The Royal Pavilion is a splendid palace built in Brighton, East Sussex in the 19th Century as a seaside retreat for the then Prince Regent.
The Prince Regent, who later became King George IV of the United Kingdom first visited Brighton in the year of 1783, due to his physician advising him that the sea water would be beneficial to his gout. In 1786, he rented a farmhouse in the location of the Old Steine area in Brighton.
He employed Henry Holland to enlarge the building, and purchased the land surrounding the property.
Between 1815 and 1822, the designer John Nash redesigned the palace in the format familiar with tourists and locals alike. The palace looks rather out of place in the middle of Brighton, having a very Indian appearance on the outside. However, the fanciful interior design is heavily influenced by both Chinese and Indian fashion. It is a prime example of the exoticism that was an alternative to more classicizing mainstream taste in the Regency style.
After the death of George IV, Queen Victoria sold the Royal Pavilion to the council.
During the First World War the pavilion was used as a hospital for wounded servicemen. As of 2004 the pavilion is open to visitors.
The garden of the BrightonPavilion after improvement
In 1805 the landscape gardener Humphry Repton was invited by the future George IV to submit designs for the garden of his seaside home, the BrightonPavilion.
Repton's ideas were published in 1808 but were never implemented; the architect John Nash was instead employed to design both the garden and the Pavilion.
The Royal Pavilion is a splendid palace built in Brighton, East Sussex in the 19th Century as a seaside retreat for the then Prince Regent.
The Prince Regent, who later became King George IV of the United Kingdom first visited Brighton in the year of 1783, due to his physician advising him that the sea water would be beneficial to his gout.
During the First World War the pavilion was used as a hospital for wounded servicemen.