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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Survey of London, by John Stow
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
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-Title: The Survey of London
-
-Author: John Stow
-
-Contributor: Henry B. Wheatley
-
-Release Date: June 16, 2013 [EBook #42959]
-
-Language: English
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-Character set encoding: UTF-8
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SURVEY OF LONDON ***
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 42959 ***
EVERYMAN’S LIBRARY
EDITED BY ERNEST RHYS
@@ -24959,362 +24923,4 @@ Wokendon and Wokenden
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Survey of London, by John Stow
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 42959 ***
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Survey of London, by John Stow
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: The Survey of London
-
-Author: John Stow
-
-Contributor: Henry B. Wheatley
-
-Release Date: June 16, 2013 [EBook #42959]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SURVEY OF LONDON ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Henry Flower and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- EVERYMAN'S LIBRARY
- EDITED BY ERNEST RHYS
-
- TRAVEL AND
- TOPOGRAPHY
-
- STOW'S SURVEY OF LONDON
- WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY
- HENRY B. WHEATLEY
-
-
-
-
-THE PUBLISHERS OF _EVERYMAN'S LIBRARY_ WILL BE PLEASED TO SEND FREELY
-TO ALL APPLICANTS A LIST OF THE PUBLISHED AND PROJECTED VOLUMES TO BE
-COMPRISED UNDER THE FOLLOWING THIRTEEN HEADINGS:
-
-
- TRAVEL SCIENCE FICTION
- THEOLOGY & PHILOSOPHY
- HISTORY CLASSICAL
- FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
- ESSAYS ORATORY
- POETRY & DRAMA
- BIOGRAPHY
- REFERENCE
- ROMANCE
-
-[Illustration]
-
-IN FOUR STYLES OF BINDING: CLOTH, FLAT BACK, COLOURED TOP; LEATHER,
-ROUND CORNERS, GILT TOP; LIBRARY BINDING IN CLOTH, & QUARTER PIGSKIN
-
-
-LONDON: J. M. DENT & SONS, LTD. NEW YORK: E. P. DUTTON & CO.
-
-[Illustration: TO THE WISE MAN ALL THE WORLD'S A SOIL
-
-BEN JONSON]
-
-
-
-
- THE SURVEY
- OF LONDON
- BY JOHN
- STOW _Citizen
- of London_
-
- [Illustration]
-
- LONDON PUBLISHED
- by J M DENT & SONS L^{TD}
- AND IN NEW YORK
- BY E P DUTTON & CO
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-
-Stow's _Survey of London_, from its first publication in 1598, has taken
-rank as the first authority on the history of London, but this very fame
-has been the cause of some injury to the unity of the work, owing to the
-additions of successive editors, whose words have often been quoted as
-if they were written by the original author, although often referring to
-occurrences long after Stow's death.
-
-What the reader of to-day wants, is the original work as it left
-the hands of the veteran antiquary, or as nearly as the change of
-spelling allows, because this gives him a vivid picture of Elizabethan
-London--the city in which Shakespeare lived and worked among a multitude
-of the men and women of those "spacious days," respecting whom we are
-all eager to learn something more. The _Survey_ is a masterpiece of
-topographical literature written by a Londoner of ripe experience, who
-was interested in everything that occurred around him.
-
-Stow founded his work upon documents of great value collected by
-himself, and also upon the splendid series of manuscripts belonging to
-the city of London, to which he had access as "fee'd chronicler" of the
-corporation.
-
-The great charm of the book to the general reader is to be found in
-the personal touches by which we are informed of changes and incidents
-which occurred in Stow's own experience. Of this special feature several
-instances have been singled out, such as the boy fetching milk from
-the farm attached to the abbey of the minoresses, for which he paid
-one halfpenny for three pints; and the staking out by the tyrannical
-Thomas Cromwell of part of the gardens of Stow's father and others
-in Throgmorton Street to be added to his own garden, which after his
-execution came into the possession of the Drapers' Company, and are now
-covered by Throgmorton Avenue. Stow, in his description of the monuments
-of St. Paul's, alluding to the burial places of Sir Philip Sidney, Sir
-Francis Walsingham and Sir Christopher Hatton, says of the latter
-"under a most sumptuous monument where merry poet writ thus--
-
- "Philip and Francis have no tombe,
- For great Christopher takes all the roome."
-
-Henry Holland, in his _Monumenta Sepulchralia Sancti Pauli_, 1614, tells
-us that there is "no doubt but the merry poet was the merry old man Stow
-himself."
-
-During the whole of his life Stow was indefatigable in his work, but
-he kept the best wine for the last. The first edition of the _Survey
-of London_ was published in 1598, when he was past seventy years of
-age, but there can be no doubt that the whole of his previous life
-was a preparation for his great work. He always lived in London, and
-he was interested in every particular connected with his native city.
-Nothing of value in its history ever escaped him, and what he did not
-personally know, he often obtained information of from older men than
-himself. Some of his informants could tell what their fathers saw, so
-that their reminiscences often take us back to a long past time. It is
-this mixture of the personal remembrances of old men with his own memory
-of what he had seen, and his careful examination of places himself, in
-corroboration of tradition, which give such special value to his book.
-
-Stow was always in search of information at first hand, and other
-authors were glad to avail themselves of his wide experience. Sir George
-Buck, when writing the _History of Richard III._, availed himself of
-Stow's information that he had talked to old men who remembered that
-maligned king as "a comely prince." Stow's arrangement of his materials
-is admirable, and many modern topographers might imitate him with
-advantage. He himself acknowledged that the model for his _Survey_ was
-his friend William Lambarde's excellent _Perambulation of Kent_, 1576.
-Some of his explanations of the names of places, being grounded on
-historical evidence, are often of great value, but others are little
-better than crude guesses. This is not to the discredit of an author
-writing in the sixteenth century, but some modern writers, who ought to
-have a better knowledge of the origin of place names, have been unwise
-enough to quote these as possible etymologies. Mr. C. L. Kingsford, in
-his excellent edition of the _Survey_, has corrected most of these from
-trustworthy old documents. Stow improved his book in the second edition,
-published in 1603, two years before his death, but he omitted some
-passages in the first edition which are of interest to us, and which are
-noted in this edition.
-
-Although it is chiefly the _Survey_ which keeps Stow's memory green in
-popular esteem, his other literary productions were highly appreciated
-by many distinguished contemporaries. He found a valuable patron in
-Archbishop Parker, for whom he edited some old chronicles. Among his
-many friends must be named Camden, Lambarde, Savile, Dr. Dee, Robert
-Glover, Somerset Herald, and Fleetwood the Recorder, who hung in his
-study a portrait of Stow inscribed, "Johannes Stowe, Antiquarius
-Angliæ." The "antiquary" was very proud of this honour, and he told
-Massingham, who records the incident in his diary, that he thought
-himself "worthy of that title for his pains."
-
-Stow was born about the year 1525, and came of a good London stock, his
-grandfather and father were tallow chandlers, and supplied the church
-of St. Michael, Cornhill, with lamp oil and candles. Thomas Stow, the
-grandfather, died in 1527, and directed his body "to be buried in the
-little green churchyard of St. Michael, Cornhill, nigh the wall as may
-be by my father and mother."
-
-We have no particulars as to John Stow's schooling, and Mr. Kingsford
-points out that his remarks in the "chapter of Schools and other houses
-of Learning," respecting his seeing the scholars of divers grammar
-schools repair to the churchyard of St. Bartholomew, Smithfield, to a
-scholastic battle of disputation "hardly suggests that he took part in
-their exercises."
-
-The general opinion seems to be that he was self-taught, but it is
-strange that the son of a fairly well-to-do citizen should not have
-been a scholar at one of these free grammar schools. He did not follow
-his father's business as a tallow chandler, but set up for himself as
-a tailor, in a house by the well within Aldgate, over which in later
-times a structure was erected widely known as Aldgate pump. Tailors have
-very generally had to put up with threadbare jokes on their trade, and
-Stow was no exception to the rule. Aubrey reports that Sir Henry Spelman
-said to Sir William Dugdale, "We are beholding to Mr. Speed and Stow
-for _stitching_ up for us our English history," and Aubrey adds, "It
-seems they were both tailors." Stow was admitted to the freedom of the
-Merchant Taylors' Company, on 25th November 1547, but was never called
-to the livery or any office in the company. At the same time he seems
-to have been highly esteemed, and was helpful to the company. He became
-a pensioner about 1578, and received four pounds a year until mid-summer
-1600; this is sometimes called his "fee" and sometimes his "pension."
-At the latter date, when he had fallen upon evil days, his pension was
-increased to ten pounds a year. This information is given by Mr. C. M.
-Clode, under the heading of "the loving brother of this mysterie, John
-Stowe," in his _Memorials of the Fraternity_, 1875.
-
-Stow's first literary work is one that does him great credit, namely,
-the 1561 edition of Chaucer's works, and subsequently he helped his
-"loving friend" Speght with notes from "divers records and monuments,"
-which that friend used in his edition of Chaucer published in 1597. He
-then turned to the publication of the results of his historical studies.
-In 1565, he brought out _A Summarie of Englyshe Chronicles_, which was
-frequently reprinted, also _The Summarie_ abridged, first in 1566, and
-often reprinted. _The Chronicles of England_ were published in 1580 and
-not reprinted. _The Annals of England_ appeared first in 1592, other
-editions issued by Stow himself in 1601 and 1605. Editions continued by
-Edmond Howes were published in 1615 and 1631.
-
-The _Annals_ are much of a compilation, but Stow has made them
-interesting by the frequent insertion of his own opinions and remarks.
-The bibliography of these works is somewhat complicated, but Mr.
-Kingsford has set forth the dates and distinctive characters of the
-different books with much clearness.
-
-Stow early fell into a discord with the chronicler Grafton, and the two
-belaboured one another in print, sometimes having resort to bad puns.
-Grafton sneered at the "Memories of superstitious foundations, fables
-foolishly _stowed_ together," and Stow replied by alluding to "empty
-_townes_ and unfruitfull _grafts_ of Momus' offspring."
-
-Stow's life was a stormy one, and he had much to endure, both publicly
-and in his own family, but his friends helped him through many of his
-difficulties. His younger brother Thomas was ungrateful, and a thorn in
-his side for many years.
-
-In the early part of 1569 he was brought before the Lord Mayor for
-having in his possession a copy of the manifesto of the Spanish
-Ambassador on behalf of the Duke of Alva, but he seems to have been able
-to clear himself. The same matter was brought before the master and
-wardens of the Merchant Taylors' Company. Mr. Clode remarks respecting
-this occurrence: "It is curious to note from the depositions of the
-several examinants how very shy of knowing much about the matter they
-appear to have been. The knowledge or memory of the nine taylors
-examined was too frequently failing them to bring guilt home to any
-brother of the craft."
-
-The trouble about the Alva manifesto drew the attention of the Queen's
-Council to Stow's library, and the Bishop of London (Grindal) was
-directed to have his house searched, and in reply the Bishop enclosed
-to Cecil a catalogue of "Stowe the taylour his unlawfull bookes,"
-amongst these are "a great store of folishe fabulous bokes of old prynt
-as of Sir Degory, Sir Tryamore," etc., "old fantastical popish books
-printed in the old type." Thomas Stapleton's translation of Bede's
-_Ecclesiastical History_ is among the objectionable books. Nothing,
-however, came of all this pother.
-
-Stow appears to have been fairly well off for some years of his life,
-when he spent a considerable amount of money on the extensive collection
-of manuscripts which he gathered together. This library was well known
-to and much appreciated by his fellow antiquaries. Many of the important
-documents are now in the British Museum and other public libraries.
-
-He gave up his business in order to devote himself uninterruptedly to
-his antiquarian labours. Although these labours were much appreciated
-they were not profitable, and in consequence his means were very limited
-in his later years. His poverty was brought under the notice of James
-I., who acknowledged his claims, but instead of giving substantial aid
-the king granted letters patent, dated 8th March 1604, authorising John
-Stow and his deputies to collect money--the "voluntary contribution and
-kind gratuities" of the king's subjects. This authority brought little
-money to the chronicler's wasted coffers, and it was indeed a pitiful
-reward for the well-directed labours of a life-time.
-
-Stow did not long survive this remarkable instance of royal favour. He
-died on the 6th April 1605, and was buried in the Church of St. Andrew
-Undershaft, Leadenhall Street, where his widow erected a terra cotta
-monument to his memory, this, which shows the man as he lived, is one of
-the most interesting monuments in the city of a past London worthy.
-
-Edmond Howes, his literary executor, and continuator of his _Annals_,
-has left a vivid picture of the old chronicler, which completes this
-short notice of one of the most distinguished "Lovers of London."
-
-"He was tall of stature, lean of body and face, his eyes small and
-crystalline, of a pleasant and cheerful countenance; his sight and
-memory very good; very sober, mild, and courteous to any that required
-his instructions; and retained the true use of all his senses unto the
-day of his death, being of an excellent memory. He always protested
-never to have written anything either for malice, fear, or favour, nor
-to seek his own particular gain or vain-glory; and that his only pains
-and care was to write _truth_. He could never ride, but travelled on
-foot unto divers cathedral churches, and other chief places of the land
-to search records. He was very careless of scoffers, back-biters, and
-detractors. He lived peacefully, and died of the stone colic, being
-four-score years of age."
-
-Stow is greatly to be commended for printing as an appendix to his
-_Survey_, William Fitzstephen's _Descriptio Londoniæ_, which originally
-formed an introduction to the same writer's _Life of Becket_. It is a
-remarkable relic, and unique in its interest as a vivid description
-of London in the twelfth century. The author is carried away by his
-enthusiasm, and probably exaggerates the beauties of the city. But he
-is not blind to evils, for he wisely says, "The city is delightful
-indeed, if it has a good governor," and we know that it did not always
-have that. The account of the sports of the citizens is particularly
-valuable, especially the early notice of the use of skates on the
-Moorfields during the winter time. We may be proud as Englishmen that
-no other city in Europe possesses so early a description of a mediæval
-town. It should be noted incidentally that "King Henry the Third"
-mentioned at the close of Fitzstephen's account is not the king usually
-known by that name; but Henry the second son of Henry II. This prince
-was crowned during his father's life-time; but died in 1182, seven years
-before his father. Matthew Paris also speaks of him as Henry III.
-
-An enlarged edition of the _Survey_ was prepared by Anthony Munday after
-Stow's death, and published in 1618. In 1633, four months after Munday's
-death, another edition, in folio, appeared "completely finished by the
-study of A. M., H. D., and others." John Strype took the matter in hand
-in the next century and made a new book of the _Survey_ in two volumes,
-folio, 1720. The sixth edition, enlarged by John Strype, "brought down
-to the present time by careful hands," was published in the same form
-in 1754-5. Strype died in 1737. This edition of Stow is an excellent
-history of London, but most persons will agree with Thomas Hearne in
-his criticism, "Stow should have been simply reprinted as a venerable
-original, and the additions given in a different character."
-
-It was not until 1842 that Stow's edition of 1603 was reprinted, when
-it was edited by Mr. W. J. Thoms, founder and first editor of _Notes
-and Queries_. Mr. C. L. Kingsford produced a critical edition of Stow's
-second edition (1603) which is of great value. It was published by the
-Clarendon Press, Oxford, in 1908. The editor gives an account of Stow's
-collections and MSS., tracing their present location.
-
- HENRY B. WHEATLEY.
-
-
-
-
-BIBLIOGRAPHY
-
-
-Ed. Woorkes of Geffrey Chaucer, 1561; Summarie of Englyshe Chronicles,
-1565; other editions, 1566, 1570, 1574, 1575, 1590; The Summary
-abridged, 1566, 1567, 1573, 1584, 1587, 1598, 1604, 1607, 1611, 1618;
-ed. Matthew of Westminster's Flores Historiarum, 1567; ed. Matthew
-Paris's Chronicle, 1571; ed. Thos. Walsingham's Chronicle, 1574; The
-Chronicles of England, 1580; re-arranged as The Annales of England,
-1592; other editions, 1601, 1605; re-edited by Edmund Howse, 1615, 1631;
-The Successions of the History of England, 1638 (Lourdes); ed. second
-edition of Holinshed's Chronicle, 1585-1587; A Survey of London, 1598,
-1603; enlarged edition by Anthony Munday, 1618 and 1633; by J. Strype,
-1720, 1754; modernised by Wm. J. Thoms, 1842, 1876; by Henry Morley,
-1890, 1893 (with index), 1908; by C. L. Kingsford, 1908; Selections from
-A Survey of London, ed. by A. Barter, 1910.
-
-BIOGRAPHIES.--By Edmund Howe (in Annales of England), 1615; by J. Strype
-(in Survey of London), 1720; by Wm. J. Thoms (in Survey of London),
-1876; by C. M. Clode (in The Early History of the Guild of Merchant
-Taylors), 1888; by C. L. Kingsford (in Survey of London), 1908.
-
-
-
-
- NORDEN'S
- MAP OF LONDON
- 1593
-
-[Illustration: LONDON
-
-FOR LETTER AND FIGURE REFERENCES, SEE PAGE xviii.]
-
-
-
-
-REFERENCES TO THE MAP
-
-ON PAGES xvi AND xvii
-
-
- _a_ Bushops gate streete.
- _b_ Papie.
- _c_ Alhallowes in the wall.
- _d_ S. Taphyns.
- _e_ Syluer streete.
- _f_ Aldermanburye.
- _g_ Barbican.
- _h_ Aldersgate streete.
- _i_ Charterhowse.
- _k_ Holborne conduct.
- _l_ Chauncery lane
- _m_ Temple barr.
- _n_ Holbourn.
- _o_ Grayes Inn lane.
- _p_ S. Androwes.
- _q_ Newgate.
- _r_ S. Iones.
- _s_ S. Nic shambels.
- _t_ Cheap syde.
- _u_ Bucklers burye.
- _w_ Brode streete.
- _x_ The Stockes.
- _y_ The Exchannge.
- _z_ Cornehill.
-
- 2. Colman streete.
- 3. Bassings hall.
- 4. Honnsditche.
- 5. Leaden hall.
- 6. Gratious streete.
- 7. Heneage house.
- 8. Fancshurche.
- 9. Marke lane.
- 10. Minchyn lane.
- 11. Paules.
- 12. Eastcheape.
- 13. Fleetstreete.
- 14. Fetter lane.
- 15. S. Dunshous.
- 16. Themes streete.
- 17. Lodon Stone.
- 18. Olde Baylye.
- 19. Clerkenwell.
- 20. Winchester house.
- 21. Battle bridge.
- 22. Bermodsoy streete.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
- The Author to the Reader 1
- The Antiquity of London 3
- The Wall about the City of London 7
- Of the Ancient and Present Rivers, Brooks, Bourns, Pools, Wells,
- and Conduits of Fresh Water serving the City 12
- The Town Ditch without the Wall of the City 19
- Bridges of this City 21
- Gates in the Wall of this City 27
- Of Towers and Castles 42
- Of Schools and other Houses of Learning 66
- Houses of Students of the Common Law 70
- Of Orders and Customs of the Citizens 73
- Of Charitable Alms in Old Times given 82
- Sports and Pastimes of Old Time used in this City 84
- Watches in London 91
- Honour of Citizens, and Worthiness of Men in the same 96
- The City of London divided into Parts 107
- Portsoken Ward 110
- Tower Street Ward 118
- Aldgate Ward 125
- Lime Street Ward 136
- Bishopgate Ward 148
- Broad Street Ward 157
- Cornehill Ward 168
- Langborne Ward and Fennie About 179
- Billingsgate Ward 185
- Bridge Ward Within 189
- Candlewike Street Ward 194
- Walbrook Ward 200
- Downegate Ward 206
- Vintry Ward 213
- Cordwainer Street Ward 224
- Cheap Ward 231
- Coleman Street Ward 248
- Bassings hall Ward 255
- Cripplegate Ward 260
- Aldersgate Ward 271
- Faringdon Ward Infra, or Within 277
- Bread Street Ward 307
- Queen hithe Ward 314
- Castle Baynard Ward 325
- The Ward of Faringdon Extra, or Without 331
- Bridge Ward Without (the 26th in number), consisting of the
- Borough of Southwark, in the County of Surrey 358
- The Suburbs without the Walls of the City, briefly touched, as
- also without the Liberties, more at large described 374
- Liberties of the Duchy of Lancaster 393
- The City of Westminster, with the Antiquities, Bounds, and
- Liberties thereof 398
- Spiritual or Ecclesiastical Government 422
- Parish Churches 434
- Hospitals in this City and Suburbs 438
- Of Leprous People and Lazar Houses 440
- Temporal Government of this City 442
- Aldermen and Sheriffs of London 474
- Officers belonging to the Lord Mayor's House 474
- Sheriffs of London; their Officers 475
- Mayor and Sheriffs' Livery 475
- Companies of London placed at the Mayor's Feast 476
- Liveries worn by Citizens at Triumphs 479
- An Apology, or Defence, against the Opinion of some Men, which
- think that the Greatness of that City standeth not with the
- Profit and Security of this Realm 482
- The Singularities of the City of London 485
- An Appendix 498
- Fitzstephen's Description of London 501
- INDEX 511
-
-
-
-
- A
- SVRVAY OF
- LONDON.
-
-
- Conteyning the Originall, Antiquity,
- Increase, Moderne estate, and description of that
- City, written in the yeare 1598, by Iohn Stow
- Citizen of London.
-
- Since by the same Author increased,
- with diuers rare notes of Antiquity, and
- _published in the yeare_,
- 1603.
-
- _Also an Apologie (or defence) against the_
- opinion of some men, concerning that Citie,
- the greatnesse thereof.
-
- VVith an Appendix, contayning in Latine
- _Libellum de situ & nobilitate Londini_: Written by
- William Fitzstephen, in the raigne of
- Henry the second.
-
-
- Imprinted by Iohn Windet, Printer to the honorable
- Citie of London.
-
- 1603.
-
-
-
-
-TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE
-
-ROBERT LEE
-
-LORD MAYOR OF THE CITY OF LONDON
-
-TO THE COMMONALTY AND CITIZENS OF THE SAME
-
-JOHN STOW, CITIZEN, WISHETH LONG HEALTH AND FELICITY
-
-
-Since the first publishing of the perambulation of Kent by that learned
-gentleman, William Lambert, Esq., I have heard of sundry other able
-persons to have (according to the desire of that author) essayed to do
-somewhat for the particular shires and counties where they were born or
-dwelt; of which none that I know (saving John Norden, for the counties
-of Middlesex and Hertford) have vouchsafed their labour to the common
-good in that behalf. And, therefore, concurring with the first, in the
-same desire to have drawn together such special descriptions of each
-place, as might not only make up a whole body of the English chorography
-amongst ourselves, but also might give occasion and courage to M. Camden
-to increase and beautify his singular work of the whole, to the view of
-the learned that be abroad, I have attempted the discovery of London,
-my native soil and country, at the desire and persuasion of some of my
-good friends, as well because I have seen sundry antiquities myself
-touching that place, as also for that through search of records to other
-purposes, divers written helps are come to my hands, which few others
-have fortuned to meet withall; it is a service that most agreeth with
-my professed travels; it is a duty that I willingly owe to my native
-mother and country, and an office that of right I hold myself bound
-in love to bestow upon the politic body and members of the same. What
-London hath been of ancient time men may here see, as what it is now
-every man doth behold. I know that the argument, being of the chief and
-principal city of the land, required the pen of some excellent artisan,
-but fearing that none would attempt and finish it, as few have essayed
-any, I chose rather (amongst other my labours) to handle it after my
-plain manner, than to leave it unperformed. Touching the dedication, I
-am not doubtful where to seek my patron, since you be a politic estate
-of the city, as the walls and buildings be the material parts of the
-same. To you, therefore, do I address this my whole labour, as well that
-by your authority I may be protected, as warranted by your own skill and
-understanding of that which I have written. I confess that I lacked my
-desire to the accomplishment of some special parts,[1] which some other
-of better ability promised to perform; but as I then professed, have
-since out of mine old store-house added to this work many rare notes of
-antiquity, as may appear to the reader, which I do afford in all duty,
-and recommend to your view, my labours to your consideration, and myself
-to your service, during life, in this or any other.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[1] The Dedication of the first edition is precisely the same, except in
-the concluding paragraph, which there stands as follows:--
-
-"I confess that I lacked my desire to the accomplishment of some
-speciall partes: but I trust hereafter that shal be supplied, and I
-professe (if more touching this worke come unto me) to afforde it, in
-all dutie. In the meantime I recommend this to your view, my laboures
-to your consideration, and myself to your service (as I have professed
-during life) in this or any other."
-
-
-
-
-THE AUTHOR TO THE READER
-
-
-Because amongst others mine authors, I have oftentimes alleged
-Fitz-Stephens as one more choice than other, namely, for the ancient
-estate of this city, more than four hundred years since: and also the
-said author being rare, I have in this place thought good by impression
-to impart the same to my loving friends, the learned antiquaries, as the
-author wrote it in the Latin tongue; and first to note in effect what
-Master Bale, in commendation of the said author, writeth:
-
-"William Stephanides, or Fitzstephen, a monk of Canterbury, born of
-worshipful parents in the city of London, well brought up at the first
-under good masters, did more and more increase in honest conditions and
-learning; for ever in his young years there appeared in him a certain
-light of a gentleman-like disposition, which promised many good things,
-afterwards by him performed. Such time as other spent in brawls and idle
-talk, he employed in wholesome exercises for the honour of his country,
-following therein the example of Plato, and was very studious both in
-humanity and divinity."
-
-The city of London, his birth-place, the most noble of all other cities
-of this land, and the prince's seat, situated in the south part of this
-island, he loved above all the other, so that at length he wrote most
-elegantly in Latin of the site and rights of the same. Leland, in divers
-of his books, commendeth him for an excellent writer. He lived in the
-reign of King Stephen, wrote in the reign of Henry II., and deceased in
-the year of Christ 1191, in the reign of Richard I.
-
-
-
-
-THE SURVEY OF LONDON
-
-CONTAINING
-
-THE ORIGINAL, ANTIQUITY, INCREASE, MODERN ESTATE, AND DESCRIPTION OF
-THAT CITY
-
-
-As the Roman writers,[2] to glorify the city of Rome, derive the
-original thereof from gods and demi-gods, by the Trojan progeny, so
-Geoffrey of Monmouth, the Welsh historian, deduceth the foundation
-of this famous city of London, for the greater glory thereof, and
-emulation of Rome, from the very same original. For he reporteth that
-Brute, lineally descended from the demi-god Æneas, the son of Venus,
-daughter of Jupiter, about the year of the world 2855, and 1108 before
-the nativity of Christ, built this city near unto the river now called
-Thames, and named it Troynovant, or Trenovant. But herein, as Livy,
-the most famous historiographer of the Romans, writeth, antiquity is
-pardonable, and hath an especial privilege, by interlacing divine
-matters with human, to make the first foundation of cities more
-honourable, more sacred, and, as it were, of greater majesty.
-
-King Lud (as the aforesaid Geoffrey of Monmouth noteth) afterwards
-not only repaired this city, but also increased the same with fair
-buildings, towers, and walls, and after his own name called it
-Caire-Lud,[3] as Lud's town; and the strong gate which he built in the
-west part of the city he likewise, for his own honour, named Ludgate.
-
-This Lud had issue two sons, Androgeus and Theomantius, who being not
-of age to govern at the death of their father, their uncle Cassibelan
-took upon him the crown; about the eighth year of whose reign, Julius
-Cæsar arrived in this land with a great power of Romans to conquer it;
-the manner of which conquest I will summarily set down out of his own
-Commentaries, which are of far better credit than the relations of
-Geoffrey Monmouth.
-
-The chief government of the Britons, and ordering of the wars, was then
-by common advice committed to Cassibelan, whose seigniory was separated
-from the cities towards the sea-coast by the river called Thames, about
-fourscore miles from the sea. This Cassibelan, in times past, had made
-continual war upon the cities adjoining; but the Britons being moved
-with the Roman invasion, had resolved in that necessity to make him
-their sovereign, and general of the wars (which continued hot between
-the Romans and them); but in the meanwhile the Troynovants, which was
-then the strongest city well near of all those countries (and out of
-which city a young gentleman, called Mandubrace, upon confidence of
-Cæsar's help, came unto him into the mainland of Gallia, now called
-France, and thereby escaped death, which he should have suffered at
-Cassibelan's hand), sent their ambassadors to Cæsar, promising to yield
-unto him, and to do what he should command them instantly, desiring him
-to protect Mandubrace from the furious tyranny of Cassibelan, and to
-send him into their city with authority to take the government thereof
-upon him. Cæsar accepted the offer, and appointed them to give unto him
-forty hostages, and withal to find him grain for his army; and so sent
-he Mandubrace unto them.
-
-When others saw that Cæsar had not only defended the Trinobants against
-Cassibelan, but had also saved them harmless from the pillage of his own
-soldiers, then did the Conimagues, Segontians, Ancalits, Bibrokes, and
-Cassians, likewise submit themselves unto him; and by them he learned
-that not far thence was Cassibelan's town, fortified with woods and
-marsh ground, into the which he had gathered a great number both of men
-and cattle.
-
-For the Britons call that a town (saith Cæsar), when they have fortified
-a cumbersome wood with a ditch and rampart, and thither they resort to
-abide the approach of their enemies; to this place therefore marched
-Cæsar with his legions; he found it excellently fortified, both of
-nature and by man's advice; nevertheless, he resolved to assault it in
-two several places at once, whereupon the Britons, being not able to
-endure the force of the Romans, fled out at another part, and left the
-town unto him: a great number of cattle he found there, and many of the
-Britons he slew, and others he took in the chase.
-
-Whilst these things were doing in these quarters, Cassibelan sent
-messengers into Kent, which lieth upon the sea, in which there reigned
-then four particular kings, named Cingetorex, Carvill, Taximagull, and
-Segonax, whom he commanded to raise all their forces, and suddenly to
-set upon and assault the Romans in their trenches by the sea-side; the
-which, when the Romans perceived, they sallied out upon them, slew a
-great sort of them, and taking Cingetorex their noble captain prisoner,
-retired themselves to their camp in good safety.
-
-When Cassibelan heard of this, and had formerly taken many other losses,
-and found his country sore wasted, and himself left almost alone by the
-defection of the other cities, he sent ambassadors by Comius of Arras
-to Cæsar, to intreat with him concerning his own submission; the which
-Cæsar did accept, and taking hostages, assessed the realm of Britain to
-a yearly tribute, to be paid to the people of Rome, giving strait charge
-to Cassibelan that he should not seek any revenge upon Mandubrace or the
-Trinobantes, and so withdrew his army to the sea again.
-
-Thus far out of Cæsar's Commentaries concerning this history, which
-happened in the year before Christ's nativity 54. In all which process
-there is for this purpose to be noted, that Cæsar nameth the city of
-Trinobantes, which hath a resemblance with Troynova, or Trinobantum,
-having no greater difference in the orthography than changing b into
-v, and yet maketh an error whereof I will not argue; only this I will
-note, that divers learned men do not think "_civitas Trinobantum_" to
-be well and truly translated, "the city of the Trinobantes;" but it
-should rather be the state, commonalty, or seigniory of the Trinobantes;
-for that Cæsar in his Commentaries useth the word _civitas_, only
-for a people living under one and the selfsame prince and law; but
-certain it is that the cities of the Britons were in those days neither
-artificially built with houses, nor strongly walled with stone, but were
-only thick and cumbersome woods, plashed within and trenched about. And
-the like in effect do other the Roman and Greek authors directly affirm,
-as Strabo, Pomponius Mela, and Dion a senator of Rome, which flourished
-in the several reigns of the Roman emperors, Tiberius, Claudius,
-Domitian, and Severus; to wit, that before the arrival of the Romans the
-Britons had no towns, but called that a town which had a thick entangled
-wood, defended, as I said, with a ditch and bank, the like whereof,
-the Irishmen, our next neighbours, do at this day call Fastness.[4]
-But after that these hither parts of Britain were reduced into the
-form of a province by the Romans, who sowed the seeds of civility over
-all Europe; this city, whatsoever it was before, began to be renowned,
-and of fame. For Tacitus, who first of all authors nameth it Londinum,
-saith, that in the 62nd year after Christ, it was, albeit no colony
-of the Romans, yet most famous for the great multitude of merchants,
-provision, and intercourse. At which time, in that notable revolt of the
-Britons from Nero, in which 70,000 Romans and their confederates were
-slain, this city, with Verulam, near St. Albans, and Maldon in Essex,
-then all famous, were ransacked and spoiled. For Suetonius Paulinus,
-then lieutenant for the Romans in this isle, abandoned it, as not then
-fortified, and left it to the spoil.
-
-Shortly after, Julius Agricola, the Roman lieutenant, in the time
-of Domitian, was the first that by adhorting the Britons publicly,
-and helping them privately, won them to build houses for themselves,
-temples for the gods, and courts for justice, to bring up the noblemen's
-children in good letters and humanity, and to apparel themselves
-Roman-like, whereas before (for the most part) they went naked, painting
-their bodies, etc., as all the Roman writers have observed.
-
-True it is, I confess, that afterwards many cities and towns in
-Britain, under the government of the Romans, were walled with stone
-and baked bricks or tiles, as Richborrow or Ryptacester,[5] in
-the Isle of Thanet, until the channel altered his course, beside
-Sandwich in Kent; Verulamium,[6] beside St. Albans, in Hertfordshire;
-Cilcester[7] in Hampshire; Wroxcester[8] in Shropshire; Kencester[9]
-in Herefordshire, three miles from Hereford town; Ribcester,[10] seven
-miles above Preston, on the water of Rible; Aldburgh,[11] a mile from
-Boroughbridge, or Watling Street, on Ure river, and others; and no doubt
-but this city of London was also walled with stone, in the time of the
-Roman government here, but yet very lately, for it seemeth not to have
-been walled in the year of our Lord 296, because in that year, when
-Alectus the tyrant was slain in the field, the Franks easily entered
-London and had sacked the same, had not God, of his great favour, at the
-very instant, brought along the river of Thames, certain bands of Roman
-soldiers, who slew those Franks in every street of the city.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[2] "As Rome, the chiefe citie of the world, to glorifie it selfe, drew
-her originall from the gods, goddesses, and demy gods, by the Trojan
-progeny, so this famous citie of London for greater glorie, and in
-emulation of Rome, deriveth itselfe from the very same originall. For,
-as Jeffreye of Monmoth, the Welche historian, reporteth, Brute descended
-from the demy god Eneas, the sonne of Venus, daughter of Jupiter, aboute
-the yeare of the world 2855, the yeare before Christe's nativitie, 1108,
-builded a citie neare unto a river now called Thames, and named it
-Troynovant, or Trenovant."--_1st edition_, 1598.
-
-[3] _Cair Lundein_, in the list of ancient British cities, preserved in
-Nennius.
-
-[4] "The like whereof the Irishmen, our next neighbours, doe at this day
-call _paces_."--_1st edition_, p. 4.
-
-[5] Richborough, about one mile and a half from Sandwich, the _Rutupium_
-of the Romans, was a place of great importance until destroyed by the
-Danes in 1010.
-
-[6] On the banks of the river Verlam, opposite to St. Alban's, which is
-supposed to have arisen out of its ruin.
-
-[7] Silchester, in Hampshire, seven miles from Basingstoke; the _Caer
-Segont_ of the Britons, and _Segontium_ of the Romans, and _Silcester_
-of the Saxons. Leland states its walls to have been two miles in compass.
-
-[8] Wroxeter, five miles from Shrewsbury. Its walls are stated to have
-been three yards in thickness, and to have extended for a circumference
-of three miles.
-
-[9] Kenchester, three miles from Hereford, supposed to be the
-_Ariconium_ of the Romans.
-
-[10] Ribchester, six miles from Blackburn, in Lancashire, supposed to be
-the _Rego-dunum_ of the Romans.
-
-[11] Aldborough, in the West Riding of Yorkshire, the _Isurium
-Brigantium_ of the Romans.
-
-
-
-
-WALL ABOUT THE CITY OF LONDON
-
-
-In a few years after, as Simeon of Durham, an ancient writer, reporteth,
-Helen, the mother of Constantine the Great, was the first that inwalled
-this city, about the year of Christ 306; but however those walls of
-stone might have been built by Helen, yet the Britons, I know, had no
-skill of building with stone, as it may appear by that which followeth,
-about the year of Christ 399, when Arcadius and Honorius, the sons of
-Theodosius Magnus, governed the empire, the one in the east, the other
-in the west; for Honorius having received Britain, the city of Rome was
-invaded and destroyed by the Goths, after which time the Romans left
-to rule in Britain, as being employed in defence of their territories
-nearer home, whereupon the Britons not able to defend themselves against
-the invasions of their enemies, were many years together under the
-oppression of two most cruel nations, the Scots and Picts, and at the
-length were forced to send their ambassadors with letters and lamentable
-supplications to Rome, requiring aid and succour from thence, upon
-promise of their continual fealty, so that the Romans would rescue
-them out of the hands of their enemies. Hereupon the Romans sent unto
-them a legion of armed soldiers, which coming into this island, and
-encountering with the enemies, overthrew a great number of them, and
-drove the rest out of the frontiers of the country; and so setting
-the Britons at liberty, counselled them to make a wall, extending all
-along between the two seas, which might be of force to keep out their
-evil neighbours, and then returned home with great triumph. The Britons
-wanting masons built that wall, not of stone as they were advised, but
-made it of turf, and that so slender, that it served little or nothing
-at all for their defence, and the enemy perceiving that the Roman
-legion was returned home, forthwith arrived out of their boats, invaded
-the borders, overcame the country, and, as it were, bore down all that
-was before them.
-
-Whereupon ambassadors were eftsoon dispatched to Rome, lamentably
-beseeching that they would not suffer their miserable country to be
-utterly destroyed: then again another legion was sent, which coming upon
-a sudden, made a great slaughter of the enemy, and chased him home, even
-to his own country. These Romans at their departure, told the Britons
-plainly, that it was not for their ease or leisure to take upon them any
-more such long and laborious journeys for their defence, and therefore
-bade them practice the use of armour and weapons, and learn to withstand
-their enemies, whom nothing else did make so strong as their faint heart
-and cowardice; and for so much as they thought that it would be no small
-help and encouragement unto their tributary friends whom they were now
-forced to forsake,[12] they built for them a wall of hard stone from the
-west sea to the east sea, right between those two cities, which were
-there made to keep out the enemy, in the selfsame place where Severus
-before had cast his trench. The Britons also putting to their helping
-hands as labourers.
-
-This wall they built eight feet thick in breadth, and twelve feet in
-height, right, as it were by a line, from east to west, as the ruins
-thereof remaining in many places until this day do make to appear. Which
-work, thus perfected, they give the people strait charge to look well to
-themselves, they teach them to handle their weapons, and they instruct
-them in warlike feats. And lest by the sea-side southwards, where their
-ships lay at harbour, the enemy should come on land, they made up
-sundry bulwarks, each somewhat distant from the other, and so bid them
-farewell, as minding no more to return. This happened in the days of the
-Emperor Theodosius the younger, almost 500 years after the first arrival
-of the Romans here, about the year after Christ's incarnation 434.
-
-The Britons after this, continuing a lingering and doubtful war with
-the Scots and Picts, made choice of Vortigern to be their king and
-leader, which man (as saith Malmesbury[13]) was neither valorous of
-courage, nor wise of counsel, but wholly given over to the unlawful
-lusts of his flesh; the people likewise, in short time, being grown
-to some quietness, gave themselves to gluttony and drunkenness, pride,
-contention, envy, and such other vices, casting from them the yoke of
-Christ. In the mean season, a bitter plague fell among them, consuming
-in short time such a multitude that the quick were not sufficient to
-bury the dead; and yet the remnant remained so hardened in sin, that
-neither death of their friends, nor fear of their own danger, could cure
-the mortality of their souls, whereupon a greater stroke of vengeance
-ensued upon the whole sinful nation. For being now again infested with
-their old neighbours the Scots and Picts, they consult with their king
-Vortigern,[14] and send for the Saxons, who shortly after arrived here
-in Britain, where, saith Bede, they were received as friends; but as it
-proved, they minded to destroy the country as enemies; for after that
-they had driven out the Scots and Picts, they also drove the Britons,
-some over the seas, some into the waste mountains of Wales and Cornwall,
-and divided the country into divers kingdoms amongst themselves.
-
-These Saxons were likewise ignorant of building with stone until the
-year 680; for then it is affirmed that Benet, abbot of Wirrall,[15]
-master to the reverend Bede, first brought artificers of stone houses
-and glass windows into this island amongst the Saxons, arts before that
-time unto them unknown, and therefore used they but wooden buildings.
-And to this accordeth Policronicon, who says, "that then had ye wooden
-churches, nay wooden chalices and golden priests, but since golden
-chalices and wooden priests." And to knit up this argument, King Edgar
-in his charter to the abbey of Malmesbury, dated the year of Christ 974,
-hath words to this effect: "All the monasteries in my realm, to the
-outward sight, are nothing but worm-eaten and rotten timber and boards,
-and that worse is, within they are almost empty, and void of Divine
-service."
-
-Thus much be said for walling, not only in respect of this city, but
-generally also of the first within the realm. Now to return to our
-Trinobant (as Cæsar hath it), the same is since by Tacitus, Ptolemæus,
-and Antoninus, called Londinium, Longidinum; of Ammiamus, Lundinum,
-and Augusta, who calleth it an ancient city; of our Britons, Lundayne;
-of the old Saxons, Lundenceaster, Lundenbrig, Londennir; of strangers
-Londra and Londres; of the inhabitants, London; whereof you may read a
-more large and learned discourse, and how it took the name, in that
-work of my loving friend, Master Camden, now Clarencieux, which is
-called _Britannia_.
-
-This city of London having been destroyed and burnt by the Danes and
-other Pagan enemies, about the year of Christ 839, was by Alfred, king
-of the West Saxons, in the year 886, repaired, honourably restored, and
-made again habitable. Who also committed the custody thereof unto his
-son-in-law, Ethelred, Earl of Mercia, unto whom before he had given his
-daughter Ethelfled.
-
-And that this city was then strongly walled may appear by divers
-accidents, whereof William of Malmsbury hath, that about the year of
-Christ 994, the Londoners shut up their gates, and defended their king
-Ethelred within their walls against the Danes.
-
-In the year 1016,[16] Edmund Ironsides reigning over the West Saxons,
-Canute the Dane bringing his navy into the west part of the bridge, cast
-a trench about the city of London, and then attempted to have won it by
-assault, but the citizens repulsed him, and drove them from their walls.
-
-Also, in the year 1052, Earl Goodwin, with his navy, sailed up by the
-south end of the bridge, and so assailed the walls of this city.
-
-William Fitzstephen, in the reign of King Henry II., writing of the
-walls of this city, hath these words: "The wall is high and great, well
-towered on the north side, with due distances between the towers. On the
-south side also the city was walled and towered, but the fishful river
-of Thames, with his ebbing and flowing, hath long since subverted them."
-
-By the north side, he meaneth from the river of Thames in the east to
-the river of Thames in the west, for so stretched the wall in his time,
-and the city being far more in length from east to west than in breadth
-from south to north, and also narrower at both ends than in the midst,
-is therefore compassed with the wall on the land side, in form of a bow,
-except denting in betwixt Cripplegate and Aldersgate; but the wall on
-the south side, along by the river of Thames, was straight as the string
-of a bow, and all furnished with towers or bulwarks (as we now term
-them) in due distance every one from other, as witnesseth our author,
-and ourselves may behold from the land side. This may suffice for proof
-of a wall, and form thereof, about this city, and the same to have been
-of great antiquity as any other within this realm.
-
-And now touching the maintenance and reparing the said wall. I read,
-that in the year 1215, the 16th of King John,[17] the barons, entering
-the city by Aldgate, first took assurance of the citizens, then brake
-into the Jews' houses, searched their coffers to fill their own purses,
-and after with great diligence repaired the walls and gates of the
-city with stone taken from the Jews' broken houses. In the year 1257,
-Henry III. caused the walls of this city, which were sore decayed and
-destitute of towers, to be repaired in more seemly wise than before, at
-the common charges of the city. Also in the year 1282,[18] King Edward
-I. having granted to Robert Kilwarby, archbishop of Canterbury, license
-for the enlarging of the Blackfriars' church, to break and take down
-a part of the wall of the city, from Ludgate to the river of Thames;
-he also granted to Henry Wales, mayor, and the citizens of London, the
-favour to take, toward the making of the wall and enclosure of the city,
-certain customs or toll, as appeareth by his grant. This wall was then
-to be made from Ludgate west to Fleet bridge along behind the houses,
-and along by the water of the Fleet unto the river of Thames. Moreover,
-in the year 1310, Edward II. commanded the citizens to make up the
-wall already begun, and the tower at the end of the same wall, within
-the water of Thames near unto the Blackfriars, etc. 1328, the 2nd of
-Edward III., the walls of this city were repaired. It was also granted
-by King Richard II. in the tenth year of his reign, that a toll should
-be taken of the wares sold by land or by water for ten years, towards
-the repairing of the walls, and cleansing of the ditch about London.
-In the 17th of Edward IV. Ralph Joceline, mayor, caused part of the
-wall about the city of London to be repaired; to wit, betwixt Aldgate
-and Aldersgate. He also caused Moorfield to be searched for clay, and
-brick thereof to be made and burnt; he likewise caused chalk to be
-brought out of Kent, and to be burnt into lime in the same Moorfield,
-for more furtherance of the work. Then the Skinners to begin in the east
-made that part of the wall betwixt Aldgate and Bevis Marks, towards
-Bishopsgate, as may appear by their arms in three places fixed there:
-the mayor, with his company of the Drapers, made all that part betwixt
-Bishopsgate and Allhallows church, and from Allhallows towards the
-postern called Moorgate. A great part of the same wall was repaired by
-the executors of Sir John Crosby, late alderman, as may appear by his
-arms in two places there fixed: and other companies repaired the rest
-of the wall to the postern of Cripplegate. The Goldsmiths repaired from
-Cripplegate towards Aldersgate, and there the work ceased. The circuit
-of the wall of London on the land side, to wit, from the Tower of London
-in the east unto Aldgate, in 82 perches; from Aldgate to Bishopsgate, 86
-perches; from Bishopsgate in the north to the postern of Cripplegate,
-162 perches; from Cripplegate to Aldersgate, 75 perches; from Aldersgate
-to Newgate, 66 perches; from Newgate in the west to Ludgate, 42 perches;
-in all, 513 perches of assize. From Ludgate to the Fleet-dike west,
-about 60 perches; from Fleetbridge south to the river Thames, about 70
-perches; and so the total of these perches amounteth to 643, every perch
-consisting of five yards and a half, which do yield 3536 yards and a
-half, containing 10,608 feet, which make up two English miles and more
-by 608 feet.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[12] Whitchendus. Whittichind, a monk of Corvay, who died about the year
-1000, wrote a History of the Saxons down to 973, which was published at
-Basle by Hervagius in 1532.
-
-[13] Malmesbury, Bede.
-
-[14] Whitchendus, Bede.
-
-[15] Benedict, abbot of Wearmouth.
-
-[16] Asser, Marianus, Florentius.
-
-[17] Roger of Wendover, Matthew Paris, Ranul. Coggeshall.
-
-[18] Matthew Paris.
-
-
-
-
-OF ANCIENT AND PRESENT RIVERS, BROOKS, BOURNS, POOLS, WELLS, AND
-CONDUITS OF FRESH WATER, SERVING THE CITY, AS ALSO OF THE DITCH
-COMPASSING THE WALL OF THE SAME FOR DEFENCE THEREOF.
