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Georgian era

The Georgian era was a period in British history from 1714 to c. 1830–1837, named after the Hanoverian kings George I, George II, George III and George IV. The definition of the Georgian era is also often extended to include the relatively short reign of William IV, which ended with his death in 1837. The subperiod that is the Regency era is defined by the regency of George IV as Prince of Wales during the illness of his father George III.[2] The transition to the Victorian era was characterized in religion, social values, and the arts by a shift in tone away from rationalism and toward romanticism and mysticism.

Georgian era
1714 – 1830 (1837)
The Georgian architecture of the Royal Crescent in the city of Bath
IncludingRegency era
Monarch(s)
Leader(s)
Chronology

The term Georgian is typically used in the contexts of social and political history and architecture. The term Augustan literature is often used for Augustan drama, Augustan poetry and Augustan prose in the period 1700–1740s. The term Augustan refers to the acknowledgement of the influence of Latin literature from the ancient Roman Republic.[3]

The term Georgian era is not applied to the time of the two 20th-century British kings of this name, George V and George VI. Those periods are simply referred to as Georgian.[4]

Arts and culture Edit

Georgian society and its preoccupations were well portrayed in the novels of writers such as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Samuel Richardson, Henry Fielding, Laurence Sterne, Mary Shelley and Jane Austen, characterised by the architecture of Robert Adam, John Nash and James Wyatt and the emergence of the Gothic Revival style, which hearkened back to a supposed golden age of building design.

The flowering of the arts was most vividly shown in the emergence of the Romantic poets, principally through Samuel Taylor Coleridge, William Wordsworth, Percy Bysshe Shelley, William Blake, John Keats, Lord Byron and Robert Burns. Their work ushered in a new era of poetry, characterised by vivid and colourful language, evocative of elevating ideas and themes.[5]

The paintings of Thomas Gainsborough, Sir Joshua Reynolds and the young J. M. W. Turner and John Constable illustrated the changing world of the Georgian period – as did the work of designers like Capability Brown, the landscape designer.

Fine examples of distinctive Georgian architecture are Edinburgh's New Town, Georgian Dublin, Grainger Town in Newcastle upon Tyne, the Georgian Quarter of Liverpool and much of Bristol and Bath.

The music of John Field, Handel, Haydn, Clementi, Johann Christian Bach, William Boyce, Mozart, Beethoven and Mendelssohn was some of the most popular in England at that time.

Grand Tour Edit

The height of the Grand Tour coincided with the 18th century and is associated with Georgian high society. This custom saw young upper-class Englishmen travelling to Italy by way of France and the Netherlands for intellectual and cultural purposes.[6] Notable historian Edward Gibbon remarked of the Grand Tour as useful for intellectual self-improvement.[7] The journey and stay abroad would usually take a year or more. This would eventually lead to the basis for the acquisition and spread of art collections back to England as well as fashions and paintings from Italy.[6] The custom also helped popularise the macaroni style that was soon to become fashionable at the time.[8]

Social change Edit

 
18th-century London

It was a time of immense social change in Britain, with the beginnings of the Industrial Revolution which began the process of intensifying class divisions, and the emergence of rival political parties like the Whigs and Tories.

In rural areas the Agricultural Revolution saw huge changes to the movement of people and the decline of small communities, the growth of the cities and the beginnings of an integrated transportation system but, nevertheless, as rural towns and villages declined and work became scarce there was a huge increase in emigration to Canada, the North American colonies (which became the United States during the period) and other parts of the British Empire.

Evangelical religion and social reform Edit

In England, the evangelical movement inside and outside the Church of England gained strength in the late 18th and early 19th century. The movement challenged the traditional religious sensibility that emphasised a code of honour for the upper class, and suitable behaviour for everyone else, together with faithful observances of rituals. John Wesley (1703–1791) and his followers preached revivalist religion, trying to convert individuals to a personal relationship with Christ through Bible reading, regular prayer, and especially the revival experience. Wesley himself preached 52,000 times, calling on men and women to "redeem the time" and save their souls. Wesley always operated inside the Church of England, but at his death, his followers set up outside institutions that became the Methodist Church.[9] It stood alongside the traditional nonconformist churches, Presbyterians, Congregationalist, Baptists, Unitarians, and Quakers. The nonconformist churches, however, were less influenced by revivalism.[10]

The Church of England remained dominant in England but it had a growing evangelical, revivalist faction, the "Low Church". Its leaders included William Wilberforce and Hannah More. It reached the upper class through the Clapham Sect. It did not seek political reform, but rather the opportunity to save souls through political action by freeing slaves, abolishing the duel, prohibiting cruelty to children and animals, stopping gambling, and avoiding frivolity on the Sabbath; they read the Bible every day. All souls were equal in God's view, but not all bodies, so evangelicals did not challenge the hierarchical structure of English society.[11] As R. J. Morris noted in his 1983 article "Voluntary Societies and British Urban Elites, 1780-1850," "[m]id-eighteenth-century Britain was a stable society in the sense that those with material and ideological power were able to defend this power in an effective and dynamic manner," but "in the twenty years after 1780, this consensus structure was broken."[12] Anglican Evangelicalism thus, as historian Lisa Wood has argued in her book Modes of Discipline: Women, Conservatism, and the Novel After the French Revolution, functioned as a tool of ruling-class social control, buffering the discontent that in France had inaugurated a revolution; yet it contained within itself the seeds for challenge to gender and class hierarchies.[13]

Empire Edit

The Georgian period saw continual warfare, with France the primary enemy. Major episodes included the Seven Years' War, known in America as the French and Indian War (1754–1763), the American Revolutionary War (1775–1783), the French Revolutionary Wars (1792–1802), the Irish Rebellion of 1798, and the Napoleonic Wars (1803–1815). The British won most of the wars except for the American Revolution, where the combined weight of the United States, France, Spain and the Netherlands overwhelmed Britain, which stood alone without allies.[14]

 
The British Empire at the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815

The loss of the 13 American Colonies was a national disaster. Commentators at home and abroad speculated on the end of Britain as a great power. In Europe, the wars with France dragged on for nearly a quarter of a century, 1793–1815. Britain organised coalition after coalition, using its superb financial system to subsidise infantry forces, and built up its Navy to maintain control of the seas. Victory over Napoleon at the Battle of Trafalgar (1805) and the Battle of Waterloo (1815) under Admiral Lord Nelson and the Duke of Wellington brought a sense of triumphalism and political reaction.[15]

The expansion of empire in Asia was primarily the work of the British East India Company, especially under the leadership of Robert Clive.[16] Captain James Cook was perhaps the most prominent of the many explorers and geographers using the resources of the Royal Navy to develop the Empire and make many scientific discoveries, especially in Australia and the Pacific.[17] Instead of trying to recover the lost colonies in North America, the British built up in Asia a largely new Second British Empire. That new empire flourished during the Victorian and Edwardian eras which were to follow.[18]

The trading nation Edit

 
East Indiaman in the China Seas

The era was prosperous as entrepreneurs extended the range of their business around the globe. By the 1720s Britain was one of the most prosperous countries in the world, and Daniel Defoe boasted:

we are the most "diligent nation in the world. Vast trade, rich manufactures, mighty wealth, universal correspondence, and happy success have been constant companions of England, and given us the title of an industrious people."[19]

While the other major powers were primarily motivated towards territorial gains, and protection of their dynasties (such as the Habsburg and Bourbon dynasties, and the House of Hohenzollern), Britain had a different set of primary interests. Its main diplomatic goal (besides protecting the homeland from invasion) was building a worldwide trading network for its merchants, manufacturers, shippers and financiers. This required a hegemonic Royal Navy so powerful that no rival could sweep its ships from the world's trading routes, or invade the British Isles. The London government enhanced the private sector by incorporating numerous privately financed London-based companies for establishing trading posts and opening import-export businesses across the world. Each was given a monopoly of trade to the specified geographical region. The first enterprise was the Muscovy Company set up in 1555 to trade with Russia. Other prominent enterprises included the East India Company, and the Hudson's Bay Company in Canada. The Company of Royal Adventurers Trading to Africa had been set up in 1662 to trade in gold, ivory and slaves in Africa; it was re-established as the Royal African Company in 1672 and focused on the slave trade. British involvement in each of the four major wars, 1740 to 1783, paid off handsomely in terms of trade. Even the loss of the 13 colonies was made up by a very favourable trading relationship with the new United States of America. British gained dominance in the trade with India, and largely dominated the highly lucrative slave, sugar, and commercial trades originating in West Africa and the West Indies. China would be next on the agenda. Other powers set up similar monopolies on a much smaller scale; only the Netherlands emphasized trade as much as England.[20][21]

