Eye-popping research as always TahoeBlue, amazing.
Thanks, I know Kubrick's locations were carefully selected and with possible symbolic connections (Apollo-The Shining) . So it got me wondering exactly what symbolism he was referring to with using the Rothschild Mansion. Too bad he didn't leave a guide book. I did see a documentary on Kubrick's warehouse(s) of props and set designs and they went into the fact that he spent MONTHS selecting locations, which doesn't make much sense unless you add the fact he was layering symbolism and multiple messages into his films.
http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117937908.html?categoryid=31&cs=1Stanley Kubrick's BoxesIf the devil is in the details, then Stanley Kubrick had a fruitful pact with Mephistopheles, judging by "Stanley Kubrick's Boxes." Left-of-field docu by confessed fan Jon Ronson reveals yet another of the mythomaniac director's eccentricities: a huge collection of cardboard boxes in which he saved every memo, fan letter and piece of production trivia, mostly from "2001: A Space Odyssey" on. Packed with some new, and some familiar, insights into Kubrick's meticulous, obsessive mind, and revealing a very human side of the reclusive helmer, pic deserves extensive fest play as well as cable airings.
Docu aired, under the "True Stories" docu strand, as part of an extensive tribute to the late helmer by U.K. digi-web More4, part of Channel 4, in July.
None of Kubrick's family and associates knew exactly how many
boxes were stored around the rambling country manse in Hertfordshire, outside London, where he lived and worked. Brother-in-law Jan Harlan estimates "over a thousand"; Kubrick's assistant of 31 years, Tony Frewin, simply says, "There were boxes everywhere." Prior to Ronson's excavation, some hadn't been opened for decades.
...
A few years after Kubrick's death in 1999, Ronson was invited to the estate by Frewin, heard about the boxes and was given permission to start going through them.
...
Ronson started with a
box marked "Islington" -- the London nabe he lived in -- and
found a massive collection of location stills cataloguing doorways, cafes, apartment interiors and gates for preproduction on "Eyes Wide Shut." Kubrick's nephew, Manuel Harlan, recalls how
he spent a year just taking photos -- at one point even documenting an entire road, stitching the pics together into a 6-meter-long roll for his uncle's delectation. "Beats going there," said Kubrick.
...
Weirdest find is that
Kubrick kept every single fan letter, cataloguing them as either "positive," "negative" or "crank." In one inspired moment, Ronson tracks down one writer, former TV scripter Vincent Tilsley, 35 years after he penned a critique of "2001."
http://www.wheredidtheyfilmthat.co.uk/film.php?film_id=87Eyes Wide Shut (1999) LocationsPinewood Studios, Iver Heath, Buckinghamshire
Hackney, London
Islington, London
Westminster, London
Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, LondonElveden Hall, Suffolk
Hamley's Toy Shop, London
Hatton Garden, Camden, London
Highclere Castle, Newbury, Berkshire - used for exteriors of the orgy scenes
Knebworth House, Stevenage, HertfordshireLanesborough Hotel, Knightsbridge, London
Luton Hoo, Luton, Bedfordshire - The interior scenes of Sydney Pollack's townhouse was filmed here.
Madame Jo-Jo's, Soho, London
Mentmore Towers, Mentmore, BuckinghamshireThetford Forest, NorfolkNot totally related - but Herfordshire/Essex was the home of Royal Saxons pre-conquest... All the places in Hichin Herfordshire which were not in King Harold's hands in 1066 were held BY HIS 'MEN'. -
Temple Dinsley firmly enters the historical record in the Domesday Book in 1086, when Deneslai is recorded as a manor previously belonging to King Harold. (Home of the Templars)
http://www.knebworthhouse.com/
Knebworth House the home of Victorian novelist Edward Bulwer Lytton - author of the words "
The pen is mightier than the sword" - this beautiful gothic mansion is situated 29 miles north of London off the A1(M) at Stevenage.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stevenage...
Stevenage may derive from Old English stiþen āc / stiōen āc / stithen ac (various Old English dialects cited here) meaning
'(place at) the strong oak'....
Dickens was at some occasion guest to Sir Edward Bulwer-Lytton in nearby Knebworth House, and for that reason he knew Stevenage very well
...
