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Author Archives: Maria Grace

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Regency Medicine: Betwixt and Between

Random Bits of Fascination Posted on March 4, 2017 by Maria GraceMay 19, 2021

I’d like to welcome Kyra Kramer today as she shares a fascinating article on Regency Medicine and how it was more medieval than modern. There would be significant changes in health care in the later decades of the 1800s, with the emergence of germ theory producing biomedicine as we would recognize it by the Edwardian age. The Regency, however, was in some ways the last gasp of medieval medicine – a Tudor merchant would be more … Continue reading →

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Posted in Regency Life | Tagged cholera, guest post, home medicine, humors, medicine, miasma | 7 Replies

Providing for young ladies’ future in Jane Austen’s World

Random Bits of Fascination Posted on February 21, 2017 by Maria GraceDecember 28, 2022

How did dowries provide for a young woman’s future? A Woman’s Dowry Though Pride and Prejudice’s (1995, movie version) Mr. Bennet referred to dowries as “bribes to worthless young men to marry his daughters,” dowries were more commonly considered a means by which a responsible family compensated a husband for their daughter’s lifelong upkeep. How’s that for a romantic notion? Dowries (or more commonly the interest earned off a dowry) were used to provide a … Continue reading →

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Posted in Regency Life | Tagged dowry, gentlemen, jointure, law, marriage, marriage articles, marriage settlements, pin money | 6 Replies

Translation is Treason

Random Bits of Fascination Posted on February 18, 2017 by Maria GraceJanuary 31, 2025

Translation is Treason, or so I’ve been told… I am so excited to let you guys know that one of my books is now out in Spanish! How cool is that? What’s even better, I got to work with and get to know Teresita in the process. She is such a delight that I wanted to give you the chance to get to know her and take a peek into the surprisingly complicated process of … Continue reading →

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Posted in Random Bits | Tagged translaitons | 13 Replies

Marriage and Coverture in Jane Austen’s World

Random Bits of Fascination Posted on February 7, 2017 by Maria GraceAugust 30, 2018

It’s hard to believe how different women’s lives were in Austen’s day. Marriage and coverture, a legal concept, effectively took away her personhood. The Concept of Coverture In 1765, William Blackstone presented a common man’s language interpretation of English law. He explained the law’s approach to women’s legal existence and rights in marriage which remained largely unchanged until the Married Women’s Property Act of 1884. Blackstone said: By marriage, the husband and wife are one person in law: that is, the … Continue reading →

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Posted in Regency Life | Tagged coverture, domestic abuse, gentlemen, ladies, law, marriage, women's rights | 6 Replies

A Touch of Consumption

Random Bits of Fascination Posted on February 4, 2017 by Maria GraceMay 19, 2021

I’d like to welcome Kyra Kramer today as she shares a fascinating article on consumption–known today as tuberculosis–during the regency era. Medical anthropology is the study of how culture frames health, illness, and medicine. Since cultures change over time, you can also look at medical anthropology from a historical perspective. For example, the way British people during the Regency era conceptualized consumption – AKA tuberculosis – was very different from the way people in the … Continue reading →

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Posted in Regency Life | Tagged beauty, consumption, guest post, ladies, medicine, tuberculosis | 4 Replies

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