The 17th Jane Austen festival, which takes place in bath in september, includes more than 80 events, as Jackie Herring explains. pictures from last year’s festival by Owen Benson
This is an important year for anniversaries. As well as being the bicentenary of Jane Austen’s death, it is also 200 years since the first publication of Northanger Abbey and Persuasion. The ‘Bath’ novels, as they are known, have scenes set in locations that can still be seen in this beautiful city today. This year the Jane Austen Festival concentrates on Northanger Abbey, and all areas in Bath mentioned in the novel are included throughout the ten days of this year’s festival.
Favourites such as the Regency dance workshops, minibus tours and walks are in the programme, as are the Regency town house events of breakfast and afternoon tea. The Natural Theatre company return with their hit street theatre Austen Undone! and a brand new improvised theatrical More pride, More prejudice!
Also included is the world-famous and record-breaking Regency Costumed Charity Promenade, which takes place on Saturday, September 9, and is raising funds for the Cancer Care Campaign at the Royal United Hospital in Bath. It departs from the lawn in front of the Royal Crescent, where spectators and promenaders can “breath the air of better quality”.
Denne historien er fra 88 – July/August 2017-utgaven av Jane Austen's Regency World.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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Denne historien er fra 88 – July/August 2017-utgaven av Jane Austen's Regency World.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
How Did Jane Austen's Pride & Prejudice Become A Christmas Story?
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Jane's Beloved Friend
Judith Stove introduces her new biography of Anne Lefroy
Women Of Peterloo
MEN WERE NOT THE ONLY ONES DEMANDING REFORM IN AUGUST 1819. MANY WOMEN CAME TO MANCHESTER FOR A DAY OF PROTEST, AND NOT ALL OF THEM MADE IT HOME, AS SUE WILKES REPORTS
Darcy's Picture Gallery
WHAT MIGHT ELIZABETH BENNET HAVE SEEN AS SHE WANDERED THROUGH THE CORRIDORS OF PEMBERLEY? VICTORIA C SKELLY CONSIDERS HOW THE OWNERS OF GREAT ESTATES IN JANE AUSTEN’S TIME VIEWED ART
Austen's Festive Music
A LARGE COLLECTION OF MUSIC WRITTEN OUT BY JANE AUSTEN REVEALS SOME POPULAR NURSERY RHYMES AND HER CHRISTMAS FAVOURITES, WRITES ROS OSWALD. PICTURES FROM THE NOVELS, BY CE BROCK
Candour And Comfort
Female friendships outside the family group rarely feature in Jane Austen’s fiction, yet she and Cassandra enjoyed a close relationship with the three youngest daughters of many down park, Hampshire as Hazel Jones explores
Keeping The Faith
Quakers, Catholics and Methodists fared badly compared with Anglicans in the Christian Britain of a Jane Austen’s time, writes Penelope Friday
Austen In Australia
The Jane Austen society of Australia
Culture Club
The Jane Austen society of the UK
Last Days In Winchester
Jane Austen left Chawton on may 24, 1817, to seek medical help in the nearby city of Winchester. Elizabeth Jane Timms traces those final weeks of her life. line drawings by Ellen Hill c1901