Also
close to Stevenage is Knebworth House, a gothic stately home and venue of
globally well-known rock concerts since 1974. The house was once home to
Sir Edward Bulwer-Lytton, Victorian English novelist and spiritualist, who, as reported by one of his visitors, was so deep in the belief of spiritual realities that he sometimes thought himself to be invisible while others were around.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ThetfordThetford Forest, NorfolkThetford is traditionally thought of as
the royal residence of Boudica Queen of the Iceni. The Iceni were a Celtic tribe living in Norfolk and parts of Cambridgeshire.
...
In 1979, a hoard of Romano-British metalwork, known as the Thetford treasure was located just outside of Thetford
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thetford_ForestThetford Forest was created after the First World War to provide a strategic reserve of timber, since the country had lost so many oaks and other slow-growing trees as a consequence of the war's demands...Grimes Graves is located within the forest.
http://apackofbeasts.com/page2.htmOn February 19th 1998 Jean-Paul Davis, a French businessman working abroad in Ipswich was offered a deal by a German gang leader importing wild animals such as wolves, tigers, bears and others into illegal zoos across the UK. Jean-Paul was in a bit of a pickle at this time with empty warehouses around the country including one in the middle of Thetford Forest. He was in a rut so when the gangsters made him an offer of 1,000,000 euros to hold 7 wolves for a week he felt obliged to accept.
...
Thetford forest under the Beasts ruleMauled carcasses of deers and wild boars littered the forest floor but
the wolves remained under the radar despite the bones of Jean-Paul being discovered by William Roads, Thetford forest park ranger. He said "I had seen nothing like it, it didn't look human at all". The wolves stayed undiscovered. Although they were playing a risky game as they were straying into farm land and snatching the occasional pig. Farmers complained to the police but the police ignored them.
http://www.wolfsongalaska.org/disappearance_of_wolves.htmlProbably one of the earliest references is contained in a manuscript at the British Museum. A
genealogy of Anglo-Saxon dynasties records the East Anglian founder of a dynasty called "Wuffa" and his tribe, who were known as "Wuffings" (Wolf people). These genealogies were written in A.D. 800 and Wuffa is thought to have ruled about 575 A.D.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wuffa_of_East_AngliaWuffa (died c. 578) was king of East Anglia from 571 to 578. He was the father of King Tytila and grandfather of King Rædwald of the Sutton Hoo ship burial.
His name, which is a diminutive form of
the Old English word for wolf, is the dynastic eponym for the kings of East Anglia,
the Wuffings.
http://www.wuffings.co.uk/WuffSites/EASitesPage.html
http://www.wuffings.co.uk/Wuffingas/WuffingC.html#EdmundEADMUND (ST EDMUND) (c.853-20th Nov., 869);
killed by the Danes, possibly in battle near Thetford, as the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle seems to say; eventually buried at Beodericsworð (Bury St Edmund's); the cult of St Edmund became one of the most powerful in Medieval England.
http://www.orthodoxengland.org.uk/athpatro.htmAlthough
St Edmund has been the patron-saint of England for well over a thousand years, he has gradually been sidelined and today,
in this land without saints, he is almost forgotten.

That they regarded the wolf as one of their special family emblems or totem is implicit in
the name 'Wuffings', the kin of Wuffa, 'Little Wolf'. The Old English Wuffingas is also a variant of Wulfingas, meaning 'the kin (or descendants) of the wolf', a ancient type of folk-name denoting an ultimately totemic affinity with the wolf. The most well-known story of the wolf with an East Anglian king is that of one of the last of the Wuffings,
St Edmund. According to the earliest version of the legend of his martydom,
his severed head was protected from the creatures of the wildwood by a miraculous wolfLuton Hoo, Luton, Bedfordshire
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luton_Hoo...
In 1903 the house was bought by
Sir Julius Wernher, who had made his fortune from the diamond mines of South Africa. Wernher had the interior remodelled in the early 20th century by the architects of the Ritz Hotel, Charles Mewes and Arthur Davis (architect).
