Posts

Showing posts with the label #Georgian period

Chawton House, the home of Jane Austen's brother

Image
Jane Austen's brother Edward owned the large estate of Chawton in Hampshire including this Tudor manor house which Jane called the Great House. He was fortunate enough to have been adopted by its previous owners, the Knight family. Something rather similar happens to Frank Churchill in Emma . The Knights were  distant relatives of the Austens, and had no child or heir of their own. They could have adopted any one of the Austen children, but they were only interested in a boy. It was an early lesson for Jane about how girls were less valued. When he grew up, Edward rarely lived at Chawton House as he acquired an even grander mansion, Godmersham Park in Kent, which became his by marriage.  When he was at Chawton, and his mother and sisters were installed in the cottage, they were frequently invited to visit him at the Great House. It was only a short walk from their home along a country lane and then up the drive.  Tall trees create a splendid avenue (just like the one at S...

Elizabeth Craven as a Patron: The Theatric Tourist

Image
Newbury Theatre from the Theatric Tourist 1804 Under the Patronage of Her Serene Highness the Margravine of Anspach, by Whose Permission an Engraving of Her Elegant Theatre Will be Given as a Frontispiece to the Publication, this Day (December 1, 1804) is Published, No. 4, of a Work Never Before Presented to the Public, Entitled The Theatric Tourist being a genuine collection of correct views, with brief and authentic historical accounts of all the principal provincial theatres in the United Kingdom / by a theatric amateur. London : T. Woodfall, 1805....printed for Sylvester, Clement Chapple, Edward Kerby, William Lindsell, Henry Delahoy Symonds, Thomas Woodfall, Vernon and Hood. The Theatre at Richmond in Yorkshire. J ames Winston (1773 or 79-1843) was an English actor, artist and sometimes architect who started as a strolling player and became manager of the Drury Lane Theatre in London by 1819. He is thought to have written one play "Perseverance" (1802) and he co...

How Did Georgians Clean Their Teeth?

Image
 "A French Dentist Shewing a Specimen of His Artificial Teeth and False Palates", drawing by Thomas Rowlandson, 1811. Did Georgians clean their teeth at all? The answer is yes... well at any rate they tried to. People were already aware that keeping teeth clean made them look and feel better and slowed down the onset of decay. Doctors recommended doing so and books and magazines offered advice. People who could afford it resorted to all sorts of methods to avoid toothache, early tooth loss, and dental misery. Toothpicks and mouth-washes were widely used in polite society and we also find references to tooth-brushes at quite an early date. In 1746, Medicina Brittanica by Thomas Short M.D. offered this advice: "Wash the Mouth often with a Decoction of Mouse-ear in small Beer; often snuff up the Nose Vinegar, wherein Primrose roots were infused ... To fasten the Teeth, chew often Roots of Brook-lime ; or rinse the Mouth often with a Decoction of Wild Tan...