This book re-examines spa and assembly culture as key venues for sociability in the eighteenth century.
This book re-examines spa and assembly culture as key venues for sociability in the eighteenth century.
Focused chiefly on the eighteenth century, this book looks forward into the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. While many of the chapters concern aspects of the city of Bath, the book stretches beyond Baths confines, taking in comparative British towns such as Tunbridge Wells, European spa towns, such as Nice, and the impact Bath had on spa towns in America. The chapters not only reconsider familiar themes such as the marriage market but also offer new insights into the architectural development of the city and the role of Masters of Ceremonies: the officials who oversaw Assembly Rooms rules and culture. There are also insights into the musical culture of spa towns and the varied backgrounds of the artists and performers. As places that attracted the wealthy and powerful, the book rounds off with consideration of Bath and other spa towns importance as centres of culture and diplomacy and of their place in the tourist industry.
This accessibly written book appeals to a broad readership, including undergraduate and postgraduate students as well as academics and informed non-specialists interested in social and cultural history, British history, and modern history.
1. Introduction
Hillary Burlock and Robin Eagles
2. Bath Assembly Rooms and its Subscribers
Timothy Moore and Rupert Goulding
3. Solemn yet sumptuous: Robert Adams designs for an alternative assembly
room in Bath
Amy Frost
4. I am a sort of Prisoner here: elite performance and Bath society in the
eighteenth century
Jemima Hubberstey
5. Not Just Suitors, Balls, and Proposals: the late eighteenth-century Bath
marriage mart reassessed
Rachel Bynoth
6. Rauzzini and the Upper Assembly Rooms Subscription Concert Series: the
First Five Years
Brianna E. Robertson-Kirkland
7. Two Kingdoms: Masters of Ceremonies at Bath and Tunbridge Wells,
1735c.1801
Rachael Johnson
8. Electing the Arbiter Elegantiarum in Bath and Beyond: power, politics, and
the 1769 Bath Contest
Hillary Burlock
9. The Undertakers of Eighteenth-Century Bath
Dan OBrien
10. British Female Hospitality and Fashionable Society in Eighteenth-Century
Nice, 176992
Isabelle-Eve Carlotti-Davier
11. The Bath Revolution? Musical distractions in French spas, cercles, and
salons
Phil Bonjour
12. Bath, Abroad: how British American colonists imagined and encountered the
famed spa city
Vaughn Scribner
13. Bath Assembly Rooms: Then, Now, and Next
Tatjana LeBoff
Dr Hillary Burlock is a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Liverpool, working on a project on British assembly rooms, and a historian of eighteenth-century dance and sociability, with interests in politics, embodiment, and performance. She previously worked on the Eighteenth-Century Political Participation and Electoral Culture project and publications include 'Party Politics: Dancing in London's West End, 1780-9' (2021).
Dr Robin Eagles is the Editor of the House of Lords 16601832 section at the History of Parliament, whose research interests include the history of Parliament from the late seventeenth to the close of the eighteenth century; the old Palace of Westminster; Frederick, Prince of Wales and the development of opposition politics at Leicester House; John Wilkes. Publications include Champion of English Freedom: the life of John Wilkes, MP and Lord Mayor of London, 17251797 (2024).
Tatjana LeBoff is the Project Curator at the Bath Assembly Rooms for the National Trust and is working on a new visitor experience at the Bath Assembly Rooms which will bring to life the Georgian heyday of the Rooms. Research interests include eighteenth- and nineteenth-century social history, as well as considering how curatorial practice can weave together heritage, social history, and contemporary arts and programming.