-
-
-Anciently, until the Conqueror's time, and two hundred years after, the
-city of London was watered, besides the famous river of Thames on the
-south part, with the river of Wells, as it was then called, on the west;
-with the water called Walbrooke running through the midst of the city in
-the river of Thames, serving the heart thereof; and with a fourth water
-or bourn, which ran within the city through Langborne ward, watering
-that part in the east. In the west suburbs was also another great water,
-called Oldborne, which had its fall into the river of Wells; then were
-there three principal fountains, or wells, in the other suburbs; to wit,
-Holy well, Clement's well, and Clarkes' well. Near unto this last-named
-fountain were divers other wells, to wit, Skinners' well, Fags' well,
-Tode well, Loder's well, and Radwell. All which said wells, having the
-fall of their overflowing in the aforesaid river, much increased the
-stream, and in that place gave it the name of Well. In West Smithfield
-there was a pool, in records called Horsepoole, and one other pool near
-unto the parish church of St. Giles without Cripplegate. Besides all
-which, they had in every street and lane of the city divers fair wells
-and fresh springs; and after this manner was this city then served with
-sweet and fresh waters, which being since decayed, other means have
-been sought to supply the want, as shall be shown. But first of the
-aforenamed rivers and other waters is to be said, as following:
-
-Thames, the most famous river of this island, beginneth a little above
-a village called Winchcombe, in Oxfordshire; and still increasing,
-passeth first by the University of Oxford, and so with a marvellous
-quiet course to London, and thence breaketh into the French ocean by
-main tides, which twice in twenty-four hours' space doth ebb and flow
-more than sixty miles in length, to the great commodity of travellers,
-by which all kind of merchandise be easily conveyed to London, the
-principal storehouse and staple of all commodities within this realm;
-so that, omitting to speak of great ships and other vessels of burthen,
-there pertaineth to the cities of London, Westminster, and borough of
-Southwark, above the number, as is supposed, of 2000 wherries and other
-small boats, whereby 3000 poor men, at the least, be set on work and
-maintained.
-
-That the river of Wells, in the west part of the city, was of old so
-called of the wells, it may be proved thus:--William the Conqueror in
-his charter to the college of St. Marten le Grand, in London, hath
-these words: "I do give and grant to the same church all the land and
-the moor without the postern, which is called Cripplegate, on either
-part of the postern; that is to say, from the north corner of the wall,
-as the river of the Wells, there near running, departeth the same moor
-from the wall, unto the running water which entereth the city."[19] This
-water hath long since been called the river of the Wels, which name of
-river continued; and it was so called in the reign of Edward I., as
-shall be shown, with also the decay of the said river. In a fair book of
-parliament records, now lately restored to the Tower, it appeareth[20]
-that a parliament being holden at Carlile in the year 1307, the 35th
-of Edward I., "Henry Lacy, earl of Lincoln, complained, that whereas
-in times past the course of water, running at London under Oldborne
-bridge and Fleete bridge into the Thames, had been of such breadth and
-depth, that ten or twelve ships navies at once, with merchandise, were
-wont to come to the foresaid bridge of Fleete, and some of them to
-Oldborne bridge: now the same course, by filth of the tanners and such
-others, was sore decayed; also by raising of wharfs; but especially,
-by a diversion of the water made by them of the new Temple, for their
-mills standing without Baynardes Castle, in the first year of King
-John,[21] and divers other impediments, so as the said ships could not
-enter as they were wont, and as they ought: wherefore he desired that
-the mayor of London with the sheriffs and other discreet aldermen, might
-be appointed to view the course of the said water; and that by the oaths
-of good men, all the aforesaid hindrances might be removed, and it to be
-made as it was wont of old. Whereupon Roger le Brabason, the constable
-of the Tower, with the mayor and sheriffs, were assigned to take with
-them honest and discreet men, and to make diligent search and enquiry
-how the said river was in old time, and that they leave nothing that
-may hurt or stop it, but keep it in the same state that it was wont to
-be." So far the record. Whereupon it followed that the said river was
-at that time cleansed, these mills removed, and other things done for
-the preservation of the course thereof, notwithstanding never brought to
-the old depth and breadth; whereupon the name of river ceased, and it
-was since called a brook, namely, Turnmill or Tremill brook, for that
-divers mills were erected upon it, as appeareth by a fair register-book,
-containing the foundation of the priory at Clarkenwell, and donation of
-the lands thereunto belonging, as also divers other records.
-
-This brook hath been divers times since cleansed, namely, and last of
-all to any effect, in the year 1502, the 17th of Henry VII., the whole
-course of Fleete dike, then so called, was scowered, I say, down to the
-Thames, so that boats with fish and fuel were rowed to Fleete bridge,
-and to Oldborne bridge, as they of old time had been accustomed, which
-was a great commodity to all the inhabitants in that part of the city.
-
-In the year 1589 was granted a fifteenth, by a common council of the
-city, for the cleansing of this brook or dike; the money amounting to a
-thousand marks, was collected, and it was undertaken, that by drawing
-divers springs about Hampstead heath into one head and course, both
-the city should be served of fresh water in all places of want; and
-also, that by such a follower, as men call it, the channel of this
-brook should be scowered into the river of Thames; but much money
-being therein spent, the effect failed, so that the brook, by means
-of continual encroachments upon the banks getting over the water, and
-casting of soilage into the stream, is now become worse cloyed and
-choken than ever it was before.
-
-The running water, so called by William the Conqueror in his said
-charter, which entereth the city, etc. (before there was any ditch)
-between Bishopsgate and the late made postern called Moorgate, entered
-the wall, and was truly of the wall called Walbrooke, not of Gualo, as
-some have far fetched: it ran through the city with divers windings from
-the north towards the south into the river of Thames, and had over the
-same divers bridges along the streets and lanes through which it passed.
-I have read in a book[22] entitled the Customs of London,[23] that the
-prior of the Holy Trinity within Aldgate ought to make over Walbrooke
-in the ward of Brod street, against the stone wall of the city, viz.,
-the same bridge that is next the Church of All Saints, at the wall.
-Also that the prior of the new hospital, St. Mary Spittle without
-Bishopsgate, ought to make the middle part of one other bridge next to
-the said bridge towards the north: and that in the twenty-eight year of
-Edward I. it was by inquisition found before the mayor of London, that
-the parish of St. Stephen upon Walbrooke ought of right to scour the
-course of the said brook, and therefore the sheriffs were commanded to
-distrain the said parishioners so to do, in the year 1300. The keepers
-of those bridges at that time were William Jordan and John de Bever.
-This water-course, having divers bridges, was afterwards vaulted over
-with brick, and paved level with the streets and lanes where through it
-passed; and since that, also houses have been built thereon, so that the
-course of Walbrooke is now hidden underground, and thereby hardly known.
-
-Langborne water, so called of the length thereof, was a great stream
-breaking out of the ground in Fenchurch street, which ran down with
-a swift course, west, through that street, athwart Gra street, and
-down Lumbard street, to the west end of St. Mary Wolnothes church, and
-then turning the course down Shareborne lane, so termed of sharing or
-dividing, it brake into divers rills or rillets to the river of Thames:
-of this bourn that ward took the name, and is till this day called
-Langborne ward. This bourn also is long since stopped up at the head,
-and the rest of the course filled up and paved over, so that no sign
-thereof remaineth more than the names aforesaid.
-
-Oldborne, or Hilborne, was the like water, breaking out about the place
-where now the bars do stand, and it ran down the whole street till
-Oldborne bridge, and into the river of the Wells, or Turnemill brook.
-This bourn was likewise long since stopped up at the head, and in other
-places where the same hath broken out, but yet till this day the said
-street is there called High Oldborne hill, and both the sides thereof,
-together with all the grounds adjoining, that lie betwixt it and the
-river of Thames, remain full of springs, so that water is there found at
-hand, and hard to be stopped in every house.
-
-There are (saith Fitzstephen) near London, on the north side, special
-wells in the suburbs, sweet, wholesome, and clear; amongst which Holy
-well, Clarkes' well, and Clement's well, are most famous, and frequented
-by scholars and youths of the city in summer evenings, when they walk
-forth to take the air.
-
-The first, to wit, Holy well, is much decayed and marred with filthiness
-purposely hid there, for the heightening of the ground for garden-plots.
-
-The fountain called St. Clement's well, north from the parish church of
-St. Clement's and near unto an inn of Chancerie called Clement's Inn, is
-fair curbed square with hard stone, kept clean for common use, and is
-always full.
-
-The third is called Clarkes' well, or Clarkenwell, and is curbed about
-square with hard stone, not far from the west end of Clarkenwell church,
-but close without the wall that incloseth it. The said church took the
-name of the well, and the well took the name of the parish clerks in
-London, who of old time were accustomed there yearly to assemble, and
-to play some large history of Holy Scripture.[24] And for example, of
-later time, to wit, in the year 1390, the 14th of Richard II., I read,
-the parish clerks of London, on the 18th of July, played interludes at
-Skinners' well, near unto Clarkes' well, which play continued three
-days together; the king, queen, and nobles being present. Also in the
-year 1409, the 10th of Henry IV., they played a play at the Skinners'
-well, which lasted eight days, and was of matter from the creation of
-the world. There were to see the same the most part of the nobles and
-gentles in England, etc.
-
-Other smaller wells were many near unto Clarkes' well, namely Skinners'
-well, so called for that the skinners of London held there certain plays
-yearly, played of Holy Scripture, etc. In place whereof the wrestlings
-have of later years been kept, and is in part continued at Bartholomew
-tide.
-
-Then there was Fagges well, near unto Smithfield by the Charterhouse,
-now lately damned up, Todwell, Loder's well, and Radwell, all decayed,
-and so filled up, that their places are hardly now discerned.
-
-Somewhat north from Holywell is one other well curved square with stone,
-and is called Dame Annis the clear, and not far from it, but somewhat
-west, is also one other clear water called Perillous pond, because
-divers youths, by swimming therein, have been drowned; and thus much be
-said for fountains and wells.
-
-Horsepoole, in West Smithfield, was some time a great water; and because
-the inhabitants in that part of the city did there water their horses,
-the same was in old records called Horsepoole; it is now much decayed,
-the springs being stopped up, and the land water falling into the small
-bottom, remaining inclosed with brick, is called Smithfield pond.[25]
-
-By St. Giles' churchyard was a large water called a Pool. I read in the
-year 1244 that Anne of Lodburie was drowned therein; this pool is now
-for the most part stopped up, but the spring is preserved, and was coped
-about with stone by the executors of Richard Whittington.
-
-The said river of the Wells, the running water of Walbrooke, the bourns
-aforenamed, and other the fresh waters that were in and about this city,
-being in process of time, by incroachment for buildings and heightenings
-of grounds, utterly decayed, and the number of citizens mightily
-increased, they were forced to seek sweet waters abroad; whereof some,
-at the request of King Henry III., in the twenty-first year of his
-reign,[26] were, for the profit of the city, and good of the whole
-realm, thither repairing, to wit, for the poor to drink, and the rich to
-dress their meat, granted to the citizens and their successors, by one
-Gilbert Sanforde, with liberty to convey water from the town of Teyborne
-by pipes of lead into their city.
-
-The first cistern of lead, castellated with stone in the city of London,
-was called the great Conduit in West Cheape, which was begun to be built
-in the year 1285, Henry Wales being then mayor. The water-course from
-Paddington to James head hath 510 rods; from James head on the hill to
-the Mewsgate, 102 rods; from the Mewsgate to the Cross in Cheape, 484
-rods.
-
-The tun upon Cornhill was cisterned in the year 1401; John Shadworth
-then being mayor.
-
-Bosses of water at Belinsgate, by Powle's wharf, and by St. Giles'
-church without Cripplegate, made about the year 1423.
-
-Water conveyed to the gaols of Newgate and Ludgate, 1432.
-
-Water was first procured to the Standard in West Cheape about the year
-1285, which Standard was again new built by the executors of John
-Welles, as shall be shown in another place. King Henry VI., in the year
-1442, granted to John Hatherley, mayor, license to take up two hundred
-fodders of lead for the building of conduits, of a common garnery, and
-of a new cross in West Cheape, for the honour of the city.
-
-The Conduit in West Cheape, by Powle's gate, was built about the year
-1442; one thousand marks were granted by common council for the building
-thereof, and repairing of the other conduits.
-
-The Conduit in Aldermanbury, and the Standard in Fleet street, were made
-and finished by the executors of Sir William Eastfield in the year 1471;
-a cistern was added to the Standard in Fleete street, and a cistern was
-made at Fleetbridge, and one other without Cripplegate, in the year 1478.
-
-Conduit in Gra street, in the year 1491.
-
-Conduit at Oldbourne cross about 1498; again new made by William Lambe
-1577.
-
-Little conduit by the Stockes market, about 1500.
-
-Conduit at Bishopsgate, about 1513.
-
-Conduit at London wall, about 1528.
-
-Conduit at Aldgate without, about 1535.
-
-Conduit in Lothbury, and in Coleman street, 1546.
-
-Conduit of Thames water at Dowgate, 1568.
-
-Thames water, conveyed into men's houses by pipes of lead from a most
-artificial forcier standing near unto London bridge, and made by Peter
-Moris, Dutchman, in the year 1582, for service of the city, on the east
-part thereof.
-
-Conduits of Thames water, by the parish churches of St. Mary Magdalen,
-and St. Nicolas Colde Abbey near unto old Fish street, in the year 1583.
-
-One other new forcier was made near to Broken wharfe, to convey Thames
-water into men's houses of West Cheape, about Powle's, Fleete street,
-etc., by an English gentleman named Bevis Bulmer, in the year 1594. Thus
-much for waters serving this city; first by rivers, brooks, bourns,
-fountains, pools, etc.; and since by conduits, partly made by good and
-charitable citizens, and otherwise by charges of the commonalty, as
-shall be shown in description of wards wherein they be placed. And now
-some benefactors to these conduits shall be remembered.
-
-In the year 1236 certain merchant strangers of cities beyond the seas,
-to wit, Amiens, Corby, and Nele, for privileges which they enjoyed in
-this city, gave one hundred pounds towards the charges of conveying
-water from the town of Teyborne. Robert Large, mayor, 1439, gave to the
-new water conduits then in hand forty marks, and towards the vaulting
-over of Walbrooke near to the parish church of St. Margaret in Lothbery,
-two hundred marks.
-
-Sir William Eastfield, mayor, 1438, conveyed water from Teyborne to
-Fleete street, to Aldermanbury, and from Highbury to Cripplegate.
-
-William Combes, sheriff, 1441, gave to the work of the conduits ten
-pounds.
-
-Richard Rawson, one of the sheriffs, 1476, gave twenty pounds.
-
-Robert Revell, one of the sheriffs, 1490, gave ten pounds.
-
-John Mathew, mayor, 1490, gave twenty pounds.
-
-William Bucke, tailor, in the year 1494, towards repairing of conduits,
-gave one hundred marks.
-
-Dame Thomason, widow, late wife to John Percivall Taylor, mayor, in the
-year 1498 gave toward the conduit in Oldbourne twenty marks.
-
-Richard Shore, one of the sheriffs, 1505, gave to the conduit in
-Oldbourne ten pounds.
-
-The Lady Ascue, widow of Sir Christopher Ascue, 1543, gave towards the
-conduits one hundred pounds.
-
-David Wodrooffe, sheriff, 1554, gave towards the conduit at Bishopsgate
-twenty pounds.
-
-Edward Jackman, one of the sheriffs, 1564, gave towards the conduits one
-hundred pounds.
-
-Barnard Randulph, common sergeant of the city, 1583, gave to the water
-conduits nine hundred pounds.[27]
-
-Thus much for the conduits of fresh water to this city.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[19] "This water hath been since that time called Turne mill brooke; yet
-then called the river of the Wells, which name of river," etc.,--_1st
-edition_, p. 11.
-
-[20] Parliament record.
-
-[21] Patent record.
-
-[22] "In an old writing book."--_1st edition_, p. 14.
-
-[23] Liber Custom.
-
-[24] This precise definition of the nature of the performances of the
-parish clerks, "some large hystorie of Holy Scripture," does not occur
-in the first edition of the _Survey_.
-
-[25] "Is but fowle, and is called Smithfield Pond."--_1st edition_, p.
-15.
-
-[26] Patent, 123.
-
-[27] In the first edition, Barnard Randulph's gift is stated to be £700
-only.
-
-
-
-
-THE TOWN DITCH WITHOUT THE WALL OF THE CITY
-
-
-The ditch, which partly now remaineth, and compassed the wall of the
-city, was begun to be made by the Londoners in the year 1211,[28] and
-was finished in the year 1213, the 15th of King John. This ditch being
-then made of 200 feet broad, caused no small hindrance to the canons of
-the Holy Trinity, whose church stood near unto Aldgate; for that the
-said ditch passed through their ground from the Tower of London unto
-Bishopsgate. This ditch, being originally made for the defence of the
-city, was also long together carefully cleansed and maintained, as need
-required; but now 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 built thereon; even to the very wall, and in many
-places upon both ditch and wall houses to be built; to what danger
-of the city, I leave to wiser consideration, and can but wish that
-reformation might be had.
-
-In the year of Christ 1354, the 28th of Edward III., the ditch of this
-city flowing over the bank into the Tower ditch, the king commanded
-the said ditch of the city to be cleansed, and so ordered, that the
-overflowing thereof should not force any filth into the Tower ditch.
-
-Anno 1379, John Philpot, mayor of London, caused this ditch to be
-cleansed, and every householder to pay five pence, which was for a day's
-work towards the charges thereof. Richard II., in the 10th of his reign,
-granted a toll to be taken of wares sold by water or by land, for ten
-years, towards repairing of the wall and cleansing of the ditch.
-
-Thomas Falconer, mayor, 1414, caused the ditch to be cleansed.
-
-Ralph Joceline, mayor, 1477, caused the whole ditch to be cast and
-cleansed, and so from time to time it was cleansed, and otherwise
-reformed, namely, in 1519, the 10th of Henry VIII., for cleansing and
-scowering the common ditch between Aldgate and the postern next the
-Tower ditch. The chief ditcher had by the day seven pence, the second
-ditcher six pence, the other ditchers five pence. And every vagabond
-(for so were they termed) one penny the day, meat and drink, at charges
-of the city. £95 3_s._ 4_d._
-
-In my remembrance also the same was cleansed, namely the Moore ditch,
-when Sir William Hollies was mayor, in the year 1540, and not long
-before, from the Tower of London to Aldgate.
-
-It was again cleansed in the year 1549, Henry Amcotes being mayor,
-at the charges of the companies. And again, 1569, the 11th of Queen
-Elizabeth, for cleansing the same ditch between Aldgate and the postern,
-and making a new sewer, and wharf of timber, from the head of the
-postern into the town ditch, £814 15_s._ 8_d._ Before the which time the
-said ditch lay open, without wall or pale, having therein great store of
-very good fish, of divers sorts, as many men yet living, who have taken
-and tasted them, can well witness; but now no such matter: the charge
-of cleansing is spared, and great profit made by letting out the banks,
-with the spoil of the whole ditch.
-
-I am not ignorant of two fifteenths granted by a common council in the
-year 1595, for the reformation of this ditch, and that a small portion
-thereof, to wit, betwixt Bishopsgate and the postern called Mooregate,
-was cleansed, and made somewhat broader; but filling again very fast,
-by reason of overraising the ground near adjoining, therefore never the
-better: and I will so leave it, for I cannot help it.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[28] Liber Dunstable. Liber Trinitat.
-
-
-
-
-BRIDGES OF THIS CITY
-
-
-The original foundation of London bridge, by report of Bartholomew
-Linsted, alias Fowle, last prior of St. Mary Overies church in
-Southwark, was this: A ferry being kept in place where now the bridge
-is built, at length the ferryman and his wife deceasing, left the same
-ferry to their only daughter, a maiden named Mary, which with the goods
-left by her parents, and also with the profits arising of the said
-ferry, built a house of Sisters, in place where now standeth the east
-part of St. Mary Overies church, above the choir, where she was buried,
-unto which house she gave the oversight and profits of the ferry; but
-afterwards the said house of Sisters being converted into a college of
-priests, the priests built the bridge (of timber) as all the other great
-bridges of this land were, and from time to time kept the same in good
-reparations, till at length, considering the great charges of repairing
-the same, there was, by aid of the citizens of London, and others, a
-bridge built with arches of stone, as shall be shown.
-
-But first of the timber bridge, the antiquity thereof being great, but
-uncertain; I remember to have read,[29] that in the year of Christ 994,
-Sweyn, king of Denmark, besieging the city of London, both by water
-and by land, the citizens manfully defended themselves, and their king
-Ethelred, so as part of their enemies were slain in battle, and part of
-them were drowned in the river of Thames, because in their hasty rage
-they took no heed of the bridge.
-
-Moreover, in the year 1016, Canute the Dane, with a great navy, came up
-to London, and on the south of the Thames caused a trench to be cast,
-through the which his ships were towed into the west side of the bridge,
-and then with a deep trench, and straight siege, he compassed the city
-round about.
-
-Also, in the year 1052, Earl Goodwin, with the like navy, taking
-his course up the river of Thames, and finding none that offered to
-resist on the bridge, he sailed up the south side of the said river.
-Furthermore, about the year 1067, William the Conqueror, in his charter
-to the church of St. Peter at Westminster, confirmed to the monks
-serving God there, a gate in London, then called Buttolph's gate, with a
-wharf which was at the head of London bridge.
-
-We read likewise, that in the year 1114, the 14th of Henry I., the river
-of Thames was so dried up, and such want of water there, that between
-the Tower of London and the bridge, and under the bridge, not only with
-horse, but also a great number of men, women, and children, did wade
-over on foot.[30]
-
-In the year 1122, the 22nd of Henry I., Thomas Arden gave the monks of
-Bermondsey the church of St. George, in Southward, and five shillings
-rent by the year, out of the land pertaining to London bridge.
-
-I also have seen a charter under seal to the effect following:--"Henry
-king of England, to Ralfe B. of Chichester, and all the ministers
-of Sussex, sendeth greeting, know ye, etc. I command by my kingly
-authority, that the manor called Alcestone, which my father gave, with
-other lands, to the abbey of Battle, be free and quiet from shires and
-hundreds, and all other customs of earthly servitude, as my father held
-the same, most freely and quietly, and namely, from the work of London
-bridge, and the work of the castle at Pevensey: and this I command upon
-my forfeiture. Witness, William de Pontlearche, at Byrry." The which
-charter, with the seal very fair, remaineth in the custody of Joseph
-Holland, gentleman.
-
-In the year 1136, the 1st of king Stephen,[31] a fire began in the
-house of one Ailewarde, near unto London stone, which consumed east to
-Aldgate, and west to St. Erkenwald's shrine, in Powle's church; the
-bridge of timber over the river of Thames was also burnt, etc., but
-afterwards again repaired. For Fitzstephen writes, that in the reign of
-King Stephen and of Henry II., when pastimes were showed on the river of
-Thames, men stood in great number on the bridge, wharfs, and houses, to
-behold.
-
-Now in the year 1163, the same bridge was not only repaired, but newly
-made of timber as before, by Peter of Cole church, priest and chaplain.
-
-Thus much for the old timber bridge, maintained partly by the proper
-lands thereof, partly by the liberality of divers persons, and partly
-by taxations in divers shires, have I proved for the space of 215 years
-before the bridge of stone was built.
-
-Now touching the foundation of the stone bridge, it followeth:--About
-the year 1176, the stone bridge over the river of Thames, at London,
-was begun to be founded by the aforesaid Peter of Cole church, near
-unto the bridge of timber, but somewhat more towards the west, for I
-read, that Buttolfe wharf was, in the Conqueror's time, at the head of
-London bridge.[32] The king assisted this work: a cardinal then being
-legate here; and Richard, archbishop of Canterbury, gave one thousand
-marks towards the foundation; the course of the river, for the time,
-was turned another way about, by a trench cast for that purpose,
-beginning, as is supposed, east about Radriffe, and ending in the west
-about Patricksey, now termed Batersey. This work; to wit, the arches,
-chapel and stone bridge, over the river of Thames at London, having been
-thirty-three years in building, was in the year 1209 finished by the
-worthy merchants of London, Serle Mercer, William Almaine, and Benedict
-Botewrite, principal masters of that work, for Peter of Cole church
-deceased four years before, and was buried in the chapel on the bridge,
-in the year 1205.[33]
-
-King John gave certain void places in London to build upon the profits
-thereof to remain towards the charges of building and repairing the
-same bridge: a mason being master workman of the bridge, builded from
-the foundation the large chapel on that bridge of his own charges,
-which chapel was then endowed for two priests, four clerks, etc.,
-besides chantries since founded for John Hatfield and other.[34] After
-the finishing of this chapel, which was the first building upon those
-arches, sundry houses at times were erected, and many charitable men
-gave lands, tenements, or sums of money, towards maintenance thereof,
-all which was sometimes noted and in a table fair written for posterity
-remaining in the chapel, until the same chapel was turned into a
-dwelling-house, and then removed to the bridge house, the effect of
-which table I was willing to have published in this book, if I could
-have obtained the sight thereof. But making the shorter work, I find by
-the account of William Mariner and Christopher Eliot, wardens of London
-bridge from Michaelmas, in the 22nd of Henry VII., unto Michaelmas
-next ensuing, by one whole year, that all the payments and allowances
-came to £815 17_s._ 2-1/4_d._, as there is shown by particulars, by
-which account then made, may be partly guessed the great charges and
-discharges of that bridge at this day, when things be stretched to so
-great a price. And now to actions on this bridge.
-
-The first action to be noted was lamentable; for within four[35] years
-after the finishing thereof, to wit, in the year 1212, on the l0th of
-July, at night,[36] the borough of Southwark, upon the south side the
-river of Thames, as also the church of our Lady of the Canons there,
-being on fire, and an exceeding great multitude of people passing the
-bridge, either to extinguish and quench it, or else to gaze at and
-behold it, suddenly the north part, by blowing of the south wind was
-also set on fire, and the people which were even now passing the bridge,
-perceiving the same, would have returned, but were stopped by fire; and
-it came to pass, that as they stayed or protracted time, the other end
-of the bridge also, namely, the south end, was fired, so that the people
-thronging themselves between the two fires, did nothing else but expect
-present death; then came there to aid them many ships and vessels, into
-the which the multitude so unadvisedly rushed, that the ships being
-drowned, they all perished.[37] It was said, that through the fire and
-shipwreck there were destroyed about three thousand persons, whose
-bodies were found in part, or half burnt, besides those that were wholly
-burnt to ashes, and could not be found.
-
-About the year 1282, through a great frost and deep snow, five arches of
-London bridge were borne down and carried away.
-
-In the year 1289, the bridge was so sore decayed for want of reparations
-that men were afraid to pass thereon, and a subsidy was granted towards
-the amendment thereof,[38] Sir John Britain being custos of London.
-1381, a great collection or gathering was made of all archbishops,
-bishops, and other ecclesiastical persons, for the reparations of London
-bridge. 1381, Wat Tyler, and other rebels of Kent, by this bridge
-entered the city, as ye may read in my _Summary_ and _Annals_.
-
-In the year 1395, on St. George's day, was a great justing on London
-bridge, betwixt David Earl of Crawford of Scotland, and the Lord Wells
-of England; in the which the Lord Wells was at the third course borne
-out of the saddle: which history proveth, that at that time the bridge
-being coped on either side, was not replenished with houses built
-thereupon, as it hath since been, and now is. The next year, on the
-13th of November, the young Queen Isabell, commonly called the little,
-for she was but eight years old, was conveyed from Kenington besides
-Lamhith, through Southwarke to the Tower of London, and such a multitude
-of people went out to see her, that on London bridge nine persons were
-crowded to death, of whom the prior of Tiptre, a place in Essex, was
-one, and a matron on Cornhill was another.
-
-The Tower on London bridge at the north end of the draw-bridge (for that
-bridge was then readily to be drawn up, as well to give passage for
-ships to Queenhithe, as for the resistance of any foreign force), was
-begun to be built in the year 1426, John Rainwell being mayor.
-
-Another tower there is on the said bridge over the gate at the south end
-towards Southwarke, whereof in another place shall be spoken.
-
-In the year 1450, Jack Cade, and other rebels of Kent, by this bridge
-entered the city: he struck his sword on London Stone, and said himself
-then to be lord of the city, but were by the citizens overcome on the
-same bridge, and put to flight, as in my _Annals_.
-
-In the year 1471, Thomas, the bastard Fawconbridge, besieged this
-bridge, burnt the gate, and all the houses to the draw-bridge, that time
-thirteen in number.
-
-In the year 1481, a house called the common siege on London bridge fell
-down into the Thames; through the fall whereof five men were drowned.
-
-In the year 1553, the 3rd of February, Sir Thomas Wyat, and the Kentish
-men, marched from Depeford towards London; after knowledge whereof,
-forthwith the draw-bridge was cut down, and the bridge gates shut.
-Wyat and his people entered Southwarke, where they lay till the 6th of
-February, but could get no entry of the city by the bridge, the same
-was then so well defended by the citizens, the Lord William Howard
-assisting, wherefore he removed towards Kingstone, etc., as in my
-_Annals_.
-
-To conclude of this bridge over the said river of Thames, I affirm, as
-in other my descriptions, that it is a work very rare, having with the
-draw-bridge twenty arches made of squared stone, of height sixty feet,
-and in breadth thirty feet, distant one from another twenty feet,
-compact and joined together with vaults and cellars; upon both sides
-be houses built, so that it seemeth rather a continual street than a
-bridge; for the fortifying whereof against the incessant assaults of the
-river, it hath overseers and officers, viz., wardens, as aforesaid, and
-others.
-
-Fleete bridge in the west without Ludgate, a bridge of stone, fair coped
-on either side with iron pikes; on the which, towards the south, be
-also certain lanthorns of stone, for lights to be placed in the winter
-evenings, for commodity of travellers. Under the bridge runneth a water,
-sometimes called, as I have said, the river of the Wels, since Turnemill
-brooke, now Fleete dike, because it runneth by the Fleete, and sometimes
-about the Fleete, so under Fleete bridge into the river of Thames. This
-bridge hath been far greater in times past, but lessened, as the water
-course hath been narrowed. It seemeth this last bridge to be made or
-repaired at the charges of John Wels, mayor, in the year 1431, for on
-the coping is engraven Wels embraced by angels, like as on the standard
-in Cheape, which he also built. Thus much of the bridge: for of the
-water course, and decay thereof, I have spoken in another place.
-
-Oldbourne bridge, over the said river of the Wels more towards the
-north, was so called, of a bourn that sometimes ran down Oldbourne hill
-into the said river. This bridge of stone, like as Fleet bridge from
-Ludgate west, serveth for passengers with carriage or otherwise, from
-Newgate toward the west and by north.
-
-Cowbridge, more north, over the same water by Cowbridge street or
-Cowlane: this bridge being lately decayed, another of timber is made
-somewhat more north, by Chick lane, etc.
-
-Bridges over the town ditch there are divers; to wit, without Aldgate,
-without Bishopsgate, the postern called Moorgate, the postern of
-Criplegate without Aldersgate, the postern of Christ's hospital,
-Newgate, and Ludgate; all these be over paved likewise, with stone level
-with the streets. But one other there is of timber over the river of
-Wels, or Fleet dike, between the precinct of the Black Friers, and the
-house of Bridewell.
-
-There have been of old time also, divers bridges in sundry places
-over the course of Walbrooke, as before I have partly noted, besides
-Horseshew bridge, by the church of St. John Baptist, now called St.
-John's upon Walbrooke. I read, that of old time every person having
-lands on either side of the said brook, should cleanse[39] the same, and
-repair the bridges so far as their lands extended. More, in the 11th of
-Edward III. the inhabitants upon the course of this brook were forced to
-pile and wall the sides thereof. Also, that in the 3rd of Henry V. this
-water-course had many bridges, since vaulted over with bricks, and the
-streets where through it passed so paved, that the same water-course is
-now hardly discerned. For order was taken in the 2nd of Edward IV., that
-such as had ground on either side of Walbrooke, should vault and pave it
-over, so far as his ground extended. And thus much for bridges in this
-city may suffice.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[29] Will. Malmsbury.
-
-[30] Liber Bermon.
-
-[31] Liber Trinitat
-
-[32] Liber Waverley.
-
-[33] "For Peter of Colechurch deceased foure years before this worke was
-finished, and was buried in the chappell builded on the same bridge, in
-the year 1205."--_1st edition_, p. 21.
-
-[34] "So that in the yeare 23 of Henrie the 6 there was 4 chaplens in
-the said chappell."--_1st edition_, p. 21.
-
-[35] "Within 3 yeres."--_1st edition._
-
-[36] "A marvellous terrible chance happened for the citie of London,
-upon the south side of the river of Thames."--_Ibid._
-
-[37] Liber Dunmow. Walter Covent. W. Packenton.
-
-[38] Patent of Edward II.
-
-[39] "Should vaulte, or bridge, and clense the same."--_1st edition_, p.
-24.
-
-
-
-
-GATES IN THE WALL OF THIS CITY
-
-
-Gates in the wall of this city of old time were four; to wit, Aeldgate
-for the east, Aldersgate for the north, Ludgate for the west, and the
-Bridgegate over the river of Thames for the south; but of later times,
-for the ease of citizens and passengers, divers other gates and posterns
-have been made, as shall be shown.
-
-In the reign of Henry II. (saith Fitzstephen) there were seven double
-gates in the wall of this city, but he nameth them not. It may therefore
-be supposed, he meant for the first, the gate next the Tower of
-London,[40] now commonly called the Postern, the next be Aeldgate, the
-third Bishopsgate, the fourth Ealdersgate, the fifth Newgate, the sixth
-Ludgate, the seventh Bridgegate. Since the which time hath been builded
-the postern called Moorgate, a postern from Christ's hospital towards
-St. Bartholomew's hospital in Smithfield, etc. Now of every of these
-gates and posterns in the wall, and also of certain water-gates on the
-river of Thames, severally somewhat may, and shall be noted, as I find
-authority, or reasonable conjecture to warrant me.
-
-For the first, now called the postern by the Tower of London, it showeth
-by that part which yet remaineth, to have been a fair and strong arched
-gate, partly built of hard stone of Kent, and partly of stone brought
-from Caen in Normandy, since the Conquest, and foundation of the high
-tower, and served for passengers on foot out of the east, from thence
-through the city to Ludgate in the west. The ruin and overthrow of this
-gate and postern began in the year 1190, the 2nd of Richard I., when
-William Longshampe, bishop of Ely, chancellor of England, caused a part
-of the city wall, to wit, from the said gate towards the river of Thames
-to the white tower, to be broken down, for the enlarging of the said
-tower, which he then compassed far wide about with a wall embattled,
-and is now the outer wall. He also caused a broad and deep ditch to
-be made without the same wall, intending to have derived the river of
-Thames with her tides to have flowed about it, which would not be. But
-the southside of this gate, being then by undermining at the foundation
-loosened, and greatly weakened; at length, to wit, after two hundred
-years and odd, the same fell down in the year 1440, the 18th of Henry
-VI., and was never since by the citizens re-edified.[41] Such was their
-negligence then, and hath bred some trouble to their successors, since
-they suffered a weak and wooden building to be there made, inhabited by
-persons of lewd life, oft times by inquest of Portsoken ward presented,
-but not reformed; whereas of former times the said postern was accounted
-of as other gates of the city, and was appointed to men of good credit.
-Amongst other, I have read, that in the 49th of Edward III., John Cobbe
-was admitted custos of the said postern, and all the habitation thereof,
-for term of his life, by William Walworth, then mayor of London, etc.
-More, that John Credy, Esq., in the 21st of Richard II., was admitted
-custos of the said postern and appurtenances by Richard Whittington,
-mayor, the aldermen, and commonalty, etc.
-
-
-AELDGATE
-
-The next gate in the east is called Aeldgate, of the antiquity or age
-thereof. This is one and the first of the four principal gates, and also
-one of the seven double gates, mentioned by Fitzstephen. It hath had two
-pair of gates, though now but one; the hooks remaineth yet. Also there
-hath been two portcloses; the one of them remaineth, the other wanteth,
-but the place of letting down is manifest. For antiquity of the gate: it
-appeareth by a charter of King Edgar to the knights of Knighten Guild,
-that in his days the said port was called Aeldgate, as ye may read in
-the ward of Portsoken. Also Matilda the queen, wife to Henry I., having
-founded the priory of the Holy Trinity within Aeldgate, gave unto the
-same church, to Norman the first prior, and the canons that devoutly
-serve God therein,[42] the port of Aeldgate, and the soke or franchises
-thereunto belonging, with all customs as free as she held the same; in
-the which charter she nameth the house Christ's church, and reporteth
-Aeldgate to be of his domain.
-
-More, I read[43] in the year 1215, that in the civil wars between King
-John and his barons, the Londoners assisting the barons' faction, who
-then besieged Northampton, and after came to Bedford castle, where they
-were well received by William Beauchampe, and captain of the same;
-having then also secret intelligence that they might enter the city of
-London if they would, they removed their camp to Ware, from thence in
-the night coming to London, they entered Aeldgate, and placing guardians
-or keepers of the gates, they disposed of all things in the city at
-their pleasure. They spoiled the friars' houses, and searched their
-coffers;[44] which being done, Robert Fitzwalter, Geffry Magnavile
-Earl of Essex, and the Earl of Glocester, chief leaders of the army,
-applied all diligence to repair the gates and walls of this city with
-the stones taken from the Jews' broken houses, namely, Aeldgate being
-then most ruinous (which had given them an easy entry), they repaired,
-or rather newly built, after the manner of the Normans, strongly arched
-with bulwarks of stone from Caen in Normandy, and small brick, called
-Flanders tile, was brought from thence, such as hath been here used
-since the Conquest, and not before.
-
-In the year 1471,[45] the 11th of Edward IV., Thomas, the bastard
-Fawconbridge, having assembled a riotous company of shipmen and other in
-Essex and Kent, came to London with a great navy of ships, near to the
-Tower; whereupon the mayor and aldermen, by consent of a common council,
-fortified all along the Thames side, from Baynard's castle to the Tower,
-with armed men, guns, and other instruments of war, to resist the
-invasion of the mariners, whereby the Thames side was safely preserved
-and kept by the aldermen and other citizens that assembled thither in
-great numbers. Whereupon the rebels, being denied passage through the
-city that way, set upon Aeldgate, Bishopsgate, Cripplegate, Aeldersgate,
-London bridge, and along the river of Thames, shooting arrows and guns
-into the city, fired the suburbs, and burnt more than threescore
-houses. And further, on Sunday the eleventh of May, five thousand of
-them assaulting Aeldgate, won the bulwarks, and entered the city; but
-the portclose being let down, such as had entered were slain, and Robert
-Basset, alderman of Aeldgate ward, with the recorder, commanded in the
-name of God to draw up the portclose; which being done, they issued out,
-and with sharp shot, and fierce fight, put their enemies back so far as
-St. Bottolph's church, by which time the Earl Rivers, and lieutenant
-of the Tower, was come with a fresh company, which joining together,
-discomfited the rebels, and put them to flight, whom the said Robert
-Basset, with the other citizens, chased to the Mile's End, and from
-thence, some to Popular, some to Stratford, slew many, and took many of
-them prisoners. In which space the Bastard having assayed other places
-upon the water side, and little prevailed, fled toward his ships. Thus
-much for Aeldgate.
-
-
-BISHOPSGATE
-
-The third, and next toward the north, is called Bishopsgate, for that,
-as it may be supposed, the same was first built by some Bishop of
-London, though now unknown when, or by whom; but true it is, that the
-first gate was first built for ease of passengers toward the east, and
-by north, as into Norfolk, Suffolk, Cambridgeshire, etc.; the travellers
-into which parts, before the building of this gate, were forced, passing
-out at Aeldgate, to go east till they came to the Mile's end, and then
-turning on the left hand to Blethenhall green[46] to Cambridge heath,
-and so north, or east, and by north, as their journey lay. If they took
-not this way, by the east out at Aeldgate, they must take their way by
-the north out at Aeldersgate, through Aeldersgate street and Goswel
-street towards Iseldon, and by a cross of stone on their right hand, set
-up for a mark by the north end of Golding lane, to turn eastward through
-a long street, until this day called Alder street, to another cross
-standing, where now a smith's forge is placed by Sewer's-ditch church,
-and then to turn again north towards Totenham, Endfield, Waltham, Ware,
-etc. The eldest note that I read of this Bishopsgate, is that William
-Blund, one of the sheriffs of London,[47] in the year 1210, sold to
-Serle Mercer, and William Almaine, procurators or wardens of London
-bridge, all his land, with the garden, in the parish of St. Buttolph
-without Bishopsgate, between the land of Richard Casiarin, towards the
-north, and the land of Robert Crispie towards the south, and the highway
-called Berewards lane on the east, etc.
-
-Next I read in a charter, dated the year 1235, that Walter Brune,
-citizen of London, and Rosia his wife, having founded the priory or new
-hospital of our blessed Lady, since called St. Mary Spittle without
-Bishopsgate, confirmed the same to the honour of God and our blessed
-Lady, for canons regular.
-
-Also in the year 1247, Simon Fitzmarie, one of the sheriffs of London,
-the 29th of Henry III., founded the hospital of St. Mary, called Bethlem
-without Bishopsgate. Thus much for the antiquity of this gate.[48]
-
-And now for repairing the same, I find that Henry III. confirmed to
-the merchants of the Haunce, that had a house in the city called
-Guildhalla Theutonicorum, certain liberties and privileges. Edward I.
-also confirmed the same; in the tenth year of whose reign it was found
-that the said merchants ought of right to repair the said gate called
-Bishopsgate; whereupon Gerard Marbod, alderman of the Haunce and other,
-then remaining in the city of London, for themselves, and all other
-merchants of the said Haunce, granted two hundred and ten marks sterling
-to the mayor and citizens; and covenanted that they and their successors
-should from time to time repair the same gate. This gate was again
-beautifully built in the year 1479, in the reign of Edward IV., by the
-said Haunce merchants.
-
-Moreover, about the year 1551, these Haunce merchants, having prepared
-stone for that purpose, caused a new gate to be framed, there to have
-been set up, but then their liberties, through suit of our English
-merchants, were seized into the king's hand; and so that work was
-stayed, and the old gate yet remaineth.
-
-
-POSTERN OF MOREGATE
-
-Touching the next postern, called Moregate, I find that Thomas Falconer,
-mayor, about the year 1415, the third of Henry V., caused the wall
-of the city to be broken near unto Coleman street, and there built a
-postern, now called Moregate, upon the moor side where was never gate
-before. This gate he made for ease of the citizens, that way to pass
-upon causeys into the field for their recreation: for the same field
-was at that time a parish. This postern was re-edified by William
-Hampton, fishmonger, mayor, in the year 1472. In the year also, 1511,
-the third of Henry VIII., Roger Acheley, mayor, caused dikes and bridges
-to be made, and the ground to be levelled, and made more commodious for
-passage, since which time the same hath been heightened. So much that
-the ditches and bridges are covered, and seemeth to me that if it be
-made level with the battlements of the city wall, yet will it be little
-the drier, such is the moorish nature of that ground.
-
-
-POSTERN OF CRIPPLEGATE
-
-The next is the postern of Cripplegate, so called long before the
-Conquest. For I read in the history of Edmond,[49] king of the East
-Angles, written by Abbo Floriacensis, and by Burchard, sometime
-secretary to Offa, king of Marcia, but since by John Lidgate, monk
-of Bury, that in the year 1010, the Danes spoiling the kingdom of
-the East Angles, Alwyne, bishop of Helmeham, caused the body of King
-Edmond the Martyr to be brought from Bedrisworth (now called Bury St.
-Edmondes), through the kingdom of the East Saxons, and so to London
-in at Cripplegate; a place, saith mine author, so called of cripples
-begging there: at which gate, it was said, the body entering, miracles
-were wrought, as some of the lame to go upright, praising God. The body
-of King Edmond rested for the space of three years in the parish church
-of St. Gregorie, near unto the cathedral church of St. Paul. Moreover,
-the charter of William the Conqueror, confirming the foundation of the
-college in London, called St. Martin the Great, hath these words:[50] "I
-do give and grant to the same church and canons, serving God therein,
-all the land and the moore without the postern, which is called
-Cripplegate, on either side the postern." More I read, that Alfune built
-the parish church of St. Giles, nigh a gate of the city, called Porta
-Contractorum, or Cripplesgate, about the year 1099.
-
-This postern was sometime a prison, whereunto such citizens and others,
-as were arrested for debt or common trespasses, were committed, as they
-be now, to the compters, which thing appeareth by a writ of Edward I.
-in these words: "_Rex vic. London. salutem: ex graui querela B. capt. &
-detent. in prisona nostra de Criples gate pro x. l. quas coram Radulpho
-de Sandwico tunc custod. ciuitatis nostræ London. & I. de Blackwell
-ciuis recognit. debit. etc._" This gate was new built by the brewers
-of London in the year 1244, as saith Fabian's manuscript. Edmond Shaw,
-goldsmith, mayor in the year 1483, at his decease appointed by his
-testament his executors, with the cost of four hundred marks, and the
-stuff of the old gate, called Cripplesgate, to build the same gate of
-new, which was performed and done in the year 1491.
-
-
-ALDERSGATE
-
-The next is Ældresgate, or Aldersgate,[51] so called not of Aldrich or
-of Elders, that is to say, ancient men, builders thereof; not of Eldarne
-trees, growing there more abundantly than in other places, as some have
-fabled,[51] but for the very antiquity of the gate itself, as being one
-of the first four gates of the city, and serving for the northern parts,
-as Aldegate for the east; which two gates, being both old gates, are for
-difference sake called, the one Ealdegate, and the other Aldersgate.
-This is the fourth principal gate, and hath at sundry times been
-increased with buildings, namely, on the south, or inner side, a great
-frame of timber hath been added and set up, containing divers large
-rooms and lodgings; also on the east side is the addition of one great
-building of timber, with one large floor, paved with stone or tile, and
-a well therein curbed with stone, of a great depth, and rising into the
-said room, two stories high from the ground; which well is the only
-peculiar note belonging to that gate, for I have not seen the like in
-all this city to be raised so high. John Day, stationer, a late famous
-printer of many good books, in our time dwelt in this gate, and built
-much upon the wall of the city towards the parish church of St. Anne.
-
-
-POSTERN OUT OF CHRIST'S HOSPITAL
-
-Then is there also a postern gate, made out of the wall on the north
-side of the late dissolved cloister of Friers minors, commonly of their
-habit called Grey friars, now Christ's church and hospital. This postern
-was made in the first year of Edward VI. to pass from the said hospital
-of Christ's church unto the hospital of St. Bartlemew in Smithfield.
-
-
-NEWGATE
-
-The next gate on the west, and by north, is termed Newgate, as latelier
-built than the rest, and is the fifth principal gate. This gate was
-first erected about the reign of Henry I. or of King Stephen, upon this
-occasion.[52] The cathedral church of St. Paul, being burnt about the
-year 1086, in the reign of William the Conqueror, Mauritius, then bishop
-of London, repaired not the old church, as some have supposed, but
-began the foundation of a new work, such as men then judged would never
-have been performed; it was to them so wonderful for height, length,
-and breadth, as also in respect it was raised upon arches or vaults, a
-kind of workmanship brought in by the Normans, and never known to the
-artificers of this land before that time, etc. After Mauritius, Richard
-Beamore did wonderfully advance the work of the said church, purchasing
-the large streets and lanes round about, wherein were wont to dwell many
-lay people, which grounds he began to compass about with a strong wall
-of stone and gates. By means of this increase of the church territory,
-but more by inclosing of ground for so large a cemetery or churchyard,
-the high and large street stretching from Aldegate in the east until
-Ludgate in the west, was in this place so crossed and stopped up, that
-the carriage through the city westward was forced to pass without the
-said churchyard wall on the north side, through Pater noster row; and
-then south, down Ave Mary lane, and again west, through Bowyer row to
-Ludgate; or else out of Cheepe, or Watheling street, to turn south,
-through the old Exchange; then west through Carter lane, again north
-by Creede lane, and then west to Ludgate: which passage, by reason of
-so often turning, was very cumbersome and dangerous both for horse and
-man; for remedy whereof a new gate was made, and so called, by which men
-and cattle, with all manner of carriages, might pass more directly (as
-afore) from Aldegate, through West Cheape by Paules, on the north side;
-through St. Nicholas shambles and Newgate market to Newgate, and from
-thence to any part westward over Oldborne bridge, or turning without
-the gate into Smithfielde, and through Iseldon to any part north and
-by west. This gate hath of long time been a gaol, or prison for felons
-and trespassers, as appeareth by records[53] in the reign of King John,
-and of other kings; amongst the which I find one testifying, that in
-the year 1218, the 3rd of King Henry III., the king writeth unto the
-sheriffs of London, commanding them to repair the gaol of Newgate for
-the safe keeping of his prisoners, promising that the charges laid out
-should be allowed unto them upon their account in the Exchequer.