The
Wernhers' great art collection, equal to that of their neighbours in nearby Buckinghamshire, the Rothschilds', was later further enhanced by
the marriage of Julius Wernher's son Harold Augustus Wernher to Anastasia Romanov, a member of the former Russian Imperial family, generally known as "Lady Zia". She brought to the collection an incomparable assembly of renaissance enamels and Russian artefacts,
including works by the Russian Imperial court jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé. For many years the collection and house were open to the public. Many of the Fabergé items were, however, stolen in the 1990s.
Following Lady Zia's death in
1977, the estate passed to her grandson Nicholas Harold Phillips, whose untimely death in 1991 caused the sale of the Mansion Househttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicholas_Harold_PhillipsIn 1977 Nicholas inherited Luton Hoo and in the late 1980s embarked on developing a business park called Capability Green on land owned by the estate near the M1 to Luton Airport access road. The name was a reference to much of the estate's gardens having been laid out by Capability Brown. The park is billed by the Bedfordshire and Luton Economic Development Partnership as the "premier business park of the East of England." [4]
Considerable debt was charged against the estate to build the park and during the subsequent property crash he was unfortunately found dead at age 43, on 1 March 1991http://gebachenthoughts.blogspot.com/2009/12/hoo-dunnit-mystery-of-missing-dinner.html...
the manor’s previous owner,
Nicholas Harold Phillips, committed suicide there and is rumoured to haunt the premises.
http://www.independent.ie/national-news/revealed-the-secret-sir-alfred-beit-diaries-that-may-tell-of-british-royal-family-scandals-134606.html...
The son of a Hamburg Jew,
Alfred Beit was born in Germany in 1853 and converted to Christianity.
Along with Sir Julius Wernher, he became one of the 'Randlords' who controlled South Africa's wealth and what was then Rhodesia.
Between them they created the De Beers diamond company which controls the world's diamond trade to this day. With the fortunes they made they diversified into gold mining, railroads, farms, mining and other enterprises which made them among the richest men in the world.
Alfred Beit, a friend of the British empire buccaneer Cecil Rhodes (and executor of his will), was recognised as the most brilliant of the partnership. Luton Hoo, a fabulous mansion outside London bought by Julius Wernher, became the social centre of this fabulously wealthy set.
"Lady Zia (Wernher's wife) was related to virtually every royal family in Europe, and
the Wernhers were particularly close to the Mountbattens and to Prince Philip,who was a frequent guest at Luton Hoo," said Wernher's biographer.
It would seem that whatever secrets are contained in the Beit Diaries date from that golden age of the late Twenties through to the abdication of King Edward VII in 1937 over his love of American heiress, Wallis Simpson, and the elevation of King George VI to the throne.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-494715/Queen-Prince-Philip-recreate-honeymoon-photo-mark-60-years-wedded-bliss.html
1947 - Prince Philip and Elizabeth - Honeymoon at Luton Hoo PhotoPrince Philip gave up his Greek citizenship and title - and abandoned his previous surname of Schleswig- Holstein- Sonderburg-Glucksburg for
Mountbatten.
Hatton Garden, Camden, London
http://www.movie-locations.com/movies/e/eyeswide.html
http://www.stetheldreda.com/history.html
St Etheldreda's Church is just a stone's throw from the noise and bustle of modern day London and it is hemmed in by the glittering wealth of Hatton Garden, where gold, silver and diamonds are traded and millions of pounds change hands daily. But amid the clamour of mammon, there stands
this hidden ancient gem, a spiritual sanctuary of the Middle Ages, a haven of peace and tranquillity.
St Etheldreda's Church was the town chapel of the Bishops of Ely from about 1250 to 1570. It is the oldest Catholic church in England and one of only two remaining buildings in London from the reign of Edward I. It was once one of the most influential places in London with a palace of vast grounds.
It was like an independent state, the Bishop of Ely's place in London or Ely Place as it is now called, and its chapel took its name from one of England's most popular saints of the day, Etheldreda [A Saxon].
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hatton_GardenHatton Garden is a street and area
near Holborn in London, England. Its name is derived from
the garden of the Bishop of Ely, which was
given to Sir Christopher Hatton by Elizabeth I in 1581, during a vacancy of the see.
http://myincarnations.com/bard/richardIII.htmBuilt in 1291,
St Ethelreda's is the oldest pre-Reformation Roman Catholic church in London, and like Westminster Abbey
dates back to the reign of Edward the confessor [Saxon] . This church is the only surviving part of the
Bishop of Ely's once extensive London palace. St Ethelreda founded the monastery at Ely in AD 673. and a pre-Reformation model of Ely Palace can be seen in the vaulted undercroft of the church.
