The house I'm renting has a similiar problem. The lightbulbs in 2 rooms were blowing out every week or so, usually when turning on the light. I "fixed" the problem by putting in flourescent lightbulbs, but the whole wiring in this house is pretty much ghetto. In the kitchen, I have 3 appliances on one circuit, the dishwasher, clotheswasher, and dryer. I get to run 2 out of the 3 at any one time, otherwise the breaker pops.
For a refit probably done 30 years ago into a 100+ yr old house, it isn't bad. Then again, a friend of mine tried to move into a house that had just been completely renovated, and the first time he plugged something in the appliance caught fire and then the whole house lost power. It turns out that the electrical contractor had no clue what he was doing, and the owner had to re-contract about $15,000 worth of electrical work since every single bit of wiring had to be torn out and replaced. In these older UK houses, that often means some serious masonry and plaster work has to be done and redone, and that's darn expensive.
I guess it's a balance... Yea the house will stand 200 years, but doing almost any work on them costs about 10 times what it would cost in the states. Contrast tearing out some drywall in the states against trying to reinforce, tear down, repair, and replace a load bearing interior stone, brick, or concrete block wall... Everything is harder here except for complete new-builds, and even then the build volume is so low, prices for "modern" building materials and techniques are sky high assuming you can find a builder willing to use newer techniques. In some areas, the council has forbidden build techniques that don't match the rest of the village/town/city, so you're stuck with load bearing stone/brick/concrete walls instead of framing and sheeting.
The houses will probably last darn near forever but you can forget about inexpensive renovations or power/water/heating/cooling upgrades.
My landlady has a poorly fitting garage door... I asked why she doesn't replace it, and she said that the contractor wanted 5000 pounds to do the job. That's around $9,000 for a simple garage door. Crazy. A custom sized roll-up door in the US would probably cost $500-$1000 to make and another $200 to install, tops.