The long 18thC is generally deemed to be from somewhere around the
restoration of Charles II or (if you're being picky) the Glorious
Revolution of 1688 AND Waterloo (1815) or, again if you're being picky,
the social turmoil of 1848. Anglo-centric dates, I admit, but it works
for England. Hard to tell about the US -- Henry Adams (b. 1838) wrote
in his autobiography that he was born into the 18thC and within a decade
found himself in the 20th (roughly cited, but someone picky will correct
me). I sometimes think that in Canada the 18thC continued right up to
1960. Germaine
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Germaine Warkentin // English (Emeritus)
VC 205, Victoria College (University of Toronto),
73 Queen's Park Crescent East, Toronto, Ont. M5S 1K7, CANADA
g.warkentin@utoronto.ca (fax number on request)
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