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LONDON
London (England), city, capital of the United Kingdom. It is situated in
south-eastern England at the head of the River Thames estuary. Settled
by the Romans as an important shipping point for crops and minerals, it
gradually developed into the wealthy capital of a thriving industrial
and agricultural nation. The expansion in the 19th century of the
British Empire increased London’s influence still further. Since World
War II the city’s prominence on the international stage has
diminished, but it remains a flourishing financial centre and home to
one of the world’s most important stock exchanges. In addition, it is
the foremost tourist destination in Britain, a centre of academic
excellence, and one of the cultural capitals of the worldâ€â€well
deserving of the observation by Samuel Johnson that: “When a man is
tired of London, he is tired of lifeâ€Â.
The term “City of Londonâ€Â, or “the Cityâ€Â, is applied only to a
small area known as the Square Mile (2.59 sq km/1 sq mi) that was the
original settlement (ancient Londinium) and is now part of the financial
and business district of the metropolis. The City of London and 32
surrounding boroughs constitute the Greater London metropolitan area,
which covers some 1,580 sq km (620 sq mi). The 13 inner London boroughs
are Camden, Hackney, Hammersmith and Fulham, Haringey, Islington,
Kensington and Chelsea, Lambeth, Lewisham, Newham, Southwark, Tower
Hamlets, Wandsworth, and the City of Westminster. The 19 outer boroughs
are Barking and Dagenham, Barnet, Bexley, Brent, Bromley, Croydon,
Ealing, Enfield, Greenwich, Harrow, Havering, Hillingdon, Hounslow,
Kingston upon Thames, Merton, Redbridge, Richmond upon Thames, Sutton,
and Waltham Forest.
Government and Administration
London is the seat of central government in Britain. The Houses of
Parliamentâ€â€the House of Commons (the lower house) and the House of
Lords (the upper house)â€â€are located at Westminster. Downing Street
(home to the Prime Minister at No 10, and traditionally the Chancellor
of the Exchequer, at No 11), the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, the
Treasury, and the Ministry of Defence are concentrated around Whitehall.
Various other government departments and public bodies are also sited in
central London. Within the Government, the Secretary of State for the
Environment has responsibility for the capital as Minister for London.
The administrative structure of the legal system, and the central
offices of the main political parties, are also based in London.
Over 70 (out of 659) Members of Parliament are returned to Westminster
from constituencies in the Greater London metropolitan area, and the
capital returns 10 of England’s 71 representatives to the European
Parliament. Unlike other major cities, there is no single body governing
Greater London. Prior to the late 1880s, when the London County Council
(LCC) was established, the four counties of Essex, Kent, Middlesex, and
Surrey administered the area, together with the ancient City of London
and many smaller local authorities. In 1965 Greater London was created
under the jurisdiction of the Greater London Council. This council was
abolished in 1986, and today each inner and outer borough and the City
of London itself has its own governing council. The borough councils
consist of councillors elected every four years, who in turn annually
elect their presiding official. Councils are responsible for the
provision of most local services including education, housing, social
services, local planning, roads, refuse collection, recreation, and
culture. They do not control the police (except in the case of the City
of London), fire service, or public transport. London’s Metropolitan
Police Service is the responsibility of the Home Secretary (a senior
government minister). London Transport is a statutory corporation whose
remit is to provide transport for the capital.
The City of London, the ancient heart of the city, has only about 5,000
residents (although well over 300,000 people work there each day). It is
governed by the Corporation of the City of London. Among local
authorities, the Corporation is unique; it is the oldest in the country
and operates on a non-party-political basis. The ruling body is the
Court of Common Council, and this consists of the Lord Mayor, 24
aldermen, and 130 common councilmen. The Lord Mayor and two sheriffs are
nominated annually by the City guilds (livery companies representing
trades and professions and dating back to medieval times) and elected by
the Court of Aldermen. Aldermen and councilmen are elected by businesses
in the City’s 25 wards. The Corporation fulfils the same functions as
the borough councils but has, for historical reasons, retained some
other powers: it is responsible for the City of London Police; is the
health authority for the Port of London; is responsible for health
control of animal imports throughout Greater London (including Heathrow
Airport); and is responsible for the Central Criminal Court (the Old
Bailey).
Population Patterns and Trends
In mid-1994 the population of Greater London was estimated at 6,967,500
(representing about 12 per cent of Britain’s overall population), with
two thirds resident in outer London. Although the population is no
longer as large as in mid-century (peaking at about 8,346,000 in the
1951 census), it has recently been increasing, rising at an average of
20,000 per year since 1984. London’s population is heavily
concentrated (at about 4,409 people per sq km/11,238 per sq mi) relative
to other metropolitan areas in the country.
The arrival of immigrants has contributed considerably to the variations
in population figures, and the capital is the most ethnically diverse
region in the United Kingdom. Ethnic minority communities account for
over a third of the population in the boroughs of Brent, Hackney,
Newham, and Tower Hamlets.
The Urban Landscape
London straddles the River Thames, 80 km (50 mi) upriver from its mouth
at the Nore, where the English Channel joins the North Sea. Most of
London, including its central districts and the majority of its famous
landmarks, lies to the north of the river. The original settlement that
gave London its name was the Roman fort of Londinium, founded in the
first century AD. The City of London is on the site where this stood,
and the description of the Roman town as “a busy emporium for trade
and traders†by the Roman historian Tacitus seems equally apt today.