 
The subscription room at Lloyd's of London in the early 19th century

Mercantilism was the basic policy imposed by Britain on its colonies.[22] Mercantilism meant that the government and the merchants became partners with the goal of increasing political power and private wealth, to the exclusion of other empires. The government protected its merchants—and kept others out—by trade barriers, regulations, and subsidies to domestic industries in order to maximise exports from and minimise imports to the realm. The government had to fight smuggling, which became a favourite American technique in the 18th century to circumvent the restrictions on trading with the French, Spanish or Dutch. The goal of mercantilism was to run trade surpluses, so that gold and silver would pour into London. The government took its share through duties and taxes, with the remainder going to merchants in Britain. The government spent much of its revenue on a large and powerful Royal Navy, which not only protected the British colonies but threatened the colonies of the other empires, and sometimes seized them. The colonies were captive markets for British industry, and the goal was to enrich the mother country.[23]

Most of the companies earned good profits, and enormous personal fortunes were created in India, but there was one major fiasco that caused heavy losses. The South Sea Bubble was a business enterprise that exploded in scandal. The South Sea Company was a private business corporation supposedly set up much like the other trading companies, with a focus on South America. Its actual purpose was to renegotiate previous high-interest government loans amounting to £31 million through market manipulation and speculation. It issued stock four times in 1720 that reached about 8,000 investors. Prices kept soaring every day, from £130 a share to £1,000, with insiders making huge paper profits. The Bubble collapsed overnight, ruining many speculators. Investigations showed bribes had reached into high places—even to the king. The future prime minister Robert Walpole managed to wind it down with minimal political and economic damage, although some suffering extreme loss fled to exile or committed suicide.[24][25]

Political and social revolt Edit

 
An Old Bailey trial, c. 1808

The beginning of the Georgian era witnessed rioting by Jacobite and High Church mobs in protest against the Hanoverian succession and which included attacks on the Dissenters' places of worship. These included the 1714 coronation riots, which occurred on the day of George I's coronation, and the riots of 1715. In response, Parliament passed the Riot Act, which granted the authorities greater powers to put down rioting.[26][27]

Although religious toleration was extensive by the standards of continental Europe, hostility to religious minorities was widespread in Britain during the eighteenth century and sometimes expressed itself in rioting.[28] The Jewish Naturalisation Act 1753 was repealed a year after it had been passed because of widespread opposition and the 1780 Gordon Riots in London were directed against Catholics after the Papists Act 1778 removed some of their legal disabilities. During the 1791 Priestley Riots in Birmingham, the mob targeted Dissenters, including the prominent Radical Joseph Priestley.[29]

The Black Act of 1723, sponsored by Robert Walpole, strengthened the criminal code for the benefit of the upper class.[30] It specified over 200 capital crimes, many with intensified punishment. The crime of arson, for example, was expanded to include of burning or the threat of burning haystacks. The legal rights of defendants were something different from today. For example, suspects who refused to surrender within 40 days could be summarily judged guilty and sentenced to execution if apprehended. Local villages were punished if they failed to find, prosecute and convict alleged criminals, due to the increase in crime at the time.[31]

With the ending of the War with France in 1815, Great Britain entered a period of greater economic depression and political uncertainty, characterised by social discontent and unrest. The Radical political party published a leaflet called The Political Register, also known as "The Two Penny Trash" to its rivals. The so-called March of the Blanketeers saw 400 spinners and weavers march from Manchester to London in March 1817 to hand the Government a petition. The Luddites destroyed and damaged machinery in the industrial north-west of England. The Peterloo Massacre in 1819 began as a protest rally which saw 60,000 people gathering to protest about their living standards, but was quelled by military action and saw eleven people killed and 400 wounded. The Cato Street Conspiracy of 1820 sought to blow up the Cabinet and then move on to storm the Tower of London and overthrow the government. This too was thwarted, with the conspirators executed or transported to Australia.

Enlightenment Edit

 Leslie - physicsFrancis Baily - astronomerPlayfair - UniformitarianismRutherford - NitrogenDollond - OpticsYoung - modulus etcBrown - Brownian motionGilbert - Royal Society presidentBanks - BotanistKater - measured gravity??Howard - Chemical EngineerDundonald - propellorsWilliam Allen - PharmacistHenry - Gas lawWollaston - Palladium and RhodiumHatchett - NiobiumDavy - ChemistMaudslay - modern latheBentham - machinery?Rumford - thermodynamicsMurdock - sun and planet gearRennie - Docks, canals & bridgesJessop - CanalsMylne - Blackfriars bridgeCongreve - rocketsDonkin - engineerHenry Fourdrinier - Paper making machineThomson - atomsWilliam Symington - first steam boatMiller - steam boatNasmyth - painter and scientistNasmyth2Bramah - HydraulicsTrevithickHerschel - UranusMaskelyne - Astronomer RoyalJenner - Smallpox vaccineCavendishDalton - atomsBrunel - Civil EngineerBoulton - SteamHuddart - Rope machineWatt - Steam engineTelfordCrompton - spinning machineTennant - Industrial ChemistCartwright - Power loomRonalds - Electric telegraphStanhope - InventorUse your cursor to explore (or Click icon to enlarge)
Distinguished Men of Science.[32] Use your cursor to see who is who.[33]

Historians have long explored the importance of the Scottish Enlightenment, as well as the American Enlightenment,[34] while debating the very existence of the English Enlightenment.

Scottish Enlightenment Edit

English historian Peter Gay argues that the Scottish Enlightenment "was a small and cohesive group of friends – David Hume, Adam Smith, Adam Ferguson, and others – who knew one another intimately and talked to one another incessantly".[35] Education was a priority in Scotland, both at the local level and especially in four universities that had stronger reputations than any in England. The Enlightenment culture was based on close readings of new books, and intense discussions that took place daily at such intellectual gathering places in Edinburgh as The Select Society and, later, The Poker Club as well as within Scotland's ancient universities (St Andrews, Glasgow, Edinburgh and Aberdeen).[36] Sharing the humanist and rationalist outlook of the European Enlightenment of the same time period, the thinkers of the Scottish Enlightenment asserted the importance of human reason combined with a rejection of any authority that could not be justified by reason. In Scotland, the Enlightenment was characterised by a thoroughgoing empiricism and practicality where the chief values were improvement, virtue, and practical benefit for the individual and society as a whole. Among the fields that rapidly advanced were philosophy, economics, history, architecture, and medicine. Leaders included Francis Hutcheson, David Hume, Adam Smith, Dugald Stewart, Thomas Reid, William Robertson, Henry Home, Lord Kames, Adam Ferguson, John Playfair, Joseph Black and James Hutton. The Scottish Enlightenment influenced England and the American colonies, and to a lesser extent continental Europe.[37]

English Enlightenment Edit

 
Edward Jenner performing his first vaccination in 1796

The very existence of an English Enlightenment has been debated by scholars. The majority of textbooks and standard surveys make no room for an English Enlightenment. Some European surveys include England, others ignore it but do include coverage of such major intellectuals as Joseph Addison, Edward Gibbon, John Locke, Isaac Newton, Alexander Pope and Joshua Reynolds.[38] Roy Porter argues that the reason for the neglect was the assumption that the movement was primarily French-inspired, that it was largely a-religious or anti-clerical, and it stood in outspoken defiance to the established order.[39] Porter admits that after the 1720s, England could claim thinkers to equal Diderot, Voltaire or Rousseau. Indeed, its leading intellectuals, such as Edward Gibbon,[40] Edmund Burke and Samuel Johnson were all quite conservative and supported the standing order. Porter says the reason was that Enlightenment had come early to England, and had succeeded so that the culture had accepted political liberalism, philosophical empiricism and religious toleration of the sort that intellectuals on the continent had to fight for against powerful odds. The coffee-house culture provided an ideal venue for enlightened conversation. Furthermore, England rejected the collectivism of the continent, and emphasized the improvement of individuals as the main goal of enlightenment.[41]

