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The Port of London in the 18th Century – All Things Georgian
https://georgianera.wordpress.com/2015/04/16/the-port-of-london-in-the-18th-century
Blogging about anything and everything to do with the Georgian Era. The Port of London in the 18th Century. April 16, 2015. May 2, 2016. We are absolutely thrilled to welcome a new guest to our blog – Regan Walker, bestselling author of historical romance. Regan has another new book due out on the 9th May 2015 – To Tame the Wind. Regan is sharing with us some of her research that has helped her in writing her latest book, which is available from Amazon. To Tame the Wind. Thousands of coastal sailing ship...
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August 4, 2015 – All Things Georgian
https://georgianera.wordpress.com/2015/08/04
Blogging about anything and everything to do with the Georgian Era. Day: August 4, 2015. One and twenty daft days’ in 1822: King George IV visits Scotland. August 4, 2015. February 17, 2016. In August 1822, a year after his coronation, King George IV made a trip to Scotland, the first British monarch to do so for 170 years. The entire trip was stage managed by the author Sir Walter Scott, with much pageantry, but some mistakes did happen. Via Brown digital repository, Brown University Library. The Landin...
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The miser, his daughter and her lover: Elizabeth Cardinall, 1776-1803 – All Things Georgian
https://georgianera.wordpress.com/2015/07/07/elizabeth-cardinall-1776-1803
Blogging about anything and everything to do with the Georgian Era. Crimes of Georgian England. The miser, his daughter and her lover: Elizabeth Cardinall, 1776-1803. July 7, 2015. February 17, 2016. Clarkson Cardinall of Tendring in Essex was a miser. He lived in a large manor house, set in a good estate and had 60,000 in the bank, but he had let it fall into disrepair (to be honest, he reminds us of Sir Pitt Crawley, owner of Queen’s Crawley, in William Makepeace Thackeray’s. And then, on the 9. May, j...
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Georgian Hair and Clothing – Fashionable but Fatal – All Things Georgian
https://georgianera.wordpress.com/2015/07/15/georgian-hair-and-clothing-fashionable-but-fatal
Blogging about anything and everything to do with the Georgian Era. Fashion and Cosmetics in Georgian England. Georgian Hair and Clothing – Fashionable but Fatal. July 15, 2015. June 20, 2016. The extravaganza, or, The mountain head dress of 1776 Courtesy of Lewis Walpole Library. Georgian fashion dictated that women wore ‘big dresses’ accompanied by even bigger hair so with all that fabric and ‘. London Chronicle (London, England), September 28, 1776 – October 1, 1776. Last week a very melancholy accide...
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The Philanthropic Cat, 1823 – All Things Georgian
https://georgianera.wordpress.com/2015/07/30/the-philanthropic-cat-1823
Blogging about anything and everything to do with the Georgian Era. The Philanthropic Cat, 1823. July 30, 2015. February 17, 2016. We thought our readers might enjoy the two following letters sent in to the newspapers in 1823, on the subject of philanthropic cats. Gabrielle Arnault as a child, by Louis-Léopold Boilly, 1815. A POLITE SCOTCH CAT. The Morning Post, 12. Harris Museum and Art Gallery via http:/ www.bbc.co.uk/arts/yourpaintings. The Morning Post, 13. To order) and all good bookshops. July 30, ...
georgianera.wordpress.com
July 2015 – All Things Georgian
https://georgianera.wordpress.com/2015/07
Blogging about anything and everything to do with the Georgian Era. The Philanthropic Cat, 1823. July 30, 2015. February 17, 2016. We thought our readers might enjoy the two following letters sent in to the newspapers in 1823, on the subject of philanthropic cats. Gabrielle Arnault as a child, by Louis-Léopold Boilly, 1815. A POLITE SCOTCH CAT. The Morning Post, 12. Harris Museum and Art Gallery via http:/ www.bbc.co.uk/arts/yourpaintings. The Morning Post, 13. To order) and all good bookshops. The famil...
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A gypsy named James Venus – All Things Georgian
https://georgianera.wordpress.com/2015/07/28/a-gypsy-named-james-venus
Blogging about anything and everything to do with the Georgian Era. Gypsies of Georgian England. A gypsy named James Venus. July 28, 2015. July 7, 2016. The Boss family, notorious gypsy horse thieves and dealers, plied their dubious trade across throughout Norfolk and Suffolk, into Northamptonshire and Lincolnshire and further afield into Yorkshire. April 1827 as James and Traineth Venus of Dunham (a neighbouring village) with James’s occupation being described as cutler, a traditional gypsy occupa...
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The Georgians: What they ate – All Things Georgian
https://georgianera.wordpress.com/2015/07/10/the-georgians-what-they-ate
Blogging about anything and everything to do with the Georgian Era. Recipes of Georgian Era. The Georgians: What they ate. July 10, 2015. May 2, 2016. Once again we are absolutely delighted to welcome a return guest to our blog, the lovely Regan Walker, who has written another fascinating article for us. This time she has looked at a subject which is very close to our hearts – food! A sea adventure like no other, a riveting romance! Shirlee Busbee, NY Times Bestselling Author. To Tame the Wind. Glasse...
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The Diaries of Miss Fanny Chapman – All Things Georgian
https://georgianera.wordpress.com/2015/07/12/the-diaries-of-miss-fanny-chapman
Blogging about anything and everything to do with the Georgian Era. The Diaries of Fanny Chapman. The Diaries of Miss Fanny Chapman. July 12, 2015. February 17, 2016. We are delighted to announce a ‘sister’ site to. And would like to introduce to you ‘The Diaries of Miss Fanny Chapman’ which can be accessed by clicking here. Miss Christiana Fanny Chapman. Batheaston Villa near Bath, c.1825, Fanny’s home up to 1809. Milsom Street, Bath, where Fanny lived during her later years. The diaries end in 1841, bu...
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