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Victorian era

Victorian era
1837–1901
Monarch(s)Victoria
Leader(s)
Chronology

In the history of the United Kingdom and the British Empire, the Victorian era was the reign of Queen Victoria, from 20 June 1837 until her death on 22 January 1901. Slightly different definitions are sometimes used. The era followed the Georgian era and preceded the Edwardian era, and its later half overlaps with the first part of the Belle Époque era of continental Europe.

Various liberalising political reforms took place in the UK, including expanding the electoral franchise. The Great Famine caused mass death in Ireland early in the period. The British Empire had relatively peaceful relations with the other great powers. It participated in various military conflicts mainly against minor powers. The British Empire expanded during this period and was the predominant power in the world.

Victorian society valued a high standard of personal conduct across all sections of society. The emphasis on morality gave impetus to social reform but also placed restrictions on certain groups' liberty. Prosperity rose during the period, but debilitating undernutrition persisted. Literacy and childhood education became near universal in Great Britain for the first time. Whilst some attempts were made to improve living conditions, slum housing and disease remained a severe problem.

The period saw significant scientific and technological development. Britain was advanced in industry and engineering in particular, but somewhat undeveloped in art and education. Great Britain's population increased rapidly, while Ireland's fell sharply.

Terminology and periodisation

In the strictest sense, the Victorian era covers the duration of Victoria's reign as Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, from her accession on 20 June 1837—after the death of her uncle, William IV—until her death on 22 January 1901, after which she was succeeded by her eldest son, Edward VII. Her reign lasted 63 years and seven months, a longer period than any of her predecessors. The term 'Victorian' was in contemporaneous usage to describe the era.[1] The era has also been understood in a more extensive sense as a period that possessed sensibilities and characteristics distinct from the periods adjacent to it, in which case it is sometimes dated to begin before Victoria's accession—typically from the passage of or agitation for (during the 1830s) the Reform Act 1832, which introduced a wide-ranging change to the electoral system of England and Wales.[note 1] Definitions that purport a distinct sensibility or politics to the era have also created scepticism about the worth of the label 'Victorian', though there have also been defences of it.[2]

Michael Sadleir was insistent that "in truth, the Victorian period is three periods, and not one".[3] He distinguished early Victorianism—the socially and politically unsettled period from 1837 to 1850[4]—and late Victorianism (from 1880 onwards), with its new waves of aestheticism and imperialism,[5] from the Victorian heyday: mid-Victorianism, 1851 to 1879. He saw the latter period as characterized by a distinctive mixture of prosperity, domestic prudery, and complacency[6]—what G. M. Trevelyan called the 'mid-Victorian decades of quiet politics and roaring prosperity'.[7]

Politics, diplomacy and war

 
Information circulated by the campaign of Lewis Pugh Pugh, a candidate at the 1880 general election in Cardiganshire (now known as Ceredigion), explaining to supporters how to vote.

The Reform Act,[note 2] which made various changes to the electoral system including expanding the franchise, had been passed in 1832.[8] The franchise was expanded again by the Second Reform Act[note 3] in 1867.[9] The Third Reform Act in 1884 introduced a general principle of one vote per household. All these acts and others simplified the electoral system and reduced corruption. Historian Bruce L Kinzer describes these reforms as putting the United Kingdom on the path towards becoming a democracy. The traditional aristocratic ruling class attempted to maintain as much influence as possible while gradually allowing the middle- and working-classes a role in politics. However, all women and a large minority of men remained outside the system into the early 20th century.[10]

Cities were given greater political autonomy and the labour movement was legalised.[11] From 1845 to 1852, the Great Famine caused mass starvation, disease and death in Ireland, sparking large-scale emigration.[12] The Corn Laws were repealed in response to this.[13] Across the British Empire, reform included rapid expansion, the complete abolition of slavery in the African possessions and the end of transportation of convicts to Australia. Restrictions on colonial trade were loosened and responsible (i.e. semi-autonomous) government was introduced in some territories.[14][15]

 
Depiction of the defence of Rorke's Drift during the Anglo-Zulu War of 1879 by Alphonse de Neuville (1880)

Throughout most of the 19th century Britain was the most powerful country in the world.[16] The period from 1815 to 1914, known as the Pax Britannica, was a time of relatively peaceful relations between the world's great powers. This is particularly true of Britain's interactions with the others.[17] The only war in which the British Empire fought against another major power was the Crimean War, from 1853 to 1856.[18][14] There were various revolts and violent conflicts within the British Empire,[14][15] and Britain participated in wars against minor powers.[19][14][15] It also took part in the diplomatic struggles of the Great Game[19] and the Scramble for Africa.[14][15]

In 1840, Queen Victoria married her German cousin Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. The couple had nine children, who themselves married into various royal families, and the queen thus became known as the 'grandmother of Europe'.[20][11] In 1861, Albert died.[19] Victoria went into mourning and withdrew from public life for ten years.[11] In 1871, with republican sentiments growing in Britain, she began to return to public life. In her later years, her popularity soared as she became a symbol of the British Empire. Queen Victoria died on 22 January 1901.[20]