-
-Moreover, in the year 1241, the Jews of Norwich were hanged for
-circumcising a Christian child; their house called the Thor was pulled
-down and destroyed; Aron, the son of Abraham, a Jew, at London, and
-the other Jews, were constrained to pay twenty thousand marks at two
-terms in the year, or else to be kept perpetual prisoners in Newgate of
-London, and in other prisons. In 1255, King Henry III. lodging in the
-tower of London, upon displeasure conceived towards the city of London,
-for the escape of John Offrem, a prisoner, being a clerk convict, out
-of Newgate, which had killed a prior that was of alliance to the king,
-as cousin to the queen: he sent for the mayor and sheriffs to come
-before him to answer the matter; the mayor laid the fault from him to
-the sheriffs, forasmuch as to them belonged the keeping of all prisoners
-within the city; and so the mayor returned home, but the sheriffs
-remained there prisoners by the space of a month and more; and yet they
-excused themselves, in that the fault chiefly rested in the bishop's
-officers; for whereas the prisoner was under custody, they at his
-request had granted license to imprison the offender within the gaol of
-Newgate, but so as the bishop's officers were charged to see him safely
-kept. The king, notwithstanding all this, demanded of the city three
-thousand marks for a fine.
-
-In the year 1326, Robert Baldoke, the king's chancellor, was put in
-Newgate, the 3rd of Edward III. In the year 1337, Sir John Poultney
-gave four marks by the year to the relief of prisoners in Newgate. In
-the year 1385, William Walworth gave somewhat to relieve the prisoners
-in Newgate, so have many others since. In the year 1414, the gaolers
-of Newgate and Ludgate died, and prisoners in Newgate to the number
-of sixty-four. In the year 1418, the parson of Wrotham, in Kent, was
-imprisoned in Newgate. In the year 1422, the first of Henry VI., license
-was granted to John Coventre, Jenken Carpenter, and William Grove,
-executors to Richard Whittington, to re-edify the gaol of Newgate, which
-they did with his goods.
-
-Thomas Knowles, grocer, sometime mayor of London, by license of Reynold,
-prior of St. Bartholomew's in Smithfield, and also of John Wakering,
-master of the hospital of St. Bartholomew, and his brethren, conveyed
-the waste of water at the cistern near to the common fountain and chapel
-of St. Nicholas (situate by the said hospital) to the gaols of Newgate,
-and Ludgate, for the relief of the prisoners. Tuesday next after Palm
-Sunday 1431, all the prisoners of Ludgate were removed into Newgate by
-Walter Chartesey, and Robert Large, sheriffs of London; and on the
-13th of April the same sheriffs (through the false suggestion of John
-Kingesell, jailor of Newgate) set from thence eighteen persons free
-men, and these were let to the compters, pinioned as if they had been
-felons; but on the sixteenth of June, Ludgate was again appointed for
-free men, prisoners for debt; and the same day the said free men entered
-by ordinance of the mayor, aldermen, and commons, and by them Henry
-Deane, tailor, was made keeper of Ludgate prison. In the year 1457, a
-great fray was in the north country between Sir Thomas Percie, Lord
-Egremond, and the Earl of Salisbury's sons, whereby many were maimed
-and slain; but, in the end, the Lord Egremond being taken, was by the
-king's counsel found in great default, and therefore condemned in great
-sums of money, to be paid to the Earl of Salisbury, and in the meantime
-committed to Newgate. Not long after, Sir Thomas Percie, Lord Egremond,
-and Sir Richard Percie his brother, being in Newgate, broke out of
-prison by night, and went to the king; the other prisoners took the
-leads of the gate, and defended it a long while against the sheriffs and
-all their officers, insomuch that they were forced to call more aid of
-the citizens, whereby they lastly subdued them, and laid them in irons:
-and this may suffice for Newgate.
-
-
-LUDGATE
-
-In the west is the next, and sixth principal gate, and is called
-Ludgate, as first built (saith Geoffrey Monmouth) by King Lud, a Briton,
-about the year before Christ's nativity, 66. Of which building, and also
-of the name, as Ludsgate, or Fludsgate, hath been of late some question
-among the learned; wherefore I overpass it, as not to my purpose, only
-referring the reader to that I have before written out of Cæsar's
-Commentaries, and other Roman writers, concerning a town or city amongst
-the Britons. This gate I suppose to be one of the most ancient; and as
-Aldgate was built for the east, so was this Ludsgate for the west. I
-read,[54] as I told you, that in the year 1215, the 17th of King John,
-the barons of the realm, being in arms against the king, entered this
-city, and spoiled the Jews' houses; which being done, Robert Fitzwater
-and Geffrey de Magnavilla, Earl of Essex, and the Earl of Gloucester,
-chief leaders of the army, applied all diligence to repair the gates
-and walls of this city, with the stones of the Jews' broken houses,
-especially (as it seemeth) they then repaired, or rather new built
-Ludgate. For in the year 1586, when the same gate was taken down to
-be newly built, there was found couched within the wall thereof a
-stone taken from one of the Jews' houses, wherein was graven in Hebrew
-characters these words following: _Hæc est statio Rabbi Mosis, filii
-insignis Rabbi Isaac_: which is to say, this is the station or ward
-of Rabbi Moyses, the son of the honourable Rabbi Isaac, and had been
-fixed upon the front of one of the Jews' houses, as a note or sign that
-such a one dwelt there. In the year 1260, this Ludgate was repaired,
-and beautified with images of Lud, and other kings, as appeareth by
-letters patent of license given to the citizens of London, to take up
-stone for that purpose, dated the 25th of Henry III. These images of
-kings in the reign of Edward VI. had their heads smitten off, and were
-otherwise defaced by[55] such as judged every image to be an idol; and
-in the reign of Queen Mary were repaired, as by setting new heads on
-their old bodies, etc. All which so remained until the year 1586, the
-28th of Queen Elizabeth, when the same gate being sore decayed, was
-clean taken down; the prisoners in the meantime remaining in the large
-south-east quadrant to the same gate adjoining; and the same year the
-whole gate was newly and beautifully built, with the images of Lud and
-others, as afore, on the east side, and the picture of her majesty Queen
-Elizabeth on the west side: all which was done at the common charges of
-the citizens, amounting to fifteen hundred pounds or more.
-
-This gate was made a free prison in the year 1378, the 1st of Richard
-II., Nicholas Brembar being mayor.[56] The same was confirmed in the
-year 1382, John Northampton being mayor, by a common council in the
-Guildhall; by which it was ordained that all freemen of this city
-should, for debt, trespasses, accounts, and contempts, be imprisoned
-in Ludgate, and for treasons, felonies, and other criminal offences,
-committed to Newgate, etc. In the year 1431, the 10th of King Henry VI.,
-John Wells being mayor, a court of common council established ordinances
-(as William Standon and Robert Chicheley, late mayors, before had done),
-touching the guard and government of Ludgate and other prisons.
-
-Also in the year 1463, the third of Edward IV., Mathew Philip, being
-mayor, in a common council, at the request of the well-disposed,
-blessed, and devout woman, Dame Agnes Forster, widow, late wife to
-Stephen Forster, fishmonger, sometime mayor, for the comfort and relief
-of all the poor prisoners, certain articles were established. Imprimis,
-that the new works then late edified by the same Dame Agnes, for the
-enlarging of the prison of Ludgate, from thenceforth should be had and
-taken as a part and parcel of the said prison of Ludgate; so that both
-the old and new work of Ludgate aforesaid be one prison, gaol keeping,
-and charge for evermore.
-
-The said quadrant, strongly built of stone by the beforenamed Stephen
-Forster, and Agnes his wife, containeth a large walking-place by ground
-of thirty-eight feet and a half in length, besides the thickness of the
-walls, which are at the least six foot, makes altogether forty-four
-feet and a half; the breadth within the walls is twenty-nine feet and a
-half, so that the thickness of the walls maketh it thirty five feet and
-a half in breadth. The like room it hath over it for lodgings, and over
-it again fair leads to walk upon, well embattled, all for fresh air and
-ease of prisoners, to the end they should have lodging and water free
-without charge, as by certain verses graven in copper, and fixed on the
-said quadrant, I have read in form following:--
-
- "Devout souls that pass this way,
- For Stephen Forster, late mayor, heartily pray;
- And Dame Agnes his spouse to God consecrate,
- That of pity this house made for Londoners in Ludgate.
- So that for lodging and water prisoners here nought pay,
- As their keepers shall all answer at dreadful doomsday."
-
-This place and one other of his arms, three broad arrow-heads, taken
-down with the old gate, I caused to be fixed over the entry of the said
-quadrant; but the verses being unhappily turned inward to the wall,
-procured the like in effect to be graven outward in prose, declaring him
-to be a fishmonger, because some upon a light occasion (as a maiden's
-head in a glass window) had fabled him to be a mercer, and to have
-begged there at Ludgate, etc. Thus much for Ludgate.
-
-Next this is there a breach in the wall of the city, and a bridge of
-timber over the Fleet dike, betwixt Fleetebridge and Thames, directly
-over against the house of Bridewel. Thus much for gates in the wall.
-
-Water-gates on the banks of the river Thames have been many, which being
-purchased by private men, are also put to private use, and the old names
-of them forgotten; but of such as remain, from the west towards the
-east, may be said as followeth:--
-
-The Blacke-friers stairs, a free landing-place.
-
-Then a water-gate at Puddle wharf, of one Puddle that kept a wharf on
-the west side thereof, and now of Puddle water, by means of many horses
-watered there.
-
-Then Powle's wharf, also a free landing-place with stairs, etc.
-
-Then Broken wharf, and other such like.
-
-But, Ripa Regina, the Queene's bank, or Queene hithe may well be
-accounted the very chief and principal water-gate of this city, being
-a common strand or landing-place, yet equal with, and of old time far
-exceeding, Belins gate, as shall be shown in the ward of Queene hithe.
-
-The next is Downe gate, so called of the sudden descending or down-going
-of that way from St. John's church upon Walbrooke unto the river of
-Thames, whereby the water in the channel there hath such a swift course,
-that in the year 1574, on the fourth of September, after a strong shower
-of rain, a lad, of the age of eighteen years, minding to have leapt over
-the channel, was taken by the feet, and borne down with the violence of
-that narrow stream, and carried toward the Thames with such a violent
-swiftness, as no man could rescue or stay him, till he came against
-a cart-wheel that stood in the water-gate, before which time he was
-drowned and stark dead.
-
-This was sometimes a large water-gate, frequented of ships and other
-vessels, like as the Queene hithe, and was a part thereof, as doth
-appear by an inquisition made in the 28th year of Henry III., wherein
-was found, that as well corn as fish, and all other things coming to the
-port of Downegate, were to be ordered after the customs of the Queene's
-hithe, for the king's use; as also that the corn arriving between the
-gate of the Guild hall of the merchants of Cullen (the Styleyard), which
-is east from Downegate, and the house then pertaining to the Archbishop
-of Canterbury, west from Baynarde's Castle, was to be measured by the
-measure, and measurer of the Queene's soke, or Queene hithe. I read
-also, in the 19th of Edward III., that customs were then to be paid for
-ships and other vessels resting at Downegate, as if they rode at Queene
-hithe, and as they now do at Belingsgate. And thus much for Downegate
-may suffice.
-
-The next was called Wolfes gate,[57] in the ropery in the parish of
-Allhallowes the Lesse, of later time called Wolfes lane, but now out of
-use; for the lower part was built on by the Earle of Shrewsburie, and
-the other part was stopped up and built on by the chamberlain of London.
-
-The next is Ebgate,[58] a water-gate, so called of old time, as
-appeareth by divers records of tenements near unto the same adjoining.
-It standeth near unto the church of St. Laurence Pountney, but is within
-the parish of St. Marten Ordegare. In place of this gate is now a narrow
-passage to the Thames, and is called Ebgate lane, but more commonly the
-Old Swan.
-
-Then is there a water-gate at the bridge foot, called Oyster gate, of
-oysters that were there of old time, commonly to be sold, and was the
-chiefest market for them and for other shell-fishes. There standeth now
-an engine or forcier, for the winding up of water to serve the city,
-whereof I have already spoken.
-
-
-BRIDGE GATE
-
-The next is the Bridge gate, so called of London Bridge, whereon it
-standeth. This was one of the four first and principal gates of the
-city, long before the Conquest, when there stood a bridge of timber,
-and is the seventh and last principal gate mentioned by W. Fitzstephen;
-which gate being new[59] made, when the bridge was built was built
-of stone, hath been oftentimes since repaired. This gate, with the
-tower upon it, in the year 1436 fell down, and two of the farthest
-arches southwards also fell therewith, and no man perished or was hurt
-therewith. To the repairing whereof, divers wealthy citizens gave large
-sums of money; namely, Robert Large, sometime mayor, one hundred marks;
-Stephen Forster, twenty pounds; Sir John Crosbye, alderman, one hundred
-pounds, etc. But in the year 1471,[60] the Kentish mariners, under the
-conduct of bastard Fauconbridge, burned the said gate and thirteen
-houses on the bridge, besides the Beer houses at St. Katherine's, and
-many others in the suburbs.
-
-The next is Buttolphe's gate, so called of the parish church of St.
-Buttolph, near adjoining. This gate was sometimes given or confirmed
-by William Conqueror to the monks of Westminster in these words: "W.
-rex Angliæ, etc., William, king of England, sendeth greeting to the
-sheriffes, and all his ministers, as also to all his loving subjects,
-French and English, of London: Know ye that I have granted to God and
-St. Peter of Westminster, and to the abbot Vitalis, the gift which
-Almundus of the port of S. Buttolph gave them, when he was there made
-monke: that is to say, his Lords court with the houses, and one wharf,
-which is at the head of London bridge, and all other his lands which he
-had in the same city, in such sort as King Edward more beneficially and
-amply granted the same; and I will and command that they shall enjoy
-the same well and quietly and honourably, with sake and soke, etc."
-
-The next is Bellinsgate, used as an especial port, or harbour, for small
-ships and boats coming thereto, and is now[61] most frequented, the
-Queen's hithe being almost forsaken. How this gate took that name, or of
-what antiquity the same is, I must leave uncertain, as not having any
-ancient record thereof, more than that Geoffrey Monmouth writeth, that
-Belin, a king of the Britons, about four hundred years before Christ's
-nativity, built this gate, and named it Belin's gate, after his own
-calling; and that when he was dead, his body being burnt, the ashes, in
-a vessel of brass, were set upon a high pinnacle of stone over the same
-gate. But Cæsar and other Roman writers affirm, of cities, walls, and
-gates, as ye have before heard; and therefore it seemeth to me not to be
-so ancient, but rather to have taken that name of some later owner of
-the place, happily named Beling, or Biling, as Somar's key, Smart's key,
-Frosh wharf, and others, thereby took their names of their owners. Of
-this gate more shall be said when we come to Belin's gate ward.
-
-Then have you a water-gate, on the west side of Wool wharf, or
-Customers' key,[62] which is commonly called the water-gate, at the
-south end of Water lane.
-
-One other water-gate there is by the bulwark of the Tower, and this is
-the last and farthest water-gate eastward, on the river of Thames, so
-far as the city of London extendeth within the walls; both which last
-named water-gates be within the Tower ward.
-
-Besides these common water-gates, were divers private wharfs and
-keys, all along from the east to the west of this city, on the bank
-of the river of Thames; merchants of all nations had landing-places,
-warehouses, cellars, and stowage of their goods and merchandises, as
-partly shall be touched in the wards adjoining to the said river. Now,
-for the ordering and keeping these gates of this city in the night time,
-it was appointed in the year of Christ 1258, by Henry III., the 42nd of
-his reign,[63] that the ports of England should be strongly kept, and
-that the gates of London should be new repaired, and diligently kept in
-the night, for fear of French deceits, whereof one writeth these verses:
-
- "Per noctem portæ clauduntur Londoniarum,
- Moenia ne forte fraus frangat Francigenarum."
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[40] "Which then served as a posterne for passengers out of the east,
-from thence through Tower street, East cheape, and Candlewecke street
-to London Stone, the middle point of that highway, then through Budge
-row, Watheling street, and leaving Paul's church on the right hand,
-to Ludgate in the west; the next be Aldgate, Bishopsgate, Criplegate,
-Aldersgate, Ludgate, and the Bridgegate over the Thames. Since the which
-time hath been builded Newgate," etc.--_1st edition_, p. 25.
-
-[41] "Was never re-edified againe of stone, but an homely cottage, with
-a narrow passage made of timber, lath and loame, hath beene in place
-thereof set up, and so remaineth."--_1st edition_, p. 25.
-
-[42] Liber Trinitat.
-
-[43] Matthew Paris.
-
-[44] Radul. Coggeshall.
-
-[45] W. Donthorn.
-
-[46] "Now called Bednal Green."--_1st edition_, p. 26.
-
-[47] Liber Trinitat.
-
-[48] Liber Custom. London.
-
-[49] Abbo Floriacens, Burchardus.
-
-[50] Liber S. Bartilmew.
-
-[51] In a book, called _Beware of the Cat_.--_Stow._
-
-[52] "About the raigne of Henry II. or Richard I."--_1st edition_, p. 30.
-
-[53] Close roll.
-
-[54] Roger Wendover, Matthew Paris.
-
-[55] "By unadvised folkes"--_1st edition._
-
-[56] Record, Guildhall.
-
-[57] Liber Horne. Liber S. Alban.
-
-[58] Liber Trinitat. Liber S. Alban. Record, E. 3.
-
-[59] "Weakly made."--_1st edition_, p. 36.
-
-[60] W. Duntherne.
-
-[61] "The largest water-gate on the river of Thames, and therefore most
-frequented."--_1st edition_, p. 36.
-
-[62] "Which is now of late most beautifully enlarged and built."--_1st
-edition_, p. 37.
-
-[63] Matthew Paris.
-
-
-
-
-OF TOWERS AND CASTLES
-
-
-"The city of London (saith Fitzstephen) hath in the east a very great
-and a most strong palatine Tower, whose turrets and walls do rise from
-a deep foundation, the mortar thereof being tempered with the blood of
-beasts. In the west part are two most strong castles, etc." To begin
-therefore with the most famous Tower of London, situate in the east,
-near unto the river of Thames: it hath been the common opinion, and
-some have written (but of none assured ground), that Julius Cæsar, the
-first conqueror of the Britons, was the original author and founder, as
-well thereof as also of many other towers, castles, and great buildings
-within this realm; but (as I have already before noted) Cæsar remained
-not here so long, nor had he in his head any such matter, but only to
-dispatch a conquest of this barbarous country, and to proceed to greater
-matters. Neither do the Roman writers make mention of any such buildings
-created by him here; and therefore leaving this, and proceeding to
-more grounded authority, I find in a fair register-book, containing
-the acts of the Bishops of Rochester, set down by Edmond de Hadenham,
-that William I., surnamed Conqueror, built the Tower of London; to wit,
-the great white and square tower there, about the year of Christ 1078,
-appointing Gundulph, then Bishop of Rochester, to be principal surveyor
-and overseer of that work, who was for that time lodged in the house of
-Edmere, a burgess of London; the very words of which mine author are
-these: "_Gundulphus Episcopus mandato Willielmi Regis magni præfuit
-operi magnæ Turris London. quo tempore hospitatus est apud quendam
-Edmerum Burgensem London. qui dedit unum_ were _Ecclesiæ Rofen._"
-
-Ye have before heard that the wall of this city was all round about
-furnished with towers and bulwarks, in due distance every one from
-other; and also that the river Thames, with his ebbing and flowing, on
-the south side, had subverted the said wall and towers there. Wherefore
-King William, for defence of this city, in place most dangerous, and
-open to the enemy, having taken down the second bulwark in the east
-part of the wall from the Thames, built this tower, which was the great
-square tower, now called the White Tower, and hath been since at divers
-times enlarged with other buildings adjoining, as shall be shown. This
-tower was by tempest of wind[64] sore shaken in the year 1090, the 4th
-of William Rufus, and was again by the said Rufus and Henry I. repaired.
-They also caused a castle to be built under the said tower, namely, on
-the south side towards the Thames, and also incastellated the same round
-about.
-
-Henry Huntingdon, libro sexto, hath these words: "William Rufus
-challenged the investure of prelates; he pilled and shaved the people
-with tribute, especially to spend about the Tower of London, and the
-great hall at Westminster."
-
-Othowerus, Acolinillus, Otto, and Geffrey Magnaville, Earl of Essex,
-were four the first constables of this Tower of London, by succession;
-all which held by force a portion of land (that pertained to the priory
-of the Holy Trinitie within Aldgate); that is to say, East Smithfield,
-near unto the Tower, making thereof a vineyard,[65] and would not depart
-from it till the 2nd year of King Stephen, when the same was abridged
-and restored to the church. This said Geffrey Magnaville was Earl of
-Essex, constable of the Tower, sheriff of London, Middlesex, Essex, and
-Hertfordshire, as appeareth by a charter of Maud the empress, dated
-1141. He also fortified the Tower of London against King Stephen; but
-the king took him in his court at St. Albones, and would not deliver him
-till he had rendered the Tower of London, with the castles of Walden and
-Plashey in Essex. In the year 1153 the Tower of London and the castle
-of Windsor were by the king delivered to Richard de Lucie, to be safely
-kept. In the year 1155, Thomas Becket being chancellor to Henry II.,
-caused the Flemings to be banished out of England,[66] their castles
-lately built to be pulled down, and the Tower of London to be repaired.
-
-About the year 1190, the 2nd of Richard I., William Longshampe, Bishop
-of Elie, Chancellor of England, for cause of dissension betwixt him and
-Earl John, the king's brother that was rebel, inclosed the tower and
-castle of London, with an outward wall of stone embattled, and also
-caused a deep ditch to be cast about the same, thinking (as I have
-said before) to have environed it with the river of Thames. By the
-making of this inclosure and ditch in East Smithfield, the church of
-the Holy Trinitie in London lost half a mark rent by the year, and the
-mill was removed that belonged to the poor brethren of the hospital of
-St. Katherine,[67] and to the church of the Holy Trinitie aforesaid,
-which was no small loss and discommodity to either part; and the garden
-which the king had hired of the brethren for six marks the year, for
-the most part was wasted and marred by the ditch. Recompense was often
-promised, but never performed, until King Edward coming after, gave to
-the brethren five marks and a half for that part which the ditch had
-devoured, and the other part thereof without he yielded to them again,
-which they hold: and of the said rent of five marks and a half, they
-have a deed, by virtue whereof they are well paid to this day.
-
-It is also to be noted, and cannot be denied, but that the said
-inclosure and ditch took the like or greater quantity of ground from the
-city within the wall; namely, one of that part called the Tower Hill,
-besides breaking down of the city wall, from the White Tower to the
-first gate of the city, called the Postern; yet have I not read of any
-quarrel made by the citizens, or recompense demanded by them for that
-matter, because all was done for good of the city's defence thereof,
-and to their good likings. But Matthew Paris writeth, that in the year
-1239, King Henry III. fortified the Tower of London to another end;
-wherefore the citizens, fearing lest that were done to their detriment,
-complained, and the king answered, that he had not done it to their
-hurt, but (saith he) I will from henceforth do as my brother doth, in
-building and fortifying castles, who beareth the name to be wiser than
-I am. It followed in the next year, saith mine author, the said noble
-buildings of the stone gate and bulwark, which the king had caused to
-be made by the Tower of London, on the west side thereof, were shaken
-as it had been with an earthquake, and fell down, which the king again
-commanded to be built in better sort than before, which was done; and
-yet again, in the year 1247, the said wall and bulwarks that were newly
-built, wherein the king had bestowed more than twelve thousand marks,
-were irrecoverably thrown down, as afore; for the which chance the
-citizens of London were nothing sorry, for they were threatened that
-the said wall and bulwarks were built, to the end that if any of them
-would contend for the liberties of the city, they might be imprisoned;
-and that many might be laid in divers prisons, many lodgings were made
-that no one should speak with another: thus much Matthew Paris for
-this building. More of Henry III., his dealings against the citizens
-of London, we may read in the said author, in 1245, 1248, 1249, 1253,
-1255, 1256, etc. But, concerning the said wall and bulwark, the same
-was finished, though not in his time; for I read that Edward I., in
-the second of his reign, commanded the treasurer and chamberlain of
-the Exchequer to deliver out of his treasury unto Miles of Andwarp two
-hundred marks, of the fines taken out of divers merchants or usurers
-of London, for so be the words of the record, towards the work of the
-ditch then new made, about the said bulwark, now called the Lion Tower.
-I find also recorded, that Henry III., in the 46th of his reign, wrote
-to Edward of Westminster, commanding him that he should buy certain
-perie plants, and set the same in the place without his Tower of London,
-within the wall of the said city, which of late he had caused to be
-inclosed with a mud wall, as may appear by this that followeth: the
-mayor and commonalty of London were fined for throwing down the said
-earthen wall against the Tower of London, the 9th of Edward II. Edward
-IV. in place thereof built a wall of brick. But now for the Lion Tower
-and lions in England, the original, as I have read, was thus.
-
-Henry I. built his manor of Wodstock, with a park, which he walled about
-with stone, seven miles in compass, destroying for the same divers
-villages, churches, and chapels; and this was the first park in England.
-He placed therein, besides great store of deer, divers strange beasts to
-be kept and nourished, such as were brought to him from far countries,
-as lions, leopards, linces, porpentines,[68] and such other. More I
-read, that in the year 1235, Frederick the emperor sent to Henry III.
-three leopards, in token of his regal shield of arms, wherein three
-leopards were pictured; since the which time those lions and others have
-been kept in a part of this bulwark, now called the Lion Tower, and
-their keepers there lodged. King Edward II., in the 12th of his reign,
-commanded the sheriffs of London to pay to the keepers of the king's
-leopard in the Tower of London sixpence the day for the sustenance of
-the leopard, and three-halfpence a day for diet for the said keeper, out
-of the fee farm of the said city. More, in the 16th of Edward III., one
-lion, one lioness, one leopard, and two cat lions, in the said Tower,
-were committed to the custody of Robert, the son of John Bowre.
-
-Edward IV. fortified the Tower of London, and inclosed with brick, as
-is aforesaid, a certain piece of ground, taken out of the Tower Hill,
-west from the Lion Tower, now called the bulwark. His officers also, in
-the 5th of his reign, set upon the said hill both scaffold and gallows,
-for the execution of offenders; whereupon the mayor and his brethren
-complained to the king, and were answered that the same was not done in
-derogation of the city's liberties, and thereof caused proclamation to
-be made, etc., as shall be shown in Tower street.
-
-Richard III., repaired and built in this tower somewhat. Henry VIII.,
-in 1532, repaired the White Tower, and other parts thereof. In the year
-1548, the 2nd of Edward VI., on the 22nd of November, in the night, a
-Frenchman lodged in the round bulwark, betwixt the west gate and the
-postern, or drawbridge, called the warders' gate, by setting fire on a
-barrel of gunpowder, blew up the said bulwark, burnt himself, and no
-more persons. This bulwark, was forthwith again new built.
-
-And here, because I have by occasion spoken of the west gate of this
-tower the same, as the most principal, is used for the receipt and
-delivery of all kinds of carriages, without the which gate divers
-bulwarks and gates, towards the north, etc. Then near within this west
-gate, opening to the south, is a strong postern for passengers by the
-ward-house, over a drawbridge let down for that purpose. Next on the
-same south side, toward the east, is a large water-gate, for receipt
-of boats and small vessels, partly under a stone bridge from the river
-of Thames. Beyond it is a small postern, with a drawbridge, seldom let
-down but for the receipt of some great persons, prisoners. Then towards
-the east is a great and strong gate, commonly called the Iron gate, but
-not usually opened. And thus much for the foundation, building, and
-repairing of this tower, with the gates and posterns, may suffice. And
-now somewhat of accidents in the same shall be shown.
-
-In the year 1196, William Fitzosbert, a citizen of London, seditiously
-moving the common people to seek liberty, and not to be subject to
-the rich and more mighty, at length was taken and brought before the
-Archbishop of Canterbury in the Tower, where he was by the judges
-condemned, and by the heels drawn thence to the Elms in Smithfield, and
-there hanged.
-
-In 1214, King John[69] wrote to Geffrey Magnaville to deliver the Tower
-of London, with the prisoners, armour, and all other things found
-therein belonging to the king, to William, archdeacon of Huntingdon. In
-the year 1216, the 1st of Henry III., the said Tower was delivered to
-Lewis of France and the barons of England.[70]
-
-In the year 1206 pleas of the crown were pleaded in the Tower; likewise
-in the year 1220, and likewise in the year 1224, and again in the year
-1243, before William of Yorke, Richard Passelew, Henry Brahe, Jerome of
-Saxton, justices.
-
-In the year 1222, the citizens of London having made a tumult against
-the abbot of Westminster, Hubert of Burge, chief justice of England,
-came to the Tower of London, called before him the mayor and aldermen,
-of whom he inquired for the principal authors of that sedition; amongst
-whom one, named Constantine Fitz Aelulfe, avowed that he was the man,
-and had done much less than he ought to have done: whereupon the justice
-sent him with two other to Falks de Brent, who with armed men brought
-them to the gallows, where they were hanged.
-
-In the year 1244, Griffith, the eldest son of Leoline, Prince of Wales,
-being kept prisoner in the Tower, devised means of escape, and having
-in the night made of the hangings, sheets, etc., a long line, he put
-himself down from the top of the Tower, but in the sliding, the weight
-of his body, being a very big and a fat man, brake the rope, and he fell
-and brake his neck withall.
-
-In the year 1253, King Henry III. imprisoned the sheriffs of London
-in the Tower more than a month, for the escape of a prisoner out of
-Newgate, as you may read in the chapter of Gates.
-
-In the year 1260, King Henry, with his queen (for fear of the barons),
-were lodged in the Tower. The next year he sent for his lords, and held
-his parliament there.
-
-In the year 1263, when the queen would have removed from the Tower by
-water towards Windsor, sundry Londoners got them together to the bridge,
-under the which she was to pass, and not only cried out upon her with
-reproachful words, but also threw mire and stones at her, by which she
-was constrained to return for the time; but in the year 1265, the said
-citizens were fain to submit themselves to the king for it, and the
-mayor, aldermen, and sheriffs were sent to divers prisons, and a custos
-also was set over the city; to wit, Othon, constable of the Tower, etc.
-
-In the year 1282, Leoline, prince of Wales, being taken at Bewlth
-castle, Roger Lestrange cut off his head, which Sir Roger Mortimer
-caused to be crowned with ivy, and set it upon the Tower of London.
-
-In the year 1290, divers justices, as well of the bench as of the
-assizes, were sent prisoners to the Tower, which with great sums of
-money redeemed their liberty. Edward II., the 14th of his reign,
-appointed for prisoners in the Tower, a knight twopence the day, an
-esquire one penny the day, to serve for their diet.
-
-In the year 1320, the king's justices sat in the Tower, for trial of
-matters; whereupon John Gifors, late mayor of London, and many others,
-fled the city, for fear to be charged of things they had presumptuously
-done.
-
-In the year 1321, the Mortimers yielding themselves to the king, he sent
-them prisoners to the Tower, where they remained long, and were adjudged
-to be drawn and hanged. But at length Roger Mortimer, of Wigmore, by
-giving to his keepers a sleepy drink, escaped out of the Tower, and his
-uncle Roger, being still kept there, died about five years after.
-
-In the year 1326, the citizens of London won the Tower, wresting the
-keys out of the constable's hands, delivered all the prisoners, and kept
-both city and Tower to the use of Isabel the queen, and Edward her son.
-
-In the year 1330, Roger Mortimer, Earl of March, was taken and brought
-to the Tower, from whence he was brought to the Elms, and there hanged.
-
-In the year 1344, King Edward III., in the 18th of his reign, commanded
-florences of gold to be made and coined in the Tower; that is to say,
-a penny piece of the value of five shillings and eight pence, the
-halfpenny piece of the value of three shillings and four pence, and a
-farthing piece worth twenty pence; Percevall de Port of Lake being then
-master of the coin. And this is the first coining of gold in the Tower,
-whereof I have read, and also the first coinage of gold in England.
-I find also recorded, that the said king in the same year ordained
-his exchange of money to be kept in Serne's Tower, a part of the
-king's house in Bucklesbury. And here to digress a little (by occasion
-offered), I find that, in times before passed, all great sums were paid
-by weight of gold or silver, as so many pounds or marks of silver, or
-so many pounds or marks of gold, cut into blanks, and not stamped, as I
-could prove by many good authorities which I overpass. The smaller sums
-also were paid in starlings, which were pence so called, for other coins
-they had none. The antiquity of this starling penny usual in this realm
-is from the reign of Henry II., notwithstanding the Saxon coins before
-the Conquest were pence of fine silver the full weight, and somewhat
-better than the latter starlings, as I have tried by conference of the
-pence of Burghrede, king of Mercia, Aelfred, Edward, and Edelred, kings
-of the West Saxons, Plegmond, Archbishop of Canterbury, and others.
-William the Conqueror's penny also was fine silver of the weight of
-the easterling, and had on the one side stamped an armed head, with a
-beardless face,--for the Normans wore no beards,--with a sceptre in his
-hand. The inscription in the circumference was this: "Le Rei Wilam;"[71]
-on the other side, a cross double to the ring, between four rowals of
-six points.
-
-King Henry I. his penny was of the like weight, fineness, form of face,
-cross, etc.
-
-This Henry, in the 8th year of his reign, ordained the penny, which was
-round, so to be quartered by the cross, that they might easily be broken
-into halfpence and farthings.[72] In the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5th of
-King Richard I. his reign, and afterwards, I find commonly easterling
-money mentioned, and yet ofttimes the same is called argent, as afore,
-and not otherwise.
-
-The first great sum that I read of to be paid in easterlings was in the
-reign of Richard I., when Robert, Earl of Leicester, being prisoner
-in France, proffered for his ransom a thousand marks easterlings,
-notwithstanding the easterling pence were long before. The weight of the
-easterling penny may appear by divers statutes, namely, of weights and
-measures, made in the 51st of Henry III. in these words: "Thirty-two
-graines of wheat, drie and round, taken in the middest of the eare,
-shoulde be the weight of a starling penie, 20 of those pence should
-waye one ounce, 12 ounces a pound Troy." It followeth in the statute
-eight pound to make a gallon of wine, and eight gallons a bushel of
-London measure, etc. Notwithstanding which statute, I find, in the 8th
-of Edward I., Gregorie Rokesley, mayor of London, being chief master
-or minister of the Kinge's Exchange, or mintes, a new coin being then
-appointed, the pound of easterling money should contain as afore twelve
-ounces; to wit, fine silver, such as was then made into foil, and
-was commonly called silver of Guthurons lane,[73] eleven ounces, two
-easterlings, and one ferling or farthing, and the other seventeen pence
-ob. q.[74] to be alloy. Also, the pound of money ought to weigh twenty
-shillings and three pence by account; so that no pound ought to be
-over twenty shillings and three pence, nor less than twenty shillings
-and two pence by account; the ounce to weigh twenty pence, the penny
-weight twenty-four grains (which twenty-four by weight then appointed
-were as much as the former thirty-two grains of wheat), a penny force
-twenty-five grains and a half, the penny deble or feeble twenty-two
-grains and a half, etc.[75]
-
-Now for the penny easterling, how it took that name I think good briefly
-to touch. It hath been said, that Numa Pompilius, the second king of the
-Romans, commanded money first to be made, of whose name they were called
-_nummi_; and when copper pence, silver pence, and gold pence, were made,
-because every silver penny was worth ten copper pence, and every gold
-penny worth ten silver pence, the pence therefore were called in Latin,
-denarii, and oftentimes the pence are named of the matter and stuff of
-gold or silver. But the money of England was called of the workers and
-makers thereof; as the florin of gold is called of the Florentines, that
-were the workers thereof, and so the easterling pence took their name of
-the Easterlings which did first make this money in England, in the reign
-of Henry II.
-
-Thus have I set down according to my reading in antiquity of money
-matters, omitting the imaginations of late writers, of whom some have
-said easterling money to take that name of a star, stamped in the border
-or ring of the penny; other some of a bird called a star or starling
-stamped in the circumference; and other (more unlikely) of being coined
-at Strivelin or Starling, a town in Scotland, etc.
-
-Now concerning halfpence and farthings, the account of which is more
-subtle than the pence, I need not speak of them more than that they were
-only made in the Exchange at London, and nowhere else: first appointed
-to be made by Edward I. in the 8th of his reign; and also at the same
-time the said king coined some few groats of silver, but they were not
-usual. The king's Exchange as London was near unto the cathedral church
-of St. Paul, and is to this day commonly called the Old Change, but in
-evidences the Old Exchange.
-
-The king's exchanger in this place was to deliver out to every other
-exchanger throughout England, or other the king's dominions, their
-coining irons, that is to say, one standard or staple, and two trussels
-or puncheons; and when the same was spent and worn, to receive them
-with an account what sum had been coined, and also their pix or bore
-of assay, and deliver other irons new graven, etc. I find that in the
-9th of King John, there was besides the mint at London, other mints
-at Winchester, Excester, Chichester, Canterburie, Rochester, Ipswich,
-Norwich, Linne, Lincolne, York, Carleil, Northampton, Oxford, St.
-Edmondsbury, and Durham. The exchanger, examiner, and trier, buyeth the
-silver for coinage, answering for every hundred pounds of silver bought
-in bullion or otherwise, ninety-eight pounds fifteen shillings, for he
-taketh twenty-five shillings for coinage.
-
-King Edward I., in the 27th of his reign, held a parliament at
-Stebenheth, in the house of Henry Waleis, mayor of London, wherein
-amongst other things there handled, the transporting of sterling money
-was forbidden.
-
-In the year 1351, William Edington, bishop of Winchester, and treasurer
-of England, a wise man, but loving the king's commodity more than the
-wealth of the whole realm, and common people (saith mine author[76])
-caused a new coin, called a groat, and a half-groat, to be coined and
-stamped, the groat to be taken for four pence, and the half-groat for
-two pence, not containing in weight according to the pence called
-easterlings, but much less, to wit, by five shillings in the pound; by
-reason whereof, victuals and merchandises became the dearer through the
-whole realm. About the same time also, the old coin of gold was changed
-into a new; but the old florin or noble, then so called, was worth much
-above the taxed rate of the new, and therefore the merchants engrossed
-up the old, and conveyed them out of the realm, to the great loss of the
-kingdom. Wherefore a remedy was provided by changing of the stamp.
-
-In the year 1411, King Henry IV. caused a new coin of nobles to be made,
-of less value than the old by four pence in the noble, so that fifty
-nobles should be a pound troy weight.
-
-In the year 1421 was granted to Henry V. a fifteenth, to be paid at
-Candlemas and at Martinmas, of such money as was then current, gold or
-silver, not overmuch clipped or washed; to wit, that if the noble were
-worth five shillings and eight pence, then the king should take it for
-a full noble of six shillings and eight pence, and if it were less of
-value than five shillings and eight pence, then the person paying that
-gold to make it good to the value of five shillings and eight pence,
-the king always receiving it for a whole noble of six shillings and
-eight pence. And if the noble so paid be better than five shillings and
-eight pence, the king to pay again the surplusage that it was better
-than five shillings and eight pence. Also this year was such scarcity of
-white money, that though a noble were so good of gold and weight as six
-shillings and eight pence, men might get no white money for them.
-
-In the year 1465, King Edward IV. caused a new coin both of gold and
-silver to be made, whereby he gained much; for he made of an old noble
-a royal, which he commanded to go for ten shillings. Nevertheless,
-to the same royal was put eight pence of alloy, and so weighed the
-more, being smitten with a new stamp, to wit, a rose. He likewise made
-half-angels of five shillings, and farthings of two shillings and six
-pence, angelets of six shillings and eight pence, and half-angels of
-three shillings and four pence. He made silver money of three pence, a
-groat, and so of other coins after that rate, to the great harm of the
-commons. W. Lord Hastings, the king's chamberlain, being master of the
-king's mints, undertook to make the monies under form following, to
-wit,--of gold, a piece of eight shillings and four pence sterling, which
-should be called a noble of gold, of the which there should be fifty
-such pieces in the pound weight of the Tower; another piece of gold of
-four shillings and two pence sterling, and to be of them an hundred such
-pieces in the pound; and a third piece of gold, of two shillings and one
-penny sterling, two hundred such pieces in the pound; every pound weight
-of the Tower to be worth twenty pounds, sixteen shillings, and eight
-pence, the which should be twenty-three carats, three grains and a half
-fine, etc., and for silver thirty-seven shillings and six pence; the
-piece of four pence to be one hundred and twelve groats and two pence in
-the pound weight.
-
-In the year 1504, King Henry VII. appointed a new coin, to wit, a groat,
-and half-groat, which bare but half faces; the same time also was coined
-a groat, which was in value twelve pence, but of those but a few, after
-the rate of forty pence the ounce.
-
-In the year 1526, the 18th of Henry VIII., the angel noble being
-then the sixth part of an ounce troy, so that six angels were just
-an ounce, which was forty shillings sterling, and the angel was also
-worth two ounces of silver, so that six angels were worth twelve ounces
-of silver, which was forty shillings. A proclamation was made on the
-sixth of September, that the angel should go for seven shillings and
-four pence, the royal for eleven shillings, and the crown for four
-shillings and four-pence. And on the fifth of November following, again
-by proclamation, the angel was enhanced to seven shillings and sixpence,
-and so every ounce of gold to be forty-five shillings, and the ounce of
-silver at three shillings and nine pence in value.
-
-In the year 1544, the 35th of Henry VIII., on the 16th of May,
-proclamation was made for the enhancing of gold to forty-eight
-shillings, and silver to four shillings the ounce. Also the king caused
-to be coined base moneys, to wit, pieces of twelve pence, six pence,
-four pence, two pence, and a penny, in weight as the late sterling, in
-show good silver, but inwardly copper. These pieces had whole, or broad
-faces, and continued current after that rate till the 5th of Edward
-VI., when they were on the 9th of July called down, the shilling to
-nine pence, the groat to three pence, etc., and on the 17th of August
-from nine pence to six pence, etc. And on the 30th of October was
-published new coins of silver and gold to be made, a piece of silver
-five shillings sterling, a piece of two shillings and five pence, of
-twelve pence, of six pence, a penny with a double rose, half-penny a
-single rose, and a farthing with a portclose. Coins of fine gold: a
-whole sovereign of thirty shillings, an angel of ten shillings, an
-angelet of five shillings. Of crown gold: a sovereign twenty shillings,
-half-sovereign ten shillings, five shillings, two shillings and six
-pence, and base moneys to pass as before, which continued till the 2nd
-of Queen Elizabeth, then called to a lower rate, taken to the mint,
-and refined, the silver whereof being coined with a new stamp of her
-majesty, the dross was carried to foul highways, to heighten them. This
-base money, for the time, caused the old sterling moneys to be hoarded
-up, so that I have seen twenty-one shillings current given for one old
-angel to gild withal. Also rents of lands and tenements, with prices of
-victuals, were raised far beyond the former rates, hardly since to be
-brought down. Thus much for base moneys coined and current in England
-have I known. But for leather moneys, as many people have fondly talked,
-I find no such matter. I read,[77] that King John of France, being taken
-prisoner by Edward the Black Prince at the battle of Poictiers, paid
-a ransom of three millions of florences, whereby he brought the realm
-into such poverty, that many years after they used leather money, with a
-little stud or nail of silver in the middle thereof. Thus much for mint
-and coinage, by occasion of this Tower (under correction of others more
-skilful) may suffice. And now to other accidents there.
-
-In the year 1360, the peace between England and France being confirmed,
-King Edward came over into England, and straight to the Tower, to see
-the French king then prisoner there, whose ransom he assessed at three
-millions of florences, and so delivered him from prison, and brought him
-with honour to the sea.
-
-In the year 1381, the rebels of Kent drew out of the Tower (where the
-king was then lodged) Simon Sudberie, archbishop of Canterbury, lord
-chancellor, Robert Hales, prior of St. John's, and treasurer of England,
-William Appleton, friar, the king's confessor, and John Legg, a sergeant
-of the king's, and beheaded them on the Tower hill, etc.
-
-In the year 1387, King Richard held his feast of Christmas in the Tower.
-And in the year 1399, the same king was sent prisoner to the Tower.
-
-In the year 1414, Sir John Oldcastell brake out of the Tower. And the
-same year, a parliament being holden at Leycester, a porter of the Tower
-was drawn, hanged, and headed, whose head was sent up, and set over the
-Tower gate, for consenting to one Whitlooke, that brake out of the Tower.
-
-In the year 1419, Friar Randulph was sent to the Tower, and was there
-slain by the parson of St. Peter's in the Tower.
-
-In the year 1428, there came to London, a lewd fellow, feigning himself
-to be sent from the Emperor to the young King Henry VI., calling himself
-Baron of Blakamoore, and that he should be the principal physician
-in this kingdom; but his subtlety being known, he was apprehended,
-condemned, drawn, hanged, headed, and quartered, his head set on the
-Tower of London, and his quarters on four gates of the city.
-
-In the year 1458, in Whitsun week, the Duke of Somerset, with Anthonie
-Rivers, and other four, kept jousts before the queen in the Tower of
-London, against three esquires of the queen's, and others.
-
-In the year 1465, King Henry VI. was brought prisoner to the Tower,
-where he remained long.
-
-In the year 1470, the Tower was yielded to Sir Richard Lee, mayor of
-London, and his brethren the aldermen, who forthwith entered the same,
-delivered King Henry of his imprisonment, and lodged him in the king's
-lodging there; but the next year he was again sent thither prisoner, and
-there murdered.
-
-In the year 1478, George Duke of Clarence was drowned with malmsey in
-the Tower; and within five years after King Edward V., with his brother,
-were said to be murdered there.
-
-In the year 1485, John Earl of Oxford was made constable of the Tower,
-and had custody of the lions granted him.[78]
-
-In the year 1501, in the month of May, was a royal tourney of lords and
-knights in the Tower of London before the king.
-
-In the year 1502, Queen Elizabeth, wife to Henry VII., died of
-childbirth in the Tower.
-
-In the year 1512, the chapel in the high White Tower was burnt. In the
-year 1536 Queen Anne Bullein was beheaded in the Tower. 1541, Lady
-Katherine Howard, wife to King Henry VIII., was also beheaded there.
-
-In the year 1546, the 27th of April, being Tuesday in Easter week,
-William Foxley, potmaker for the Mint in the Tower of London, fell
-asleep, and so continued sleeping, and could not be wakened with
-pricking, cramping, or otherwise, burning whatsoever, until the first
-day of the term, which was full fourteen days and fifteen nights, or
-more, for that Easter term beginneth not before seventeen days after
-Easter. The cause of his thus sleeping could not be known, though the
-same was diligently searched after by the king's physicians, and other
-learned men; yea, the king himself examining the said William Foxley,
-who was in all points found at his awakening to be as if he had slept
-but one night. And he lived more than forty years after in the said
-Tower, to wit, until the year of Christ 1587, and then deceased on
-Wednesday in Easter week.
