Title: The History of London
Author: Walter Besant
Release date: February 4, 2009 [eBook #27995]
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Susan Skinner and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
BY
WALTER BESANT
AUTHOR OF 'LONDON' 'CHILDREN OF GIBEON' ETC.
SECOND EDITION
LONDON
LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.
1894
All rights reserved
| PAGE | ||
| 1. | The New Houses of Parliament: designed by Barry, opened 1852 | Frontispiece |
| 2. | Early British Pottery | 9 |
| 3. | Roman London | 15 |
| 4. | Remains of a Viking Ship, from a Cairn at Gokstad | 22 |
| 5. | Martyrdom of St. Edmund by the Danes | 31 |
| 6. | Saxon Horsemen | 33 |
| 7. | Saxon Church at Bradford-on-Avon, Wilts | 36 |
| 8. | City Gates | 39 |
| 9. | Remains of the Wall | 40 |
| 10. | Part of the Roman Wall at Leicester | 41 |
| 11. | Tower in the Earlier Style. Church at Earl's Barton | 44 |
| 12. | A Norman Ship | 46 |
| 13. | Building a Church in the later Style | 47 |
| 14. | Lay Costumes in the Twelfth Century | 50 |
| 15. | Costume of Shepherds in the Twelfth Century | 51 |
| 16. | Ecclesiastical Costume in the Twelfth Century | 52 |
| 17. | Royal Arms of England from Richard I. to Edward III. | 54 |
| 18. | Old London Bridge | 57 |
| 19. | The Tower of London | 61, 64 |
| 20. | A Bed in the Reign of Henry III. | 67 |
| 21. | Interior of the Hall at Penshurst, Kent | 71 |
| 22. | The Upper Chamber or Solar at Sutton Courtenay Manor-house | 73 |
| 23. | The Lepers Begging | 77 |
| 24. | London before the Spire of St. Paul's was burned; showing the Bridge, Tower, Shipping, &c. | 83 |
| 25. | Old St. Paul's, from the East | 85 |
| 26. | Old St. Paul's on Fire | 87 |
| 27. | West Front of St. Paul's Cathedral Church. (Built by Sir Christopher Wren) | 89 |
| 28. | Paul's Cross | 92 |
| 29. | Bermondsey Abbey | 96 |
| 30. | Ruins of Gateway of Bermondsey Abbey | 97 |
| 31. | Christ's Hospital | 99 |
| 32. | Chepe in the Fifteenth Century | 108 |
| 33. | Large Ship and Boat of the Fifteenth Century | 111 |
| 34. | A Sea-Fight | 113 |
| 35. | Durham, Salisbury, and Worcester Houses | 125 |
| 36. | Bear-baiting | 128 |
| 37. | Shooting at the Butts with the Long-bow | 129 |
| 38. | Tomb of Edward III. in Westminster Abbey | 132 |
| 39. | The Embarkation of Henry VIII. from Dover, 1520 | 141 |
| 40. | Coaches in the Reign of Elizabeth | 148 |
| 41. | The City from Southwark | 150 |
| 42. | South-east Part of London in the Fifteenth Century, showing the Tower and Wall | 153 |
| 43. | King Edward VI. | 159 |
| 44. | Sir Thomas Gresham | 161 |
| 45. | First Royal Exchange | 162 |
| 46. | Shipping in the Thames, circa 1660 | 166 |
| 47. | Sir Francis Drake, in his Forty-third Year | 167 |
| 48. | The Globe Theatre | 179 |
| 49. | Civil Costume about 1620 | 181 |
| 50. | Costume of a Lawyer | 181 |
| Ordinary Civil Costume; temp. Charles I.: | ||
| 51. | A Countryman | 185 |
| 52. | A Countrywoman | 185 |
| 53. | A Citizen | 187 |
| 54. | A Citizen's Wife | 187 |
| 55. | A Gentleman | 189 |
| 56. | A Gentlewoman | 189 |
| 57. | Lud-gate on Fire | 190 |
| 58. | Paul Pindar's House | 191 |
| 59. | London, as Rebuilt after the Fire | 193 |
| 60. | Coach of the latter half of the Seventeenth Century | 195 |
| 61. | Waggon of the second half of the Seventeenth Century | 195 |
| 62. | Ordinary Dress of Gentlemen in 1675 | 197 |
| 63. | Dress of Ladies of Quality | 199 |
| 64. | Ordinary Attire of Women of the Lower Classes | 199 |
| 65. | Group showing Costumes and Sedan Chair, about 1720 | 202 |
| 66. | Temple Bar, London | 203 |
| 67. | Fleet Street and Temple Bar | 205 |
| 68. | A Coach of the Middle of the Seventeenth Century | 207 |
| 69. | View of School connected with Bunyan's Meeting House | 209 |
| 70. | Grenadier in the time of the Peninsular War | 211 |
| 71. | Uniform of Sailors, about 1790 | 213 |
| 72. | Costumes of Gentlefolk, about 1784 | 215 |
| 73. | Vessels unloading at the Customs House, at the beginning of the Eighteenth Century | 217 |
| 74. | The Old Houses of Parliament and Westminster Abbey, 1803 | 221 |
'In the year 1108 B.C., Brutus, a descendant of Æneas, who was the son of Venus, came to England with his companions, after the taking of Troy, and founded the City of Troynovant, which is now called London. After a thousand years, during which the City grew and flourished exceedingly, one Lud became its king. He built walls and towers, and, among other things, the famous gate whose name still survives in the street called Ludgate. King Lud was succeeded by his brother Cassivelaunus, in whose time happened the invasion of the Romans under Julius Cæsar. Troynovant, or London, then became a Roman city. It was newly fortified by Helena, mother of Constantine the Great.'