The gardens of St Ethelreda were said to produce the finest strawberries in London and were mentioned in Shakespeare's Richard III. (Act II, scene 4), Gloucester: My Lord Ely!
Ely: My Lord?
Gloucester: When I was last in Holborn, I saw good strawberries in your garden there: I do beseech you send for some of them.
A Strawberry Fair is still held every June in Ely Place for charity. Here
...
Gloucester/Richard always used code words when he ordered someone murdered....
The statement about good strawberries is an allusion to
the notorious Bishop of Ely's practices when dealing with members of his diocese. Feeling that he held the power of life and death over anyone in his diocese (garden) when he had problems with anyone they disappeared forever.
http://thegardenwindow.blogspot.com/2009/06/more-about-st-audreyetheldreda.html...
Etheldreda died c.680 from a tumour on the neck, reputedly as a divine punishment for her vanity in wearing necklaces in her younger days; in reality it was the result of the plague which also killed several of her nuns, many of whom were her sisters or nieces. At St Audrey's Fair necklaces of silk and lace were sold, often of very inferior quality, hence the derivation of the word tawdry from St Audrey.
17 years after her death her body was found to be incorrupt: Wilfred and her physician Cynefrid were among the witnesses. The tumour on her neck, cut by her doctor, was found to be healed. The linen cloths in which her body was wrapped were as fresh as the day she had been buried. Her body was placed in a stone sarcophagus of Roman origin, found at Grantchester and reburied.
http://www.irondequoitcatholic.org/index.php/St/EtheldredaDuring the English Reformation, the government decreed the destruction of all sorts of "superstitions" in England. This included the bodies of saints. Fortunately, one hand of Audrey, incorrupt, was preserved. It is now venerated in the Catholic parish Church of St. Etheldreda in Ely. In London there had been a Chapel of St. Etheldreda from the 13th century on. This came into Catholic hands in 1873, and
it remains the only pre-Reformation church building in London used for Catholic worship.
The garden of the Bishop of ElyThe area around Hatton Garden has been the centre of London's jewellery trade since medieval times. The old City of London had certain streets, or quarters, dedicated to types of business, and the area around
Hatton Garden became a centre for jewellers and jewellery.
http://www.internationallife.tv/hattongarden...
The diamond industry developed here in 17th Century when Portuguese Jews settled because of persecution. At the same time,
diamonds began to flood in from India and even Brazil as European trade spread across the globe.
...
The name Hatton was that of a favourite of
Elizabeth I -
Christopher Hatton. The besotted Queen gave him the area as a present.
Mary Queen of Scots infuriated them both by apparently encouraging
the rumour the two were an item. Hatton had his revenge - as one of the Judges at her trial
he signed her execution warrant. An early business angel, he invested in Francis Drake’s voyages. His ship,
the Golden Hind, is named after Hatton’s coat of arms.
Elveden Hall, Suffolk
http://www.literarynorfolk.co.uk/elveden_hall.htm

Originally a Georgian country house, it was transformed by
Prince Duleep Singh - the last Maharajah of Punjab. The Maharajah, who was exiled from India, bought the house in 1863 and commissioned John Norton to redesign it in the style of Indian palaces such as those at Lahore or Delhi. Duleep Singh was a noted sportsman and crack shot and
handed over the Koh-I-Noor diamond to Queen Victoria.
Duleep Singh died in Paris in 1893 but his body was brought back to Elveden and
he is buried in the churchyard. He was the first Sikh to settle in Britain and today
many Sikhs make a pilgrimage to Elveden or to visit his statue in nearby Thetford.
The hall is best known today as a filmset and has featured in many productions including Stanley Kubrick's Eyes Wide Shut, the Bond movie The Living Daylights and Tombraider - starring Angelina Jolie
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elveden_HallThe exact date of the hall's first construction is unknown but it is known to have been anciently appropriated by
Bury Abbey.
