by RosemaryBaird (Author)
In MISTRESS OF THE HOUSE Rosemary Baird describes women's roles as wives, chatelaines and keepers-up of fashion in decoration and entertainment in the great power houses of Britain. Large town houses and country estates were created largely to overawe and to reinforce social and political prestige; with that went the presentational requirements needed to impress: fashion in clothes, carriages and entertainment, and in terms of an appropriate backdrop, lavish interiors and exotic gardens. Rosemary Baird has selected ten women whose status as consorts to powerful men required them to take on a wide variety of roles. This is a fascinating account of their lives, taken very often from diaries, letters and new research in family archives. 'Expertly researched, beautifully illustrated and deftly constructed' Sunday Telegraph
Format: Paperback
Pages: 336
Edition: New
Publisher: Phoenix
Published: 01 Jul 2004
ISBN 10: 0753817713
ISBN 13: 9780753817711
Book Overview: In the same mould as the bestselling Aristocrats, Georgiana and Daughters of Britannia There is an insatiable interest in well-written books on the place of women in history - an entirely fresh approach to a very popular subject Changing Rooms meets the English Country House