"All this he saw, for one moment breathless and intense, vivid on the morning sky; and still, as he looked, he lived; and still, as he lived, he wondered."

#MerfolkMonday: the Mermaid Passage at Harvington Hall

Harvington Hall is a moated medieval and Elizabethan manor house located in the hamlet of Harvington in Worcestershire, England. Its moat and artificial island trace back to the 13th century to, and the 14th-century building still survives behind a layer of bricks. The hall was owned by several notable figures over the centuries, including Adam de Harvington, Chancellor of the Exchequer, and the Pakington family in the 16th century, and it was under the latter family that the hall was transformed into an Elizabethan manor house, with Humphrey Pakington adding numerous priest holes to hide Catholic priests during the Elizabethan religious persecutions.

The Mermaid Passage is a significant feature within the house’s complex architecture. It is located on the first floor — a tiny, overlooked corridor that leads from the main part of the hall to the Great Staircase — and contains some of the most impressive wall paintings discovered in the hall. These paintings, dating back to the 14th century, were hidden under layers of plaster and depict various scenes, including Biblical scenes like David slaying Goliath. The name is due to the double-tailed mermaid in the picture.

The passage is also notable for its unique architectural design, which — in the very words of the museum curator — will make you “lose all sense of where you are”.

art and fashion

Fortuny in Venice

A few weeks ago, I wrote about an installation with pieces by Giorgio Armani at the Pinacoteca di Brera, here in Milan, and as a matter of fact that wasn’t the only show around fashion I visited, which is unlike me. While I was in

Read More »
books and literature

Licantropies

I love books from this publisher: they mostly curate publications of Gothic fiction coming from the public domain, but they’re splendidly curated, translated with love, and assembled in lovely products. They’ll let you discover and rediscover gems at the very heart of our contemporary horror

Read More »
books and literature

Arabilious

An astonishing anthology of what’s being called “Arabic futurism” because, as the preface explains well, the term “science fiction” is an invention of other cultures, and it might not apply to what we’re reading here.And what is it that we’re reading here?Stories about the future,

Read More »
Share on LinkedIn
Throw on Reddit
Roll on Tumblr
Mail it
No Comments

Post A Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

RELATED POSTS

Fortuny in Venice

A few weeks ago, I wrote about an installation with pieces by Giorgio Armani at the Pinacoteca di Brera, here in Milan, and as a matter of fact that wasn’t the only show around fashion I visited, which is unlike me. While I was in

Read More

Licantropies

I love books from this publisher: they mostly curate publications of Gothic fiction coming from the public domain, but they’re splendidly curated, translated with love, and assembled in lovely products. They’ll let you discover and rediscover gems at the very heart of our contemporary horror

Read More

Arabilious

An astonishing anthology of what’s being called “Arabic futurism” because, as the preface explains well, the term “science fiction” is an invention of other cultures, and it might not apply to what we’re reading here.And what is it that we’re reading here?Stories about the future,

Read More