#Victorians

Nearlyknowledgeable 👻Amynearlyknowledgeable
2025-06-16

In the 19th Century, Coalbrookdale was often described as ‘Hell On Earth’ due to the impact of Industrialisation. Perhaps it was this environment that contributed to tragedy below. All I know is that William Maybury deserves to be remembered.

nearlyknowledgeablehistory.blo

2025-05-07

#history #poison #victorians #socialhistory

The Victorians loved their wall papers using them to decorate their homes. Queen Victoria setting the fashion. Green was a popular colour; however it was deadly. the green was achieved by using arsenic and many people of the time complained of feeling ill. They complained of headaches, nausea and tiredness. It was only in the 20th century that it understood that the wallpaper gave off a gas.

historytoday.com/archive/great

Nearlyknowledgeable 👻Amynearlyknowledgeable
2025-05-01

📢 New Episode 📢

In our latest episode we are joined by graveyard expert Jono Namara. Join us as we discuss weird and wonderful graves, famous resting places and the enduring appeal of cemeteries. 🦇🪦

rss.com/podcasts/the-shropshir

2025-04-17

There was a time when Sir Arthur Conan Doyle decided to clear the name of a wronged man.

This is that story! (It's part two, but you don't need to watch part 1 to get this)

(also, Subtitles are NOT automated)
youtu.be/ZrnuOOBfqL8

#History #Books #Victorians #Crime

The Shropshire Witches Podcast 🦇shropwitchespod.bsky.social@bsky.brid.gy
2025-04-11

✨️New Episode ✨️ Part 2 of our history of beauty is here! From the bold allure of the Vamp to the poised elegance of the Gibson Girl, we unpack the beauty ideals of the last century. media.rss.com/the-shropshi... #Folklore #History #Edwardians #Victorians #Shropshire #Podcast #Podcasting #Beauty

2025-03-27
The Shropshire Witches Podcast 🦇shropwitchespod.bsky.social@bsky.brid.gy
2025-01-23

📢 New Episode 📢 We had an absolutely fabulous time romping through the history and cultural significance of the Music Hall. It's such a fascinating tangible piece of history. We hope you enjoy listening! media.rss.com/the-shropshi... #History #Victorians #Shropshire #Musichall

A colourised image of Marie Lloyd, a famous music hall star
Nearlyknowledgeable 👻Amynearlyknowledgeable
2025-01-13

📢 New Post 📢

In my latest article, I have built upon previous research. It discusses the Coalport ferry disaster of 1799 and the many lives lost to the river. This one is personal to me, as it also includes my own families loss.

nearlyknowledgeablehistory.blo

An image of one of the jackfield ferries mentioned. A black and white house stands behind
2024-12-07

Today's video for December is one taken from the pages of Robert DeBruce Trotter's Galloway Gossip.
I'll leave you to decide what you make of these Henpecked Husbands.
youtu.be/SmGfVrL-zZE

#Galloway #Scotland #womenssuffrage #victorians #history #video

White dude voted for HarrisStephenleader@sfba.social
2024-10-11

Just some common and garden #SanFrancisco #Victorians with a common and garden #HarrisWaltz yard sign on a fire escape

2024-10-09

While I'm still putting the finishing touches on the introduction (i.e. I'm still writing it), Honno are already taking pre-orders for their next volume in the Welsh Women's Classics series.

If high Victorian drama in the manner of Middlemarch is your thing, then this book is for you!

honno.co.uk/books/country-land

#Wales #Victorians #LitStudies #Novel #WelshWritingInEnglish

The covers for the Country Landlords volume both in physical and e-reader format.
2024-08-27

Some book news. My novel Saving Grace has returned to the top ten. Saving Grace is based on a true story, to my mind the most intriguing mystery of the Victorian era.

Amazon’s review: “Customers find the story intriguing, exciting, and suspenseful. They describe the book as a delightful, easy, and enjoyable read. Readers praise the writing quality as smart, well-written, and great. They also mention the characters are well-fleshed out and compelling.”

#Books #Novels #Mysteries #Victorians

Book chart
FID Anglo-American CultureLibraryAAC@openbiblio.social
2024-08-27

Book # 2 of our thematic week:
Jillian M. Hess's study "How #Romantics and #Victorians Organized Information" examines #commonplace books, scrapbooks & albums as mediums of organizing knowledge & people, too!

