After a week off for the holiday, we're back today with a bumper crop of Breakfast Links – our weekly round-up of fav links to other web sites, blogs, articles, and images, all gathered for you from around the Twitterverse.
• Mary Robinson - known as
Perditia - a Georgian fashion icon and leading London celebrity of the 1780s.
• Retail therapy: what
mannequins say about us.
• The remarkable life & times of Jeffery Hudson, Charles I's
dwarf.
• Image: early handbills show the rage for talented animal sideshows include the "
Most Astonishing" Learned Goose.
•
Hypochondria in Jane Austen's England.
• Nine 19th c. books that will change your
Victorian sex life.
• The burning of the
"satanic" Albion Mills at Blackfriars, 1791.
• A glimmer of gold: a gorgeous 19th c.
bonnet.
• Sensational assassination in the Adriondacks: 1903
murder of millionaire lawyer Orrando Perry Dexter.
• "
Christmas pye, the invention of the scarlet whore of Babylon."
• For the first time, ancient
Bibles and Biblical texts from the Bodleian and Vatican Libraries go on-line.
• Minding the farm:
wives looking after family properties for their Tory husbands during the American Revolution.
• A century of vintage photographs of people building
snowmen, 1850-1960.
• Image:
Monday washing, New York City, 1900
• "To Make a Quarter Cask of
Currant Wine": 18th c. recipe begins with eighty-six pounds of "the best Jamaica sugar."
• A video offering a closer look at a magnificent
Charles James evening gown.
• Image: delightful photo of
Edwardian domestic servants up to some "mischief."
• Happy
Hanukkah! images of the Festival of Lights from medieval manuscripts in the British Library.
• Claxton's Patent Ear Cap, 1890s, to prevent baby from getting
"ugly" ears.
• Browse through Charles Dickens' manuscript for
A Christmas Carol.
• A dress to dye for: 1860s
green dress colored with arsenic in the aniline dye.
• The Edwardian
debutante.
• The
tongues of rogues: how secret languages develop in closed societies like English con men, Parisian prostitutes, and German bandits.
• The history of green boughs and trees for
Christmas.
• Teeny tiny
medieval books.
• The British view of early American President
John Adams.
• Turquoise with a story: the
diadem of Empress Marie-Louise, Napoleon's second wife.
• French frolicking
dog wallpaper, 1798.
• Quinine from cinchona bark as cheap and effective treatment for
malaria in 19th c. India.
• "Dust, ho? Bring out your dust": early
cries of London.
• Piss prophets and the Wheel of Urine: what
urine revealed in the medieval world.
• Beware the girl with the wiggling walk and the boy eating pencils: vigilant Dr. Jackson lists the signs of a chronic
masturbator, 1861.
• Of dirty books and
bread.
• Heart-rending family stories in records of Royal Hospital School for children of
lost seamen.
• In 1902, the Episcopal Women's Auxiliary in NYC sends lunch wagons out to keep workers and
coachmen out of saloons.
• Quotes falsely (and repeatedly) attributed to
George Washington.
•
Nancy Dupree, a thoroughly intrepid woman in 20th c. Afghanistan.
Hungry for more? Follow us on Twitter @2nerdyhistgirls for fresh updates daily.