Breakfast Links: Week of June 13, 2016

• Circassian bloom : cheek rouge for 18thc and 19thc ladies.
• "My present dreadful situation": the perils of fame as an 18thc actress .
• Tabasco and the war against bland military meals.
• Jane Austen's manuscripts are finally all digitized, and may now be viewed as a whole online.
• Video: If you're a Regency era lady, a new spencer jacket is a great way to spruce up your look for summer.
• Converting Jews to Christianity in Regency England, 1809-1813.
• Lavish lace in the Martha Washington collection at Mount Vernon.
• What spilled ink and fingerprints reveal about medieval manuscripts.
• Soldier newspapers in the American Civil War.
• Epic battles in medieval manuscripts: knights vs. snails.
• Image: Pretty much all you need to know about Victorian children's literature .
• What did it mean to be called an Amazon during World War One?
• Why memes matter for feminism.
• America's mid-century rest stops were real roadside attractions.
• A Coney Island pie-maker invents the hot dog , 1870.
• Built around 1780, this Federal-style house in what is today Chinatown, NYC, managed to survive until the 1920s.
• Image: Dante Gabriel Rossetti in his Chelsea home.
• Eight places associated with the wives of Henry VIII .
• Uncovered in Hyde Park: 165-year-old toilet remains from "spend a penny" exhibition.
• The Endicott pear tree : still alive in Massachusetts after nearly 400 years.
• Blood, controversy, and puddings in early New England.
• Changing concepts of time : art in a speeded-up world.
• Image: Medieval church door in Gloucestershire believed to have been the inspiration for J.R.R. Tolkien's entrance to Moria.
• They marched with torches: getting out the vote , 1840-1900.
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Above: At Breakfast by Laurits Andersen Ring. Private collection.
Published on June 18, 2016 14:00
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