Society and culture

The Victorian era saw a rapidly growing middle class who became an important cultural influence, to a significant extent replacing the aristocracy as British society's dominant class.[21][22] A distinctive middle-class lifestyle developed that influenced what society valued as a whole.[21][23] Increased importance was placed on the value of the family, and the idea that marriage should be based on romantic love gained popularity.[24][25] A clear separation was established between the home and the workplace, which had often not been the case before.[23] The home was seen as a private environment,[23] where housewives provided their husbands with a respite from the troubles of the outside world.[24] Within this ideal, women were expected to focus on domestic matters and to rely on men as breadwinners.[26][27] Women had limited legal rights in most areas of life, and a feminist movement developed.[27][28] Parental authority was seen as important, but children were given legal protections against abuse and neglect for the first time.[29] Access to education increased rapidly during the 19th century. State-funded schools were established in England and Wales for the first time. Education became compulsory for pre-teenaged children in England, Scotland and Wales. Literacy rates increased rapidly, and had become nearly universal by the end of the century.[30][31] Private education for wealthier children, boys and more gradually girls, became more formalised over the course of the century.[30]

The growing middle class and strong evangelical movement placed great emphasis on a respectable and moral code of behaviour. This included features such as charity, personal responsibility, controlled habits,[note 4] child discipline and self-criticism.[22][32] As well as personal improvement, importance was given to social reform.[33] Utilitarianism was another philosophy that saw itself as based on science rather than on morality, but also emphasised social progress.[34][35] An alliance formed between these two ideological strands.[36] The reformers emphasised causes such as improving the conditions of women and children, giving police reform priority over harsh punishment to prevent crime, religious equality, and political reform in order to establish a democracy.[37] The political legacy of the reform movement was to link the nonconformists (part of the evangelical movement) in England and Wales with the Liberal Party.[38] This continued until the First World War.[39] The Presbyterians played a similar role as a religious voice for reform in Scotland.[40]

Religion was politically controversial during this era, with Nonconformists pushing for the disestablishment of the Church of England.[41] Nonconformists comprised about half of church attendees in England in 1851,[note 5][42] and gradually the legal discrimination that had been established against them outside of Scotland was removed.[43][44][45][46] Legal restrictions on Roman Catholics were also largely removed. The number of Catholics grew in Great Britain due to conversions and immigration from Ireland.[41] Secularism and doubts about the accuracy of the Old Testament grew among people with higher levels of education.[47] Northern English and Scottish academics tended to be more religiously conservative, whilst agnosticism and even atheism (though its promotion was illegal)[48] gained appeal among academics in the south.[49] Historians refer to a 'Victorian Crisis of Faith', a period when religious views had to readjust to accommodate new scientific knowledge and criticism of the Bible.[50]

A variety of reading materials grew in popularity during the period, including novels,[51] women's magazines,[52] children's literature,[53] and newspapers.[54] Much literature, including chapbooks, was distributed on the street.[55][56] Music was also very popular, with genres such as folk music, broadsides, music halls, brass bands, theater music and choral music having mass appeal. What is now called classical music was somewhat undeveloped compared to parts of Europe but did have significant support.[57] Many sports were introduced or popularised during the Victorian era.[58] They became important to male identity.[59] Examples included cricket,[60] football,[61] rugby,[62] tennis[63] and cycling.[64] The idea of women participating in sport did not fit well with the Victorian view of femininity, but their involvement did increase as the period progressed.[65] For the middle classes, many leisure activities such as table games could be done in the home while domestic holidays to rural locations such as the Lake District and Scottish Highlands were increasingly practical.[66] The working classes had their own culture separate from that of their richer counterparts, various cheaper forms of entertainment and recreational activities provided by philanthropy. Trips to resorts such as Blackpool were increasingly popular towards the end of period.[67] Initially the industrial revolution increased working hours, but over the course of the 19th century a variety of political and economic changes caused them to fall back down to and in some cases below pre-industrial levels, creating more time for leisure.[68]

Economy, industry, and trade

 
Illustrations of the Royal Small Arms Factory, Enfield in The Illustrated London News (1861)

Before the Industrial Revolution, daily life had changed little for hundreds of years. The 19th century saw rapid technological development with a wide range of new inventions. This led Great Britain to become the foremost industrial and trading nation of the time.[69] Historians have characterised the mid-Victorian era (1850–1870) as Britain's 'Golden Years',[70][71] with national income per person increasing by half. This prosperity was driven by increased industrialisation, especially in textiles and machinery, along with exports to the empire and elsewhere.[72] The positive economic conditions, as well as a fashion among employers for providing welfare services to their workers, led to relative social stability.[72][73] The Chartist movement for working-class men to be given the right to vote, which had been prominent in the early Victorian period, dissipated.[72] Government involvement in the economy was limited.[73] Only in the post-World War II period, around a century later, did the country experience substantial economic growth again.[71] But whilst industry was well developed, education and the arts were mediocre.[73] Wage rates continued to improve in the later 19th century: real wages (after taking inflation into account) were 65 per cent higher in 1901 compared to 1871. Much of the money was saved, as the number of depositors in savings banks rose from 430,000 in 1831 to 5.2 million in 1887, and their deposits from £14 million to over £90 million.[74]

 
This illustration of a child drawer (a type of hurrier) pulling a coal tub was originally published in the Children's Employment Commission (Mines) 1842 report.