-
-Thus much for these accidents: and now to conclude thereof in summary.
-This Tower is a citadel to defend or command the city; a royal palace
-for assemblies or treaties; a prison of state for the most dangerous
-offenders; the only place of coinage for all England at this time; the
-armoury for warlike provision; the treasury of the ornaments and jewels
-of the crown; and general conserver of the most records of the king's
-courts of justice at Westminster.
-
-
-TOWER ON LONDON BRIDGE
-
-The next tower on the river of Thames is on London bridge, at the north
-end of the drawbridge. This tower was newly begun to be built in the
-year 1426. John Reynwell, mayor of London, laid one of the first corner
-stones in the foundation of this work, the other three were laid by
-the sheriffs and bridge masters; upon every of these four stones was
-engraven in fair roman letters the name of "Ihesus." And these stones I
-have seen laid in the bridge storehouse since they were taken up, when
-that tower was of late newly made of timber. This gate and tower was at
-the first strongly built up of stone, and so continued until the year
-1577, in the month of April, when the same stone arched gate and tower
-being decayed, was begun to be taken down, and then were the heads of
-the traitors removed thence, and set on the tower over the gate at the
-bridge-foot towards Southwark. This said tower being taken down, a new
-foundation was drawn, and Sir John Langley, lord mayor, laid the first
-stone in the presence of the sheriffs and bridge masters, on the 28th of
-August; and in the month of September, in the year 1579, the same tower
-was finished--a beautiful and chargeable piece of work, all above the
-bridge being of timber.
-
-
-TOWER ON THE SOUTH OF LONDON BRIDGE
-
-Another tower there is on London bridge, to wit, over the gate at the
-south end of the same bridge towards Southwark. This gate, with the
-tower thereupon, and two arches of the bridge, fell down, and no man
-perished by the fall thereof, in the year 1436;[79] towards the new
-building whereof divers charitable citizens gave large sums of money;
-which gate, being then again newly built, was, with seventeen houses
-more on the bridge, in the year 1471, burnt by the mariners and sailors
-of Kent, Bastard Fauconbridge being their captain.
-
-
-BAYNARD'S CASTLE
-
-In the west of this city (saith Fitzstephen) are two most strong
-castles, etc. Also Gervasius Tilbury,[80] in the reign of Henry II.,
-writing of these castles, hath to this effect:--"Two castels," saith
-he, "are built with walles and rampires, whereof one is, in right of
-possession, Baynardes; the other the Barons of Mountfichet." The first
-of these castles, banking on the river Thames, was called Baynard's
-Castle, of Baynard a nobleman, that came in with the Conqueror, and
-then built it, and deceased in the reign of William Rufus; after whose
-decease Geffrey Baynard succeeded, and then William Baynard, in the
-year 1111, who by forfeiture for felony, lost his barony of Little
-Dunmow, and King Henry gave it wholly to Robert, the son of Richard,
-the son of Gilbard of Clare, and to his heirs, together with the honour
-of Baynard's Castle. This Robert married Maude de Sent Licio, lady
-of Bradham, and deceased 1134; was buried at St. Needes by Gilbert of
-Clare, his father. Walter his son succeeded him; he took to wife Matilde
-de Bocham, and after her decease, Matilde, the daughter and co-heir
-of Richard de Lucy, on whom he begat Robert and other: he deceased in
-the year 1198, and was buried at Dunmow; after whom succeeded Robert
-Fitzwater, a valiant knight.
-
-About the year 1213 there arose a great discord between King John
-and his barons, because Matilda, surnamed the Fair, daughter to the
-said Robert Fitzwater, whom the king unlawfully loved, but could not
-obtain her, nor her father would consent thereunto, whereupon, and for
-other like causes, ensued war through the whole realm. The barons were
-received into London, where they greatly endamaged the king; but in the
-end the king did not only therefore banish the said Fitzwater, amongst
-other, out of the realm, but also caused his castle called Baynard, and
-other his houses, to be spoiled; which thing being done, a messenger
-being sent unto Matilda the Fair about the king's suit, whereunto she
-would not consent, she was poisoned;[81] Robert Fitzwater, and other,
-being then passed into France, and some into Scotland, etc.[82]
-
-It happened in the year 1214, King John being then in France with a
-great army, that a truce was taken betwixt the two kings of England
-and France for the term of five years; and a river, or arm of the sea,
-being then between either host, there was a knight in the English host,
-that cried to them of the other side, willing some one of their knights
-to come and joust a course or twain with him; whereupon, without stay,
-Robert Fitzwater, being on the French part, made himself ready, ferried
-over, and got on horseback, without any man to help him, and showed
-himself ready to the face of his challenger, whom at the first course
-he struck so hard with his great spear, that horse and man fell to
-the ground; and when his spear was broken he went back to the King of
-France; which when the king had seen, "By God's tooth," quoth he (after
-his usual oath), "he were a king indeed that had such a knight." The
-friends of Robert, hearing these words, kneeled down, and said:--"O
-king, he is your knight; it is Robert Fitzwater." And thereupon, the
-next day he was sent for, and restored to the king's favour; by which
-means peace was concluded, and he received his livings, and had license
-to repair his castle of Baynard, and other castles.
-
-The year 1216, the 1st of Henry III., the castle of Hartford being
-delivered to Lewis the French prince, and the barons of England, Robert
-Fitzwater requiring to have the same, because the keeping thereof did
-by ancient right and title pertain to him, was answered by Lewis, "that
-Englishmen were not worthy to have such holds in keeping, because they
-did betray their own lord," etc. This Robert deceased in the year 1234,
-and was buried at Dunmow, and Walter his son that succeeded him. 1258,
-his barony of Baynard, was in the ward of King Henry, in the nonage
-of Robert Fitzwater. This Robert took to his second wife, Ælianor,
-daughter and heir to the Earl of Ferrars, in the year 1289; and in
-the year 1303, on the 12th of March, before John Blondon, mayor of
-London, he acknowledged his service to the same city, and sware upon
-the Evangelists, that he would be true to the liberties thereof, and
-maintain the same to his power, and the counsel of the same to keep, etc.
-
-
-THE RIGHTS THAT BELONGED TO ROBERT FITZWALTER CHASTALIAN OF LONDON, LORD
-OF WODEHAM, WERE THESE:--
-
-The said Robert, and his heirs, ought to be, and are chief bannerers
-of London, in fee of the chastilarie, which he and his ancestors had
-by Castle Baynard, in the said city. In time of war the said Robert,
-and his heirs, ought to serve the city in manner as followeth: that is,
-The said Robert ought to come, he being the twentieth man of arms on
-horseback, covered with cloth, or armour, unto the great west door of
-St. Paul, with his banner displayed before him of his arms; and when he
-is come to the said door, mounted and apparelled, as before is said, the
-mayor with his aldermen and sheriffs armed in their arms, shall come out
-of the said church of St. Paul, unto the said door, with a banner in his
-hand, all on foot, which banner shall be gules, with the image of St.
-Paul, gold, the face, hands, feet, and sword, of silver; and as soon as
-the said Robert shall see the mayor, aldermen, and sheriffs, come on
-foot out of the church, armed with such a banner, he shall alight from
-his horse, and salute the mayor, and say to him,--"Sir mayor, I am come
-to do my service, which I owe to the city." And the mayor and aldermen
-shall answer,--"We give to you, as our bannerer of fee in this city,
-this banner of this city to bear, and govern to the honour and profit
-of the city to our power." And the said Robert and his heirs shall
-receive the banner in his hands, and shall go on foot out of the gate
-with the banner in his hands; and the mayor, aldermen, and sheriffs,
-shall follow to the door, and shall bring a horse to the said Robert
-worth twenty pounds, which horse shall be saddled with a saddle of the
-arms of the said Robert, and shall be covered with sandals of the said
-arms. Also they shall present to him twenty pounds sterling money, and
-deliver it to the chamberlain of the said Robert for his expenses that
-day. Then the said Robert shall mount upon the horse which the mayor
-presented to him, with the banner in his hand, and as soon as he is up,
-he shall say to the mayor, that he cause a marshal to be chosen for the
-host, one of the city; which marshal being chosen, the said Robert shall
-command the mayor and burgesses of the city to warn the commoners to
-assemble together, and they shall all go under the banner of St. Paul,
-and the said Robert shall bear it himself unto Aldgate, and there the
-said Robert and mayor shall deliver the said banner of St. Paul from
-thence, to whom they shall assent or think good. And if they must make
-any issue forth of the city, then the said Robert ought to choose two
-forth of every ward, the most sage personages, to foresee to the safe
-keeping of the city after they be gone forth. And this counsel shall be
-taken in the priory of the Trinity near unto Aldgate. And before every
-town or castle which the host of London besiege, if the siege continue a
-whole year, the said Robert shall have for every siege of the commonalty
-of London an hundred shillings for his travail, and no more. These
-be the rights that the said Robert hath in the time of war.--Rights
-belonging to Robert Fitzwalter, and to his heirs in the city of London,
-in the time of peace, are these: that is to say, the said Robert hath
-a soken or ward in the city, that is, a wall of the canonry of St.
-Paul, as a man goeth down the street before the brewhouse of St. Paul
-unto the Thames, and so to the side of the mill, which is in the water
-that cometh down from the Fleet bridge, and goeth so by London walls,
-betwixt the Friers preachers and Ludgate, and so returneth back by the
-house of the said Friars unto the said wall of the said canonry of St.
-Paul, that is, all the parish of St. Andrew, which is in the gift of his
-ancestors by the said seigniority. And so the said Robert hath appendant
-unto the said soken all these things under-written,--that he ought to
-have a soke man, and to place what sokeman he will, so he be of the
-sokemanry, or the same ward; and if any of the sokemanry be impleaded in
-the Guildhall, of any thing that toucheth not the body of the mayor that
-for the time is, or that toucheth the body of no sheriff, it is not
-lawful for the sokeman of the sokemanry of the said Robert Fitzwalter
-to demand a court of the said Robert, and the mayor, and his citizens
-of London, ought to grant him to have a court, and in his court he
-ought to bring his judgments, as it is assented and agreed upon in this
-Guildhall, that shall be given them. If any, therefore, be taken in his
-sokenly, he ought to have his stocks and imprisonment in his soken; and
-he shall be brought from thence to the Guildhall before the mayor, and
-there they shall provide him his judgment that ought to be given of him;
-but his judgment shall not be published till he come into the court of
-the said Robert, and in his liberty. And the judgment shall be such,
-that if he have deserved death by treason, he to be tied to a post in
-the Thames at a good wharf where boats are fastened, two ebbings and
-two flowings of the water. And if he be condemned for a common thief,
-he ought to be led to the Elms, and there suffer his judgment as other
-thieves. And so the said Robert and his heirs hath honour that he
-holdeth a great franchise within the city, that the mayor of the city
-and citizens are bound to do him of right, that is to say, that when the
-mayor will hold a great council, he ought to call the said Robert, and
-his heirs, to be with him in council of the city, and the said Robert
-ought to be sworn to be of council with the city against all people,
-saving the king and his heirs. And when the said Robert cometh to the
-hustings in the Guildhall of the city, the mayor, or his lieutenant,
-ought to rise against him, and set him down near unto him; and so long
-as he is in the Guildhall, all the judgment ought to be given by his
-mouth, according to the record of the recorders of the said Guildhall;
-and so many waifes as come so long as he is there, he ought to give
-them to the bailiffs of the town, or to whom he will, by the counsel of
-the mayor of the city. These be the franchises that belonged to Robert
-Fitzwalter in London, in time of peace; which for the antiquity thereof
-I have noted out of an old record.
-
-This Robert deceased in the year 1305, leaving issue Walter Fitzrobert,
-who had issue Robert Fitzwalter, unto whom, in the year 1320, the
-citizens of London acknowledged the right which they ought to him and
-his heirs for the Castle Baynard; he deceased 1325; unto whom succeeded
-Robert Fitzrobert, Fitzwalter, etc. More of the Lord Fitzwalter may
-ye read in my Annals in 51st of Edward III. But how this honour of
-Baynard's castle, with the appurtenances, fell from the possession of
-the Fitzwalters, I have not read; only I find, that in the year 1428,
-the 7th of Henry VI., a great fire was at Baynard's castle, and that
-same Humfrey, Duke of Gloucester, built it of new. By his death and
-attainder, in the year 1446, it came to the hands of Henry VI., and
-from him to Richard, Duke of York, of whom we read, that in the year
-1457 he lodged there, as in his own house. In the year 1460, the 28th
-of February, the Earls of March and of Warwick, with a great power of
-men, but few of name, entered the city of London, where they were of the
-citizens joyously received; and upon the 3rd of March, being Sunday,
-the said earl caused to be mustered his people in St. John's field;
-whereunto that host was showed and proclaimed certain articles and
-points wherein King Henry, as they said, had offended; and thereupon,
-it was demanded of the said people, whether the said Henry was worthy
-to reign as king any longer or not: whereunto the people cried Nay.
-Then it was asked of them, whether they would have the Earl of March
-for their king; and they cried, Yea, Yea. Whereupon, certain captains
-were appointed to bear report thereof unto the said Earl of March, then
-being lodged at his castle of Baynard. Whereof when the earl was by them
-advertised, he thanked God, and them for their election; notwithstanding
-he showed some countenance of insufficiency in him to occupy so great a
-charge, till by exhortation of the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Bishop
-of Excester, and certain noblemen, he granted to their petition; and
-on the next morrow at Paul's he went on procession, offered, and had
-_Te Deum_ sung. Then was he with great royalty conveyed to Westminster,
-and there, in the great hall, set in the king's seat, with St. Edward's
-sceptre in his hand.
-
-Edward IV. being dead, leaving his eldest son Edward, and his second son
-Richard, both infants, Richard, Duke of Glocester,[83] being elected by
-the nobles and commons in the Guildhall of London, took on him the title
-of the realm and kingdom, as imposed upon him in this Baynard's castle,
-as ye may read penned by Sir Thomas More, and set down in my Annals.
-
-Henry VII., about the year 1501, the 16th of his reign, repaired, or
-rather new built this house, not embattled, or so strongly fortified
-castle like, but far more beautiful and commodious for the entertainment
-of any prince or great estate. In the 17th of his reign, he, with his
-queen were lodged there, and came from thence to Powles church, where
-they made their offering, dined in the bishop's palace, and so returned.
-The 18th of his reign he was lodged there, and the ambassadors from the
-king of the Romans, where thither brought to his presence, and from
-thence the king came to Powles, and was there sworn to the king of the
-Romans, as the said king had sworn to him.
-
-The 20th of the said king, he with his knights of the order, all in
-their habits of the Garter, rode from the Tower of London, through the
-city, unto the cathedral church of St. Paul's, and there heard evensong,
-and from thence they rode to Baynard's castle, where the king lodged;
-and on the next morrow, in the same habit they rode from thence again
-to the said church of St. Paul's, went on procession, heard the divine
-service, offered, and returned. The same year the king of Castile was
-lodged there.
-
-In the year 1553, the 19th of July, the council, partly moved with the
-right of the Lady Mary's cause, partly considering that the most of
-the realm were wholly bent on her side, changing their mind from Lady
-Jane, lately proclaimed queen, assembled themselves at this Baynard's
-castle, where they communed with the Earl of Pembroke, and the Earl of
-Shrewsbury, and Sir John Mason, clerk of the council, sent for the lord
-mayor, and then riding into Cheap to the cross, where Garter King at
-Arms, trumpet being sounded, proclaimed the Lady Mary, daughter of King
-Henry VIII., and Queen Katherine, queen of England, etc.
-
-This castle now belongeth to the Earl of Pembroke.[84]
-
-Next adjoining to this castle was sometime a tower, the name whereof I
-have not read; but that the same was built by Edward II. is manifest by
-this that followeth. King Edward III., in the second year of his reign,
-gave unto William de Ros, of Hamolake, in Yorkshire, a tower upon the
-water of Thames, by the castle of Baynard in the city of London, which
-tower his father had built; he gave the said tower and appurtenances to
-the said William Hamolake, and his heirs, for a rose yearly, to be paid
-for all service due, etc. This tower, as seemeth to me, was since called
-Legat's inn, the 7th of Edward IV.
-
-
-TOWER OF MOUNTFIQUIT
-
-The next tower or castle, banking also on the river of Thames, was, as
-is afore showed, called Mountfiquit's castle, of a nobleman, Baron of
-Mountfiquit, the first builder thereof, who came in with William the
-Conqueror, and was since named Le Sir Mountfiquit. This castle he built
-in a place not far distant from Baynard's, towards the west. The same
-William Mountfiquit lived in the reign of Henry I., and was witness to
-a charter then granted to the city for the sheriffs of London. Richard
-Mountfiquit lived in King John's time; and in the year 1213, was by the
-same king banished the realm into France, when peradventure King John
-caused his castle of Mountfiquit, amongst other castles of the barons,
-to be overthrown; the which after his return, might be by him again
-re-edified; for the total destruction thereof was about the year 1276,
-when Robert Kilwarby, archbishop of Canterbury, began the foundation of
-the Fryers Preachers church there, commonly called the Blacke Fryers, as
-appeareth by a charter the 4th of Edward I., wherein is declared that
-Gregorie de Rocksley, mayor of London, and the barons of the same city,
-granted and gave unto the said Archbishop Robert, two lanes or ways next
-the street of Baynard's castle, and the tower of Mountfiquit, to be
-applied for the enlargement of the said church and place.
-
-One other tower there was also situate on the river of Thames near unto
-the said Blacke Fryers church, on the west part thereof built at the
-citizens' charges, but by license and commandment of Edward I. and of
-Edward II., as appeareth by their grants; which tower was then finished,
-and so stood for the space of three hundred years, and was at the last
-taken down by the commandment of John Shaw, mayor of London, in the year
-1502.
-
-Another tower, or castle, also was there in the west part of the city
-pertaining to the king. For I read, that in the year 1087, the 20th
-of William I., the city of London, with the church of St. Paul, being
-burned, Mauritius, then bishop of London, afterward began the foundation
-of a new church, whereunto King William, saith mine author, gave the
-choice stones of this castle standing near to the bank of the river of
-Thames, at the west end of the city. After this Mauritius, Richard his
-successor purchased the streets about Paul's church,[85] compassing the
-same with a wall of stone and gates. King Henry I. gave to this Richard
-so much of the moat or wall of the castle, on the Thames side to the
-south, as should be needful to make the said wall of the churchyard, and
-so much more as should suffice to make a way without the wall on the
-north side, etc.
-
-This tower or castle thus destroyed, stood, as it may seem, where now
-standeth the house called Bridewell. For notwithstanding the destruction
-of the said castle or tower, the house remained large, so that the kings
-of this realm long after were lodged there, and kept their courts; for
-until the 9th year of Henry III. the courts of law and justice were
-kept in the king's house, wheresoever he was lodged, and not elsewhere.
-And that the kings have been lodged, and kept their law courts in this
-place, I could show you many authors of record, but for plain proof
-this one may suffice. "_Hæc est finalis concordia, facta in Curia
-Domini regis apud Sanct. Bridgid. London. a die Sancti Michaelis in
-15 dies, Anno regni regis Johannis 7. coram G. Fil. Petri. Eustachio
-de Fauconberg, Johanne de Gestlinge, Osbart filio Hervey, Walter De
-Crisping Justiciar. et aliis baronibus Domini regis._"[86] More, as
-Matthew Paris hath, about the year 1210, King John, in the 12th of his
-reign, summoned a parliament at St. Bride's in London, where he exacted
-of the clergy and religious persons the sum of one hundred thousand
-pounds; and besides all this, the white monks were compelled to cancel
-their privileges, and to pay forty thousand pounds to the king, etc.
-This house of St. Bride's of latter time being left, and not used by the
-kings, fell to ruin, insomuch that the very platform thereof remained
-for great part waste, and, as it were, but a laystall of filth and
-rubbish; only a fair well remained there. A great part of this house,
-namely, on the west, as hath been said, was given to the Bishop of
-Salisbury; the other part towards the east remaining waste until King
-Henry VIII. built a stately and beautiful house thereupon, giving it to
-name Bridewell, of the parish and well there. This house he purposely
-built for the entertainment of the Emperor Charles V., who in the year
-1522 came into this city, as I have showed in my Summary, Annals, and
-large Chronicles.
-
-On the north-west side of the city, near unto Redcross street, there
-was a tower, commonly called Barbican, or Burhkenning; for that the
-same being placed on a high ground, and also built of some good height,
-was in old time as a watch-tower for the city, from whence a man might
-behold and view the whole city towards the south, and also into Kent,
-Sussex, and Surrey, and likewise every other way, east, north, or west.
-
-Some other Burhkennings, or watch-towers, there were of old time in and
-about the city, all which were repaired, yea, and others new built, by
-Gilbart de Clare, Earl of Glocester, in the reign of King Henry III.,
-when the barons were in arms, and held the city against the king; but
-the barons being reconciled to his favour in the year 1267, he caused
-all their burhkennings, watch-towers, and bulwarks, made and repaired
-by the said earl, to be plucked down, and the ditches to be filled
-up, so that nought of them might be seen to remain; and then was this
-burhkenning, amongst the rest, overthrown and destroyed; and although
-the ditch near thereunto, called Hound's ditch, was stopped up, yet the
-street of long time after was called Hound's ditch; and of late time
-more commonly called Barbican. The plot or seat of this burhkenning, or
-watch-tower, King Edward III., in the year 1336, and the 10th of his
-reign, gave unto Robert Ufford, Earl of Suffolk, by the name of his
-manor of Base court, in the parish of St. Giles without Cripplegate, of
-London, commonly called the Barbican.
-
-Tower Royal was of old time the king's house. King Stephen was there
-lodged; but sithence called the Queen's Wardrobe. The princess, mother
-to King Richard II. in the 4th of his reign was lodged there; being
-forced to fly from the Tower of London when the rebels possessed it. But
-on the 15th of June (saith Froissart), Wat Tyler being slain, the king
-went to this lady princess his mother, then lodged in the Tower Royal,
-called the Queen's Wardrobe, where she had tarried two days and two
-nights; which tower (saith the record of Edward III., the 36th year[87])
-was in the parish of St. Michel de Paternoster, etc. In the year 1386,
-King Richard, with Queen Anne his wife, kept their Christmas at Eltham,
-whither came to him Lion, king of Ermony,[88] under pretence to reform
-peace betwixt the kings of England and France; but what his coming
-profited he only understood; for besides innumerable gifts that he
-received of the king and his nobles, the king lying then in this Tower
-Royal, at the Queen's Wardrobe in London, granted to him a charter of a
-thousand pounds by year during his life. He was, as he affirmed, chased
-out of his kingdom by the Tartarians. More concerning this tower shall
-you read when you come to Vintry Ward, in which it standeth.
-
-Sernes tower in Bucklesberie, was sometime the king's house. Edward
-III., in the 18th of his reign, appointed his exchange of moneys therein
-to be kept; and in the 32d, he gave the same tower to his free chapel of
-St. Stephen at Westminster.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[64] W. Malmesbury, Matthew Paris, John London.
-
-[65] Ex charta.
-
-[66] Roger Wendover, John Bever.
-
-[67] "St. Katherine's mill stood where now is the Iron Gate of the
-Tower."--_Stow._
-
-[68] Lynxes, porcupines.
-
-[69] Patent, the 15th of King John.
-
-[70] Matthew Paris.
-
-[71] W. Malmsbury.
-
-[72] Roger Hoveden.
-
-[73] Guthuron's lane, now Gutter lane, leading out of Cheapside, was a
-small lane, formerly tenanted by goldsmiths; the person who gave his
-name to the lane, was evidently of Saxon or Danish origin.
-
-[74] That is, seventeen pence halfpenny farthing to be alloy.
-
-[75] By the terms _force_ and _deble_, it is presumed the maximum and
-minimum weights are intended.
-
-[76] Thomas Walsingham.
-
-[77] Philip Comines.
-
-[78] Patent, 1st of Henry VII.
-
-[79] W. Dunthorne.
-
-[80] Fitzstephen, Gerv. Tilbury.
-
-[81] "Virginitie defended with the losse of worldly goods, and life of
-the bodie, for life of the soule."--_Stow._
-
-[82] Liber Dunmow.
-
-[83] Stow in his first edition says, "there practised for the crown ...;"
-and the admirable scene in _Richard the Third_ (act III., sc. 7), in
-which Gloucester is by Buckingham, the mayor, and citizens of London,
-"enforced to a world of cares," is laid by Shakspeare with great
-historic truth in "the court of Baynard's castle."
-
-[84] It was destroyed in the Great Fire, before which time it had become
-the residences of the Earls of Shrewsbury.
-
-[85] Vita Arkenwald.
-
-[86] Liber Burton, super Trent.
-
-[87] Liber Sanct. Mariæ Eborum.
-
-[88] Armenia. Ermony, from the Old French "Ermenie." See Roquefort's
-_Glossaire_, s. v.
-
-Chaucer, too, in his _Monke's Tale_, line 14,343, etc., says:--
-
- "Ne dorste never be so corageous
- Ne non _Ermin_, ne non Egiptien,
- Ne Surrien, ne non Arabien."
-
-
-
-
-OF SCHOOLS AND OTHER HOUSES OF LEARNING
-
-
-"In the reign of King Stephen and of Henry II.," saith Fitzstephen,
-"there were in London three principal churches, which had famous
-schools, either by privilege and ancient dignity, or by favour of some
-particular persons, as of doctors which were accounted notable and
-renowned for knowledge in philosophy. And there were other inferior
-schools also. Upon festival days the masters made solemn meetings in the
-churches, where their scholars disputed logically and demonstratively;
-some bringing enthimems, other perfect syllogisms; some disputed for
-shew, other to trace out the truth; cunning sophisters were thought
-brave scholars when they flowed with words; others used fallacies;
-rhetoricians spake aptly to persuade, observing the precepts of art,
-and omitting nothing that might serve their purpose: the boys of
-diverse schools did cap or pot verses, and contended of the principles
-of grammar; there were some which on the other side with epigrams and
-rymes, nipping and quipping their fellowes, and the faults of others,
-though suppressing their names, moved thereby much laughter among their
-auditors." Hitherto Fitzstephen, for schools and scholars, and for their
-exercises in the city in his days; sithence the which time, as to me it
-seemeth, by the increase of colleges and students in the universities
-of Oxford and Cambridge, the frequenting of schools, and exercises of
-scholars in the city, as had been accustomed, hath much decreased.
-
-The three principal churches which had these famous schools by
-privileges, must needs be the cathedral church of St. Paul for one;
-seeing that by a general council, holden in the year of Christ 1176,
-at Rome, in the patriarchy of Laterane, it was decreed, that every
-cathedral church should have his schoolmaster to teach poor scholars,
-and others as had been accustomed, and that no man should take any
-reward for license to teach. The second, as most ancient, may seem
-to have been the monastery of St. Peter's at Westminster, whereof
-Ingulphus, Abbot of Crowland, in the reign of William the Conqueror,
-writeth thus:--"I, Ingulphus, an humble servant of God, born of
-English parents, in the most beautiful city of London, for to attain
-to learning, was first put to Westminster, and after to study of
-Oxford," etc. And writing in praise of Queen Edgitha, wife to Edward
-the Confessor: "I have seen her," saith he, "often when being a boy, I
-came to see my father dwelling in the king's court, and often coming
-from school, when I met her, she would oppose me, touching my learning
-and lesson; and falling from grammar to logic, wherein she had some
-knowledge, she would subtilly conclude an argument with me, and by her
-handmaiden give me three or four pieces of money, and send me unto the
-palace where I should receive some victuals, and then be dismissed."
-
-The third school seemeth to have been in the monastery of St. Saviour,
-at Bermondsey in Southwark; for other priories, as of St. John by
-Smithfield, St. Bartholomew in Smithfield, St. Mary Overie in Southwark,
-and that of the Holy Trinity by Aldgate, were all of later foundation,
-and the friaries, colleges, and hospitals, in this city, were raised
-since them in the reigns of Henry III., Edward I., II., and III., etc.
-All which houses had their schools, though not so famous as these first
-named.
-
-But touching schools more lately advanced in this city, I read, that
-King Henry V., having suppressed the priories aliens, whereof some were
-about London; namely, one hospital, called Our Lady of Rouncivall,
-by Charing Cross; one other hospital in Oldborne; one other without
-Cripplegate; and the fourth without Aldersgate; besides other that are
-now worn out of memory, and whereof there is no monument remaining more
-than Rouncivall, converted to a brotherhood, which continued till the
-reign of Henry VIII. or Edward VI. This, I say, and other their schools
-being broken up and ceased, King Henry VI., in the 24th of his reign,
-by patent, appointed, that there should be in London grammar schools,
-besides St. Paul's, at St. Martin's le Grand, St. Mary le Bow in Cheap,
-St. Dunstan's in the west, and St. Anthony's. And in the next year, to
-wit, 1447, the said king ordained by parliament that four other grammar
-schools should be erected, to wit, in the parishes of St. Andrew in
-Oldborne, Allhallowes the Great in Thames street, St. Peter's upon
-Cornhill, and in the hospital of St. Thomas of Acons in West Cheap;
-since the which time as divers schools, by suppressing of religious
-houses, whereof they were members, in the reign of Henry VIII., have
-been decayed, so again have some others been newly erected, and founded
-for them; as namely Paul's school, in place of an old ruined house, was
-built in most ample manner, and largely endowed, in the year 1512, by
-John Collet, Doctor of Divinity, Dean of Paul's, for one hundred and
-fifty-three poor men's children, for which there was ordained a master,
-surmaster, or usher, and a chaplain. Again, in the year 1553, after
-the erection of Christ's hospital, in the late dissolved house of the
-Gray Friars, a great number of poor children being taken in, a school
-was also ordained there at the citizen's charges. Also, in the year
-1561, the Merchant Taylors of London founded one notable free grammar
-school, in the parish of St. Laurence Poultney by Candleweeke street,
-Richard Hils, late master of that company, having given five hundred
-pounds towards the purchase of a house, called the Mannor of the Rose,
-sometime the Duke of Buckingham's, wherein the school is kept. As for
-the meeting of the schoolmasters on festival days, at festival churches,
-and the disputing of their scholars logically, etc., whereof I have
-before spoken, the same was long since discontinued; but the arguing of
-the schoolboys about the principles of grammar hath been continued even
-till our time; for I myself, in my youth, have yearly seen, on the eve
-of St. Bartholomew the Apostle, the scholars of divers grammar schools
-repair unto the churchyard of St. Bartholomew, the priory in Smithfield,
-where upon a bank boarded about under a tree, some one scholar hath
-stepped up, and there hath opposed and answered, till he were by some
-better scholar overcome and put down; and then the overcomer taking
-the place, did like as the first; and in the end the best opposers
-and answerers had rewards, which I observed not but it made both good
-schoolmasters, and also good scholars, diligently against such times to
-prepare themselves for the obtaining of this garland. I remember there
-repaired to these exercises, amongst others, the masters and scholars of
-the free schools of St. Paul's in London, of St. Peter's at Westminster,
-of St. Thomas Acon's hospital, and of St. Anthonie's hospital; whereof
-the last-named commonly presented the best scholars, and had the prize
-in those days.
-
-This priory of St. Bartholomew being surrendered to Henry VIII., those
-disputations of scholars in that place surceased; and was again, only
-for a year or twain, in the reign of Edward VI., revived in the cloister
-of Christ's hospital, where the best scholars, then still of St.
-Anthonie's school,[89] were rewarded with bows and arrows of silver,
-given to them by Sir Martin Bowes, goldsmith. Nevertheless, however the
-encouragement failed, the scholars of Paul's, meeting with them of St.
-Anthonie's, would call them Anthonie pigs, and they again would call the
-other pigeons of Paul's, because many pigeons were bred in St. Paul's
-church, and St. Anthonie was always figured with a pig following him;
-and mindful of the former usage, did for a long season disorderly in
-the open street provoke one another with, _Salve tu quoque, placet tibi
-mecum disputare? Placet._ And so proceeding from this to questions in
-grammar, they usually fell from words to blows with their satchels full
-of books, many times in great heaps, that they troubled the streets and
-passengers; so that finally they were restrained with the decay of St.
-Anthonie's school. Out of this school have sprung divers famous persons,
-whereof although time hath buried the names of many, yet in mine own
-remembrance may be numbered these following:--Sir Thomas More, knight,
-lord chancellor of England, Dr. Nicholas Heath, sometime Bishop of
-Rochester, after of Worcester, and lastly Archbishop of York and Lord
-Chancellor of England; Doctor John Whitgift, Bishop of Worcester, and
-after Archbishop of Canterbury, etc.
-
-Of later time, in the year of Christ 1582, there was founded a public
-lecture in chirurgerie, to be read in the College of Physicians in
-Knight riders street, to begin in the year 1584, on the sixth of May,
-and so to be continued for ever, twice every week, on Wednesday and
-Friday, by the honourable Baron, John Lord Lombley, and the learned
-Richard Caldwell, doctor in physic, the reader whereof to be Richard
-Forster, doctor of physic, during his life.
-
-Furthermore, about the same time there was also begun a mathematical
-lecture, to be read in a fair old chapel, built by Simon Eayre, within
-the Leaden hall; whereof a learned citizen born, named Thomas Hood, was
-the first reader. But this chapel, and other parts of that hall, being
-employed for stowage of goods taken out of a great Spanish caracke, the
-said lecture ceased any more to be read, and was then in the year 1588
-read in the house of master Thomas Smith in Grasse street, etc.
-
-Last of all, Sir Thomas Gresham, knight, agent to the queen's highness,
-by his last will and testament made in the year 1579, gave the Royal
-Exchange, and all the buildings thereunto appertaining; that is to
-say, the one moiety to the mayor and commonalty of London and their
-successors, upon trust that they perform as shall be declared; and the
-other moiety to the mercers in like confidence. The mayor and commonalty
-are to find four to read lectures of divinity, astronomy, music, and
-geometry, within his dwelling-house in Bishopsgate street, and to bestow
-the sum of two hundred pounds; to wit, fifty pounds the piece, etc.
-The mercers likewise are to find three readers, that is, in civil law,
-physic, and rhetoric, within the same dwelling-house, the sum of one
-hundred and fifty pounds; to every reader, fifty pounds, etc.: which
-gift hath been since that time confirmed by parliament, to take effect
-and begin after the decease of the Lady Anne Gresham, which happened
-in the year 1596, and so to continue for ever. Whereupon the lecturers
-were accordingly chosen and appointed to have begun their readings
-in the month of June, 1597; whose names were, Anthony Wootton, for
-divinity; Doctor Mathew Guin, for physic; Doctor Henry Mountlow, for
-the civil law; Doctor John Bull, for music; Beerewood, for astronomy;
-Henry Brigges, for geometry; and Caleb Willis, for rhetoric. These
-lectures are read daily, Sundays excepted, in the term times, by every
-one upon his day, in the morning betwixt nine and ten, in Latin; in
-the afternoon, betwixt two and three, in English; save that Dr. Bull
-is dispensed with to read the music lecture in English only upon two
-several days, Thursday and Saturday, in the afternoons, betwixt three
-and four of the clock.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[89] "Howsoever the same be now fallen, both in number and
-estimation."--_1st edition_, p. 56.
-
-
-
-
-HOUSES OF STUDENTS IN THE COMMON LAW
-
-
-But besides all this, there is in and about this city a whole
-university, as it were, of students, practicers or pleaders, and judges
-of the laws of this realm, not living of common stipends, as in other
-universities it is for the most part done, but of their own private
-maintenance, as being altogether fed either by their places or practice,
-or otherwise by their proper revenue, or exhibition of parents and
-friends; for that the younger sort are either gentlemen or the sons of
-gentlemen, or of other most wealthy persons. Of these houses there be at
-this day fourteen in all; whereof nine do stand within the liberties of
-this city, and five in the suburbs thereof; to wit:
-
-
-_Within the liberties_
-
-Serjeants' inn in Fleet Street, Serjeants' inn in Chancery lane; for
-judges and sergeants only.
-
-The Inner temple, the Middle temple, in Fleet street; houses of court.
-
-Clifford's inn in Fleet street, Thavies inn in Oldborne, Furnival's inn
-in Oldborne, Barnard's inn in Oldborne, Staple inn in Oldborne; houses
-of Chancery.
-
-
-_Without the liberties_
-
-Gray's inn in Oldborne, Lincoln's inn in Chancery lane by the old
-Temple;[90] houses of court.
-
-Clement's inn, New inn, Lion's inn; houses of Chancery, without Temple
-bar, in the liberty of Westminster.
-
-There was sometime an inn of sergeants in Oldborne, as you may read of
-Scrop's inn over against St. Andrew's church.
-
-There was also one other inn of Chancery, called Chester's inn, for the
-nearness of the Bishop of Chester's house, but more commonly termed
-Strand inn, for that it stood in Strand street, and near unto Strand
-bridge without Temple bar, in the liberty of the duchy of Lancaster.
-This inn of Chancery, with other houses near adjoining, were pulled
-down in the reign of Edward VI. by Edward Duke of Sommerset, who in
-place thereof raised that large and beautiful house, but yet unfinished,
-called Sommerset house.
-
-There was moreover, in the reign of King Henry I., a tenth house of
-Chancery, mentioned by Justice Fortescue in his book of the laws of
-England, but where it stood, or when it was abandoned, I cannot find,
-and therefore I will leave it, and return to the rest.
-
-The houses of court be replenished partly with young students, and
-partly with graduates and practisers of the law; but the inns of
-Chancery, being, as it were, provinces, severally subjected to the inns
-of court, be chiefly furnished with officers, attorneys, solicitors, and
-clerks, that follow the courts of the King's Bench or Common Pleas; and
-yet there want not some other being young students, that come thither
-sometimes from one of the Universities, and sometimes immediately from
-grammar schools; and these having spent some time in studying upon
-the first elements and grounds of the law, and having performed the
-exercise of their own houses (called Boltas Mootes,[91] and putting of
-cases), they proceed to be admitted, and become students in some of
-these four houses or inns of court, where continuing by the space of
-seven years or thereabouts, they frequent readings, meetings, boltings,
-and other learned exercises, whereby growing ripe in the knowledge of
-the laws, and approved withal to be of honest conversation, they are
-either, by the general consent of the benchers or readers, being of
-the most ancient, grave, and judicial men of every inn of the court,
-or by the special privilege of the present reader there, selected and
-called to the degree of utter barristers, and so enabled to be common
-counsellors, and to practice the law, both in their chambers and at the
-bars.
-
-Of these, after that they be called to a further step of preferment,
-called the Bench, there are twain every year chosen among the benchers
-of every inn of court to be readers there, who do make their readings at
-two times in the year also; that is, one in Lent, and the other at the
-beginning of August.
-
-And for the help of young students in every of the inns of Chancery,
-they do likewise choose out of every one inn of court a reader, being
-no bencher, but an utter barrister there, of ten or twelve years'
-continuance, and of good profit in study. Now, from these of the said
-degree of counsellors, or utter barristers, having continued therein the
-space of fourteen or fifteen years at the least, the chiefest and best
-learned are by the benchers elected to increase the number, as I said,
-of the bench amongst them; and so in their time do become first single,
-and then double, readers to the students of those houses of court;
-after which last reading they be named apprentices at the law, and, in
-default of a sufficient number of sergeants at law, these are, at the
-pleasure of the prince, to be advanced to the places of sergeants; out
-of which number of sergeants also the void places of judges are likewise
-ordinarily filled; albeit, now and then some be advanced, by the special
-favour of the prince, to the estate, dignity, and place, both of
-sergeant and judge, as it were in one instant. But from thenceforth they
-hold not any room in those inns of court, being translated to one of the
-said two inns, called Sergeante's inns, where none but the sergeants and
-judges do converse.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[90] "In Oldborne."--_1st edition._
-
-[91] Cowell, in his _Law Dictionary_, says, "Bolting is a term of art
-used in Gray's Inn, and applied to the bolting or arguing of _moot_
-cases." He endeavours to show that the bolting of cases is analogous
-to the _boulting_ or sifting of meal through a bag. All readers of
-Shakspeare must be familiar with the use of the word in the latter sense.
-
-
-
-
-OF ORDERS AND CUSTOMS
-
-
-Of orders and customs in this city of old time, Fitzstephen saith as
-followeth: "Men of all trades, sellers of all sorts of wares, labourers
-in every work, every morning are in their distinct and several places:
-furthermore, in London, upon the river side, between the wine in ships
-and the wine to be sold in taverns, is a common cookery, or cooks' row;
-there daily, for the season of the year, men might have meat, roast,
-sod, or fried; fish, flesh, fowls, fit for rich and poor. If any come
-suddenly to any citizen from afar, weary, and not willing to tarry till
-the meat be bought and dressed, while the servant bringeth water for his
-master's hands, and fetcheth bread, he shall have immediately from the
-river's side all viands whatsoever he desireth: what multitude soever,
-either of soldiers or strangers, do come to the city, whatsoever hour,
-day or night, according to their pleasures may refresh themselves; and
-they which delight in delicateness may be satisfied with as delicate
-dishes there as may be found elsewhere. And this Cooke's row is very
-necessary to the city; and, according to Plato in Gorgius, next to
-physic, is the office of cooks, as part of a city.
-
-"Without one of the gates is a plain field, both in name and deed,
-where every Friday, unless it be a solemn bidden holy day, is a notable
-show of horses to be sold; earls, barons, knights, and citizens repair
-thither to see or to buy; there may you of pleasure see amblers pacing
-it delicately; there may you see trotters fit for men of arms, sitting
-more hardly; there may you have notable young horses, not yet broken;
-there may you have strong steeds, well limbed geldings, whom the buyers
-do specially regard for pace and swiftness; the boys which ride these
-horses, sometimes two, sometimes three, do run races for wagers, with
-a desire of praise, or hope of victory. In another part of that field
-are to be sold all implements of husbandry, as also fat swine, milch
-kine, sheep, and oxen; there stand also mares and horses fit for ploughs
-and teams, with their young colts by them. At this city, merchant
-strangers of all nations had their keys and wharfs; the Arabians sent
-gold; the Sabians spice and frankincense; the Scythian armour, Babylon
-oil, Indian purple garments, Egypt precious stones, Norway and Russia
-ambergreece and sables, and the Frenchmen wine. According to the truth
-of Chronicles, this city is ancienter than Rome, built of the ancient
-Troyans and of Brute, before that was built by Romulus and Rhemus; and
-therefore useth the ancient customs of Rome. This city, even as Rome,
-is divided into wards; it hath yearly sheriffs instead of consuls; it
-hath the dignity of senators in aldermen. It hath under officers, common
-sewers, and conduits in streets; according to the quality of causes,
-it hath general courts and assembles upon appointed days. I do not
-think that there is any city wherein are better customs, in frequenting
-the churches, in serving God, in keeping holy days, in giving alms,
-in entertaining strangers, in solemnising marriages, in furnishing
-banquets, celebrating funerals, and burying dead bodies.
-
-"The only plagues of London are immoderate quaffing among the foolish
-sort, and often casualties by fire. Most part of the bishops, abbots,
-and great lords of the land have houses there, whereunto they resort,
-and bestow much when they are called to parliament by the king, or to
-council by their metropolitan, or otherwise by their private business."
-
-Thus far Fitzstephen, of the estate of things in his time, whereunto may
-be added the present, by conference whereof the alteration will easily
-appear.
-
-Men of trades and sellers of wares in this city have oftentimes since
-changed their places, as they have found their best advantage. For
-whereas mercers and haberdashers used to keep their shops in West
-Cheape,[92] of later time they held them on London Bridge, where partly
-they yet remain. The goldsmiths of Gutheron's lane and Old Exchange
-are now for the most part removed into the south side of West Cheape,
-the peperers and grocers of Soper's lane are now in Bucklesberrie, and
-other places dispersed. The drapers of Lombard street and of Cornehill
-are seated in Candlewick street and Watheling street; the skinners from
-St. Marie Pellipers, or at the Axe, into Budge row and Walbrooke; the
-stock fishmongers in Thames street; wet fishmongers in Knightriders
-street and Bridge street; the ironmongers, of Ironmongers' lane and Old
-Jurie, into Thames street; the vintners from the Vinetree into divers
-places. But the brewers for the more part remain near to the friendly
-water of Thames; the butchers in Eastcheape, St. Nicholas shambles,
-and the Stockes market; the hosiers of old time in Hosier lane, near
-unto Smithfield, are since removed into Cordwayner street, the upper
-part thereof by Bow church, and last of all into Birchoveris lane by
-Cornehill; the shoe-makers and curriers of Cordwayner street removed
-the one to St. Martin's le Grand, the other to London wall near unto
-Mooregate; the founders remain by themselves in Lothberie; cooks,[93]
-or pastelars, for the more part in Thames street, the other dispersed
-into divers parts; poulters of late removed out of the Poultrie, betwixt
-the Stockes and the great Conduit in Cheape, into Grasse street and St.
-Nicholas shambles; bowyers, from Bowyers' row by Ludgate into divers
-places, and almost worn out with the fletchers; pater noster makers of
-old time, or bead-makers, and text-writers, are gone out of Pater noster
-row, and are called stationers of Paule's churchyard;[94] patten-makers,
-of St. Margaret, Pattens' lane, clean worn out; labourers every work-day
-are to be found in Cheape, about Soper's land end; horse-coursers and
-sellers of oxen, sheep, swine, and such like, remain in their old market
-of Smithfield, etc.
-
-That merchants of all nations had their keys and wharfs at this city,
-whereunto they brought their merchandises before and in the reign of
-Henry II., mine author wrote of his own knowledge to be true, though for
-the antiquity of the city he took the common opinion. Also that this
-city was in his time and afore divided into wards, had yearly sheriffs,
-aldermen, general courts, and assemblies, and such like notes by him set
-down, in commendation of the citizens; whereof there is no question,
-he wrote likewise of his own experience, as being born and brought up
-amongst them.
-
-And to confirm his opinion, concerning merchandises then hither
-transported, whereof happily may be some argument, Thomas Clifford[95]
-(before Fitzstephen's time), writing of Edward the Confessor, saith
-to this effect: "King Edward, intending to make his sepulchre at
-Westminster; for that it was near to the famous city of London, and
-the river of Thames, that brought in all kind of merchandises from all
-parts of the world, etc." And William of Malmesbury, that lived in
-the reign of William I. and II., Henry I., and King Stephen, calleth
-this a noble city, full of wealthy citizens, frequented with the trade
-of merchandises from all parts of the world. Also I read, in divers
-records, that of old time no woad was stowed or harboured in this city,
-but all was presently sold in the ships, except by license purchased
-of the sheriffs, till of more later time; to wit, in the year 1236,
-Andrew Bokerell, being mayor, by assent of the principal citizens, the
-merchants of Amiens, Nele, and Corby, purchased letters insealed with
-the common seal of the city, that they when they come might harbour
-their woads, and therefore should give the mayor every year fifty
-marks sterling; and the same year they gave one hundred pounds towards
-the conveying of water from Tyborn to this city. Also the merchants
-of Normandie made fine for license to harbour their woads till it was
-otherwise provided, in the year 1263, Thomas Fitz Thomas being mayor,
-etc., which proveth that then as afore, they were here amongst other
-nations privileged.
-
-It followeth in Fitzstephen, that the plagues of London in that time
-were immoderate quaffing among fools, and often casualties by fire. For
-the first--to wit, of quaffing--it continueth as afore, or rather is
-mightily increased, though greatly qualified among the poorer sort, not
-of any holy abstinence, but of mere necessity, ale and beer being small,
-and wines in price above their reach. As for prevention of casualties
-by fire, the houses in this city being then built all of timber, and
-covered with thatch of straw or reed, it was long since thought good
-policy in our forefathers wisely to provide, namely, in the year of
-Christ 1189, the first of Richard I., Henry Fitzalwine[96] being then
-mayor, that all men in this city should build their houses of stone up
-to a certain height, and to cover them with slate or baked tile; since
-which time, thanks be given to God, there hath not happened the like
-often consuming fires in this city as afore.
