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Showing posts from January, 2019

The Residence of the Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach at Ansbach

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The Margrave of Ansbach, who became Elizabeth Craven's second husband, owned some palatial residences, far too palatial for him to live in them most of the time. He preferred to live more modestly. The Margrave Charles-Alexander of Ansbach from https://www.triesdorf.de/fileadmin/LLA/doku/Downloads/Bildunszentr_Triesdorf_Broschuere_englisch.pdf In the years before his abdication he used a former hunting lodge, The Red Castle, as his home. The palace at Ansbach, the capital of his little principality, survives and is well-preserved. It is now in Bavaria. This video gives a visual tour of its interiors, showing the fine collection of pictures and artworks. Can you spot the portrait of Elizabeth Craven that flashes into view for just a second or so? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0r_x_IP791A Copy the link into your browser address bar to watch the video. To find out more about Elizabeth Craven, her writings and the people she knew, read https://v

Elizabeth Craven and the Marquis d'Argens

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What possible connection could there be between Elizabeth Craven, the Georgian feminist writer, and the Marquis d'Argens, the French writer and philosopher? Craven was born in 1750, and d'Argens died in 1771, and as far as is known they never met. Both were writers, both went to Constantinople and both were considered to have misbehaved extensively in the course of their lives. Both loved the theatre, and and both spent part of their lives in a German court, running the theatrical entertainments. King Frederick II of Prussia and the Marquis d'Argens  by Johan Christoph Frisch D'Argens worked for many years for King Frederick the Great of Prussia, holding the post of Chamberlain which made him responsible for court entertainments such as theatre and opera. He was expected to organize troupes of professional actors, singers and dancers to put on productions in King Frederick's rather grand opera houses and palaces of Sans-Souci and Charlottenburg.  

An Arcadian Pastoral: A Musical Entertainment by Elizabeth Craven and William Beckford

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In 1782 Elizabeth Craven and the brilliant but wayward young writer William Beckford collaborated on a musical entertainment called An Arcadian Pastoral. It was performed in London by a choir of children, with professional musicians taking the solos and providing orchestral accompaniment. No 1 Ouverture Title-page The score was preserved among Beckford's papers, and catalogued by the Bodleian Library under his name, without reference to Elizabeth Craven. In a letter of 1782, Beckford wrote that she had written the words and he had composed the music. When we look closely at the score, it actually says that Elizabeth Craven wrote the music too, for the second of its five Acts. This is not the only example of her writing music, though little of it survives. The items of the Pastoral are numbered, but number 8 is missing. However, it may not be lost entirely. In a letter she enclosed a words of a song about Cupid and Hymen for which she wrote both the words and music,