Inquiring readers: At the end of 2010, PBS sent Jane Austen’s World blog many DVDs for review. Most dealt with Jane Austen or the Georgian/Regency era. Close to fifteen years have passed since the series “At Home With the Georgians” first aired in the US. Recently I started to think that a new audience of Jane Austen fans might not be aware of this marvelous series, which presented the private lives, courtships, and marriages of Georgian men and women in 18th Century England. This series was developed in a variety of ways: by reading original sources, such as letters, discussions with experts, museum displays, and visiting the houses and regions where the British from all classes once lived.
This three part series is based on Amanda Vickery’s book, Behind Closed Doors: At Home in Georgian England, a thoroughly informative and academic effort. Vickery is also the host of this visually stunning show. About the Georgian household she states that a home “reflected your taste, your values, your moral character, and the state of your marriage.” This concise introduction sums up the series. A man’s home ownership determines his position. For example, a rented home could determine his status. If he rented the entire house, from top to bottom, he could not only attract a wife, he would also be viewed as a full citizen qualified to vote. Bachelors who rented rooms in squalid areas of town, were at the bottom of the matrimonial ladder, always yearning to improve their circumstances.
Marrying well was the major focus for Georgian women. Spinster ladies who were unsuccessful in finding a husband, led lives of dependency. Austen described their lot beautifully in her letters and novels.
Finding a husband and raising a family were a Georgian woman’s main ambitions. As for the man, all he really needed for happiness was “a wife and a fire.” His primary focus early in life was to set up the kind of household that enabled him to woo a woman successfully.

A proper Georgian Family. Thomas Hudson,The Thistlethwayte Family, ca. 1758. Yale Center for British Art
The third video has a much darker tone than the first two, but its content is equally as fascinating. In it, Vickery discusses how the home provided safety during the night, especially in cities, towns, and rural communities that were dark after sundown and badly lit at night in an age before electricity.
While the wife carried the keys and other instruments, such as sewing scissors, inside the home during the day to perform her housewifely duties (notice the instruments attached to the bodice in the image), the husband’s responsibility was to walk around the house every night, and lock the doors and windows to prevent intruders from entering. As the 18th century progressed, crimes, including relatively minor ones of theft, were punished more harshly. Serious robberies and break ins led increasingly to brutal imprisonment or a death sentence.
The “At Home With the Georgians” videos are divided into the following three topics. Click on the links to read our full reviews.
- A Man’s Place, reviewed by Vic. Read it at this link.
- A Woman’s Touch, reviewed by Tony Grant, a frequent contributor to this blog. Read it at this link.
- Safe as Houses, reviewed by Vic, with photo contributions from Tony Grant. Read it at this link.
Where to view the videos today
DVDs of these videos are available at Amazon and eBay. Roku Channel and Tubi offer free views, although if I recall correctly, they come with ads. One YouTube channel features at least the first two videos: A Man’s Place and A Woman’s Touch. Click on soniab1’s YouTube channel to see them.
About Amanda Vickery
Amanda Jane Vickery FBA is an English historian, writer, radio and television presenter, and professor of early modern history at Queen Mary, University of London. Source: Wikipedia
About her Book
- Behind Closed Doors: At Home in Georgian England
- Review excerpt by The English Historical Review, Oxford Academic
Podcast talks with Amanda Vickery, Blackwell’s Bookshops – around 20 min total
- Part 1 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BtCk_MWEjS4
- Part 2 The second half of the discussion is available after the first part finishes















those would be wonderful to watch.
denise
Wow, we’re both up early, Denise! Although I know you are busy, especially this time of season, you might try a taste of the first video link on YouTube that I put into this post. You’ll see Professor Vickery’s lively and educated presentation. I was hooked years ago. Still am!
More like insomnia.
Invaluable, Vic.
Thank you, Ellen. Vickery’s research is impeccable IMO.
I was unable to find these DVD’S using your information. Could you give me a link or full title for each of them? Thanks! June Calvin
Hi June, If you live in the US, try the Tubi app, which, after you download it, provides free tv shows and movies. Then type in the search icon: At Home With the Georgians. Season 1 comes up, and all 3 episodes are on one long loop.
Or, when you are in the app, if your tv or phone has a microphone, just say At Home With the Georgians. It’s categorized as a Documentary 2010 – Present. You will then have two options to watch the video: on Tubi or the Roku Channel.
Also, the link to soniarb1’s YouTube channel is https://www.youtube.com/@soniarb1 The two videos are under the “Video” bar. At Home With the Georgians S01 e1 and S01 e2 show up as images with those descriptions.
Thanks so much! I wonder if there is a way to watch on the computer? I could watch them in bed. June
I watch YouTube on my computer. I don’t pay for premium, so suffer the ads. Try the two youtube vids first. (BTW-I watch many vids in bed on a lazy Saturday morning.)
Thanks! I didn’t see those links. These look excellent. I wonder why the third one isn’t available? (I will be watching with ads too!)
June Calvin
June, I had mentioned Tubi. If you live in the States, simply sign up. It’s free. Type At Home With the Georgians in the search bar, and the Season 1 will pop up. All three episodes are there. You can watch it on TV or your computer.
Vic, thanks so much for this post! Very helpful not only for those new to Jane Austen but also for some of us whose focus has been later, on the beginning of the 19th century. Facing the task of writing a prequel to my Regency series, I am now researching everything about life several decades earlier, and cannot believe I did not know about this series or Vickery’s book!! Very timely for me. Thanks again!! —Gail Eastwood
You are so very welcome. The book is great for research. The series is a lovely amuse bouche companion.