Royal houses that have appeared in Jane Austen adaptations

Located in Salisbury, England, and owned by the Count and Countess of Pembroke, Wilton House has been in his family for 450 years. With surprising interiors that have made the house serve as a perfect setting for series such as The Crown – where their halls serve to imitate those of Buckingham Castle, but also for not one, but several adaptations of Jane Austen in the cinema.

Some of the halls and the library were used to portray the interior of Pemberly in the version of Joe Wright of Pride and prejudice. In addition, one of the biggest rooms also appears in the scene where Marianne is finally Wisdom and feeling (1995). And if it weren't not enough, the house is also represented in the last adaptation of Emma In the cinemaWell, the property of George Knightley, Donwell Abbey, is portrayed there, where he lives only after his brother married Emma's sister.

Royal Crescent

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Although we still do not know too much about the locations that were used for the most recent adaptation of the novel of Persuasion From Jane Austen to the big screen (which premieres in Netflix on July 15), we are clear based on history: The historic town of Bath will be present. Famous for its Roman bathrooms of the year 60 AD and the apparent healing properties of the waters of the area, the city of Bath became a spa destination for the high classes of the 18th and 19th century. The most famous construction of the city is, without a doubt, Royal Crescent, a row of 30 houses that were built between 1767 and 1774, a clear example of the Eduardian architecture of the time. In modern times, those houses joined and They became a Spa hotel that evokes us to the time of the regency to which we are so excited to return With this new film adaptation.