This is the legend invented or copied by Geoffrey of Monmouth, and continued to be copied, and perhaps believed, almost to the present day. Having paid this tribute to old tradition, let us relate the true early history of the City, as it can be recovered from such documents as remain, from discoveries made in excavation, from fragments of architecture, and from the lie of the ground. The testimony derived from the lie of the ground is more important than any other, for several reasons. First, an historical document may be false, or inexact; for instance, the invention of a Brutus, son of Æneas, is false and absurd on the face of it. Or a document may be wrongly interpreted. Thus, a fragment of architecture may through ignorance be ascribed to the Roman, when it belongs to the Norman, period—one needs to be a profound student of architecture before an opinion of value can be pronounced upon the age of any monument: or it may be taken to mean something quite apart from the truth, as if a bastion of the old Roman fort, such as has been discovered on Cornhill, should be taken for part of the Roman wall. But the lie of the ground cannot deceive, and, in competent hands, cannot well be misunderstood. If we know the course of streams, the height and position of hills, the run of valleys, the site of marshes, the former extent of forests, the safety of harbours, the existence of fords, we have in our hands a guide-book to history. We can then understand why towns were built in certain positions, why trade sprang up, why invading armies landed at certain places, what course was taken by armies, and why battles have been fought on certain spots. For these things are not the result of chance, they are necessitated by the geographical position of the place, and by the lie of the ground. Why, for instance, is Dover one of the oldest towns in the country? Because it is the nearest landing ground for the continent, and because its hill forms a natural fortress for protecting that landing ground. Why was there a Roman station at Portsmouth? On account of the great and landlocked harbour. Why is Durham an ancient city? Because the steep hill made it almost impregnable. Why is Chester so called? Because it was from very ancient times a fort, or stationary camp (L. castra), against the wild Welsh.
Let us consider this question as regards London. Look at the map called 'Roman London' (p. 15). You will there see flowing into the river Thames two little streams, one called Walbrook, and the other called the Fleet River. You will see a steep slope, or cliff, indicated along the river side. Anciently, before any buildings stood along the bank, this cliff, about 30 feet high, rose over an immense marsh which covered all the ground on the south, the east, and the west. The cliff receded from the river on the east and on the west at this point: on either side of the Walbrook it rose out of the marsh at the very edge of the river at high tide. There was thus a double hill, one on the east with the Walbrook on one side of it, the Thames on a second side, and a marsh on a third side, and the Fleet River on the west. It was thus bounded on east, south, and west, by streams. On the north was a wild moor (hence the name Moorfields) and beyond the moor stretched away northwards a vast forest, afterwards called the Middlesex forest. This forest covered, indeed, the greater part of the island, save where marshes and stagnant lakes lay extended, the haunt of countless wild birds. You may see portions and fragments of this forest even now; some of it lies in Ken Wood, Hampstead; some in the last bit left of Hainault Forest; some at Epping.
The river Thames ran through this marsh. It was then much broader than at present, because there were no banks or quays to keep it within limits: at high tide it overflowed the whole of the marsh and lay in an immense lake, bounded on the north by this low cliff of clay, and on the south by the rising ground of what we now call the Surrey Hills, which begin between Kennington and Clapham, as is shown by the name of Clapham Rise. In this marsh were a few low islets, always above water save at very high tides. The memory of these islands is preserved in the names ending with ea or ey, as Chelsea, Battersea, Bermondsey. And Westminster Abbey was built upon the Isle of Thorns or Thorney. The marsh, south of the river, remained a marsh, undrained and neglected for many centuries. Almost within the memory of living men Southwark contained stagnant ponds, while Bermondsey is still flooded when the tide is higher than is customary.
On these low hillocks marked on the map London was first founded. The site had many advantages: it was raised above the malarious marsh, it overlooked the river, which here was at its narrowest, it was protected by two other streams and by the steepness of the cliff, and it was over the little port formed by the fall of one stream into the river. Here, on the western hill, the Britons formed their first settlement; there were as yet no ships on the silent river where they fished; there was no ferry, no bridge, no communication with the outer world; the woods provided the first Londoners with game and skins; the river gave them fish; they lived in round huts formed of clay and branches with thatched roofs. If you desire to understand how the Britons fortified themselves, you may see an excellent example not very far from London. It is the place called St. George's Hill, near Weybridge. They wanted a hill—the steeper the side the better: they made it steeper by entrenching it; they sometimes surrounded it with a high earthwork and sometimes with a stockade: the great thing being to put the assailing force under the disadvantage of having to climb. The three river sides of the London fort presented a perpendicular cliff surmounted by a stockade, the other side, on which lay the forest, probably had an earthwork also surmounted by a stockade. There were no buildings and there was no trade; the people belonged to a tribe and had to go out and fight when war was carried on with another tribe.
