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Marlinspike Hall: Difference between revisions

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Added parenthetical about the hall being Haddock's ancestral home - an important subtext of the series according to some critics.
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* [[Italian language|Italian]]: Castello di Moulinsart
* [[Italian language|Italian]]: Castello di Moulinsart
* [[Persian language|Persian]]: کاخ مولنسار (Ka'kh-e-Moulansar)
* [[Persian language|Persian]]: کاخ مولنسار (Ka'kh-e-Moulansar)
* [[Polish language|Polish]]: Księżymłyn
* [[Portuguese language|Portuguese]] (including [[Brazilian Portuguese|Brazilian]]): Castelo de Moulinsart
* [[Portuguese language|Portuguese]] (including [[Brazilian Portuguese|Brazilian]]): Castelo de Moulinsart
* [[Spanish language|Spanish]]: Castillo de Moulinsart
* [[Spanish language|Spanish]]: Castillo de Moulinsart

Revision as of 13:44, 28 December 2009

Tintin, Captain Haddock and Snowy approach Marlinspike Hall.
The Château de Cheverny was used as a model for Marlinspike Hall. The two outermost wings are not present, but the remaining central tower and two wings are identical.

Marlinspike Hall (Le château de Moulinsart in the original French-Belgian) is Captain Haddock's country house in Hergé's comic book series The Adventures of Tintin.

The hall is modeled after the central section of the Château de Cheverny. The French name is derived from Sart-Moulin, a village near Braine-l'Alleud in Walloon Brabant, Belgium; in an allusion to the Haddock family's maritime history, the hall's English name refers to the Marlinspike, a tool used in seamanship to splice ropes.

Marlinspike Hall first appears in The Secret of the Unicorn as the home of the story's villains, the Bird Brothers. At the end of Red Rackham's Treasure, the manor (found to have been built by an illustrious ancestor of Haddock's) is purchased by Professor Calculus on behalf of the Captain; the fabled treasure itself is found hidden in the manor's old chapel, in the cellars. In the following years, Marlinspike provides a home base for Tintin and Haddock in between their various adventures. In The Castafiore Emerald, virtually all of the action takes place in the hall, its grounds, or the surrounding countryside.

Marlinspike Hall is presented as a large and luxurious dwelling adorned with numerous works of art, antique furniture, and a gallery of the Haddock family's treasures. The grounds comprise a park with extensive woodlands, wide lawns, a rose garden, a high surrounding wall, at least two gates, a neighbouring meadow, and at least one adjacent building (used by Professor Calculus as a laboratory in The Calculus Affair ). The size of the house and park would appear to require a number of domestic and gardening staff but only one - the faithful Nestor, who serves as butler to the Hall - is ever seen, although a gardener is mentioned once in the last pages of The Red Sea Sharks.

Location

The original English language translators of the Tintin books caused some confusion by giving the address of Marlinspike Hall as "Marlinshire, England" in The Secret of the Unicorn. However details such as traffic travelling on the right hand side of the road and the appearance of the Marlinspike police (who wear the black and red uniforms of the Belgian Gendarmerie) confirm that Hergé's intention was to locate the Hall in his native Belgium.

Translations