-
-But now in our time, instead of these enormities, others are come
-in place no less meet to be reformed; namely, purprestures, or
-encroachments on the highways, lanes, and common grounds, in and
-about this city; whereof a learned gentleman and grave citizen[97]
-hath not many years since written and exhibited a book to the mayor
-and commonalty; which book, whether the same have been by them read
-and diligently considered upon, I know not, but sure I am nothing is
-reformed since concerning this matter.
-
-Then the number of cars, drays, carts, and coaches, more than hath
-been accustomed, the streets and lanes being straitened, must needs be
-dangerous, as daily experience proveth.
-
-The coachman rides behind the horse tails, lasheth them, and looketh not
-behind him; the drayman sitteth and sleepeth on his dray, and letteth
-his horse lead him home. I know that, by the good laws and customs of
-this city,[98] shodde carts[99] are forbidden to enter the same, except
-upon reasonable cause, as service of the prince, or such like, they be
-tolerated. Also that the fore horse of every carriage should be lead by
-hand; but these good orders are not observed. Of old time coaches were
-not known in this island, but chariots or whirlicotes, then so called,
-and they only used of princes or great estates, such as had their
-footmen about them; and for example to note, I read that Richard II.,
-being threatened by the rebels of Kent, rode from the Tower of London to
-the Myles end, and with him his mother, because she was sick and weak,
-in a whirlicote, the Earls of Buckingham, Kent, Warwicke, and Oxford,
-Sir Thomas Percie, Sir Robert Knowles, the Mayor of London, Sir Aubery
-de Vere, that bare the king's sword, with other knights and esquires
-attending on horseback. But in the next year, the said King Richard took
-to wife Anne, daughter to the King of Bohemia, that first brought hither
-the riding upon side-saddles; and so was the riding in wherlicoates and
-chariots forsaken, except at coronations and such like spectacles; but
-now of late years the use of coaches, brought out of Germany, is taken
-up, and made so common, as there is neither distinction of time nor
-difference of persons observed; for the world runs on wheels with many
-whose parents were glad to go on foot.
-
-Last of all, mine author in this chapter hath these words:[100] "Most
-part of the bishops, abbots, and great lords of the land, as if they
-were citizens and freemen of London, had many fair houses to resort
-unto, and many rich and wealthy gentlemen spent their money there." And
-in another place he hath these words: "Every Sunday in Lent a fresh
-company of young men comes into the fields on horseback, and the best
-horsemen conducteth the rest; then march forth the citizens' sons,
-and other young men, with disarmed lances and shields, and practise
-feats of war; many courtiers likewise and attendants of noblemen repair
-to this exercise, and whilst the hope of victory doth inflame their
-minds, they do show good proof how serviceable they would be in martial
-affairs, etc." Again he saith: "This city, in the troublesome time
-of King Stephen, showed at a muster twenty thousand armed horsemen
-and forty thousand footmen, serviceable for the wars, etc." All which
-sayings of the said author, well considered, do plainly prove that in
-those days the inhabitants and repairers to this city, of what estate
-soever, spiritual or temporal, having houses here, lived together in
-good amity with the citizens, every man observing the customs and orders
-of the city, and those to be contributary to charges here, rather than
-in any part of the land wheresoever. This city, being the heart of the
-realm, the king's chamber and prince's seat, whereunto they made repair,
-and showed their forces, both of horses and of men, which caused in
-troublesome time, as of King Stephen, the musters of this city to be so
-great in number.
-
-And here, to touch somewhat of greater families and households kept in
-former times by noblemen, and great estates of this realm, according
-to their honours or dignities,[101] I have seen an account made by H.
-Leicester, cofferer to Thomas Earl of Lancaster, for one whole year's
-expenses in the Earl's house, from the day next after Michaelmas, in
-the seventh year of Edward II., until Michaelmass in the eight year
-of the same king, amounting to the sum of £7957 13_s._ 4-1/2_d._ as
-followeth:[102]
-
-To wit, in the pantry, buttery, and kitchen, £3405, etc.: for one
-hundred and eighty-four tons, one pipe of red or claret wine, and one
-ton of white wine bought for the house, £104 17_s._ 6_d._
-
-For grocery ware, £180 17_s._
-
-For six barrels of sturgeon, £19.
-
-For six thousand eight hundred stock-fishes, so called for dried fishes
-of all sorts, as lings, habardines, and other, £41 6_s._ 7_d._
-
-For one thousand seven hundred and fourteen pounds of waxe, with
-vermelion and turpentine to make red waxe, £314 7_s._ 4-1/4_d._
-
-For two thousand three hundred and nineteen pounds of tallow candles for
-the household, and one thousand eight hundred and seventy of lights for
-Paris candles, called perchers, £31 14_s._ 3_d._
-
-Expenses on the earl's great horses, and the keeper's wages, £486 4_s._
-3-1/4_d._
-
-Linen cloth for the earl and his chaplains, and for the pantry, £43
-17_s._
-
-For one hundred and twenty-nine dozen of parchment, with ink, £4 8_s._
-3-1/4_d._
-
-Sum, £5230 17_s._ 7-1/4_d._
-
-Item, for two cloths of scarlet for the earl against Christmass, one
-cloth of russet for the Bishop of Angew, seventy cloths of blue for the
-knights (as they were then termed), fifteen cloths of medley for the
-lords' clerks, twenty-eight cloths for the esquires, fifteen cloths for
-officers, nineteen cloths for grooms, five cloths for archers, four
-cloths for minstrels and carpenters, with the sharing and carriage for
-the earl's liveries at Christmasse, £460 15_s._
-
-Item, for seven furs of variable miniver (or powdered ermine), seven
-hoods of purple, three hundred and ninety-five furs of budge for the
-liveries of barons, knights, and clerks, one hundred and twenty-three
-furs of lamb for esquires, bought at Christmas, £147 17_s._ 8_d._
-
-Item, sixty-five cloths, saffron colour, for the barons and knights in
-summer, twelve red cloths, mixed, for clerks, twenty-six cloths, ray,
-for esquires, one cloth, ray, for officers' coats in summer, and four
-cloths, ray, for carpets in the hall, for £345 13_s._ 8_d._
-
-Item, one hundred pieces of green silk for the knights, fourteen budge
-furs for surcoats, thirteen hoods of budge for clerks, and seventy-five
-furs of lambs for the lord's liveries in summer, with canvas and cords
-to truss them, £72 19_s._
-
-Item, saddles for the lord's liveries in summer, £51 6_s._ 8_d._
-
-Item, one saddle for the earl of the prince's arms, 40_s._
-
-Sum, £1079 18_s._ 3_d._
-
-Item, for things bought, whereof cannot be read in my note, £241 14_s._
-1-1/4_d._
-
-For horses lost in service of the earl, £8 6_s._ 8_d._
-
-Fees paid to earls, barons, knights, and esquires, £623 15_s._ 5_d._
-
-In gifts to knights of France, the Queen of England's nurses, to the
-Countess of Warren, esquires, minstrels, messengers, and riders, £92
-14_s._
-
-Item, one hundred and sixty-eight yards of russet cloth,[103] and
-twenty-four coats for poor men, with money given to the poor on Maundy
-Thursday, £8 16_s._ 7_d._
-
-Item, twenty-four silver dishes, so many saucers and so many cups for
-the buttery, one pair of pater nosters, and one silver coffin, bought
-this year, £103 5_s._ 6_d._
-
-To divers messengers about the earl's business, £34 19_s._ 8_d._
-
-In the earl's chamber, £5.
-
-To divers men for the earl's old debts, £88 16_s._ 0-3/4_d._
-
-Sum, £1207 7_s._ 11-3/4_d._
-
-The expences of the countess at Pickering for the time of this account,
-as in the pantry, buttery, kitchen, and other places, concerning these
-offices, £285 13_s._ 0-1/2_d._
-
-In wine, wax, spices, cloths, furs, and other things for the countess'
-wardrobe, £154 7_s._ 4-1/2_d._
-
-Sum, £439 8_s._ 6-1/4_d._
-
-Sum total of the whole expenses, £7957 13_s._ 4-1/2_d._
-
-Thus much for this Earl of Lancaster.
-
-More I read, that in the 14th of the same Edward II., Hugh Spencer the
-elder (condemned by the commonalty) was banished the realm; at which
-time it was found by inquisition that the said Spencer had in sundry
-shires, fifty-nine manors: he had twenty-eight thousand sheep, one
-thousand oxen and steers, one thousand two hundred kine, with their
-calves, forty mares with their colts, one hundred and sixty drawing
-horses, two thousand hogs, three hundred bullocks, forty tuns of wine,
-six hundred bacons, eighty carcases of Martilmasse beef, six hundred
-muttons in larder, ten tuns of cider; his armour, plate, jewels, and
-ready money, better than £10,000, thirty-six sacks of wool, and a
-library of books. Thus much the record, which provision for household
-showeth a great family there to be kept.
-
-Nearer to our time, I read,[104] in the 36th of Henry VI., that the
-greater estates of the realm being called up to London,
-
-The Earl of Salisbury came with five hundred men on horseback, and was
-lodged in the Herber.
-
-Richard, Duke of York, with four hundred men, lodged at Baynard's
-castle.
-
-The Dukes of Excester and Sommerset, with eight hundred men.
-
-The Earl of Northumberland, the Lord Egremont, and the Lord Clifford,
-with fifteen hundred men.
-
-Richard Nevill, Earl of Warwick, with six hundred men, all in red
-jackets, embroidered with ragged staves before and behind, and was
-lodged in Warwicke lane; in whose house there was oftentimes six oxen
-eaten at a breakfast, and every tavern was full of his meat; for he that
-had any acquaintance in that house, might have there so much of sodden
-and roast meat as he could prick and carry upon a long dagger.
-
-Richard Redman, Bishop of Ely, 1500, the 17th of Henry VII.,[105]
-besides his great family, housekeeping, alms dish, and relief to the
-poor, wheresoever he was lodged. In his travelling, when at his coming
-or going to or from any town, the bells being rung, all the poor would
-come together, to whom he gave every one six pence at the least.
-
-And now to note of our own time somewhat. Omitting in this place Thomas
-Wolsey, Archbishop of Yorke, and cardinal, I refer the reader to my
-_Annals_, where I have set down the order of his house and household,
-passing all other subjects of his time. His servants, daily attending
-in his house, were near about four hundred, omitting his servants'
-servants, which were many.
-
-Nicholas West, Bishop of Ely, in the year 1532, kept continually in his
-house an hundred servants, giving to the one half of them 53_s._ 4_d._
-the piece yearly; to the other half each 40_s._ the piece; to every one
-for his winter gown four yards of broad cloth, and for his summer coat
-three yards and a half: he daily gave at his gates, besides bread and
-drink, warm meat to two hundred poor people.
-
-The housekeeping of Edward, late Earl of Derby, is not to be forgotten,
-who had two hundred and twenty men in check roll: his feeding aged
-persons twice every day, sixty and odd, besides all comers, thrice a
-week, appointed for his dealing days, and every Good Friday two thousand
-seven hundred, with meat, drink, and money.
-
-Thomas Audley, lord chancellor, his family of gentlemen before him, in
-coats garded with velvet, and chains of gold; his yeomen after him in
-the same livery, not garded.
-
-William Powlet, lord great master, Marquis of Winchester, kept the like
-number of gentlemen and yeomen in a livery[106] of Reading tawny, and
-great relief at his gate.
-
-Thomas Lord Cromwell, Earl of Essex, kept the like or greater number in
-a livery of grey marble; the gentlemen garded with velvet, the yeomen
-with the same cloth, yet their skirts large enough for their friends to
-sit upon them.
-
-Edward, Duke of Sommerset, was not inferior in keeping a number of tall
-and comely gentlemen and yeomen, though his house was then in building,
-and most of his men were lodged abroad.
-
-The late Earl of Oxford, father to him that now liveth, hath been noted
-within these forty years to have ridden into this city, and so to his
-house by London stone, with eighty gentlemen in a livery of Reading
-tawny, and chains of gold about their necks, before him, and one hundred
-tall yeomen, in the like livery, to follow him without chains, but
-all having his cognisance of the blue boar embroidered on their left
-shoulder.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[92] Thus Lydgate, in his ballad of _London Lackpenny_:
-
- "Then to the Chepe I began me drawne,
- Where much people I saw for to stande:
- One offered me velvet, sylke and lawne,
- An other he taketh me by the hande,
- 'Here is Pary's thred the fynest in the lande,'" etc.
-
-[93] The cooks in Lydgate's time, as we learn from the same ballad,
-resided chiefly in Eastcheap:
-
- "Then I hyed me into East Chepe;
- One cryes ribbs of befe, and many a pye:
- Pewter pottes they clattered on a heape;
- There was harpe, pype and mynstrelsye," etc.
-
-[94] "Pater noster beade-makers and text-writers are gone out of
-Paternoster rowe into stationers of Paule's churchyard."--_1st edition_,
-p. 63.
-
-[95] Thomas Clifford.
-
-[96] Liber Constitutionis. Liber Horne. Liber Clerkenwell.
-
-[97] W. Patten.
-
-[98] Liber S. Mariæ Eborum.
-
-[99] Carts shod or bound with iron. _Carrectæ ferro ligatæ_ are
-mentioned in the Liber Garderobæ, Edw. I.
-
-[100] W. Fitzstephen.
-
-[101] There are few documents calculated to throw greater light upon the
-social and domestic life of our ancestors than their Household Books.
-Stow has here set an example, which has of late years been followed to
-a great extent. The Liber Garderobæ, Edw. I., published by the Society
-of Antiquaries in 1787--_The Northumberland Household Book_--_The
-Privy Purse Expences of Henry VIII._--_The Privy Purse Expences of the
-Princess Mary_, etc.; and lastly, the handsome volume, printed for the
-Roxburgh Club by Beriah Botfield, Esq., M.P., containing the _Household
-Book of the Countess of Leicester, wife of Simon de Montford_, and
-that of Sir John Howard, afterwards Duke of Norfolk, in the reign of
-Richard III., afford views of ancient manners and illustrations of
-olden customs, which would be sought for in vain in works of a graver
-character.
-
-[102] Record of Pontefract, as I could obtain of M. Cudnor.--_Stow._
-
-[103] Northern russet, half a yard and half a quarter broad, I have
-seen sold for four pence the yard, and was good cloth of a mingled
-colour.--_Stow._
-
-[104] Rob. Fabian, manuscript.
-
-[105] Liber Ely.
-
-
-
-
-OF CHARITABLE ALMS IN OLD TIMES GIVEN
-
-
-These, as all other of their times, gave great relief to the poor. I
-myself, in that declining time of charity, have oft seen at the Lord
-Cromwell's gate in London more than two hundred persons served twice
-every day with bread, meat, and drink sufficient; for he observed that
-ancient and charitable custom, as all prelates, noblemen, or men of
-honour and worship, his predecessors, had done before him; whereof
-somewhat to note for example, Venerable Bede writeth, that prelates of
-his time having peradventure but wooden churches, had notwithstanding on
-their board at their meals one alms dish, into the which was carved some
-good portion of meat out of every other dish brought to their table; all
-which was given to the poor, besides the fragments left, in so much as
-in a hard time, a poor prelate wanting victuals, hath caused his alms
-dish, being silver, to be divided among the poor, therewith to shift as
-they could, till God should send them better store.
-
-Such a prelate was Ethelwald, Bishop of Winchester, in the reign of King
-Edgar, about the year of Christ 963: he in a great famine sold away
-all the sacred vessels of his church for to relieve the almost starved
-people, saying that there was no reason that the senseless temples of
-God should abound in riches, and lively temples of the Holy Ghost to
-lack it.
-
-Walter de Suffilde, Bishop of Norwich, was of the like mind; about
-the year 1245, in a time of great dearth, he sold all his plate, and
-distributed it to the poor every pennyworth.
-
-Robert Winchelsey, Archbishop of Canterbury, about the year 1293,
-besides the daily fragments of his house, gave every Friday and Sunday,
-unto every beggar that came to his gate, a loaf of bread sufficient
-for that day, and there more usually, every such alms day, in time of
-dearth, to the number of five thousand, and otherwise four thousand, at
-the least; more, he used every great festival day to give one hundred
-and fifty pence to so many poor people, to send daily meat, bread, and
-drink, to such as by age or sickness were not able to fetch his alms,
-and to send meat, money, and apparel to such as he thought needed it.
-
-I read,[107] in 1171, that Henry II., after his return into England,
-did penance for the slaughter of Thomas Becket, of whom (a sore dearth
-increasing) ten thousand persons, from the first of April, till new corn
-was inned, were daily fed and sustained.
-
-More, I find recorded,[108] that in the year 1236, the 20th of Henry
-III., William de Haverhull, the king's treasurer, was commanded, that
-upon the day of the Circumcision of our Lord, six thousand poor people
-should be fed at Westminster, for the state of the king, queen, and
-their children. The like commandment the said King Henry gave to Hugh
-Gifford and William Browne, that upon Friday next after the Epiphany,
-they should cause to be fed in the great hall at Windsore, at a good
-fire, all the poor and needy children that could be found, and the
-king's children being weighed and measured, their weight and measure to
-be distributed for their good estates. These few examples for charity of
-kings may suffice.
-
-I read, in the reign of Edward III., that Richard de Berie, Bishop of
-Durham, did weekly bestow for the relief of the poor eight quarters of
-wheat made into bread, besides his alms dish, fragments of his house,
-and great sums of money given to the poor when he journeyed. And that
-these alms dishes were as well used at the tables of noblemen as of the
-prelates, one note may suffice in this place.
-
-I read, in the year 1452, that Richard, Duke of York, then claiming
-the crown, the Lord Rivers should have passed the sea about the king's
-business, but staying at Plimmoth till his money was spent, and then
-sending for more, the Duke of Sommerset sent him the image of St. George
-in silver and gold, to be sold, with the alms dish of the Duke of
-Glocester, which was also of great price, for coin had they none.
-
-To end of orders and customs in this city, also of great families kept
-by honourable persons thither repairing, and of charitable alms of
-old times given, I say, for conclusion, that all noble persons, and
-other of honour and worship, in former times lodging in this city, or
-liberties thereof, did without grudging bear their parts in charges with
-the citizens, according to their estimated estates, as I have before
-said, and could prove by examples; but let men call to mind Sir Thomas
-Cromwel, then lord privy seal and vicar-general, lying in the city of
-London; he bare his charges to the great muster there in A.D. 1539; he
-sent his men in great number to the Miles end, and after them their
-armour in cars, with their coats of white cloth, the arms of this city;
-to wit, a red cross, and a sword, on the breast and back; which armour
-and coats they ware amongst the citizens, without any difference, and
-marched through the city to Westminster.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[106] Every livery coat had three yards of broad cloth.--_Stow._
-
-[107] Pater de Ioham.
-
-[108] Record of the Tower.
-
-
-
-
-SPORTS AND PASTIMES OF OLD TIME USED IN THIS CITY
-
-
-"Let us now," saith Fitzstephen, "come to the sports and pastimes,
-seeing it is fit that a city should not only be commodious and serious,
-but also merry and sportful; whereupon in the seals of the popes, until
-the time of Pope Leo, on the one side was St. Peter fishing, with a key
-over him, reached as it were by the hand of God out of heaven, and about
-it this verse:
-
- 'Tu pro me navem liquisti, suscipe clavem.'
-
-And on the other side was a city, and this inscription on it: '_Aurea
-Roma_.' Likewise to the praise of Augustus Cæsar and the city, in
-respect of the shows and sports, was written:
-
- 'Nocte pluit tota, redeunt spectacula mane,' etc.
-
- 'All night it raines, and shews at morrow tide returne again,
- And Cæsar with almighty Jove hath matcht an equal raign.'
-
-"But London, for the shows upon theatres, and comical pastimes, hath
-holy plays, representations of miracles, which holy confessors have
-wrought, or representations of torments wherein the constancy of martyrs
-appeared. Every year also at Shrove Tuesday, that we may begin with
-children's sports, seeing we all have been children, the school-boys
-do bring cocks of the game to their master, and all the forenoon they
-delight themselves in cock-fighting: after dinner, all the youths go
-into the fields to play at the ball.
-
-"The scholars of every school have their ball, or baston, in their
-hands; the ancient and wealthy men of the city come forth on horseback
-to see the sport of the young men, and to take part of the pleasure in
-beholding their agility. Every Friday in Lent a fresh company of young
-men comes into the field on horseback, and the best horseman conducteth
-the rest. Then march forth the citizens' sons, and other young men,
-with disarmed lances and shields, and there they practice feats of war.
-Many courtiers likewise, when the king lieth near, and attendants of
-noblemen, do repair to these exercises; and while the hope of victory
-doth inflame their minds, do show good proof how serviceable they would
-be in martial affairs.
-
-"In Easter holidays they fight battles on the water; a shield is hung
-upon a pole, fixed in the midst of the stream, a boat is prepared
-without oars, to be carried by violence of the water, and in the fore
-part thereof standeth a young man, ready to give charge upon the shield
-with his lance; if so be he breaketh his lance against the shield, and
-doth not fall, he is thought to have performed a worthy deed; if so be,
-without breaking his lance, he runneth strongly against the shield,
-down he falleth into the water, for the boat is violently forced with
-the tide; but on each side of the shield ride two boats, furnished with
-young men, which recover him that falleth as soon as they may. Upon the
-bridge, wharfs, and houses, by the river's side, stand great numbers to
-see and laugh thereat.
-
-"In the holidays all the summer the youths are exercised in leaping,
-dancing, shooting, wrestling, casting the stone, and practising their
-shields; the maidens trip in their timbrels, and dance as long as they
-can well see. In winter, every holiday before dinner, the boars prepared
-for brawn are set to fight, or else bulls and bears are baited.
-
-"When the great fen, or moor, which watereth the walls of the city on
-the north side, is frozen, many young men play upon the ice; some,
-striding as wide as they may, do slide swiftly; others make themselves
-seats of ice, as great as millstones; one sits down, many hand in hand
-do draw him, and one slipping on a sudden, all fall together; some tie
-bones to their feet and under their heels; and shoving themselves by a
-little picked staff, do slide as swiftly as a bird flieth in the air,
-or an arrow out of a cross-bow. Sometime two run together with poles,
-and hitting one the other, either one or both do fall, not without
-hurt; some break their arms, some their legs, but youth desirous of
-glory in this sort exerciseth itself against the time of war. Many of
-the citizens do delight themselves in hawks and hounds; for they have
-liberty of hunting in Middlesex, Hartfordshire, all Chiltron, and in
-Kent to the water of Cray." Thus far Fitzstephen of sports.
-
-These, or the like exercises, have been continued till our time,
-namely, in stage plays, whereof ye may read in anno 1391, a play by
-the parish clerks of London at the Skinner's well besides Smithfield,
-which continued three days together, the king, queen, and nobles of the
-realm being present. And of another, in the year 1409, which lasted
-eight days, and was of matter from the creation of the world, whereat
-was present most part of the nobility and gentry of England. Of late
-time, in place of those stage plays, hath been used comedies, tragedies,
-interludes, and histories, both true and feigned; for the acting whereof
-certain public places[109] have been erected. Also cocks of the game are
-yet cherished by divers men for their pleasures, much money being laid
-on their heads, when they fight in pits, whereof some be costly made
-for that purpose. The ball is used by noblemen and gentlemen in tennis
-courts, and by people of meaner sort in the open fields and streets.
-
-The marching forth of citizens' sons, and other young men on horseback,
-with disarmed lances and shields, there to practise feats of war, man
-against man, hath long since been left off, but in their stead they
-have used on horseback to run at a dead mark, called a quinten; for
-note whereof I read,[110] that in the year of Christ 1253, the 38th of
-Henry III., the youthful citizens, for an exercise of their activity,
-set forth a game to run at the quinten; and whoever did best should
-have a peacock, which they had prepared as a prize. Certain of the
-king's servants, because the court lay then at Westminster came, as it
-were, in spite of the citizens, to that game, and giving reproachful
-names to the Londoners, which for the dignity of the city, and ancient
-privilege which they ought to have enjoyed, were called barons, the
-said Londoners, not able to bear so to be misused, fell upon the king's
-servants, and beat them shrewdly, so that upon complaint to the king he
-fined the citizens to pay a thousand marks. This exercise of running at
-the quinten was practised by the youthful citizens as well in summer as
-in winter, namely, in the feast of Christmas, I have seen a quinten set
-upon Cornehill, by the Leaden hall, where the attendants on the lords of
-merry disports have run, and made great pastime; for he that hit not
-the broad end of the quinten was of all men laughed to scorn, and he
-that hit it full, if he rid not the faster, had a sound blow in his neck
-with a bag full of sand hung on the other end. I have also in the summer
-season seen some upon the river of Thames rowed in wherries, with staves
-in their hands, flat at the fore end, running one against another, and
-for the most part, one or both overthrown, and well ducked.
-
-On the holy days in summer the youths of this city have in the field
-exercised themselves in leaping, dancing, shooting, wrestling, casting
-of the stone or ball, etc.
-
-And for defence and use of the weapon, there is a special profession of
-men that teach it. Ye may read in mine _Annals_ how that in the year
-1222 the citizens kept games of defence, and wrestlings, near unto the
-hospital of St. Giles in the field, where they challenged, and had the
-mastery of the men in the suburbs, and other commoners, etc. Also, in
-the year 1453, of a tumult made against the mayor at the wrestling
-besides Clearke's well, etc. Which is sufficient to prove that of old
-time the exercising of wrestling, and such like, hath been much more
-used than of later years. The youths of this city also have used on holy
-days after evening prayer, at their masters' doors, to exercise their
-wasters and bucklers; and the maidens, one of them playing on a timbrel,
-in sight of their masters and dames, to dance for garlands hung athwart
-the streets; which open pastimes in my youth being now suppressed,
-worse practices within doors are to be feared. As for the baiting of
-bulls and bears, they are to this day much frequented, namely, in Bear
-gardens,[111] on the Bank's side, wherein be prepared scaffolds for
-beholders to stand upon. Sliding upon the ice is now but children's
-play; but in hawking and hunting many grave citizens at this present
-have great delight, and do rather want leisure than goodwill to follow
-it.
-
-Of triumphant shows made by the citizens of London, ye may read,[112] in
-the year 1236, the 20th of Henry III., Andrew Bockwell then being mayor,
-how Helianor, daughter to Reymond, Earl of Provance, riding through the
-city towards Westminster, there to be crowned queen of England, the city
-was adorned with silks, and in the night with lamps, cressets, and other
-lights without number, besides many pageants and strange devices there
-presented; the citizens also rode to meet the king and queen, clothed in
-long garments embroidered about with gold, and silks of divers colours,
-their horses gallantly trapped to the number of three hundred and sixty,
-every man bearing a cup of gold or silver in his hand, and the king's
-trumpeters sounding before them. These citizens did minister wine, as
-bottelers, which is their service, at their coronation. More, in the
-year 1293, for victory obtained by Edward I. against the Scots, every
-citizen, according to their several trade, made their several show, but
-especially the fishmongers, which in a solemn procession passed through
-the city, having, amongst other pageants and shows, four sturgeons gilt,
-carried on four horses; then four salmons of silver on four horses; and
-after them six and forty armed knights riding on horses, made like luces
-of the sea; and then one representing St. Magnus, because it was upon
-St. Magnus' day, with a thousand horsemen, etc.
-
-One other show, in the year 1377, made by the citizens for disport of
-the young prince, Richard, son to the Black Prince, in the feast of
-Christmas, in this manner:--On the Sunday before Candlemas, in the
-night, one hundred and thirty citizens, disguised, and well horsed,
-in a mummery, with sound of trumpets, sackbuts, cornets, shalmes,
-and other minstrels, and innumerable torch lights of wax, rode from
-Newgate, through Cheape, over the bridge, through Southwarke, and so to
-Kennington beside Lambhith, where the young prince remained with his
-mother and the Duke of Lancaster his uncle, the Earls of Cambridge,
-Hertford, Warwicke, and Suffolke, with divers other lords. In the first
-rank did ride forty-eight in the likeness and habit of esquires, two
-and two together, clothed in red coats and gowns of say or sandal, with
-comely visors on their faces; after them came riding forty-eight knights
-in the same livery of colour and stuff; then followed one richly arrayed
-like an emperor; and after him some distance, one stately attired like
-a pope, whom followed twenty-four cardinals, and after them eight or
-ten with black visors, not amiable, as if they had been legates from
-some foreign princes. These maskers, after they had entered Kennington,
-alighted from their horses, and entered the hall on foot; which done,
-the prince, his mother, and the lords, came out of the chamber into the
-hall, whom the said mummers did salute, showing by a pair of dice upon
-the table their desire to play with the prince, which they so handled
-that the prince did always win when he cast them. Then the mummers set
-to the prince three jewels, one after another, which were a bowl of
-gold, a cup of gold, and a ring of gold, which the prince won at three
-casts. Then they set to the prince's mother, the duke, the earls, and
-other lords, to every one a ring of gold, which they did also win. After
-which they were feasted, and the music sounded, the prince and lords
-danced on the one part with the mummers, which did also dance; which
-jollity being ended, they were again made to drink, and then departed in
-order as they came.
-
-The like was in Henry IV., in the 2nd of his reign, he then keeping his
-Christmas at Eltham, twelve aldermen of London and their sons rode in a
-mumming, and had great thanks.
-
-Thus much for sportful shows in triumphs may suffice. Now for sports and
-pastimes yearly used.
-
-First, in the feast of Christmas, there was in the king's house,
-wheresoever he was lodged, a lord of misrule, or master of merry
-disports,[113] and the like had ye in the house of every nobleman of
-honour or good worship, were he spiritual or temporal. Amongst the which
-the mayor of London, and either of the sheriffs, had their several lords
-of misrule, ever contending, without quarrel or offence, who should make
-the rarest pastimes to delight the beholders. These lords beginning
-their rule on Alhollon eve, continued the same till the morrow after the
-Feast of the Purification, commonly called Candlemas day. In all which
-space there were fine and subtle disguisings, masks, and mummeries, with
-playing at cards for counters, nails, and points, in every house, more
-for pastime than for gain.
-
-Against the feast of Christmas every man's house, as also the parish
-churches, were decked with holm, ivy, bays, and whatsoever the season
-of the year afforded to be green. The conduits and standards in the
-streets were likewise garnished; amongst the which I read, in the year
-1444, that by tempest of thunder and lightning, on the 1st of February,
-at night, Powle's steeple was fired, but with great labour quenched; and
-towards the morning of Candlemas day, at the Leaden hall in Cornhill,
-a standard of tree being set up in midst of the pavement, fast in the
-ground, nailed full of holm and ivy, for disport of Christmas to the
-people, was torn up, and cast down by the malignant spirit (as was
-thought), and the stones of the pavement all about were cast in the
-streets, and into divers houses, so that the people were sore aghast of
-the great tempests.
-
-In the week before Easter had ye great shows made for the fetching in
-of a twisted tree, or with, as they termed it, out of the woods into the
-king's house; and the like into every man's house of honour or worship.
-
-In the month of May, namely, on May-day in the morning, every man,
-except impediment, would walk into the sweet meadows and green woods,
-there to rejoice their spirits with the beauty and savour of sweet
-flowers, and with the harmony of birds, praising God in their kind; and
-for example hereof, Edward Hall hath noted, that King Henry VIII., as
-in the 3rd of his reign, and divers other years, so namely, in the 7th
-of his reign, on May-day in the morning, with Queen Katherine his wife,
-accompanied with many lords and ladies, rode a-maying from Greenwitch
-to the high ground of Shooter's hill, where, as they passed by the way,
-they espied a company of tall yeomen, clothed all in green, with green
-hoods, and bows and arrows, to the number of two hundred; one being
-their chieftain, was called Robin Hoode, who required the king and his
-company to stay and see his men shoot; whereunto the king granting,
-Robin Hoode whistled, and all the two hundred archers shot off, loosing
-all at once; and when he whistled again they likewise shot again; their
-arrows whistled by craft of the head, so that the noise was strange
-and loud, which greatly delighted the king, queen, and their company.
-Moreover, this Robin Hoode desired the king and queen, with their
-retinue, to enter the green wood, where, in harbours made of boughs, and
-decked with flowers, they were set and served plentifully with venison
-and wine by Robin Hoode and his men, to their great contentment, and had
-other pageants and pastimes, as ye may read in my said author.
-
-I find also, that in the month of May, the citizens of London of all
-estates, lightly in every parish, or sometimes two or three parishes
-joining together, had their several mayings, and did fetch in May-poles,
-with divers warlike shows, with good archers, morris dancers, and other
-devices, for pastime all the day long; and toward the evening they had
-stage plays, and bonfires in the streets. Of these mayings we read,
-in the reign of Henry VI., that the aldermen and sheriffs of London,
-being on May-day at the Bishop of London's wood, in the parish of
-Stebunheath,[114] and having there a worshipful dinner for themselves
-and other commoners, Lydgate the poet, that was a monk of Bury, sent to
-them, by a pursuivant, a joyful commendation of that season, containing
-sixteen staves of metre royal, beginning thus:--
-
- "Mightie Flora! goddess of fresh flowers,--
- Which clothed hath the soyle in lustie greene,
- Made buds spring, with her sweete showers,
- By the influence of the sunne shine.
- To doe pleasance of intent full cleane,
- Unto the States which now sit here,
- Hath Vere downe sent her owne daughter deare.
-
- Making the vertue, that dared in the roote,
- Called of clarkes the vertue vegitable,
- For to transcend, most holsome and most soote,
- Into the crop, this season so agreeable,
- The bawmy liquor is so commendable,
- That it rejoyceth with his fresh moysture,
- Man, beast, and fowle, and every creature," etc.
-
-These great Mayings and May-games, made by the governors and masters
-of this city, with the triumphant setting up of the great shaft (a
-principal May-pole in Cornehill, before the parish church of St.
-Andrew), therefore called Undershaft, by means of an insurrection of
-youths against aliens on May-day, 1517, the 9th of Henry VIII., have
-not been so freely used as afore, and therefore I leave them, and will
-somewhat touch of watches, as also of shows in the night.[115]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[109] "As the Theater, the Curtine," etc.--_1st edition._
-
-[110] Matthew Paris.
-
-[111] The Bear garden on the Bankside is not mentioned in the first
-edition.
-
-[112] Matthew Paris.
-
-[113] In the edition of Brand's _Popular Antiquities_, edited by Sir
-Henry Ellis, vol. i. 272-278, will be found a very large and curious
-collection of materials illustrative of this ancient custom.
-
-[114] Stepney.
-
-
-
-
-OF WATCHES IN THIS CITY, AND OTHER MATTERS COMMANDED, AND THE CAUSE WHY
-
-
-William Conqueror commanded that in every town and village, a bell
-should be nightly rung at eight o'clock, and that all people should then
-put out their fire and candle, and take their rest; which order was
-observed through this realm during his reign, and the reign of William
-Rufus. But Henry I., restoring to his subjects the use of fire and
-lights, as afore; it followeth, by reason of wars within the realm, that
-many men also gave themselves to robbery and murders in the night; for
-example whereof in this city Roger Hoveden writeth thus:--"In the year
-1175, council was kept at Nottingham; in time of which council a brother
-of the Earl Ferrers being in the night privily slain at London, and
-thrown out of his inn into the dirty street, when the king understood
-thereof, he swore that he would be avenged on the citizens. For it was
-then (saith mine author) a common practice in the city, that a hundred
-or more in a company, young and old, would make nightly invasions upon
-houses of the wealthy, to the intent to rob them; and if they found any
-man stirring in the city within the night that were not of their crew,
-they would presently murder him, insomuch that when night was come no
-man durst adventure to walk in the streets. When this had continued
-long, it fortuned that as a crew of young and wealthy citizens,
-assembling together in the night, assaulted a stone house of a certain
-rich man, and breaking through the wall, the good man of that house,
-having prepared himself with others in a corner, when he perceived one
-of the thieves named Andrew Bucquint to lead the way, with a burning
-brand in the one hand, and a pot of coals in the other, which he essayed
-to kindle with the brand, he flew upon him, and smote off his right
-hand, and then with a loud voice cried 'Thieves!' at the hearing whereof
-the thieves took their flight, all saving he that had lost his hand,
-whom the good man in the next morning delivered to Richard de Lucie,
-the king's justice. This thief, upon warrant of his life, appeached his
-confederates, of whom many were taken, and many were fled. Among the
-rest that were apprehended, a certain citizen of great countenance,
-credit, and wealth, named John Senex,[116] who forasmuch as he could not
-acquit himself by the water dome, as that law was then, he offered to
-the king five hundred pounds of silver for his life; but forasmuch as
-he was condemned by judgment of the water, the king would not take the
-offer, but commanded him to be hanged on the gallows, which was done,
-and then the city became more quiet for a long time after." But for a
-full remedy of enormities in the night I read, that in the year 1253,
-Henry III. commanded watches in the cities and borough towns to be kept,
-for the better observing of peace and quietness amongst his people.
-
-And further, by the advice of them of Savoy, he ordained, that if any
-man chanced to be robbed, or by any means damnified by any thief or
-robber, he to whom the charge of keeping that country, city, or borough,
-chiefly appertained, where the robbery was done, should competently
-restore the loss. And this was after the use of Savoy, but yet thought
-more hard to be observed here than in those parts; and, therefore,
-leaving those laborious watches, I will speak of our pleasures and
-pastimes in watching by night.
-
-In the months of June and July, on the vigils of festival days, and on
-the same festival days in the evenings after the sun setting, there were
-usually made bonfires in the streets, every man bestowing wood or labour
-towards them; the wealthier sort also, before their doors near to the
-said bonfires, would set out tables on the vigils, furnished with sweet
-bread and good drink, and on the festival days with meats and drinks
-plentifully, whereunto they would invite their neighbours and passengers
-also to sit and be merry with them in great familiarity, praising God
-for his benefits bestowed on them. These were called bonfires as well
-of good amity amongst neighbours that being before at controversy, were
-there, by the labour of others, reconciled, and made of bitter enemies
-loving friends; and also for the virtue that a great fire hath to purge
-the infection of the air. On the vigil of St. John the Baptist, and on
-St. Peter and Paul the apostles, every man's door being shadowed with
-green birch, long fennel, St. John's wort, orpin, white lilies, and
-such like, garnished upon with garlands of beautiful flowers, had also
-lamps of glass, with oil burning in them all the night; some hung out
-branches of iron curiously wrought, containing hundreds of lamps alight
-at once, which made a goodly show, namely in New Fish street, Thames
-street, etc. Then had ye besides the standing watches all in bright
-harness, in every ward and street of this city and suburbs, a marching
-watch, that passed through the principal streets thereof, to wit, from
-the little conduit by Paule's gate to West Cheape, by the stocks through
-Cornhill, by Leaden hall to Aldgate, then back down Fenchurch street, by
-Grasse church, about Grasse church conduit, and up Grasse church street
-into Cornhill, and through it into West Cheape again. The whole way for
-this marching watch extendeth to three thousand two hundred tailor's
-yards of assize; for the furniture whereof with lights, there were
-appointed seven hundred cressets, five hundred of them being found by
-the companies, the other two hundred by the chamber of London. Besides
-the which lights every constable in London, in number more than two
-hundred and forty,[117] had his cresset: the charge of every cresset
-was in light two shillings and four pence, and every cresset had two
-men, one to bear or hold it, another to bear a bag with light, and to
-serve it, so that the poor men pertaining to the cressets, taking wages,
-besides that every one had a straw hat, with a badge painted, and his
-breakfast in the mornings amounted in number to almost two thousand.
-The marching watch contained in number about two thousand men, part of
-them being old soldiers of skill, to be captains, lieutenants,
-serjeants, corporals, etc., wiflers, drummers, and fifes, standard and
-ensign bearers, sword players, trumpeters on horseback, demilances on
-great horses, gunners with hand guns, or half hakes, archers in coats
-of white fustian, signed on the breast and back with the arms of the
-city, their bows bent in their hands, with sheaves of arrows by their
-sides, pike-men in bright corslets, burganets, etc., halberds, the like
-bill-men in almaine rivets, and apernes of mail in great number; there
-were also divers pageants, morris dancers, constables, the one-half,
-which was one hundred and twenty, on St. John's eve, the other half
-on St. Peter's eve, in bright harness, some overgilt, and every one a
-jornet[118] of scarlet thereupon, and a chain of gold, his henchman
-following him, his minstrels before him, and his cresset light passing
-by him, the waits of the city, the mayor's officers for his guard before
-him, all in a livery of worsted, or say jackets party-coloured, the
-mayor himself well mounted on horseback, the swordbearer before him in
-fair armour well mounted also, the mayor's footmen, and the like torch
-bearers about him, henchmen twain upon great stirring horses, following
-him. The sheriffs' watches came one after the other in like order, but
-not so large in number as the mayor's; for where the mayor had besides
-his giant three pageants, each of the sheriffs had besides their giants
-but two pageants, each their morris dance, and one henchman, their
-officers in jackets of worsted or say, party-coloured, differing from
-the mayor's, and each from other, but having harnessed men a great many,
-etc.
-
-This midsummer watch was thus accustomed yearly, time out of mind, until
-the year 1539, the 31st of Henry VIII., in which year, on the 8th of
-May, a great muster was made by the citizens at the Mile's end, all
-in bright harness, with coats of white silk, or cloth and chains of
-gold, in three great battles, to the number of fifteen thousand, which
-passed through London to Westminster, and so through the Sanctuary, and
-round about the park of St. James, and returned home through Oldborne.
-King Henry, then considering the great charges of the citizens for the
-furniture of this unusual muster, forbad the marching watch provided for
-at Midsummer for that year, which being once laid down, was not raised
-again till the year 1548, the 2nd of Edward VI., Sir John Gresham then
-being mayor, who caused the marching watch, both on the eve of St.
-John the Baptist and of St. Peter the Apostle, to be revived and set
-forth in as comely order as it hath been accustomed, which watch was
-also beautified by the number of more than three hundred demilances and
-light horsemen, prepared by the citizens to be sent into Scotland for
-the rescue of the town of Hadington, and others kept by the Englishmen.
-Since this mayor's time, the like marching watch in this city hath not
-been used, though some attempts have been made thereunto; as in the year
-1585, a book was drawn by a grave citizen,[119] and by him dedicated to
-Sir Thomas Pullison, then lord mayor, and his brethren the aldermen,
-containing the manner and order of a marching watch in the city upon the
-evens accustomed; in commendation whereof, namely, in times of peace
-to be used, he hath words to this effect: "The artificers of sundry
-sorts were thereby well set a-work, none but rich men charged, poor men
-helped, old soldiers, trumpeters, drummers, fifes, and ensign-bearers,
-with such like men, meet for princes' service, kept in ure, wherein the
-safety and defence of every common weal consisteth. Armour and weapon
-being yearly occupied in this wise, the citizens had of their own
-readily prepared for any need; whereas by intermission hereof, armourers
-are out of work, soldiers out of pay, weapons overgrown with foulness,
-few or none good being provided," etc.
-
-In the month of August, about the feast of St. Bartholomew the Apostle,
-before the Lord Mayor, aldermen, and sheriffs of London, placed in a
-large tent near unto Clarkenwell, of old time, were divers days spent
-in the pastime of wrestling, where the officers of the city, namely,
-the sheriffs, sergeants, and yeomen, the porters of the king's beam or
-weigh-house, now no such men, and other of the city, were challengers
-of all men in the suburbs, to wrestle for games appointed, and on other
-days, before the said mayor, aldermen, and sheriffs, in Fensburie
-field, to shoot the standard, broad arrow, and flight, for games; but
-now of late years the wrestling is only practised on Bartholomew's day
-in the afternoon, and the shooting some three or four days after, in
-one afternoon, and no more. What should I speak of the ancient daily
-exercises in the long bow by citizens of this city, now almost clean
-left off and forsaken?--I overpass it; for by the mean of closing in the
-common grounds, our archers, for want of room to shoot abroad, creep
-into bowling alleys, and ordinary dicing houses, nearer home, where
-they have room enough to hazard their money at unlawful games; and there
-I leave them to take their pleasures.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[115] A paper by Mr. Saunders, in Knight's _London_, i. 169, entitled,
-"The Old Spring Time in London," forms a very agreeable commentary on
-this section of our author's work.
-
-[116] Rich thieves most worthy to be hanged. The judgment of fire and
-water, called _ordalii_, was condemned by Pope Innocent III. 1203.
-Decretal. lib. 5.--_Stow._
-
-[117] More than two hundred and forty constables in London, the one half
-of them each night went in the marching watch, the other half kept their
-standing watch in every street and lane.--_Stow._
-
-[118] A large coat or cloak, from the French "journade."--See
-Roquefort's _Glossaire_, s. v.
-
-[119] John Mountgomery.
-
-
-
-
-HONOUR OF CITIZENS, AND WORTHINESS OF MEN IN THE SAME
-
-
-"This city," saith Fitzstephen, "is glorious in manhood: furnished with
-munitions, populous with inhabitants; insomuch, that in the troublesome
-time of King Stephen, it hath showed at a muster twenty thousand armed
-horsemen, and threescore thousand footmen, serviceable for the wars.
-Moreover (saith he), the citizens of London, wheresoever they become,
-are notable before all other citizens in civility of manners, attire,
-table, and talk. The matrons of this city are the very modest Sabine
-ladies of Italy. The Londoners, sometime called Trinobantes, repelled
-Cæsar, which always made his passage by shedding blood; whereupon Lucan
-sung:
-
- 'Territa quæsitis ostendit terga Britannis.'
-
-"The city of London hath bred some which have subdued many kingdoms,
-and also the Roman empire. It hath also brought forth many others, whom
-virtue and valour hath highly advanced; according to Apollo, in his
-Oracle to Brute, '_Sub occasu solis_,' etc. In the time of Christianity,
-it brought forth that noble emperor, Constantine, which gave the city of
-Rome and all the imperial ensigns to God, St. Peter, and Pope Silvester;
-choosing rather to be called a defender of the church than an emperor;
-and, lest peace might be violated, and their eyes troubled by his
-presence, he retired from Rome, and built the city of Constantinople.
-London also in late time hath brought forth famous kings: Maude the
-empress, King Henry, son to Henry II., and Thomas the Archbishop," etc.
-
-This Thomas, surnamed Becket, born in London, brought up in the priory
-of Marton, student at Paris, became the sheriff's clerk of London for
-a time, then parson of St. Mary hill, had a prebend at London, another
-at Lincoln, studied the law at Bononie, etc., was made Chancellor of
-England, and Archbishop of Canterbury, etc. Unto this might be added
-innumerable persons of honour, wisdom, and virtue, born in London; but
-of actions done by worthy citizens I will only note a few, and so to
-other matters.
-
-The citizens of London, time out of mind, founded an hospital of St.
-James in the fields for leprous women of their city.
-
-In the year 1197, Walter Brune, a citizen of London, and Rosia, his
-wife, founded the hospital of our Lady, called Domus Dei, or St. Marie
-Spittle, without Bishopsgate of London; a house of such relief to the
-needy, that there was found standing at the surrender thereof nine score
-beds, well furnished for receipt of poor people.
-
-In the year 1216, the Londoners sending out a navy, took ninety-five
-ships of pirates and sea-robbers; besides innumerable others that they
-drowned, which had robbed on the river of Thames.
-
-In the year 1247, Simon Fitzmary, one of the sheriffs of London, founded
-the hospital of St. Mary called Bethlem, and without Bishopsgate.
-
-In the year 1283, Henry Wallice, then mayor, built the Tun upon
-Cornhill, to be a prison for night-walkers, and a market-house called
-the Stocks, both for fish and flesh, standing in the midst of the city.
