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Bygone London

Chapter 2: Preface.
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About This Book

The work traces the City of London's development from its prehistoric estuary setting through Roman occupation and medieval fortification, presenting compact essays on walls, gates, principal streets, markets, churches, and monasteries. It interweaves archaeological and archival observations with anecdote and episode-focused sketches of areas such as Cheapside and Aldgate, and offers brief portraits of notable civic and ecclesiastical figures and an old local diarist. Organized into concise chapters, the volume combines topographical description, historical narrative, and antiquarian detail to show how urban form, commerce, and religious institutions contributed to the city's vanished landscape and social life.

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Title: Bygone London

Author: Frederick Ross

Release date: December 28, 2014 [eBook #47796]
Most recently updated: October 24, 2024

Language: English

Credits: Produced by MWS and the Online Distributed Proofreading
Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from
images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BYGONE LONDON ***

BYGONE LONDON.

Of this book 500 copies have been printed, and this is

No.......12


Bygone London.

BY
FREDERICK ROSS, F.R.H.S.,

AUTHOR OF
"LEGENDARY YORKSHIRE," "YORKSHIRE FAMILY
ROMANCE," ETC., ETC.

LONDON:
HUTCHINSON & CO., PATERNOSTER SQUARE.

1892.



Preface.

Notwithstanding the multitude of books that have been written relating to its history and antiquities, the History of London still remains to be written, a work that cannot, from its ocean-like infinitude of matter, be accomplished by a single hand, but will require the combined action of a multiplicity of labourers.

By London is here meant, not the vast aggregation of buildings and population spreading into four or five counties but that small fraction lying north and south of the Thames, which is under the jurisdiction of the Lord Mayor of London—that portion which was a considerable emporium of trade under the Celtic Trinobantes; a military post and seat of commerce under the Romans, with roads, of which one still retains its name of Watling Street, in the centre of London, all radiating from a central miliarium, which may still be seen, a venerable relic of sixteen centuries of age, in the wall of St. Swithin's Church; which was a capital city and place of great mercantile importance under the Saxons and the Danes, and has in the subsequent thousand years, gradually expanded its limits, and gathered population, wealth, and commerce, until it has become the capital of the world, in magnitude and wealth unprecedented, to which the capitals of other nations are but as provincial cities: so vast and rich that Blucher might well exclaim, when shewn its banks and docks, its warehouses and shops—"Ye gods! what a place to sack."

Notwithstanding the many books in existence, descriptive of the various phases of London, it appeared to the publishers there was still room for a small, handy, and compact volume, of moderate price, which should give a clear and comprehensive view of some of the more salient features of the bygone history of the old city, which they presume to hope may be found in this volume.


Contents.

  PAGE
The Walls and Gates 1
Episodes in the Annals of Cheapside 34
Bishopsgate Street Within and Without 76
Aldersgate Street and St. Martin's-le-Grand 118
Old Broad Street 142
Chaucer and the Tabard 165
The Priory of the Holy Trinity, Aldgate 178
Convent of the Sisters Minoresses of the Order of St. Clare, Aldgate 197
The Abbey of St. Mary of Graces, or East Minster 208
The Barons Fitzwalter of Baynard's Castle 219
Sir Nicholas Brember, Knight, Lord Mayor of London 239
An Olden Time Bishop of London: Robert de Braybrooke 249
A Brave Old London Bishop: Fulco Basset 262
An Old London Diarist 269
Index 291

BYGONE LONDON.