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La Belle Assemblée, title page, Volume III, July to
December 1807.
La Belle Assemblée (in full
La Belle Assemblée or, Bell's Court and Fashionable
Magazine Addressed Particularly to the Ladies) was a
British women's magazine published from 1806 to
1837, founded by John Bell (1745–1831).[1][2]
The magazine was published as La Belle Assemblée from
1806 until May 1832. It became The Court Magazine and Belle
Assemblée from 1832 to 1837. After 1837 the Belle
Assemblée name was dropped and the magazine merged with the
Lady's Magazine and Museum in 1837 to become The Court
Magazine and Monthly Critic.[2][3]
It was published by John Bell from 1806 until his retirement in
1821, and by G. & W. Whittaker & Co. from 1823–1829.
Between these dates the magazine was listed as "Published for the
proprietors".[2][3]
La Belle Assemblée is now best known for its fashion plates of
Regency era
styles, but until the 1820s it also published original poetry and
fiction, non-fiction articles on politics and science, book and
theatre reviews, and serialized novels, including Oakwood
Hall by Catherine Hutton.[2][3]
Other notable contributors to La Belle Assemblée include
Mary
Shelley. Contributions from readers were also encouraged and
published.[2][3]
While each number of La Belle Assemblée typically contained
five plates—one depicting a member of the court or fashionable
society, two depicting the latest fashions, and a further two
providing sheet music and a sewing pattern—the magazine was not
dominated by the frivolities of fashionable dress. Indeed, Bell
separated the portion of the work dealing with the fashions of the
month from the remainder of the publication. One could (at least
initially) purchase either of the two divisions of the work
separately; the first consisting of the bulk of the letterpress,
together with two of the plates, the second ('La Belle Assemblée')
consisting of the fashion plates and sewing pattern, together,
usually, with four pages describing the plates and discussing the
latest London and Paris fashions.
[3]
In the 1820s, changing expectations of the role of women in
British society coincided with a marked decrease in the
intellectual scope of La Belle Assemblée and its
competitors, which increasingly focused on fashion and domestic
pursuits.[3]
Similarly titled fashion publications included The Penny
Belle Assemblée or Maids, Wives and Widows’ Gazette of
Fashions (1830s), the Weekly Belle Assemblée, and its
sucessor the New Monthly Belle Assemblée (1847–1870).
Plates from La Belle
Assemblée
|
|
Fashion plate, ballgown, 1818
|
Portrait of the Rt. Hon. Harriet Charlotte Beaujolois,
Viscountess Tullamore, engraved by John Cochran, 1826
|
Her Grace, Charlotte Florentia, Duchess of Northumberland.
Stipple engraving by T. A. Dean, 1829
|
References
- ^
"Regency Fashion". http://regencyfashion.org/lb.html. Retrieved 27 November
2009.
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
Garside, P. D., J. E. Belanger, and S.
A. Ragaz, authors, A. A. Mandal, designer. "La Belle Assemblée, or Bell’s
Court and Fashionable Magazine". British Fiction 1800–1829:
A Database of Production, Circulation, and Reception. Centre
for Editorial and Intertextual Research, Cardiff University. http://www.british-fiction.cf.ac.uk/guide/reviews/lba.html. Retrieved 27 November
2009.
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
f
"Belle Assemblée".
Science in the 19th Century Periodical: An Electronic
Index. http://www.hrionline.ac.uk/sciper/browse/BA_desc.html. Retrieved 28 November
2009.
External
links