-He also built divers houses on the west and north side of Paule's
-churchyard; the profits of all which buildings are to the maintenance of
-London Bridge.
-
-In the year 1332, William Elsing, mercer of London, founded Elsing
-Spittle within Cripplegate, for sustentation of an hundred poor blind
-men, and became himself the first prior of that hospital.
-
-Sir John Poultney, draper, four times mayor, in 1337 built a fair chapel
-in Paule's church, wherein he was buried. He founded a college in the
-parish church of St. Laurence, called Poultney: he built the parish
-church called Little Alhallowes, in Thames street; the Carmelite friars
-church in Coventry: he gave relief to prisoners in Newgate and in the
-Fleet, and ten shillings a-year to St. Giles' hospital by Oldborne for
-ever, and other legacies long to rehearse.
-
-John Stodie, vintner, mayor 1358, gave to the vintners all the quadrant
-wherein the Vintners' hall now standeth, with all the tenements round
-about, from Stadies lane, wherein is founded thirteen alms houses for so
-many poor people, etc.
-
-Henry Picard, vintner, mayor 1357, in the year 1363, did in one day
-sumptuously feast Edward III., king of England, John, king of France,
-David, king of Scots, the king of Cyprus, then all in England, Edward,
-prince of Wales, with many other noblemen, and after kept his hall
-for all comers that were willing to play at dice and hazard. The Lady
-Margaret, his wife, kept her chamber to the same effect, etc.
-
-John Lofken, fishmonger, four times mayor, 1367, built an hospital
-called Magdalen's, in Kingstone upon Thames; gave thereunto nine
-tenements, ten shops, one mill, one hundred and twenty-five acres of
-land, ten acres of meadow, one hundred and twenty acres of pasture,
-etc.; more, in London, he built the fair parish church of St. Michael in
-Crooked lane, and was there buried.
-
-John Barnes, mayor 1371, gave a chest with three locks, and one thousand
-marks therein, to be lent to young men upon sufficient pawn, and for
-the use thereof, to say _De profundis_, or _Pater noster_, and no more:
-he also was a great builder of St. Thomas Apostle's parish church, as
-appeareth by his arms there, both in stone and glass.
-
-In the year 1378, John Filpot, sometime mayor, hired with his own
-money one thousand soldiers, and defended the realm from incursions
-of the enemy, so that in small time his hired men took John Mercer,
-a sea-rover, with all his ships, which he before had taken from
-Scarborrow, and fifteen Spanish ships, laden with great riches.
-
-In the year 1380, Thomas of Woodstocke, Thomas Percie, Hugh Calverley,
-Robert Knoles, and others, being sent with a great power to aid the
-duke of Brytaine, the said John Filpot hired ships for them of his
-own charges, and released the armour, which the soldiers had pawned
-for their battles, more than a thousand in number. "This most noble
-citizen," saith Thomas Walsingham, "that had travailed for the commodity
-of the whole realm, more than all other of his time, had often relieved
-the king by lending him great sums of money and otherwise, deceased in
-A.D. 1384, after that he had assured lands to the city for the relief of
-thirteen poor people for ever."
-
-In the year 1381, William Walworth, then mayor, a most provident,
-valiant, and learned citizen, did by his arrest of Wat Tyler (a
-presumptuous rebel, upon whom no man durst lay hands), deliver the king
-and kingdom from the danger of most wicked traitors, and was for his
-service knighted in the field.
-
-Nicholas Brembar, John Filpot, Robert Laund, Nicholas Twiford, and Adam
-Francis, aldermen, were then for their service likewise knighted; and
-Sir Robert Knoles, for assisting of the mayor, was made free of this
-city.
-
-This Sir Robert Knoles, thus worthily infranchised a citizen, founded a
-college with an hospital at Pontefract: he also built the great stone
-bridge at Rochester, over the river of Medway, etc.
-
-John Churchman, grocer, one of the sheriffs, 1386, for the quiet
-of merchants, built a certain house upon Wool wharf, in Tower ward,
-to serve for tronage or weighing of wools, and for the customer,
-comptroller, clerks, and other officers to sit, etc.
-
-Adam Bamme, goldsmith, mayor 1391, in a great dearth, procured corn
-from parts beyond the seas, to be brought hither in such abundance as
-sufficed to serve the city, and the countries near adjoining; to the
-furtherance of which good work he took out of the orphans' chest in the
-Guildhall two thousand marks to buy the said corn, and each alderman
-laid out twenty pounds to the like purpose.
-
-Thomas Knoles, grocer, mayor 1400, with his brethren the aldermen, began
-to new build the Guildhall in London, and instead of an old little
-cottage in Aldermanberie street, made a fair and goodly house, more
-near unto St. Laurence church in the Jurie: he re-edified St. Anthony's
-church, and gave to the grocers his house near unto the same, for relief
-of the poor for ever. More, he caused sweet water to be conveyed to the
-gates of Newgate and Ludgate, for relief of the prisoners there.
-
-John Hinde, draper, mayor 1405, newly built his parish church of St.
-Swithen by London stone: his monument is defaced, save only his arms in
-the glass windows.
-
-Thomas Falconar, mercer, mayor 1414, lent to King Henry VI., towards
-maintenance of his wars in France, ten thousand marks upon jewels. More,
-he made the postern called Mooregate, caused the ditches of the city to
-be cleansed, and did many other things for good of the same city.
-
-William Sevenoke, grocer, mayor 1419, founded in the town of Sevenoke,
-in Kent, a free school for poor men's children, and thirteen alms
-houses: his testament saith, twenty poor men and women.
-
-Richard Whittington, mercer, three times mayor, in the year 1421 began
-the library of the grey friars in London, to the charge of four hundred
-pounds: his executors with his goods founded and built Whittington
-college, with alms houses for thirteen poor men, and divinity lectures
-to be read there for ever. They repaired St. Bartholomew's hospital in
-Smithfield; they bare some charges to the glazing and paving of the
-Guildhall; they bare half the charges of building the library there, and
-they built the west gate of London, of old time called Newgate, etc.
-
-John Carpenter, town-clerk of London, in the reign of Henry V., caused
-with great expense to be curiously painted upon board, about the north
-cloister of Paule's, a monument of Death leading all estates, with
-the speeches of Death, and answer of every state. This cloister was
-pulled down 1549. He also gave tenements to the city, for the finding
-and bringing up of four poor men's children with meat, drink, apparel,
-learning at the schools in the universities, etc., until they be
-preferred, and then other in their places for ever.
-
-Robert Chichley, grocer, mayor 1422, appointed by his testament, that on
-his minde day, a competent dinner should be ordained for two thousand
-four hundred poor men, householders of this city, and every man to have
-two pence in money. More, he gave one large plot of ground, thereupon to
-build the new parish church of St. Stephen, near unto Walbrooke, etc.
-
-John Rainwell, fishmonger, mayor 1427, gave tenements to discharge
-certain wards of London of fifteenths and other payments.
-
-John Wells, grocer, mayor, 1433, a great builder of the chapel or
-college of the Guildhall, and was there buried. He caused fresh water to
-be conveyed from Tyborne to the standard in West Cheape for service of
-the city.
-
-William Eastfield, mercer, 1438, appointed his executors of his goods
-to convey sweet water from Tyborne, and to build a fair conduit by
-Aldermanberie church, which they performed, as also made a standard in
-Fleet street by Shew lane end; they also conveyed water to Cripples
-gate, etc.
-
-Stephen Browne, grocer, mayor 1439, sent into Prussia, causing corn to
-be brought from thence;[120] whereby he brought down the price of wheat
-from three shillings the bushel to less than half that money.
-
-Philip Malpas, one of the sheriffs 1440, gave by his testament one
-hundred and twenty-five pounds, to relieve poor prisoners, and every
-year for five years, four hundred shirts and smocks, forty pairs of
-sheets, and one hundred and fifty gowns of frieze, to the poor; to
-five hundred poor people in London six shillings and eight pence;
-to poor maids' marriages one hundred marks; to highways one hundred
-marks; twenty marks the year to a graduate to preach; twenty pounds to
-preachers at the Spittle the three Easter holidays, etc.
-
-Robert Large, mercer, mayor 1440, gave to his parish-church of St. Olave
-in Surry two hundred pounds; to St. Margaret's in Lothberie twenty-five
-pounds; to the poor twenty pounds; to London bridge one hundred marks;
-towards the vaulting over the water-course of Walbrooke two hundred
-marks; to poor maids' marriages one hundred marks; to poor householders
-one hundred pounds, etc.
-
-Richard Rich, mercer, one of the sheriffs 1442, founded alms houses at
-Hodsdon in Hertfordshire.
-
-Simon Eyre, draper, mayor 1346, built the Leaden hall for a common
-garner of corn for the use of this city, and left five thousand marks to
-charitable uses.
-
-Godfrey Bollein, mayor of London, 1458, by his testament, gave liberally
-to the prisons, hospitals, and lazar houses, besides a thousand
-pounds to poor householders in London, and two hundred pounds to poor
-householders in Norfolke.[121]
-
-Richard Rawson, one of the sheriffs 1477, gave by testament large
-legacies to the prisoners, hospitals, lazar houses, to other poor, to
-highways, to the water-conduits, besides to poor maids' marriages three
-hundred and forty pounds, and his executors to build a large house in
-the churchyard of St. Marie Spittle, wherein the mayor and his brethren
-do use to sit and hear the sermons in the Easter holidays.
-
-Thomas Ilam, one of the sheriffs 1480, newly built the great conduit in
-Cheape, of his own charges.
-
-Edward Shaw, goldsmith, mayor 1483, caused the Cripplegate of London to
-be newly built of his goods, etc.
-
-Thomas Hill, grocer, mayor 1485, caused of his goods the conduit of
-Grasse street to be built.
-
-Hugh Clopton, mercer, during his life a bachelor, mayor 1492, built the
-great stone-arched bridge at Stratford upon Avon in Warwickshire, and
-did many other things of great charity, as in my _Summary_.
-
-Robert Fabian, alderman, and one of the sheriffs, 1494, gathered out
-of divers good authors, as well Latin as French, a large Chronicle of
-England and of France, which he published in English, to his great
-charges, for the honour of this city, and common utility of the whole
-realm.
-
-Sir John Percivall, merchant-taylor, mayor 1498, founded a
-grammar-school at Macklefield in Cheshire, where he was born; he endowed
-the same school with sufficient lands for the finding of a priest master
-there, to teach freely all children thither sent, without exception.
-
-The Lady Thomasine his wife founded the like free school, together with
-fair lodgings for the schoolmasters, scholars, and other, and added
-twenty pounds of yearly revenue for supporting the charges, at St. Mary
-Wike in Devonshire, where she was born.
-
-Stephen Gennings, merchant-taylor, mayor 1509, founded a fair
-grammar-school at Ulfrimhampton[122] in Staffordshire, left good lands,
-and also built a great part of his parish church, called St. Andrew's
-Undershaft, in London.
-
-Henry Keble, grocer, mayor 1511, in his life a great benefactor to the
-new building of old Mary church, and by his testament gave a thousand
-pounds towards the finishing thereof; he gave to highways two hundred
-pounds; to poor maids' marriages one hundred marks; to poor husbandmen
-in Oxford and Warwick shires one hundred and forty ploughshares, and one
-hundred and forty coulters of iron; and in London, to seven almsmen six
-pence the week for ever.
-
-John Collet, a citizen of London by birth and dignity, dean of
-Paule's, doctor of divinity, erected and built one free school in
-Paule's churchyard, 1512, for three hundred and fifty-three poor men's
-children to be taught free in the same school, appointing a master, a
-surmaster, and a chaplain, with sufficient stipends to endure for ever,
-and committed the oversight thereof to the mercers in London, because
-himself was son to Henry Collet, mercer, mayor of London, and endowed
-the mercers with lands to the yearly value of one hundred and twenty
-pounds or better.
-
-John Tate, brewer, then a mercer, mayor 1514, caused his brewhouse,
-called the Swan, near adjoining to the hospital of St. Anthonie in
-London, to be taken down for the enlarging of the said church, then
-newly built, a great part of his charge. This was a goodly foundation,
-with alms houses, free school, etc.
-
-George Monox, draper, mayor 1515, re-edified the decayed parish church
-of Waltonstow, or Walthamstow, in Essex; he founded there a free school,
-and alms houses for thirteen alms people, made a causeway of timber over
-the marshes from Walthamstow to Lock bridge, etc.
-
-Sir John Milborne, draper, mayor 1522, built alms houses, fourteen in
-number, by the Crossed Friers church in London, there to be placed
-fourteen poor people; and left to the Drapers certain messuages,
-tenements, and garden plots, in the parish of St. Olave in Hart street,
-for the performance of stipends to the said alms people, and other uses.
-Look more in Ealdgate ward.
-
-Robert Thorne, merchant-taylor, deceased a bachelor in the year 1532,
-gave by his testament to charitable actions more than four thousand four
-hundred and forty pounds, and legacies to his poor kindred more five
-thousand one hundred and forty-two pounds, besides his debts forgiven,
-etc.
-
-Sir John Allen, mercer, mayor of London, and of council to King Henry
-VIII., deceased 1544, buried in St. Thomas of Acres in a fair chapel
-by him built. He gave to the city of London a rich collar of gold to
-be worn by the mayor, which was first worn by Sir W. Laxton. He gave
-five hundred marks to be a stock for sea-coal; his lands purchased of
-the king, the rent thereof to be distributed to the poor in the wards
-of London for ever. He gave besides to the prisons, hospitals, lazar
-houses, and all other poor in the city, or two miles without, very
-liberally, and long to be recited.
-
-Sir William Laxton, grocer, mayor 1545, founded a fair free school at
-Owndale in Northamptonshire, with six alms houses for the poor.
-
-Sir John Gresham, mercer, mayor 1548, founded a free school at Holt, a
-market-town in Norfolk.
-
-Sir Rowland Hill, mercer, mayor 1550, caused to be made divers causeways
-both for horse and man; he made four bridges, two of stone, containing
-eighteen arches in them both; he built one notable free school at
-Drayton in Shropshire; he gave to Christ's hospital in London five
-hundred pounds, etc.
-
-Sir Andrew Jud, skinner, mayor 1551, erected one notable free school at
-Tunbridge in Kent, and alms houses nigh St. Helen's church in London,
-and left to the Skinners lands to the value of sixty pounds three
-shillings and eight pence the year; for the which they be bound to pay
-twenty pounds to the schoolmaster, eight pounds to the usher, yearly,
-for ever, and four-shillings the week to the six alms people, and
-twenty-five shillings and four pence the year in coals for ever.
-
-Sir Thomas White, merchant-taylor, mayor 1554, founded St. John's
-college, Oxford, and gave great sums of money to divers towns in England
-for relief of the poor, as in my _Summary_.
-
-Edward Hall, gentleman, of Gray's inn, a citizen by birth and office, as
-common sergeant of London, and one of the judges in the Sheriffs' court;
-he wrote and published a famous and eloquent chronicle, entitled, "The
-Uniting of the Two noble Families, Lancaster and Yorke."
-
-Richard Hils, merchant-taylor, 1560, gave five hundred pounds towards
-the purchase of a house called the manor of the Rose, wherein the
-merchant-taylors founded their free school in London; he also gave
-to the said merchant-taylors one plot of ground, with certain small
-cottages on the Tower hill, where he built fair alms houses for fourteen
-sole women.
-
-About the same time William Lambert, Esq., born in London, a justice
-of the peace in Kent, founded a college for the poor which he named of
-Queen Elizabeth, in East Greenwich.
-
-William Harper, merchant-taylor, mayor 1562, founded a free school in
-the town of Bedford, where he was born, and also buried.
-
-Sir Thomas Gresham, mercer, 1566, built the Royal Exchange in London,
-and by his testament left his dwelling house in Bishopsgate street to
-be a place for readings, allowing large stipends to the readers, and
-certain alms houses for the poor.
-
-William Patten, gentleman, a citizen by birth, a customer of London
-outward, justice of peace in Middlesex, the parish church of
-Stokenewenton being ruinous, he repaired, or rather new built.
-
-Sir Thomas Roo, merchant-taylor, mayor 1568, gave to the
-merchant-taylors lands or tenements, out of them to be given to ten poor
-men, cloth-workers, carpenters, tilers, plasterers, and armourers, forty
-pounds yearly, namely, four pounds to each, also one hundred pounds to
-be lent to eight poor men; besides he enclosed with a wall of brick
-nigh one acre of ground, pertaining to the hospital of Bethlem, to be a
-burial for the dead.
-
-Ambrose Nicholas, salter, mayor 1576, founded twelve alms houses in
-Monke's well street, near unto Creple's gate, wherein he placed twelve
-poor people, having each of them seven pence the week, and once every
-year five sacks of coals, and one quarter of a hundred faggots, all of
-his gift for ever.
-
-William Lambe, gentleman and clothworker, in the year 1577, built a
-water-conduit at Oldborne cross to his charges of fifteen hundred
-pounds, and did many other charitable acts, as in my _Summary_.
-
-Sir T. Offley, merchant-taylor, mayor, deceased 1580, appointed by his
-testament the one half of all his goods, and two hundred pounds deducted
-out of the other half given to his son Henry, to be given and bestowed
-in deeds of charity by his executors, according to his confidence and
-trust in them.
-
-John Haydon, sheriff 1583, gave large legacies, more than three thousand
-pounds, for the relief of the poor, as in my _Summary_.
-
-Barnard Randolph, common sergeant of London 1583, gave and delivered
-with his own hand, nine hundred pounds towards the building of
-water-conduits, which was performed. More, by testament he gave one
-thousand pounds to be employed in charitable actions; but that money
-being in hold fast hands, I have not heard how it was bestowed, more
-than of other good men's testaments--to be performed.
-
-Sir Wolston Dixie, skinner, mayor 1586, founded a free school at
-Bosworth, and endowed it with twenty pounds land by year.
-
-Richard May, merchant-taylor, gave three hundred pounds toward the new
-building of Blackwell hall in London, a market-place for woollen cloths.
-
-John Fuller, Esq., one of the judges in the sheriffs' court of London,
-by his testament, dated 1592, appointed his wife, her heirs and
-assigns, after his decease, to erect one alms house in the parish of
-Stikoneth,[123] for twelve poor single men, aged fifty years or upwards,
-and one other alms house in Shoreditch, for twelve poor aged widow women
-of like age, she to endow them with one hundred pounds the year, to
-wit, fifty pounds to each for ever, out of his lands in Lincolne shire,
-assured ever unto certain fiefs in trust, by a deed of feoffment. Item:
-more, he gave his messuages, lands, and tenements, lying in the parishes
-of St. Benet and St. Peter, by Powle's wharf in London, to feoffees
-in trust, yearly for ever, to disburse all the issues and profits of
-the said lands and tenements, to the relieving and discharge of poor
-prisoners in the Hole, or two penny wards in the two compters in London,
-in equal portions to each compter, so that the prisoners exceed not the
-sum of twenty-six shillings and eight pence for every one prisoner at
-any one time.
-
-Thus much for famous citizens have I noted their charitable actions,
-for the most part done by them in their lifetime. The residue left in
-trust to their executors, I have known some of them hardly (or never)
-performed; wherefore I wish men to make their own hands their executors,
-and their eyes their overseers, not forgetting the old proverb:--
-
- "Women be forgetfull, children be unkind,
- Executors be covetous, and take what they find.
- If any body aske where the dead's goods became,
- They answere, So God me help, and holy dome, he died a poore man."
-
-One worthy citizen merchant-taylor, having many years considered this
-proverb foregoing, hath therefore established to twelve poor aged men,
-merchant-taylors, six pounds two shillings to each yearly for ever. He
-hath also given them gowns of good broad cloth, lined thoroughly with
-bays, and are to receive every three years' end the like new gowns for
-ever.
-
-And now of some women, citizens' wives, deserving memory, for example to
-posterity shall be noted.
-
-Dame Agnes Foster, widow, sometime wife to Stephen Foster, fishmonger,
-mayor 1455, having enlarged the prison of Ludgate in 1463, procured in a
-common council of this city, certain articles to be established for the
-ease, comfort, and relief of poor prisoners there, as in the chapter of
-gates I have set down.
-
-Avise Gibson, wife unto Nicholas Gibson, grocer, one of the sheriffs
-1539, by license of her husband, founded a free school at Radclyffe,
-near unto London, appointing to the same, for the instruction of sixty
-poor men's children, a schoolmaster and usher with fifty pounds; she
-also built alms houses for fourteen poor aged persons, each of them to
-receive quarterly six shillings and eight pence the piece for ever; the
-government of which free school and alms houses she left in confidence
-to the Coopers in London. This virtuous gentlewoman was after joined in
-marriage with Sir Anthony Knevet, knight, and so called the Lady Knevet;
-a fair painted table of her picture was placed in the chapel which she
-had built there, but of late removed thence, by the like reason as the
-Grocer's arms fixed on the outer wall of the schoolhouse are pulled
-down, and the Coopers set in place.[124]
-
-Margaret Danne, widow to William Danne, ironmonger, one of the sheriffs
-of London, gave by her testament to the ironmongers, two thousand
-pounds, to be lent to young men of that company, paying after the rate
-of five pounds in the year for every hundred; which one hundred pounds
-so rising yearly, to be employed on charitable actions, as she then
-appointed, but not performed in more than thirty years after.
-
-Dame Mary Ramsey, wife to Sir Thomas Ramsey, mayor about the year 1577,
-being seised of lands in fee simple of her inheritance to the yearly
-value of two hundred and forty-three pounds, by his consent gave the
-same to Christ's hospital in London towards the relief of poor children
-there, and other ways, as in my _Summary_ and _Abridgment_ I have
-long since expressed; which gift she in her widowhood confirmed and
-augmented, as is showed by monuments in Christ's hospital erected.
-
-Thus much for the worthiness of citizens in this city, touching whom
-John Lidgate, a monk of Bury, in the reign of Henry VI., made (amongst
-other) these verses following:--
-
- "Of seaven things I prayse this citty.
- Of true meaning and faithful observance;
- Of righteousnes, truth, and equity;
- Of stablenes aye kept in legiance;
- And for of vertue thou hast suffisance,
- In this lond here, and other londs all,
- The kinges chamber of custome, men thee call."
-
-Having thus in generality handled the original, the walls, gates,
-ditches, and fresh waters, the bridges, towers, and castles, the
-schools of learning and house of law, the orders and customs, sports
-and pastimes, watchings and martial exercises, and lastly the honour
-and worthiness of the citizens, I am now to set down the distribution
-of this city into parts; and more especially to declare the antiquities
-noteworthy in every of the same; and how both the whole and parts have
-been from time to time ruled and governed.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[120] "To London in greater quantitie."--_1st edition_, p. 80.
-
-[121] "In the yeare 1471, John Stockton, mayor, and eleven aldermen
-of London, with the recorder, were all made knightes in the fielde by
-Edward IV., for their good service done to him."--_1st edition_, p. 81.
-
-[122] Wolverhampton.
-
-[123] Stepney.
-
-[124] "Cursed is hee that removeth his neighbors mark, have I
-read."--_Stow._
-
-
-
-
-THE CITY DIVIDED INTO PARTS
-
-
-The ancient division of this city was into wards or aldermanries. And
-therefore I will begin at the east, and so proceed through the high and
-most principal street of the city to the west, after this manner.
-
-First, through Aldgate street to the west corner of St. Andrewe's
-church, called Undershaft, on the right hand, and Lyme street corner on
-the left; all which is of Aldgate ward; from thence through Cornhill
-street to the west corner of Leaden hall; all which is of Lyme street
-ward. From thence, leaving the street that leadeth to Bishopsgate on the
-right hand, and the way that leadeth into Grasse street on the left,
-still through Cornhill street, by the conduit to the west corner against
-the Stocks; all which is in Cornhill ward. Then by the said Stocks (a
-market-place both of fish and flesh standing in the midst of the city)
-through the Poultry (a street so called) to the great conduit in West
-Cheape, and so through Cheape to the standard, which is of Cheape ward,
-except on the south side from Bow-lane to the said standard, which is
-of Cordwayner street ward. Then by the standard to the great cross,
-which is in Cripplegate ward on the north side, and in Bred street ward
-on the south side. And to the little conduit by Paule's gate, from
-whence of old time the said high street stretched straight to Ludgate,
-all in the ward of Faringdon within, then divided truly from east to
-west, but since by means of the burning of Paule's church, which was
-in the reign of William I., Mauricius, then bishop of London, laid the
-foundation of a new church, so far in largeness exceeding the old, that
-the way towards Ludgate was thereby greatly straitened, as before I have
-discoursed.
-
-Now from the north to the south this city was of old time divided, not
-by a large highway or street, as from east to west, but by a fair brook
-of sweet water, which came from out the north fields through the wall,
-and midst of the city, into the river of Thames; which division is
-till this day constantly and without change maintained. This water was
-called (as I have said) Walbrooke, not Galus brook of a Roman captain
-slain by Asclepiodatus, and thrown therein, as some have fabled, but of
-running through, and from the wall of this city; the course whereof,
-to prosecute it particularly, was and is from the said wall to St.
-Margaret's church in Lothberrie; from thence beneath the lower part
-of the Grocers' hall, about the east part of their kitchen, under St.
-Mildred's church, somewhat west from the said Stockes' market; from
-thence through Buckles berry, by one great house built of stone and
-timber called the Old Barge, because barges out of the river of Thames
-were rowed up so far into this brook, on the backside of the houses in
-Walbrooke street (which street taketh the name of the said brook) by the
-west end of St. John's church upon Walbrooke, under Horseshew bridge,
-by the west side of Tallowchandler's hall, and of the Skinner's hall,
-and so behind the other houses to Elbow lane, and by a part thereof down
-Greenewitch lane, into the river of Thames.
-
-This is the course of Walbrooke, which was of old time bridged over in
-divers places, for passage of horses and men, as need required; but
-since, by means of encroachment on the banks thereof, the channel being
-greatly straitened, and other noyances done thereunto, at length the
-same by common consent was arched over with brick, and paved with stone,
-equal with the ground, where through it passed, and is now in most
-places built upon, that no man may by the eye discern it, and therefore
-the trace thereof is hardly known to the common people.
-
-This city was divided from east to west, and from north to south. I am
-further to show how the same was of old time broken into divers parts
-called wards, whereof Fitzstephen, more than four hundred years since,
-writeth thus:--"This city, (saith he) even as Rome, is divided into
-wards; it hath yearly sheriffs instead of consuls. It hath the dignity
-of senators in aldermen," etc. The number of these wards in London
-was, both before and in the reign of Henry III., twenty-four in all;
-whereof thirteen lay on the east side of the said Walbrooke, and eleven
-on the west. Notwithstanding these eleven grew much more large than
-those of the east; and therefore in the year of Christ 1393, in the
-17th of Richard II., Faringdon ward, which was then one entire ward,
-but mightily increased of buildings without the gates, was by act of
-parliament appointed to be divided into twain, and to have two aldermen,
-to wit, Faringdon within, and Faringdon without, which made up the
-number of twelve wards on the west side of Walbrooke, and so the whole
-number of twenty-five on both sides. Moreover, in the year 1550, the
-mayor, commonalty, and citizens of London, purchasing the liberties of
-the borough of Southwark, appointed the same to be a ward of London, and
-so became the number of thirteen wards on the east, twelve on the west,
-and one south of the river Thames, in the said borough of Southwark, in
-the county of Surrey, which in all arise to the number of twenty-six
-wards, and twenty-six aldermen of London.
-
-Wards on the east part of Walbrooke are these:--
-
- 1 Portsoken ward without the walls.
-
- 2 Tower street ward.
-
- 3 Ealdegate ward.
-
- 4 Lime street ward.
-
- 5 Bishopsgate ward, within the walls and without.
-
- 6 Brod street ward.
-
- 7 Cornehil ward.
-
- 8 Langbourne ward.
-
- 9 Billingsgate ward.
-
- 10 Bridge ward within.
-
- 11 Candlewick street ward.
-
- 12 Walbrooke ward.
-
- 13 Downgate ward.
-
-Wards on the west side of Walbrooke are these:
-
- 14 Vintry ward.
-
- 15 Cordwainer street ward.
-
- 16 Cheape ward.
-
- 17 Colman street warde.
-
- 18 Basinghall warde.
-
- 19 Cripplegate ward, within and without.
-
- 20 Aldersgate ward, within and without.
-
- 21 Farringdon ward within.
-
- 22 Bread street ward.
-
- 23 Queenhithe ward.
-
- 24 Castle Baynard ward.
-
- 25 Farringdon ward without the walls.
-
-One ward south the river Thames, in the borough of Southwark, by the
-name of
-
- 26 Bridge ward without.
-
-
-
-
-OF PORTSOKEN WARD, THE FIRST IN THE EAST PART
-
-
-Seeing that of every of these wards I have to say somewhat, I will begin
-with Portsoken ward without Aldgate.
-
-This Portsoken, which soundeth[125] the franchise at the gate, was
-sometime a guild, and had beginning in the days of King Edgar, more
-than six hundred years since.[126] There were thirteen knights or
-soldiers, well-beloved to the king and realm, for service by them done,
-which requested to have a certain portion of land on the east part of
-the city, left desolate and forsaken by the inhabitants, by reason of
-too much servitude. They besought the king to have this land, with the
-liberty of a guild for ever. The king granted to their request, with
-conditions following: that is, that each of them should victoriously
-accomplish three combats, one above the ground, one under ground,
-and the third in the water; and after this, at a certain day in East
-Smithfield, they should run with spears against all comers; all which
-was gloriously performed; and the same day the king named it Knighten
-Guild, and so bounded it, from Aldgate to the place where the bars now
-are, toward the east, on both the sides of the street, and extended
-it towards Bishopsgate in the north, unto the house then of William
-Presbiter, after of Giffrey Tanner, and then of the heirs of Colver,
-after that of John Easeby, but since of the Lord Bourchier, etc. And
-again towards the south unto the river of Thames, and so far into the
-water, as a horseman, entering the same, may ride at a low water, and
-throw his spear; so that all East Smithfield, with the right part of the
-street that goeth to Dodding pond into the Thames, and also the hospital
-of St. Katherin's, with the mills that were founded in King Stephen's
-days, and the outward stone wall, and the new ditch of the Tower, are
-of the said fee and liberty; for the said wall and ditch of the Tower
-were made in the time of King Richard, when he was in the Holy Land, by
-William Longshampe, Bishop of Ely, as before I have noted unto you.
-
-These knights had as then none other charter by all the days of Edgar,
-Ethelred, and Cnutus, until the time of Edward the Confessor, whom the
-heirs of those knights humbly besought to confirm their liberties;
-whereunto he graciously granting,[127] gave them a deed thereof, as
-appeareth in the book of the late house of the Holy Trinity. The said
-charter is fair written in the Saxon letter and tongue. After this,
-King William, the son of William the Conqueror, made a confirmation of
-the same liberties, unto the heirs of those knights, in these words:
-"William, king of England, to Maurice Bishop, and Godffrey de Magum,
-and Richard de Parre, and to his faithfull people of London, greeting:
-Know ye me to have granted to the men of Knighten Guilde, the guilde
-that belonged to them, and the land that belonged thereunto, with all
-customes, as they had the same in the time of King Edward, and my
-father. Witnesse, Hugh de Buche, at Rething."
-
-After him, King Henry I. confirmed the same by his charter to the like
-effect, the recital whereof I pretermit for brevity. After which time,
-the church of the Holy Trinity, within Aldgate of London, being founded
-by Queen Matilda, wife to the said Henry, the multitude of brethren,
-praising God day and night therein, in short time so increased, that all
-the city was delighted in the beholding of them; insomuch, that in the
-year 1115, certain burgesses of London, of the progeny of those noble
-English knights; to wit, Radulphus Fitalgod, Wilmarde le Deucreshe,
-Orgar le Prude, Edward Hupcornehill, Blackstanus, and Alwine his
-kinsman, and Robert his brother, the sons of Leafstanus the goldsmith,
-Wiso his son, Hugh Fitzvulgar, Algare Secusme, coming together into the
-chapter-house of the said church of the Holy Trinity, gave to the same
-church and canons serving God therein, all the lands and soke called in
-English Knighten Guilde, which lieth to the wall of the city, without
-the same gate, and stretcheth to the river of Thames; they gave it, I
-say, taking upon them the brotherhood and participation of the benefits
-of that house, by the hands of Prior Norman. And the better to confirm
-this their grant, they offered upon the altar there the charter of
-Edward, together with the other charters which they had thereof; and
-afterward they did put the foresaid prior in seisine thereof, by the
-church of St. Buttolphe's, which is built thereon, and is the head
-of that land. These things were thus done before Bernard, prior of
-Dunstable, John, prior of Derland, Geffrey Clinton, chamberlain, and
-many other clerks and laymen, French and English. Orgar le Prude (one
-of their company) was sent to King Henry, beseeching him to confirm
-their gift, which the king gladly granted by his deed: "Henrie, king of
-England, to Richard Bishop of London, to the shireffes and provost, and
-to all his barons and faithfull people, French and English, of London
-and Middlesex, greeting: Know ye mee to have graunted and confirmed to
-the church and canons of the Holy Trinitie of London, the soke of the
-English Knighten Guilde, and the land which pertaineth thereunto, and
-the church of St. Buttolph, as the men of the same guilde have given and
-granted unto them: and I will and straightly commaund, that they may
-hold the same well and honourably and freely, with sacke and soke, toll
-and thea, infangthefe, and all customs belonging to it, as the men of
-the same Guild in best sort had the same in the time of K. Edward, and
-as King William, my father and brother, did grant it to them by their
-writs. Witnesse, A. the queene, Geffrey the chauncellor, Geoffrey of
-Clinton, and William of Clinton, at Woodstocke." All these prescribed
-writings (saith my book), which sometime belonged to the priory of the
-Holy Trinity, are registered in the end of the Book of Remembrances,
-in the Guildhall of London, marked with the letter C, folio 134. The
-king sent also his sheriffs, to wit, Aubrey de Vere, and Roger, nephew
-to Hubert, which upon his behalf should invest this church with the
-possessions thereof, which the said sheriffs accomplished coming upon
-the ground; Andrew Buchevite, and the forenamed witnesses, and other,
-standing by; notwithstanding, Othowerus Acolivillus, Otto, and Geffrey,
-Earl of Essex, constables of the Tower by succession, withheld by force
-a portion of the said land, as I have before delivered.
-
-The prior and canons of the Holy Trinity, being thus seised of the said
-land and soke of Knighten Guilde, a part of the suburb without the wall
-(but within the liberties of the city), the same prior was, for him and
-his successors, admitted as one of the aldermen of London, to govern
-the same land and soke: according to the customs of the city, he did
-sit in court, and rode with the mayor and his brethren the aldermen, as
-one of them, in scarlet or other livery as they used, until the year
-1531, at the which time the said priory, by the last prior there, was
-surrendered to King Henry VIII., in the 23rd of his reign, who gave this
-priory to Sir Thomas Audley, knight, lord chancellor of England, and he
-pulled down the church; since the which dissolution of that house, the
-said ward of Portsoken hath been governed by a temporal man, one of the
-aldermen of London, elected by the citizens, as the aldermen of other
-wards. Thus much for the out-bounds of Knighten guilde, or Portsoken
-ward, and for the antiquity and government thereof.
-
-Now, of the parts therein, this is specially to be noted. First,
-the east part of the Tower standeth there, then an hospital of St.
-Katherine's, founded by Matilda the queen, wife to King Stephen, by
-license of the priory and convent of the Holy Trinity in London, on
-whose grounds he founded it. Helianor the queen, wife to King Edward
-I., a second foundress, appointed there to be a master, three brethren
-chaplains, and three sisters, ten poor women, and six poor clerks; she
-gave to them the manor of Carlton in Wiltshire, and Upchurch in Kent,
-etc. Queen Philippa, wife to King Edward III., 1351, founded a chantry
-there, and gave to that hospital ten pounds land by year; it was of late
-time called a free chapel, a college, and an hospital for poor sisters.
-The choir, which of late years was not much inferior to that of Paules,
-was dissolved by Dr. Wilson, a late master there, the brethren and
-sisters remaining: this house was valued at £315 14_s._ 2_d._, being
-now of late years inclosed about, or pestered with small tenements and
-homely cottages, having inhabitants, English and strangers, more in
-number than in some city in England. There lie buried in this church the
-countess of Huntingdon, countess of the March in her time, 1429; John
-Holland, Duke of Exeter and Earl of Huntingdon, 1447, and his two wives,
-in a fair tomb on the north side the choir; Thomas Walsingham, esquire,
-and Thomas Ballarde, esquire, by him, 1465; Thomas Flemming, knight,
-1466, etc.[128]
-
-On the east and by north of the Tower, lieth East Smithfield and Tower
-hill, two plots of ground so called, without the wall of the city; and
-east from them both was sometime a monastery, called New Abbey, founded
-by King Edward III. in the year 1359, upon occasion as followeth:
-
-In the year 1348, the 23rd of Edward III., the first great pestilence
-in his time began, and increased so sore, that for want of room in
-churchyards to bury the dead of the city and of the suburbs, one John
-Corey, clerk, procured of Nicholas, prior of the Holy Trinity within
-Aldgate, one toft[129] of ground near unto East Smithfield, for the
-burial of them that died, with condition that it might be called the
-churchyard of the Holy Trinity; which ground he caused, by the aid of
-divers devout citizens, to be inclosed with a wall of stone. Robert
-Elsing, son of William Elsing, gave five pounds thereunto; and the same
-was dedicated by Ralph Stratford, Bishop of London, where innumerable
-bodies of the dead were afterwards buried, and a chapel built in the
-same place to the honour of God: to the which King Edward setting his
-eye (having before, in a tempest on the sea, and peril of drowning,
-made a vow to build a monastery to the honour of God, and our lady of
-grace, if God would grant him grace to come safe to land), built there
-a monastery, placing an abbot, and monks of the Cistercian, or White
-order. The bounds of this plot of ground, together with a decree for
-tithes thereof, are expressed in the charter, the effect whereof I
-have set down in another place, and have to show. This house, at the
-late general suppression, was valued at £546 0_s._ 10_d._ yearly; it
-was surrendered in the year 1539, the 30th of Henry VIII.; since the
-which time, the said monastery being clean pulled down by Sir Arthur
-Darcie, knight, and others, of late time in place thereof is built a
-large storehouse for victuals; and convenient ovens are built there, for
-baking of biscuits to serve her majesty's ships. The grounds adjoining,
-belonging to the said abbey, are employed in building of small tenements.
-
-For Tower hill, as the same is greatly diminished by building of
-tenements and garden-plots, etc. So it is of late, to wit, in the year
-of Christ 1593, on the north side thereof, and at the west end of Hog
-street, beautified by certain fair alms houses, strongly built of brick
-and timber, and covered with slate for the poor, by the merchant-tailors
-of London, in place of some small cottages given to them by Richard
-Hils, sometime a master of that company, one thousand loads of timber
-for that use, being also given by Anthonie Radcliffe, of the same
-society, alderman. In these alms houses, fourteen charitable brethren
-of the said merchant-tailors yet living, have placed fourteen poor
-sole women, which receive each of them of their founder sixteen pence,
-or better, weekly, besides £8 15_s._ yearly, paid out of the common
-treasury of the same corporation for fuel.
-
-From the west part of this Tower hill, towards Aldgate, being a long
-continual street, amongst other smaller buildings in that row, there
-was sometime an abbey of nuns of the order of St. Clare, called the
-Minories, founded by Edmond, Earl of Lancaster, Leycester, and Darbie,
-brother to King Edward III., in the year 1293; the length of which abbey
-contained fifteen perches and seven feet, near unto the king's street or
-highway, etc., as appeareth by a deed, dated 1303.
-
-A plague of pestilence being in this city, in the year 1515, there died
-in this house of nuns professed to the number of twenty-seven, besides
-other lay people, servants in their house. This house was valued to
-dispend £418 8_s._ 5_d._ yearly, and was surrendered by Dame Elizabeth
-Salvage, the last abbess there, unto King Henry VIII. in the 30th of his
-reign, the year of Christ 1539.
-
-In place of this house of nuns is now built divers fair and large
-storehouses for armour and habiliments of war, with divers workhouses,
-serving to the same purpose: there is a small parish church for
-inhabitants of the close, called St. Trinities.
-
-Near adjoining to this abbey, on the south side thereof, was sometime
-a farm belonging to the said nunnery; at the which farm I myself in my
-youth have fetched many a halfpenny worth of milk, and never had less
-than three ale pints for a halfpenny in the summer, nor less than one
-ale quart for a halfpenny in the winter, always hot from the kine, as
-the same was milked and strained. One Trolop, and afterwards Goodman,
-were the farmers there, and had thirty or forty kine to the pail.
-Goodman's son being heir to his father's purchase, let out the ground
-first for grazing of horses, and then for garden-plots, and lived like a
-gentleman thereby.
-
-On the other side of that street lieth the ditch without the walls of
-the city, which of old time was used to be open, always from time to
-time cleansed from filth and mud, as need required; of great breadth,
-and so deep, that divers, watering horses where they thought it
-shallowest, were drowned, both horse and man. But now of later time the
-same ditch is inclosed, and the banks thereof let out for garden-plots,
-carpenters' yards, bowling allies, and divers houses thereon built,
-whereby the city wall is hidden, the ditch filled up, a small channel
-left, and that very shallow.
-
-From Aldgate, east, lieth a large street and highway, sometime
-replenished with few, but fair and comely buildings; on the north side
-whereof, the first was the parish church of St. Buttolph, in a large
-cemetery or churchyard. This church hath been lately new built at the
-special charges of the priors of the Holy Trinity; patrons thereof, as
-it appeareth by the arms of that house, engraven on the stone work.
-The parishioners of this parish being of late years mightily increased,
-the church is pestered with lofts and seats for them. Monuments in this
-church are few: Henry Jorden founded a chauntry there; John Romany
-Ollarie, and Agnes his wife, were buried there about 1408; Richard
-Chester, alderman, one of the sheriffs, 1484; Thomas Lord Darcie of
-the north, knight of the garter, beheaded 1537; Sir Nicholas Carew, of
-Bedington, in Surrey, knight of the garter, beheaded 1538; Sir Arthur
-Darcie, youngest son to Thomas Lord Darcie, deceased at the new abbey on
-the Tower hill, was buried there. East from this parish church, there
-were certain fair inns for receipt of travellers repairing to the city,
-up towards Hog lane end, somewhat within the bars, a mark showing how
-far the liberties of the city do extend.
-
-This Hog lane stretcheth north toward St. Mary Spitle without
-Bishopsgate, and within these forty years[130] had on both sides fair
-hedge rows of elm trees, with bridges and easy stiles to pass over into
-the pleasant fields, very commodious for citizens therein to walk,
-shoot, and otherwise to recreate and refresh their dull spirits in
-the sweet and wholesome air, which is now within a few years made a
-continual building throughout, of garden-houses and small cottages; and
-the fields on either sides be turned into garden-plots, tenter yards,
-bowling alleys, and such like, from Houndes ditch in the west, as far as
-White Chappell, and further towards the east.
-
-On the south side of the highway from Aldgate were some few tenements,
-thinly scattered here and there, with many void spaces between them,
-up to the Bars; but now that street is not only fully replenished with
-buildings outward, and also pestered with divers alleys, on either side
-to the bars, but to White Chappell and beyond. Among the which late
-buildings, one memorable for the commodity of that east part of this
-city is a fair water conduit, hard without the gate; at the building
-whereof in the year 1535, Sir John Allen being mayor, two-fifteens were
-granted by the citizens for the making and laying of pipes, to convey
-water from Hackney to that place; and so that work was finished.
-
-From Aldgate, north-west to Bishopsgate, lieth the ditch of the city
-called Houndes ditch; for that in old time, when the same lay open, much
-filth (conveyed forth of the city), especially dead dogs, were there
-laid or cast; wherefore of latter time a mud wall was made, inclosing
-the ditch, to keep out the laying of such filth as had been accustomed.
-Over against this mud wall, on the other side of the street, was a fair
-field, sometime belonging to the priory of the Trinity, and since by Sir
-Thomas Audley given to Magdalen college in Cambridge: this field (as all
-other about the city) was inclosed, reserving open passage thereinto,
-for such as were disposed. Towards the street were some small cottages,
-of two stories high, and little garden-plots backward, for poor bed-rid
-people, for in that street dwelt none other, built by some prior of the
-Holy Trinity, to whom that ground belonged.
-
-In my youth, I remember, devout people, as well men as women of this
-city, were accustomed oftentimes, especially on Fridays, weekly to walk
-that way purposely there to bestow their charitable alms; every poor man
-or woman lying in their bed within their window, which was towards the
-street, open so low that every man might see them, a clean linen cloth
-lying in their window, and a pair of beads, to show that there lay a
-bed-rid body, unable but to pray only. This street was first paved in
-the year 1503.
-
-About the latter reign of Henry VIII., three brethren that were
-gunfounders, surnamed Owens, got ground there to build upon, and to
-inclose for casting of brass ordinance. These occupied a good part of
-the street on the field side, and in a short time divers others also
-built there, so that the poor bed-rid people were worn out, and, in
-place of their homely cottages, such houses built as do rather want
-room than rent; which houses be for the most part possessed by brokers,
-sellers of old apparel, and such like. The residue of the field was for
-the most part made into a garden by a gardener named Cawsway, one that
-served the markets with herbs and roots; and in the last year of King
-Edward VI. the same was parcelled into gardens wherein are now many fair
-houses of pleasure built.
-
-On the ditch side of this street the mud wall is also by little and
-little all taken down, the bank of the ditch being raised, made level
-ground, and turned into garden-plots and carpenters' yards, and many
-large houses are there built; the filth of which houses, as also the
-earth cast out of their vaults, is turned into the ditch, by which means
-the ditch is filled up, and both the ditch and wall so hidden that they
-cannot be seen of the passers by. This Portsoken ward hath an alderman
-and his deputy, common councillors six, constables four, scavengers
-four, for the wardemote inquest eighteen, and a beadle. To the fifteen
-it is cessed at four pounds ten shillings.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[125] "As much as"--_1st edition_, p. 85.
-
-[126] Liber Trinitat.
-
-[127] Liber Trinitat.
-
-[128] The further history of this establishment will be found in
-Nichols' _History of the Hospital and Collegiate Church of St.
-Katherine, near the Tower of London_.
-
-[129] The Danish _toft_, Swedish _tomt_, properly signifies the ground
-upon which a house stands. See Grimm's _Deutsche Rechtsalterthümer_, s.
-539.
-
-[130] "These fortie-four yeares last."--_1st edition_, p. 92.
-
-
-
-
-TOWER STREET WARD
-
-
-The first ward in the east part of this city within the wall is called
-Tower street ward, and extendeth along the river of Thames from the
-said Tower in the east almost to Belinsgate in the west. One half of
-the Tower, the ditch on the west side, and bulwarks adjoining, do stand
-within that part where the wall of the city of old time went straight
-from the postern gate south to the river of Thames, before that the
-Tower was built. From and without the Tower ditch, west and by north,
-is the said Tower hill, sometime a large plot of ground, now greatly
-straitened by incroachments (unlawfully made and suffered) for gardens
-and houses; some on the bank of the Tower ditch, whereby the Tower ditch
-is marred, but more near unto the wall of the city from the postern
-north, till over against the principal fore-gate of the Lord Lumley's
-house, etc.; but the Tower ward goeth no further that way.