Children had always played a role in economic life but exploitation of their labour became especially intense during the Victorian era. Children were put to work in a wide range of occupations, but particularly associated with this period are factories. Employing children had advantages, as they were cheap, had limited ability to resist harsh working conditions, and could enter spaces too small for adults. Some accounts exist of happy upbringings involving child labour, but conditions were generally poor. Pay was low, punishments severe, work was dangerous and disrupted children's development (often leaving them too tired to play even in their free time). Early labour could do lifelong harm; even in the 1960s and '70s, the elderly people of industrial towns were noted for their often unusually short stature, deformed physiques, and diseases associated with unhealthy working conditions.[75] Reformers wanted the children in school; in 1840 only about 20 per cent of the children in London had any schooling.[76] By the 1850s, around half of the children in England and Wales were in school (not including Sunday school).[77] From the 1833 Factory Act onwards, attempts were made to get child labourers into part time education, though this was often difficult to achieve.[78] Only in the 1870s and 1880s did children begin to be compelled into school.[77] Work continued to inhibit children's schooling into the early 20th century.[75]

Housing and public health

19th-century Britain saw a huge population increase accompanied by rapid urbanisation stimulated by the Industrial Revolution.[79] In the 1901 census, more than three out of every four people were classified as living in an urban area, compared to one in five a century earlier.[80] Historian Richard A. Soloway wrote that "Great Britain had become the most urbanized country in the West."[81] The rapid growth in the urban population included the new industrial and manufacturing cities, as well as service centres such as Edinburgh and London.[80][82] Private renting from housing landlords was the dominant tenure. P. Kemp says this was usually of advantage to tenants.[83] Overcrowding was a major problem with seven or eight people frequently sleeping in a single room. Until at least the 1880s, sanitation was inadequate in areas such as water supply and disposal of sewage. This all had a negative effect on health, especially that of the impoverished young. For instance, of the babies born in Liverpool in 1851, only 45 per cent survived to age 20.[84] Conditions were particularly bad in London, where the population rose sharply and poorly maintained, overcrowded dwellings became slum housing. Kellow Chesney wrote of the situation:[85]

Hideous slums, some of them acres wide, some no more than crannies of obscure misery, make up a substantial part of the metropolis... In big, once handsome houses, thirty or more people of all ages may inhabit a single room

Hunger and poor diet was a common aspect of life across the UK in the Victorian period, especially in the 1840s, but the mass starvation seen in the Great Famine in Ireland was unique.[86][84] Levels of poverty fell significantly during the 19th century from as much as two thirds of the population in 1800 to less than a third by 1901. However, 1890s studies suggested that almost 10% of the urban population lived in a state of desperation lacking the food necessary to maintain basic physical functions. Attitudes towards the poor were often unsympathetic and they were frequently blamed for their situation. In that spirit, the Poor Law Amendment Act 1834 had been deliberately designed to punish them and would remain the basis for welfare provision into the 20th century. While many people were prone to vices, not least alcoholism, historian Bernard A. Cook argues that the main reason for 19th century poverty was that typical wages for much of the population were simply too low. Barely enough to provide a subsistence living in good times, let alone save up for bad.[84]

Improvements were made over time to housing along with the management of sewage and water eventually giving the UK the most advanced system of public health protection anywhere in the world.[87] The quality and safety of household lighting improved over the period with oil lamps becoming the norm in the early 1860s, gas lighting in the 1890s and electric lights beginning to appear in the homes of the richest by the end of the period.[88] Medicine advanced rapidly during the 19th century and germ theory was developed for the first time. Doctors became more specialised and the number of hospitals grew.[87] The overall number of deaths fell by about 20%. The life expectancy of women increased from around 42 to 55 and 40 to 56 for men.[note 6][81] In spite of this, the mortality rate fell only marginally, from 20.8 per thousand in 1850 to 18.2 by the end of the century. Urbanisation aided the spread of diseases and squalid living conditions in many places exacerbated the problem.[87] The population of England, Scotland and Wales grew rapidly during the 19th century.[89] Various factors are considered contributary to this, including a rising fertility rate (though it was falling by the end of the period),[81] the lack of a catastrophic pandemic or famine in the island of Great Britain during the 19th century for the first time in history,[90] improved nutrition,[90] and a lower overall mortality rate.[90] Ireland's population shrank significantly, mostly due to emigration and the Great Famine.[91]

Knowledge and infrastructure

 
Michael Faraday delivering a Christmas Lecture at the Royal Institution (c. 1855)

The professionalisation of scientific study began in parts of Europe following the French Revolution but was slow to reach Britain. William Whewell coined the term 'scientist' in 1833 to refer to those who studied what was generally then known as natural philosophy, but it took a while to catch on. Having been previously dominated by amateurs with a separate income, the Royal Society admitted only professionals from 1847 onwards.[94] The British biologist Thomas Henry Huxley indicated in 1852 that it remained difficult to earn a living as a scientist alone.[49] Scientific knowledge and debates such as that about Charles Darwin's book on evolution gained a high-profile. Simplified (and at times inaccurate) popular science was increasingly distributed through a variety of publications which caused tension with the professionals.[94] There were significant advances in various fields of research, including statistics,[95] elasticity,[96] refrigeration,[97] natural history,[49] electricity[98] and logic.[99]