The fort was called Llyn-din—the Lake Fort. When the Romans came they could not pronounce the word Llyn—Thlin in the British way—and called it Lon—hence their word Londinium. Presently adventurous merchants from Gaul pushed across to Dover, and sailed along the coast of Kent past Sandwich and through the open channel which then separated the island of Thanet from the main land, into the broad Thames, and, sailing up with the tide, dropped anchor off the fishing villages which lay along the river and began to trade. What did they offer? What Captain Cook offered the Polynesians: weapons, clothes, adornments. What did they take away? Skins and slaves at first; skins and slaves, and tin and iron, after the country became better known and its resources were understood. The taste for trading once acquired rapidly grows; it is a delightful thing to exchange what you do not want for what you do want, and it is so very easy to extend one's wants. So that when the Romans first saw London it was already a flourishing town with a great concourse of merchants.
How long a period elapsed between the foundation of London and the arrival of the Romans? How long between the foundation and the beginnings of trade? It is quite impossible even to guess. When Cæsar landed Gauls and Belgians were already here before him. As for the Britons themselves they were Celts, as were the Gauls and the Belgians, but of what is called the Brythonic branch, represented in speech by the Welsh, Breton and Cornish languages (the last is now extinct). There were also lingering among them the surviving families of an earlier and a conquered race, perhaps Basques or Finns. When the country was conquered by the Celts we do not know. Nor is there any record at all of the people they found here unless the caves, full of the bones which they gnawed and cut in two for the marrow, were the homes of these earlier occupants.
When the Romans came they found the town prosperous. That is all we know. What the town was like we do not know. It is, however, probable that the requirements of trade had already necessitated some form of embankment and some kind of quay; also, if trade were of long standing, some improvement in the huts, the manner of living, the wants, and the dress of the people would certainly have been introduced.
Such was the beginning of London. Let us repeat.
It was a small fortress defended on three sides by earthworks, by stockades, by a cliff or steeply sloping bank, and by streams; on the fourth side by an earthwork, stockade, and trench. The ground was slightly irregular, rising from 30 to 60 feet. An open moor full of quagmires and ponds also protected it on the north. On the east on the other side of the stream rose another low hill. The extent of this British fort of Llyn-din may be easily estimated. The distance from Walbrook to the Fleet is very nearly 900 yards; supposing the fort was 500 yards in depth from south to north we have an area of 450,000 square yards, i.e. about 100 acres was occupied by the first London, the Fortress on the Lake. What this town was like in its later days when the Romans found it; what buildings stood upon it; how the people lived, we know very little indeed. They went out to fight, we know so much; and if you visit Hampstead Heath you may look at a barrow on the top of a hill which probably contains the bones of those citizens of London who fell in the victory which they achieved over the citizens of Verulam when they fought it out in the valley below that hill.
The Romans, when they resolved to settle in England, established themselves on the opposite hillock, the eastern bank of the Walbrook. The situation was not so strong as that of the British town, because it was protected by cliff and river on two sides only instead of three. But the Romans depended on their walls and their arms rather than the position of their town. As was their habit they erected here a strong fortress or a stationary camp, such as others which remain in the country. Perhaps the Roman building which most resembles this fort is the walled enclosure called Porchester, which stands at the head of Portsmouth Harbour. This is rectangular in shape and is contained by a high wall built of rubble stone and narrow bricks, with round, hollow bastions at intervals. One may also see such a stationary camp at Richborough, near Sandwich; and at Pevensey, in Sussex; and at Silchester, near Reading, but the two latter are not rectangular. One end of this fort was on the top of the Walbrook bank and the other, if you look in your map, on the site of Mincing Lane. This gives a length of about 700 yards by a breadth of 350, which means an enclosure of about 50 acres. This is a large area: it was at once the barrack, the arsenal, and the treasury of the station; it contained the residences of the officers, the offices of the station, the law court and tribunals, and the prisons; it was the official residence. Outside the fort on the north was the burial place. If we desire to know the character of the buildings we may assure ourselves that they were not mean or ignoble by visiting the Roman town of Silchester. Here we find that the great Hall of Justice was a hall more spacious than Westminster Hall, though doubtless not so lofty or so fine. Attached to this hall were other smaller rooms for the administration of justice; on one side was an open court with a cloister or corridor running all round it and shops at the back for the sale of everything. This was the centre of the city: here the courts were held; this was the Exchange; here were the baths; this was the place where the people resorted in the morning and lounged about to hear the news; here the jugglers and the minstrels and the acrobats came to perform; it was the very centre of the life of the city—as was Silchester so was London.