(Redirected from Regency period)The 'Regency period' in the
United Kingdom is the period between
1811 and
1820, when King
George III was deemed unfit to rule and his son, later
George IV, was instated to be his
proxy as
Prince Regent. The term is often expanded to apply to the years between
1795 and
1837, a time characterised by distinctive fashions, politics and culture. In this sense it can be considered to be a transitional period between "
Georgian" and "
Victorian". The era was distinctive for its architecture, literature, fashions, politics, and snuffboxes. It was a period of excess for the aristocracy: for example, it was during this time that the Prince Regent built the
Brighton Pavilion. However, it was also an era of uncertainty caused by, among other things, the
Napoleonic wars, periodic
riots, and a perceived threat of the English lower classes imitating the upheavals of the
French Revolution.

Aristocratic dandies were satirised as being preoccupied with the tying and arrangement of their
cravats (1818 caricature)
Artistic trends
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Regency architecture
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Regency fashions
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Regency dance
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Regency novels
★ Regency Silver Snuffboxes
Famous places
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Almack's
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Brighton Pavilion
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Carlton House
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Brooks's
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Watier's
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White's
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Vauxhall Gardens
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Ranelagh Gardens
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The Pantheon
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Tattersalls
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Her Majesty's Theatre
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Little Theatre, Haymarket
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Drury Lane
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Covent Garden
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St George Hanover Square
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Astley's Ampitheatre
Famous people
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Jane Austen
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Beau Brummell
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George Gordon, Lord Byron
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Robert Stewart, Viscount Castlereagh
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Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington
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Sarah, Countess of Jersey
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Lady Caroline Lamb
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Princess Lieven
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Marguerite, Countess of Blessington
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Samuel Taylor Coleridge
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Walter Scott
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William Wordsworth
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Sir Thomas Lawrence, PRA
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J.M.W. Turner
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Thomas Raikes
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John Nash
See also
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Régence (French parallel)