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Tag Archives: household

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Christmas: Tree History #Christmas #holidays #Traditions #RegencyEra

Suzi Love Posted on December 1, 2025 by Suzi LoveDecember 1, 2025

Christmas Trees and Their History

Our modern Christmas tree tradition probably began in Germany in the 18th century, though some argue that Martin Luther began the tradition in the 16th century. An  evergreen fir tree was used to celebrate winter festivals (pagan and Christian) for thousands of years. Nobody is really sure when Fir trees were first used as Christmas trees but it probably began 1000 years ago in Northern Europe. Many early Christmas Trees seem to have been hung upside down from the ceiling using chains.

The English phrase “Christmas tree”, first recorded in 1835, came from the German words Tannenbaum (fir tree) or Weinachtenbaum (Christmas tree). The Christmas tree is often explained as a Christianization of pagan tradition and ritual surrounding the Winter Solstice, which included the use of evergreen boughs, and an adaptation of pagan tree worship.   At first, a figure of the Baby Jesus was put on the top of the tree. Over time it changed to an angel or fairy that told the shepherds about Jesus, or a star like the Wisemen saw.

Christian tradition associates the holly tree with the crown of thorns, and says that its leaves were white until stained red by the blood of Christ. Along with a Christmas tree, the interior of homes were decorated with plants, garlands, and evergreen foliage and in Victorian times, Christmas trees were decorated with candles to represent stars.

The early Germans conceived of the world as a great tree whose roots were hidden deep under the earth, but whose top, flourishing in the midst of Walhalla, the old German paradise, nourished the she-goat upon whose milk fallen heroes restored themselves. Yggdnafil was the name of this tree, and its memory was still green long after Christianity had been introduced into Germany, when much of its symbolic character was transferred to the Christmas-tree. At first fitted up during the Twelve Nights in honor of Berchta, the goddess of spring, it was subsequently transferred to the birthday of Christ, who, as the God-man, is become the “resurrection and the life.”

Queen Victoria saw a Christmas tree as a girl in 1832. The little princess wrote excitedly in her diary that her Aunt Sophia had set up two “trees hung with lights and sugar ornaments. All the presents being placed around the tree.” In 1841, Prince Albert, Queen Victoria’s German husband, arranged for a fir tree to be brought from Germany and decorated. By 1850, Victoria and Albert had Christmas trees erected in the British Royal Palaces and their children started the tradition of gathering around the tree.

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‘The Christmas-tree is doubtless of German origin. Though in its present form it is comparatively of recent date, yet its pagan prototype enjoyed a very high antiquity.’ From 1873 Harper’s Bazaar, America.

A print of the royal family gathered about the Christmas tree at Windsor Castle appeared in the Illustrated London News in 1848, then in Godey’s Lady’s Book in 1850, and was reprinted again ten years later. The six-foot fir sits on a table, each tier laden with a dozen or more lighted wax tapers. An angel with outstretched arms poses at the top. Gilt gingerbread ornaments and tiny baskets filled with sweets hang by ribbons from the branches. Clustered around the base of the tree are dolls and soldiers and toys.

Christmas trees did exist in America before Queen Victoria made them famous, but mainly only amongst migrant groups from Europe. The writer of an 1825 article in The Saturday Evening Post mentions seeing trees in the windows of many houses in Philadelphia, a city with a large German population. He wrote, Their “green boughs laden with fruit, richer than the golden apples of the Hesperides, or the sparkling diamonds that clustered on the branches in the wonderful cave of Aladdin.” Gilded apples and nuts hung from the branches as did marzipan ornaments, sugar cakes, miniature mince pies, spicy cookies cut from molds in the shape of stars, birds, fish, butterflies, and flowers. A woman visiting German friends in Boston in 1832 wrote about their unusual tree hung with gilded eggshell cups filled with candies.

Not until the mid-nineteenth century did Christmas trees start spreading to homes with no known German connection.  But once Queen Victoria approved of the custom of a Christmas tree,  the practice spread throughout England and America and, to a lesser extent, to other parts of the world, through magazine pictures and articles. Upper-class Victorian Englishmen loved to imitate the royal family, and other nations copied the custom. Late in the century, larger floor-to-ceiling trees replaced the tabletop size.  

