Edwardian$23913$ - meaning and definition. What is Edwardian$23913$
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What (who) is Edwardian$23913$ - definition

FORM OF BRITISH MUSICAL THEATRE
Edwardian musical comedies; Edwardian Musicals; Edwardian Musical Theatre; Edwardian Musical Comedies; Edwardian Musical Comedy
  • ''[[The Geisha]]'' was a popular Edwardian musical comedy
  • Souvenir program cover, 1900
  • [[George Edwardes]]
  • The Arcadians]]''

Edwardian architecture         
  • [[Department of Education building]], Sydney
  • [[Lancaster House, Manchester]], built during 1910.
  • Sutton]], [[Greater London]], England
  • Catts Farm, [[Kingsclere]], Newbury, design by H. Launcelot Fedden (1869-1910), as seen in ''The Building News'', July 31, 1908.
  • The Empress Hotel
  • An Edwardian residence in [[South Yarra, Victoria]]
  • Flinders Street station]], Melbourne
  • Government Buildings near [[Merrion Square]], [[Dublin]]
  • Hotel Macdonald
  • [[53 King Street]], built for Lloyds Bank during 1915.
  • Masonic Temple, [[Aberdeen]], [[Scotland]] built in 1910.
  • Penang City Hall in [[Penang]]
STYLE OF ARCHITECTURE DESIGNED DURING THE REIGN OF EDWARD OF GREAT BRITAIN (1901-1910)
Wrenaissance; Edwardian Baroque architecture; Edwardian Baroque; Edwardian baroque architecture; Edwardian building; Edwardian buildings; Edwardian houses
Edwardian architecture is a Neo-Baroque architectural style that was popular in the British Empire during the Edwardian era (1901–1910). Architecture up to the year 1914 may also be included in this style.
Edwardian         
  • [[H. H. Asquith]]
  • [[Mary Macarthur]] addressing the crowds during the chain makers' strike, [[Cradley Heath]], 1910
  • 1911 [[Michelin Guide]]
  • The British ''Dreadnought'' (1906) made all battleships obsolete because it had ten long-range 12-inch big guns, mechanical computer-like range finders, high speed turbine engines that could make 21 knots, and armour plates 11 inches thick.
  • steeplechase]]
  • The medical staff of No. 1 Stationary Hospital at Ladysmith
  • [[Peter Pan statue]], [[Kensington Gardens]]
  • Punch]]'' 28 April 1909
  • 1905–1910}}
  • Oilette postcard with art by Phil May, published by Raphael Tuck & Sons, circa 1910s
  • A cartoon in ''Punch'' (1911) compares changes in fashion between 1901 and 1911. "The dowdy voluminous clothes of the earlier date, making the grandmother an old lady and the mother seem plain, had been replaced by much simpler looser wear producing a sense of release for all three females."<ref>Donald Read, ''Edwardian England 1901-15: society and politics'' (1972) pp 257-58.</ref>
PERIOD OF BRITISH HISTORY SPANNING THE REIGN OF THE KING EDWARD VII, FROM 1901 TO 1910
Edwardian; Edwardian Era; Edwardian Period; Britain in 1900; Edwardian England; Edwardian ages; Edwardian period; Prince Edward Era; Edwardian age; The Edwardian period; The Edwardian era; Reign of King Edward VII; Reign of Edward VII; Britain under King Edward VII; Britain under Edward VII; Great Britain under King Edward VII; Great Britain under Edward VII; UK under King Edward VII; UK under Edward VII; United Kingdom under King Edward VII; United Kingdom under Edward VII; Edwardians
Edwardian means belonging to, connected with, or typical of Britain in the first decade of the 20th century, when Edward VII was King.
...the Edwardian era.
ADJ: usu ADJ n
Edwardian         
  • [[H.&nbsp;H. Asquith]]
  • [[Mary Macarthur]] addressing the crowds during the chain makers' strike, [[Cradley Heath]], 1910
  • 1911 [[Michelin Guide]]
  • The British ''Dreadnought'' (1906) made all battleships obsolete because it had ten long-range 12-inch big guns, mechanical computer-like range finders, high speed turbine engines that could make 21 knots, and armour plates 11 inches thick.
  • steeplechase]]
  • The medical staff of No. 1 Stationary Hospital at Ladysmith
  • [[Peter Pan statue]], [[Kensington Gardens]]
  • Punch]]'' 28 April 1909
  • 1905–1910}}
  • Oilette postcard with art by Phil May, published by Raphael Tuck & Sons, circa 1910s
  • A cartoon in ''Punch'' (1911) compares changes in fashion between 1901 and 1911. "The dowdy voluminous clothes of the earlier date, making the grandmother an old lady and the mother seem plain, had been replaced by much simpler looser wear producing a sense of release for all three females."<ref>Donald Read, ''Edwardian England 1901-15: society and politics'' (1972) pp 257-58.</ref>
PERIOD OF BRITISH HISTORY SPANNING THE REIGN OF THE KING EDWARD VII, FROM 1901 TO 1910
Edwardian; Edwardian Era; Edwardian Period; Britain in 1900; Edwardian England; Edwardian ages; Edwardian period; Prince Edward Era; Edwardian age; The Edwardian period; The Edwardian era; Reign of King Edward VII; Reign of Edward VII; Britain under King Edward VII; Britain under Edward VII; Great Britain under King Edward VII; Great Britain under Edward VII; UK under King Edward VII; UK under Edward VII; United Kingdom under King Edward VII; United Kingdom under Edward VII; Edwardians
[?d'w?:d??n]
¦ adjective relating to or characteristic of the reign of King Edward VII.
¦ noun a person who lived during this period.

Wikipedia

Edwardian musical comedy

Edwardian musical comedy was a form of British musical theatre that extended beyond the reign of King Edward VII in both directions, beginning in the early 1890s, when the Gilbert and Sullivan operas' dominance had ended, until the rise of the American musicals by Jerome Kern, Rodgers and Hart, George Gershwin and Cole Porter following the First World War.

Between In Town in 1892 and The Maid of the Mountains, premiering in 1917, this new style of musical theatre became dominant on the musical stage in Britain and the rest of the English-speaking world. The popularity of In Town and A Gaiety Girl (1893), led to an astonishing number of hits over the next three decades, the most successful of which included The Shop Girl (1894), The Geisha (1896), Florodora (1899), A Chinese Honeymoon (1901), The Earl and the Girl (1903), The Arcadians (1909), Our Miss Gibbs (1909), The Quaker Girl (1910), Betty (1914), Chu Chin Chow (1916) and The Maid of the Mountains (1917).