 
Crew stood with a railway engine (1873)

Known as the 'workshop of the world', Britain was uniquely advanced in technology in the mid-19th century.[100] Engineering, having developed into a profession in the 18th century, gained new profile and prestige in this period.[101] The Victorian era saw methods of communication and transportation develop significantly. In 1837, William Fothergill Cooke and Charles Wheatstone invented the first telegraph system. This system, which used electrical currents to transmit coded messages, quickly spread across Britain, appearing in every town and post office. A worldwide network developed towards the end of the century. In 1876, Alexander Graham Bell patented the telephone. A little over a decade later, 26,000 telephones were in service in Britain. Multiple switchboards were installed in every major town and city.[69] Guglielmo Marconi developed early radio broadcasting at the end of the period.[102] The railways were important economically in the Victorian era, allowing goods, raw materials, and people to be moved around, stimulating trade and industry. They were also a major employer and industry in their own right.[103]

Moral standards

 
If we lift our skirts they level their eye-glasses at our ankles (1854), cartoon suggesting that men saw women lifting their dresses as a titillating opportunity to see some of their body shape.

Expected standards of personal conduct changed in around the first half of the 19th century, with good manners and self-restraint becoming much more common.[104] Historians have suggested various contributing factors, such as Britain's major conflicts with France during the early 19th century, meaning that the distracting temptations of sinful behaviour had to be avoided in order to focus on the war effort, and the evangelical movement's push for moral improvement.[105] There is evidence that the expected standards of moral behaviour were reflected in action as well as rhetoric across all classes of society.[106][107] For instance, an analysis suggested that less than 5% of working class couples cohabited before marriage.[107]

Historian Harold Perkin argued that the change in moral standards led by the middle of the 19th century to 'diminished cruelty to animals, criminals, lunatics, and children (in that order)'.[104] Legal restrictions were placed on cruelty to animals.[108][109][110] Restrictions were placed on the working hours of child labourers in the 1830s and 1840s.[111][112] Further interventions took place throughout the century to increase the level of child protection.[113] Use of the death penalty also decreased.[104] Crime rates fell significantly in the second half of the 19th century. Sociologist Christie Davies linked this change to attempts to morally educate the population, especially at Sunday schools.[114]

Contrary to popular belief, Victorian society understood that both men and women enjoyed copulation.[115] Chastity was expected of women, whilst attitudes to male sexual behaviour were more relaxed.[116] The development of police forces led to a rise in prosecutions for illegal sodomy in the middle of the 19th century.[117] Male sexuality became a favourite subject of medical researchers' study.[118] For the first time, all male homosexual acts were outlawed.[119] Concern about sexual exploitation of adolescent girls increased during the period, especially following the white slavery scandal, which contributed to the increasing of the age of consent from 13 to 16.[120]

At a time when job options for women were limited and generally low-paying, some women, particularly those without familial support, took to prostitution to support themselves. Attitudes in public life and among the general population to prostitution varied. Evidence about prostitutes' situation also varies. One contemporary study argues that the trade was a short-term stepping stone to a different lifestyle for many women, while another, more recent study argues they were subject to physical abuse, financial exploitation, state persecution, and difficult working conditions. Due to worries about venereal disease, especially among soldiers, women suspected of prostitution were for a period between the 1860s and 1880s subject to spot compulsory examinations for sexually transmitted infections, and detainment if they were found to be infected. This caused a great deal of resentment among women in general due to the principle underlying the checks, that women had to be controlled in order to be safe for sexual use by men, and the checks were opposed by some of the earliest feminist campaigning.[120]

Notes

  1. ^ A Scottish Reform Act and Irish Reform Act were passed separately.
  2. ^ A Scottish Reform Act and Irish Reform Act were passed separately.
  3. ^ See Representation of the People (Ireland) Act 1868 and Representation of the People (Scotland) Act 1868 for equivalent reforms made in those jurisdictions
  4. ^ Avoiding addictions such as alcoholism and excessive gambling
  5. ^ They were a clear majority in Wales. Scotland and Ireland had separate religious cultures.
  6. ^ These life expectancy figures are rounded to the nearest whole.

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Bibliography

Further reading

External links

  •   Quotations related to Victorian era at Wikiquote
  •   Media related to Victorian era at Wikimedia Commons

