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  1. The life of an upper-class child during the Victorian era, was as one may put it, stuffy, conventional and routine, not to mention quite lonely at certain times. Yet others argue Victorian children should have been quite content, given the fact that they were treated to only the best of toys, clothes and education and it was absurd to even consider the child being neglected.

  2. In the Victorian era, the definitions of childhood were changing . Leisure, education and innocence became characteristic of childhood for upper and middle class children.1 Working class children were still sometimes seen as little adults or economic assets and expected to work.1,2 Thesis In the midst of growing awareness about child

  3. The children in these families established relationships with their parents more as they got older. The middle class family differed in that they closely followed the Victorian domestic idea - the loving and hard-working father, the nurturing mother, the dutiful sons and daughters. While they could not match the high standards of the upper ...

  4. 4 de jun. de 2020 · In the Victorian era, the upper class was made up of the Royal family, Lords and Ladies, Earls, Barons, Dukes, Duchesses and other titled people. These people inherited their titles, their homes and their money from other members of their family. They didn’t have to get a job, so to speak, because they just took over the running of the family ...

  5. Victorians: Daily Life. Although the Victorian era was a period of extreme social inequality, industrialisation brought about rapid changes in everyday life that affected all classes. Family life, epitomised by the young Queen Victoria, Prince Albert and their nine children, was enthusiastically idealised. The billiard room at Down House, Kent ...

  6. Victorian Era: The Victorian era, named after Queen Victoria who ruled from 1837 to 1901, defined much of the 19th-century English upper-class lifestyle. It emphasized strict social norms, etiquette, and moral values.

  7. The women belonging to this class were expected to take education, help in the family business and try to get married into the nobility. At the close of the Victorian era, few women of this class were self-employed by being a nurse, writer etc. Victorian women’s life centered around family. The Upper Working Class tried a variety of jobs and ...