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  1. Oct 10, 2009 · George Austen: Jane Austen’s almost forgotten, invisible brother. October 10, 2009 by Vic. “We have this comfort, he cannot be a bad or a wicked child,” George Austen writing about his second son, George. George Austen, Jane’s second oldest brother is an enigma, rarely glimpsed and hardly known to the world. No image exists of him ...

  2. Sep 23, 2017 · Jane Austen spent her childhood in Steventon, Hampshire. Her father George was the rector of Steventon, a living that had been given to him by his fourth cousin, Thomas Knight. Jane and her family lived in Steventon Rectory, owned by Thomas Knight. Thomas was also the 9th Squire of Chawton, the primary Hampshire seat of the Knight family.

  3. Jun 17, 2011 · George Austen (1766 – 17 January 1838) was actually the second son of Revd. George Austen and Cassandra Leigh. He was born with a mental handicap; hence he was kept away from the rest of the Austen family. It was one of the dark secrets of the Austens that David Nokes elaborated in his 1997 biography, Jane Austen: a Life.

  4. Jun 28, 2021 · While there isn’t a definitive diagnosis for Thomas or George, it has been suggested by some historians that George may have been deaf, as Jane mentioned talking with her fingers in a letter in 1808:

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  6. Jane had seven siblings, six brothers, and one sister. Her brothers were James, George, Edward, Henry Thomas, Francis William (known as Frank), and Charles John. They were all older than Jane, except for Charles John who was born in 1779. The eldest was James, born in 1765. Her one sister, Cassandra Elizabeth, was only two years Jane’s elder.

  7. Dec 16, 2010 · Steventon Rectory, the Austen family home, lay seven miles away from the nearest village of Basingstoke, and so on the eventful night that baby Jane was born, the Austen family did not bother to summon a physician. An 18th century pregnant woman’s corset could be loosened from both front and back.

  8. Austen biographer David Nokes describes George as “excluded and forgotten” (525), and this characterization unfortunately appears to be the proper one when considering the facts of George’s life. As a baby, George was sent away for care by a village family, just as the other Austen children spent their first years.

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