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Shiver my timbers
Part art and part history, these timber-frame houses are some of England’s finest
Set fair for 2020
The year’s trade had an excellent start, with high prices achieved for a cheese-toasting dish, a stone Apollo, an Art Deco rug and slabs of the Berlin Wall
Make mine a labradoodle
In the past 30 years, this well-mannered crossbreed has stolen our hearts, yet the man responsible has likened it to Frankenstein’s monster. Kate MacDougall finds out more
A growing success
The Plant Specialist, Great Missenden, Buckinghamshire A good garden starts with great plants. Juliet Roberts visits one of the finest suppliers
A flash in the pan
One of Britain’s outstanding Baroque houses vanished in 1747, having been sold within three years of its patron’s death. William Aslet looks at the tantalising fragments that survive and what they tell us about this prodigy building
Punching Above Their Weight
Small independent schools can still give larger rivals a run for their money in terms of academic results, facilities and individuality. Madeleine Silver finds out how they manage to hold their own
Time to reflect
Find some perspective next to the peaceful waters of these three properties
Purple reign
Purple-sprouting broccoli, the surprisingly robust dandy of the vegetable patch, is best enjoyed with an anchovy sauce and a dusting of feta, says Tom Parker Bowles
Pride rocks
At last, Joseph Paxton’s monument is being given the restoration it deserves, reveals Tiffany Daneff
Scalloped splashes of gold
Lauded by Wordsworth for their ‘glittering countenance’, the appearance of the first celandines and the swallow’s return to our shores are c favourite, and much anticipated, harbingers of spring
Albion the brave
Two works illustrate the ambivalence–loyalty and pride mixed with disgust and anger–that playwrights, from Shakespeare to Alan Bennett, often display towards England
Fantastic Mr Fox
On a dreary February day, John Lewis-Stempel comes face-to-face with a brace of Vulpes vulpes crucigera among the emerging snowdrops in the dingle below his Herefordshire farmhouse
Pomp and propaganda
Jeremy Musson explores the glorious detail unveiled in a new exhibition devoted to the late Stuart Age
A palace worthy of a bishop
Encircled by water in the shadow of its cathedral, the Bishop’s Palace at Wells is a captivating survival. John Goodall looks at the history of this outstanding building 800 years after its construction
A leap of faith
Ladies, gather your red petticoats and Poundland rings–the day on which you’re ‘allowed’ to propose marriage is on the horizon, says Victoria Marston
The Future Of The Kitchen Garden
Steven Desmond applauds a ground-breaking restoration that balances productivity with beauty
Gardens For All Seasons
Winter Gardens have had a difficult late 20th century. What lies ahead for these extraordinary architectural creations, asks Marcus Binney, and might they be about to enjoy a revival?
My Favourite Painting Viktor Wynd
A Love Spell by Austin Osman Spare
Through An Italian Looking Glass
Restituted paintings, particularly a stormy scene from the life of St Clare, light up Christie’s, as Dürer poses a riddle it is natural, I suppose, to
Tied up in knots
Homo rusticus spends ‘Veganuary’ on the urban media trail
‘Where gentle Thames his winding water leads'
Huon Mallalieu reflects on the influence of the Thames on the work of Turner and other artists and writers of his time
Trumpet majors
WAS there ever such an obliging and ubiquitous plant as the daffodil?
Kent believe it
The market in the garden of England is seeing a Dutch bloom
City of arts and crafts
Bruges, Belgium
Broadening horizons
As Britain’s leading metropolitan auction houses cut their regional activities, their provincial counterparts are doing better than ever, says Emma Crichton-Miller
Moss magic
Moss softens hard edges and brings a natural ease and permanence wherever it colonises, but tends to be ignored. Tilly Ware thinks it’s time to invite it in
To the manors born
Two properties, one in Somerset, one in Berkshire, would certainly impress Audrey fforbes-Hamilton
Wearing the green willow
Of all the sylvan gifts we enjoy, Ian Morton finds that the moisture-loving willow tree has arguably bestowed the most to Mankind throughout history
The Prince and his pagodas
The Royal Pavilion, Brighton, East Sussex Brighton & Hove City Council The temporary loan by the Royal Collection Trust of fittings and furnishings removed from the Brighton Pavilion in the 1840s have transformed this lavish interior. John Goodall reports
Thank you for the music
Many composers, even Elgar and Liszt, owe their popularity to groups of devotees who were determined their music should continue to be heard. Claire Jackson reports