In 1849, the Maharajah Duleep Singh, ruler of the Punjab and owner of the famous Koh-i-noor diamond was exiled to England, having been
removed from his kingdom by the British East India Company.
The Maharajah
purchased the 17,000-acre (69 km2) Elveden Estate in 1863 The Guinness brewing family purchased Elveden Hall in 1894.The hall was used during the Second World War as a headquarters for the U.S. Air Force and (unfortunately the staff quarters were struck and destroyed by a bomb).By the 1980s, the large Hall provided a home only to a caretaker and so the family sold off the entire contents with auctioneers Christie's between 21-24 May 1984. The sale included a number of elaborate items that would have once been owned or used by the Maharajah.
The Heir Apparent is the present holder's son
Arthur Benjamin Geoffrey Guinness, Viscount Elveden (b. 2003)
The hall now stands empty, aside from its use as an occasional film location.
Bury Abbey.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bury_St_Edmunds
Bury St Edmunds Abbey
It is the main town in the borough of
St Edmundsbury and known for
the ruined abbey near the town centre.
...
Bury St Edmunds (Beodericsworth, St Edmund's Bury), supposed by some to have been the Villa Faustina of the Romans, was
one of the royal towns of the Saxons.[2] Sigebert, king of the East Angles, founded a monastery here about 633, which in 903 became
the burial place of King Edmund, who was slain by the Danes in 869, and owed most of its early celebrity to the
reputed miracles performed at the shrine of the martyr king...
The town is associated with Magna Carta. In
1214 the barons of England are believed to have met in the Abbey Church and sworn to force King John to accept the Charter of Liberties, the document which influenced the creation of the Magna Carta.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bury_St._Edmunds_AbbeyInscription, abbey ruins, enforcement of the
Magna Carta, signed in 1215
Highclere Castle, Newbury, Berkshire - used for exteriors of the orgy scenes
Lord Carnarvon's Home - Highclere Castlehttp://www.mummytombs.com/egypt/kingtut.htmLord Carnarvon, who had funded the search for King Tut's tomb, and archaeologist Howard Carter entered the king's burial chamber on February 17, 1923. On or about March 6, Lord Carnarvon was bitten by a mosquito on his cheek and became ill.
"Death comes on wings to he who enters the tomb of a pharaoh." Her concerns seemed to be on target when Lord Carnarvon's condition worsened. The mosquito bite became infected, he contracted pneumonia, and on April 5, he died
http://news.discovery.com/videos/news-carnarvon-castle-reveals-treasures.htmlThe man who financed the search for King Tut's tomb had his own buried treasures. And now, long-hidden artifacts from Lord Carnarvon's collection are on public display in his castleLanesborough Hotel, Knightsbridge, London
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lanesborough_HouseThe Lanesborough is reputedly the most expensive hotel in London, the highest rate being up to £8,000 per night for the "Royal Suite". A 24-hour private butler is available to each guest. The Lanesborough has accommodated visiting royalty, eminent politicians and entertainers. Opposite are Hyde Park and Apsley House, the former home of the Duke of Wellington.
Lanesborough Hotel also was the St George's Hospital...http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._George%27s_HospitalSt George's Hospital, founded in 1733, is a teaching hospital in London, England. It has continuously trained medical students since that date.
...
The original site was in Lanesborough House at Hyde Park Corner, originally built in 1719 by the James Lane, 2nd Viscount Lanesborough[3][4], in what was then open countryside. The new St George's Hospital was arranged on three floors and accommodated 30 patients in two wards: one for men and one for women. The hospital was gradually extended and, by 1744, it had fifteen wards and over 250 patients.[5]
By the 1800s, the hospital was slipping into disrepair. The old Lanesborough House at Hyde Park Corner (now the location of The Lanesborough hotel) was demolished to make way for a new 350 bed new facility. Building began in 1827 designed by architect William Wilkins and the new hospital was completed by 1844.
Rosewood Hotels and Resorts refurbished and re-opened the building as a hotel in 1991. Ten years later the management contract passed to Starwood's St Regis operation as its first and only hotel in England.