-
-Upon this hill is always readily prepared, at the charges of the city, a
-large scaffold and gallows of timber, for the execution of such traitors
-or transgressors as are delivered out of the Tower, or otherwise, to the
-sheriffs of London by writ, there to be executed. I read, that in the
-fifth of King Edward IV.[131] a scaffold and gallows was there set up
-by other the king's officers, and not of the city's charges, whereupon
-the mayor and his brethren complained, but were answered by the king
-that the Tower hill was of the liberty of the city; and whatsoever was
-done in that point was not in derogation of the city's liberties, and
-therefore commanded proclamation[132] to be made, as well within the
-city as in the suburbs, as followeth: "Forasmuch as, the seventh day of
-this present month of November, gallows were erect and set up besides
-our Tower of London, within the liberties and franchises of our city of
-London, in derogation and prejudice of the liberties and franchises of
-this city, the king our sovereign lord would it be certainly understood
-that the erection and setting up of the said gallows was not done by
-his commandment; wherefore the king our sovereign lord willeth that the
-erection and setting up the said gallows be not any precedent or example
-thereby hereafter to be taken, in hurt, prejudice, or derogation of the
-franchises, liberties, and privileges of the said city, which he at all
-times hath had, and hath in his benevolence, tender favour, and good
-grace, etc. Apud Westminst. 9 die Novemb. anno regni nostri quinto."
-On the north side of this hill is the said Lord Lumley's house, and on
-the west side divers houses lately built, and other incroachments along
-south to Chick lane,[133] on the east of Barking church, at the end
-whereof you have Tower street stretching from the Tower hill, west to
-St. Margaret Patten's church parsonage.
-
-Now therefore, to begin at the east end of the street, on the north side
-thereof, is the fair parish church called Allhallows Barking, which
-standeth in a large, but sometime far larger, cemetery or churchyard; on
-the north side whereof was sometime built a fair chapel, founded by King
-Richard I.; some have written that his heart was buried there under the
-high altar. This chapel was confirmed and augmented by King Edward I.
-Edward IV. gave license to his cousin John, Earl of Worcester, to found
-there a brotherhood for a master and brethren; and he gave to the custos
-of that fraternity, which was Sir John Scot, knight, Thomas Colte,
-John Tate, and John Croke, the priory of Totingbecke, and advowson
-of the parish church of Streatham, in the county of Surrey, with all
-the members and appurtenances, and a part of the priory of Okeborn in
-Wiltshire, both priors aliens, and appointed it to be called the king's
-chapel or chantry, _In capella Beatæ Mariæ de Barking_. King Richard
-III. new built and founded therein a college of priests, etc. Hamond de
-Lega was buried in that chapel. Robert Tate, mayor of London, 1488,[134]
-and other, were there buried. This chapel and college were suppressed
-and pulled down in the year 1548, the 2nd of King Edward VI. The ground
-was employed as a garden-plot during the reigns of King Edward, Queen
-Mary, and part of Queen Elizabeth, till at length a large strong frame
-of timber and brick was set thereon, and employed as a store-house of
-merchants' goods brought from the sea by Sir William Winter, etc.
-
-Monuments in the parish church of Allhallows Barking, not defaced, are
-these:--Sir Thomas Studinham, of Norwich diocess, knight, 1469; Thomas
-Gilbart, draper and merchant of the staple, 1483; John Bolt, merchant
-of the staple, 1459; Sir John Stile, knight, draper, 1500. William
-Thinne, esq., one of the clerks of the Green cloth, and master of the
-household to King Henry VIII., 1546; Humfrey Monmouth, draper, one of
-the sheriffs, 1535; Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey, beheaded 1546; Sir
-Richard Devereux, son and heir to the Lord Ferrers of Chartley; Richard
-Browne, esq. 1546; Philip Dennis, esq. 1556; Andrew Evenger, salter;
-William Robinson, mercer, alderman, 1552; William Armorer, cloth-worker,
-esquire, governor of the pages of honour, or master of the heance men,
-servant to Henry VIII., Edward VI., and Queen Mary, buried 1560. Besides
-which there be divers tombs without inscription. John Crolys and Thomas
-Pike, citizens of London, founded a chantry there 1388.
-
-By the west end of this parish church and chapel, lieth Sidon lane,
-now corruptly called Sything lane, from Tower street up north to
-Hart street. In this Sidon lane divers fair and large houses are
-built, namely, one by Sir John Allen, sometime mayor of London, and
-of council unto King Henry VIII.; Sir Francis Walsingham, knight,
-principal secretary to the queen's majesty that now is, was lodged
-there, and so was the Earl of Essex, etc. At the north-west corner of
-this lane standeth a proper parish church of St. Olave, which church,
-together with some houses adjoining, as also others over against it
-in Hart street, are of the said Tower street ward. Monuments in this
-parish church of St. Olave be these:--Richard Cely and Robert Cely,
-fellmongers, principal builders and benefactors of this church; Dame
-Johan, wife to Sir John Zouch, 1439; John Clarenciaulx, king of arms,
-1427; Thomas Sawle; Sir Richard Haddon, mercer, mayor 1512; Thomas
-Burnell, mercer, 1548; Thomas Morley, gentleman, 1566; Sir John
-Radcliffe, knight, 1568; and Dame Anne his wife, 1585; Chapone, a
-Florentine gentleman, 1582; Sir Hamond Vaughan, knight; George Stoddard,
-merchant; etc.
-
-Then have ye out of Tower street, also on the north side, one other
-lane, called Marte lane, which runneth up towards the north, and is
-for the most part of this Tower street ward; which lane is about the
-third quarter thereof divided from Aldgate ward, by a chain to be drawn
-athwart the said lane, above the west end of Hart street. Cokedon hall,
-sometime at the south-west end of Marte lane, I read of.[135]
-
-A third lane out of Tower street, on the north side, is called Mincheon
-lane, so called of tenements there sometime pertaining to the Minchuns
-or nuns of St. Helen's in Bishopsgate street. This lane is all of the
-said ward, except the corner house towards Fenchurch street. In this
-lane of old time dwelt divers strangers born of Genoa and those parts;
-these were commonly called galley men, as men that came up in the
-galleys brought up wines and other merchandises, which they landed in
-Thames street, at a place called Galley key; they had a certain coin
-of silver amongst themselves, which were halfpence of Genoa, and were
-called Galley halfpence; these halfpence were forbidden in the 13th of
-Henry IV., and again by parliament in the 4th of Henry V. It was, that
-if any person bring into this realm halfpence, suskinges, or dodkins, he
-should be punished as a thief; and he that taketh or payeth such money
-shall leese a hundred shillings, whereof the king shall have the one
-half, and he that will sue the other half. Notwithstanding, in my youth,
-I have seen them pass current, but with some difficulty, for that the
-English halfpence were then, though not so broad, somewhat thicker and
-stronger.
-
-The Clothworkers' hall is in this lane. Then at the west end of Tower
-street have ye a little turning towards the north to a fair house
-sometime belonging to one named Griste, for he dwelt there in the year
-1449. And Jack Cade, captain of the rebels in Kent, being by him in this
-his house feasted, when he had dined, like an unkind guest, robbed him
-of all that was there to be found worth the carriage. Next to this is
-one other fair house, sometime built by Angell Dune, grocer, alderman of
-London, since possessed by Sir John Champneis, alderman, and mayor of
-London. He built in this house a high tower of brick, the first that I
-ever heard of in any private man's house, to overlook his neighbours in
-this city. But this delight of his eye was punished with blindness some
-years before his death. Since that time. Sir Percevall Hart, a jolly
-courtier, and knight-harbinger to the queen, was lodged there, etc.
-From this house, somewhat west, is the parish church of St. Margaret's
-Pattens; to the which church and house, on the north side, and as far
-over against on the south, stretcheth the farthest west part of this
-ward.
-
-And, therefore, to begin again at the east end of Tower street, on
-the south side, have ye Beare lane, wherein are many fair houses, and
-runneth down to Thames street. The next is Sporiar lane, of old time
-so called, but since and of later time named Water lane, because it
-runneth down to the water gate by the Custom house in Thames street.
-Then is there Hart lane for Harpe lane, which likewise runneth down
-into Thames street. In this Hart lane is the Bakers' hall, sometime the
-dwelling-house of John Chichley, chamberlain of London, who was son
-to William Chichley, alderman of London, brother to William Chichley,
-archdeacon of Canterburie, nephew to Robert Chichley, mayor of London,
-and to Henry Chichley, archbishop of Canterburie. This John Chichley,
-saith John Leland, had twenty-four children. Sir Thomas Kirrioll, of
-Kent, after he had been long prisoner in France, married Elizabeth, one
-of the daughters of this Chichley, by whom he had this Chichley's house.
-This Elizabeth was secondly married to Sir Ralfe Ashton, knight-marshal,
-and thirdly, to Sir John Burchier, uncle to the late Burchier, Earl of
-Essex, but she never had child. Edward Poynings made part with Burchier
-and Elizabeth, to have Ostenhanger in Kent, after their death, and
-entered into it, they living.
-
-In Tower street, between Hart lane and Church lane, was a quadrant
-called Galley row, because galley men dwelt there. Then have ye two
-lanes out of Tower street, both called Church lanes, because one runneth
-down by the east end of St. Dunstan's church, and the other by the west
-end of the same; out of the west lane turneth another lane west towards
-St. Marie Hill, and is called Fowle lane, which is for the most part in
-Tower street ward.
-
-This church of St. Dunstone is called, in the east, for difference from
-one other of the same name in the west; it is a fair and large church
-of an ancient building, and within a large churchyard; it hath a great
-parish of many rich merchants, and other occupiers of divers trades,
-namely salters and ironmongers.
-
-The monuments in that church be these:--In the choir, John Kenington,
-parson, there buried 1374; William Islip, parson, 1382; John Kryoll,
-esq., brother to Thomas Kryoll, 1400; Nicholas Bond, Thomas Barry,
-merchant, 1445; Robert Shelly, esq., 1420; Robert Pepper, grocer, 1445;
-John Norwich, grocer, 1390; Alice Brome, wife to John Coventry, sometime
-mayor of London, 1433; William Isaack, draper, alderman, 1508; Edward
-Skales, merchant, 1521; John Ricroft, esq., sergeant of the larder to
-Henry VII. and Henry VIII., 1532; Edwaters, esq., sergeant-at-arms,
-1558; Sir Bartholomew James, draper, mayor 1479, buried under a fair
-monument with his lady; Ralfe Greenway, grocer, alderman, put under the
-stone of Robert Pepper, 1559; Thomas Bledlow, one of the sheriffs 1472;
-James Bacon, fishmonger, sheriff, 1573; Sir Richard Champion, draper,
-mayor 1568; Henry Herdson, skinner, alderman, 1555; Sir James Garnado,
-knight; William Hariot, draper, mayor 1481, buried in a fair chapel by
-him built, 1517; John Tate, son to Sir John Tate, in the same chapel in
-the north wall; Sir Christopher Draper, ironmonger, mayor 1566, buried
-1580. And many other worshipful personages besides, whose monuments are
-altogether defaced.
-
-Now for the two Church lanes, they meeting on the south side of this
-church and church yard, do join in one, and running down to the Thames
-street, the same is called St. Dunstan's hill, at the lower end whereof
-the said Thames street towards the west on both sides almost to Belin's
-gate, but towards the east up to the water gate, by the bulwark of the
-Tower, is all of Tower street ward. In this street, on the Thames side,
-are divers large landing-places called wharfs or keys, for craneage up
-of wares and merchandise, as also for shipping of wares from thence to
-be transported. These wharfs and keys commonly bear the names of their
-owners, and are therefore changeable. I read, in the 26th of Henry VI.,
-that in the parish of St. Dunstone in the east, a tenement, called
-Passeke's wharf, and another called Horner's key, in Thames street,
-were granted to William Harindon, esq. I read also, that in the 6th of
-Richard II., John Churchman, grocer, for the quiet of merchants, did
-newly build a certain house upon the key, called Wool wharf, in the
-Tower street ward, in the parish of Allhallows Barking, betwixt the
-tenement of Paule Salisberrie on the east part, and the lane called the
-water gate on the west, to serve for tronage, or weighing of wools in
-the port of London; whereupon the king granted that during the life of
-the said John, the aforesaid tronage should be held and kept in the said
-house, with easements there for the balances and weights, and a counting
-place for the customer, controllers, clerks, and other officers of the
-said tronage, together with ingress and egress to and from the same,
-even as was had in other places, where the said tronage was wont to be
-kept, and that the king should pay yearly to the said John during his
-life forty shillings at the terms of St. Michael and Easter, by even
-portions, by the hands of his customer, without any other payment to the
-said John, as in the indenture thereof more at large appeareth.
-
-Near unto this Customer's key towards the east, is the said water gate,
-and west from it Porter's key, then Galley key, where the gallies were
-used to unlade and land their merchandises and wares; and that part of
-Thames street was therefore of some called Galley row, but more commonly
-Petty Wales.
-
-On the north side, as well as on the south of this Thames street, are
-many fair houses large for stowage, built for merchants; but towards
-the east end thereof, namely, over against Galley key, Wool key, and the
-Custom house, there have been of old time some large buildings of stone,
-the ruins whereof do yet remain, but the first builders and owners of
-them are worn out of memory, wherefore the common people affirm Julius
-Cæsar to be the builder thereof, as also of the Tower itself. But
-thereof I have spoken already. Some are of another opinion, and that a
-more likely, that this great stone building was sometime the lodging
-appointed for the princes of Wales, when they repaired to this city, and
-that, therefore, the street in that part is called Petty Wales, which
-name remaineth there most commonly until this day, even as where the
-kings of Scotland were used to be lodged betwixt Charing cross and White
-hall, it is likewise called Scotland, and where the earls of Britons
-were lodged without Aldersgate, the street is called Britain street, etc.
-
-The said building might of old time pertain to the princes of Wales, as
-is aforesaid, but is since turned to other use.
-
-It is before noted of Galley key, that the galleys of Italie, and
-other parts, did there discharge their wines and merchandises brought
-to this city. It is like, therefore, that the merchants and owners
-procured the place to build upon for their lodgings and storehouses, as
-the merchants of the Haunce of Almaine were licensed to have a house,
-called _Gilda Teutonicorum_, the Guild hall of the Germans. Also the
-merchants of Burdeaux were licensed to build at the Vintry, strongly
-with stone, as may be yet seen, and seemeth old, though often repaired;
-much more cause have these buildings in Petty Wales, though as lately
-built, and partly of the like stone brought from Caen in Normandie, to
-seem old, which for many years, to wit, since the galleys left their
-course of landing there,[136] hath fallen to ruin, and been let out for
-stabling of horses, to tipplers of beer, and such like; amongst others,
-one Mother Mampudding (as they termed her) for many years kept this
-house, or a great part thereof, for victualling; and it seemeth that
-the builders of the hall of this house were shipwrights, and not house
-carpenters; for the frame thereof (being but low) is raised of certain
-principal posts of main timber, fixed deep in the ground, without any
-groundsell, boarded close round about on the inside, having none other
-wall from the ground to the roof, those boards not exceeding the length
-of a clap board, about an inch thick, every board ledging over other as
-in a ship or galley, nailed with ship nails called rough and clench,
-to wit, rough nails with broad round heads, and clenched on the other
-side with square plates of iron. The roof of this hall is also wrought
-of the like board, and nailed with rough and clench, and seemeth as it
-were a galley, the keel turned upwards; and I observed that no worm or
-rottenness is seen to have entered either board or timber of that hall,
-and therefore, in mine opinion, of no great antiquity.[137]
-
-I read, in 44th of Edward III., that a hospital in the parish of Barking
-church was founded by Robert Denton, chaplain, for the sustentation
-of poor priests, and other both men and women, that were sick of the
-frenzy, there to remain till they were perfectly whole, and restored
-to good memory. Also I read, that in the 6th of Henry V. there was in
-the Tower ward a messuage, or great house, called Cobham's inn; and in
-the 37th of Henry VI, a messuage in Thames street pertaining to Richard
-Longvile, etc. Some of the ruins before spoken of may seem to be of the
-foresaid hospital, belonging peradventure to some prior alien, and so
-suppressed among the rest in the reign of Edward III. or Henry V., who
-suppressed them all. Thus much for the bounds and antiquities of this
-ward, wherein is noted the Tower of London, three parish churches, the
-custom house, and two halls of companies, to wit, the clothworkers and
-the bakers. This ward hath an alderman, his deputy, common councillors
-eight, constables thirteen, scavengers twelve, wardmote men thirteen,
-and a beadle; it is taxed to the fifteenth at six and twenty pounds.[138]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[131] Liber l. folio 40.
-
-[132] Proclamation. W. Dunthorn.
-
-[133] "And to Berewardes lane."--_1st edition_, p. 95.
-
-[134] "When he deceased, 1501."--_Ibid._
-
-[135] "Woodroffe lane towardes the Tower in this parish."--_1st edition_
-p. 97.
-
-[136] "No gallies landed here in memorie of men living."--_Stow._
-
-[137] "But I leave every man to his own judgment, and pass to other
-matters."--_1st edition_, p. 101.
-
-[138] "It is taxed to the fifteene at forty-six pounds, and accounted in
-the Exchequer at forty-five pounds ten shillings."--_1st edition_, p.
-102.
-
-
-
-
-ALDGATE WARD
-
-
-The second ward within the wall, on the east part, is called Aldgate
-ward, as taking name of the same gate. The principal street of this ward
-beginneth at Aldgate, stretching west to sometime a fair well, where
-now a pump is placed; from thence the way being divided into twain, the
-first and principal street is called Aldgate street, runneth on the
-south side to Lime street corner, and half that street down on the left
-hand is also of that ward. In the mid way on that south side, betwixt
-Aldgate and Lime street, is Hart horn alley, a way that goeth through
-into Fenchurch street over against Northumberland house. Then have ye
-the Bricklayers' hall, and another alley called Sprinckle alley, now
-named Sugarloafe alley, of the like sign. Then is there a fair house,
-with divers tenements near adjoining, sometimes belonging to a late
-dissolved priory, since possessed by Mistress Cornewallies, widow, and
-her heirs, by gift of Henry VIII., in reward of fine puddings (as it
-was commonly said) by her made, wherewith she had presented him. Such
-was the princely liberality of those times. Of later time Sir Nicholas
-Throgmorton, knight, was lodged there. Then, somewhat more west is
-Belzettar's lane, so called of the first builder and owner thereof, now
-corruptly called Billitar lane. Betwixt this Belzettar lane and Lime
-street was of later time a frame of three fair houses, set up in the
-year 1590, in place where before was a large garden plot, enclosed from
-the high street with a brick wall, which wall being taken down, and the
-ground dug deep for cellarage, there was found right under the said
-brick wall another wall of stone, with a gate arched of stone, and gates
-of timber to be closed in the midst towards the street; the timber of
-the gates was consumed, but the hinges of iron still remained on their
-staples on both the sides. Moreover, in that wall were square windows,
-with bars of iron on either side of the gate. This wall was under ground
-about two fathoms deep, as I then esteemed it, and seemeth to be the
-ruins of some houses burned in the reign of King Stephen, when the fire
-began in the house of one Alewarde, near London stone, and consumed east
-to Aldgate, whereby it appeareth how greatly the ground of this city
-hath been in that place raised.
-
-On the north side this principal street stretcheth to the west corner of
-St. Andrewe's church, and then the ward turneth towards the north by St.
-Marie street, on the east side to St. Augustine's church in the wall,
-and so by Buries markes again, or about by the wall to Aldgate.
-
-The second way from Aldgate, more towards the south, from the pump
-aforesaid, is called Fenchurch street, and is of Aldgate ward till
-ye come to Culver alley, on the west side of Ironmongers hall, where
-sometime was a lane which went out of Fenchurch street to the middest of
-Lime street, but this lane was stopped up for suspicion of thieves that
-lurked there by night. Again to Aldgate out of the principal street,
-even by the gate and wall of the city, runneth a lane south to Crowched
-Friers, and then Woodroffe lane to the Tower hill, and out of this lane
-west a street called Hart street, which of that ward stretched to Sydon
-lane by St. Olave's church. One other lane more west from Aldgate goeth
-by Northumberland house toward the Crossed Friers; then have ye on the
-same side the north end of Mart lane and Blanch Apleton, where that ward
-endeth.
-
-Thus much for the bounds; now for monuments, or places most ancient and
-notable.
-
-I am first to begin with the late dissolved priory of the Holy Trinity,
-called Christ's church, on the right hand within Aldgate. This priory
-was founded by Matilda, queen, wife to Henry I., in the same place where
-Siredus sometime began to erect a church in honour of the Cross and of
-St. Marie Magdalen, of which the Dean and Chapter of Waltham were wont
-to receive thirty shillings. The queen was to acquit her church thereof,
-and in exchange gave unto them a mill. King Henry confirmed her gift.
-This church was given to Norman, first canon regular in all England.
-The said queen also gave unto the same church, and those that served
-God therein, the plot of Aldgate, and the soke thereunto belonging,
-with all customs so free as she had held the same, and twenty-five
-pound blankes, which she had of the city of Excester, as appeareth by
-her deed, wherein she nameth the house Christ's church, and reporteth
-Aldgate to be of her domains, which she granteth with two parts of
-the rent of the city of Excester. Norman took upon him to be prior of
-Christ's church, in the year of Christ 1108, in the parishes of St. Mary
-Magdalen, St. Michael, St. Katherine, and the Blessed Trinity, which
-now was made but one parish of the Holy Trinity, and was in old time of
-the Holy Cross or Holy Rood parish. The priory was built on a piece of
-ground in the parish of St. Katherine towards Aldgate, which lieth in
-length betwixt the King's street, by the which men go towards Aldgate,
-near to the chapel of St. Michael towards the north, and containeth in
-length eighty-three ells, half, quarter, and half-quarter of the king's
-iron eln, and lieth in breadth, etc. The soke and ward of Aldgate was
-then bounded as I have before showed. The queen was a means also that
-the land and English Knighten Guild was given unto the prior Norman:
-the honourable man, Geffrey de Glinton, was a great helper therein, and
-obtained that the canons might enclose the way betwixt their church
-and the wall of the city, etc. This priory, in process of time, became
-a very fair and large church, rich in lands and ornaments, and passed
-all the priories in the city of London or shire of Middlesex; the prior
-whereof was an alderman of London, to wit, of Portsoken ward.
-
-I read, that Eustacius, the eighth prior, about the year 1264, because
-he would not deal with temporal matters, instituted Theobald Fitz
-Ivonis, alderman of Portsoken ward under him, and that William Rising,
-prior of Christ's church, was sworn alderman of the said Portsoken ward
-in the 1st of Richard II. These priors have sitten and ridden amongst
-the aldermen of London, in livery like unto them, saving that his
-habit was in shape of a spiritual person, as I myself have seen in my
-childhood; at which time the prior kept a most bountiful house of meat
-and drink, both for rich and poor, as well within the house as at the
-gates, to all comers, according to their estates.
-
-These were the monuments in this church:--Sir Robert Turke, and Dame
-Alice his wife; John Tirell, esquire; Simon Kempe, esquire; James
-Manthorpe, esquire; John Ascue, esquire; Thomas Fauset, of Scalset,
-esquire; John Kempe, gentleman; Robert Chirwide, esquire; Sir John
-Heningham, and Dame Isabel his wife; Dame Agnes, wife first to Sir
-William Bardolph, and then to Sir Thomas Mortimer; John Ashfield,
-esquire; Sir John Dedham, knight; Sir Ambrose Charcam; Joan, wife to
-Thomas Nuck, gentleman; John Husse, esquire; John Beringham, esquire;
-Thomas Goodwine, esquire; Ralph Walles, esquire; Dame Margaret, daughter
-to Sir Ralph Chevie, wife to Sir John Barkeley, to Sir Thomas Barnes,
-and to Sir W. Bursire; William Roofe; Simon Francis; John Breton,
-esquire; Helling, esquire; John Malwen and his wife; Anthonie Wels, son
-to John Wels; Nicholas de Avesey, and Margarie his wife; Anthonie, son
-to John Milles; Baldwine, son to King Stephen, and Mathilde, daughter
-to King Stephen, wife to the Earl of Meulan; Henry Fitzalwine, mayor of
-London, 1213; Geffrey Mandevile, 1215; and many other. But to conclude
-of this priory: King Henry VIII., minding to reward Sir Thomas Audley,
-speaker of the parliament against Cardinal Wolsey, as ye may read in
-Hall, sent for the prior, commending him for his hospitality, promised
-him preferment, as a man worthy of a far greater dignity, which promise
-surely he performed, and compounded with him, though in what sort I
-never heard, so that the prior surrendered all that priory, with the
-appurtenances, to the king, in the month of July, in the year 1531, the
-23rd of the said king's reign. The canons were sent to other houses of
-the same order, and the priory, with the appurtenances, King Henry gave
-to Sir Thomas Audley, newly knighted, and after made lord chancellor.
-
-Sir Thomas Audley offered the great church of this priory, with a ring
-of nine bells well tuned (whereof four the greatest were since sold
-to the parish of Stebunhith, and the five lesser to the parish of St.
-Stephen in Coleman street) to the parishioners of St. Katherine Christ
-church, in exchange for their small parish church, minding to have
-pulled it down, and to have built there towards the street; but the
-parishioners having doubts in their heads of after-claps, refused the
-offer. Then was the priory church and steeple proffered to whomsoever
-would take it down, and carry it from the ground, but no man would
-undertake the offer; whereupon Sir Thomas Audley was fain to be at more
-charges than could be made of the stones, timber, lead, iron, etc. For
-the workmen, with great labour, beginning at the top, loosed stone from
-stone, and threw them down, whereby the most part of them were broken,
-and few remained whole; and those were sold very cheap, for all the
-buildings then made about the city were of brick and timber. At that
-time any man in the city might have a cart-load of hard stone for paving
-brought to his door for six pence or seven pence, with the carriage. The
-said Thomas Lord Audley built and dwelt on this priory during his life,
-and died there in the year 1544; since the which time the said priory
-came by marriage of the Lord Audley's daughter and heir unto Thomas,
-late Duke of Norfolk, and was then called the Duke's place.
-
-The parish church of St. Katherine standeth in the cemetery of the
-late dissolved priory of the Holy Trinity, and is therefore called St.
-Katherine Christ church. This church seemeth to be very old; since the
-building whereof the high street hath been so often raised by pavements,
-that now men are fain to descend into the said church by divers steps,
-seven in number. But the steeple, or bell-tower thereof, hath been
-lately built, to wit, about the year 1504; for Sir John Percivall,
-merchant-tailor, then deceasing, gave money towards the building
-thereof. There be the monuments of Sir Thomas Fleming, knight of Rowles,
-in Essex, and Margaret his wife, 1464; Roger Marshall, esquire; Jane
-Horne, wife to Roger Marshall; William Multon, alias Burdeaux, herald;
-John Goad, esquire, and Joan his wife; Beatrix, daughter to William
-Browne; Thomas Multon, esquire, son to Burdeaux, herald; John Chitcroft,
-esquire; John Wakefielde, esquire; William Criswicke; Anne and Sewch,
-daughters to Ralph Shirley, esquire; Sir John Rainsford, knight of
-Essex; Sir Nicholas Throkmorton, chief butler of England, one of the
-chamberlains of the exchequer, ambassador, etc., 1570, and other.
-
-At the north-west corner of this ward, in the said high street,
-standeth the fair and beautiful parish church of St. Andrew the Apostle;
-with an addition, to be known from other churches of that name, of the
-knape or undershaft; and so called St. Andrew Undershaft, because that
-of old time, every year on May-day in the morning, it was used, that
-an high or long shaft or May-pole, was set up there, in the midst of
-the street, before the south side of the said church; which shaft when
-it was set on end and fixed in the ground, was higher than the church
-steeple. Geffrey Chaucer, writing of a vain boaster, hath these words,
-meaning of the said shaft:
-
- "Right well aloft, and high ye beare your heade,
- The weather cocke, with flying, as ye would kill,
- When ye be stuffed, bet of wine, then brede,
- Then looke ye, when your wombe doth fill,
- As ye would beare the great shaft of Cornehill,
- Lord, so merrily crowdeth then your croke,
- That all the streete may heare your body cloke."
-
-This shaft was not raised at any time since evil May-day (so called of
-an insurrection made by apprentices and other young persons against
-aliens in the year 1517); but the said shaft was laid along over the
-doors, and under the pentises of one row of houses and alley gate,
-called of the shaft Shaft alley (being of the possessions of Rochester
-bridge), in the ward of Lime street. It was there, I say, hung on iron
-hooks many years, till the third of King Edward VI., that one Sir
-Stephen, curate of St. Katherine Christ's church, preaching at Paules
-cross, said there that this shaft was made an idol, by naming the church
-of St. Andrew with the addition of "under that shaft:" he persuaded
-therefore that the names of churches might be altered; also that the
-names of days in the week might be changed; the fish days to be kept
-any days except Friday and Saturday, and the Lent any time, save only
-betwixt Shrovetide and Easter. I have oft times seen this man, forsaking
-the pulpit of his said parish church, preach out of a high elm-tree[139]
-in the midst of the churchyard, and then entering the church, forsaking
-the altar, to have sung his high mass in English upon a tomb of the dead
-towards the north. I heard his sermon at Paules cross, and I saw the
-effect that followed; for in the afternoon of that present Sunday, the
-neighbours and tenants to the said bridge, over whose doors the said
-shaft had lain, after they had well dined, to make themselves strong,
-gathered more help, and with great labour raising the shaft from the
-hooks, whereon it had rested two-and-thirty years, they sawed it in
-pieces, every man taking for his share so much as had lain over his door
-and stall, the length of his house; and they of the alley divided among
-them so much as had lain over their alley gate. Thus was this idol (as
-he[140] termed it) mangled, and after burned.
-
-Soon after was there a commotion of the commons in Norfolk, Suffolk,
-Essex, and other shires; by means whereof, straight orders being taken
-for the suppression of rumours, divers persons were apprehended and
-executed by martial law; amongst the which the bailiff of Romfort, in
-Essex, was one, a man very well beloved: he was early in the morning
-of Mary Magdalen's day, then kept holiday, brought by the sheriffs of
-London and the knight-marshal to the well within Aldgate, there to be
-executed upon a gibbet set up that morning, where, being on the ladder,
-he had words to this effect: "Good people, I am come hither to die, but
-know not for what offence, except for words by me spoken yesternight to
-Sir Stephen, curate and preacher of this parish, which were these: He
-asked me, 'What news in the country?' I answered, 'Heavy news.' 'Why?'
-quoth he. 'It is said,' quoth I, 'that many men be up in Essex, but,
-thanks be to God, all is in good quiet about us:' and this was all, as
-God be my judge," etc. Upon these words of the prisoner, Sir Stephen,
-to avoid reproach of the people, left the city, and was never heard of
-since amongst them to my knowledge. I heard the words of the prisoner,
-for he was executed upon the pavement of my door where I then kept
-house. Thus much by digression: now again to the parish church of St.
-Andrew Undershaft, for it still retaineth the name, which hath been new
-built by the parishioners there since the year 1520; every man putting
-to his helping hand, some with their purses, other with their bodies.
-Steven Gennings, merchant-tailor, sometime mayor of London, caused at
-his charges to be built[141] the whole north side of the great middle
-aisle, both of the body and choir, as appeareth by his arms over every
-pillar graven, and also the north isle, which he roofed with timber and
-sealed; also the whole south side of the church was glazed, and the pews
-in the south chapel made of his costs, as appeareth in every window,
-and upon the said pews. He deceased in the year 1524, and was buried in
-the Grey friars church. John Kerkbie, merchant-tailor, sometime one of
-the sheriffs, John Garlande, merchant-tailor, and Nicholas Levison,
-mercer, executor to Garlande, were great benefactors to this work; which
-was finished to the glazing in the year 1529, and fully finished 1532.
-Buried in this church:[142] Philip Malpas, one of the sheriffs, 1439;
-Sir Robert Dennie, knight, and after him Thomas Dennie, his son, in the
-year 1421; Thomas Stokes, gentleman, grocer, 1496. In the new church:
-John Nichell, merchant-tailor, 1537; William Draper, esquire, 1537;
-Isabell and Margaret, his wives; Nicholas Levison, mercer, one of the
-sheriffs, 1534; John Gerrarde, woolman, merchant of the staple, 1456;
-Henry Man, doctor of divinity, bishop of Man, 1550; Stephen Kyrton,
-merchant-tailor, alderman, 1553; David Woodroffe, haberdasher, one of
-the sheriffs, 1554; Stephen Woodroffe, his son, gave one hundred pounds
-in money, for the which the poor of that parish receive two shillings in
-bread weekly for ever; Sir Thomas Offley, merchant-tailor, mayor, 1556;
-he bequeathed the one half of all his goods to charitable actions, but
-the parish received little benefit thereby; Thomas Starkey, skinner, one
-of the sheriffs, 1578; Hugh Offley, leatherseller, one of the sheriffs,
-1588; William Hanbury, baker.
-
-Now down St. Mary street, by the west end of the church towards the
-north, stand divers fair houses for merchants and other; namely, one
-fair great house, built by Sir William Pickering the father, possessed
-by Sir William his son, and since by Sir Edward Wootton of Kent. North
-from this place is the Fletchers' hall, and so down to the corner of
-that street, over against London wall, and against eastwards to a fair
-house lately new built, partly by Master Robert Beale, one of the clerks
-of the council.
-
-Then come you to the Papey, a proper house, wherein sometime was kept a
-fraternity or brotherhood of St. Charity and St. John Evangelist, called
-the Papey, for poor impotent priests (for in some language priests are
-called papes), founded in the year 1430 by William Oliver, William
-Barnabie, and John Stafford, chaplains or chantry priests in London,
-for a master, two wardens, etc., chaplains, chantry priests, conducts,
-and other brethren and sisters, that should be admitted into the church
-of St. Augustine Papey in the wall. The brethren of this house becoming
-lame, or otherwise into great poverty, were here relieved, as to have
-chambers, with certain allowance of bread, drink, and coal, and one
-old man and his wife to see them served and to keep the house clean.
-This brotherhood, among others, was suppressed in the reign of Edward
-VI.; since the which time in this house hath been lodged Master Moris
-of Essex; Sir Francis Walsingham, principal secretary to her majesty;
-Master Barret of Essex, etc.
-
-Then next is one great house, large of rooms, fair courts, and
-garden-plots; sometimes pertaining to the Bassets, since that to the
-abbots of Bury in Suffolk, and therefore called Buries markes, corruptly
-Bevis markes, and since the dissolution of the abbey of Bury, to Thomas
-Henage the father, and to Sir Thomas his son. Then next unto it is the
-before-spoken priory of the Holy Trinity; to wit, the west and north
-part thereof, which stretcheth up to Aldgate, where we first began.
-
-Now in the second way from Aldgate, more toward the south from the
-well or pump aforesaid, lieth Fenne church street; on the right hand
-whereof, somewhat west from the south end of Belzetter's lane is the
-Ironmongers' hall; which company was incorporated in the 3rd of Edward
-IV. Richard Fleming was their first master; Nicholas Marshall and
-Richard Cox were custos, or wardens. And on the left hand, or south
-side, even by the gate and wall of the city, runneth down a lane to the
-Tower hill; the south part whereof is called Woodroffe lane, and out of
-this lane toward the west a street called Hart street. In this street,
-at the south-east corner thereof, sometime stood one house of Crouched
-(or crossed) friars, founded by Ralph Hosiar and William Sabernes about
-the year 1298. Stephen, the tenth prior of the Holy Trinity, in London
-granted there tenements for 13_s._ 8_d._ by the year unto the said
-Ralph Hosiar and William Sabernes, who afterwards became friars of St.
-Crosse; Adam was the first prior of that house. These friars founded
-their house in place of certain tenements purchased of Richard Wimbush,
-the twelfth prior of the Holy Trinity, in the year 1319, which was
-confirmed by Edward III. the 17th of his reign, valued at £52 13_s._
-4_d._, surrendered the twelfth of November, the 30th of Henry VIII. In
-this house was buried Master John Tirres; Nicholas, the son of William
-Kyriell, esquire; Sir Thomas Mellington, baron of Wemesse, and Dame
-Elizabeth his wife, daughter and heir of William Botelar, baron of Wome;
-Robert Mellington, esquire, and Elizabeth his wife, daughter to Ferreis
-of Ousley; Henry Lovell, son to William Lord Lovell; Dame Isabel, wife
-to William Edwarde, mayor of London, 1471; William Narborough, and Dame
-Elizabeth his wife; William Narborough, and Dame Beatrix his wife;
-William Brosked, esquire; William Bowes; Lionel Mollington, esquire,
-son of Robert Mollington; Nicholas Couderow, and Elizabeth his wife;
-Sir John Stratford, knight; Sir Thomas Asseldy, knight, clerk of the
-crown, sub-marshal of England, and justice of the shire of Middlesex;
-John Rest, grocer, mayor of London, 1516; Sir John Skevington, knight,
-merchant-tailor, sheriff, 1520; Sir John Milborne, draper, mayor in
-the year 1520, was buried there, but removed since to St. Edmondes in
-Lombard street; Sir Rice Grifith, beheaded on the Tower hill, 1531.
-
-In place of this church is now a carpenters' yard, a tennis court, and
-such like; the friars' hall was made a glass-house, or house wherein
-was made glass of divers sorts to drink in; which house in the year
-1575, on the 4th of September, burst out into a terrible fire, where
-being practised all means possible to quench, notwithstanding as the
-same house in a small time before had consumed a great quantity of wood
-by making of glasses, now itself having within it about forty thousand
-billets of wood, was all consumed to the stone walls, which nevertheless
-greatly hindered the fire from spreading any further.
-
-Adjoining unto this friars' church, by the east end thereof in Woodroffe
-lane towards the Tower hill, are certain proper alms houses, fourteen in
-number, built of brick and timber, founded by Sir John Milborne, draper,
-sometime mayor, 1521, wherein he placed thirteen aged poor men and their
-wives, if they have wives: these have their dwellings rent free, and
-2_s._ 4_d._ the piece, the first day of every month, for ever. One also
-is to have his house over the gate, and 4_s._ every month: more, he
-appointed every Sunday for ever, thirteen penny loaves of white bread,
-to be given in the parish church of St. Edmonde in Lombard street, to
-thirteen poor people of that parish; and the like thirteen loaves to be
-given in the parish church of St. Michael upon Cornhill, and in either
-parish every year one load of chare coal, of thirty sacks in the load;
-and this gift to be continued for ever: for performance whereof, by the
-master and wardens of the drapers in London, he assured unto them and
-their successors twenty-three messuages and tenements, and eighteen
-garden-plots, in the parish of St. Olave in Hart street; with proviso,
-that if they perform not those points[143] above-mentioned, the said
-tenements and gardens to remain to the mayor and commonalty of the city
-of London.
-
-Next to these alms houses is the Lord Lumley's house, built in the time
-of King Henry VIII. by Sir Thomas Wiat the father, upon one plot of
-ground of late pertaining to the foresaid Crossed friars, where part of
-their house stood: and this is the farthest part of Aldgate ward towards
-the south, and joineth to the Tower hill. The other side of that line,
-over against the Lord Lumley's house, on the wall side of the city, is
-now for the most part (or altogether) built even to Aldgate.
-
-Then have you on the south side of Fenchurch street, over against the
-well or pump, amongst other fair and large built houses, one that
-sometime belonged to the prior of Monte Joves, or Monastery Cornute,
-a cell to Monte Joves beyond the seas, in Essex: it was the prior's
-inn, when he repaired to this city. Then a lane that leadeth down by
-Northumberland house towards the Crossed friars, as is afore showed.
-
-This Northumberland house, in the parish of St. Katherine Colman,
-belonged to Henry Percie, Earl of Northumberland, in the 33rd of Henry
-VI., but of late being left by the earls, the gardens thereof were made
-into bowling alleys, and other parts into dicing houses, common to all
-comers for their money, there to bowle and hazard; but now of late so
-many bowling alleys, and other houses for unlawful gaming, hath been
-raised in other parts of the city and suburbs, that this their ancient
-and only patron of misrule, is left and forsaken of her gamesters, and
-therefore turned into a number of great rents, small cottages, for
-strangers and others.
-
-At the east end of this lane, in the way from Aldgate toward the Crossed
-friars, of old time were certain tenements called the poor Jurie, of
-Jews dwelling there.
-
-Next unto this Northumberland house is the parish church of St.
-Katherine, called Coleman; which addition of Coleman was taken of a
-great haw-yard, or garden, of old time called Coleman haw, in the parish
-of the Trinity, now called Christ's church, and in the parish of St.
-Katherine and All Saints called Coleman church.
-
-Then have you Blanch Apleton; whereof I read, in the 13th of Edward I.,
-that a lane behind the said Blanch Apleton was granted by the king to
-be inclosed and shut up. This Blanch Apleton was a manor belonging to
-Sir Thomas Roos of Hamelake, knight, the 7th of Richard II., standing at
-the north-east corner of Mart lane, so called of a privilege sometime
-enjoined to keep a mart there, long since discontinued, and therefore
-forgotten, so as nothing remaineth for memory but the name of Mart
-lane, and that corruptly termed Marke lane. I read that, in the third
-of Edward IV., all basket-makers, wire-drawers, and other foreigners,
-were permitted to have shops in this manor of Blanch Apleton, and not
-elsewhere, within this city or suburbs thereof; and this also being
-the farthest west part of this ward on that south side, I leave it,
-with three parish churches, St Katherine Christ church, St. Andrew
-Undershaft, and St. Katherine Colemans; and three halls of companies,
-the Bricklayers' hall, the Fletchers' hall, and the Ironmongers' hall.
-It hath an alderman, his deputy, common councillors six, constables six,
-scavengers nine, wardmote men for inquest eighteen, and a beadle. It is
-taxed to the fifteen in London at five pounds.[144]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[139] "The said elm-tree, his preaching place, is lately taken
-down."--_Stow._
-
-[140] "As he, poore man, tearmed it."--_1st edition_, p. 108.
-
-[141] "The one halfe, to wit."--_1st edition_, p. 109.
-
-[142] "The monuments of the dead, buried in this church, are
-these."--_1st edition_, p. 109.
-
-[143] "These poyntes not performed. The Drapers have unlawfully solde
-these tenements and garden plots, and the poore be wronged."--_Stow._
-
-
-
-
-LIME STREET WARD
-
-
-The next is Lime street ward, and taketh the name of Lime street of
-making or selling of lime there (as is supposed); the east side of this
-Lime street, from the north corner thereof to the midst, is of Aldgate
-ward, as is aforesaid; the west side, for the most part from the said
-north corner, southward, is of this Lime street ward; the south end on
-both sides is of Langborne ward; the body of this Lime street ward is
-of the high street called Cornehill street, which stretcheth from Lime
-street on the south side to the west corner of Leaden hall, and on the
-north side from the south-west corner of St. Mary street to another
-corner over against Leaden hall. Now for St. Mary street; the west side
-thereof is of this Lime street ward, and also the street which runneth
-by the north end of this St. Mary street, on both sides, from thence
-west to an house called the Wrestlers, a sign so called, almost to
-Bishopsgate. And these are the bounds of this small ward.
-
-Monuments, or places notable, in this ward be these:--In Lime street
-are divers fair houses for merchants and others; there was sometime a
-mansion-house of the kings, called the King's Artirce, whereof I find
-record in the 14th of Edward I., but now grown out of knowledge. I read
-also of another great house in the west side of Lime street, having a
-chapel on the south and a garden on the west, then belonging to the
-Lord Nevill, which garden is now called the Green yard of the Leaden
-hall. This house, in the 9th of Richard II., pertained to Sir Simon
-Burley, and Sir John Burley his brother; and of late the said house
-was taken down, and the forefront thereof new built of timber by Hugh
-Offley, alderman. At the north-west corner of Lime street was of old
-time one great messuage called Benbrige's inn; Ralph Holland, draper,
-about the year 1452 gave it to John Gill, master, and to the wardens and
-fraternity of tailors and linen-armourers of St. John Baptist in London,
-and to their successors for ever. They did set up in place thereof a
-fair large frame of timber, containing in the high street one great
-house, and before it to the corner of Lime street three other tenements,
-the corner house being the largest, and then down Lime street divers
-proper tenements; all which the merchant-tailors, in the reign of Edward
-VI., sold to Stephen Kirton, merchant-tailor and alderman: he gave, with
-his daughter Grisild, to Nicholas Woodroffe the said great house, with
-two tenements before it, in lieu of a hundred pounds, and made it up in
-money £366 13_s._ 4_d._ This worshipful man, and the gentlewoman his
-widow after him, kept those houses down Lime street in good reparations,
-never put out but one tenant, took no fines, nor raised rents of them,
-which was ten shillings the piece yearly: but whether that favour did
-overlive her funeral, the tenants now can best declare the contrary.
-
-Next unto this, on the high street, was the Lord Sowche's messuage or
-tenement, and other; in place whereof, Richard Wethell, merchant-tailor,
-built a fair house, with a high tower, the second in number, and first
-of timber, that ever I learnt to have been built to overlook neighbours
-in this city.
-
-This Richard, then a young man, became in a short time so tormented with
-gouts in his joints, of the hands and legs, that he could neither feed
-himself nor go further than he was led; much less was he able to climb
-and take the pleasure of the height of his tower. Then is there another
-fair house, built by Stephen Kirton, alderman; Alderman Lee doth now
-possess it, and again new buildeth it.
-
-Then is there a fair house of old time called the Green gate; by which
-name one Michael Pistoy Lumbard held it, with a tenement and nine shops
-in the reign of Richard II., who in the 15th of his reign gave it to
-Roger Crophull, and Thomas Bromeflet, esquires, by the name of the Green
-gate, in the parish of St. Andrew upon Cornhill, in Lime street ward;
-since the which time Philip Malpas, sometime alderman, and one of the
-sheriffs, dwelt therein, and was there robbed and spoiled of his goods
-to a great value by Jack Cade, and other rebels, in the year 1449.
-
-Afterwards, in the reign of Henry VII., it was seized into the
-king's hands, and then granted, first, unto John Alston, after that
-unto William de la Rivers, and since by Henry VIII. to John Mutas, a
-Picarde or Frenchman, who dwelt there, and harboured in his house many
-Frenchmen, that kalendred wolsteds, and did other things contrary to
-the franchises of the citizens; wherefore on evil May-day, which was in
-the year 1517, the apprentices and other spoiled his house; and if they
-could have found Mutas, they would have stricken off his head. Sir Peter
-Mutas, son to the said John Mutas, sold this house to David Woodroffe,
-alderman, whose son, Sir Nicholas Woodroffe, alderman, sold it over to
-John Moore, alderman, that now possesseth it.
-
-Next is a house called the Leaden porch, lately divided into two
-tenements; whereof one is a tavern, and then one other house for a
-merchant, likewise called the Leaden porch, but now turned to a cook's
-house. Next is a fair house and a large, wherein divers mayoralties have
-been kept, whereof twain in my remembrance; to wit, Sir William Bowyar
-and Sir Henry Huberthorne.
-
-The next is Leaden hall, of which I read, that in the year 1309 it
-belonged to Sir Hugh Nevill, knight, and that the Lady Alice his
-widow made a feoffment thereof, by the name of Leaden hall, with the
-advowsons of the church of St. Peter upon Cornhill, and other churches,
-to Richard, Earl of Arundell and Surrey, 1362. More, in the year 1380,
-Alice Nevill, widow to Sir John Nevill, knight, of Essex, confirmed to
-Thomas Gogshall and others the said manor of Leaden hall, the advowsons,
-etc. In the year 1384, Humfrey de Bohun, Earl of Hereford, had the said
-manor. And in the year 1408, Robert Rikeden, of Essex, and Margaret his
-wife, confirmed to Richard Whittington, and other citizens of London,
-the said manor of Leaden hall, with the appurtenances, the advowsons of
-St. Peter's church, St. Margaret's Pattens, etc. And in the year 1411,
-the said Whittington and other confirmed the same to the mayor and
-commonalty of London, whereby it came to the possession of the city.
