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Medieval beauty: The Cloisters, New York, US Part of the Metropolitan Museum of Art
One of the most important museums of medieval art in the world could only have been created in 1930s America, as Jeremy Musson discovers
The man who bought Stonehenge
On a whim in 1915, Sir Cecil Chubb made a bid for a plot of land that would never get planning permission. Bernard Bale looks at the life of the barrister who gave Stonehenge to the nation
Flights of fancy
Capturing images of British butterflies dancing through the air like petals on the breeze has been a labour of love for photographer Andrew Fusek Peters, as he tells Ben Lerwill
The big one
It’s the series we’ve all been waiting for. Can Pat Cummins and co resist the hottest team in world cricket,
The green furniture trade
Devoted to recycling by its very nature, the antiques world is now finding evermore innovative ways to go green, from straw-bale buildings to sea freight
The master of the shadow
The painter-turned-renowned printmaker’s light shone but fleetingly, and he has been overshadowed by his friend David Hockney, yet Norman Stevens left a luminous legacy that deserves greater recognition,
Go ahead, jump!
True crickets once basked in the warmth of the kitchen or sang their cheerful summer song in the fields. Now, after years of decline, some species are making a welcome comeback,
Fool me once
A fat green blob wearing a three-day growth of stubble, sexy it is not, et the gooseberry adds a welcome sharpness to jellies, jams and a simple fool,
How to be a human squirrel
Pickling and preserving is a great way to extend the shelf life of seasonal produce, says John Wright, who shares some of his top tips and ideas
Ramblers retreat
IN the village where I grew up, all the cottages grew the same pink rambling rose against their walls. Blowsy, prickly and very sweet scented, my grandmother told me that its name was ‘Albertine’, a Wichurana Rambler introduced in France in 1921, the year my father was born.
Romancing the garden
Stopping spraying and allowing plants to self-seed was the first step in the gradual and brilliant reinvention of the walled garden at Serge Hill,
The heat is on
Lucy Denton investigates how heat pumps can help our heritage buildings in the move to a more sustainable future
To the manor reborn
A charming Tudor house in Dorset comes to the market for the first time in almost three centuries
Better than new
Sustainability relies on creating furniture and appliances that can be fixed–and the skills to do so,
The land of raw milk and honey
Raw milk has been vilified in the press and by food agencies and competitor industries for decades, but its superior taste and health benefits demand we take a second look,
Farming for the future
Food security and land management are two of the most pressing issues facing the UK today, but the way forward isn’t simple. Here, nine guardians of the land outline what they think the next step should be
Changing tides
North Devon recently became the UK’s first official World Surfing Reserve and its upgraded status is shining a much-needed light on how much more the sport has to offer beyond riding waves,
Powered by the wind
Turbines are becoming a familiar feature of the landscape. John Goodall looks at their operation, form and future through the example of the largest onshore wind farm in the UK
A golden oldie
THERE has been a big birthday in the household.
God's country
As authors rewrite the exploits of Greek mythology’s gods and heroes for a modern-day audience, Rosie Paterson goes in search of the key characters in the Cyclades
The elixir of youth
A string of islands in the South China Sea might just hold the secret to a long and healthy life. Luke Abrahams made the journey to find out what it involves
For whom the harebell tolls
Frail and delicate, this graceful blue flower alarmed our superstitious ancestors for centuries until it became a symbol of love, innocence and humility
The end of the line?
There are shocking plans afoot to modernise Liverpool Street Station, but it’s not the first of London’s historic Victorian stations to come under attack, says Jack Watkins, as he takes a look at some of the ones saved and those that were less fortunate
The Adam family
The king of classical motifs, Robert Adam festooned late-18th-century London with exquisite plasterwork, fluted columns and fanciful pilasters, but, in his drive to succeed, he nearly lost it all
Treasures of the east
A Whig power house is only one of the many jewels in East Anglia
The pride of the peacock
Graceful peafowl have never been shy about coming forward, although most of us admire the males’ flamboyant tail feathers–long a vibrant and striking motif–far more than their grating cries,
Reduced to splendour
Audley End, Essex A property in the care of English Heritage Built to attract a visit by James I, this hugely ambitious house has been massively reduced and yet remains both outstanding and magnificent.
A breath of fresh air
Amid the sweet chestnuts, walnuts and cobnuts of a Suffolk farm, a natural amphitheatre has been transformed into a glorious sylvan venue for touring companies to tread Nature’s boards
Sugar and spice
I FIRST grew sweet cicely (Myrrhis odorata) thanks to my father-in-law: one mention that I’d recently read about it had him trowel in hand, lifting multiple self-seeded plants into pots of varying size for me to lighten his burden. I introduced him to the joys of sweet cicely gin a few months later and he’s regretted thinning his supply ever since.
Family treasures
Tilly Ware meets Lucy Skellorn, great-great-grand-daughter of the pre-eminent iris breeder Sir Michael Foster, at her garden near Stowmarket, where her quest to find the original Foster hybrids has already created a National Collection