St Paul’s Cathedral stands on the western edge of the City, and the
Tower of London, the Norman fortress built by William the Conqueror to
defend his new lands late in the 11th century (and now listed as a
conservation site in the World Heritage List), lies to the south-east.
Spanning the river to Southwark (west of Tower Bridge) is London Bridge,
a modern replacement of the only bridge over the Thames in London until
the 18th century.
To the east and north-east of the City are the predominantly
working-class districts of the East End, home to successive waves of
immigrants from Ireland, continental Europe, and the former British
Empire. Lively and industrious, the East End continues to have many
thriving small businesses. The area known as Docklands comprises (on the
north bank of the Thames) the districts of Wapping and Poplar, the Isle
of Dogs, the Royal Docks, and (to the south of the Thames) Surrey Docks.
Docklands is the site of a massive inner city regeneration project. West
of the City lie the ancient Inns of Court (Lincoln’s Inn, Middle
Temple, Inner Temple, and Gray’s Inn), the legal district occupied by
barristers and firms of solicitors; and Fleet Street, once the home of
Britain’s national press (which has now relocated to other parts of
the capital). Further to the north-west is Bloomsbury, the haunt in the
1920s of a renowned group of literary intellectuals (the Bloomsbury
Group), thanks to its proximity to London University and the British
Museum.
The West End is a large area of central London to the west of the City,
containing most of the best-known theatres and shopping districts. To
the south, following the river as it takes a southward bend, is the
administrative core of London and the centre of government: Whitehall,
the Houses of Parliament (officially called the Palace of Westminster),
St James’s Palace (London home of the Prince of Wales), and Buckingham
Palace (the London residence of Queen Elizabeth II). The West End also
contains Hyde Park, London’s largest open space, which leads west to
the districts of Knightsbridge and Kensington, both fashionable
residential areas with such attractions as Harrods department store, the
Royal Albert Hall, and the South Kensington museums. South of the river,
upstream from the Houses of Parliament, lies Lambeth Palace, home of the
Archbishop of Canterbury; nearby is the South Bank Centre, the arts and
theatre complex. Beyond lie other residential districts with historical
associations, such as Dulwich, Clapham, Wimbledon (one of London’s
earliest settlements), and Greenwich (home of the Royal Naval College,
the restored Cutty Sark tea clipper, and the Prime Meridian at the Old
Royal Observatory).
Economy
Economic activity in London contributes almost one sixth of Britain’s
non-oil gross domestic product (GDP). In mid-1995 the total number of
people employed in the capital was 3.1 million (compared with over 3.5
million in 1981). About 85 per cent of London’s employment is now in
service industries, notably in financial and business services which, at
almost 750,000, may be the largest such concentration in any city in the
world. Other service sectors supporting significant levels of employment
include public administration (central and local government and other
official agencies), retail and wholesale distribution, hotels and
catering, education and health services, and transport and
communications. Manufacturing makes up an important, though relatively
small, part of the London economy.
The financial and business services sector makes up over a third of the
capital’s GDP. London is one of the three main global financial
centres (with New York and Tokyo) and is noted for having a larger
number of international banks than any other financial centre; a banking
sector that accounts for about 20 per cent of total international bank
lending; one of the largest international insurance markets; the largest
centre in the world for trading overseas equities; the world’s largest
foreign exchange market; one of the world’s biggest financial
derivatives markets; the greatest concentration of international bond
dealers; major markets for transactions in commodities; and a vast range
of ancillary and support services (legal, accountancy, management,
property, computer, and advertising consultancy). The Big Bang
deregulation of financial markets in 1986 allowed changes in the
structure of the industry that created conglomerates operating across
all markets (although many specialists still exist). The insurance
sector includes general insurance companies as well as life assurance
companies and societies. It is less focused on London than is banking,
but still generates a considerable share of financial and business
services employment in the capital. Lloyd’s of London, an incorporated
society of private insurers (which has had some highly publicized
financial problems in recent years), accounts for about half of the
international insurance market that is based in London.
Tourism is another vital service sector within the London economy.
London is one of the world’s major tourist destinations and a leading
conference venue, attracting over 23 million visitors annually. Of
these, 13 million are from outside the United Kingdom. Tourist
expenditure in London in 1994 reached £6.1 billion (US$9 billion), and
overseas visitors accounted for 85 per cent of this spending. Over
200,000 people work in tourism-related industries within the capital.
There are about 480 hotels in London, approximately a third of which are
located in Westminster. Tourist attractions include the many museums,
art galleries, monuments, historic buildings, gardens, churches, and
shopping facilities. The most popular attractions are the British Museum
(with over 6 million visitors in 1994-1995), the National Gallery,
Westminster Abbey (where the sovereign is crowned), Madame Tussaud’s
waxworks, and the Tower of London.
Manufacturing remains a significant part of London’s economy,
accounting for some 13 per cent of output, but has been declining for
many years. In general, heavy industry in London has been disappearing
since the war, and between 1982 and 1994 the numbers employed in
manufacturing almost halved to approximately 328,000 (about 10 per cent
of total employment). Printing and publishing remains one of the most
healthy industries and accounts for over a quarter of London’s
manufacturing employment. This reflects London’s role as an
administrative, financial, and media centre, placing heavy demands on
printing. Other important manufacturing sectors include electrical and
electronic engineering; food, drink, and tobacco; and chemicals and
synthetic fibres. Generally, manufacturing industries are more
concentrated in outer, rather than inner, London, and five outer London
boroughs (Barking and Dagenham, Enfield, Ealing, Hounslow, and Waltham
Forest) have about 20 per cent of their output in manufacturing.