Science and medicine Edit

The British sponsored numerous scientists who made major discoveries in the small laboratories. Joseph Priestley investigated electricity. Chemist Henry Cavendish identified hydrogen in 1772. Daniel Rutherford isolated nitrogen in 1774, while Priestley discovered oxygen and ammonia. Antiquarians and archaeologists mapped the past.[42] In medicine, in 1717 Lady Mary Wortley Montagu introduced inoculation against smallpox and Britain, and by 1740 it was in wide usage. Guy's Hospital was founded in 1721; the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh in 1729; Queen Charlotte's maternity hospital in 1739 and the Middlesex Hospital in 1745. Asylums for the mentally ill were established, notably Bethel Hospital in Norwich (1713); a ward for incurable lunatics at Guy's Hospital (1728); and lunatic hospitals in Manchester (1766) and York in (1777)—York was the first to be called an asylum.[43]

Ending Edit

Historians debate the exact ending, with the deaths of George IV in 1830 or William IV in 1837 as the usual marker. In most social and cultural trends, the timing varied. The emergence of Romanticism and literature began as early as the 1780s, but religious changes took much longer and were incomplete until around a century later. The 1830s saw important developments such as the emergence of the Oxford Movement in religion and the demise of classical architecture. Victorians typically were disapproving of the times of the previous era. By the late 19th century, the "Georgian era" was a byword for a degenerate culture.[44] Charles Abbey in 1878 argued that the Church of England:

partook of the general sordidness of the age; it was an age of great material prosperity, but of moral and spiritual poverty, such as hardly finds a parallel in our history. Mercenary motives were to predominate everywhere, in the Church as well as in the state.[45]

Timeline Edit

1714
Upon the death of his second cousin Queen Anne, George Louis, Elector of Hanover, succeeds as the new King, George I, of Great Britain and Ireland, the former of which had itself been established in 1707. This is the beginning of the House of Hanover's reign over the British Crown.
1715
The Whig Party wins the British parliamentary election for the House of Commons. This party is dominant until 1760.
1727
George I dies on 11 June. His son George, Prince of Wales, ascends to the throne as George II.
 
An Incident in the Rebellion of 1745, depicting the Battle of Culloden of 1746, where British troops defeated the Jacobite Army
1745
The final Jacobite rising is crushed at the Battle of Culloden in April 1746.
1760
George II dies on 25 October, and his grandson George, Prince of Wales, ascends to the throne as George III.
1763
Britain is victorious in the Seven Years' War. The Treaty of Paris of 1763 grants Britain domain over vast new territories around the world.
1765
The Stamp Act is passed by the Parliament of Great Britain, causing much unrest in the Thirteen Colonies in North America.
1769–1770
Australia and New Zealand are claimed as British colonies.
1773
The Inclosure Act 1773 is put into place by the British Parliament. This act brought about the enclosure of land and removing the right of common land access. This began an internal mass movement of rural poor from the countryside into the cities.
1775
The American Revolutionary War begins in the Thirteen Colonies, specifically in Massachusetts; all royal officials are expelled.
1776
The Thirteen Colonies in North America declare their independence. King George III is determined to recover them.
 
British general John Burgoyne shown surrendering at Saratoga in 1777
1777
The main British invasion army under Gen. Burgoyne surrenders at Saratoga; the French increase their aid to the Americans.
1778
France forms in a military alliance with the United States and declares war on Britain. The Netherlands and Spain support France; Britain has no major allies.
1781
The British Army in America under Lord Cornwallis surrenders to George Washington after its defeat in Yorktown, Virginia, in October 1781. The French Navy controls the seas.
1782
Battle of the Saintes: Admiral Sir George Rodney defeated a French fleet under the Comte de Grasse, enabling the Royal Navy to control the West Indies.
1783
Great Britain formally recognises the independence of the original 13 American States in the Treaty of Paris of 1783. The geographical terms are very generous to the Americans, and the expectation that Anglo-American trade will become of major importance.
1788
Australia is settled through penal transportation to the colony of New South Wales from 26 January.
1789
Thomas Robert Malthus, an Anglican cleric, authors An Essay on the Principle of Population. This work, the origin of Malthusianism, posited a need for population control to avoid poverty and famine or conflict over scare resources.
1801
The Act of Union 1800 comes into effect on 1 January, uniting the Kingdoms of Great Britain and of Ireland into the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
1807
The Abolition of the Slave Trade Act became law, making it illegal to engage in the slave trade throughout the British Empire, partly as a result of a twenty-year parliamentary campaign by William Wilberforce.
1811
George, Prince of Wales, begins his nine-year period as the regent (he became known as George, Prince Regent) for George III, who had become delusional. This sub-period of the Georgian era is known as the Regency era.
1815
Napoleon I of France is defeated by the Seventh Coalition under The Duke of Wellington at the Battle of Waterloo.
1819
The Peterloo Massacre occurs.
1820
George III dies on 29 January, and his son George, Prince Regent, ascends to the throne of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland as George IV. He had been the effective ruler since 1811 as regent for his seriously ill father.
1830
George IV dies on 26 June. Some historians date this as the end of the Georgian era of the House of Hanover. However, many other authorities continue this era during the relatively short reign of his younger brother, who became King William IV.
1833
Slavery Abolition Act passed by Parliament through the influence of William Wilberforce and the Evangelical movement. The slaveowners are generously paid off.
1837
Transition to the Victorian era. King William IV dies on 20 June, ending the Georgian era. He was succeeded by his niece, Queen Victoria.

Monarchs Edit

See also Edit

Further reading Edit

  • Andress, David. The savage storm: Britain on the brink in the age of Napoleon (2012).
  • Armstrong, Anthony. The Church of England: the Methodists and society, 1700–1850 (1973).
  • Bannister, Jerry, and Liam Riordan, eds. The Loyal Atlantic: Remaking the British Atlantic in the Revolutionary Era (U of Toronto Press, 2012).
  • Bates, Stephen. Year of Waterloo: Britain in 1815 (2015).
  • Begiato, Joanne. "Between poise and power: embodied manliness in eighteenth-and nineteenth-century British culture." Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 26 (2016): 125–147. Online
  • Black, Jeremy. "Georges I & II: Limited monarchs." History Today 53.2 (2003): 11+
  • Black, Jeremy. The Hanoverians: The History of a Dynasty (2004), 288 pp.
  • Briggs, Asa. The making of modern England, 1783–1867: The age of improvement (1959) online.
  • Chandler, Timothy. "The development of a sporting tradition at Oxbridge, 1800-1860" Canadian Journal of History of Sport (1988) vol 19 pp:1-29. Emergence of cricket and rowing at Cambridge and Oxford.
  • Curl, James Stevens. Georgian Architecture (English Heritage, 2011).
  • Ellis, Joyce. The Georgian Town, 1680–1840 (2001).
  • Evans, E. J. Britain before the Reform Act: politics and society 1815–1832 (1989).
  • Gould, Eliga H. "American independence and Britain's counter-revolution", Past & Present (1997) #154 pp. 107–41.
  • Gregg, Pauline. A Social and Economic History of Britain: 1760–1950 (1950) online
  • Hochschild, Adam. Bury the Chains, The British Struggle to Abolish Slavery (Basingstoke: Pan Macmillan, 2005).
  • Holmes, Richard. The Age of Wonder: How the Romantic Generation Discovered the Beauty and Terror of Science (2009).
  • Hunt, Tamara L. Defining John Bull: political caricature and national identity in late Georgian England (Taylor & Francis, 2017).
  • Hunt, William. The History of England from the Accession of George III to the close of Pitt's first Administration (1905), highly detailed on politics and diplomacy, 1760–1801. online
  • Leadam, I. S. The History of England From The Accession of Anne To The Death of George II (1912) online, highly detailed on politics and diplomacy 1702–1760.
  • Mokyr, Joel. The Enlightened Economy: An Economic History of Britain 1700–1850 (2010).
  • Mori, Jennifer. Britain in the Age of the French Revolution: 1785–1820 (Routledge, 2014).
  • Newman, Gerald, ed. (1997). Britain in the Hanoverian Age, 1714–1837: An Encyclopedia. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-8153-0396-1. online review; 904pp; short articles by experts
  • O'Brien, Patrick K. "The political economy of British taxation, 1660‐1815", in Economic History Review (1988) 41#1 pp: 1–32. in JSTOR
  • Parsons, Timothy H. The British imperial century, 1815–1914: A world history perspective (Rowman & Littlefield, 2019).
  • Plumb, J. H. The First Four Georges. Revised ed. Hamlyn, 1974.
  • Porter, Roy. English Society in the Eighteenth Century (1991) excerpt
  • Rendell, Mike. Trailblazing Women of the Georgian Era: The Eighteenth-Century Struggle for Female Success in a Man's World (Pen and Sword, 2018).
  • Robertson, Charles. England under the Hanoverians (1911) online
  • Robson, Eric. "The American Revolution Reconsidered." History Today (Feb 1952) 3#3 pp 126–132.
  • Royle, Edward, and James Walvin. English radicals and reformers, 1760–1848 (UP of Kentucky, 1982).
  • Rule. John. Albion's People: English Society 1714–1815 (1992)
  • Schweizer, Karl W., and Jeremy Black, eds. Politics and the Press in Hanoverian Britain (E. Mellon Press, 1989).
  • Thomas, Peter D. G. (1985). "George III and the American Revolution". History. 70 (228): 16–31. doi:10.1111/j.1468-229X.1985.tb02477.x.
  • Trevelyan, G. M. British History in the Nineteenth Century (1782–1901) (1901) online
  • Turner, M. J. The Age of Unease: government and reform in Britain, 1782–1832 (2000)
  • Watson J. Steven. The Reign of George III: 1760–1815 (1960), scholarly survey; online
  • Webb, R. K. Modern England: from the 18th century to the present (1968) online university textbook
  • Williams, Basil. The Whig Supremacy 1714–1760 (1939) online edition, wide-ranging survey
  • Wilson, Charles. England's apprenticeship, 1603–1763 (1967), comprehensive economic and business history.
  • Woodward; E. L. The Age of Reform, 1815–1870, (1938), wide-ranging survey online