victorian, victorian, society, redirects, here, amenity, society, victorian, society, 1837, 1901painting, queen, victoria, franz, xaver, winterhalter, 1859, monarch, victorialeader, viscount, melbournesir, robert, peellord, john, russellthe, earl, derbythe, ea. Victorian society redirects here For the UK amenity society see The Victorian Society Victorian era1837 1901Painting of Queen Victoria by Franz Xaver Winterhalter 1859 Monarch s VictoriaLeader s The Viscount MelbourneSir Robert PeelLord John RussellThe Earl of DerbyThe Earl of AberdeenThe Viscount PalmerstonBenjamin DisraeliWilliam Ewart GladstoneThe Marquess of SalisburyThe Earl of RoseberyChronology Regency era Edwardian era In the history of the United Kingdom and the British Empire the Victorian era was the reign of Queen Victoria from 20 June 1837 until her death on 22 January 1901 Slightly different definitions are sometimes used The era followed the Georgian era and preceded the Edwardian era and its later half overlaps with the first part of the Belle Epoque era of continental Europe Various liberalising political reforms took place in the UK including expanding the electoral franchise The Great Famine caused mass death in Ireland early in the period The British Empire had relatively peaceful relations with the other great powers It participated in various military conflicts mainly against minor powers The British Empire expanded during this period and was the predominant power in the world Victorian society valued a high standard of personal conduct across all sections of society The emphasis on morality gave impetus to social reform but also placed restrictions on certain groups liberty Prosperity rose during the period but debilitating undernutrition persisted Literacy and childhood education became near universal in Great Britain for the first time Whilst some attempts were made to improve living conditions slum housing and disease remained a severe problem The period saw significant scientific and technological development Britain was advanced in industry and engineering in particular but somewhat undeveloped in art and education Great Britain s population increased rapidly while Ireland s fell sharply Contents 1 Terminology and periodisation 2 Politics diplomacy and war 3 Society and culture 4 Economy industry and trade 5 Housing and public health 6 Knowledge and infrastructure 7 Moral standards 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 10 Further reading 11 External linksTerminology and periodisationSee also Periodisation In the strictest sense the Victorian era covers the duration of Victoria s reign as Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland from her accession on 20 June 1837 after the death of her uncle William IV until her death on 22 January 1901 after which she was succeeded by her eldest son Edward VII Her reign lasted 63 years and seven months a longer period than any of her predecessors The term Victorian was in contemporaneous usage to describe the era 1 The era has also been understood in a more extensive sense as a period that possessed sensibilities and characteristics distinct from the periods adjacent to it in which case it is sometimes dated to begin before Victoria s accession typically from the passage of or agitation for during the 1830s the Reform Act 1832 which introduced a wide ranging change to the electoral system of England and Wales note 1 Definitions that purport a distinct sensibility or politics to the era have also created scepticism about the worth of the label Victorian though there have also been defences of it 2 Michael Sadleir was insistent that in truth the Victorian period is three periods and not one 3 He distinguished early Victorianism the socially and politically unsettled period from 1837 to 1850 4 and late Victorianism from 1880 onwards with its new waves of aestheticism and imperialism 5 from the Victorian heyday mid Victorianism 1851 to 1879 He saw the latter period as characterized by a distinctive mixture of prosperity domestic prudery and complacency 6 what G M Trevelyan called the mid Victorian decades of quiet politics and roaring prosperity 7 Politics diplomacy and warMain articles Political and diplomatic history of the Victorian era and United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland nbsp Information circulated by the campaign of Lewis Pugh Pugh a candidate at the 1880 general election in Cardiganshire now known as Ceredigion explaining to supporters how to vote The Reform Act note 2 which made various changes to the electoral system including expanding the franchise had been passed in 1832 8 The franchise was expanded again by the Second Reform Act note 3 in 1867 9 The Third Reform Act in 1884 introduced a general principle of one vote per household All these acts and others simplified the electoral system and reduced corruption Historian Bruce L Kinzer describes these reforms as putting the United Kingdom on the path towards becoming a democracy The traditional aristocratic ruling class attempted to maintain as much influence as possible while gradually allowing the middle and working classes a role in politics However all women and a large minority of men remained outside the system into the early 20th century 10 Cities were given greater political autonomy and the labour movement was legalised 11 From 1845 to 1852 the Great Famine caused mass starvation disease and death in Ireland sparking large scale emigration 12 The Corn Laws were repealed in response to this 13 Across the British Empire reform included rapid expansion the complete abolition of slavery in the African possessions and the end of transportation of convicts to Australia Restrictions on colonial trade were loosened and responsible i e semi autonomous government was introduced in some territories 14 15 nbsp Depiction of the defence of Rorke s Drift during the Anglo Zulu War of 1879 by Alphonse de Neuville 1880 Throughout most of the 19th century Britain was the most powerful country in the world 16 The period from 1815 to 1914 known as the Pax Britannica was a time of relatively peaceful relations between the world s great powers This is particularly true of Britain s interactions with the others 17 The only war in which the British Empire fought against another major power was the Crimean War from 1853 to 1856 18 14 There were various revolts and violent conflicts within the British Empire 14 15 and Britain participated in wars against minor powers 19 14 15 It also took part in the diplomatic struggles of the Great Game 19 and the Scramble for Africa 14 15 In 1840 Queen Victoria married her German cousin Prince Albert of Saxe Coburg and Gotha The couple had nine children who themselves married into various royal families and the queen thus became known as the grandmother of Europe 20 11 In 1861 Albert died 19 Victoria went into mourning and withdrew from public life for ten years 11 In 1871 with republican sentiments