Parliamentarians past
Above the lower or 'crypt' chapel arose a new hall, named St Stephen鈥檚, which in size and design loosely followed the medieval chapel. Within this Victorian pastiche, the Fine Art Commission introduced sculptures of eminent parliamentarians of the 17th and 18th centuries, whose deeds and words had resonated through the old chamber, amongst these were Sir Edmund Hampden, the Earl of Clarendon, Sir Robert Walpole and Pitt the Younger - all representing in stone the ghosts of parliamentarians past.
'... the entire interior was decorated in a polychrome scheme of painting, stencilling, gilding and marble ...'
The lower chapel, which had served as a wine cellar, a dining room and - as legend has it - a stable for Cromwell鈥檚 horses, was now restored to a functioning chapel. The interior, although charred by the fire, still contained such details as the carved medieval ceiling bosses representing martyrdoms - that of St Stephen was located above the altar.
Sir Charles Barry鈥檚 son, Edward, undertook the restoration and as a symbol of its reversal of fortune, the entire interior was decorated in a polychrome scheme of painting, stencilling, gilding and marble which emulated, in a very High Victorian manner, the earlier medieval scheme.
Published: 2005-04-02