| MANSFIELDPARK | Jane Austen novel published in 1814 (9,4) |
| EMMA | Jane Austen novel published in 1815, set in Regency England (4) |
| NORTHANGERABBEY | 1803 Jane Austen novel, published in 1817, whose protagonist is the 17- year- old Catherine Morland (10,5) |
| LADYSUSAN | Epistolary Jane Austen novel published posthumously in 1871 (4,5) |
| PERSUASION | Jane Austen novel published posthumously in 1817 whose protagonist is Anne Elliot (10) |
| ABBEY | Northanger ---, Jane Austen novel published posthumously (5) |
| PURDEY | Gunmaker founded in London in 1814 (6) |
| MARQUISDESADE | French libertine, d. 1814 (7,2,4) |
| VIENNA | Site of a congress that was held in 1814-1815 to establish post-Napoleonic terms of peace in Europe (6) |
| RYDE | South coast resort with the oldest seaside pleasure pier in the world, opened in 1814 |
| GHENT | Belgian port where a treaty ceremony was sited in 1814 (5) |
| KEAN | Edmund, tragedian who played Shylock at Drury Lane in 1814 (4) |
| ELBA | Island of Napoleon's exile in 1814-15 |
| EXILED | Like Napoleon from France, in 1814 |
| CAPITOL | Building partly burned by Britain in 1814 |
| THREEGRACES | 'The -', sculpture by Antonio Canova begun in 1814 (5,6) |
| SCOTTKEY | Francis ___, U.S. lawyer who wrote the words of The Star-Spangled Banner in 1814 (5,3) |
| NESTLE | Henri _ _ _ _ _ _, GermanSwiss confectioner born in 1814 who founded a company producing formula milk (6) |
| FORTMCHENRY | Coastal bastion of Baltimore, the site of a successful defence against the British Navy in 1814 (4,7) |
| SAMUELCOLT | U.S. firearms inventor born in 1814 who popularised the revolver (6,4) |