Rechercher
Toasting glass [ Food & Drink ]
… was an English imitation of Italian glass, which had been imported from Venice since the sixteenth century but was a luxury that very few could afford despite the foundation of a glass manufacture in London in 1574. A new luxury in the late seventeenth century, flint glass, a hard, white, high-quality product, became increasingly available … stem was used for small glasses as well as for large ceremonial goblets for communal drinking at court. 3 . Maxine Berg, Luxury and Pleasure in Eighteenth-Century Britain (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005), p. 117-126. An example of a …Menageries [ Sports & Leisure / Politics & Society / Social interaction ]
… exotic animals dinners fragrances macabre curiosity Royal Menageries: The Queen’s Zebra Seen as an establishment of luxury and curiosity a menagerie was, in eighteenth-century England, a collection of captive exotic animals kept by … were employed as ingredients to prepare elite delicacies, exotic fragrances and highly refined hair products epitomising luxury, gentility and respectability. In particular, the Georgians developed a real mania for the exotic turtle which was … whose waxy yellow-brown secretion exuded a strong musky odour. Perfumes and wig powders were made with civet epitomising luxury, decadence and sensuality for much of the eighteenth century. Both an aphrodisiac and a perfume, civet was perhaps …Gaming table [ Sports & Gaming accessories ]
Collections [ Furniture & Interior decoration / Art & Luxury ]
… tout en suscitant de nouvelles activités de sociabilité. Objects > Furniture & Interior decoration Objects > Art & Luxury Mots-clés Antiquity Art Cabinets of curiosity Collectors museums Aesthetics science Art market Italy Rome Au XVIII …Boxing [ Games & Sports ]
… acted as a counter-model to the Enlightenment values of sociability based on a belief in the benefits of trade and luxury in polishing national manners. Furthermore, pugilism often used the egalitarian argument as many pugilists came …Pagination
- Page précédente
- Page 2
- Page suivante