School Terms During the Regency Era + PreOrder of “The Colonel’s Ungovernable Governess” + a Giveaway

The above is an example of the school terms found in one of author Suzi Love’s books, but I wished to share it as a marker of when the children during Jane Austen’s England would have returned to school, and what each term meant, for in my latest Austen-inspired tale, The Colonel’s Ungovernable Governess, much of the action in compacted between the Easter Term and the Michael Term and there are three children, two of them young boys whose schooling plays a part of in the plot line. My British readers will wonder why I bother, while I hope my American readers will be able to make more sense of such details in the tale. 

Before we get into specifics of each boarding school and the terms, let us first revisit some givens as to the education of both males and females, though my story has a young boy who is the colonel’s nephew and the heroine also has a brother of 10 years of age. So most of what I am sharing is dealing with the male education. 

At around the age of five, children no longer had a “nurse,” but rather came under the care of a “governess.” There was no rule of thumb as to whether a governess addressed only the education of the young girls, so I chose to have the governess in my story tend the boy and his sister, for they are twins. Such a person was sometimes referred to as the “nursery governess.” Generally though, the word “governess” is for girls and “tutor” is for boys. 

Boys, especially as I have written my young lad as an earl, would require lessons in reading, writing, arithmetic, history, geography, etc. Girls would receive much the same, but would also learn as they say in Pride and Prejudice . . . 

“A woman must have a thorough knowledge of music, singing, drawing, dancing, all the modern languages, to deserve the word; and besides all this, she must possess a certain something in her air and manner of walking, the tone of her voice, her address and expressions, or the word will be but half deserved.”

Later education included languages, such as French, Greek, and Latin, geography, science, astronomy, philosophy, business, literature, and traveling abroad, as well as social graces such as dancing, music, etc. Some boys, before they left for school, studied in the home of a learned man. Jane Austen’s father supplemented his income by educating boys in his home. Ironically, though the schools catered to the landed gentry and the aristocracy, the curriculum did not include land management and bookkeeping. Sons of the men of trade learned those skills. 

We must recall, in the Regency, a boarding school was called a “public school,” meaning the boys received their education outside of their homes. The public schools were Eton, Harrow, Westminster, Charterhouse, Shrewsbury, Winchester, and Rugby. Between ten and twelve seemed to be the age boys went out to school. 

Okay, we have an overview of the curriculum, though with both the colonel’s and Mr. Darcy’s help, in my story, my young Lord Vincent learns many other necessary skills which will serve him as the earl when he able to sit in the House of Lords. Now, let us look at the school terms: 

The School Terms, as you can see in the example at the top have specific names. These names are, as are the court sessions, associated with the church calendar. 

Michaelmas Term (a word we are all familiar with because Mr. Bingley let Netherfield before Michaelmas, which is one of the four quarter days, meaning “taxes” to be paid. The Michaelmas runs for eight weeks after the Feast of St Michael, which falls on 29 September. Generally, the Michaelmas term begins the first few days of October, depending on whether it is a weekend or not.

Hilary Term is the second of the school terms at Oxford and Dublin universities, not at Cambridge. It runs from January to March and is named “Hilary” after St Hilary of Poitiers, which is celebrated on 13 January and falls within this academic term. The term lasts 10 weeks after the feast of St Hilary. 

Trinity Term varies some because of the”movement” of Easter. Many schools, universities and law courts had Easter terms.  The fact that Easter was a moveable feast meant that one could not always tie the terms to the calendar nor have them be the same length every year. All were closed for Holy week preceding  Easter and then most did not reopen until the Wednesday after Easter as Monday and Tuesday were holidays.

Many other dates were calculated as being so many days after Easter.

Additionally, the periods when the schools and law courts were not in session were called vacations, not holidays, despite contemporary English usage.

Nancy Regency Researcher describes it this way: 15 Sundays to 21 Sundays after the fest of St Hilary (6 Sundays) with Trinity Sunday as the first Sunday after Pentecost or Whitsunday (as it is called in the UK. Pentecost is celebrated seven weeks (50 days) after Easter Sunday, since its name. Pentecost falls on the tenth day after Ascension Thursday. 

Eton had terms called “Halves.” These were the existing parameters: 

September to two weeks before Christmas

Christmas holidays: a fortnight before and after Christmas

January to Palm Sunday.

Easter holidays were a fortnight from Palm Sunday.

Week after Easter to end of July The Summer holiday from the end of July for five weeks.

* Senior boys returned later.

Meanwhile, Cambridge did not have a Term called “Trinity.” Their Easter Term was longer. 

As the Darcys lived in Derbyshire, and I have placed members of the Fitzwilliam family in Derbyshire (Earl of Matlock) and the eldest son (at William’s Wood in Lincolnshire), and the young earl’s estate in North Yorkshire, we may assume all within my story attended or will attend Cambridge. We know Darcy and Wickham and the colonel all attended Cambridge, from Chapter 35 of Pride and Prejudice

“Mr. Wickham is the son of a very respectable man, who had for many years the management of all the Pemberley estates, and whose good conduct in the discharge of his trust naturally inclined my father to be of service to him; and on George Wickham, who was his godson, his kindness was therefore liberally bestowed. My father supported him at school, and afterwards at Cambridge—most important assistance, as his own father, always poor from the extravagance of his wife, would have been unable to give him a gentleman’s education. “ . . . 

