The gentleman's house in the British Atlantic world, 1680 - 1780

The Gentleman's House in ContextBuilding Status -- Situating Status -- Arranging Status -- Furnishing Status -- Enacting Status -- Social Strategies and Gentlemanly Networks.

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Bibliographische Detailangaben
1. Verfasser: Hague, Stephen G. (VerfasserIn)
Format: UnknownFormat
Sprache:eng
Veröffentlicht: Basingstoke u.a. Palgrave Macmillan 2015
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Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:The Gentleman's House in ContextBuilding Status -- Situating Status -- Arranging Status -- Furnishing Status -- Enacting Status -- Social Strategies and Gentlemanly Networks.
"The eighteenth-century Georgian mansion holds a fascination in both Britain and America. Between the late seventeenth century and 1780, compact classical houses developed as a distinct architectural type. From small country estates to provincial towns and their outskirts, 'gentlemen's houses' proliferated in Britain and its American colonies. The Gentleman's House analyses the evolution of these houses and their owners to tell a story about incremental social change in the British Atlantic world. It challenges accounts of the newly wealthy buying large estates and overspending on houses and material goods. Instead, gentlemen's houses offer a new interpretation of social mobility characterized by measured growth and demonstrate that colonial Americans and provincial Britons made similar house building and furnishing choices to confirm their status in British society. This book is essential reading for social, cultural, and architectural historians, curators, and historic house-enthusiasts"--
"The eighteenth-century Georgian mansion holds a fascination in both Britain and America. Between the late seventeenth century and 1780, compact classical houses developed as a distinct architectural type. From small country estates to provincial towns and their outskirts, 'gentlemen's houses' proliferated in Britain and its American colonies. The Gentleman's House analyses the evolution of these houses and their owners to tell a story about incremental social change in the British Atlantic world. It challenges accounts of the newly wealthy buying large estates and overspending on houses and material goods. Instead, gentlemen's houses offer a new interpretation of social mobility characterized by measured growth and demonstrate that colonial Americans and provincial Britons made similar house building and furnishing choices to confirm their status in British society. This book is essential reading for social, cultural, and architectural historians, curators, and historic house-enthusiasts"--
Beschreibung:XVI, 233 S.
Ill., graph. Darst., Kt.
ISBN:9781349677481
978-1-349-67748-1
9781137378378
978-1-137-37837-8