Christmas: Tree History #Christmas #holidays #Traditions #RegencyEra https://books2read.com/suziloveHOCP Share on X
Posted in 1700s, 1800s, 1900s, Australia, Bridgerton, Canada, Christmas, Customs & Manners, Edwardian Era, Europe, Georgian Era, History Of Christmases Past, household, Jane Austen, Pastimes, Regency Era, Romantic Era, South Pacific, Suzi Love Images, U.S.A, Victorian Era | Tagged British history, Christmas, Customs and Traditions, europe, History Of Christmases Past, household, Regency Life, Regency Royalty, Suzi Love Research, Victorian Era

19th Century Typical Meals and Table Settings for the Family and For Guests. #RegencyEra #RomanticEra #Food #BritishHistory

Suzi Love Posted on November 28, 2025 by Suzi LoveNovember 27, 2025

19th Century Typical Meals and Table Settings for the Family and For Guests. This is typical of the food that would have been served at Jane Austen’s meal times. Historic food from 1860s Mrs. Beeton’s Household Management.

1800s Typical Modern Table Settings. From: 1860s Mrs. Beeton's Book of Household Management. via Google Books (PD-150)
1800spical Modern Table Settings.
Food_1800s_TypicalJoints_SirloinofBeef, Boiled Beef, Leg Of Mutton, Roast Ribs Of Beef. From- 1861 Mrs. Beeton_Sml
food_1800s_TypicalGame and Poultry (1). Snipe On Toast, Larks On Toast, Roast Pheasant, Roast Pigeons, Roast Fowl, Roast Goose, Roast Duck, Boiled Fowl, Roast Turkey_1860s_Mrs. Beeton_Sml
Xmas_food_1800s_TypicalPies-and-Puddings_MrsBeeton
1800s Typical Cold Entrees. Chicken Medallions, Cold Border Of Salmon, Beef Galantine, Zephires Of Duck, Mutton Cutlets In Aspic, Chartreuse Of Pheasant, Timbale Of Turbot or Fished Baked In a Mold, Chicken Darioles or Chicken in Small Molds. From: 1860s Mrs. Beeton's Book of Household Management. via Google Books (PD-150)
Food_1800s Typical China For Serving Dinner and Dessert. Dinner Plates, Soup Tureen, Covered Cheese Dish, Jug, Dessert plates and Serving Dish. From: 1860s Mrs. Beeton's Book of Household Management. via Google Books (PD-150)
1800s Typical China For Serving Dinner and Dessert. Dinner Plates, Soup Tureen, Covered Cheese Dish, Jug, Dessert plates and Serving Dish. From: 1860s Mrs. Beeton’s Book of Household Management. via Google Books (PD-150)
19th Century Typical Meals and Table Settings for the Family and Guests in Bridgerton and Jane Austen years. #Bridgerton #JaneAusten #RegencyEra #RomanticEra #Food #BritishHistory https://books2read.com/suziloveOLD Share on X
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Posted in 1800s, Australia, Bridgerton, Canada, England, Europe, Food and Drink, History, household, Jane Austen, Regency Era, Romantic Era, Suzi Love Images, U.S.A, Victorian Era | Tagged 1800s Or 19th Century, Bridgerton, British history, Food, google books, household, Jane Austen, Mrs. Beeton, Romantic Era

What did ladies do and wear in Bridgerton and Jane Austen’s time, or early 1800s? Books 4 and 5 Regency Life Series. #Bridgerton #RegencyEra #JaneAusten #BritishHistory #nonfiction

Suzi Love Posted on November 24, 2025 by Suzi LoveNovember 23, 2025

What did ladies do and wear in Jane Austen’s time, or early 1800s? #Regency #History #nonfiction Books 4 and 5 Regency Life Series. Young Lady’s Day and Older Lady’s Day in Books 4 and 5 in the Regency Life Series.
These books depict the often-frivolous life and fashions of ladies in the early 1800’s, or during the lifetime of Jane Austen, but also gives a glimpse into the more serious occupations ladies may undertake. Through historic images, historical information, and funny anecdotes, they show how a lady fills her day, where she is permitted to go, and who she spends time with. These light-hearted looks at the longer Regency years are an easy to read overview of what people did and wore, and where they worked and played. There is plenty of information to interest history buffs, and lots of pictures to help readers and writers of historical fiction visualize the people and places from the last years of the 18th Century until Queen Victoria took the throne. Young Lady’s Day ~ Older Lady’s Day

