, OBE FSA, is a true chronicler of the country houses of the UK and Ireland, having published nineteen books on social and architectural history. His many acclaimed titles include The Long Weekend: Life in the English Country House Between the Wars', a New York Times and Sunday Times bestseller, and The Verneys: a True Story of Love, War and Madness in Seventeenth-Century England, which was shortlisted for the BBC/Samuel Johnson Prize. Adrian Tinniswood is currently Professor of British Cultural History at the University of Buckingham. He lives in the west of Ireland with his wife Helen and their cat. 

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