Transport
Transport is essential to the operation of a city such as London. Its
very development was significantly affected by the advent of the
railways, and more recently the construction of roads (particularly the
orbital M25 motorway) has influenced patterns of settlement and economic
activity. London has one of the most extensive urban railway systems in
the world; in addition to the Underground railway, there is a network of
suburban railways covering London and the surrounding region. Most of
the passenger-carrying Underground lines in central London were built
before 1914. Suburban extensions were added before and after World War
II. The most recent line, the Jubilee, opened in 1979 and in the 1990s
was extended eastward to Stratford. The Docklands Light Railway connects
the City of London with Docklands and other east London destinations.
Most travel is done by rail and Underground, although there is also
considerable commuting by car, particularly in the outer boroughs.
London has about 18,000 licensed taxis.
Railway services from London to Paris or Brussels through the Channel
Tunnel run from the terminal at Waterloo station.
London has three main airports. Heathrow, about 25 km (15 mi) west of
London, is the world’s busiest airport for international passengers
and is Britain’s most important airport for passengers and air freight
(handling about 55 million passengers and over 1 million tonnes of
freight in 1996). Gatwick (south of London) is Britain’s
second-busiest airport in terms of passenger traffic, and Stansted (to
the north-east, in Essex) is the sixth-busiest. London City Airport,
based in the rejuvenated Docklands area, links Docklands and the City to
continental Europe.
The Port of London, covering about 150 km (93 mi) of waterway along the
Thames to the east coast, is the largest port in Britain in terms of
total tonnage of cargo handled and in terms of non-fuel traffic. The
total tonnage handled in 1995 was about 52 million tonnes.
Museums and Art Galleries
London’s museums and art galleries contain some of the most
comprehensive collections of objects of artistic, archaeological,
scientific, historical, and general interest. The British Museum in
Bloomsbury is one of the biggest and most famous museums in the world.
Its collections range from Egyptian and Classical antiquities through
Saxon treasures to more recent artefacts.
The Victoria and Albert Museum in South Kensington is an assembly of
fine and decorative art collections from all over the world. There are
magnificent examples of porcelain, glass, sculpture, fabrics and
costume, furniture, and musical instruments, all set in a building of
Victorian grandeur. Nearby are the Museum of Natural History and the
Science Museum. On the other side of London, in the City itself, is the
Museum of London, which has exhibits dealing with the development of the
capital from its origins to the present day.
The National Gallery in Trafalgar Square contains one of the finest
mixed collections of paintings in the world. Next door is the National
Portrait Gallery, whose collection includes more than 9,000 portraits.
The Tate Gallery, situated on the Embankment between Chelsea and
Westminster, houses the largest collection of British painting from the
16th century to the present day. In 1987 an extension opened to house
the paintings bequeathed to the nation by J. M. W. Turner. There are
plans to establish a new Tate Gallery of Modern Art in Southwark, near
the reconstructed Shakespearean theatre, the Globe.
Other important collections in the capital include the Imperial War
Museum, the National Army Museum, the Royal Air Force Museum, the
National Maritime Museum, the Wallace Collection (of paintings,
furniture, arms and armour, and objets d’art), Sir John Soane’s
Museum (founded by the architect of the Bank of England in the City),
and the London Transport Museum. The Queen’s Gallery in Buckingham
Palace has exhibitions of pictures from the extensive royal collection.
The Theatre Museum displays the history of the performing arts, while
the Museum of the Moving Image traces the history of film and
television.
The British Library, the national library of Britain, has a collection
of more than 150 million separate items. Publishers must deposit in the
Library a copy of everything they publish.
Performing Arts
London is one of the world’s leading centres for theatre, and there
are about 100 theatres in the capital. These include the three
auditoriums of the Royal National Theatre in the South Bank Centre; the
two auditoriums in the London base of the Royal Shakespeare Company at
the City’s Barbican Centre; and the Royal Court Theatre in Sloane
Square, home of the English Stage Company, which stages work by new
playwrights. The largest concentration of commercial theatres is in the
West End, around Shaftesbury Avenue, Charing Cross Road, and the Strand.
In 1989 the partial remains of the Globe Theatre, where Shakespeare
acted, and the Rose Theatre, where his plays were performed during his
lifetime, were excavated on the south bank of the Thames in central
London: a modern reconstruction of the Globe Theatre, near its original
site, was unveiled in 1996.
The principal concert halls in central London are the Royal Festival
Hall in the South Bank Centre (next to which are the Queen Elizabeth
Hall and the Purcell Room, which accommodate smaller-scale
performances), the Barbican Hall, the Royal Albert Hall in Kensington,
the Wigmore Hall, (behind Oxford Street); and St John’s Church in
Smith Square, Westminster.
