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In Defence of the City: The Gates of London and Temple Bar in the Seventeenth Century

Author(s):
Medium: journal article
Language(s): English
Published in: Architectural History, , v. 49
Page(s): 75-99
DOI: 10.1017/s0066622x00002719
Abstract:

In the seventeenth century London was a walled city, as it had been since the Romans fortified it around 200 AD. The gates erected by the Romans on the most important routes in and out of the city were rebuilt on their ancient foundations in the medieval period, when posterns (smaller passageways) were added in the wall and a huge ditch was dug around the outside. By the seventeenth century, there were seven principal gates in the old wall: from east to west starting from the Tower, they were Aldgate, Bishopsgate, Moorgate, Cripplegate, Aldersgate, Newgate and Ludgate. On the bridge across the River Thames – the only point of entry to the City from the south – there were two more gates. The ditch, as John Stow recorded in hisSurvey of London(first published in 1598), was ‘of late neglected and forced either to a very narrow, and the same a filthy channel, or altogether stopped up for gardens planted, and houses builded thereon'. This treatment of the ditch points to how the urban fabric had long since pushed through the gates and beyond the old walls; this area ‘without', but still under the City's jurisdiction, was known as the Liberties. In Hollar's map of London in the later seventeenth century (Fig. 1), the walls and gates are a clearly visible feature defining the core of the City, which none the less spreads beyond them, in particular to the west. The limits of the Liberties were marked on main roads by ‘bars', usually consisting of posts and chains, as at Holborn (to the north) or Whitechapel (to the east). Temple Bar, however, situated on Fleet Street to the west of Ludgate, had been made a gateway by the mid-fourteenth century, a reflection of its importance as the main point of transition between the Cities of London and Westminster. As such Temple Bar was considered one of the City gates; it was the eighth gate in the engraved plate that accompanied John Strype's version of Stow'sSurvey, published in 1720 (Fig. 2).

Structurae cannot make the full text of this publication available at this time. The full text can be accessed through the publisher via the DOI: 10.1017/s0066622x00002719.
  • About this
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  • Reference-ID
    10306302
  • Published on:
    01/03/2019
  • Last updated on:
    01/03/2019
 
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