Manners and Customs in 19th Century England

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The people Look for some people. Write it down. By the water
Advertisements

Life, Government, and Culture Mac Bailey Colonial Willamsburg.
Dress and Dance in the 1860s. Gowns The gowns in this time period included a crinoline (the metal frame inside a dress to make it bell out). The crinolines.
Old Sicilian traditions about weddings
CAN A CHRISTIAN REMARRY WHILE SPOUSE IS ALIVE? CAN A CHRISTIAN REMARRY WHILE SPOUSE IS ALIVE? Version-1 LET US LOOK AT WHAT BIBLE TEACHES.
Love & Marriage Shakespeares Time vs. Today. Paris- Scene 2 Paris, a relative of the Prince, will ask for Juliets hand in marriage in Act I, Scene 2 Heres.
A.
Women in Victorian Britain Rights and Views.. During the whole of the 19 th Century women had no political rights though there had been some movements.
Women’s Rights In America By B.B.. Background Information Women’s roles in Early American History, or any country's history, has often been.
Jane Austen An everyday life’s narrator, a great observer of the country world.
History Vs. Hollywood: Pride and Prejudice By: McKenzie LaValle and London Wolff.
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen December 16, 1775 – July 18, 1817 Born in Steventon, England She lived to be 41 years old She had 1 sister named Cassandra.
Pride And Prejudice, The Novel of Manners By Katrina, Karen, Birttany and Max.
Review Test March 5 Web March 5.  Figures of speech almost absent  Her prose is filled with irony, satire, wit and humor  Language is simple; vocabulary.
Pride and Prejudice English IV. Gentleman Seeks Eligible, Accomplished, Lively Lady with Fine Eyes Likes Ladies who can paint tables, cover screens, and.
Character and Setting.
Jane Austen A Critical Introduction. Biographical Information Austen was born in 1775 Austen was born in 1775 She was one of 8 children She was one of.
  Wrote many novels and other works  Many of them can be seen as parodies  Parody = something that mocks or comments on a target, often taking something.
Second Grade English High Frequency Words
Jane Austen’s PERSUASION Historical Commentary. Some facts about Jane Austen  Jane Austen, born in 1775 in Hampshire, England, was the seventh of eight.
By: Lauren Sadler, Kinsey Morley, Kristen McKenna, Alison Romley, and Ziven Chinburg.
Created by Verna C. Rentsch and Joyce Cooling Nelson School
Emily Dickinson December 10, 1830 – May 15, 1886
Women in Islamic Society
 Took throne in 1837 at age of 18  Queen for 64 years  Called Empress of India  Married Prince Albert from Germany Her first cousin Married in 1840.
I am ready to test!________ I am ready to test!________
Sight Words.
Love, Courtship, and Marriage in Pride and Prejudice.
Pride & Prejudice Jane Austen. 19th Century Society Wealth Social Class Courtship and Marriage Gender Roles Parents and Family.
 When going up stairs with a lady always walk ahead, when going down stairs with a lady always walk behind.  When you meet a lady in the street wait.
Section 4: Daily Life in Athens. I. The Athenian Economy Most Athenian citizens were farmers who grew olives, grapes, and figs on terraced hillsides.
Sight words.
Youth Culture Lesson Finding Teachable Moments in Culture From YouthWorker Journal and YouthWorker.com A Night to Remember Senior Takes Great-Grandmother.
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen Historical Background and Brief Overview of Novel EQ: How does society determine proper behavior for men and women?
The Regency Period (give or take a few years)
Jane Austen 1775~1817 Virginia Woolf called Austen "the most perfect artist among women.“
Why Jane Austen. Wrote six novels Sense and Sensibility Mansfield Park Pride and Prejudice Emma Northanger Abbey Persuasion.
ANCIENT GREEK WOMEN. THE IMPORTANCE OF GREEK WOMEN From photographic evidence we know that Greek women were not very important. They had non public lives.
PRIDE AND PREJUDICE Written by: Jane Austen Published in January 28, 1813 Maegan McCane Block 2B.
Roman House & Family Living
CHARLOTTE LUCAS By Michaela Bulloch.  Charlotte Lucas is the eldest of 7 children to Sir William and Lady Lucas.  She 27 years old, and is still unmarried,
Women Insubordination Presented by : Arzlelei Joyce Marie Fiel and Christine Mae N. Franco March 6,2012.
Sight Words.
Pride and Prejudice JANE AUSTEN.  Jane Austen was a country person’s daughter who lived most of her life in a tiny English village.
High Frequency Words.
Roman Law & Daily Life.
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
Intercultural communication
PRIDE AND PREJUDICE Background Information. English Regency Period   Middle class gained considerable prestige and social status  New-money.
THE EVOLUTION OF DATING. DATING-THE PURPOSE  Dating has three purposes: 1. Socialization-Dating helps individuals build social skills. In dating, individuals.
Page#29—Pride and Prejudice11/3/14 Aim: How can we begin to familiarize ourselves with early 19 th century England? Do Now: Write about a time where your.
As we go through each slide, make 2 inferences about the person you see and provide justifications. For example, you can infer that the person is nice.
LE3-C3S3T3pg43-58 Service Etiquette. Purpose This lesson will examine the role of etiquette in the armed services.
Created By Sherri Desseau Click to begin TACOMA SCREENING INSTRUMENT FIRST GRADE.
1 Marriage and the Wedding Service. Marriage 2 Marriage is the legal state (ie you can be legally married), but wedding refers to the ceremony only. In.
"FIRST LADY" OF ENGLISH LITERATURE Aselderova Dina 2 marketing 2012.
British Literature WednesdayDecember 9, 2015 Day 82 ACTIVITIES: 1.Discuss sentence combining 2.Read Austen “On Making…” (pg. 912) 3.Read Wollstonecraft.
Literary Heritage We’re going to be looking at the idea of literary heritage and how it sometimes helps to know about the times when a text was written.
Pride and Prejudice By Jane Austen
Jane Austen(16 December 1775 – 18 July 1817)
High Frequency Words. High Frequency Words a about.
Customs, Courtesies, and Traditions of Service
“A mind lively and at ease, can do with seeing nothing, and can see nothing that does not answer” -Jane Austen PRIDE AND PREJUDICE.
Jane Austen
Pride and Prejudice Jane Austen.
Charlotte Bronte.
Customs, Courtesies, and Traditions of Service
Jane Austen.
Presentation transcript:

