Regency era
E226536
The Regency era was a period in early 19th-century Britain marked by distinctive social elegance, political unrest, and cultural flourishing in literature, fashion, and the arts under the regency of the future King George IV.
All labels observed (11)
| Label | Occurrences |
|---|---|
| Regency era canonical | 40 |
| Regency literature | 3 |
| Regency style | 2 |
| Regency | 1 |
| Regency Britain | 1 |
| Regency England | 1 |
| Regency era England | 1 |
| Regency period | 1 |
| Regency-era England | 1 |
| RegencyEra | 1 |
| late Georgian era | 1 |
How this entity was disambiguated
This entity first appeared as the object of triple T2003619 — resolving that mention is where its identity was fixed. The disambiguator weighed these candidate entities and picked the highlighted one (or “None”, minting a new entity). This is how homonymy is resolved: the same surface form can point to different entities.
Target entity: Regency era Context triple: [Seizure of Arms Act 1819, era, Regency era]
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A.
Regency
Regency is a luxury trim level designation used by Oldsmobile to denote more upscale, comfort- and feature-oriented versions of its Ninety-Eight full-size sedan.
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B.
Georgian era
The Georgian era was a period of British history from the early 18th to early 19th century marked by the reigns of the first four King Georges and characterized by expanding empire, Enlightenment thought, and distinctive architecture and arts.
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C.
Victorian era
The Victorian era was the period of British history during Queen Victoria's reign (1837–1901), marked by rapid industrialization, imperial expansion, and significant social and cultural change.
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D.
Stuart period
The Stuart period was a historical era in Britain marked by the rule of the Stuart dynasty, encompassing events such as the English Civil War, the Interregnum, the Restoration, and the Glorious Revolution.
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E.
Edwardian era
The Edwardian era was a period of British history from 1901 to 1910 marked by relative peace, social elegance, and the transition from Victorian traditions to modern 20th-century culture.
- F. None of above. chosen
- G. Unsure - the case is ambiguous/there is not enough information to decide.
Target entity: Regency era Target entity description: The Regency era was a period in early 19th-century Britain marked by distinctive social elegance, political unrest, and cultural flourishing in literature, fashion, and the arts under the regency of the future King George IV.
-
A.
Regency
Regency is a luxury trim level designation used by Oldsmobile to denote more upscale, comfort- and feature-oriented versions of its Ninety-Eight full-size sedan.
-
B.
Georgian era
The Georgian era was a period of British history from the early 18th to early 19th century marked by the reigns of the first four King Georges and characterized by expanding empire, Enlightenment thought, and distinctive architecture and arts.
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C.
Victorian era
The Victorian era was the period of British history during Queen Victoria's reign (1837–1901), marked by rapid industrialization, imperial expansion, and significant social and cultural change.
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D.
Stuart period
The Stuart period was a historical era in Britain marked by the rule of the Stuart dynasty, encompassing events such as the English Civil War, the Interregnum, the Restoration, and the Glorious Revolution.
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E.
Edwardian era
The Edwardian era was a period of British history from 1901 to 1910 marked by relative peace, social elegance, and the transition from Victorian traditions to modern 20th-century culture.
- F. None of above. chosen
Statements (321)
| Predicate | Object |
|---|---|
| instanceOf | historical period ⓘ |
| capital |
London, England
ⓘ
surface form:
London
|
| country |
Great Britain
ⓘ
United Kingdom ⓘ |
| endTime | 1820 ⓘ |
| followedBy | Victorian era ⓘ |
| follows | Georgian era ⓘ |
| hasCharacteristic |
African exploration beginnings
ⓘ
Anglican evangelicalism ⓘ Arctic exploration ⓘ Beau Brummell-inspired menswear ⓘ Bible societies growth ⓘ Catholic emancipation debate ⓘ Chinese and Egyptian decorative motifs ⓘ East India Company dominance ⓘ Gothic revival beginnings ⓘ Grand Tour adaptations ⓘ Italian opera vogue ⓘ Luddite disturbances ⓘ
surface form:
Luddite unrest
Martello towers ⓘ Masonic lodges ⓘ Methodist expansion ⓘ Napoleonic Wars context ⓘ Newgate narratives ⓘ Pacific exploration ⓘ Peterloo-era radicalism ⓘ Regency architecture ⓘ Regency interior design ⓘ Royal Institution Christmas Lectures ⓘ
surface form:
Royal Institution lectures
Royal Society activity ⓘ Scottish Highlands tourism ⓘ Sunday schools movement ⓘ West Indian plantation economy ⓘ abolition of the slave trade ⓘ agricultural improvement ⓘ agricultural shows ⓘ amateur science ⓘ anthropological curiosity ⓘ antiquarianism ⓘ architectural innovation ⓘ argument from design ⓘ art exhibitions ⓘ artistic circles ⓘ astronomical observations ⓘ asylums for the insane ⓘ automata displays ⓘ ball culture and assemblies ⓘ ballooning spectacles ⓘ benevolent associations ⓘ biblical chronology discussions ⓘ biblical scholarship debates ⓘ botanic gardens ⓘ botanical collecting ⓘ bow windows ⓘ boxing and prizefighting ⓘ bridge between Enlightenment and Victorian culture ⓘ bright color schemes in interiors ⓘ broadsides ⓘ cabinet of curiosities ⓘ campaigns against cruelty to animals ⓘ campaigns against vice ⓘ canal and early railway development ⓘ canal network expansion ⓘ caricature prints ⓘ celebrity culture around actors ⓘ celebrity culture around authors ⓘ celebrity culture around criminals ⓘ censorship and press control ⓘ chapbooks ⓘ chaperonage for young women ⓘ charitable societies ⓘ charitable visiting societies ⓘ charity hospitals ⓘ charity schools ⓘ chemical demonstrations ⓘ child labor in industry ⓘ children's literature growth ⓘ china and porcelain collecting ⓘ chronometer use ⓘ circulating libraries ⓘ circulating library novels ⓘ circulation of political pamphlets ⓘ circuses ⓘ clubs for gentlemen ⓘ coal mining expansion ⓘ coastal defenses ⓘ coffee house culture ⓘ collecting of curiosities ⓘ comet sightings ⓘ concern about French revolutionary ideas ⓘ concern about moral reform ⓘ concern about prostitution ⓘ concerts and musical evenings ⓘ conduct literature for women ⓘ consumer culture expansion ⓘ continental travel for elites ⓘ cookery books ⓘ corn laws controversy ⓘ country house visiting ⓘ cricket as a gentlemanly sport ⓘ crime reporting fascination ⓘ criticism of court extravagance ⓘ crop rotation ⓘ crowded housing ⓘ cultural flourishing ⓘ debate over church establishment ⓘ debate over education reform ⓘ debate over human origins ⓘ debate over mental illness treatment ⓘ debate over parliamentary reform ⓘ debate over public morality ⓘ debate over slavery ⓘ debtor's prisons ⓘ demobilization after Napoleonic Wars ⓘ development of Regent Street and Regent's Park ⓘ didactic fiction ⓘ dispensaries ⓘ distinctive fashion ⓘ district visiting ⓘ dog and horse breeding ⓘ domestic ideology development ⓘ domestic manuals ⓘ domestic service as major employment ⓘ drainage schemes ⓘ dueling culture ⓘ early animal welfare movement ⓘ early geological studies ⓘ early steamships ⓘ elaborate etiquette ⓘ electrical experiments ⓘ emphasis on reputation and scandal ⓘ empire waistline fashion ⓘ enclosure of common lands ⓘ estate landscaping ⓘ ethnographic collecting ⓘ evangelical religious influence ⓘ exotic plant cultivation ⓘ expanding middle class ⓘ expansion of the British Empire ⓘ exploration voyages ⓘ fairy tales circulation ⓘ fashion for picturesque travel ⓘ fashion plates in magazines ⓘ fashionable promenading ⓘ floriculture ⓘ flower shows ⓘ folk customs persistence ⓘ food riots ⓘ fossil collecting ⓘ founding of the SPCA precursor ⓘ freak shows ⓘ gallows literature ⓘ gambling and high society clubs ⓘ gambling at clubs ⓘ gentleman scientists ⓘ geological time debates ⓘ gothic fiction popularity ⓘ growth of London as a metropolis ⓘ growth of insurance and banking ⓘ growth of newspapers ⓘ growth of philanthropy ⓘ growth of policing in London ⓘ growth of print culture ⓘ growth of professional middle class ⓘ growth of public parks ⓘ growth of schooling ⓘ growth of seaside resorts ⓘ high church revival beginnings ⓘ historical novels ⓘ home missions ⓘ home museums ⓘ hot houses and greenhouses ⓘ hunting and racing culture ⓘ hydrographic surveying ⓘ illuminations and fireworks ⓘ improved bridges ⓘ improvement in livestock breeds ⓘ improvement of roads and coaching ⓘ improvement societies ⓘ improvements in printing technology ⓘ improving tales for children ⓘ increasing Irish unrest ⓘ increasing emphasis on childhood ⓘ increasing global trade ⓘ increasing literacy ⓘ increasing role of women readers ⓘ infant mortality ⓘ infectious disease outbreaks ⓘ interest in India and the East ⓘ interest in domestic pets ⓘ interest in medievalism ⓘ interest in natural history ⓘ iron balconies ⓘ ironworks growth ⓘ joint-stock companies ⓘ kitchen gardens ⓘ lampooning of the Prince Regent ⓘ landscape painting ⓘ learned societies ⓘ literary reviews ⓘ luxury goods consumption ⓘ lying-in hospitals ⓘ magic lantern shows ⓘ mail coach system ⓘ marriage as economic alliance ⓘ mechanical exhibitions ⓘ mechanized textile production ⓘ menageries and zoos ⓘ mesmerism beginnings ⓘ midwifery and man-midwives ⓘ militia service ⓘ missionary societies expansion ⓘ missionary work in colonies ⓘ missionary-explorer overlap ⓘ model farms ⓘ monuments to war heroes ⓘ museum and gallery visiting ⓘ natural theology ⓘ naval and military art ⓘ naval impressment issues ⓘ naval memorials ⓘ naval supremacy ⓘ navigation improvements ⓘ neoclassical influences ⓘ new prison designs ⓘ orientalism in art and design ⓘ ornamental gardening ⓘ ornate furniture ⓘ panoramas and dioramas ⓘ patriotism and anti-French sentiment ⓘ periodical essays ⓘ phrenology interest ⓘ picturesque landscape gardening ⓘ political cartoons ⓘ political unrest ⓘ poor relief under the Old Poor Law ⓘ popular astronomy ⓘ popular interest in chemistry and electricity ⓘ popular theatre and melodrama ⓘ portrait miniatures ⓘ post-war economic depression ⓘ poverty and social inequality ⓘ press coverage of the royal family ⓘ press gangs legacy ⓘ prison reform debates ⓘ public celebrations of victories ⓘ public executions ⓘ public interest in royal marriages ⓘ public scientific demonstrations ⓘ quack medicine trade ⓘ racial theories development ⓘ reading societies ⓘ refined manners ⓘ reform of criminal law ⓘ regimental traditions ⓘ religious tracts ⓘ repressive government measures ⓘ rise of caricature and satirical prints ⓘ rise of romantic literature ⓘ rise of the dandy ⓘ rise of the novel ⓘ romanticism in the arts ⓘ royal scandals ⓘ rural festivals and fairs ⓘ salon culture ⓘ salon literary culture ⓘ scientific and technological innovation ⓘ scientific clubs ⓘ scientific societies and lectures ⓘ scriptural geology ⓘ secret societies and radical clubs ⓘ selective breeding ⓘ sensation over murders ⓘ separate spheres ideology beginnings ⓘ servant-managed households ⓘ shell collecting ⓘ signal stations ⓘ silver fork novel precursors ⓘ silverware and plate display ⓘ slavery abolition movement ⓘ slums ⓘ smallpox inoculation decline ⓘ smuggling on coasts ⓘ social elegance ⓘ spa town culture ⓘ spying on political radicals ⓘ stagecoach services ⓘ steam engines in industry ⓘ stock market speculation ⓘ street ballads ⓘ strict class hierarchy ⓘ stuccoed facades ⓘ subscription concerts ⓘ subscription libraries ⓘ tea drinking rituals ⓘ temperance beginnings ⓘ terraced housing developments ⓘ tithes controversies ⓘ tourism in the Lake District ⓘ toy theatres ⓘ tract distribution ⓘ transportation as punishment ⓘ transportation of convicts to Australia ⓘ travel writing ⓘ turnpike trusts ⓘ typhus and typhoid ⓘ unitarian and dissenting growth ⓘ urban smoke and pollution ⓘ urbanization ⓘ use of gas lighting in cities ⓘ vaccination adoption ⓘ venereal disease fears ⓘ veterans' issues after war ⓘ volunteer corps ⓘ waterloo commemorations ⓘ women's magazines emergence ⓘ |
| hasMonarch |
George III of the United Kingdom
ⓘ
surface form:
George III
|
| hasPart |
Georgian era
ⓘ
surface form:
late Georgian era
|
| hasRegent |
George IV of the United Kingdom
ⓘ
surface form:
George IV
|
| namedAfter |
George IV of the United Kingdom
ⓘ
surface form:
George IV
|
| startTime | 1811 ⓘ |
How these facts were elicited
The pipeline generated the facts above by prompting gpt-5.1 with this entity's name + description and the instruction below.
You are a knowledge base construction expert. Given a subject entity and a description of it, return factual statements that you know for the subject as a JSON list of dictionaries(triples), where keys must be "subject", "predicate" and "object". The number of facts may be very high, between 25 to 50 or more, for very popular subjects. For less popular subjects, the number of facts can be very low, like 5 or 10. # Requirements - If you don't know the subject at all, return an empty list. - If the subject is not a named entity, return an empty list. - Include at least one triple where predicate is "instanceOf". - Do not get too wordy. - Separate several objects into multiple triples with one object.
Subject: Regency era Description of subject: The Regency era was a period in early 19th-century Britain marked by distinctive social elegance, political unrest, and cultural flourishing in literature, fashion, and the arts under the regency of the future King George IV.
Referenced by (53)
Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.