Historiography and memory Edit

  • Boyd, Hilton. A Mad, Bad, and Dangerous People?: England 1783–1846 (2008) 783pp; wide-ranging survey with emphasis on historiography
  • Bultmann, William A. "Early Hanoverian England (1714–60): Some Recent Writings." Journal of Modern History 35.1 (1963): 46-61 online in JSTOR; also reprinted in Elizabeth Chapin Furber, ed. Changing views on British history: essays on historical writing since 1939 (Harvard UP, 1966), pp. 181–205.
  • Dixon, Nicholas, "From Georgian to Victorian," History Review, (Dec 2010), Issue 68
  • O'Gorman, Frank. "The Recent Historiography of the Hanoverian Regime." Historical Journal 29#4 (1986): 1005–1020. online
  • Reitan, E. A. (editor) (1964). George III, Tyrant Or Constitutional Monarch?. scholarly essays
  • Simms, Brendan and Torsten Riotte, eds. The Hanoverian Dimension in British History, 1714–1837 (2009) online, focus on Hanover
  • Snyder, Henry L. "Early Georgian England", in Richard Schlatter, ed., Recent Views on British History: Essays on Historical Writing since 1966 (Rutgers UP, 1984), pp. 167–196, historiography

Note: In the twentieth century, the period 1910–1936 was informally called the Georgian Era during the reign of George V (following the Edwardian Era), and is sometimes still referred to as such;[46] see Georgian Poetry.

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c Pryde, E. B., ed. (1996). Handbook of British Chronology. Cambridge University Press. pp. 46–47. ISBN 978-0-521-56350-5.
  2. ^ John Steven Watson (31 May 2023). "George III King of Great Britain". Britannica.
  3. ^ Roger D. Lund, Ridicule, Religion and the Politics of Wit in Augustan England (Ashgate, 2013), ch. 1.
  4. ^ "Georgian Definition & Meaning". Dictionary.com. Retrieved 13 May 2022.
  5. ^ Aleksandr Georgievich, and David Minaevich Gamezardashvili Baramidze, Georgian literature (The Minerva Group, 2001).
  6. ^ a b "Grand Tour". Oxford Reference. Retrieved 20 May 2022.
  7. ^ E. Chaney, "Gibbon, Beckford and the Interpretation of Dreams, Waking Thoughts and Incidents", The Beckford Society Annual Lectures (London, 2004), pp. 25–50.
  8. ^ Amelia Rauser, Hair, Authenticity, The Self Made Macaroni (Johns Hopkins University Press, Fall 2004) p. 101.
  9. ^ Anthony Armstrong, The Church of England: the Methodists and society, 1700–1850 (1973).
  10. ^ Asa Briggs, The age of improvement, 1783–1867 (1959), pp. 66–73.
  11. ^ John Rule, Albion's People: English Society 1714–1815 (1992), ch. 2–6.
  12. ^ Morris, R. J. (March 1983). "Voluntary Societies and British Urban Elites, 1780–1850: An Analysis". The Historical Journal. 26 (1): 99. doi:10.1017/S0018246X00019610. S2CID 162351383.
  13. ^ Wood, Lisa (2003). Modes of Discipline: Women, Conservatism, and the Novel after the French Revolution. Lewisburg, PA: Bucknell University Press. pp. 42–44.
  14. ^ Jeremy Black, Crisis of Empire: Britain and America in the Eighteenth Century (2010).
  15. ^ Eliga H. Gould, "American independence and Britain's counter-revolution", Past & Present (1997) #154 pp. 107–41.
  16. ^ P. Bruce Buchan, "The East India Company 1749–1800: The evolution of a territorial strategy and the changing role of the directors." Business and Economic History (1994): 52–61.
  17. ^ John McAleer, and Nigel Rigby, Captain Cook and the Pacific: art, exploration and empire (Yale UP, 2017).
  18. ^ G. C. Bolton, "The Founding of the Second British Empire." Economic History Review 19.1 (1966): 195–200.
  19. ^ Julian Hoppit, A Land of Liberty?: England 1689–1727 (2000), p. 344.
  20. ^ Eric J. Evans, The forging of the modern state: early industrial Britain, 1783–1872 (1996), p. 31.
  21. ^ Ann M. Carlos and Stephen Nicholas. "'Giants of an Earlier Capitalism': The Chartered Trading Companies as Modern Multinationals." Business history review 62#3 (1988): 398-419. in JSTOR
  22. ^ Max Savelle, Seeds of Liberty: The Genesis of the American Mind (2005), pp. 204–211
  23. ^ William R. Nester, The Great Frontier War: Britain, France, and the Imperial Struggle for North America, 1607–1755 (Praeger, 2000), p. 54.
  24. ^ Hoppit, A Land of Liberty?: England 1689–1727 (2000), pp. 334–38.
  25. ^ Julian Hoppit, "The Myths of the South Sea Bubble", Transactions of the Royal Historical Society (1962), 12#1 pp. 141–165.
  26. ^ Nicholas Rogers, 'Riot and Popular Jacobitism in Early Hanoverian England', in Eveline Cruickshanks (ed.), Ideology and Conspiracy: Aspects of Jacobitism, 1689–1759 (Edinburgh: John Donald, 1982), pp. 70–88.
  27. ^ Paul Kleber Monod, Jacobitism and the English People, 1688–1788 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993), pp. 173-194.
  28. ^ Paul Langford, A Polite and Commercial People: England, 1727–1783 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998), p. 291.
  29. ^ Langford, pp. 291-292.
  30. ^ A. J. Graham Cummings and Jack Fruchtman, ed. (1997). Britain in the Hanoverian Age, 1714–1837: An Encyclopedia. Taylor & Francis. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-8153-0396-1.
  31. ^ Leon Radzinowicz, "The Waltham Black Act: A study of the legislative attitude towards crime in the eighteenth century". Cambridge Law Journal (1945). 9#1 pp. 56–81.
  32. ^ Engraving after 'Men of Science Living in 1807-8', John Gilbert engraved by George Zobel and William Walker, ref. NPG 1075a, National Portrait Gallery, London, accessed February 2010
  33. ^ Smith, HM (May 1941). "Eminent men of science living in 1807-8". J. Chem. Educ. 18 (5): 203. doi:10.1021/ed018p203.
  34. ^ Adrienne Koch, ed., The American enlightenment: The shaping of the American experiment and a free society (1965).
  35. ^ Peter Gay, ed. The Enlightenment: A comprehensive anthology (1973), p. 15.
  36. ^ Matthew Daniel Eddy, "Natural History, Natural Philosophy and Readership", in Stephen Brown and Warren McDougall, eds., The Edinburgh History of the Book in Scotland, Vol. II: Enlightenment and Expansion, 1707–1800 (2012), pp. 297–309 online
  37. ^ David Daiches, Peter Jones, Jean Jones, eds., A Hotbed of Genius: The Scottish Enlightenment 1731–1790 (Edinburgh UP, 1986).
  38. ^ Peter Gay, ed. The Enlightenment: A comprehensive anthology (1973), p. 14.
  39. ^ Roy Porter, "England" in Alan Charles Kors, ed., Encyclopedia of the Enlightenment (2003) 1:409–15.
  40. ^ Karen O'Brien, "English Enlightenment Histories, 1750–c.1815" in José Rabasa et al. eds. (2012). The Oxford History of Historical Writing. Vol. 3: 1400–1800. OUP Oxford. pp. 518–35. ISBN 978-0-19-921917-9. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  41. ^ Roy Porter, The creation of the modern world: the untold story of the British Enlightenment (2000), pp. 1–12, 36–37, 482–84.
  42. ^ Rosemary Sweet, Antiquaries: the discovery of the past in eighteenth-century Britain (A&C Black, 2004).
  43. ^ William Li Parry-Jones, "Asylum for the mentally ill in historical perspective." Bulletin of the Royal College of Psychiatrists 12.10 (1988): 407-410 online.
  44. ^ Nicholas Dixon, "From Georgian to Victorian", History Review (Dec 2010), Issue 68.
  45. ^ Charles John Abbey, The English Church in the Eighteenth Century (1878) vol 2 p. 4.
  46. ^ . The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (4th ed.). Archived from the original on 12 March 2008. Retrieved 4 July 2008.