“For the truth of everything here related, I can appeal more particularly to the testimony of Colonel Fitzwilliam, who, from our near relationship and constant intimacy, and, still more, as one of the executors of my father’s will, has been unavoidably acquainted with every particular of these transactions. “

Let us look at some of the school terms for years during the Georgian/Regency era as samples of what to expect. (Note: Part of this was shared on Nancy Regency Researcher, but I added specific dates for the calendar and school term. 

1804 (taken from A Pocket Companion for Oxford)

10 October 1803 to 17 December 1803 – Michaelmas Term 

14 January 1804 to 24 March 1804 (ends on Saturday before Palm Sunday) – Hilary Term

11 April 1804 (the Wednesday after Low Sunday, which is the Sunday after Easter) to 17 May 1804, which is the Thursday before Whitsunday (the Pentecost) – Easter Term

30 May 1804 (the Wednesday after Trinity Sunday, which is the Sunday after Whitsunday) to the Saturday after Act Sunday. In 1804, 1 July was the first Sunday of the month. Therefore, the term would end on 7 July 1804. 

Bear with me on this explanation of Act Sunday. I am taking this from the footnotes of a lecture on Newman Reader via The National Institute of Newman Studies – copyright 2007 – based on the works of John Henry Newman. 

Footnote #2 [Act Sunday. “The candidate,” says Huber on the English Universities, “emancipated from his teacher, makes himself known to the other teachers by taking part in the disputations in the schools. These services afterwards become formal public acts, disputationes, responsiones, lecturæ cursoriæ. A more especially solemn Act formed the actual close of the whole course of study. The licence was then conferred on him by the Chancellor. A custom arose that all the final and solemn exercises should fall in the second term of the year (hence called the Act Term), and be closed on the last Saturday in term by a solemn general Act, the Vesperiæ, by keeping which the candidates of all degrees in their different Faculties were considered qualified and entitled to begin the exercises connected with their new degree upon the following Monday. This fresh beginning (inceptio) took place with the greatest solemnity, and formed the point of richest brilliancy in the scholastic year. In Oxford it was called emphatically ‘the Act,’ in Cambridge ‘the Commencement.'” {Abridged from F. W. Newman’s translation.) The Act Sunday is or was the Sunday next before the Act, which falls in the first week of July.]

Again, thanks to Nancy Regency Researcher and to the following for their input on the subject

Education and Other Forms of Child Torture in the Regency Era

Eton College During the Regency

Reading the Regency – Education, Part 1

Schools in Regency England Part 2: The Middle and Upper Classes 

The Colonel’s Ungovernable Governess 

Rather than be forced to marry a man not of her choice, Miss Jocelyn Romfield runs away. She believes spending her life as a governess would be superior to a loveless marriage. 

An arrangement has been made by his father for Colonel Edward Fitzwilliam to marry a woman related to his Aunt Catherine’s last husband, Sir Lewis de Bourgh. Yet, how is Fitzwilliam expected to court his future bride, who has proven to be elusive during each of his attempts to take her acquaintance, when the governess of his brother’s stepchildren fills his arms so perfectly?

Jocelyn has no idea the man she has purposely avoided is the same one who fills her heart with love. 

Kindle https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CZZCMWW7

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Amazon https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0D11KC196

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Giveaway: I have 3 eBooks available for those who comment on any of the posts associated with The Colonel’s Ungovernable Governess release. Winners will be chosen May 9, 2024, and prizes will be delivered on May 10, with the book’s official release.

About Regina Jeffers

Regina Jeffers is the award-winning author of Austenesque, Regency and historical romantic suspense.
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8 Responses to School Terms During the Regency Era + PreOrder of “The Colonel’s Ungovernable Governess” + a Giveaway

  1. BeckyC says:

    Love the Colonel! What a fun twist!

    • The colonel and Jocelyn get a taste of raising a child before they are even married. Moreover, young Lord Vincent is somewhere on what we now called the “spectrum.”

  2. Glory says:

    So much to keep track of for the schooling options!

    • When including children in a book, especially those of the aristocracy and the gentry, schools must play a part. Even Jane and Cassandra Austen attended school elsewhere, and their father tutored young boys preparing them for Harrow and Eton.

  3. darcybennett says:

    Congrats on the release and thanks for sharing your research on school terms.

  4. Lúthien84 says:

    Thanks for the enlightening post on school terms in Regency England, Regina. But I’m confuse with Suzi Love’s school terms in 1815. They don’t align with Nancy Regency Researcher’s explanation. E.g. Michaelmas term begins in early October which is correct but Suzi has it on 3rd November. I think I need to do more reading on this topic.

    Btw, I cannot comment on the earlier 2 posts. I think it is a WordPress policy that automatically blocks comments after 2 weeks because I encounter the same problem on another WordPress blog. You should look into it, Regina.

    I find them interesting especially about haemorrhage. Is the blood disorder still present now or has it been eradicated with modern medicine? And I love the excerpt that introduces the Colonel’s elder brother and his family.

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