In recent years the National Trust have acknowledged this relationship with displays at Diwali, the Hindu Festival of Lights, when homes are decorated with rangoli, patterns made from flowers, and lit with rows of lights.
The entrance hall ceiling was lit up with colourful patterns, and a trail led up the stairs to the grander rooms which were decorated.
Marigolds with their bright colours are traditionally seen as symbols of life and light but with none flowering in the UK at this time of year, a little ingenuity was needed. So, with help from a community art co-operative near Kolkata, and volunteers from the local community, many of them had been crafted from plants and threads to create rangoli designs on the floors.
I'd expected that viewing the decorated rooms would take longer so we had time to for a walk in the grounds.
The gardens though were, if anything, in a worse state than the lakeside grass but spotting that the church was open we decided to visit. Again this is a first - or if I have visited it was so long ago that I've forgotten.
Sir John, who died in 1450, and his wife, Joan, - or at least their effigies - rest in peace with their dogs at their feet - and a bird on Sir John's shoulder.
Could it be a parrot? To be honest it looks more like a crow, but a parrot seems more romantic.
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