RL_4-5_YLD_Young Lady's Day Regency Life Series Book 4
What did ladies do and wear in Bridgerton and Jane Austen's time, or early 1800s? Books 4 and 5 Regency Life Series. #Bridgerton #RegencyEra #JaneAusten #BritishHistory #nonfictionRegency Life Series. https://books2read.com/suziloveYLD Share on X
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Posted in 1800s, 1800s women's fashion, art, bedroom fashion, Box Or Container, Bridgerton, cartoon, Coat or Pelisse Or Redingote, Corset, Customs & Manners, dancing, Decorative Item, Dress Or Robe, England, Europe, fashion accessories, hats, household, Jane Austen, London, medical, mourning, Music, Pastimes, peerage, Regency Era, Regency Fashion, Regency Life Series, Reticule or Bag, riding, Royalty, sewing, shoes, Spencer, Suzi Love Books, Suzi Love Images, travel, U.S.A, underclothing | Tagged 1800s women's fashion, Book 4, Book 5, Bridgerton, Cartoons, Dress Or Gown, fashion accessories, Fashion Plate, Food, Hats And Hair, household, Jane Austen, magazines, music, peerage, Regency Fashion, Regency Life, Regency Life Series, Regency London, Regency Women, Shoes, Spencer, Suzi Love Books

1800s Typical Breakfast and Tea China Used In English Households Like Jane Austen’s. #Food #RegencyEra #JaneAusten #BritishHistory

Suzi Love Posted on September 3, 2025 by Suzi LoveAugust 30, 2025

1800s Typical Breakfast and Tea China, England. Tea cups, Bread and Butter plates, Teapot, Butter Dish, Coffee Cups, Tea Set, Milk Jug, Water Jug, Bread Dish, Sardine Dish, Bacon Dish, Marmalade Jar and Breakfast Cups. From: 1860 Mrs. Isabella Beeton’s Book of Household Management. These are the sort of salads that Jane Austen’s family would have eaten to accompany main dishes during the early 1800s, or Regency Era.

1800s Typical Breakfast and Tea China, England. Tea cups, Bread and Butter plates, Teapot, Butter Dish, Coffee Cups, Tea Set, Milk Jug, Water Jug, Bread Dish, Sardine Dish, Bacon Dish, Marmalade Jar and Breakfast Cups. From: 1860 Mrs. Isabella Beeton's Book of Household Management.
1800s Typical Breakfast and Tea China used in households like the Bridgerton's and Jane Austen's. #Bridgerton #Food #RegencyEra #JaneAusten #BritishHistory https://books2read.com/suziloveOLD Share on X
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Posted in 1800s, Bridgerton, England, Food and Drink, Google Books, History, household, Jane Austen, London, Regency Era, Romantic Era, Suzi Love Images, Victorian Era | Tagged British history, drink, Food, google books, household, Jane Austen, Mrs. Beeton, Regency Era, Regency Life Series

1800s Typical Salads Served With Main Meals In Households Like Jane Austen’s and the Bridgerton’s. #Food #RegencyEra #JaneAusten #Bridgerton

Suzi Love Posted on August 30, 2025 by Suzi LoveAugust 30, 2025

What salads were served in Jane Austen and the Bridgerton households?
Salads
“Persons in health, who feel a craving for salad, may indulge in the enjoyment of it to a great extent with perfect impunity, if not with positive benefit.
Oil, when mixed in salad, appears to render the raw vegetables and herbs more digestible.
Vinegar likewise promotes the digestion of lettuce, celery, and beet-root.

“Endive is very wholesome, strengthening, and easy of digestion; but when strong seasoning is added to it, it becomes an epicurean sauce. — Mayo.”

