(England
- Buckinghamshire)


Cliveden
House is the third house to sit on the site it occupies, the first,
which was host to the first performance of the patriotic anthem, “Rule
Britannia”, burnt down in 1795 as to did the second in 1849. The current
House was built in 1850 and was bought by the Astor family in 1893,
becoming one the most significant stately homes in Britain.
Cliveden’s
most famous resident was Lady Nancy Astor, who, in 1919, was elected
Britain’s first Member of Parliament. During the 1930s the House played
host to the controversial “Cliveden Set”, a group of politicians and
prominent people who advanced a peace-line with Germany. In 1942 the
House was given to the National Trust, although members of the Astor
family continued to live there until 1966. In 1963 Cliveden acquired
notoriety by hosting “goings on” involving senior politicians, including
Britain’s Minister of War, John Profumo, several nightclub “hostesses”
and Soviet diplomats. The scandal, known as the Profumo Affair, was
one of the reasons behind the fall of the government of Harold Macmillan,
when it became clear that John Profumo had been having an affair, which
he denied in Parliament, with Christine Keeler, who, as it was revealed,
was also having an affair with a Soviet diplomat.
Today
Cliveden is a private luxury hotel, although much of it, such as the
oak-panelled Grand Room, the French dining room and the former library,
is open to day visitors. The extensive beautiful parkland in which the
House is set, is also open to visitors.