External links Edit

  • Georgians British Library history resources about the Georgian era, featuring collection material and text by Dr. Matthew White.
  • British Library Timelines: Sources from History

georgian, other, uses, georgian, georgian, disambiguation, period, british, history, from, 1714, 1830, 1837, named, after, hanoverian, kings, george, george, george, george, definition, also, often, extended, include, relatively, short, reign, william, which, . For other uses of Georgian see Georgian disambiguation The Georgian era was a period in British history from 1714 to c 1830 1837 named after the Hanoverian kings George I George II George III and George IV The definition of the Georgian era is also often extended to include the relatively short reign of William IV which ended with his death in 1837 The subperiod that is the Regency era is defined by the regency of George IV as Prince of Wales during the illness of his father George III 2 The transition to the Victorian era was characterized in religion social values and the arts by a shift in tone away from rationalism and toward romanticism and mysticism Georgian era1714 1830 1837 The Georgian architecture of the Royal Crescent in the city of BathIncludingRegency eraMonarch s George IGeorge IIGeorge IIIGeorge IVWilliam IVLeader s George Prince of Wales 1 Queen Caroline 1 George Prince Regent 1 Prime ministers Sir Robert WalpoleLord WilmingtonHenry PelhamDuke of NewcastleDuke of DevonshireLord ButeGeorge GrenvilleLord RockinghamLord ChathamDuke of GraftonLord NorthLord ShelburneDuke of PortlandWilliam Pitt the YoungerHenry AddingtonLord GrenvilleSpencer PercevalLord LiverpoolGeorge CanningLord GoderichDuke of WellingtonLord GreyLord MelbourneSir Robert PeelChronology Stuart period Victorian eraThe term Georgian is typically used in the contexts of social and political history and architecture The term Augustan literature is often used for Augustan drama Augustan poetry and Augustan prose in the period 1700 1740s The term Augustan refers to the acknowledgement of the influence of Latin literature from the ancient Roman Republic 3 The term Georgian era is not applied to the time of the two 20th century British kings of this name George V and George VI Those periods are simply referred to as Georgian 4 Contents 1 Arts and culture 1 1 Grand Tour 2 Social change 2 1 Evangelical religion and social reform 3 Empire 3 1 The trading nation 4 Political and social revolt 5 Enlightenment 5 1 Scottish Enlightenment 5 2 English Enlightenment 5 3 Science and medicine 6 Ending 7 Timeline 8 Monarchs 9 See also 10 Further reading 10 1 Historiography and memory 11 References 12 External linksArts and culture EditGeorgian society and its preoccupations were well portrayed in the novels of writers such as Daniel Defoe Jonathan Swift Samuel Richardson Henry Fielding Laurence Sterne Mary Shelley and Jane Austen characterised by the architecture of Robert Adam John Nash and James Wyatt and the emergence of the Gothic Revival style which hearkened back to a supposed golden age of building design The flowering of the arts was most vividly shown in the emergence of the Romantic poets principally through Samuel Taylor Coleridge William Wordsworth Percy Bysshe Shelley William Blake John Keats Lord Byron and Robert Burns Their work ushered in a new era of poetry characterised by vivid and colourful language evocative of elevating ideas and themes 5 The paintings of Thomas Gainsborough Sir Joshua Reynolds and the young J M W Turner and John Constable illustrated the changing world of the Georgian period as did the work of designers like Capability Brown the landscape designer Fine examples of distinctive Georgian architecture are Edinburgh s New Town Georgian Dublin Grainger Town in Newcastle upon Tyne the Georgian Quarter of Liverpool and much of Bristol and Bath The music of John Field Handel Haydn Clementi Johann Christian Bach William Boyce Mozart Beethoven and Mendelssohn was some of the most popular in England at that time Grand Tour Edit The height of the Grand Tour coincided with the 18th century and is associated with Georgian high society This custom saw young upper class Englishmen travelling to Italy by way of France and the Netherlands for intellectual and cultural purposes 6 Notable historian Edward Gibbon remarked of the Grand Tour as useful for intellectual self improvement 7 The journey and stay abroad would usually take a year or more This would eventually lead to the basis for the acquisition and spread of art collections back to England as well as fashions and paintings from Italy 6 The custom also helped popularise the macaroni style that was soon to become fashionable at the time 8 Social change Edit nbsp 18th century LondonIt was a time of immense social change in Britain with the beginnings of the Industrial Revolution which began the process of intensifying class divisions and the emergence of rival political parties like the Whigs and Tories In rural areas the Agricultural Revolution saw huge changes to the movement of people and the decline of small communities the growth of the cities and the beginnings of an integrated transportation system but nevertheless as rural towns and villages declined and work became scarce there was a huge increase in emigration to Canada the North American colonies which became the United States during the period and other parts of the British Empire Evangelical religion and social reform Edit In England the evangelical movement inside and outside the Church of England gained strength in the late 18th and early 19th century The movement challenged the traditional religious sensibility that emphasised a code of honour for the upper class and suitable behaviour for everyone else together with faithful observances of rituals John Wesley 1703 1791 and his followers preached revivalist religion trying to convert individuals to a personal relationship with Christ through Bible reading regular prayer and especially the revival experience Wesley himself preached 52 000 times calling on men and women to redeem the time and save their souls Wesley always operated inside the Church of England but at his death his followers set up outside institutions that became the Methodist Church 9 It stood alongside the traditional nonconformist churches Presbyterians Congregationalist Baptists Unitarians and Quakers The nonconformist churches however were less influenced by revivalism 10 The Church of England remained dominant in England but it had a growing evangelical revivalist faction the Low Church Its leaders included William Wilberforce and Hannah More It reached the upper class through the Clapham Sect It did not seek political reform but rather the opportunity to save souls through political action by freeing slaves abolishing the duel prohibiting cruelty to children and animals stopping gambling and avoiding frivolity on the Sabbath they read the Bible every day All souls were equal in God s view but not all bodies so evangelicals did not challenge the hierarchical structure of English society 11 As R J Morris noted in his 1983 article Voluntary Societies and British Urban Elites 1780 1850 m id eighteenth century Britain was a stable society in the sense that those with material and ideological power were able to defend this power in an effective and dynamic manner but in the twenty years after 1780 this consensus structure was broken 12 Anglican Evangelicalism thus as historian Lisa Wood has argued in her book Modes of Discipline Women Conservatism and the Novel After the French Revolution functioned as a tool of ruling class social control buffering the discontent that in France had inaugurated a revolution yet it contained within itself the seeds for challenge to gender and class hierarchies 13 Empire EditThe Georgian period saw continual warfare with France the primary enemy Major episodes included the Seven Years War known in America as the French and Indian War 1754 1763 the American Revolutionary War 1775 1783 the French Revolutionary Wars 1792 1802 the Irish Rebellion of 1798 and the Napoleonic Wars 1803 1815 The British won most of the wars except for the American Revolution where the combined weight of the United States France Spain and the Netherlands overwhelmed Britain which stood alone without allies 14 nbsp The British Empire at the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815The loss of the 13 American Colonies was a national disaster Commentators at home and abroad speculated on the end of Britain as a great power In Europe the wars with France dragged on for nearly a quarter of a century 1793 1815 Britain organised coalition after coalition using its superb financial system to subsidise infantry forces and built up its Navy to maintain control of the seas Victory over Napoleon at the Battle of Trafalgar 1805 and the Battle of Waterloo 1815 under Admiral Lord Nelson and the Duke of Wellington brought a sense of triumphalism and political reaction 15 The expansion of empire in Asia was primarily the work of the British East India Company especially under the leadership of Robert Clive 16 Captain James Cook was perhaps the most prominent of the many explorers and geographers using the resources of the Royal Navy to develop the Empire and make many scientific discoveries especially in Australia