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Caernarvon was begun in 1283, immediately upon the execution of David, the last Welsh prince. The first work was that of quarrying the cross ditch, and collecting materials and workmen, the latter being drafted from the English counties. Caernarvon, Conway, Criccaeth, and Harlech, were in progress together, and nothing short of the hope of consolidating his kingdom could have induced so economical a sovereign as Edward to incur expenses which, in one year, for Caernarvon alone, amounted to above £3,000. The king was here for the first time in 1284, in which year, April 25th, Edward of Caernarvon was born, probably in the town.
A bird’s-eye view of the castle from the north-west. In the front and centre is the King’s Gatehouse, and next, on the spectator’s right, is the Well Tower, and beyond it, the Eagle Tower. On the extreme left is the interior of the Queen’s Gatehouse, placed between the Granary Tower on the left and the Black Tower. Opposite to the King’s Gate is the Exchequer Tower, and between it and the Eagle is the Prince’s Tower. In the lower or right-hand court are seen the foundations of the hall; next on the left of the King’s Gate is the Dungeon Tower.
191 visits
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The illustration shows the allure or rampart-walk of the Eagle Tower. The rear wall, if it ever existed, has been removed. The cut shows the merlon, with its contained loop, the plain flat-sided embrasure, and the figures placed upon the ridge of the coping, one of which gives name to the tower. The small, shoulder-headed doorway opening from the tower upon the rampart is also seen.
192 visits
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Upon the line of the Severn, in the rear of all these, there were but eight of any importance, Bristol, Berkeley, Gloucester, Hanley, Worcester, Hartlebury, Bridgenorth and Shrewsbury, and of these Berkeley was in many respects the most remarkable, and has endured the longest.
A Keep.
B Inner Ward.
C Outer Ward.
D Outer Gate.
E Inner Gate.
F Fore Building.
G Ed. II. Dungeon.
H Ed. II. Tower.
I Domestic Apartments.
J Chapel.
K Room above Cellar.
L Hall.
M Buttery.
N Kitchen.
O Offices.
P Well.
Q Oratory and Well.
340 visits
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Berkeley Castle, Keep
Entering the outer gate, the visitor finds himself upon a triangular platform, of which the outer gate-house is the apex, and the inner gate-house and part of the keep the base; on the left a modern wall, which replaces the curtain, crests the scarp of the ditch, and forms the north side of the platform 66 yards long. On the right a low parapet, 54 yards long, forms the south side, and caps a revetment wall of about 10 feet in height, at the foot of which the ancient scarp has been laid out in good taste in a terrace garden. This triangular platform is scarcely an outer ward: it is rather a barbican covering the main entrance and the keep. Its area is 7,750 square yards. There is no trace of a second ditch in advance of this side of the keep and the inner gate, but it is very probable that there was one, though, if so, it must have been filled up when the courts were added to the keep, as otherwise it would have completely occupied them.
202 visits
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BEAUMARIS Castle is built upon a marshy flat, close to the sea-shore, and but little above the level of the sea, from which its ditch was supplied. It is an example of a purely concentric fortress, in which the engineer was left free to design his works without being governed, as in most other cases, by the irregularities of the ground.
172 visits
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Its inner ward is a quadrangle about 50 yards square, contained within four curtain-walls about 16 feet thick and 40 to 50 feet high. At the angles are four drum-towers, three-quarters engaged, of the height of the curtains. On the east and west sides are intermediate towers, half-round, with prolonged sides, of which that to the east, as at Kidwelly, contains the chapel. In the centre of the north and south sides are the gatehouses, of large size and something higher than the other towers. In each a quadrangular part projects into the court, capped at the two angles by round turrets containing staircases. Outside, half-round towers with prolonged sides flank the entrance.
176 visits
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The great hall, 70 feet by 23 feet 6 inches, occupies most of the first floor of the northern gatehouse, and is lighted from the court by five windows, of two lights each, with a transom, as at Stokesley and Ludlow, contemporary halls. The fireplace was on the opposite side. The roof was of timber, but with one stone rib, as at Charing. The southern gatehouse probably also contained a large chamber, now destroyed. The state-rooms and lodgings were in the gatehouses. The portals were of unusual length, and each was guarded by three grates.
190 visits
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Another name for the crossbow was 'arbalist,' and its arrows were called quarils, or bolts. These were made of various sorts of wood; about a dozen trees were used for the purpose, but ash-wood was thought to be the best. Generally the arrows had a tip of iron, shaped like a pyramid, pointed, though for shooting at birds the top was sometimes blunt, so that a bird might be struck down without being badly wounded. One old writer says that a great difference between the long-bow and the crossbow was, that success did not depend upon who pulled the lock—a child might do this as well as a man—but with the long-bow strength was everything. In fact, during the Tudor times, the kings specially encouraged the archers to practise shooting with the long-bow, and people were even forbidden to keep crossbows. The crossbow, however, when it had reached perfection, carried much further than the ordinary long-bow.
156 visits
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The Duchess of Kent, with Princess Victoria at the age of two
238 visits
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Queen Victorias first council - Kensington Palace June 20 1837
The year 1837, except for the death of the old King and the accession of the young Queen, was a tolerably insignificant year. It was on June 20 that the King died. He was buried on the evening of July 9 at St. George’s Chapel, Windsor; on the 10th the Queen dissolved Parliament; on the 13th she went to Buckingham Palace; and on November 9 she visited the City, where they gave her a magnificent banquet, served in Guildhall at half past five, the Lord Mayor and City magnates humbly taking their modest meal at a lower table.
