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The plan of the rooms at Belton was passé for a grand house of its time.
Following the Restoration and the influx of European ideas, it had become popular for large houses to follow the continental fashion of a suite of state rooms consisting of a withdrawing room, dressing room, and bedroom proceeding from either side of a central saloon or hall.
These rooms were permanently reserved for use by a high ranking guest, such as a visiting monarch.
While Belton does have a saloon at its centre, enfilades of state rooms of lessening grandeur do not flank it.
The possible reason for this unusual layout is that, while the Brownlows possessed great wealth, their title was only a baronetcy, and their fortune was barely a century old.
They would have been regarded as gentry, not aristocracy.
As a result, building a suite of state rooms would have been in hope rather than anticipation of a royal guest.
However, the lack of a fashionable and formal suite of state apartments coupled with the Brownlows ' lack of social credentials did not prevent a visit from King William III to the newly completed house in 1695.
The King occupied the " Best bedchamber ", a large room with an adjoining closet, directly above the saloon, that led directly from the second floor Great Dining Chamber.

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