and the Pacific 17 Instead of trying to recover the lost colonies in North America the British built up in Asia a largely new Second British Empire That new empire flourished during the Victorian and Edwardian eras which were to follow 18 The trading nation Edit nbsp East Indiaman in the China SeasThe era was prosperous as entrepreneurs extended the range of their business around the globe By the 1720s Britain was one of the most prosperous countries in the world and Daniel Defoe boasted we are the most diligent nation in the world Vast trade rich manufactures mighty wealth universal correspondence and happy success have been constant companions of England and given us the title of an industrious people 19 While the other major powers were primarily motivated towards territorial gains and protection of their dynasties such as the Habsburg and Bourbon dynasties and the House of Hohenzollern Britain had a different set of primary interests Its main diplomatic goal besides protecting the homeland from invasion was building a worldwide trading network for its merchants manufacturers shippers and financiers This required a hegemonic Royal Navy so powerful that no rival could sweep its ships from the world s trading routes or invade the British Isles The London government enhanced the private sector by incorporating numerous privately financed London based companies for establishing trading posts and opening import export businesses across the world Each was given a monopoly of trade to the specified geographical region The first enterprise was the Muscovy Company set up in 1555 to trade with Russia Other prominent enterprises included the East India Company and the Hudson s Bay Company in Canada The Company of Royal Adventurers Trading to Africa had been set up in 1662 to trade in gold ivory and slaves in Africa it was re established as the Royal African Company in 1672 and focused on the slave trade British involvement in each of the four major wars 1740 to 1783 paid off handsomely in terms of trade Even the loss of the 13 colonies was made up by a very favourable trading relationship with the new United States of America British gained dominance in the trade with India and largely dominated the highly lucrative slave sugar and commercial trades originating in West Africa and the West Indies China would be next on the agenda Other powers set up similar monopolies on a much smaller scale only the Netherlands emphasized trade as much as England 20 21 nbsp The subscription room at Lloyd s of London in the early 19th centuryMercantilism was the basic policy imposed by Britain on its colonies 22 Mercantilism meant that the government and the merchants became partners with the goal of increasing political power and private wealth to the exclusion of other empires The government protected its merchants and kept others out by trade barriers regulations and subsidies to domestic industries in order to maximise exports from and minimise imports to the realm The government had to fight smuggling which became a favourite American technique in the 18th century to circumvent the restrictions on trading with the French Spanish or Dutch The goal of mercantilism was to run trade surpluses so that gold and silver would pour into London The government took its share through duties and taxes with the remainder going to merchants in Britain The government spent much of its revenue on a large and powerful Royal Navy which not only protected the British colonies but threatened the colonies of the other empires and sometimes seized them The colonies were captive markets for British industry and the goal was to enrich the mother country 23 Most of the companies earned good profits and enormous personal fortunes were created in India but there was one major fiasco that caused heavy losses The South Sea Bubble was a business enterprise that exploded in scandal The South Sea Company was a private business corporation supposedly set up much like the other trading companies with a focus on South America Its actual purpose was to renegotiate previous high interest government loans amounting to 31 million through market manipulation and speculation It issued stock four times in 1720 that reached about 8 000 investors Prices kept soaring every day from 130 a share to 1 000 with insiders making huge paper profits The Bubble collapsed overnight ruining many speculators Investigations showed bribes had reached into high places even to the king The future prime minister Robert Walpole managed to wind it down with minimal political and economic damage although some suffering extreme loss fled to exile or committed suicide 24 25 Political and social revolt Edit nbsp An Old Bailey trial c 1808The beginning of the Georgian era witnessed rioting by Jacobite and High Church mobs in protest against the Hanoverian succession and which included attacks on the Dissenters places of worship These included the 1714 coronation riots which occurred on the day of George I s coronation and the riots of 1715 In response Parliament passed the Riot Act which granted the authorities greater powers to put down rioting 26 27 Although religious toleration was extensive by the standards of continental Europe hostility to religious minorities was widespread in Britain during the eighteenth century and sometimes expressed itself in rioting 28 The Jewish Naturalisation Act 1753 was repealed a year after it had been passed because of widespread opposition and the 1780 Gordon Riots in London were directed against Catholics after the Papists Act 1778 removed some of their legal disabilities During the 1791 Priestley Riots in Birmingham the mob targeted Dissenters including the prominent Radical Joseph Priestley 29 The Black Act of 1723 sponsored by Robert Walpole strengthened the criminal code for the benefit of the upper class 30 It specified over 200 capital crimes many with intensified punishment The crime of arson for example was expanded to include of burning or the threat of burning haystacks The legal rights of defendants were something different from today For example suspects who refused to surrender within 40 days could be summarily judged guilty and sentenced to execution if apprehended Local villages were punished if they failed to find prosecute and convict alleged criminals due to the increase in crime at the time 31 With the ending of the War with France in 1815 Great Britain entered a period of greater economic depression and political uncertainty characterised by social discontent and unrest The Radical political party published a leaflet called The Political Register also known as The Two Penny Trash to its rivals The so called March of the Blanketeers saw 400 spinners and weavers march from Manchester to London in March 1817 to hand the Government a petition The Luddites destroyed and damaged machinery in the industrial north west of England The Peterloo Massacre in 1819 began as a protest rally which saw 60 000 people gathering to protest about their living standards but was quelled by military action and saw eleven people killed and 400 wounded The Cato Street Conspiracy of 1820 sought to blow up the Cabinet and then move on to storm the Tower of London and overthrow the government This too was thwarted with the conspirators executed or transported to Australia Enlightenment EditFurther information Age of Enlightenment nbsp Distinguished Men of Science 32 Use your cursor to see who is who 33 Historians have long explored the importance of the Scottish Enlightenment as well as the American Enlightenment 34 while debating the very existence of the English Enlightenment Scottish Enlightenment Edit Main article Scottish Enlightenment English historian Peter Gay argues that the Scottish Enlightenment was a small and cohesive group of friends David Hume Adam Smith Adam Ferguson and others who knew one another intimately and talked to one another incessantly 35 Education was a priority in Scotland both at the local level and especially in four universities that had stronger reputations than any in England The Enlightenment culture was based on close readings of new books and intense discussions that took place daily at such intellectual gathering places in Edinburgh as The Select Society and later The Poker Club as well as within Scotland s ancient universities St Andrews Glasgow Edinburgh and Aberdeen 36 Sharing the humanist and rationalist outlook of the European Enlightenment of the same time period the thinkers of the Scottish Enlightenment asserted the importance of human reason combined with a rejection of any authority that could not be justified by reason In Scotland the Enlightenment was characterised by a thoroughgoing empiricism and practicality where the chief values were improvement virtue and practical benefit for the individual and society as a whole Among the fields that rapidly advanced were philosophy economics history architecture and medicine Leaders included Francis Hutcheson David Hume Adam Smith Dugald Stewart Thomas Reid William Robertson Henry Home Lord Kames Adam Ferguson John Playfair Joseph Black and James Hutton The Scottish Enlightenment influenced England and the American colonies and to a lesser extent continental Europe 37 English Enlightenment Edit nbsp Edward Jenner performing his first vaccination in 1796The