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A little about the Regency Period: |
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The English Regency period occurred roughly between 1790 and 1820 (although some people will debate that--saying the true Regency period was between 1810 and 1820). It took place between two rather distinctive periods; the Georgian Era, which dominated the 17th and 18th centuries, and the Romantic Period, which harkened the arrival of the Victorian age. The Georgian period (1600-1750) was garish and gaudy. In the Georgian/Baroque period, women wore towering wigs and massive, elaborate gowns, and men wore heels, white wigs, false moles (mouches), and they powdered their faces. The Romantic Period followed the Regency. Styles were fussier and waistlines dropped--this period is depicted in films such as Gone with the wind. The Regency period was brief, but it made a lasting impression; mostly because the early nineteenth century produced |
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some of the most notable
pieces of art and literature in history, and several major historical
events occurred during this time. Historic writings imply that the real reason for the shift from the outlandish fashions of the Georgian era to the simple lines of the Regency was the French Revolution. Fashions were simplified in order to blur the stark distinction between the poor and the privileged--to quell any sense of inequality that would cause further revolution to spread. Of course, only a few decades later, the class-defining fashions gradually made themselves distinctly noticeable again as we moved into the Victorian and Industrial age. |
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Some of the most famous representations of this period were Jane Austen’s works (most popular: Pride and Prejudice, Sense & Sensibility, Mansfield Park, Emma, Northanger Abbey, etc) and the artwork of Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres—whose finely detailed paintings gave a flawless image of the materials and fashions of the period. This was the time of Beau Brummell, the scandalous Lord Byron and Almack’s Assembly rooms. Charles Dickens and the Brontë sisters also grew up during this period. The Napoleonic wars raged during this time, as well as the war of 1812. It was also the dawn of the age of science, when some of the greatest scientific discoveries were about to occur. |
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Charming 1857 cartoon submitted by ORS member J. Asparro.
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