growing in Britain she began to return to public life In her later years her popularity soared as she became a symbol of the British Empire Queen Victoria died on 22 January 1901 20 Society and cultureThe Victorian era saw a rapidly growing middle class who became an important cultural influence to a significant extent replacing the aristocracy as British society s dominant class 21 22 A distinctive middle class lifestyle developed that influenced what society valued as a whole 21 23 Increased importance was placed on the value of the family and the idea that marriage should be based on romantic love gained popularity 24 25 A clear separation was established between the home and the workplace which had often not been the case before 23 The home was seen as a private environment 23 where housewives provided their husbands with a respite from the troubles of the outside world 24 Within this ideal women were expected to focus on domestic matters and to rely on men as breadwinners 26 27 Women had limited legal rights in most areas of life and a feminist movement developed 27 28 Parental authority was seen as important but children were given legal protections against abuse and neglect for the first time 29 Access to education increased rapidly during the 19th century State funded schools were established in England and Wales for the first time Education became compulsory for pre teenaged children in England Scotland and Wales Literacy rates increased rapidly and had become nearly universal by the end of the century 30 31 Private education for wealthier children boys and more gradually girls became more formalised over the course of the century 30 The growing middle class and strong evangelical movement placed great emphasis on a respectable and moral code of behaviour This included features such as charity personal responsibility controlled habits note 4 child discipline and self criticism 22 32 As well as personal improvement importance was given to social reform 33 Utilitarianism was another philosophy that saw itself as based on science rather than on morality but also emphasised social progress 34 35 An alliance formed between these two ideological strands 36 The reformers emphasised causes such as improving the conditions of women and children giving police reform priority over harsh punishment to prevent crime religious equality and political reform in order to establish a democracy 37 The political legacy of the reform movement was to link the nonconformists part of the evangelical movement in England and Wales with the Liberal Party 38 This continued until the First World War 39 The Presbyterians played a similar role as a religious voice for reform in Scotland 40 Religion was politically controversial during this era with Nonconformists pushing for the disestablishment of the Church of England 41 Nonconformists comprised about half of church attendees in England in 1851 note 5 42 and gradually the legal discrimination that had been established against them outside of Scotland was removed 43 44 45 46 Legal restrictions on Roman Catholics were also largely removed The number of Catholics grew in Great Britain due to conversions and immigration from Ireland 41 Secularism and doubts about the accuracy of the Old Testament grew among people with higher levels of education 47 Northern English and Scottish academics tended to be more religiously conservative whilst agnosticism and even atheism though its promotion was illegal 48 gained appeal among academics in the south 49 Historians refer to a Victorian Crisis of Faith a period when religious views had to readjust to accommodate new scientific knowledge and criticism of the Bible 50 A variety of reading materials grew in popularity during the period including novels 51 women s magazines 52 children s literature 53 and newspapers 54 Much literature including chapbooks was distributed on the street 55 56 Music was also very popular with genres such as folk music broadsides music halls brass bands theater music and choral music having mass appeal What is now called classical music was somewhat undeveloped compared to parts of Europe but did have significant support 57 Many sports were introduced or popularised during the Victorian era 58 They became important to male identity 59 Examples included cricket 60 football 61 rugby 62 tennis 63 and cycling 64 The idea of women participating in sport did not fit well with the Victorian view of femininity but their involvement did increase as the period progressed 65 For the middle classes many leisure activities such as table games could be done in the home while domestic holidays to rural locations such as the Lake District and Scottish Highlands were increasingly practical 66 The working classes had their own culture separate from that of their richer counterparts various cheaper forms of entertainment and recreational activities provided by philanthropy Trips to resorts such as Blackpool were increasingly popular towards the end of period 67 Initially the industrial revolution increased working hours but over the course of the 19th century a variety of political and economic changes caused them to fall back down to and in some cases below pre industrial levels creating more time for leisure 68 nbsp Recreation of a Victorian parlour at Nidderdale Museum Yorkshire nbsp Cheap meals for poor children in East London 1870 nbsp Leisure Hours 1855 depiction of a man resting by George HardyEconomy industry and tradeFurther information Economy industry and trade of the Victorian era Industrial Revolution and Second Industrial Revolution nbsp Illustrations of the Royal Small Arms Factory Enfield in The Illustrated London News 1861 Before the Industrial Revolution daily life had changed little for hundreds of years The 19th century saw rapid technological development with a wide range of new inventions This led Great Britain to become the foremost industrial and trading nation of the time 69 Historians have characterised the mid Victorian era 1850 1870 as Britain s Golden Years 70 71 with national income per person increasing by half This prosperity was driven by increased industrialisation especially in textiles and machinery along with exports to the empire and elsewhere 72 The positive economic conditions as well as a fashion among employers for providing welfare services to their workers led to relative social stability 72 73 The Chartist movement for working class men to be given the right to vote which had been prominent in the early Victorian period dissipated 72 Government involvement in the economy was limited 73 Only in the post World War II period around a century later did the country experience substantial economic growth again 71 But whilst industry was well developed education and the arts were mediocre 73 Wage rates continued to improve in the later 19th century real wages after taking inflation into account were 65 per cent higher in 1901 compared