The leading symphony orchestras in London include the London Symphony,
the London Philharmonic, the Royal Philharmonic, the Philharmonia, and
the BBC Symphony. There are also several London chamber orchestras and
choirs. The Royal Opera and the Royal Ballet, which rank among the
world’s finest companies, perform at the Royal Opera House, Covent
Garden. Seasons of opera in English are given by the English National
Opera at the London Coliseum. English Festival Ballet (founded as London
Festival Ballet) performs at the Royal Festival Hall, and the Rambert
Dance Company provides regular seasons of modern dance in the capital.
There is a wide range of cinemas throughout London. The National Film
Theatre on the South Bank, administered by the British Film Institute,
annually mounts the London Film Festival.
Highly respected music, dance, and drama colleges in London include the
Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, the Royal College of Music, the Royal
Ballet School, and the London Contemporary Dance School.
Parks
Two thirds of London is intensively built up, yet the capital is well
endowed with parks and open spaces. Hyde Park, adjoining Kensington
Gardens, was formerly known as the “lung of Londonâ€Â. Regent’s
Park, to the north of the West End, is surrounded by elegant buildings
designed by John Nash for the Prince Regent (hence its name) and
contains the Zoological Gardens (the London Zoo). Other important open
spaces in London, some of them royal parks, include Green Park, St
James’s Park, Hampstead Heath, Holland Park, Battersea Park,
Parliament Hill Fields, and Primrose Hill. In outer London there are
some extended green areas such as Richmond Park, Bushey Park, Kew
Gardens (incorporating the famous Royal Botanic Gardens), and Greenwich
Park.
Education
London University was founded in 1837 and is the largest university in
Britain, comprising many prominent colleges, institutes, and schools.
These include the medical schools attached to London’s teaching
hospitals (such as the ancient foundations of Guy’s, St Thomas’s,
and St Bartholomew’s), and other renowned centres of educational
excellence, including University College London; King’s College; the
Imperial College of Science, Technology, and Medicine; and the London
School of Economics and Political Science. Other universities located in
the capital include the City University, the University of East London,
the University of Greenwich, Kingston University, London Guildhall
University, Middlesex University, the University of North London, South
Bank University, Thames Valley University, and the University of
Westminster. The Royal College of Art, next to the Royal Albert Hall,
awards postgraduate degrees.
London is also the home of the British Academy, which promotes
historical, philosophical, and philological studies; the Royal Academy
(of fine arts); the Royal Academy of Engineering; and the Royal Society,
devoted to the encouragement of the sciences.
The History of London
Site and Origins
When Julius Caesar overcame the native British forces in a skirmish by
the Thames in 54 BC, he may possibly have left behind an encampment on
the site of what became London; however, there is no firm evidence of
the founding of the city until the Romans invaded again during the reign
of Claudius in AD 43. After another victorious battle, the invaders
founded a settlement on the north bank of the Thames, at a point where
it could conveniently be forded and bridged. This first “Londiniumâ€Â
did not last long: in AD 60 the Roman settlement was overrun and burnt
to the ground by avenging Britons led by Queen Boudicca.
The Romans proved resolute, retook the city, rebuilt it, fortified it
with walls, and thereafter for the next three centuries London
flourished as one of the most important outposts of the Roman Empire
north of the Alps. By around AD 200 the city had a population of about
30,000, and it could boast a fort, an extensive basilica, a forum, an
amphitheatre, temples, and public baths for its citizens. Archaeological
finds have demonstrated the opulence of the villas built by the leading
citizens and the rich lifestyles they followed. London was the natural
geographical site for the Romans to choose as the focus of their colony.
Situated on Britain’s chief river, it formed a bridgehead, a hub for
the military road system, and a superb port for trade with Gaul and the
Low Countries.
Decline and Fall of Roman London
With the growing barbarian assaults on the empire at the end of the 4th
century, Rome withdrew its troops and the Romanized population was left
to fend for itself. Fierce raids by Picts, Angles, and Saxons led to the
abandonment of the city and there is little evidence of urban activity
during the 5th century. As the Anglo-Saxon settlement took root,
however, London revived; by the 8th century trade was prospering again
across the English Channel and the North Sea.
Medieval London
Viking raids in the 9th century affected all England. London was a prime
target and for that reason strategically ever more important for the
survival of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. In consequence London replaced
Winchester as the de facto capital of the southern kingdoms. Time and
again in the 9th and 10th centuries the city was assailed, and
chroniclers report savage attacks and heroic defences. Defence needs led
to the emergence of aldermenâ€â€headmen of the precincts (or wards) of
the city, who served as its military defenders. Here lie the roots of
London’s later local government system.
Though the Viking threat was eventually seen off, the Anglo-Saxon
monarchy could not repulse the Normans. After the defeat of King Harold
at the Battle of Hastings in 1066, William, Duke of Normandy, quickly
installed himself in London, had himself crowned on Christmas Day, and
made it his headquarters, building the White Tower, a monumental stone
keep that was to form the core of the Tower of London. The Normans
restored the walls and rebuilt London Bridge in stone for the first
time. William II, the Conqueror’s son, developed Westminster Hall 3km
(2 mi) upriver from the Tower as his royal palace and a bolt-hole safe
from fractious burghers. Thereafter, the capital’s history was always
in some measure a tale of two cities: the City of London itself, the
square mile first circumscribed by the Roman walls, settled by the
Saxons and Normans, and destined to become the centre of economic
activity; and, on the other hand, the City of Westminster with its two
focuses of Westminster Abbey and Westminster Hall, which became the home
of the royal court and later of Parliament.
