Brings out the 'dark side' of gin - the lesser-known version of gin's history, as well as the tales of sinister, sad or criminal behaviour.
Mike Rendell Bücher
Dieser Autor, ursprünglich ein Anwalt, entdeckte seine wahre Berufung in der Geschichte, mit einer Spezialisierung auf das georgianische Zeitalter in Großbritannien. Anhand umfangreicher familiärer Archive mit Briefen und Tagebüchern schafft er Sozialgeschichten, die durch die Augen seiner Vorfahren gesehen werden. Seine Arbeit verbindet auf einzigartige Weise historische Forschung mit bildender Kunst und bezieht oft aufwendige Scherenschnitte seiner Vorfahren mit ein. Jedes Buch taucht in einen bestimmten Aspekt der georgianischen Periode ein, von gesellschaftlichen Bräuchen bis hin zu handwerklichen Künsten.





Georgian Harlots and Whores
- 208 Seiten
- 8 Lesestunden
The lives and loves of some of the most extraordinary women in Georgian Britain.
Everything you ever wanted to know about sex during the reigns of Georges I-IV.
The Grand Tour
- 64 Seiten
- 3 Lesestunden
An introduction to the raucous yet educational 'gap year' tours of Europe taken by wealthy British graduates in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.The Grand Tour, the eighteenth-century's precursor to the gap year, was a rite of passage for young aristocrats fresh out of it was a tour of Europe ostensibly taken to absorb culture, knowledge, and appreciation for the arts; but was also often a gateway to womanizing and debauchery. This book looks at how the tour developed in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, examining what the young tourists got up to on their foreign travels – how they acquired 'polish' and knowledge of art, architecture, and opera. It looks at how they developed a passion for collecting, and how they applied those interests to fit out what became one of the triumphs of the eighteenth century – the English country house.
Pirates and Privateers in the 18th Century
- 184 Seiten
- 7 Lesestunden
Pirates and Privateers tells the fascinating story of the buccaneers who were the scourge of merchants in the 18th Century.