Thank you, that's so kind!
Posts by Dr Natalee Garrett
Very happy to see my article published in SHR this month- please do read & share!
#history #scottishhistory #womenshistory
Fashionably Scottish: The Duchess of Gordon and Scottish Identity in British High Society, 1767–1812 | The Scottish Historical Review www.euppublishing.com/doi/10.3366/...
Thank you!
Very happy to see my article published in SHR this month- please do read & share!
#history #scottishhistory #womenshistory
Fashionably Scottish: The Duchess of Gordon and Scottish Identity in British High Society, 1767–1812 | The Scottish Historical Review www.euppublishing.com/doi/10.3366/...
A satirical print form 1777 titled 'The Flower Garden.' A woman stands in profile, half-length. Her enormous powdered hair is adorned with flowers and grapes cascading down the sides. At the top of her hair is a perfectly manicured miniature garden complete with flowerbeds, a temple, and even a tiny gardener.
A personal favourite of the #bighair satirical prints: 'The Flower Garden' (1777). Note the tiny gardener and the temple in the exquisitely detailed hair garden.
#historysky #18thcentury #caricatures #hairhistory #fashionhistory
'The Caricaturer's Stock in Trade' (1786) A print showing sketches of famous individuals, among them: King George III, his wife Queen Charlotte, their son the Prince of Wales, the Duchess of Devonshire, and politicians including Lord North, William Pitt, and Charles James Fox. The figures are in profile, except for Fox, who looks out at the viewer, and Lord North, who is seen from behind. Each individual is identified by a handwritten label, almost certainly a later addition to the print.
A #caricature print from 1786 showing the individuals most satirised by caricaturists at the time, including #GeorgeIII , #QueenCharlotte, and Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire 🎨
#historysky #18thcentury #arthistory
A satirical print form 1777 titled 'The Flower Garden.' A woman stands in profile, half-length. Her enormous powdered hair is adorned with flowers and grapes cascading down the sides. At the top of her hair is a perfectly manicured miniature garden complete with flowerbeds, a temple, and even a tiny gardener.
A personal favourite of the #bighair satirical prints: 'The Flower Garden' (1777). Note the tiny gardener and the temple in the exquisitely detailed hair garden.
#historysky #18thcentury #caricatures #hairhistory #fashionhistory
Thank you!
Thank you!
Thank you!
Thanks, Neil!
Thank you!
I got an email this morning telling me that I have been elected a Fellow of RHS. Academia is very hard right now, especially for ECRs, so it means a lot to have my work recognised by fellow historians 😊
#historysky
letter by Christian Friedrich Pfeffel von Kriegelstein, ambassador, to Friederike Luise Auguste von Hofenfels about the marriage of future Maximilian I Joseph of Bavaria and Princess Augusta Wilhelmine of Hesse-Darmstadt on September 30, 1785. The couple wed in Darmstadt .
Detail: tiny water-colour painting of Auguste Wilhemine in a blue dress with yellow skirt (or apron). The 'gossip in the letter is about her slim waist, which was expected to change in about 9 month after the wedding
The art of letter-writing in the 18th century. 🤗
The sender - gossiping about the marriage of Max Joseph and Auguste Wilhelmine - painted the figure of the bride wearing an dress from the 1780ies in the top corner of his letter.
Happy St Andrew's Day !
Cathedral ruins, Old Union Cafe, and Butts Wynd, St Andrews, Scotland, UK.
Next Wednesday 3-12 we are holding a joint seminar with @histparl.bsky.social! Join us at 17:30 at the @ihr.bsky.social or online via zoom to hear Dr Helen Wilson discuss ‘Black & Political: Black Political Participation in Britain, 1750-1850’.
Register now! 👎
www.history.ac.uk/news-events/...