Recipe for a Winter Salad, by the late Rev. Sydney Smith.
Two large potatoes, passed through kitchen sieve, Unwonted softness to the salad give, Of mordent mustard add a single spoon;
To add a double quantity of salt;
Three times the spoon with oil of Lucca crown,
And once with vinegar, procured from town.
True flavor needs it, and your poet begs
The pounded yellow of two well-boiled eggs.
Let onion atoms lurk within the bowl,
And, scarce suspected, animate the whole;
And, lastly, on the flavored compound toss
A magic teaspoon of anchovy sauce.
Then, though green turtle fail, though venison’s tough, And ham and turkey are not boiled enough,
Serenely full the Epicure may say,-
Fate cannot harm me—I have dined to-day!

The Spanish proverb says four persons are wanted to make a good salad: a spendthrift for oil, a miser for vinegar, a counsellor for salt, and a madman to stir all up.

1859 Hints for the Table by John Timbs.

1800s Typical Salads: Cucumber, Beetroot and Potato, Macedone Salad, Tomato Salad, Jellied Russian and Italian Salads, Prawn Salad, Egg and Lettuce, Lobster Salad and Salad Dumas. From: Mrs. Beeton’s Book of Household Management. via Google Books (PD-150)

1800s Typical Salads Served, Cucumber, Beetroot and Potato, Macedone Salad, Tomato Salad, Jellied Russian and Italian Salads, Prawn Salad, Egg and Lettuce, Lobster Salad and Salad Dumas. From: 1860s Mrs. Beeton's Book of Household Management. via Google Books (PD-150)
1800s Typical Salads Served With Main Meals In Households Like Jane Austen's and the Bridgerton's. #Food #RegencyEra #JaneAusten #Bridgerton#BritishHistory https://books2read.com/suziloveOLD Share on X
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Posted in 1800s, Bridgerton, England, Food and Drink, Google Books, History, household, Jane Austen, London, Regency Era, Romantic Era, Suzi Love Images, Victorian Era | Tagged Bridgerton, British history, Food, google books, household, Jane Austen, Mrs. Beeton, Regency Life

What did the lady of the house use to pen notes in Bridgerton and Jane Austen’s years? What sat on the desk of her male contemporaries? #bridgerton #JaneAusten #RegencyEra #Antiques

Suzi Love Posted on August 27, 2025 by Suzi LoveAugust 21, 2025

What did the lady of the house use to pen notes in Bridgerton and Jane Austen’s years? What sat on the desk of Jane Austen’s male contemporaries when they managed household and estate accounts? books2read.com/SuziLoveWritingTools. Writing Tools, History Notes Book 13.

HN_10_Travel and Luggage By Suzi Love History Notes Book 10. How did people travel in Jane Austen's times. In past centuries? What did they take with them to make their long journeys easier? Travel by road, ship, canal, or railway all took a long time and had dangers so people learned to prepare. And then, in the nineteenth century, road improvements, inventions, and scientific developments made travel more pleasurable. books2read.com/SuziLoveTravel
What did the lady of the house use to pen notes in Bridgerton and Jane Austen's years? What sat on the desk of her male contemporaries? #bridgerton #JaneAusten #RegencyEra #Antiques books2read.com/SuziLoveWritingTools Share on X
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Posted in 1700s, 1800s, 1900s, Australia, Box Or Container, Bridgerton, Canada, cartoon, Decorative Item, Edwardian Era, England, Europe, Food and Drink, France, Georgian Era, Google Books, History, History Notes, Jane Austen, London, medical, postal, Regency Era, Romantic Era, Russia, Suzi Love Books, Suzi Love Images, Suzi Love Writing, travel, U.S.A, Victorian Era, Writing Tools | Tagged antiques, Book 13, Bridgerton, decorative, Edwardian Era, furniture, Georgian era, History Notes, household, Jane Austen, Romantic Era, Suzi Love Books, travel, Victorian Era, Writing Tools

19th Century Mother Of Pearl Carnet De Bal Or Dance Card, as used at balls in the years of Jane Austen and the Bridgertons. #janeausten #bridgerton #Dancing #Antiques

Suzi Love Posted on August 26, 2025 by Suzi LoveAugust 26, 2025

19th Century Mother Of Pearl Carnet De Bal Or Dance Card, French. via Ruby Lane Antiques.

