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The Book of the Court
Exhibiting the Origin, Peculiar Duties, and Privileges of the Several Ranks of the Nobility and Gentry
This remarkable 1838 publication reviews British state ceremonial and court etiquette, in anticipation of the coronation of Queen Victoria.
William John Thoms (Edited by)
9781108078016, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 30 June 2016
496 pages, 1 b/w illus.
21.7 x 14 x 3 cm, 0.65 kg
A Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries, William John Thoms (1803–85) pursued literary and bibliographical interests and conversed with the likes of Thomas Macaulay and Charles Dickens. Most notably, he coined the term 'folklore' in 1846 and founded the scholarly periodical Notes and Queries in 1849. This remarkable 1838 publication, dedicated to the soon-to-be-crowned Queen Victoria, is a review of British state ceremonial and court etiquette, giving details of the royal family from the queen herself downwards, with appropriate forms of address to each member, and describing the titles, history and roles of all court officials, from the Poet Laureate and the Historiographer Royal to the Clerk of the Closet. Thoms also provides an account of the coronation of Queen Anne (the last queen regnant), the official programme for the forthcoming coronation, and appendices giving lists of precedence among the peerage of Great Britain and their wives.
Preface
Introductory essay
1. The sovereign and royal family
2. The nobility and gentry
3. The orders of knighthood
4. The houses of parliament
5. The great officers of state
6. The royal household
7. Ambassadors
8. Coronation ceremonies
Appendices
Index.
Subject Areas: British & Irish history [HBJD1]
