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Hyde Park, Its History and Romance

Chapter 19: FOOTNOTES:
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About This Book

The book traces the park's development from royal hunting ground to urban public pleasure garden, surveying changes under successive rulers and regimes, recounting its darker uses as a site of public executions and duels, and chronicling its social life in Georgian and nineteenth-century society, including masks, fashions, public entertainments, fairs, and camps. It describes landscape features and wildlife, the creation of the lake, carriage culture and promenading, and provides maps, illustrations, anecdotal episodes, and an appendix listing the park's trees and plants. The narrative blends topographical description, archival research, and social anecdotes to portray the park's evolving roles in city life.

FOOTNOTES:

1 Mercurius Publius, 19-26th April 1660.

2 Pappe with a Hatchet.

3 The Kingdomes Intelligencer of the Affairs now in agitation in England. From Monday, 28th January, to Monday, 4th Feb. 1661.

4 Ghosts of Piccadilly.

5 “Yes, he even comes into the Senate, observes and singles out each of us.” Words of Cicero applied to Catiline.