Entries Tagged as ‘History’

July 6, 2009

The Intimate Type

I missed the opportunity to post about a remarkable, ground-breaking exhibition that was recently held at the British Museum. As readers who check in on Georgian Image Bookmarking already know, I’m fascinated with Georgian and Regency era painting and drawing, especially portraiture, and this exhibit focused on a particularly interesting type of portrait, the personal likenesses [...]

June 11, 2009

Voice of the Enlightenment

“…She was a woman of much deeper feeling than the world imagined,’ one friend of Anna Barbauld said. She was also a woman of extraordinary sense, writing at the height of invasion fever in 1803, ‘I am sure we do not believe in the danger we pretend to believe in; and I am sure that [...]

March 21, 2009

Crim.Con.

Hallie Rubenhold’s 2008 work Lady Worsley’s Whim is a scholarly and highly entertaining account of the 1782 Criminal Conversation trial of the era. The details of the personal lives of Sir Richard Worsley, 7th Baron of Appuldercombe, his wife Lady Seymour Worsley and her lover George Bisset riveted society and, through the newspapers and the [...]

March 7, 2009

Life Aboard

Nelson’s Flagships 1807 Nicholas Pocock

“What I hope to bring together here is a comprehensive source for the era: weapons and armaments, personages, single ship and minor fleet actions, and way of life aboard a man o’war during the Age of Sail.”
I’m so thrilled that the author of Age of Sail and his fascinating website [...]

January 2, 2009

Austen and The Woolf

“When she was laid in the cradle again she knew not only what the world looked like, but had already chosen her kingdom.”
It is unusually long for a blogpost I know but I can’t resist posting this essay in it’s entirety. Virginia Woolf’s essay on Jane Austen was published in her 1925 collection of essays [...]

December 22, 2008

Seymour: A Woman of Spirit and Friends

Lady Worsley’s Whim 2008 by Hallie Rubenhold is an excellently researched and written account of a real-life  Georgian sex scandle. ‘To have Criminal Conversation with’ is an 18th century euphemism for adultery and the 1782 Crim Con trial involving George Bisset, his lover Lady Seymour Worsley and her husband Sir Richard Worsley, 7th Baronet Worsley of Appuldercombe [...]

July 21, 2008

Machine Breaking and the Plight of the Luddites

During the period 1812-22, it could be said that England suffered more economically, socially and politically, than during the height of the Napoleonic Wars. The population of England and Wales had risen to 10.2 million by 1811, the rapid development of factories had seen villages become insanitary and dependent factory towns, and the system of [...]

September 12, 2007

The Diodati Stories and Their Authors: Lord Byron

Diodati 1816
by By Robert Gordon
1963 
Byron and Shelley and Mary and Claire,
Braced by the grandeur and quick Alpine air,
Clustered themselves in a Genevese site,
Telling of spirits and ghosts in the night,
Byron was piqued by the whispering gloom;
Shelly had visions and ran from the room;
Claire became pregnant (her passion, his wine);
And Mary, bright Mary, begot Frankenstein.
[...]

August 14, 2007

Peaches and Cream: Lady Hamilton

Emma, Lady Hamilton
1765 – 1815
Undoubtedly the most well remembered scandal of Georgian England was the devoted alliance between Emma, Lady Hamilton and the hero of the nation, Horatio Nelson. Like any public and unconventional woman, an inordinate amount has been written about Lady Hamilton, much of it unflattering and most of it untrue. The daughter [...]

August 9, 2007

Curriculum Vitae: Joseph Priestley

Joseph Priestley 1733 – 1804

Joseph Priestley. Ellen Sharples, probably after James Sharples pastel, circa 1797.NPG 175.

A native of West Yorkshire, Joseph Priestley was a natural philosopher, chemist, educator and Dissenting clergyman, and he is credited with the discovery of the existence of oxygen. A clergyman-chemist, Priestley called the gas he discovered, “dephlogisticated air.” It [...]

July 31, 2007

The Interesting Narrative of Life

Olaudah Equiano

Portrait of Olaudah Equiano
Circa 1780
Previously attributed to Joshua Reynolds
Royal Albert Memorial Museum, Exeter
Although forms of bondage had existed in West and Central Africa (and indeed in Europe) before the trans-Atlantic slave trade, human beings were rarely the main commodity at the African marketplace. In the modern world however, the enslaved African was inspected, [...]

July 27, 2007

Impropriety by the Seaside III

Weymouth

“Very lucky–marrying as they did, upon an acquaintance formed only in a public place!–They only knew each other, I think, a few weeks in Bath! Peculiarly lucky!– for as to any real knowledge of a person’s disposition that Bath, or any public place, can give–it is all nothing; there can be no knowledge.”
What [...]

July 24, 2007

Fielding Picaresque

Between the years 1729 and 1737 Henry Fielding wrote 25 plays, including his most well known, Tom Thumb but he acclaimed critical notice with his novels. The best known are The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling (1749), a picaresque novel in which the tangled comedies of coincidence are offset by the neat, architectonic structure [...]

July 10, 2007

Council of One

The Big Three of the Napoleonic Wars: Nap, Nel and Well, Part Three

Napoleon I of France
15 August 1769 – 5 May 1821

Napoleon Bonaparte First Consul
1802
Antoine-Jean Gros
Musée Nationale de la Légion d’Honneur, Paris
Napoleon Bonaparte was born to a minor Corsican noble family – the Buonapartes – in 1769, not long after the island [...]

July 3, 2007

Armed Neutrality

The Big Three of The Napoleonic Wars II

Vice-Admiral Horatio, Lord Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson
29 September 1758 – 21st October 1805
Rear-Admiral Sir Horatio Nelson
1800
Lemuel Francis Abbot
National Maritime Museum, UK

If Wellington is regarded as Britain’s greatest soldier, another Georgian must be considered their greatest sailor. Horatio Nelson won three of the most decisive naval [...]

June 29, 2007

Chawton Cottage

For eight years, from 1809 until her death in 1817, Austen lived with her mother, her sister Cassandra and their friend Martha Lloyd, in the village of Chawton in Hampshire. The cottage is open to the public as a museum and after acquiring new funding, Austen’s letters have become part of the displayed collection. [...]

June 26, 2007

Field Marshal, His Grace

Field Marshal His Grace Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington c. 1 May 1769 – 14 September 1852.

Portrait of The Duke of Wellington
1812
Francisco Goya
National Gallery, London
Born to an aristocratic Anglo-Irish family in Ireland, Wellesley joined the army in 1787. He fought against the French in Flanders and in 1796 went to India, where he [...]

June 19, 2007

Impropiety at Weymouth

Weymouth Bay: Bowleaze Cove and Jordan Hill
1816-17
John Constable
National Gallery, London
Ah, Weymouth. Doesn’t it just make you think of Frank Churchill & Jane Fairfax? And Impropriety by the Seaside?

June 12, 2007

Inside the Painter’s Studio

A Painter’s Studio
c. 1800
Louis-Léopold Boilly
National Gallery of Art Washington DC

Even though I could blog (verb? Totally) possibly endlessly about strictly Austen topics, once a week, possibly more often but at least this one is in a specific format, I’m going to go down the culturally significant road and post an [...]