19th Century Mother Of Pearl Carnet De Bal Or Dan

19th Century Mother Of Pearl Carnet De Bal Or Dance Card, as used at balls in the years of Jane Austen and the Bridgertons. #janeausten #bridgerton #Dancing #Antiques… Share on X
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Posted in 1800s, Bridgerton, dancing, Decorative Item, Europe, France, History, household, Jane Austen, Pastimes, Regency Era, Suzi Love, Suzi Love Images, Writing Tools | Tagged antiques, Bridgerton, dancing, decorative, fashion accessories, France, household, Jane Austen, Regency Era, Romantic Era, Ruby Lane Antiques

1863 Traveler’s Chest With Sewing Tools, Perfume and Notebook. #sewing #Antique #VictorianEra

Suzi Love Posted on August 24, 2025 by Suzi LoveAugust 20, 2025

1863 Traveler’s Chest, French. Sewing Tools, Ruby Perfume, Aide de Memoire or Notebook, etc. Inside lid with theatre curtains. via Ruby Lane Antiques. rubylane.com

box_1863 Traveler’s Chest, French. Sewing Tools, Ruby Perfume, Aide de Memoire or Notebook, etc. Inside lid with theatre curtains. via Ruby Lane Antiques. rubylane.com
1863 Traveler's Chest With Sewing Tools, Perfume and Notebook. #sewing #Antique #VictorianEra https://www.books2read.com/suziloveBoxesCases Share on X
HN_11_D2D_Craftsmen created containers of precious metals, leather, silks, and decorated them with jewels to make exquisite and expensive items as well as practical carrying cases. books2read.com/suziloveBoxesCases
Posted in 1800s, Box Or Container, Decorative Item, France, History, household, Pastimes, sewing, travel, Writing Tools | Tagged antiques, Box Or Container, decorative, household, Ruby Lane Antiques, sewing, Suzi Love Images, travel, Writing Tools
1800s-typical-food-served-regency-history-_sml

1815 Typical English Dinner In Jane Austen and Bridgerton Times. Two Courses and Desert. #RegencyEra #JaneAusten #Food #History

Suzi Love Posted on August 21, 2025 by Suzi LoveAugust 21, 2025

1815 Typical English Dinner In Jane Austen and Bridgerton Times. Two Courses and a Desert. From- 1815 Journal of Tour of Great Britain by a French Tourist via Google Books (PD-180)

Typical food served during the early 1800s, or Regency Era. ‘Removes‘ were the dishes removed from the table during a meal, usually the soup and fish, and then replaced by other dishes. After all diners have had a chance to eat all the dishes on the table, the table is cleared and another set of dishes put on the table. This is the second course.

1815_TypicalEnglish-dinneroftwo-courses-and-a-desert.-from-1815-journal-of-tour-of-great-britain-by-a-french-tourist_sml
1815 Typical English Dinner In Jane Austen and Bridgerton Times. Two Courses and Desert. #Bridgerton #RegencyEra #JaneAusten #Food books2read.com/suziloveOLD Share on X
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Posted in 1800s, Bridgerton, Food and Drink, Google Books, Jane Austen | Tagged Bridgerton, drink, Food, France, google books, household, Jane Austen, Regency Era, trave;

1826 Cartoon: The Dinner Party By Robert Cruikshank. From Regency Family Life. #RegencyEra #Cartoon #England

Suzi Love Posted on August 19, 2025 by Suzi LoveAugust 17, 2025

1826 The Dinner Party. Social Life. From 1826 The English Spy By Robert Cruikshank. via Google Books (PD-180). https://books2read.com/suziloveOLD

1826 The Dinner Party. Regency Social Life. From The English Spy By Robert Cruikshank.
1826 Cartoon: The Dinner Party By Robert Cruikshank. From Regency Family Life. #Regency #Cartoon #England. https://books2read.com/suziloveOLD Share on X
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Posted in 1800s, cartoon, Customs & Manners, England, Food and Drink, Google Books, household, London, Regency Era, Suzi Love Images | Tagged Book 5, Cartoons, England, Food, google books, household, Regency Fashion, Regency Life, Regency Life Series, Regency London

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