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Historical Fiction Author & Researcher

7 Results with the "Victorian" tag


  • The Hedge Witch in Late Victorian and Edwardian Britain Thumbnail

    Healer, Cunning Woman, and Quiet Rival to the Chemist The Hedge Witch heals with natures medicine. In a narrow lane at the edge of a mining village, a woman keeps jars in her cupboard. Dried foxglove hangs from a beam. Chamomile and yarrow sit in paper twists. Neighbours knock at dusk, not loudly, and not all at once. They come because a child is…

  • Victorian Obsession with Death and the Rise of Spiritualism Thumbnail

    How grief, high mortality, and scientific upheaval shaped a culture determined to speak with the dead A Victorian parlour séance, where candlelight and longing invite the illusion of spirit presence. In the dim glow of a parlour lamp, a table trembles. Hands rest lightly upon polished wood, fingers touching, breath held. A widow listens for a knock from the other side. In Victorian Britain…

  • The Collapse of Parish Policing in Britain Thumbnail

    In the early hours of the nineteenth century, the streets of London were guarded by a system that had barely changed since medieval times. A night watchman, often elderly and poorly paid, might patrol with a lantern and staff while the parish constable, an ordinary citizen chosen for temporary duty, carried the authority of the law. In theory this system represented community responsibility for…

  • The Peelian Revolution Thumbnail

    The Birth of the Metropolitan Police On a September morning in 1829, Londoners encountered a new and unfamiliar presence on their streets. Men in dark blue coats and tall hats were walking regular patrols through the city’s crowded neighbourhoods. They carried wooden truncheons and small rattles used to summon assistance, but they did not carry firearms. Their task was simple but unprecedented: to patrol…

  • The Birth of the Detective Thumbnail

    Scotland Yard and the CID In the early decades of the nineteenth century, the idea of a police officer working undercover would have seemed deeply unsettling to many Britons. The country had a long tradition of mistrusting secret policing, associating it with the authoritarian regimes of continental Europe. While the newly created Metropolitan Police patrolled London’s streets in uniform, the idea of officers quietly…

  • The Imperial Laboratory Thumbnail

    The Royal Irish Constabulary While London was developing a civilian model of policing based on patrol and public consent, a very different system was taking shape across the Irish Sea. In Ireland, British authorities created a force that looked far less like a community service and far more like a disciplined security organisation. The Royal Irish Constabulary, commonly known as the RIC, would become…

  • How Britain Invented Modern Policing Thumbnail

    At the beginning of the nineteenth century Britain did not possess a police force in the modern sense. Law enforcement relied on a patchwork of parish constables, watchmen, and local officials whose responsibilities had evolved over centuries. In small communities this system could function reasonably well. In rapidly expanding cities such as London, however, it struggled to maintain order. Industrialisation, urban growth, and political…

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