Stag and Hounds, Bristol
51°27′20″N 2°35′00″W / 51.455451°N 2.583203°W / 51.455451; -2.583203
The Stag and Hounds is a grade II listed pub in Old Market, Bristol.[1] The oldest parts of the building date to 1483, when it was probably as a private house. The current building is predominantly from the early 18th century, when it became a pub. It was partly rebuilt in the 1960s, and refurbished in 1987. At one time the inn was flanked by houses, but the building of a dual carriageway underpass has left it isolated.
A well in the former rear court has a 19th-century iron hand pump with flywheel and pump rods, an early example of an installation for raising water from a well. This old iron pump, operated by a wheel six feet in diameter, is in fine condition and all its parts still move. It is unique in Bristol.[2]
There is also a minute window looking out onto the courtyard, which opens onto a small room set between floors and is only accessible through a trap-door in what is now a bathroom. It is possible that this may be a survival from the days of priest-hunting.
The modern day pub is renowned as a live music venue with a wide variety of bands ranging across many genres.[citation needed]
Pie-Poudre Court
In Norman times a court was set up to deal summarily with thieves and debtors of a market called the Pie-Poudre Court (also spelt pie poudre or Piepowders). The name comes from the French, "pieds poudrés" which can be translated as "dusty feet", and was a temporary court set up for the duration of a fair or market to deal with travelers who were not resident in the town.
It was held in the open air under an ancient oak tree, the site of which the Stag and Hounds was built upon. There is no actual record of when the court moved into the inn, which was reputedly held in the first-floor room.
It is believed that this was the last "active" Court of Piepowders, being abolished by the Courts Act 1971. Although it had not actually met since the abolition of the fair in 1870, an annual proclamation was still read on the last day of September under the portico of the inn.[3]
References
- ^ "No.74 Stag and Hounds Public House and attached gates". historicengland.org.uk. Retrieved 6 May 2007.
- ^ "The Stag and Hounds - Old Market". The History of Old Inns & Pubs of Bristol. Archived from the original on 26 August 2007. Retrieved 8 May 2007.
- ^ "The Stag and Hounds - Old Market". The History of Old Inns & Pubs of Bristol. Archived from the original on 26 August 2007. Retrieved 8 May 2007.
External links
- Stag and Hounds Web Site
- The History of Old Inns & Pubs of Bristol. The Stag and Hounds - Old Market - 1982 Archived 26 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- v
- t
- e
- Ashton Gate
- Bristol Arena (proposed)
- Bristol County Ground
- Bristol Hippodrome
- Bristol Old Vic
- Bristol Beacon
- Cube Microplex
- Memorial Stadium
- O2 Academy Bristol
- QEH Theatre
- Redgrave Theatre
- St George's, Brandon Hill
- The Thekla
- Tobacco Factory
- Victoria Rooms
- Watershed
- Whiteladies Picture House
- Wickham Theatre
- Winston Theatre
archives and public art
- Arnolfini
- Blaise Castle
- Blaise Hamlet
- Banksy
- Bristol Archives
- Bristol City Museum and Art Gallery
- Bristol Harbour Railway
- Bristol Zoo
- Clifton Observatory
- Georgian House
- Glenside Museum
- Kings Weston Roman Villa
- M Shed
- Red Lodge Museum
- Royal West of England Academy
- See No Evil
- SS Great Britain
- We the Curious
- Wild Place Project
Open Spaces
- All Saints' Church
- Bristol Cathedral
- Bristol Community Church
- Broadmead Baptist Church
- Buckingham Baptist Chapel
- Chapel of the Three Kings of Cologne
- Christ Church, Clifton Down
- Christ Church with St Ewen
- Church of All Saints
- Church of Holy Trinity, Hotwells
- Church of Holy Trinity, Stapleton
- Church of the Holy Trinity with St Edmund
- Church of St John the Baptist
- City Road Baptist Church
- Cotham Church
- Counterslip Baptist Church
- Clifton Cathedral
- Crofts End Church
- John Wesley's New Room
- Holy Trinity Church, Kingswood
- Holy Trinity Church, Westbury on Trym
- Horfield United Reformed Church
- Hope Chapel
- Lewin's Mead Unitarian meeting house
- Pro-Cathedral of the Holy Apostles
- St Mary Redcliffe
- Redland Chapel
- St. Augustine's Church, Whitchurch
- St Augustine the Less Church
- St George's Church
- St James' Presbyterian
- St James' Priory
- St John the Baptist
- St Luke's Church
- St Mark's Church
- St Mary le Port Church
- St Mary on the Quay
- St Mary's Church, Henbury
- St Matthew's Church
- St Michael on the Mount Without
- St Nicholas
- St Paul's Church
- St Paul's, Clifton
- St Peter and St Paul
- St Peter's Church, Bishopsworth
- St Peter's Church, Castle Park
- St Philip and St Jacob
- St Stephen's Church
- St Thomas the Martyr
- St Werburgh's Church
- Temple Church
- Trinity Centre
- Tyndale Baptist Church
- Whitefield's Tabernacle, Kingswood
- Woodlands Christian Centre