Famous students and staff
Henry Gray, anatomist Edward Jenner, introduced vaccination for smallpox http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_LukinsGeorge Lukins, also known as the Yatton dœmoniac,[1][2][3] was an individual
famous for his alleged demonic possession and the subsequent exorcism that occurred when he was aged forty-four...George Lukins was consquently taken under the care of Dr. Smith, an eminent surgeon of Wrington, among many other physicians, who in vain, tried to help George Lukins;[10] moreover, after
his twenty week stay at St. George's Hospital,[12] the medical community there pronounced him incurableIslington, LondonIslington grew as a sprawling village along the line of the Great North Road ...
Islington was originally named by the Saxons Giseldone (1005), then Gislandune (1062). The name means 'Gīsla's hill' from the Old English personal name Gīsla and dun 'hill', 'down'.
Islington may have played its own small part in the destruction and conquest by [Norman] England of north Wales.
In December 1277 the last native prince of Wales, Llywelyn the Last, while staying in Islington in preparation of his ritual act of homage to the [Norman] English king, was so heinously offended by the display put on by the locals that he and his lords resolved never to return and thenceforth to fight England to the death.[10]
The Llywelyn Monument at Cilmeri near Builth Wells (Wales)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Llywelyn_the_LastLlywelyn, Our Last Leader—
was the last prince of an independent Wales before its [Norman] conquest by Edward I of England.
There are legends surrounding the fate of Llywelyn's severed head. It is known that it was sent to Edward at Rhuddlan and after being shown to the English troops based in Anglesey, Edward sent the head on to London.
In London, it was set up in the city pillory for a day, and crowned with ivy {i.e. to show he was a "king" of Outlaws} and in mockery of the ancient Welsh prophecy, which said that a Welshman would be crowned in London as king of the whole of Britain. Then it was
carried by a horseman on the point of his lance to the Tower of London and set up over the gate. It was still on the Tower of London 15 years later [2].
Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, Londonhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chelsea_and_Westminster_HospitalThe Chelsea and Westminster Hospital was opened on
the site once occupied by St Stephen's Hospital ... It
displays many treasures from the old hospitals. Some of these are in the first floor Hospital Chapel, including an 16th century painting by Veronese from the Westminster Hospital and stained glass windows from Westminster , St Mary Abbots and the Westminster Children's Hospital
http://www.chelwest.nhs.uk/aboutus/organisation/history.htmlSt Stephen's Hospital -
A map of 1664 indicates, on this site, “The hospital in Little Chelsea”. Later there was a workhouse then an infirmary before St Stephen’s was founded in the late 1800s.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westminster,_LondonThe historic core of Westminster is the former Thorney Island on which Westminster Abbey was built. The
Abbey became the traditional venue of the coronation of the kings and queens of England. The nearby P
alace of Westminster came to be the principal royal residence after the Norman conquest of England in 1066, and later housed the developing Parliament and law courts of England. It can be said that London thus has developed two distinct focal points: an economic one in the City of London; and a
political and cultural one in Westminster, where the Royal Court had its home. This division is still very apparent today.
Notice they barely mention the OPIUM:
Siegfried Sassoon was born and grew up in the neo-gothic mansion "Weirleigh", in Matfield, Kent,[2] to a Jewish father and an Anglo-Catholic mother. His father, Alfred Ezra Sassoon (1861–1895), son of Sassoon David Sassoon, was a member of the wealthy
Baghdadi Sephardic Jewish Sassoon merchant family. For marrying outside the faith he was disinherited....
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sassoon_familyThe Sassoon family was an Indian-based, Iraqi Jewish family of international renown, descended from the famous Ibn Shoshans,
one of the richest families of medieval Spain. From the late-18th century, the Sassoons were one of the wealthiest families in the world, with a merchant empire spanning the continent of Asia...
The Sassoon family was heavily involved in the shipping and opium trade in China and IndiaAnd the Sassoon's and Rothschild's inter-married:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_SassoonSir Edward Sassoon, 2nd Baronet, of Kensington Gore - In 1887 he married Aline Caroline de Rothschild (1865-1909), daughter of Baron Gustave de Rothschild and Cecile Anspach from Paris. They had two children, Philip Albert Gustave David and Sybil Rachel Bettie Cécile, Marchioness of Cholmondeley.