The Hidden Life of Things
Did you know that walking down a British street in 1750 meant looking up at elegant houses with their eyes closed? In this episode, I uncover the hidden history of the window tax. A bizarre piece of legislation that effectively put a price on the sun, turning light and fresh air into a taxable luxury and physically reshaping the architecture of our cities. I trace the journey of this extraordinary tax from its late 17th-century origins as a sneaky way to target the wealthy, to the dark, damp, and disease-ridden tenements it inadvertently created. I also dive into the truth behind a famous linguistic myth; did this tax actually give us the phrase "daylight robbery," or is that just a brilliant piece of historical folklore? In this episode, I explore: The Sealed Facades: Why Georgian homeowners chose to live in darkness, bricking up their windows to escape the government’s reach. The Wealth Trap: How a tax meant for the rich accidentally penalized the poor living in crowded urban tenements. The Daylight Robbery Myth: Why historians quietly argue about the true origins of our favourite phrase for getting ripped off. The Shape of a Tax: Why history isn't just in museums—sometimes it's a permanent physical scar pressed into the brick and stone of the buildings we walk past every day. Music Credits: Track: "Algoma" by Ross Bugden Listen here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gT8dG898eE0 [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gT8dG898eE0]
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