very existence of an English Enlightenment has been debated by scholars The majority of textbooks and standard surveys make no room for an English Enlightenment Some European surveys include England others ignore it but do include coverage of such major intellectuals as Joseph Addison Edward Gibbon John Locke Isaac Newton Alexander Pope and Joshua Reynolds 38 Roy Porter argues that the reason for the neglect was the assumption that the movement was primarily French inspired that it was largely a religious or anti clerical and it stood in outspoken defiance to the established order 39 Porter admits that after the 1720s England could claim thinkers to equal Diderot Voltaire or Rousseau Indeed its leading intellectuals such as Edward Gibbon 40 Edmund Burke and Samuel Johnson were all quite conservative and supported the standing order Porter says the reason was that Enlightenment had come early to England and had succeeded so that the culture had accepted political liberalism philosophical empiricism and religious toleration of the sort that intellectuals on the continent had to fight for against powerful odds The coffee house culture provided an ideal venue for enlightened conversation Furthermore England rejected the collectivism of the continent and emphasized the improvement of individuals as the main goal of enlightenment 41 Science and medicine Edit The British sponsored numerous scientists who made major discoveries in the small laboratories Joseph Priestley investigated electricity Chemist Henry Cavendish identified hydrogen in 1772 Daniel Rutherford isolated nitrogen in 1774 while Priestley discovered oxygen and ammonia Antiquarians and archaeologists mapped the past 42 In medicine in 1717 Lady Mary Wortley Montagu introduced inoculation against smallpox and Britain and by 1740 it was in wide usage Guy s Hospital was founded in 1721 the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh in 1729 Queen Charlotte s maternity hospital in 1739 and the Middlesex Hospital in 1745 Asylums for the mentally ill were established notably Bethel Hospital in Norwich 1713 a ward for incurable lunatics at Guy s Hospital 1728 and lunatic hospitals in Manchester 1766 and York in 1777 York was the first to be called an asylum 43 Ending EditHistorians debate the exact ending with the deaths of George IV in 1830 or William IV in 1837 as the usual marker In most social and cultural trends the timing varied The emergence of Romanticism and literature began as early as the 1780s but religious changes took much longer and were incomplete until around a century later The 1830s saw important developments such as the emergence of the Oxford Movement in religion and the demise of classical architecture Victorians typically were disapproving of the times of the previous era By the late 19th century the Georgian era was a byword for a degenerate culture 44 Charles Abbey in 1878 argued that the Church of England partook of the general sordidness of the age it was an age of great material prosperity but of moral and spiritual poverty such as hardly finds a parallel in our history Mercenary motives were to predominate everywhere in the Church as well as in the state 45 Timeline Edit1714 Upon the death of his second cousin Queen Anne George Louis Elector of Hanover succeeds as the new King George I of Great Britain and Ireland the former of which had itself been established in 1707 This is the beginning of the House of Hanover s reign over the British Crown 1715 The Whig Party wins the British parliamentary election for the House of Commons This party is dominant until 1760 1727 George I dies on 11 June His son George Prince of Wales ascends to the throne as George II nbsp An Incident in the Rebellion of 1745 depicting the Battle of Culloden of 1746 where British troops defeated the Jacobite Army1745 The final Jacobite rising is crushed at the Battle of Culloden in April 1746 1760 George II dies on 25 October and his grandson George Prince of Wales ascends to the throne as George III 1763 Britain is victorious in the Seven Years War The Treaty of Paris of 1763 grants Britain domain over vast new territories around the world 1765 The Stamp Act is passed by the Parliament of Great Britain causing much unrest in the Thirteen Colonies in North America 1769 1770 Australia and New Zealand are claimed as British colonies 1773 The Inclosure Act 1773 is put into place by the British Parliament This act brought about the enclosure of land and removing the right of common land access This began an internal mass movement of rural poor from the countryside into the cities 1775 The American Revolutionary War begins in the Thirteen Colonies specifically in Massachusetts all royal officials are expelled 1776 The Thirteen Colonies in North America declare their independence King George III is determined to recover them nbsp British general John Burgoyne shown surrendering at Saratoga in 17771777 The main British invasion army under Gen Burgoyne surrenders at Saratoga the French increase their aid to the Americans 1778 France forms in a military alliance with the United States and declares war on Britain The Netherlands and Spain support France Britain has no major allies 1781 The British Army in America under Lord Cornwallis surrenders to George Washington after its defeat in Yorktown Virginia in October 1781 The French Navy controls the seas 1782 Battle of the Saintes Admiral Sir George Rodney defeated a French fleet under the Comte de Grasse enabling the Royal Navy to control the West Indies 1783 Great Britain formally recognises the independence of the original 13 American States in the Treaty of Paris of 1783 The geographical terms are very generous to the Americans and the expectation that Anglo American trade will become of major importance 1788 Australia is settled through penal transportation to the colony of New South Wales from 26 January 1789 Thomas Robert Malthus an Anglican cleric authors An Essay on the Principle of Population This work the origin of Malthusianism posited a need for population control to avoid poverty and famine or conflict over scare resources 1801 The Act of Union 1800 comes into effect on 1 January uniting the Kingdoms of Great Britain and of Ireland into the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland1807 The Abolition of the Slave Trade Act became law making it illegal to engage in the slave trade throughout the British Empire partly as a result of a twenty year parliamentary campaign by William Wilberforce 1811 George Prince of Wales begins his nine year period as the regent he became known as George Prince Regent for George III who had become delusional This sub period of the Georgian era is known as the Regency era 1815 Napoleon I of France is defeated by the Seventh Coalition under The Duke of Wellington at the Battle of Waterloo 1819 The Peterloo Massacre occurs 1820 George III dies on 29 January and his son George Prince Regent ascends to the throne of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland as George IV He had been the effective ruler since 1811 as regent for his seriously ill father 1830 George IV dies on 26 June Some historians date this as the end of the Georgian era of the House of Hanover However many other authorities continue this era during the relatively short reign of his younger brother who became King William IV 1833 Slavery Abolition Act passed by Parliament through the influence of William Wilberforce and the Evangelical movement The slaveowners are generously paid off 1837 Transition to the Victorian era King William IV dies on 20 June ending the Georgian era He was succeeded by his niece Queen Victoria Monarchs Edit nbsp George I nbsp George II nbsp George III nbsp George IV nbsp William IVSee also EditBloody Code Early modern Britain Historiography of the British Empire Historiography of the United Kingdom International relations 1648 1814 The Georgian GroupFurther reading EditAndress David The savage storm Britain on the brink in the age of Napoleon 2012 Armstrong Anthony The Church of England the Methodists and society 1700 1850 1973 Bannister Jerry and Liam Riordan eds The Loyal Atlantic Remaking the British Atlantic in the Revolutionary Era U of Toronto Press 2012 Bates Stephen Year of Waterloo Britain in 1815 2015 Begiato Joanne Between poise and power embodied manliness in eighteenth and nineteenth century British culture Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 26 2016 125 147 Online Black Jeremy Georges I amp II Limited monarchs History Today 53 2 2003 11 Black Jeremy The Hanoverians The History of a Dynasty 2004 288 pp Briggs Asa The making of modern England 1783 1867 The age of improvement 1959 online Chandler Timothy The development of a sporting tradition at Oxbridge 1800 1860 Canadian Journal of History of Sport 1988 vol 19 pp 1 29 Emergence of cricket and rowing at Cambridge and Oxford Curl James Stevens Georgian Architecture English Heritage 2011 Ellis Joyce The Georgian Town 1680 1840 2001 Evans E J Britain before the Reform Act politics and society 1815 1832 1989 Gould Eliga H American independence and Britain s counter revolution Past amp Present 1997 154 pp 107 41 Gregg Pauline A Social and Economic History of Britain 1760 1950 1950 online Hochschild Adam Bury the Chains The British Struggle to Abolish Slavery