#VictorianCulture #Romanticism #CulturalStudies #MaterialCulture

Holding the book "How Romantics and Victorians Organized Information" in the foyer of the University of Göttingen
Jamez Barrett 🜃 ॐ Ⓐdidgebaba@c.im
2024-08-20

Henry James Prince, baptised on 21 February 1811, was the son of Thomas and Mary Ann Prince of Lyncombe and Widcombe, Bath. He studied medicine at Guy's Hospital, obtained his qualifications in 1832, and was appointed medical officer to the General Hospital in Bath, his native city. Compelled by ill health to abandon his profession, in 1837 Prince entered himself as a student at St David's College, Lampeter (now the Lampeter campus of the University of Wales Trinity Saint David), where he gathered about him a band of earnest religious enthusiasts known as the Lampeter Brethren. The vice principal of the college contacted the Bishop of Bath and Wells who, in 1840, installed Prince as the curate of Charlinch in Somerset, where he had sole charge during the illness and absence of the rector, Samuel Starkey.

Attendances at the church were small until, during one of the services, Prince acted as if he was possessed, throwing himself around the church. Congregations grew each week as the "possession" was repeated. The congregation was then divided with separate services for men and women. Subsequently, he separated them again into sinners and the righteous, the latter of which generally included women who were wealthy. The bishop was summoned to investigate the practices. By that time, Prince had contracted his first "spiritual marriage" and had persuaded himself that he had been absorbed into the personality of God and become a visible embodiment of the Holy Spirit. During his illness, Starkey read one of his curate's sermons, and was not only "cured" forthwith, but embraced his strange doctrines. Together, they procured many conversions in the countryside and the neighbouring towns. In the end, the rector was deprived of his living and Prince was defrocked. Together with a few disciples they started the Charlinch Free Church, which had a very brief existence, meeting in a supportive farmer's barn.

Prince used money inherited on the death of his first wife, Martha, to marry Julia Starkey, the sister of the rector. They all moved to Stoke-by-Clare in Suffolk where Prince started again to build a congregation, which grew over the subsequent one to two years. The Bishop of Ely then expelled them. Prince opened Adullam Chapel, which was also known as Cave Adullam, in the North Laine area of Brighton. Meanwhile, Starkey established himself at Weymouth. Their chief success lay in the latter town, and Prince soon moved there.

The Agapemonites or Community of The Son of Man was a Christian religious group or sect that existed in England from 1846 to 1956. It was from the Greek: agapemone meaning "abode of love". The Agapemone community was founded by the Reverend Henry Prince in Spaxton, Somerset. The sect also built a church in Upper Clapton, London, and briefly had bases in Stoke-by-Clare in Suffolk, Brighton and Weymouth.

In 1856, a few years after the establishment of the "Abode of Love", Prince and Zoe Patterson, one of his virginal female followers, engaged in public ceremonial sexual intercourse on a billiard table in front of a large audience. The scandal led to the secession of some of his most faithful friends, who were unable any longer to endure what they regarded as the amazing mixture of blasphemy and immorality offered for their acceptance. The most prominent of those who remained received such titles as the "Anointed Ones", the "Angel of the Last Trumpet", the "Seven Witnesses" and so forth.

In 1899, Prince died at the age of 88. His followers buried Prince in the grounds of the chapel, with his coffin positioned vertically so that he would be standing on the day of his resurrection.

In the early 20th century, a number of houses (some in the Arts and Crafts style) were built at Four Forks by members of the Agapemonites, including Joseph Morris and his daughter Violet.

Since closure of the community in 1956 ( with the death of the last leader, 90 year old Sister Ruth), the chapel has been used as a studio for the production of children's television programmes, including Trumpton and Camberwick Green. The complex of buildings became known as Barford Gables and was put on the market in 1997. The chapel received planning permission for conversion into a residential house and was put on the market again in 2004.

The Abode of Love: The Conception, Financing, and Daily Routine of an English Harem in the Middle of the 19th Century by Aubrey Menon (1958) provides a detailed account of Henry Prince and his cult.

westoverward.co.uk/day-history

#cult #sex #victorians #christianity

Henry Prince (1811–1899)
Nearlyknowledgeable 👻Amynearlyknowledgeable
2024-08-09

I am currently writing up some new research regarding Ann Morgan 'The Shropshire Witch', which should be available soon, but you can read the story so far by following the link below.

nearlyknowledgeablehistory.blo

An extract from the article aboveAn image of Bourton Church, where Ann Morgan is buried. You can see the tower of the church and the tombstones

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