455 visits
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Leigh Hunt
263 visits
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Sir Robert Peel
300 visits
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Young Gentleman Louis XIII period - 1625 - 1640
673 visits
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Women's Costume during the Directory - 1795 - 1800
868 visits
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Tie-back skirt
Late '7o's and Early '8o's
The bustle remained an important feature after the panier effect had been discarded. The skirts were made severely plain and were pulled back by strings, so as to fit with extreme snugness in the front. At the
back, however, they were drawn out over a bustle of such extent that the fashion plates of the late '70's now have the appearance of caricatures.
1139 visits
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The more practical gown of the Empire Period
984 visits
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The Incroyable of the Revolution Period - 1795
"Incroyable" (incredible) was the sobriquet given to the fops or dandies of the later Revolutionary period. Here is the description of one of these remarkably dressed personages as given by the French writer, Honore de Balzac:
The costume of his unknown presented an exact picture of the fashion which at that time called forth the caricatures of the Incroyables.
Imagine a person muffled in a coat so short in front that there showed beneath five or six inches of the waistcoat and with skirts so long behind that they resembled a codfish tail, a term then commonly employed to designate them. An immense cravat formed round his neck such innumerable folds that the little head emerging from a labyrinth of muslin almost justified Captain Merle's kitchen simile. [Merle had described the Incroyable as looking "like a duck with its head
protruding from a game pie."] The stranger wore tight breeches and boots a la Suwarrow; a huge white and blue cameo was stuck, as a pin, in his shirt. Two watch chains hung in parallel festoons at his waist, and his hair, hanging in corkscrew curls on each side of the face, almost
hid his forehead. Finally, as a last touch of decoration, the collars of his shirt and his coat rose so high that his head presented the appearance of a bouquet in its paper wrappings. If there be
added to these insignificant details, which formed a mass of disparities with no ensemble, the absurd contrast of his yellow breeches, his red waistcoat, his cinnamon brown coat, a faithful portrait will be given of the height of fashion at which dandies aimed at the beginning of the Consulate Preposterous as the costume was, it seemed to have been invented as a sort of touchstone of elegance to show that nothing can be too absurd for fashion to hallow it.
635 visits
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The Grecian Bend , a feature of the late 70's
1192 visits
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NO radical change in womens' costumes occurrred until the early fifties when what are known as the "Second Empire" styles were introduced. A remarkable feature of the fashions set by Eugenie, the consort of Napoleon III, was the enormous crinoline, of which we have more than once in recent years been threatened with a revival.
The monstrous dimensions of women's skirts during the period from 1853 to the early seventies afforded an excellent theme for the pencil of the comic artist, and those who care to search the volumes of "Punch"
and other illustrated publications of English and French origin, as well as those produced at the time in this country, will find both exact reproductions and caricatures of this style of costume.
944 visits
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The 1840 style
977 visits
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The 1830 Effect
923 visits
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Street costume Late Louis XVI period - 1790
815 visits
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Reversion to the classic (Grecian) type
519 visits
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Mousquetaire or Cavalier Costume 1620- 1640
616 visits
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Morning costume of Dandy of the early Revolutionary period - 1791
654 visits
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Middle class costume during French Revolution - showing Charlotte Corday cap
765 visits
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Marie Antoinette style - Late Louis XVI period - 1790
790 visits
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Men's street costume Late Revolution and early Empire
539 visits
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Dress in the time of Louis XV
744 visits
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Louis XIV Period - about 1700
752 visits
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Louis XIV Period - about 1670
632 visits
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Louis XIII - about 1640
761 visits
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Later Louis XIV Period 1700 - 1715
598 visits
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Late Empire - Ball dress and street costume
748 visits
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Henry IV or early Stuart Period
587 visits
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Henry IV or early Stuart - 1600 - 1615
784 visits
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Gentleman of the early Louis XV Period
563 visits
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French Restoration period - 1823
925 visits
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Evening dress of Directoire and early first Empire 1798 - 1804
620 visits
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Elizabethan or Marie Stuart Period - 1558 - 1600
780 visits
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Elizabethan or Henry III Period - showing Medicis Collar
655 visits
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Elizabethan or Henry III - 1570
747 visits
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Early days of the crinoline - 1855
843 visits
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Days of the pannier
671 visits
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Court Dress 1550 - Tudor or Francis I
591 visits
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Court Dress 1540 - Tudor or Francis I
762 visits
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Court costume Louis XVI - about 1780
789 visits
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Costume of Manservant - reign of Louis XIII
619 visits
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Citizens Dress of 1545
614 visits
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Ball Costume 1825
850 visits
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Noble of the Tudor or Louis XI Period
540 visits
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Court Dress of tudor or Louis XI Period
687 visits
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Court Dress of 1390
730 visits
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Court Dress - Early 15th Century
712 visits
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Citizen of Early tudor or Louis XI Period
557 visits
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Young Gentleman of the 14th Century
583 visits
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Young Woman's dress - 14th Century
717 visits
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Nobleman of the 13th Century
641 visits
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Court Dress - Latter part of 13th Century
694 visits
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The coronation of her majesty Queen Victoria
463 visits
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Her majesty leaving Buckingham Palace on the morning of the coronation
474 visits
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Her majesty leaving her private apartments in Westminster Abbey
449 visits
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The procession approaching Westminster Abbey
476 visits
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Marshall Soult's State Carriage
486 visits
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Her majesty’s State Carriage
464 visits
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Queen Victoria
455 visits
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Image 5482
131 visits
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Thomas Carlyle
276 visits
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Queen Elizabeth
305 visits