The Normans, and later the Plantagenets, made England strong, and London
flourished as their capital and as a port and manufacturing centre. Much
of England’s lucrative trade in wool and agricultural produce was
floated down the Thames and exported via the wharves and jetties just
downstream of London Bridge. Within the walls, skilled crafts flourished
and, especially from the 14th century, these were organized into over
100 guilds, such as the Mercers, Salters, Fishmongers, and Vintners. A
mixture of trade union and employers’ company, guilds were
self-regulating bodies with the power to admit apprentices and appoint
freemen (who thereby became citizens). Trades were localized and often
associated with a particular street that still survives today: for
example, Wood Street, Milk Street, Ironmonger Lane, and Poultry still
branch off Cheapside (“cheap†is from the Anglo-Saxon for
“marketâ€Â).
London developed administrative institutions. From just before 1200
there is evidence of a mayor. This official seems to have had dual
loyalties, being in part an officer of the Crown charged with carrying
out royal business, while also serving as a focus for citizen
loyaltyâ€â€a tension indicative of the often strained relationships
between the City and the Crown in the latter part of the Middle Ages.
Many kings, notably the Edwards, treated the City of London as a milch
cow, a handy source of taxes and revenues. Yet only a foolish monarch
would risk permanently alienating the loyalties of the merchant princes
of the City of London, as Charles I was later to discover to his cost.
From the 15th century, London’s government was conducted from the
Guildhall, an impressive stone building that in part survives. Beneath
the Mayor there was the Court of Aldermen, the Common Council, and the
Common Hall. Tensions often arose among these bodies, and also between
the assemblies and the guilds, but London managed to escape the
internecine urban warfare so common in late medieval Italy. The
emergence of Parliament conferred further importance on London, since
its meetings were increasingly held in Westminster Hall.
London’s prosperity was temporarily affected by the Black Death of
1348-1349, a bubonic plague epidemic that killed up to one third of the
entire population. That did not, however, prove a long-term setback, and
much evidence suggests that London enjoyed self-confident prosperity in
the late Middle Ages. The guilds staged elaborate pageantry with their
calendar festivities, and the Canterbury Tales, written by Geoffrey
Chaucer around 1390, gives a vivid picture of pilgrims setting off to
Canterbury from the Tabard Inn in Southwark, at the south end of London
Bridge.
Tudor London
A great watershed in London’s history was the Reformation instigated
by Henry VIII, furthered by his son Edward VI, and completed by his
daughter Elizabeth I. Unlike the experience of many European cities, in
London the Reformation did not involve mass bloodshed. City fathers and
educated preachers generally cooperated in bringing about a gradual
shift from Catholicism to Protestantism. What proved more disruptive,
however, and yet a golden opportunity, was the abolition of the
monasteries and chantries. As a consequence of the Dissolution, much of
the freehold property within the City and just beyond the walls changed
hands. The Crown redistributed priories, nunneries, chantries, and
charities into the hands of royal supporters who sold them off, turned
them into spectacular houses for themselves, or redeveloped them for
industrial and commercial or residential purposes. The result was a
vigorous land market, and the unleashing of a property boom, with
housing of all sorts for rich and poor alike becoming jammed into every
nook and cranny of the old city and spilling over into the suburbs.
This building boom was both a cause and a consequence of the other great
16th-century change in the capital: rapid population growth. London
boomed from a population of about 50,000 in 1500 to perhaps 140,000 in
1600, and to about 750,000 by 1700. Most of these people had flocked in
from the country, but many migrants came from abroad, often as religious
refugees, such as the Huguenots. These worked in London’s burgeoning
workshops and industries, notably weaving, laboured in the port, or
found employment in domestic service. London was becoming one of
Europe’s great commercial centres, its trade spreading to the Levant,
to Russia, and after 1600 increasingly to North America. London was a
beneficiary of the incessant warfare raging after 1550 on the Continent,
especially the Wars of Religion. The destruction of Antwerp by the
Spaniards in 1572 handed London supremacy as a North Sea commercial
entrepôt.
England’s monopoly trading companies, such as the Russia Company, set
up by royal charter in 1555, and the East India Company (1600), had
their headquarters in London. Its commercial dominance was epitomized by
the career of Sir Thomas Gresham and his establishment of the Royal
Exchange in 1566 as a commercial headquarters. Opened by Queen Elizabeth
in 1570, the Exchange was the City’s finest attempt at Renaissance
architecture, a four-storeyed brick building (later stuccoed) built
around a courtyard with covered arcades and dominated by a bell tower.
Above the arcades were haberdashers, armourers, goldsmiths, drapers, and
glass-sellers. It symbolized London’s growing confidence as a world
trading-centre.
London’s glory was reflected in its cultural radiance. It became a
major book-publishing centre, while the courts of Henry VIII and
Elizabeth I at Whitehall attracted painters, poets, and performers.
London also became the focus for the study and practice of law, centred
upon the Inns of Court: Lincoln’s Inn, the Temple, the Inner Temple,
Gray’s Inn, and other lesser halls, situated between the City and
Westminster. South of the river, Bankside flourished as a lively
amusement precinct, boasting innumerable taverns and hostelries,
cockpits, bull- and bear-baiting rings, and brothels. Theatres sprang
up, notably the Globe (1598), where some of Shakespeare’s plays where
premiered. These theatres were closed by the Puritans in the 1640s as
threats to public morals and order.