to 1871 Much of the money was saved as the number of depositors in savings banks rose from 430 000 in 1831 to 5 2 million in 1887 and their deposits from 14 million to over 90 million 74 nbsp This illustration of a child drawer a type of hurrier pulling a coal tub was originally published in the Children s Employment Commission Mines 1842 report Children had always played a role in economic life but exploitation of their labour became especially intense during the Victorian era Children were put to work in a wide range of occupations but particularly associated with this period are factories Employing children had advantages as they were cheap had limited ability to resist harsh working conditions and could enter spaces too small for adults Some accounts exist of happy upbringings involving child labour but conditions were generally poor Pay was low punishments severe work was dangerous and disrupted children s development often leaving them too tired to play even in their free time Early labour could do lifelong harm even in the 1960s and 70s the elderly people of industrial towns were noted for their often unusually short stature deformed physiques and diseases associated with unhealthy working conditions 75 Reformers wanted the children in school in 1840 only about 20 per cent of the children in London had any schooling 76 By the 1850s around half of the children in England and Wales were in school not including Sunday school 77 From the 1833 Factory Act onwards attempts were made to get child labourers into part time education though this was often difficult to achieve 78 Only in the 1870s and 1880s did children begin to be compelled into school 77 Work continued to inhibit children s schooling into the early 20th century 75 Housing and public healthFurther information Economy industry and trade of the Victorian era Mathematics science technology and engineering of the Victorian era and Demographics of the Victorian era 19th century Britain saw a huge population increase accompanied by rapid urbanisation stimulated by the Industrial Revolution 79 In the 1901 census more than three out of every four people were classified as living in an urban area compared to one in five a century earlier 80 Historian Richard A Soloway wrote that Great Britain had become the most urbanized country in the West 81 The rapid growth in the urban population included the new industrial and manufacturing cities as well as service centres such as Edinburgh and London 80 82 Private renting from housing landlords was the dominant tenure P Kemp says this was usually of advantage to tenants 83 Overcrowding was a major problem with seven or eight people frequently sleeping in a single room Until at least the 1880s sanitation was inadequate in areas such as water supply and disposal of sewage This all had a negative effect on health especially that of the impoverished young For instance of the babies born in Liverpool in 1851 only 45 per cent survived to age 20 84 Conditions were particularly bad in London where the population rose sharply and poorly maintained overcrowded dwellings became slum housing Kellow Chesney wrote of the situation 85 Hideous slums some of them acres wide some no more than crannies of obscure misery make up a substantial part of the metropolis In big once handsome houses thirty or more people of all ages may inhabit a single room Hunger and poor diet was a common aspect of life across the UK in the Victorian period especially in the 1840s but the mass starvation seen in the Great Famine in Ireland was unique 86 84 Levels of poverty fell significantly during the 19th century from as much as two thirds of the population in 1800 to less than a third by 1901 However 1890s studies suggested that almost 10 of the urban population lived in a state of desperation lacking the food necessary to maintain basic physical functions Attitudes towards the poor were often unsympathetic and they were frequently blamed for their situation In that spirit the Poor Law Amendment Act 1834 had been deliberately designed to punish them and would remain the basis for welfare provision into the 20th century While many people were prone to vices not least alcoholism historian Bernard A Cook argues that the main reason for 19th century poverty was that typical wages for much of the population were simply too low Barely enough to provide a subsistence living in good times let alone save up for bad 84 Improvements were made over time to housing along with the management of sewage and water eventually giving the UK the most advanced system of public health protection anywhere in the world 87 The quality and safety of household lighting improved over the period with oil lamps becoming the norm in the early 1860s gas lighting in the 1890s and electric lights beginning to appear in the homes of the richest by the end of the period 88 Medicine advanced rapidly during the 19th century and germ theory was developed for the first time Doctors became more specialised and the number of hospitals grew 87 The overall number of deaths fell by about 20 The life expectancy of women increased from around 42 to 55 and 40 to 56 for men note 6 81 In spite of this the mortality rate fell only marginally from 20 8 per thousand in 1850 to 18 2 by the end of the century Urbanisation aided the spread of diseases and squalid living conditions in many places exacerbated the problem 87 The population of England Scotland and Wales grew rapidly during the 19th century 89 Various factors are considered contributary to this including a rising fertility rate though it was falling by the end of the period 81 the lack of a catastrophic pandemic or famine in the island of Great Britain during the 19th century for the first time in history 90 improved nutrition 90 and a lower overall mortality rate 90 Ireland s population shrank significantly mostly due to emigration and the Great Famine 91 nbsp Slum area in Glasgow 1871 nbsp Buildings originally built as Llanfyllin workhouse a state funded home for the destitute which operated from 1838 to 1930 92 93 nbsp Photograph of a mother and baby by Alfred Capel Cure c 1850s or 60s Knowledge and infrastructureMain article Mathematics science technology and engineering of the Victorian era nbsp Michael Faraday delivering a Christmas Lecture at the Royal Institution c 1855 The professionalisation of scientific study began in parts of Europe following the French Revolution but was slow to reach Britain William Whewell coined the term scientist in 1833 to refer to those who studied what was generally then known as natural philosophy but it took a while to catch on Having been previously dominated by amateurs with a separate income the Royal Society admitted only professionals from 1847 onwards 94 The British biologist Thomas Henry Huxley indicated in 1852 that it remained difficult to earn a living as a scientist alone 49 Scientific knowledge and debates such as that about Charles