Release your inner Janeite with our top suggestions for your Regency-style stay… 

1. Stay in a house fit for Jane Austen 

Whether you check into the luxurious five-star Royal Crescent Hotel & Spa to stay behind one of Bath’s most iconic facades, book into The Francis Hotel or Dukes Bath to experience Regency-style lodgings similar to those that Jane Austen lived in, or indulge in the Jane Austen room at Bailbrook House, Bath has the perfect accommodation for your city break. 

Smiling doorman stands outside of The Royal Crescent Hotel & Spa
Image: The Royal Crescent Hotel & Spa

2. Don your bonnet for the Jane Austen Festival 

Pop the Jane Austen Festival onto your calendar and prepare to celebrate all things Austen, with events ranging from the spectacular annual Regency Costumed Promenade to concerts, etiquette workshops, dancing lessons, day trips and more. While celebrating, pop along to No.1 Royal Crescent for an immersive experience showing visitors what life would've been like living in a Georgian townhouse in Bath. 

Jane Austen fans, dressed in period costume, on Royal Crescent
Image: The Jane Austen Festival 

3. Visit The Jane Austen Centre 

For a snapshot of Jane Austen’s life in Regency-era Bath, visit The Jane Austen Centre. Come face-to-face with Jane Austen as you examine her waxwork, learn more about her life from costumed guides and the exhibition, and go for a twirl in the traditional empire line dress. Upstairs, you will find the Regency Tea Rooms, where you can sit down to ‘Tea with Mr Darcy,' served by staff dressed in full Regency regalia.  


Image: The Jane Austen Centre

4. Take the waters 

During the Regency era, visitors, such as Jane’s brother Edward, came to Bath to cure their ailments by ‘taking the waters.' As well as drinking the water in the Pump Room, bathing in the waters was also very popular, just like today. Thermae Bath Spa is the only day spa in the UK where you can bathe in natural thermal waters, with a stunning view of the city from the rooftop pool. 

Regency visitors also used to drink up to eight pints a day of the spa water, considered to be beneficial to your health – you can still sample a glass of spa water, which contains 43 minerals, at the Pump Room today.  


Image: Thermae Bath Spa

5. Promenade through town 

Promenading was a very fashionable thing to do during the Regency era, as it was a good way to be seen by fellow members of high society. Promenade through the Georgian streets of Bath to experience this popular Regency activity while taking in all the iconic sights.  

Begin at Gravel Walk, the Lover's Lane of Jane Austen's day and the setting for a touching love scene in Persuasion. As you stroll along Gravel Walk, look out for the discreet door into the Georgian Garden, which has been sympathetically restored to how it would have appeared in Jane Austen’s time.  

Follow the Gravel Walk to the Royal Crescent, where Jane would often walk on Sundays after church.  


Image: Strictly Jane Austen & ECT Travel

6. Indulge in an afternoon tea

In Regency Britain, tea drinking was very popular, and Jane would have taken tea in the Assembly Rooms. Nowadays, afternoon tea is the perfect way to celebrate Jane Austen during your stay in Bath. Used as a filming location in the ITV adaptation of Persuasion, the Pump Room is the perfect place to indulge in afternoon tea. Sit back and listen to The Pump Room Trio or pianist play as you tuck into a three-tiered afternoon tea filled with scrumptious delights. 

Alternatively, sample a taste of time gone by at Sally Lunn's Historic Eating House, where the top floor is known as the Jane Austen room. A young Austen wrote of enjoying a Bath bun, and nowhere is more known for this than Sally Lunn's!


Image: The Pump Room Restaurant 

7. Take a trip to the theatre

For a more obscure Jane Austen experience, book a tour around the original Theatre Royal, where Jane Austen would have watched Sarah Siddons, one of the finest actresses of the era, perform. And, if you share Jane’s passion for the theatre, be sure to visit the Theatre Royal Bath. Dating from 1805, the Main House offers a year-round programme of top quality drama, including West End productions, comedy, dance, opera, and Sunday concerts. 


Image: Theatre Royal Bath

8. Breathe in the fresh air 

Jane was a keen walker, and frequently escaped the city on country walks. Follow in her footsteps on a promenade down grand streets, stroll through public gardens and meander along the picturesque canal. As you amble through the meadows of Bathwick Fields, you will be rewarded with spectacular views of the city on the Bath Skyline Walk. Alternatively, follow the self-guided Jane Austen Trail in Sydney Gardens to explore Jane Austen's relationship with the Georgian pleasure gardens, and imagine both the time and the place from Jane's perspective. 

Bath skyline with spires
Image: Bath skyline 

9. Explore ‘Meryton’ 

Explore the picturesque streets and quaint cottages of Lacock, the village which provided the setting for Meryton in the 1995 BBC television adaptation of Pride and Prejudice, starring Colin Firth as Mr Darcy. 

Join Rabbie's Tours or Mad Max Tours for a full or half day trip from Bath taking in Lacock and Stonehenge. Or spend a little more time in this quintessentially English village with a visit to the historic Lacock Abbey, a family home with medieval monastic roots, and a major filming location in the Harry Potter film series. 


Image: Lacock

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