You're right that it's all over the place. Ep 1-9, with the Adam and Eve tapestry wrapped in an 1843 newspaper, refers to the paper being "more than 40 years" old.
Ep 2-11 is "dated" 1895. (When repairing a wall, Robert finds a slip of paper, dated 1795, and coin from a previous stone mason; when he inserts his paper and coin for the next mason, his is dated 1895.) That might address your concern about the parish council, but I agree that it's all over the place and that the writers should have had dates nailed down when they were sketching out the seasons, bc even 10 years (1885? 1895?) makes a difference in fashion, laws, politics, attitudes.
About this:
Yet the Act that introduced elections also allowed all women to vote yet in the program it is claimed that only property owning, rate paying women were to vote.
Are you sure?
Downton makes the point that Lady Edith can't vote because she's not a property-owner, and I'm pretty sure that ep is set in 1920 (I think a news item about Tennessee's ratification of the XIXth Amendment sparked her comment). No disrespect intended in asking.
The rent: I was very puzzled about rent being only 1 shilling/month for those particular houses; it seemed unbelievably low, even as a version of subsidized housing for the poor, considering that the Timmons family's windfall of 7 pounds covered a few months' rent on their extremely modest home. Seemed to me that the writers slipped up with the former.
So, yes, many problems. Really sloppy/lazy writing, which is unacceptable when people are paid as well as these writers and producers are.
"All you need to start an asylum is an empty room and the right kind of people."
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