Darwin s book on evolution gained a high profile Simplified and at times inaccurate popular science was increasingly distributed through a variety of publications which caused tension with the professionals 94 There were significant advances in various fields of research including statistics 95 elasticity 96 refrigeration 97 natural history 49 electricity 98 and logic 99 nbsp Crew stood with a railway engine 1873 Known as the workshop of the world Britain was uniquely advanced in technology in the mid 19th century 100 Engineering having developed into a profession in the 18th century gained new profile and prestige in this period 101 The Victorian era saw methods of communication and transportation develop significantly In 1837 William Fothergill Cooke and Charles Wheatstone invented the first telegraph system This system which used electrical currents to transmit coded messages quickly spread across Britain appearing in every town and post office A worldwide network developed towards the end of the century In 1876 Alexander Graham Bell patented the telephone A little over a decade later 26 000 telephones were in service in Britain Multiple switchboards were installed in every major town and city 69 Guglielmo Marconi developed early radio broadcasting at the end of the period 102 The railways were important economically in the Victorian era allowing goods raw materials and people to be moved around stimulating trade and industry They were also a major employer and industry in their own right 103 Moral standardsFurther information Victorian morality and Women in the Victorian era nbsp If we lift our skirts they level their eye glasses at our ankles 1854 cartoon suggesting that men saw women lifting their dresses as a titillating opportunity to see some of their body shape Expected standards of personal conduct changed in around the first half of the 19th century with good manners and self restraint becoming much more common 104 Historians have suggested various contributing factors such as Britain s major conflicts with France during the early 19th century meaning that the distracting temptations of sinful behaviour had to be avoided in order to focus on the war effort and the evangelical movement s push for moral improvement 105 There is evidence that the expected standards of moral behaviour were reflected in action as well as rhetoric across all classes of society 106 107 For instance an analysis suggested that less than 5 of working class couples cohabited before marriage 107 Historian Harold Perkin argued that the change in moral standards led by the middle of the 19th century to diminished cruelty to animals criminals lunatics and children in that order 104 Legal restrictions were placed on cruelty to animals 108 109 110 Restrictions were placed on the working hours of child labourers in the 1830s and 1840s 111 112 Further interventions took place throughout the century to increase the level of child protection 113 Use of the death penalty also decreased 104 Crime rates fell significantly in the second half of the 19th century Sociologist Christie Davies linked this change to attempts to morally educate the population especially at Sunday schools 114 Contrary to popular belief Victorian society understood that both men and women enjoyed copulation 115 Chastity was expected of women whilst attitudes to male sexual behaviour were more relaxed 116 The development of police forces led to a rise in prosecutions for illegal sodomy in the middle of the 19th century 117 Male sexuality became a favourite subject of medical researchers study 118 For the first time all male homosexual acts were outlawed 119 Concern about sexual exploitation of adolescent girls increased during the period especially following the white slavery scandal which contributed to the increasing of the age of consent from 13 to 16 120 At a time when job options for women were limited and generally low paying some women particularly those without familial support took to prostitution to support themselves Attitudes in public life and among the general population to prostitution varied Evidence about prostitutes situation also varies One contemporary study argues that the trade was a short term stepping stone to a different lifestyle for many women while another more recent study argues they were subject to physical abuse financial exploitation state persecution and difficult working conditions Due to worries about venereal disease especially among soldiers women suspected of prostitution were for a period between the 1860s and 1880s subject to spot compulsory examinations for sexually transmitted infections and detainment if they were found to be infected This caused a great deal of resentment among women in general due to the principle underlying the checks that women had to be controlled in order to be safe for sexual use by men and the checks were opposed by some of the earliest feminist campaigning 120 Notes A Scottish Reform Act and Irish Reform Act were passed separately A Scottish Reform Act and Irish Reform Act were passed separately See Representation of the People Ireland Act 1868 and Representation of the People Scotland Act 1868 for equivalent reforms made in those jurisdictions Avoiding addictions such as alcoholism 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Loss of Virtue Moral Confusion and Social Disorder in Britain and America Social Affairs Unit pp 5 10 ISBN 978 0907631507 Draznin Yaffa Claire 2001 Victorian London s Middle Class Housewife What She Did All Day 179 Contributions in Women s Studies Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press pp 95 96 ISBN 978 0 313 31399 8 Goodman Ruth 2013 Chapter 15 Behind the bedroom door How to be a Victorian Penguin ISBN 978 0 241 95834 6 Sean Brady Masculinity and Male Homosexuality in Britain 1861 1913 2005 Crozier I 5 August 2007 Nineteenth Century British Psychiatric Writing about Homosexuality before Havelock Ellis The Missing Story Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 63 1 65 102 doi 10 1093 jhmas jrm046 ISSN 0022 5045 PMID 18184695 Smith F B 1976 Labouchere s amendment to the Criminal Law Amendment bill Historical Studies 17 67 165 173 doi 10 1080 10314617608595545 ISSN 0018 2559 a b Clark Anna 2011 Prostitution In Mitchell Sally ed Victorian Britain An Encyclopedia Routledge pp 642 645 ISBN 9780415669726 Bibliography Plunkett John ed 2012 Victorian Literature A Sourcebook Houndmills Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 9780230551756 Further readingMain article Bibliography of the Victorian eraExternal links nbsp Quotations related to Victorian era at Wikiquote nbsp Media related to Victorian era at Wikimedia Commons Portals nbsp History nbsp United Kingdom nbsp Victorian era Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Victorian era amp oldid 1219571757, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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