Many thanks to everyone who attended yesterday evening. It was great to share my research and receive such positive and useful feedback. An article on this topic is (all being well) forthcoming with Scottish Historical Review next year! 🤞
#scottishhistory #18thcentury
Tonight Natalee Garrett will be speaking at the IHR Parliaments, Politics & People Seminar where she will be discussing her paper on 'Jane, Duchess of Gordon and the Romanticisation of Scottish Identity in London, c.1780-1812'.
Details of how to attend online can be found below:
Tonight!
Jewelry and comb with shells on it
Jewelry with shells on it
Happy #MosaicMonday! Either a mosaic or mosaic-adjacent, depending on whom you ask.
This parure (jewelry set) was probably made for Caroline Bonaparte Murat, #Napoleon's sister. These stunning pieces were made via pietra dura (the V&A calls it a "hardstone mosaic technique").
Spotted @ V&A. 📸me
Died #OTD 1737, Queen Caroline of Ansbach, wife of George II
As Dr Robin Eagles explores, not only were her last few weeks agonizing, but her death reflected her wider importance to the Hanoverian regime:
historyofparliament.com/2021/12/02/c...
Thank you! This is great, I do love a Gillray.
If you're interested in Scottish national identity, eighteenth-century fashion, and/or women in politics, you may be interested in the paper I'm presenting at the IHR Parliaments, Politics & People seminar next Tuesday. Best of all, it's online!
#eighteenthcentury #womenshistory #Scottishhistory
#OTD 1712, the infamous, and extremely violent Hamilton-Mohun duel took place between Scottish Tory the Duke of Hamilton and the Cornish Whig Lord Mohun. Check out Dr Robin Eagles' article on the violent history of duels in 18thc England here: historyofparliament.com/2018/06/07/d...
Very much looking forward to Helen Esfandiary's talk next week on medical and maternal approaches to domestic childcare in Georgian England. All welcome either in person or online @long18thsem.bsky.social @ihrlibrary.bsky.social But please register www.history.ac.uk/news-events/...
A book cover for Being Pretty in the Eighteenth Century: a cultural history of female beauty by Katherine Aske published by Bloomsbury. The cover is teal blue and depicts an eighteenth century portrait of a white woman in a large, white silk dress with puff sleeves, brown curled hair with blue ribbons, looking towards the sky. There is a large brown curtain hanging behind the sitting figure. The painting is by Joshua Reynolds of Mrs Stanhope as Contemplation.
This week I submitted my manuscript for Being Pretty in the Eighteenth Century: a Cultural History of Female Beauty to @bloomsburyacad.bsky.social This book has been a (long) labour of love and I owe so many thank yous to so many people for helping me reach this stage!
2/2 Dolls' Tea Party, 1730, w/ non-cooperation of pup. Another ridiculously cute scene by normally sharp & satirical William Hogarth, born OTD 1697.
Alexander Roslin, The Lady with the Veil. The Artist's Wife Marie Suzanne Giroust, 1768. Oil on canv
www.alaintruong.com/2025/11/exhi...
painting of a man in late 18th century clothing. He has curled grey hair and wears a double-breasted dark coat with a white cravat underneath. On his breast is a silver star.
painting of a young woman in late 18th-century clothing. She wears a light coloured dress with a dark shawl and a bonnet on top of her curled brown hair.
#OnThisDay 1794 the king made the formal announcement of the Prince of Wales's engagement to Princess Caroline of Brunswick...
5 November may have been deemed an auspicious day, but it didn't work out well.
#HistParl
Awesome piece featuring a white wig with curls on the sides and on top a ship made of gold fabric and embroidery with three masts under full sail (dark pink fabric). The action of 17 June 1778 (also known as the fight of Belle Poule and Arethusa) was a single-ship action that took place off the coast of France between British and French frigates.
Headdress called "La Belle Poule",
replica inspired by the headdress created for Marie-Antoinette to mark a battle fought on 17.6.1778.
The original headdress was created by fashion designer Rose Bertin and Leonard, hairdresser of Marie-Antoinette
(Centre national du costume et de la scène)