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England
and the World in the Late Georgian and Regency Era |
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| The reigns of George III and George IV encompass the elegant, glittering world of the end of the eighteenth century and the beginning of the nineteenth. The transition embraces the Napoleonic Wars, the madness of George III, the War of 1812 (1812-1814) and the Regency (1811-1820). This period, from the beginning of the war with France in 1793 to George IV's ascension to the throne in 1820, illustrates the vast change in England's economic and social face. England moved swiftly from the artisan/cottage industry firmly into the industrial revolution and the fringes of the Victorian age and the British empire. This
time in history featured a wide gap between rich and poor, and at the
same time, a rise in the merchant middle class. Merchants, insurers, bankers,
and shipping companies all strengthened England's move toward the vast
empire it was to become. |
![]() George IV |
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The haut ton played, and played hard. Beau Brummell rose to fame and then crashed in 1816 when he was forced to France to escape his creditors. Emma Hamilton catapulted from prostitute to Lady and became the lover of Horatio Nelson, England's most honored naval hero. |
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![]() Lord Byron |
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The
Prince Regent spent a fortune redecorating his Brighton pavilion and Carleton
House in London. The construction of Regent Street and Regent's Park began
in 1816, only a small part of the grandiose and unrealized plan for transforming
that part of London. The Regent's beloved daughter, Charlotte, married
for love in 1816, then died in childbirth in 1817. Her husband, Prince
Leopold, became the uncle and mentor of Princess Victoria, then took up
the throne of Belgium. |
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![]() Sea battle from the War of 1812 |
Britain fought a war with the United States (1812-1815); causes included British blockading of American ships. The U.S. army burned Toronto in 1812, and in retaliation, British troops burned Washington DC in 1814. Many historic sayings and songs emerged from this war: Frances Scott Key wrote the poem that was to become The Star Spangled Banner while watching the battle of Fort McHenry (1814) from a British vessel. The USS Constitution proved itself in battle and was nicknamed Old Ironsides. "Don't give up the ship," became a battle cry. In the 1814 Battle of New Orleans, actually fought after the war's end (word had not yet reached either army of the truce), Americans under Andrew Jackson caused heavy losses for the British army, including many veterans of the Peninsular War (1808-1814). The Duke of Wellington felt those losses as he gathered troops for the battle of Waterloo in June, 1815. |
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![]() Napoleon Bonaparte |
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French
émigrés, those aristocrats who fled to England to avoid the
guillotine, began returning to France in 1814-15, although many chose to
remain in London. They had lived there, after all, for more than twenty
years, and the
France they had known was forever gone. By the time the Prince Regent was crowned George IV, England was industrial, crowded, elegant, powerful, and troubled. Poverty and food prices soared, and in 1819, the Peterloo Massacre of protestors at St. Peter's field outraged the nation. The time was right for England to step into reform, empire, and the modern age. |
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| GardnerMysteries.com
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