Regency Era - Places

Places

The following is a list of places associated with the Regency era:

(incomplete list)

  • The Adelphi Theatre
  • Almack's
  • Astley's Amphitheatre
  • Attingham Park
  • Bath, Somerset
  • Brighton Pavilion
  • Brighton and Hove
  • Brooks's
  • Burlington Arcade
  • Carlton House, London
  • Chapel Royal, St. James's
  • Cheltenham, Gloucestershire
  • Circulating libraries, 1801–25
  • Covent Garden
  • Custom Office, London Docks
  • Doncaster Races
  • Drury Lane
  • Floris of London
  • Fortnum & Mason
  • Gretna Green
  • Hatchard's
  • Little Theatre, Haymarket
  • Her Majesty's Theatre
  • Houses of Parliament
  • Hyde Park, London
  • Jermyn Street
  • Kensington Gardens
  • List of London's gentlemen's clubs
  • Lloyd's of London
  • London Docks
  • London Institution
  • London Post Office
  • Lyme Regis
  • Marshalsea Debtor's Prison
  • Mayfair, London
  • Newgate Prison
  • Newmarket Racecourse
  • The Old Bailey
  • Old Bond Street
  • Opera House
  • Pall Mall, London
  • The Pantheon
  • Ranelagh Gardens
  • Regent's Park
  • Regent Street
  • Royal Circus
  • Royal Opera House
  • Royal Parks of London
  • Rundell and Bridge Jewellery firm
  • Saville Row
  • St George's, Hanover Square
  • St. James's
  • Sydney Gardens, Bath
  • Temple of Concord, St. James's Park
  • Tattersalls
  • The Thames Tunnel
  • Tunbridge Wells
  • Vauxhall Gardens
  • West End of London
  • Watier's
  • White's

Read more about this topic:  Regency Era

Famous quotes containing the word places:

    All places where women are excluded tend downward to barbarism; but the moment she is introduced, there come in with her courtesy, cleanliness, sobriety, and order.
    Harriet Beecher Stowe (1811–1896)

    Look,
    when it is over he places her,
    like a phone, back on the hook.
    Anne Sexton (1928–1974)

    The social kiss is an exchange of insincerity between two combatants on the field of social advancement. It places hygiene before affection and condescension before all else.
    Sunday Correspondent (London, Aug. 12, 1990)