• Thumbnail for The Tatler (1709 journal)
    The Tatler was a British literary and society journal begun by Richard Steele in 1709 and published for two years. It represented a new approach to journalism...
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  • politics and lifestyle. Tatler may also refer to: Ulster Tatler, a Northern Irish lifestyle magazine founded in 1966 Tatler (1709 journal), a British literary...
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  • occasionally as The Tatler and for some time a weekly publication, it had a subtitle varying on "an illustrated journal of society and the drama". It contained...
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  • considerations rather than news. Famous among the about 200 titles in English are Tatler (1709 journal), The Spectator (1711), The Guardian (1713). Doms, Misia Sophia...
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  • Thumbnail for A Description of a City Shower
    A Description of a City Shower (category Works originally published in Tatler (1709 journal))
    with inspiration for his series is the aforementioned "A Description of the Morning", published in the Tatler in 1709, as well as John Gay's "Trivia". Fairer;...
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  • Thumbnail for A Description of the Morning
    Description of the Morning" is a poem by Anglo-Irish poet Jonathan Swift, written in 1709. The poem discusses contemporary topics, including the social state...
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  • Thumbnail for Joseph Addison
    Later, he helped form the Kitcat Club and renewed his friendship with Richard Steele. In 1709, Steele began to publish the Tatler, and Addison became a...
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  • Thumbnail for List of 18th-century British periodicals
    List of 18th-century British periodicals (category Defunct literary magazines published in the United Kingdom)
    excludes daily newspapers. The Tatler (1709—1711) The Female Tatler (8 July 1709—31 March 1710). Thrice weekly; 115 issues The Spectator (1711–1714). Founded...
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  • from the year 1709 in Great Britain. Monarch – Anne January to March – unusually cold weather (the Great Frost of 1709) brings floating ice into the North...
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  • Will's Coffee House (category History of the City of Westminster)
    Steele, The Tatler, no. 1, 12 April 1709 from "Will's Coffee-house", Quoted in Raymond F. Howes, "Jonathan Swift and the conversation of the coffee-house"...
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  • Thumbnail for Martin Powell (puppetry)
    of the 1709–1710 journal Tatler, or the Lucubrations of Isaac Bickerstaff and later of the 1711 journal Spectator. In the Tatler, Steele assumed the persona...
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  • Thumbnail for Richard Steele
    Richard Steele (category Wikipedia articles incorporating a citation from the ODNB)
    He also gained the favour of Robert Harley, Earl of Oxford. The Tatler, Steele's first public journal, first came out on 12 April 1709, and appeared three...
    14 KB (1,359 words) - 10:56, 6 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for The Spectator (1711)
    Brian; Cornelis, Emilie (2022). "Contributors to the Tatler, Spectator, and Guardian periodicals (Act. 1709–1714)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography...
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  • Thumbnail for Button's Coffee House
    Button's Coffee House (category Coffeehouses and cafés in the United Kingdom)
    Garden, between the City and Westminster. The earlier Will's Coffee House was badly reviewed by Richard Steele in The Tatler on 8 April 1709 and this helped...
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    Don Saltero's (category History of the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea)
    PaperMac. p. 240. ISBN 0333576888. OCLC 28963301. londonist.com The Tatler, No. 34, June 27, 1709 Benjamin Franklin, Autobiography in William L. Andrews, ed...
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  • Thumbnail for Charles Dartiquenave
    Charles Dartiquenave (category Wikipedia articles incorporating a citation from the ODNB)
    to Nichols's edition of theTatler,’ vol. vi. Kneller's portrait of Dartiquenave is usually considered one of the best in the set, as showing strong individuality...
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  • Thumbnail for Vittorio Emanuele, Prince of Naples
    Vittorio Emanuele, Prince of Naples (category Recipients of the Order of the Crown (Italy))
    2024). "At the Duomo in the rain: Bystander looks on at the funeral of Prince Vittorio Emanuele of Savoy, son of the last King of Italy". Tatler. Retrieved...
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  • Thumbnail for Jacob Tonson
    announced for sale in the Tatler for 14 October (No. 237); and it seems to have been taken by Thomas Osborne, stationer, the father of the afterwards well-known...
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  • ISBN 978-2-226-46029-5. "Royal Newlywed Lord Ivar Mountbatten Opens Up | Tatler". 2019-09-01. Archived from the original on 2019-09-01. Retrieved 2024-05-23. Deborah Mitford...
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  • Thumbnail for Volpone
    Volpone (redirect from The Fox (play))
    throughout the 18th century. Richard Steele mentions a performance in a 1709 edition of Tatler. Famous eighteenth-century Volpones included James Quin; famous...
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    offered books, journals, and sometimes even popular novels to their customers. Tatler and The Spectator, two influential periodicals sold from 1709 to 1714,...
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  • Thumbnail for William Congreve
    William Congreve (category Last of the Romans)
    and was part of the London intelligentsia. He wrote a number of articles about her in the Tatler magazine. William Congreve shaped the English comedy of...
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  • National papers The Era Periodicals Tatler (1709-1711) Spectator (1711-1712) English provincial titles from 1712 The Stamford Mercury of 1728, The Leeds Mercury...
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  • have appeared until 1710 and mentions a first number to have appeared in 1709. Author according to GBV (source there: Gottlieb Friedrich Otto: Lexikon...
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  • Missed connection (category Pages using the JsonConfig extension)
    did "missed connections". The earliest known such advert, at the time called a "Once seen" ad, appeared in The Tatler in 1709. An early example of such...
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  • Thumbnail for List of the oldest newspapers
    journals Kaiyuan Za Bao Nominally associated with the Holy Roman Empire until 1648, but de facto independent since 1499 Nominally associated with the...
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  • Thumbnail for Essay
    Essay (redirect from The essay)
    Steele used the journal Tatler (founded in 1709 by Steele) and its successors as storehouses of their work, and they became the most celebrated eighteenth-century...
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  • Thumbnail for Culture of the United Kingdom
    and contributed the prologue to John Vanbrugh’s The Mistake. Steele's major breakthrough came in 1709 with the creation of The Tatler, a tri-weekly periodical...
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  • Thumbnail for Susanna Centlivre
    and the Tory press struck back. The weekly Female Tatler printed an "interview" that it claimed to have done with Centlivre, where she insulted the actors...
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  • Thumbnail for Mary Astell
    Mary Astell (category Wikipedia articles incorporating a citation from the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica with Wikisource reference)
    for the English. Later her ideas about women were satirised in The Tatler by the writer Jonathan Swift. While the writer Daniel Defoe admired the first...
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