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Regency era.
Starring: Lucy Worsley
Type: documentary
Country of manufacture: United Kingdom
Language: English
Issue date: 20 1 1-08-29 (UK)
Number of groups: 3
Duration: 50 minutes
Historian Dr. Lucy Worsley will give us a section of British history 200 years ago-the most explosive and creative period-the Regency period. A vivid picture unfolds before us: a decadent prince-an elegant and decadent era under the control of the notorious Regent. He was obsessed with beauty, food and sex appeal, and became a legend ... It was this man who reshaped the city of London, opened up the world-famous Regent Street, and made the Regent era a microcosm of British fashion through his strong support for art and design. ...
Episode 1: Unveiling-Portrait of the Prince
Dr. Lucy Worsley led us to appreciate the early regency era, when Britain defeated Napoleon at 18 15, and the scenery was infinite for a while. We will also explore the twisted and complicated personality of Regent together. He became a legend because he was obsessed with beauty, food and acting like a dog and a horse. ...
Episode II: The Great Development of Regency Style
Dr. Lucy Worsley will show you what image Britain, a rising country with its head held high, wants to establish in the eyes of the world after the Waterloo incident, and how it embodies this temperament in architectural design ... Similarly, Regent still leads the fashion trend. He became fatter and fatter, unable to climb stairs or walk, and architecture became the outlet for his creativity: the most expressive building was the Royal Palace in Brighton. In his early days as Regent, this palace was just an elegant neoclassical villa. However, after cooperating with architect johnf nash, George built this villa into a shocking royal palace after 18 15. In this palace, Lucy learned more about the taste of the Regent and found the common ground between him and his chef. ...
Episode 3: Majority and Minority-Ten Years of Division
Dr. Lucy Worsley carefully studied the Regent's extravagant reaction and the bad blood between the elite he represented and the public. At the end of George's regency, the British revolution was imminent ... At this moment, the power of public opinion-radical works and speeches-challenged the judicial power of the country. The poet Shelley and his wife Mary openly supported the revolutionaries, and Mary's famous novel Frankenstein showed this fear, which was surrounded by the uncontrollable new industrial world.