Regency History
@RegencyHistory
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Researching and celebrating an age of elegance. A resource for writers and readers. By @rachelkauthor and @andrew_writer Also @regencyhistory.bsky.social
Weymouth, Dorset, UK
Joined November 2011
In the footsteps of Lizzie B. Belton aka Rosings Park in the 1995 P&P with Colin and Jennifer.
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Our full video of the 2024 Grand Regency Costumed Promenade is now on our YT channel.
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William's marriage produced no children who survived. Edward has one child - Princess Alexandrina Victoria of Kent. William went on to become William IV. The Georgian era ended when he died, on 20 June 1837. His niece, Edward's daughter, followed him as Queen Victoria.
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It was a race. With their older brother, the Prince Regent, effectively out of it, William and Edward had a chance of fathering a monarch. They had a double wedding on 11 July 1818. But Edward had the edge on his brother. He’d married his Princess six weeks before, in Germany.
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As a son of George III, he had to marry a Protestant princess. There weren’t many around and he settled on Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen. He was 52. She was 25. Beside him at the wedding was his younger brother, Edward Duke of Kent. He, too, was marrying to produce an heir.
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So William, along with his brother Edward, married in 1818. It was an opportunity to father a future monarch. William was confident of becoming a father - again. He already had ten by his mistress, Dorothea Jordan. But they were illegitimate and couldn’t inherit.
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There was no shortage of potential successors to George III. Of his 15 children, 12 were still alive. But, shockingly, there was no obvious heir in the next generation. The king’s only legitimate grandchild, Princess Charlotte, died in childbirth in November 1817.
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On 11 July 1818 William, Duke of Clarence, married a German princess. He was 52 years old. She was 25. William, the second son of George III, was in a rush to father a child. That child would jump up to the top of the British royal line of succession. 🧵
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We loved exploring @fairfax_house yesterday. In a city awash with history, this is our favourite find.
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Regency History direct to your inbox. Two emails a month, unsubscribe at any time. https://t.co/Sx5HFYuYXB
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Regency History direct to your inbox. Two emails a month, unsubscribe at any time. https://t.co/Sx5HFYvwN9
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We broke our website. As part of setting up for the new site, we broke the old one. So the new site will launch sooner than expected (and with a few more rough edges). We predict a few long days to get this sorted!
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"Everybody seems to think they are to be murdered now, to my great amusement." This week's email newsletter contains more from the unpublished letters of a teenage girl. She writes in 1820, about the panic after the arrest of the Cato Street conspirators. Email out on Friday.
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You can still get to our site content, securely, through this link: https://t.co/1u2Ka9BWKK
regencyhistory.blogspot.com
A blog about Regency and late Georgian history.
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Our website is having a funny five minutes. We're in the process of upgrading. Sorry if it inconveniences you. Normal service will be resumed soon. The new site's not ready. The old one is throwing up this message because we're moving some technical stuff around.
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Have you written a fiction or non-fiction book with Regency connections? On 31 May our newsletter will list all the books written by our subscribers. It's your chance to present your book to others interested in the Regency period. Sign up for more info - link on website.
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Regency History direct to your inbox. Two emails a month, unsubscribe at any time. https://t.co/Sx5HFYvwN9
mailchi.mp
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