Manners and Customs in 19th Century England Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen Manners and Customs in 19th Century England

Etiquette Rules During the nineteenth century (when Jane Austen wrote) there were strict etiquette rules that men and women were expected, almost required, to follow. During this time, men inherited property over women. This process was called entailment. It became a priority of mothers to unsure the financial security of their daughters.

Basic Etiquette for Gentlemen In riding horseback or walking along the street, the lady always has the wall. Meeting a lady in the street whom you know only slightly, you wait for her acknowledging bow- then and only then may you tip your hat to her, which is done using the hand farthest away from her to raise the hat. You do not speak to her - or to any other lady - unless she speaks to you first. If you meet a lady who is a good friend and who signifies that she wishes to talk to you, you turn and walk with her if you wish to converse. It is not "done" to make a lady stand talking in the street. In going up a flight of stairs, you precede the lady (running, according to one authority); in going down, you follow.

Basic Etiquette for Gentlemen In a carriage, a gentleman takes the seat facing backward. If he is alone in a carriage with a lady, he does not sit next to her unless he is her husband, brother, father, or son. He exists the carriage first so that he may help her down. He takes care not to step on her dress. At a public exhibition or concert, if accompanied by a lady, he goes in first in order to find her a seat. If he enters such an exhibition alone and there are ladies or older gentlemen present, he removes his hat. A gentleman is always introduced to a lady - never the other way around. It is presumed to be an honor for the gentleman to meet her. Likewise a social inferior is always introduced to a superior. A gentleman never smokes in the presence of ladies.

Basic Etiquette for Ladies If unmarried and under thirty, she is never to be seen in the company of a man without a chaperone. Except for a walk to church or a park in the early morning, she may not walk alone, but should always be accompanied by another lady, a man, or a servant. (Note: this would seem to have become a more general rule later in the century, as Austen's women are seen walking alone.) Under no circumstances may a lady call upon a gentleman alone unless she is consulting that gentleman on a professional or business matter. A lady does not wear pearls or diamonds in the morning. A lady never dances more than three dances with the same partner. A lady should never "cut" someone, that is to say, fail to acknowledge his presence after encountering him socially, unless it is absolutely necessary. By the same token, only a lady is ever truly justified in cutting someone.

Coming Out The London social season (lasting from Easter until August 12th, the start of Grouse hunting season) was filled each with girls just "out" in society. The principle reason for "coming out" was to marry well. Girls were expected to be quite childlike until they were about 18, when they were taken to London from their parents' country homes to be presented at court. This was their official entry into society which made them available for parties, balls, and of course, marriage. At least, this is the idea for the daughters of the nobility and gentry.

Dancing In Jane Austen's time, the most common dances were "country dances" which consisted of several couples walking through a series figures together. The couples stood, moved forward, walked around one another, sometimes with arms or hands interlaced, wove between the other dancers, and then stepped back into their places. One or two, or all of the couples could move at the same time. In some cases, this left a number of the dancers standing by waiting their turns to move allowing, time of conversation.

Dancing According to a somewhat hollow convention of the day, it was considered a violation of etiquette for a woman to decline a man's invitation to dance in any way which would make it seem that she didn't want to dance with him personally; rather, she had to maintain the pretense that she didn't want to dance at all with anybody for the moment, and then sit down for at least the next few "sets" of two dances each (i.e. must not soon be seen to be standing up with someone other than the man she has turned down). In some cases (depending on the lady's scruples and/or fear of being seen to violate etiquette or fear of giving offense, and the particular circumstances involved), it means she won't dance at all for the rest of the evening.

Letters In an era before telephones or cheap fast transportation, letter-writing was very important to the families of Jane Austen's day; Jane Austen herself wrote many hundreds of letters during her lifetime, of which about 150 have survived. Many 18th century literary works (even some quite long novels) were in the form of a series of letters between the characters (the "epistolary novel"), often regardless of plausibility. Jane Austen experimented with this form in her early works, and Pride and Prejudice itself (under its original title of First Impressions) was probably first written in epistolary form.

Women’s Education In Jane Austen's day, there was no centrally-organized system of state-supported education. There were local charity or church-run day schools, but these were not attended by the children of the genteel social levels that Austen writes about. Instead, genteel children might be educated at home by their parents, particularly when young; or by live-in governesses or tutors; or by going off to a private boarding school or to live with a tutor.

Women’s Education Since women did not have careers and were not citizens in the sense of being directly involved in politics, there was little need for higher-education. Most women studied religion and became proficient at cooking and other household duties. For women of the genteel classes, the goal of non-domestic education was the acquisition of “accomplishments,” such as the ability to draw, sing, play music, or speak modern languages (generally French and Italian). Though it was not usually stated with such open cynicism, the purpose of such accomplishments was often only to attract a husband; so that these skills then tended to be neglected after marriage.

Works Cited http://chuma.cas.usf.edu/~runge/MasonJA1.html http://harsh-light.org/wallpapers/movies/prideandprejudice1.jpg http://www.pemberley.com/janeinfo/pptopic2.html#entail