Many feared that spiralling population growth would unleash social
disorder. Lurid pamphlets warned about the surge of criminals,
pickpockets, and a disruptive low-life subculture. Yet in the event
Tudor London seems to have been remarkably stable. Much was owed to the
great resilience of its local government system. The city’s 100
parishes operated well as small, face-to-face neighbourhood communities;
the rotation of elective offices absorbed a high proportion of the
citizenry in running their own affairs. Guilds also continued to
regulate trade and employment, integrating outsiders and giving some
semblance of reality to the myth of Dick Whittington (the apprentice boy
who rose to become lord mayor). London was fortunate in remaining
essentially self-governing under its own mayor, rather than having a
royal governor imposed, as with so many other European cities.
Prosperity kept discontent down.
17th-Century London
London experienced several disasters in the 17th century. The first was
political. Growing tensions between the early Stuart kings and
Parliament provoked from 1641 a chain of events that led to the Civil
War. After the City gave refuge in January 1642 to five Members of
Parliament whom Charles I had tried to arrest, the bonds between
Parliament and London became cemented. In August 1642 the king raised
his standard in Nottingham. His flight from London left the way open for
radicals to take over the city.
With war declared, Charles’s first priority was to capture the unruly
city, which would have won the war at a stroke. His chance came early,
before the parliamentary army was organized. On November 12, 1642,
royalists overwhelmed the parliamentary troops at Brentford; to parry
the inescapable attack, London gathered its trained bands in a force of
24,000 at Turnham Green, to the west by Chiswick Common; Charles
hesitated, retired to Reading, and missed his golden chance of seizing
the mutinous capital. London then threw up an impressive defence system,
ringing the City with a vast system of ditches and fortifications.
Thereafter, during the remaining four years of civil war, London
remained securely in parliamentary hands, and the city’s wealth
ensured ultimate parliamentary victory.
Further turmoil hit London soon after the restoration of the monarchy in
1660. In 1665 plague broke out. There had been outbreaks of growing
severity throughout the Tudor and Stuart eras, but the 1665 attack was
particularly severe. Plague erupted early in the summer, especially in
the overcrowded slum areas beyond the walls, peaking in September, when
thousands were dying every week. All who could, fled, leaving it a ghost
town. The diarist Samuel Pepys left moving accounts of the suffering in
a decimated city. The cold winter weather finally put down the outbreak,
but not before it had killed up to 80,000 Londoners.
Soon afterwards came the Fire of London. This broke out on the night of
September 2, 1666 in a baker’s shop in Pudding Lane, just north of old
Billingsgate Fish Market. Drought conditions and a strong easterly wind
meant the flames spread rapidly, all the more so as the mayor was
unwilling to take drastic action by pulling down houses in the path of
the flames. The fire stretched westward for three days, eventually
crossing the River Fleet by Blackfriars and moving into Holborn. About
60 per cent of the old city was destroyed, including old St Paul’s
Cathedral, 87 parish churches, 44 Livery Company halls, 13,200 houses,
Gresham’s Royal Exchange, and the Custom House. Surprisingly, very few
lives were lost.
Sir Christopher Wren and other architects rapidly tendered majestic
redevelopment designs but in the rush to get the city operational again
all such plans were forgotten, and individual landowners and
householders were encouraged to build more or less as they wished on
their own sites. New building regulations, however, stipulated that
post-fire buildings should be constructed of stone, brick, tile, and
slate, rather than of wood and thatch as before. As a result, London
escaped subsequent disastrous fires; the more salubrious urban
environment perhaps also helped stamp out plague.
Restoration to Regency
With Charles II’s restoration and the post-fire rebuilding, London
enjoyed a golden age. Commerce boomed thanks to the success of Britain
as a European power and with the growth of empire. Around 1700,
London’s quays were handling about 80 per cent of the country’s
imports, 69 per cent of its exports, and 86 per cent of its re-exports,
notably tobacco, sugar, silks, and spices. Everything came to London.
Silk, tea, sugar, and tobacco warehouses lined the Pool of London; and
commodity exchanges sprang up, such as the tea exchange near East India
House in Leadenhall Street. Contemporaries described the Thames as a
forest of masts.
Meanwhile, the City of London grew into a world financial centre,
rivalled only by Amsterdam. The Bank of England was founded in 1694 at
more or less the same time as the development of the Stock Exchange,
brokers, and bankers.
Commercial prosperity produced a new urban geography. To the east of the
old walled city, the port’s activities attracted multitudes of working
people who lived in slum conditions in Whitechapel, Wapping, Stepney,
and Limehouseâ€â€sailors, watermen, and all those involved with the
processing and distributive trades that grew up around the port. This
area became the core of the classic East End, the haunt of Cockneys,
especially after the construction of London’s artificial docks early
in the 19th century. Major riverside industries included shipbuilding
(until the 1850s), breweries, and chemical firms; and, in the 19th
century, gasworks, railway marshalling yards, and tanneries.
To the west of the old city the environs of Westminster attracted the
elite. City bankers and merchants, now wishing to live away from their
business, were beguiled by the idea of a smart domicile to the west,
away from the smoke, dirt, and bustle of the city. Above all, landowners
and gentlemen needing a town house were attracted to the West End, so as
to be near Parliament and the royal court at St James’s. The West End
thus developed as a fashionable residential area between the Restoration
and the Regency (1660-1820).