Basingstoke Pan Macmillan 2005 Holmes Richard The Age of Wonder How the Romantic Generation Discovered the Beauty and Terror of Science 2009 Hunt Tamara L Defining John Bull political caricature and national identity in late Georgian England Taylor amp Francis 2017 Hunt William The History of England from the Accession of George III to the close of Pitt s first Administration 1905 highly detailed on politics and diplomacy 1760 1801 online Leadam I S The History of England From The Accession of Anne To The Death of George II 1912 online highly detailed on politics and diplomacy 1702 1760 Mokyr Joel The Enlightened Economy An Economic History of Britain 1700 1850 2010 Mori Jennifer Britain in the Age of the French Revolution 1785 1820 Routledge 2014 Newman Gerald ed 1997 Britain in the Hanoverian Age 1714 1837 An Encyclopedia Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 8153 0396 1 online review 904pp short articles by experts O Brien Patrick K The political economy of British taxation 1660 1815 in Economic History Review 1988 41 1 pp 1 32 in JSTORParsons Timothy H The British imperial century 1815 1914 A world history perspective Rowman amp Littlefield 2019 Plumb J H The First Four Georges Revised ed Hamlyn 1974 Porter Roy English Society in the Eighteenth Century 1991 excerpt Rendell Mike Trailblazing Women of the Georgian Era The Eighteenth Century Struggle for Female Success in a Man s World Pen and Sword 2018 Robertson Charles England under the Hanoverians 1911 online Robson Eric The American Revolution Reconsidered History Today Feb 1952 3 3 pp 126 132 Royle Edward and James Walvin English radicals and reformers 1760 1848 UP of Kentucky 1982 Rule John Albion s People English Society 1714 1815 1992 Schweizer Karl W and Jeremy Black eds Politics and the Press in Hanoverian Britain E Mellon Press 1989 Thomas Peter D G 1985 George III and the American Revolution History 70 228 16 31 doi 10 1111 j 1468 229X 1985 tb02477 x Trevelyan G M British History in the Nineteenth Century 1782 1901 1901 online Turner M J The Age of Unease government and reform in Britain 1782 1832 2000 Watson J Steven The Reign of George III 1760 1815 1960 scholarly survey online Webb R K Modern England from the 18th century to the present 1968 online university textbook Williams Basil The Whig Supremacy 1714 1760 1939 online edition wide ranging survey Wilson Charles England s apprenticeship 1603 1763 1967 comprehensive economic and business history Woodward E L The Age of Reform 1815 1870 1938 wide ranging survey onlineHistoriography and memory Edit Boyd Hilton A Mad Bad and Dangerous People England 1783 1846 2008 783pp wide ranging survey with emphasis on historiography Bultmann William A Early Hanoverian England 1714 60 Some Recent Writings Journal of Modern History 35 1 1963 46 61 online in JSTOR also reprinted in Elizabeth Chapin Furber ed Changing views on British history essays on historical writing since 1939 Harvard UP 1966 pp 181 205 Dixon Nicholas From Georgian to Victorian History Review Dec 2010 Issue 68 O Gorman Frank The Recent Historiography of the Hanoverian Regime Historical Journal 29 4 1986 1005 1020 online Reitan E A editor 1964 George III Tyrant Or Constitutional Monarch scholarly essays Simms Brendan and Torsten Riotte eds The Hanoverian Dimension in British History 1714 1837 2009 online focus on Hanover Snyder Henry L Early Georgian England in Richard Schlatter ed Recent Views on British History Essays on Historical Writing since 1966 Rutgers UP 1984 pp 167 196 historiographyNote In the twentieth century the period 1910 1936 was informally called the Georgian Era during the reign of George V following the Edwardian Era and is sometimes still referred to as such 46 see Georgian Poetry References Edit a b c Pryde E B ed 1996 Handbook of British Chronology Cambridge University Press pp 46 47 ISBN 978 0 521 56350 5 John Steven Watson 31 May 2023 George III King of Great Britain Britannica Roger D Lund Ridicule Religion and the Politics of Wit in Augustan England Ashgate 2013 ch 1 Georgian Definition amp Meaning Dictionary com Retrieved 13 May 2022 Aleksandr Georgievich and David Minaevich Gamezardashvili Baramidze Georgian literature The Minerva Group 2001 a b Grand Tour Oxford Reference Retrieved 20 May 2022 E Chaney Gibbon Beckford and the Interpretation of Dreams Waking Thoughts and Incidents The Beckford Society Annual Lectures London 2004 pp 25 50 Amelia Rauser Hair Authenticity The Self Made Macaroni Johns Hopkins University Press Fall 2004 p 101 Anthony Armstrong The Church of England the Methodists and society 1700 1850 1973 Asa Briggs The age of improvement 1783 1867 1959 pp 66 73 John Rule Albion s People English Society 1714 1815 1992 ch 2 6 Morris R J March 1983 Voluntary Societies and British Urban Elites 1780 1850 An Analysis The Historical Journal 26 1 99 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00019610 S2CID 162351383 Wood Lisa 2003 Modes of Discipline Women Conservatism and the Novel after the French Revolution Lewisburg PA Bucknell University Press pp 42 44 Jeremy Black Crisis of Empire Britain and America in the Eighteenth Century 2010 Eliga H Gould American independence and Britain s counter revolution Past amp Present 1997 154 pp 107 41 P Bruce Buchan The East India Company 1749 1800 The evolution of a territorial strategy and the changing role of the directors Business and Economic History 1994 52 61 John McAleer and Nigel Rigby Captain Cook and the Pacific art exploration and empire Yale UP 2017 G C Bolton The Founding of the Second British Empire Economic History Review 19 1 1966 195 200 Julian Hoppit A Land of Liberty England 1689 1727 2000 p 344 Eric J Evans The forging of the modern state early industrial Britain 1783 1872 1996 p 31 Ann M Carlos and Stephen Nicholas Giants of an Earlier Capitalism The Chartered Trading Companies as Modern Multinationals Business history review 62 3 1988 398 419 in JSTOR Max Savelle Seeds of Liberty The Genesis of the American Mind 2005 pp 204 211 William R Nester The Great Frontier War Britain France and the Imperial Struggle for North America 1607 1755 Praeger 2000 p 54 Hoppit A Land of Liberty England 1689 1727 2000 pp 334 38 Julian Hoppit The Myths of the South Sea Bubble Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 1962 12 1 pp 141 165 Nicholas Rogers Riot and Popular Jacobitism in Early Hanoverian England in Eveline Cruickshanks ed Ideology and Conspiracy Aspects of Jacobitism 1689 1759 Edinburgh John Donald 1982 pp 70 88 Paul Kleber Monod Jacobitism and the English People 1688 1788 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1993 pp 173 194 Paul Langford A Polite and Commercial People England 1727 1783 Oxford Oxford University Press 1998 p 291 Langford pp 291 292 A J Graham Cummings and Jack Fruchtman ed 1997 Britain in the Hanoverian Age 1714 1837 An Encyclopedia Taylor amp Francis p 58 ISBN 978 0 8153 0396 1 Leon Radzinowicz The Waltham Black Act A study of the legislative attitude towards crime in the eighteenth century Cambridge Law Journal 1945 9 1 pp 56 81 Engraving after Men of Science Living in 1807 8 John Gilbert engraved by George Zobel and William Walker ref NPG 1075a National Portrait Gallery London accessed February 2010 Smith HM May 1941 Eminent men of science living in 1807 8 J Chem Educ 18 5 203 doi 10 1021 ed018p203 Adrienne Koch ed The American enlightenment The shaping of the American experiment and a free society 1965 Peter Gay ed The Enlightenment A comprehensive anthology 1973 p 15 Matthew Daniel Eddy Natural History Natural Philosophy and Readership in Stephen Brown and Warren McDougall eds The Edinburgh History of the Book in Scotland Vol II Enlightenment and Expansion 1707 1800 2012 pp 297 309 online David Daiches Peter Jones Jean Jones eds A Hotbed of Genius The Scottish Enlightenment 1731 1790 Edinburgh UP 1986 Peter Gay ed The Enlightenment A comprehensive anthology 1973 p 14 Roy Porter England in Alan Charles Kors ed Encyclopedia of the Enlightenment 2003 1 409 15 Karen O Brien English Enlightenment Histories 1750 c 1815 in Jose Rabasa et al eds 2012 The Oxford History of Historical Writing Vol 3 1400 1800 OUP Oxford pp 518 35 ISBN 978 0 19 921917 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help Roy Porter The creation of the modern world the untold story of the British Enlightenment 2000 pp 1 12 36 37 482 84 Rosemary Sweet Antiquaries the discovery of the past in eighteenth century Britain A amp C Black 2004 William Li Parry Jones Asylum for the mentally ill in historical perspective Bulletin of the Royal College of Psychiatrists 12 10 1988 407 410 online Nicholas Dixon From Georgian to Victorian History Review Dec 2010 Issue 68 Charles John Abbey The English Church in the Eighteenth Century 1878 vol 2 p 4 Georgian The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 4th ed Archived from the original on 12 March 2008 Retrieved 4 July 2008 External links EditRocque s Map of London Online 1746 Georgians British Library history resources about the Georgian era featuring collection material and text by Dr Matthew White British Library Timelines Sources from History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Georgian era amp oldid 1177328636, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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