YOI Regency Week - Day 7: FREE DAY!

seen from United States

seen from Indonesia
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Indonesia
seen from China
seen from Russia
seen from Malaysia
seen from Brazil

seen from United States
seen from Indonesia

seen from Canada

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Austria

seen from Türkiye
YOI Regency Week - Day 7: FREE DAY!
YOI Regency Week - Day 4: Keyword ‘Music’
@yoiregencyweek
my piece for @yoiregencyweek!! i really wanted to draw them as darcy and elizabeth 🥺
Victuuri as Regency Husbands...
Yuuri and Victor now married and enjoying themselves :P. And still sporting long hair ( this is a sequel to my Regency Week 2020 art series :D. AO3 art collection HERE Pixiv art post here Twitter post here ) @yoiregencyweek , 2021 edition, Day 7: Free Day. Marriage. (Married intimacy/Hair brushing.)
A little gift for @zen-draws who wished for Victor being pampered by Yuuri :D. I love thee my Australian lass. Hope you like it.
@yoiregencyweek Day 1 - Dance/Ball (keyword: “Gloves”)
I’m back this year for Regency Week with another multi-page comic! \( ゚ヮ゚)/ Follow EligibleBachelor!Yuuri and EvenMoreEligibleBachelor!Victor as they navigate regency love under the beady, disapproving eye of a Chastity Goose. XDDD This is my jam and I had a lot of fun with this one, so I hope you all enjoy the uploads in the coming days! Two pages to start with, then one page per prompt for the rest of the week. <3
--------------------------
Continue to Day 2 Read on AO3
--------------------------
The regency era class system
Do not miss the opportunity to vote for the prompts for the event, and afterwards you can indulge in this information about the regency era class system.
Cottagers and laborers ~ Cottagers were a step below husbandmen, in that they had to work for others for wages. Lowest order of the working castes; perhaps vagabonds, drifters, criminals or other outcasts would be lower.
Husbandman (or other tradesmen) ~ A tradesman or farmer who either rented a home or owned very little land was a husbandman. In ancient feudal times, this person likely would have been a serf, and paid a large portion of his work or produce to the land-holding lord.
Yeoman ~ The yeoman class generally included small farmers who held a reasonable amount of land and were able to protect themselves from neighbouring lords et cetera. They played a military role as longbowmen. Sometimes merchant citizens are placed between yeoman and gentry in early modern social hierarchy.
Gentry/gentleman ~ The gentry by definition held enough assets to live on rents without working, and so could be well educated. If they worked it was in law, as priests, in politics, or in other educated pursuits without manual labour. The term Esquire was used for landowners who were not knighted. Many gentry families were armigerous and of ancient lineage possessing great wealth and large estates.
Knight ~ By the seventeenth century a knight was a senior member of the gentry, and the military role would be one of sheriff of a county, or organising a larger body of military forces, or in civil service exercising judicial authority. He was a large land owner, and his younger sons would often be lawyers, priests, or officials of some sort.
Baronet (hereditary, non peer) ~ A baronet held a hereditary style of knighthood, giving the highest rank below a peerage.
Peer (Noble/Archbishop) ~ The peers were generally large land holders, living solely off assets, sat in the House of Lords and either held court or played a role in court depending upon the time frame referenced, such as: Duke/Duchess; Marquess/Marchioness; Earl/Countess; Viscount/Viscountess; Baron/Baroness
Royal ~ A member of the royal family, a prince, a close relative of the queen or king.
Reference
Victuuri - regency - marriage of convince.
For #YOIregencyweek 2022: Day 7 - Free day. https://archiveofourown.org/works/39003414