The first major speculative development had emerged in the 1630s, with
Covent Garden, the property of the Earl of Bedford. This he developed as
an elegant residential area focused upon a Piazza, built either on the
Italian model, or in imitation of the Place des Vosges in Paris.
Bloomsbury Square came next, developed by the Earl of Southampton, and
soon afterwards St James’s Square was built up in the 1670s by the
Earl of St Albans as the most fashionable residential area of town.
Development followed development: Hanover Square, Cavendish Square,
Berkeley Square, Grosvenor Square, Manchester Square, and Portman
Square; and linking them were the stylish streets and shops of
Piccadilly, Mayfair, and, slightly later, Marylebone.
The freeholds to these areas were typically owned by principal
aristocratic landowners who would lease out plots of land to speculative
builders who would be compelled to uphold high standards in their
developments so as to sustain high rental values. A chief style involved
squares and terraces of elegant brick-built dwellings in classical
proportions with clean straight lines, tall sash windows, basements for
services, and attics for servantsâ€â€a mode of urban living that was
economical on space yet extremely smart.
The West End also generated entertainment and pleasure centresâ€â€Hyde
Park and other royal parks, theatres, clubs, spectacles, taverns, inns,
shops, bagnios (genteel brothels)â€â€a range of sights and places where
the affluent could enjoy themselves, parade, and mingle in chic company.
By the time John Nash developed Regent Street and Regent’s Park for
the Prince Regent, London was bigger than Paris and was proud of its
reputation as the most lively city in the world.
19th-Century London
Georgian London had remained topographically compact, restricted by the
limitations of contemporary transport. In the 19th century the
metropolis grew rapidly in numbers because a series of major
transportation innovations permitted geographical spread.
From 1829 the introduction of public horse-drawn omnibuses made it easy
for city tradesmen and clerks to live in leafy suburbs such as Clapham,
Chiswick, and Richmond. The invention of the railway then changed things
radically. London’s first railway termini, including Euston, were
built in the 1830s, but it was not until the 1850s that a suburban
commuter railway network began to emerge north and south of the Thames.
Stations were built to get white-collar workers rapidly to their city
offices. Villages rapidly turned into densely built-up suburbs, as
speculative builders crammed villas and terraces into them.
Initially, the railways catered mainly for the middle classes, but from
the 1860s Parliament stipulated that railway companies must run special
cheap workmen’s trains to ensure that the working classes could
relocate from the old central slums to new and affordable housing being
built up particularly to London’s north-east and east around
Tottenham, Poplar, and West Ham. The ability of the working classes to
travel considerable distances to work was also enhanced from about 1860
by horse-drawn trams.
The greatest revolution lay in the underground railway, beginning in the
1860s with the Metropolitan Line between Paddington and Farringdon, and
followed by the Circle and District lines. Initially these were shallow
tunnels built on a “cut-and-cover systemâ€Â, with carriages hauled by
steam locomotives. It was only with the coming of efficient electric
traction in the 1890s that a deep tube system became feasibleâ€â€the
Northern and Central lines were constructed first, and then, in the 20th
century, the Piccadilly Line followed. Underground railways proved
crucial in getting commuters and shoppers rapidly into the very heart of
London without further contributing to the traffic jams that had become
all too common.
London’s growth startled natives and visitors alike. In 1800 the
capital’s population had been around a million. By 1881 it had soared
to 41 million, by 1911 to over 7 million, and by 1940 to nearly 9
million. In 1800 10 per cent of England and Wales dwelt in the
metropolis; by 1900, it was 20 per cent. London had become a “polypus
… a vast irregular growthâ€Â, judged the pioneering 20th-century urban
planner Patrick Geddes, “perhaps likest to the spreading of a great
coral reefâ€Â.
Victorian London was a city of contrasts. The East End was poor, swollen
by masses of immigrants, in particular Irish labourers and Jews from
Eastern Europe. Whitechapel was the haunt of Jack the Ripper. The West
End was rich and fashionable, with stylish department stores, theatres,
music halls, and grand hotels that included the Savoy and later the
Ritz. Such contrasts were depicted by a succession of authors and
journalists, notably Charles Dickens, Henry Mayhew, and slightly later,
Virginia Woolf, and analysed by social scientists such as Charles Booth.
Yet this enormous growth brought immense problems. Health was endangered
as London experienced worsening epidemics, notably of cholera, in the
early-19th century as a result of festering slums, filth, and
deteriorating sanitation. A series of major public health reformers,
notably Edwin Chadwick in the 1840s and his successor Dr John Simon,
battled to improve public health provisions. The crucial sanitary
improvement was the modernization of sewage disposal, thanks to the
vision of Sir Joseph Bazalgette. Completed in 1875, his drainage system
connected every household to main drains that emptied into the Thames
downriver on the ebb-tide, thus reducing the risk of contamination of
the drinking-water supply, much of which was still taken from the higher
reaches of the river. The scheme also involved building the Thames
embankments. There was a growing recognition that London’s government
had become an anachronism. Organized crime had grown in the 18th century
and the French Revolution brought anxieties of massive public disorder
in the metropolis. In the 19th century the capital was still being
presided over by a City of London Corporation and a model of parochial
administration barely changed since the Middle Ages. Dickens and other
critics waxed indignant against parish-pump politics, claiming that the
system was venal, blinkered, and inefficient. Yet vested interests dug
in their heels; above all the Corporation was wealthy, well-connected,
and resistant to reform.
