Hamilton Palace, like other great houses, always had a
gallery where the family could take exercise in bad
weather and where their portraits were displayed to
impress visitors. According to Sir William Burrell,
who saw round the Palace in 1758, the Gallery was 36m
long by 6.7m wide and its contents were 'remarkable'.
It ran the full length of the north wing, and the
walls were hung with portraits by Mytens, Janssens,
Van Dyck and Kneller. There were what Burrell took to
be 'three large Titian's, exceedingly fine' and of
course there was the most famous picture of the entire
collection,
Daniel in the Lions' Den
by Rubens, 'extremely natural, great expression of the
lions, some tame'. In the
10th Duke's
time, fine furniture enhanced the wonderful array of
visual art.
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