Knowing Your Place
The real history of Britain's servants. Dr Pamela Cox looks at the grand houses of the Victorian ruling elite - estates dependent on an army of staff.
Dr Pamela Cox looks at the grand houses of the Victorian ruling elite - large country estates dependent on an army of staff toiling away below stairs.
The Victorians ushered in a new ideal of servitude - where loyal, selfless servants were depersonalised stereotypes with standardised uniforms, hairstyles and even generic names denoting position. In the immaculately preserved rooms of Erddig in North Wales, portraits of servants like loyal housekeeper Mrs Webster hint at an affectionate relationship between family and servants, but the reality for most was quite different.
In other stately homes, hidden passages kept servants separate from the family. Anonymity, invisibility and segregation were a crucial part of their gruelling job - and the strict servant hierarchy even kept them segregated from each other.
Last on
More episodes
Previous
You are at the first episode
Next
See all episodes from Servants: The True Story of Life Below Stairs
Clip
-
Tunnel and Swan
Duration: 01:21
Servants of the house
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Pamela Cox |
Executive Producer | Emma Hindley |
Series Producer | Annabel Hobley |