Set up in 1855, the Metropolitan Board of Works was the first local
government body for London as a whole, which possessed a
quasi-democratic character. Set up for “the better management of the
metropolis in respect of the sewerage and drainage and the paving,
cleansing, lighting, and improvements thereofâ€Â, its functions included
planning new roads (two of which were Shaftesbury Avenue and Charing
Cross Road) and the maintenance of London’s public health. It was not
until the late 1880s that a genuinely democratically elected
organization for London was set up. This, the London County Council
(LCC), had responsibility for London’s schools, hospitals, roads,
sanitation and transport system, though the City of London Corporation
still retained its independence and the metropolitan police remained the
responsibility of the Home Secretary.
The LCC had many achievements to its credit in the first half of the
20th century. Above all it initiated an energetic policy of public
housing, decanting working-class Londoners from central slums to new
estates built on the perimeter. It later promoted the building of
subsidized flats in the inner suburbs too. It was also energetic in the
preservation of London’s parks and open spaces, in the improvement of
public education, and in the consolidation of London’s hospitals.
The 20th Century
After World War I, London continued to thrive and sprawl. Electric
trams, the underground railway system, the building of new arterial
roads, the motor bus, and eventually the rise of car ownership led to
the mushrooming of outer suburban dormitory areas 15 to 25 km (10 or 15
mi) from the centre. Some became employment centres in their own right.
The Empire Exhibition of 1924 boosted Wembley, while air travel led to
the construction of London Airport (later called Heathrow), which gave a
lasting boost to the economy of west London. A new suburban culture
highlighted the semi-detached house, built in huge numbers from the
1920s, affordable by the lower middle classes with the aid of cheap
mortgages. It was not to everyone’s taste. “The life of the
suburb,†declared Sir Walter Besant, one of London’s most eminent
historians, was life “without any society; no social gatherings or
institutions; as dull a life as mankind ever tolerated.â€Â
So long as the British Empire remained powerful, London’s economy
boomed, overriding the disruptions of World War I. The City’s
finance-houses, merchant banks, and insurance companies had no equal,
and the port handled immense quantities of trade from all over the
world. London also remained a major manufacturing centre, particularly
for high-quality goods, becoming an early home of the motor-car and
electrical industries.
During World War II, the Blitz, from 1940 to 1941, resulted in massive
damage, affecting up to a third of all London’s housing. Casualties
were substantial: about 20,000 Londoners died and another 25,000 were
injured between September 1940 and May 1941 alone. Bombing continued
throughout the war. Post-war London enjoyed a brief Indian summer, and
in the 1960s the metropolis basked in a reputation as “swinging
Londonâ€Â, thanks to its associations with the world of pop, fashion,
film, and youth culture. Yet danger signals were flashing. The ending of
the empire and the decline in the significance of the Commonwealth
undermined traditional imports and exports and, with freight
containerization, London’s docks closed and moved downriver to
Tilbury. Many of the capital’s traditional industries were collapsing
or were beginning to move out of town, being threatened by strikes, high
wages, rentals, and costs. From the 1970s there was a growing exodus of
businesses and people out of London, moving instead into new towns (some
deliberately planned to take London overspill) and green-field sites
believed to offer pleasanter, cheaper, and safer environments. One
consequence was that many inner-city and inner-suburban districts began
to decline.
This growing sense of trouble, even crisis, coincided with the setting
up in 1965 of a new governing authority to replace the LCC. The Greater
London Council (GLC) represented a greater geographical area (see
Greater London), an indication of the fact that London was continuing to
spread. Hopes were high that the GLC would modernize and revitalize
London. Its housing problems would be solved by high-rise flats, its
traffic jams by a gigantic ring-road system of motorways, flyovers, and
underpasses. All such proposals, however, proved deeply controversial
and were thwarted. Plans to redevelop historical areas such as Covent
Garden also ran into resolute opposition. The GLC itself became the
centre of controversy, partly because of the flamboyant politics of its
socialist leadership. This precipitated its abolition in 1986 by Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher, an act widely read as a party-political
manoeuvre, irrelevant to the real needs and interests of London as such.
Since then, London has been governed by a pot-pourri of agencies; it is
the only major city in the West not to have its own elected assembly or
mayor.
At the close of the 20th century, London’s future remains somewhat
enigmatic. As a great historical city it is a vast tourist attraction.
The capital’s old industrial base has, however, dramatically declined;
unemployment remains high, and crime and poverty are escalating as in
many Western cities. London’s world position depends heavily upon the
continuing success of its financial sector, but the uneasy relations
between Britain and the European Union threaten to put that in doubt.
Meanwhile, being an old city, the upkeep of its infrastructure is
extremely expensive, and its transport system is out of date. Many
believe that the emergence of impoverished, run-down inner-city areas,
the growing contrast between rich and poor, and the absence of a proper
democratic government for the metropolis bode ill for the future. On the
other hand, London has always been multifaceted, with many distinct
growth points, and a mixture of strengths enables it to respond
positively to economic challenges.
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