1st Edition

The Georgian Triumph, 1700–1830

By Michael Reed Copyright 1983
258 Pages
by Routledge

258 Pages
by Routledge

258 Pages
by Routledge

In The Georgian Triumph, 1700–1830 (originally published in 1983), Michael Reed re-creates the ambience of eighteenth-century Britain, a period of astonishing change and, paradoxically, of massive stability. Both the change and the stability were reflected in the landscape. Dr Reed explores the visual impact on the landscape of the adoption of new ideas and practices. These range from the... Read more

Preface  1. The structure of Britain  2. The rural landscape  3. Rural change  4. Country houses, parks and gardens  5. The urban landscape  6. The search for power  7. Transport  8. The secularisation of the landscape  9. Britain in 1830 

Biography

Michael Reed read history at the University of Brimingham and took his further degrees at the University of London, and the University of Leicester. He has published a number of papers on various aspects of economic history, as well as an edition of early seventeenth-century probate inventories for Ipswich.

Review of the first publication:

‘…Reed’s application of the techniques of local history to Britain as a whole makes this book fresh and rewarding.’

Kenneth L. Campbell, Albion, Volume 16, Issue 3