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WHEN THE END WAS NIGH

Scottish Daily Express

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October 25, 2025

From Halley's Comet Panic to impending war in Europe, the Edwardian era is far more fascinating than people realise, writes ROSS MONTGOMERY... and just as relevant today

- ROSS MONTGOMERY

THE GLOBAL success of Julian Fellowes’ Downton Abbey has definitely helped to change that a little, but I wouldn’t be surprised if a lot of people, when questioned, misremember that first series as being set in the Victorian period.

As a result, I approached my research with a sense of dutiful, grudging boredom — a bit like being forced to learn about Roman aqueducts in school. I'd wanted to write a fun, thrilling murder mystery caper... was I really going to have to wade through hundreds of pages of bone-dry material, just to make that happen? “Why couldn’t the Halley’s Comet Panic have happened 40 years earlier,” I hissed through gritted teeth, “so my detectives could ride steam-powered penny farthings to the murder site or something?”

But what I discovered — and what I suspect might be true for a lot of other time periods — was that I was massively wrong about the Edwardian era.

Maybe the key element at play is the one I’ve already touched on: it wasn’t the Victorian age. Britain had just experienced several decades of incredible, dizzying boom, expanding its colonies and becoming the most powerful empire in the world. Now, all that had stalled: in the eyes of the nation, Queen Victoria had died, a golden era had passed and Britain didn’t feel like the powerhouse that it once was. There was a paranoia that things were falling apart: that somehow, for some reason, we were at threat and nobody knew why.

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