There’s something timelessly alluring about the perfect country house and the civilised values it represents – indeed, the rural retreat has been attracting the well-to-do since Roman times, when senators secured villas far from the noise and bustle of the city. In Britain, many of us hanker after a stately manor, a rose-clad farmhouse or a rambling rectory surrounded by lush gardens.
The grand country house is “an icon of British culture”, according to Julian Fellowes, the writer of Downton Abbey. It seems to “encapsulate the ideas that the British have about themselves” while enticing international buyers keen on a taste of English life. Yet there’s a new spin on the story of these quintessential rural homes: increasingly, they are being marketed to rent rather than to buy.
For many years, the designer Nicky Haslam rented an 18th-century hunting lodge in Hampshire. He now lives in a Georgian house on the Daylesford Estate in the Cotswolds, a reminder that the delights of country living can be enjoyed in a cottage, gatehouse or barn conversion as well as in a stately home.
One of the finest country houses to come to the lettings market in the past year is Stanley Park, a Grade II listed, 11-bedroom mansion in Selsey, near the Gloucestershire town of Stroud. Set in 2.5 acres of gorgeous grounds, it has Tudor origins and was revamped in Victorian gothic style in 1850, with a ballroom that offers wide views of Wales. An eight-year renovation retained period features such as an ornate plasterwork ceiling and mullioned windows, while adding modern elements such as a cinema room, gym and sauna.