-Then in the year 1443, the 21st of Henry VI., John Hatherley, mayor,
-purchased license of the said king to take up two hundred fother of
-lead, for the building of water conduits, a common granary, and the
-cross in West Cheape, more richly, for the honour of the city. In the
-year next following, the parson and parish of St. Dunston, in the east
-of London, seeing the famous and mighty man (for the words be in the
-grant, _cum nobilis et potens vir_), Simon Eyre, citizen of London,
-among other his works of piety, effectually determined to erect and
-build a certain granary upon the soil of the same city at Leaden hall,
-of his own charges, for the common utility of the said city, to the
-amplifying and enlarging of the said granary, granted to Henry Frowicke,
-then mayor, the aldermen and commonalty, and their successors for
-ever, all their tenements, with the appurtenances, sometime called the
-Horsemill, in Grasse street, for the annual rent of four pounds, etc.
-Also, certain evidences of an alley and tenements pertaining to the
-Horsemill adjoining to the said Leaden hall in Grasse street, given
-by William Kingstone, fishmonger, unto the parish church of St. Peter
-upon Cornehill, do specify the said granary to be built by the said
-honourable and famous merchant, Simon Eyre, sometime an upholsterer,
-and then a draper, in the year 1419. He built it of squared stone, in
-form as now it showeth, with a fair and large chapel in the east side of
-the quadrant, over the porch of which he caused to be written, _Dextra
-Domini exaltavit me_ (The Lord's right hand exalted me). Within the said
-church, on the north wall, was written. _Honorandus famosus mercator
-Simon Eyre hujus operis_, etc. In English thus:--"The honourable and
-famous merchant, Simon Eyre, founder of this work, once mayor of this
-city, citizen and draper of the same, departed out of this life, the
-18th day of September, the year from the Incarnation of Christ 1459,
-and the 38th year of the reign of King Henry VI." He was buried in
-the parish church of St. Mary Woolnoth, in Lombard street: he gave by
-his testament, which I have read, to be distributed to all prisons in
-London, or within a mile of that city, somewhat to relieve them. More,
-he gave two thousand marks, upon a condition, which not performed, was
-then to be distributed to maids' marriages, and other deeds of charity;
-he also gave three thousand marks to the drapers, upon condition they
-should, within one year after his decease, establish perpetually a
-master or warden, five secular priests, six clerks, and two choristers,
-to sing daily Divine service by note for ever, in his chapel of the
-Leaden hall; also,[145] one master, with an usher, for grammar, one
-master for writing, and the third for song, with housing there newly
-built for them for ever; the master to have for his salary ten pounds,
-and every other priest eight pounds, every other clerk five pounds six
-shillings and eight pence, and every other chorister five marks; and
-if the drapers refused this to do, within one year after his decease,
-then the three thousand marks to remain to the prior and convent of
-Christ's church in London, with condition to establish, as is aforesaid,
-within two years after his decease; and if they refused, then the three
-thousand marks to be disposed by his executors, as they best could
-devise, in works of charity. Thus much for his testament, not performed
-by establishing of Divine service in his chapel, or free schools for
-scholars; neither how the stock of three thousand marks, or rather five
-thousand marks, was employed by his executors, could I ever learn. He
-left issue, Thomas, who had issue, Thomas, etc. True it is, that in
-one year, 1464, the 3rd of Edward IV., it was agreed by the mayor,
-aldermen, and commonalty of London, that notwithstanding the king's
-letters patent, lately before granted unto them, touching the tronage or
-weighing of wares to be holden at the Leaden hall, yet suit should be
-made to the king for new letters patent to be granted to the mayor of
-the staple for the tronage of wools to be holden there, and order to be
-taken by the discretion of Thomas Cooke, then mayor, the counsel of the
-city, Geffrey Filding, then mayor of the staple at Westminster, and of
-the king's council, what should be paid to the mayor and aldermen of the
-city, for the laying and housing of the wools there, that so they might
-be brought forth and weighed, etc.
-
-Touching the chapel there, I find, that in the year 1466, by license
-obtained of King Edward IV., in the 6th of his reign, a fraternity of
-the Trinity, of sixty priests, besides other brethren and sisters, in
-the same chapel, was founded by William Rouse, John Risbie, and Thomas
-Ashby priests, some of the which sixty priests, every market-day in
-the forenoon, did celebrate Divine service there to such market-people
-as repaired to prayer; and once every year they met all together and
-had solemn service, with procession of the brethren and sisters. This
-foundation was in the year 1512, by a common council, confirmed to the
-sixty Trinity priests, and to their successors, at the will of the mayor
-and commonalty.
-
-In the year 1484, a great fire happened upon this Leaden hall, by what
-casualty I know not, but much housing was there destroyed, with all the
-stocks for guns, and other provision belonging to the city, which was a
-great loss, and no less charge to be repaired by them.
-
-In the year 1503, the 18th of Henry VII., a request was made by the
-commons of the city, concerning the usage of the said Leaden hall, in
-form as followeth:--"Please it, the lord mayor, and common council, to
-enact, that all Frenchmen bringing canvass, linen cloth, and other
-wares to be sold, and all foreigners bringing wolsteds, sayes, staimus,
-coverings, nails, iron work, or any other wares, and also all manner
-of foreigners bringing lead to the city to be sold, shall bring all
-such their wares aforesaid to the open market of the Leaden hall, there
-and no where else to be sold and uttered, like as of old time it hath
-been used, upon pain of forfeiture of all the said wares showed or
-sold in any other place than aforesaid; the show of the said wares to
-be made three days in the week, that is to say, Monday, Tuesday, and
-Wednesday; it is also thought reasonable that the common beam be kept
-from henceforth in the Leaden hall, and the farmer to pay therefore
-reasonable rent to the chamber; for better it is that the chamber have
-advantage thereby than a foreign person; and also the said Leaden hall,
-which is more chargeable now by half than profitable, shall better bear
-out the charges thereof; also the common beam for wool at Leaden hall,
-may yearly pay a rent to the chamber of London, toward supportation
-and charges of the same place; for reason it is, that a common office,
-occupied upon a common ground, bear a charge to the use of the
-commonalty; also, that foreigners bringing wools, felts, or any other
-merchandises or wares to Leaden hall, to be kept there for the sale and
-market, may pay more largely for the keeping of their goods than free
-men." Thus much for the request of the commons at this time.
-
-Now to set down some proof that the said hall hath been employed and
-used as a granary for corn and grain (as the same was first appointed),
-leaving all former examples, this one may suffice: Roger Achley, mayor
-of London in the year 1512, the 3rd of Henry VIII., when the said mayor
-entered the mayoralty, there was not found one hundred quarters of wheat
-in all the garners of the city, either within the liberties, or near
-adjoining; through the which scarcity, when the carts of Stratford came
-laden with bread to the city (as they had been accustomed) there was
-such press about them, that one man was ready to destroy another, in
-striving to be served for their money. But this scarcity did not last
-long; for the mayor in short time made such provision of wheat, that the
-bakers, both of London and Stratford, were weary of taking it up, and
-were forced to take up much more than they would, and for the rest the
-mayor laid out the money, and stored it up in Leaden hall, and other
-garners of the city. This mayor also kept the market so well, that he
-would be at the Leaden hall by four o'clock in the summer's mornings;
-and from thence he went to other markets, to the great comfort of the
-citizens.
-
-I read also that in the year 1528, the 20th of Henry VIII., surveyors
-were appointed to view the garners of the city, namely, the Bridgehouse
-and the Leaden hall, how they were stored of grain for the service of
-the city. And because I have here before spoken of the bread carts
-coming from Stratford at the Bow, ye shall understand that of old time
-the bakers of bread at Stratford were allowed to bring daily (except the
-Sabbath and principal feasts) divers long carts laden with bread, the
-same being two ounces in the penny wheat loaf heavier than the penny
-wheat loaf baked in the city, the same to be sold in Cheape, three or
-four carts standing there, between Gutheron's lane and Fauster's lane
-end, one cart on Cornhill, by the conduit, and one other in Grasse
-street. And I have read, that in the 4th year of Edward II., Richard
-Reffeham being mayor, a baker named John of Stratforde, for making bread
-less than the assize, was with a fool's hood on his head, and loaves
-of bread about his neck, drawn on a hurdle through the streets of this
-city. Moreover, in the 44th of Edward III., John Chichester being mayor
-of London, I read in the _Visions of Pierce Plowman_, a book so called,
-as followeth:
-
- "At Londone, I leve,
- Liketh wel my wafres;
- And louren whan thei lakken hem.
- It is noght longe y passed,
- There was a careful commune,
- Whan no cart com to towne
- With breed fro Stratforde;
- Tho gonnen beggaris wepe,
- And werkmen were agast a lite;
- This wole be thought longe.
- In the date of oure Drighte,
- In a drye Aprill,
- A thousand and thre hundred
- Twies twenty and ten,
- My wafres there were gesene
- Whan Chichestre was maire."[146]
-
-I read also in the 20th of Henry VIII., Sir James Spencer being mayor,
-six bakers of Stratford were amerced in the Guildhall of London, for
-baking under the size appointed. These bakers of Stratford left serving
-of this city, I know not upon what occasion, about thirty years since.
-
-In the year 1519 a petition was exhibited by the commons to the common
-council, and was by them allowed, concerning the Leaden hall, how they
-would have it used, viz. "Meekly beseeching, showeth unto your good
-lordship and masterships, divers citizens of this city, which under
-correction think, that the great place called the Leaden hall should,
-nor ought not to be letten to farm to any person or persons, and in
-especial to any fellowship or company incorporate, to have and hold the
-same hall for term of years, for such inconveniences as thereby may
-ensue, and come to the hurt of the common weal of the said city in time
-to come, as somewhat more largely may appear in the articles following.
-
-"First, If any assembly or hasty gathering of the commons of the said
-city, for suppressing or subduing of misruled people within the said
-city, hereafter shall happen to be called or commanded by the mayor,
-aldermen, and other governors and councillors of the said city for the
-time being, there is none so convenient, meet, and necessary a place,
-to assemble them in, within the said city, as the said Leaden hall,
-both for largeness of room, and their sure defence in time of their
-counselling together about the premises. Also, in that place hath been
-used the artillery, guns, and other armours of the said city, to be
-safely kept in a readiness for the safeguard, wealth, and defence of
-the said city, to be had and occupied at times when need required. As
-also the store of timber for the necessary reparations of the tenements
-belonging to the chamber of the said city, there commonly hath been
-kept. Item, If any triumph or nobleness were to be done, or shown by
-the commonalty of the city, for the honour of our sovereign lord the
-king and realm, and for the worship of the said city, the said Leaden
-hall is most meet and convenient place to prepare and order the said
-triumph therein, and from thence to issue forth to the places therefore
-appointed. Item, at any largess or dole of any money made unto the poor
-people of this city, it hath been used to be done and given in the said
-Leaden hall, for that the said place is most meet therefore. Item, the
-honourable father, that was maker of the said hall, had a special will,
-intent, and mind, that (as it is commonly said) the market men and
-women that came to the city with victuals and other things, should have
-their free standing within the said Leaden hall in wet weather, to keep
-themselves and their wares dry, and thereby to encourage them, and all
-other, to have the better will and desire the more plenteously to resort
-to the said city, to victual the same. And if the said hall should be
-letten to farm, the will of the said honourable father should never be
-fulfilled nor take effect. Item, if the said place, which is the chief
-fortress, and most necessary place within all the city, for the tuition
-and safeguard of the same, should be letten to farm out of the hands
-of the chief heads of the same city, and especially to another body
-politic, it might at length by likelihood be occasion of discord and
-debate between the said bodies politic, which God defend.
-
-"For these and many other great and reasonable causes, which hereafter
-shall be showed to this honourable court, your said beseechers think it
-much necessary that the said hall be still in the hands of this city,
-and to be surely kept by sad and discreet officers, in such wise, that
-it may alway be ready to be used and occupied for the common weal of the
-said city when need shall require, and in no wise to be letten to any
-body politic."
-
-Thus much for the petition.
-
-About the year 1534, great means were made about the Leaden hall to have
-the same made a burse, for the assembly of merchants, as they had been
-accustomed in Lombard street; many common councils were called to that
-end: but in the year 1535, John Champneys being mayor, it was fully
-concluded that the burse should remain in Lombard street as afore, and
-Leaden hall no more to be spoken of concerning that matter.
-
-The use of Leaden hall in my youth was thus:,--In a part of the north
-quadrant, on the east side of the north gate, were the common beams for
-weighing of wool and other wares, as had been accustomed; on the west
-side the gate were the scales to weight meal; the other three sides were
-reserved for the most part to the making and resting of the pageants
-showed at Midsummer in the watch; the remnant of the sides and quadrant
-was employed for the stowage of wool sacks, but not closed up; the lofts
-above were partly used by the painters in working for the decking of
-pageants and other devices, for beautifying of the watch and watchmen;
-the residue of the lofts were letten out to merchants, the wool winders
-and packers therein to wind and pack their wools. And thus much for
-Leaden hall may suffice.
-
-Now on the north of Lime street ward in the high street are divers fair
-houses for merchants, and proper tenements for artificers, with an alley
-also called Shaft alley, of the shaft or May-pole sometime resting over
-the gate thereof, as I have declared in Aldgate ward. In the year 1576,
-partly at the charges of the parish of St. Andrew, and partly at the
-charges of the chamber of London, a water-pump was raised in Lime street
-ward, near unto Lime street corner; for the placing of the which pump,
-having broken up the ground, they were forced to dig more than two
-fathom deep[147] before they came to any main ground, where they found a
-hearth made of Britain, or rather Roman tile[148] every tile half a yard
-square, and about two inches thick; they found coal lying there also
-(for that lying whole will never consume); then digging one fathom into
-the main, they found water sufficient, made their prall, and set up the
-pump; which pump, with oft repairing and great charges to the parish,
-continued not four-and-twenty years, but being rotted, was taken up and
-a new set in place in the year 1600. Thus much for the high street.
-
-In St. Marie street had ye of old time a parish church of St. Marie
-the Virgin, St. Ursula, and the eleven thousand Virgins, which church
-was commonly called St. Marie at the Axe, of the sign of an axe, over
-against the east end thereof, or St. Marie Pellipar, of a plot of ground
-lying on the north side thereof, pertaining to the Skinners in London.
-This parish, about the year 1565, was united to the parish church of St.
-Andrew Undershaft, and so was St. Mary at the Axe suppressed and letten
-out to be a warehouse for a merchant. Against the east end of this
-church was sometime a fair wall, now turned to a pump. Also against the
-north end of this St. Mary street, was sometime one other parish church
-of St. Augustine, called St. Augustine in the Wall, for that it stood
-adjoining to the wall of the city, and otherwise called St. Augustin's
-Papey, or the poor, as I have read in the reign of Edward III. About
-the year 1430, in the reign of Henry VI., the same church was allowed
-to the brethren of the Papey, the house of poor priests, whereof I have
-spoken in Aldgate ward. The parishioners of this church were appointed
-to the parish church of Allhallows in the wall, which is in Broad street
-ward, this brotherhood called Papey, being suppressed, the church of St
-Augustin was pulled down, and in place thereof one Grey an apothecary
-built a stable, hay-loft, etc. It is now a dwelling-house.[149] Those
-two parish churches, both lying in the ward of Lime street, being thus
-suppressed, there is not any one parish church or place for Divine
-service in that ward, but the inhabitants thereof repair to St. Peter
-in Cornhill ward, St. Andrew in Aldgate ward, Alhallows in the wall in
-Broad street ward, and some to St. Denis in Langborne ward.
-
-Now because of late there hath been some question, to what ward this
-church of St. Augustine Papey should of right belong, for the same hath
-been challenged by them of Aldgate ward, and without reason taken into
-Bishopsgate ward from Lime street ward, I am somewhat to touch it. About
-thirty years since the chamber of London granted a lease of ground, in
-these words: "lying near London wall in the ward of Lime street, from
-the west of the said church or chapel of St. Augustine Papey towards
-Bishopsgate," etc. On the which plot of ground the lease built three
-fair tenements, and placed tenants there; these were charged to bear
-scot and lot, and some of them to bear office in Lime street ward; all
-which they did willingly without grudging. And when any suspected or
-disordered persons were by the landlord placed there, the officers of
-Lime street ward fetched them out of their houses, committed them to
-ward, procured their due punishments, and banished them from thence;
-whereby in short time that place was reformed, and brought into good
-order; which thing being noted by them of Aldgate ward, they moved their
-alderman, Sir Thomas Offley, to call in those houses to be of his ward;
-but I myself showing a fair ledger book, sometimes pertaining to the
-late dissolved priory of the Holy Trinity whithin Aldgate, wherein were
-set down the just bounds of Aldgate ward, before Sir Thomas Offley, Sir
-Rowland Heyward, the common council, and wardmote inquest of the same
-Lime street ward, Sir Thomas Offley gave over his challenge, and so
-that matter rested in good quiet until the year 1579, that Sir Richard
-Pype being mayor, and alderman of Bishopsgate ward, challenged those
-houses to be of his ward, whereunto (without reason showed) Sir Rowland
-Heyward yielded. And thus is that side of the street, from the north
-corner of St. Mary street almost to Bishopsgate, wherein is one plot
-of ground, letten by the chamberlain of London to the parish of St.
-Martin's Oteswich, to be a churchyard or burying place for the dead of
-that parish, etc., unjustly drawn and withholden from the ward of Lime
-street. Divers other proofs I could set down, but this one following
-may suffice.--The mayor and aldermen of London made a grant to the
-fraternity of Papie in these words: "Be it remembered, that where now
-of late the master and wardens of the fraternity of the Papie have made
-a brick wall, closing in the chapel of St. Augustine called Papie
-chapel, situate in the parish of All Saints in the Wall, in the ward of
-Lime street, of the city of London; from the south-east corner of the
-which brick wall is a scutcheon of twenty-one feet of assize from the
-said corner eastward. And from the same scutcheon there to a messuage
-of fifty-five feet and a half westward, the said scutcheon breaketh
-out of line right southward betwixt the measures aforesaid three feet
-and five inches of assize, upon the common ground of the said city
-aforesaid, Ralph Verney, mayor, and the aldermen of the same city, the
-22nd day of October, the 6th year of Edward IV., granted to John Hod,
-priest, and to Master John Bolte, and Thomas Pachet, priests, wardens
-of the fraternity of Papie aforesaid, and to their successors for ever,
-etc., yielding four pence sterling yearly at Michaelmas." And this is,
-saith my book,[150] enrolled in the Guild hall of London; which is a
-sufficient proof the same plot of ground to be of Lime street ward, and
-never otherwise accounted or challenged.
-
-On the south side of this street, stretching west from St. Mary street
-towards Bishopsgate street, there was of old time one large messuage
-built of stone and timber, in the parish of St. Augustine in the Wall,
-now the parish of Allhallows in the same wall, belonging to the Earl of
-Oxford, for Richard de Vere, Earl of Oxford, possessed it in the 4th of
-Henry V.; but in process of time the lands of the earl fell to females,
-amongst the which, one being married to Wingfielde of Suffolke, this
-house with the appurtenances fell to his lot, and was by his heir, Sir
-Robert Wingfield, sold to Master Edward Coke, at this time the queen's
-attorney-general. This house being greatly ruinated of late time, for
-the most part hath been letten out to poulterers, for stabling of horses
-and stowage of poultry, but now lately new built into a number of small
-tenements, letten out to strangers, and other mean people.
-
-One note more of this ward, and so an end. I find of record, that in
-the year 1371, the 45th of Edward III., a great subsidy of one hundred
-thousand pounds was granted towards the king's wars in France, whereof
-the clergy paid fifty thousand pounds, and the laity fifty thousand
-pounds, to be levied to thirty-nine shires of England, containing
-parishes eight thousand six hundred, of every parish five pounds sixteen
-shillings, the greater to help the lesser. This city, as one of the
-shires, then containing twenty-four wards, and in them one hundred and
-ten parishes, was therefore assessed to six hundred and thirty-five
-pounds twelve shillings, whereof Lime street ward did bear thirty-four
-shillings and no more, so small a ward it was, and so accounted, as
-having no one whole parish therein, but small portions only of two
-parishes in that ward. This ward hath an alderman, his deputy, common
-councillors four, constables four, scavengers two, wardmote inquest
-sixteen, and a beadle; and is taxed to the fifteenth at one pound
-nineteen shillings and two pence three farthings.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[144] "It is taxed to the fifteene in London at 46 _li._, and accounted
-in the Exchequer to £45 10_s._"--_1st edition_, p. 113.
-
-[145] "Three schoolemaisters, with an usher, to wit."--_1st edition_, p.
-118.
-
-[146] This passage is printed very incorrectly, and as prose, by Stow,
-who makes the date "twice thirty and ten," _i.e._ 1370 (which is
-certainly the date of Chichester's mayoralty), instead of "twice twenty
-and ten," _i.e._ 1350, which is the reading of the MSS. and of the two
-early printed editions.
-
-[147] "Cornhill street, in some place raysed two fadome higher than of
-olde time, as appeared by buildings found so deepe."--_Stow._
-
-[148] "As they call it."--_1st edition_, p. 123.
-
-[149] "Reserving the churchyard for a garden plot."--_1st edition_, p.
-124.
-
-[150] Liber Papie.
-
-
-
-
-BISHOPSGATE WARD
-
-
-The next is Bishopsgate ward; whereof a part is without the gate and of
-the suburbs, from the bars by St. Mary Spittle to Bishopsgate, and a
-part of Houndsditch; almost half thereof, also without the wall, is of
-the same ward. Then within the gate is Bishopsgate street, so called of
-the gate, to a pump, where sometimes was a fair well, with two buckets,
-by the east end of the parish church of St. Martin Oteswich, and then
-winding by the west corner of Leaden hall down Grass street to the
-corner over against Grass church; and this is the bounds of that ward.
-
-Monuments most to be noted are these: The parish church of St. Buttolph
-without Bishopsgate, in a fair churchyard, adjoining to the town ditch,
-upon the very bank thereof, but of old time inclosed with a comely wall
-of brick, lately repaired by Sir William Allen, mayor, in the year
-1571, because he was born in that parish, where also he was buried. An
-anchoress received 40_s._ the year of the sheriffs of London.
-
-Now without this churchyard wall is a causeye, leading to a quadrant,
-called Petty France, of Frenchmen dwelling there, and to other
-dwelling-houses, lately built on the bank of the said ditch by some
-citizens of London, that more regarded their own private gain than the
-common good of the city; for by means of this causeye raised on the
-bank, and soilage of houses, with other filthiness cast into the ditch,
-the same is now forced to a narrow channel, and almost filled up with
-unsavoury things, to the danger of impoisoning the whole city.
-
-Next unto the parish church of St. Buttolph is a fair inn for receipt of
-travellers; then an hospital of St. Mary of Bethelem, founded by Simon
-Fitz Mary, one of the sheriffs of London, in the year 1246: he founded
-it to have been a priory of canons, with brethren and sisters; and King
-Edward III. granted a protection, which I have seen, for the brethren,
-_Miliciæ beatæ Mariæ de Bethlem_, within the city of London, the 14th
-year of his reign. It was an hospital for distracted people: Stephen
-Geninges, merchant-tailor, gave £40 towards purchase of the patronage by
-his testament, 1523; the mayor and commonalty purchased the patronage
-thereof, with all the lands and tenements thereunto belonging, in the
-year 1546: the same year King Henry VIII. gave this hospital unto the
-city; the church and chapel whereof were taken down in the reign of
-Queen Elizabeth, and houses built there by the governors of Christ's
-hospital in London. In this place people that be distraight in wits
-are, by the suit of their friends, received and kept as afore, but not
-without charges to their bringers in. In the year 1569, Sir Thomas Roe,
-merchant-tailor, mayor, caused to be inclosed with a wall of brick
-about one acre of ground, being part of the said hospital of Bethelem;
-to wit, on the west, on the bank of Deep Ditch, so called, parting the
-said hospital of Bethelem from the More field: this he did for burial
-and ease of such parishes in London as wanted ground convenient within
-their parishes. The lady his wife was there buried (by whose persuasion
-he inclosed it), but himself, born in London, was buried in the parish
-church of Hackney.
-
-From this hospital northward, upon the street's side, many houses have
-been built with alleys backward, of late time too much pestered with
-people (a great cause of infection) up to the bars.
-
-The other side of this high street from Bishopsgate and Hounds ditch,
-the first building a large inn for receipt of travellers, and is called
-the Dolphin, of such a sign. In the year 1513, Margaret Ricroft, widow,
-gave this house, with the gardens and appurtenances, unto William Gam,
-R. Clye, their wives, her daughters, and to their heirs, with condition
-they yearly do give to the warden or governors of the Grey friers church
-within Newgate forty shillings, to find a student of divinity in the
-University for ever. Then is there a fair house, of late built by John
-Powlet. Next to that, a far more large and beautiful house, with gardens
-of pleasure, bowling alleys, and such like, built by Jasper Fisher, free
-of the goldsmiths, late one of the six clerks of the chauncerie and a
-justice of the peace. It hath since for a time been the Earl of Oxford's
-place. The queen's majesty Elizabeth hath lodged there. It now belongeth
-to Sir Roger Manars.[151] This house, being so large and sumptuously
-built by a man of no greater calling, possessions, or wealth (for he was
-indebted to many) was mockingly called Fisher's folly, and a rhythm was
-made of it, and other the like, in this manner:
-
- "Kirkebyes Castell, and Fishers Follie,
- Spinilas pleasure, and Megses glorie."
-
-And so of other like buildings about the city by citizens, men have not
-letted to speak their pleasure.
-
-From Fisher's Folly up to the west end of Berward's lane, of old time
-so called, but now Hogge lane, because it meeteth with Hogge lane,
-which cometh from the bars without Aldgate, as is afore showed, is a
-continual building of tenements, with alleys of cottages, pestered,
-etc. Then is there a large close, called Tasel close, sometime for that
-there were tassels planted for the use of cloth-workers, since letten
-to the cross-bow makers, wherein they used to shoot for games at the
-popinjay: now the same being inclosed with a brick wall, serveth to be
-an artillery yard, whereunto the gunners of the Tower do weekly repair,
-namely, every Thursday; and there levelling certain brass pieces of
-great artillery against a butt of earth, made for that purpose, they
-discharge them for their exercise.
-
-Then have you the late dissolved priory and hospital,[152] commonly
-called St. Mary Spittle, founded by Walter Brune and Rosia his wife,
-for canons regular. Walter, archdeacon of London, laid the first
-stone in the year 1197, William, of St. Mary church, then bishop of
-London, dedicated to the honour of Jesus Christ and his mother, the
-perpetual Virgin Mary, by the name of _Domus Dei_, and _Beatæ Mariæ_,
-extra Bishopsgate, in the parish of St. Buttolph; the bounds whereof,
-as appeareth by composition betwixt the parson and prior of the
-said hospital concerning tithes, beginneth at Berward's lane toward
-the south, and extendeth in breadth to the parish of St. Leonard of
-Shoreditch towards the north; and in length, from the King's street
-on the west to the bishop of London's field, called Lollesworth, on
-the east. The prior of this St. Mary Spittle, for the emortising
-and propriation of Bikenacar, in Essex, to his said house of St.
-Mary Spittle, gave to Henry VII. £400 in the 22nd of his reign. This
-hospital, surrendered to Henry VIII., was valued to dispend £478;
-wherein was found, besides ornaments of the church, and other goods
-pertaining to the hospital, one hundred and eighty beds, well furnished,
-for receipt of the poor; for it was an hospital of great relief. Sir
-Henry Plesington, knight, was buried there 1452.
-
-In place of this hospital, and near adjoining, are now many fair houses
-built for receipt and lodging of worshipful persons. A part of the large
-churchyard pertaining to this hospital, and severed from the rest with a
-brick wall, yet remaineth as of old time, with a pulpit cross therein,
-somewhat like to that in Paules churchyard. And against the said pulpit
-on the south side, before the charnel and chapel of St. Edmond the
-Bishop and Mary Magdalen, which chapel was founded about the year 1391
-by William Eneshan, citizen and paperer of London, who was there buried,
-remaineth also one fair built house, of two stories in height, for the
-mayor and other honourable persons, with the aldermen and sheriffs to
-sit in, there to hear the sermons preached in the Easter holidays. In
-the loft over them stood the bishop of London, and other prelates; now
-the ladies and aldermen's wives do there stand at a fair window, or sit
-at their pleasure. And here is to be noted, that, time out of mind, it
-hath been a laudable custom, that on Good Friday, in the afternoon, some
-especial learned man, by appointment of the prelates, hath preached a
-sermon at Paules cross, treating of Christ's Passion; and upon the three
-next Easter holidays, Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, the like learned
-men, by the like appointment, have used to preach on the forenoons at
-the said Spittle, to persuade the article of Christ's Resurrection;
-and then on Low Sunday, one other learned man at Paules cross, to
-make rehearsal of those four former sermons, either commending or
-reproving them, as to him by judgment of the learned divines was thought
-convenient. And that done, he was to make a sermon of his own study,
-which in all were five sermons in one. At these sermons, so severally
-preached, the mayor, with his brethren the aldermen, were accustomed
-to be present in their violets at Paules on Good Friday, and in their
-scarlets at the Spittle in the holidays, except Wednesday in violet, and
-the mayor with his brethren on Low Sunday in scarlet, at Paules cross,
-continued until this day.
-
-Touching the antiquity of this custom, I find, that in the year 1398,
-King Richard having procured from Rome confirmation of such statutes
-and ordinances as were made in the parliament, begun at Westminster and
-ended at Shrewsbury, he caused the same confirmation to be read and
-pronounced at Paules cross, and at St. Mary Spittle, in the sermons
-before all the people. Philip Malpas, one of the sheriffs in the year
-1439, gave twenty shillings by the year to the three preachers at the
-Spittle. Stephen Forster, mayor in the year 1454, gave forty pounds
-to the preachers at Paules cross and Spittle. I find also that the
-aforesaid house, wherein the mayor and aldermen do sit at the Spittle,
-was built for that purpose of the goods and by the executors of Richard
-Lawson, alderman, and Isabell his wife, in the year 1488. In the year
-1594, this pulpit being old was taken down, and a new set up; the
-preacher's face turned towards the south, which was before toward the
-west; also a large house, on the east side of the said pulpit, was then
-built for the governors and children of Christ's hospital to sit in, and
-this was done of the goods of William Elkens, alderman, late deceased;
-but within the first year the same house decaying, and like to have
-fallen, was again with great cost repaired at the city's charge.
-
-On the east side of this churchyard lieth a large field, of old time
-called Lolesworth, now Spittle field; which about the year 1576 was
-broken up for clay to make brick; in the digging whereof many earthen
-pots, called _urnæ_, were found full of ashes, and burnt bones of men,
-to wit, of the Romans that inhabited here; for it was the custom of the
-Romans to burn their dead, to put their ashes in an urn, and then bury
-the same, with certain ceremonies, in some field appointed for that
-purpose near unto their city. Every of these pots had in them with the
-ashes of the dead one piece of copper money, with the inscription of the
-emperor then reigning: some of them were of Claudius, some of Vespasian,
-some of Nero, of Anthoninus Pius, of Trajanus, and others. Besides those
-urns, many other pots were there found, made of a white earth with
-long necks and handles, like to our stone jugs: these were empty, but
-seemed to be buried full of some liquid matter long since consumed and
-soked through; for there were found divers phials and other fashioned
-glasses, some most cunningly wrought, such as I have not seen the like,
-and some of crystal; all which had water in them, nothing differing in
-clearness, taste, or savour from common spring water, whatsoever it was
-at the first: some of these glasses had oil in them very thick, and
-earthy in savour; some were supposed to have balm in them, but had lost
-the virtue; many of those pots and glasses were broken in cutting of
-the clay, so that few were taken up whole. There were also found divers
-dishes and cups of a fine red-coloured earth, which showed outwardly
-such a shining smoothness as if they had been of coral; those had in the
-bottoms Roman letters printed: there were also lamps of white earth and
-red, artificially wrought with divers antiques about them, some three
-or four images made of white earth, about a span long each of them: one
-I remember was of Pallas, the rest I have forgotten. I myself have
-reserved, among divers of those antiquities there, one urn, with the
-ashes and bones, and one pot of white earth very small, not exceeding
-the quantity of a quarter of a wine pint, made in shape of a hare
-squatted upon her legs, and between her ears is the mouth of the pot.
-There hath also been found in the same field divers coffins of stone,
-containing the bones of men: these I suppose to be the burials of some
-especial persons in time of the Britons or Saxons, after that the Romans
-had left to govern here. Moreover, there were also found the skulls and
-bones of men without coffins, or rather whose coffins (being of great
-timber) were consumed. Divers great nails of iron were there found,
-such as are used in the wheels of shod carts, being each of them as big
-as a man's finger, and a quarter of a yard long, the heads two inches
-over; those nails were more wondered at than the rest of things there
-found, and many opinions of men were there uttered of them; namely,
-that the men there buried were murdered by driving those nails into
-their heads; a thing unlikely, for a smaller nail would more aptly serve
-to so bad a purpose, and a more secret place would likely be employed
-for their burial. But to set down what I have observed concerning this
-matter, I there beheld the bones of a man lying (as I noted), the head
-north, the feet south, and round about him, as thwart his head, along
-both his sides, and thwart his feet, such nails were found, wherefore I
-conceived them to be the nails of his coffin, which had been a trough
-cut out of some great tree, and the same covered with a plank, of a
-great thickness, fastened with such nails; and therefore I caused some
-of the nails to be reached up to me, and found under the broad heads of
-them the old wood, skant turned into earth, but still retaining both
-the grain and proper colour: of these nails, with the wood under the
-head thereof, I reserved one, as also the nether jaw-bone of the man,
-the teeth being great, sound, and fast fixed, which, among other many
-monuments there found, I have yet to show; but the nail lying dry, is
-by scaling greatly wasted. And thus much for this part of Bishopsgate
-ward, without the gate; for I have in another place spoken of the gate,
-and therefore I am to speak of that other part of this ward which lieth
-within the gate.
-
-And first to begin on the left hand of Bishopsgate street, from the gate
-you have certain tenements of old time pertaining to a brotherhood of
-St. Nicholas, granted to the parish clerks of London, for two chaplains,
-to be kept in the chapel of St. Mary Magdalen, near unto the Guildhall
-of London, in the 27th of Henry VI. The first of these houses towards
-the north, and against the wall of the city, was sometime a large inn
-or court called the Wrestlers, of such a sign, and the last in the high
-street towards the south was sometime also a fair inn called the Angel,
-of such a sign. Among these said tenements was on the same street side
-a fair entry, or court, to the common hall of the said parish clerks,
-with proper alms houses, seven in number, adjoining, for poor parish
-clerks, and their wives and their widows, such as were in great years
-not able to labour. One of these, by the said brotherhood of parish
-clerks, was allowed sixteen pence the week; the other six had each of
-them nine pence the week, according to the patent thereof granted. This
-brotherhood, amongst other, being suppressed, in the reign of Edward
-VI. the said hall, with the other buildings there, was given to Sir
-Robert Chester, a knight of Cambridgeshire; against whom the parish
-clerks commencing suit, in the reign of Queen Mary, and being like to
-have prevailed, the said Sir Robert Chester pulled down the hall, sold
-the timber, stone, and lead, and thereupon the suit was ended. The alms
-houses remain in the queen's hands, and people are there placed, such as
-can make best friends; some of them, taking the pension appointed, have
-let forth their houses for great rent, giving occasion to the parson of
-the parish to challenge tithes of the poor, etc.
-
-Next unto this is the small parish church of St. Ethelburge Virgin,
-and from thence some small distance is a large court called Little St.
-Helen's, because it pertained to the nuns of St. Helen's, and was their
-house: there are seven alms rooms or houses for the poor, belonging to
-the company of Leathersellers. Then, somewhat more west, is another
-court with a winding lane, which cometh out against the west end of
-St. Andrew Undershaft church. In this court standeth the church of St.
-Helen, sometime a priory of black nuns, and in the same a parish church
-of St. Helen.
-
-This priory was founded before the reign of Henry III. William Basing,
-dean of Paules, was the first founder, and was there buried; and William
-Basing, one of the sheriffs of London, in the 2nd year of Edward II. was
-holden also to be a founder, or rather a helper there. This priory being
-valued at £314 2_s._ 6_d._ was surrendered the 25th of November, the
-30th of Henry VIII.; the whole church, the partition betwixt the nuns'
-church and parish church being taken down, remaineth now to the parish,
-and is a fair parish church, but wanteth such a steeple as Sir Thomas
-Gresham promised to have built, in recompense of ground in their church
-filled up with his monument. The nuns' hall, and other houses thereunto
-appertaining, was since purchased by the company of the Leathersellers,
-and is their common hall; which company was incorporate in the 21st year
-of Richard II.
-
-In the church of St. Helen have you these monuments of the dead:--Thomas
-Langton, chaplain, buried in the choir 1350; Adam Frances, mayor, 1354;
-Elizabeth Vennar, wife to William Vennar, alderman, one of the sheriffs
-of London, 1401; Joan, daughter to Henry Seamer, wife to Richard, son
-and heir to Robert Lord Poynings, died a virgin 1420; John Swinflat,
-1420; Nicholas Marshall, ironmonger, alderman, 1474; Sir John Crosby,
-alderman, 1475, and Ann his wife; Thomas Williams, gentleman, 1495;
-Joan Cocken, wife to John Cocken, esquire, 1509; Marie Orrell, wife
-to Sir Lewes Orrell, knight; Henry Sommer, and Katherine his wife;
-Walter Huntington, esquire; John Langthorpe, esquire, 1510; John Gower,
-steward of St. Helen's, 1512; Robert Rochester, esquire, sergeant of the
-pantry to Henry VIII.; Sir William Sanctlo, and Sir William Sanctlo,
-father and son; Eleanor, daughter to Sir Thomas Butler; Lord Sudley;
-John Southworth; Nicholas Harpsfield, esquire; Thomas Sanderford,
-or Sommerford, alderman; Alexander Cheyney; Walter Dawbeney; George
-Fastolph, son to Hugh Fastolph; Robert Liade; Thomas Benolt, alias
-Clarenciaulx, king at arms, 1534; William Hollis, mayor, 1540; John
-Fauconbridge, esquire, 1545; Hacket, gentleman of the king's chapel;
-Sir Andrew Jud, mayor, 1551; Sir William Pickering, and Sir William
-Pickering, father and son; William Bond, alderman, 1567; Sir Thomas
-Gresham, mercer, 1579; William Skegges, sergeant poulter; Richard
-Gresham, son to Sir Thomas Gresham, 1564.
-
-Then have you one great house called Crosby place, because the same
-was built by Sir John Crosby, grocer and woolman, in place of certain
-tenements, with their appurtenances, letten to him by Alice Ashfed,
-prioress of St. Helen's, and the convent for ninety-nine years, from the
-year 1466 unto the year 1565, for the annual rent of £11 6_s._ 8_d._
-This house he built of stone and timber, very large and beautiful, and
-the highest at that time in London. He was one of the sheriffs, and an
-alderman in the year 1470, knighted by Edward IV. in the year 1471, and
-deceased in the year 1475; so short a time enjoyed he that his large and
-sumptuous building; he was buried in St. Helen's, the parish church; a
-fair monument of him and his lady is raised there. He gave towards the
-reforming of that church five hundred marks, which was bestowed with
-the better, as appeareth by his arms, both in the stone work, roof of
-timber, and glazing. I hold it a fable said of him to be named Crosbie,
-of being found by a cross, for I have read of other to have that name
-of Crosbie before him; namely, in the year 1406, the 7th of Henry IV.,
-the said king gave to his servant John Crosbie the wardship of Joan,
-daughter and sole heir to John Jordaine, fishmonger, etc. This Crosbie
-might be the father or grandfather to Sir John Crosbie.
-
-Richard, Duke of Gloucester, and lord protector, afterward king, by
-the name of Richard III., was lodged in this house; since the which
-time, among other, Anthonie Bonvice, a rich merchant of Italy, dwelt
-there; after him, Germain Cioll, then William Bond, alderman, increased
-this house in height, with building of a turret on the top thereof: he
-deceased in the year 1576, and was buried in St. Helen's church. Divers
-ambassadors have been lodged there; namely, in the year 1586, Henry
-Ramelius, chancellor of Denmark, ambassador unto the queen's majesty
-of England from Frederick II., the king of Denmark; an ambassador of
-France, etc. Sir John Spencer, alderman, lately purchased this house,
-made great reparations, kept his mayoralty there, and since built a most
-large warehouse near thereunto.
-
-From this Crosbie place up to Leaden hall corner, and so down Grass
-street, amongst other tenements, are divers fair and large built houses
-for merchants, and such like.
-
-Now for the other side of this ward, namely, the right hand, hard by
-within the gate, is one fair water conduit, which Thomas Knesworth,
-mayor, in the year 1505, founded: he gave £60, the rest was furnished
-at the common charges of the city. This conduit hath since been taken
-down and new built. David Woodrooffe, alderman, gave £20 towards the
-conveyance of more water thereunto. From this conduit have you, amongst
-many fair tenements, divers fair inns, large for receipt of travellers,
-and some houses for men of worship; namely, one most spacious of all
-other thereabout, built of brick and timber by Sir Thomas Gresham,
-knight, who deceased in the year 1579, and was buried in St. Helen's
-church, under a fair monument, by him prepared in his life: he appointed
-by his testament this house to be made a college of readers, as before
-is said in the chapter of schools and houses of learning.
-
-Somewhat west from this house is one other very fair house, wherein
-Sir William Hollies kept his mayoralty, and was buried in the parish
-church of St. Helen. Sir Andrew Jud also kept his mayoralty there, and
-was buried at St. Helen's: he built alms houses for six poor alms people
-near to the said parish church, and gave lands to the Skinners, out of
-the which they are to give 4_s._ every week to the six poor alms people,
-8_d._ the piece, and 25_s._ 4_d._ the year, in coals amongst them for
-ever.
-
-Alice Smith, of London, widow, late wife of Thomas Smith, of the same
-city, esquire, and customer of the port of London, in her last will
-and testament, bequeathed lands to the value of £15 by the year for
-ever, to the company of Skinners, for the augmenting of the pensions
-of certain poor, inhabiting in eight alms houses, erected by Sir
-Andrew Jud, knight, her father, in the parish of Great St. Helen's, in
-Bishopsgate street, in London. She hath also given in her said last will
-and testament, in other charitable uses, as to the hospitals and to the
-poor of other parishes and good preachers, the sum of £300. As also to
-the poor scholars in the two universities of Oxford and Cambridge the
-sum of £200; of which, her last will and testament, she made her sons,
-Thomas Smith, late sheriff of London, and Richard and Robert Smith,
-her executors, who have performed the same according to her godly and
-charitable mind.
-
-Then in the very west corner, over against the east end of St. Martin's
-Oteswich (from whence the street windeth towards the south), you had of
-old time a fair well, with two buckets, so fastened that the drawing up
-of the one let down the other; but now of late that well is turned into
-a pump.
-
-From this to the corner over against the Leaden hall, and so down Grasse
-street, are many fair houses for merchants and artificers, and many fair
-inns for travellers, even to the corner where that ward endeth, over
-against Grasse street. And thus much for this Bishopsgate ward shall
-suffice; which hath an alderman, two deputies, one without the gate,
-another within, common councillors six, constables seven, scavengers
-seven, for wardmote inquest thirteen, and a beadle: it is taxed to the
-fifteen at £13.[153]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[151] "To Master Cornewallos."--_1st edition_, p. 128.
-
-[152] "Of our blessed lady."--_1st edition_, p. 129.
-
-[153] "At twenty-two pounds in London, and in the Exchequer twenty-one
-pounds ten shillings."--_1st edition_, p. 136.
-
-
-
-
-BROAD STREET WARD
-
-
-The next is Brode street ward, which beginneth within Bishopsgate,
-from the water conduit westward on both sides of the street, by
-Allhallows church, to an iron grate on the channel which runneth into
-the water-course of Walbrooke, before you come to the postern called
-Mooregate; and this is the farthest west part of that ward.
-
-Then have you Brode street, whereof the ward taketh name, which
-stretcheth out of the former street from the east corner of Allhallows
-churchyard, somewhat south to the parish church of St. Peter the Poor
-on both sides, and then by the south gate of the Augustine friars west,
-down Throkmorton street by the Drapers' hall into Lothburie, to another
-grate of iron over the channel there, whereby the water runneth into
-the course of Walbrook, under the east end of St. Margaret's church,
-certain posts of timber are there set up; and this is also the farthest
-west part of this ward, in the said street. Out of the which street
-runneth up Bartholomew lane south to the north side of the Exchange;
-then more east, out of the former street from over against the Friars
-Augustine's church south gate, runneth up another part of Brode street
-south to a pump over against St. Bennet's church. Then have you one
-other street called Three needle street, beginning at the west, with
-two buckets, by St. Martin's Oteswich church wall. This street runneth
-down on both sides to Finkes lane, and half way up that lane to a gate
-of a merchant's house on the west side, but not so far on the east; then
-the foresaid street, from this Finkes lane, runneth down by the Royal
-Exchange to the Stocks, and to a place formerly called Scalding house,
-or Scalding wick, but now Scalding alley; by the west side whereof,
-under the parish church of St. Mildred, runneth the course of Walbrooke;
-and these be the bounds of this ward.
-
-Special monuments therein are these:--First, the parish church of
-Allhallows in the wall, so called of standing close to the wall of the
-city, in which have been buried Thomas Durrem, esquire, and Margaret his
-wife; Robert Beele, esquire, 1601. On the other side of that street,
-amongst many proper houses possessed for the most part by curriers, is
-the Carpenters' hall, which company was incorporated in the 17th year of
-King Edward IV.
-
-Then east from the Currier's row is a long and high wall of stone,
-inclosing the north side of a large garden adjoining to as large an
-house, built in the reign of King Henry VIII. and of Edward VI. by Sir
-William Powlet, lord treasurer of England. Through this garden, which
-of old time consisted of divers parts, now united, was sometimes a
-fair footway, leading by the west end of the Augustine friars church
-straight north, and opened somewhat west from Allhallows church against
-London wall towards Moregate; which footway had gates at either end,
-locked up every night; but now the same way being taken into those
-gardens, the gates are closed up with stone, whereby the people are
-forced to go about by St. Peter's church, and the east end of the said
-Friars church, and all the said great place and garden of Sir William
-Powlet to London wall, and so to Moregate.
-
-This great house, adjoining to the garden aforesaid, stretcheth to the
-north corner of Brode street, and then turneth up Brode street all that
-side to and beyond the east end of the said Friars church. It was built
-by the said lord treasurer in place of Augustine friars house, cloister,
-and gardens, etc. The Friars church he pulled not down, but the west
-end thereof, inclosed from the steeple and choir, was in the year 1550
-granted to the Dutch nation in London, to be their preaching place: the
-other part, namely, the steeple, choir, and side aisles to the choir
-adjoining, he reserved to household uses, as for stowage of corn, coal,
-and other things; his son and heir, Marquis of Winchester, sold the
-monuments of noblemen there buried in great number, the paving-stone
-and whatsoever (which cost many thousands), for one hundred pounds,
-and in place thereof made fair stabling for horses. He caused the lead
-to be taken from the roofs, and laid tile in place whereof; which
-exchange proved not so profitable as he looked for, but rather to his
-disadvantage.
-
-On the east side of this Brode street, amongst other buildings, on the
-back part of Gresham house, which is in Bishopsgate street, he placed
-eight proper alms houses, built of brick and timber by Sir Thomas
-Gresham, knight, for eight alms men, which he now there placed rent
-free, and receive each of them by his gift £6 13_s._ 4_d._ yearly for
-ever.
-
-Next unto Pawlet house is the parish church of St. Peter the Poor, so
-called for a difference from other of that name, sometime peradventure a
-poor parish, but at this present there be many fair houses, possessed by
-rich merchants and other. Buried in this church: Richard Fitzwilliams,
-merchant-tailor, 1520; Sir William Roch, mayor, 1540; Martin Calthrope,
-mayor, 1588.
-
-Then next have you the Augustine Friars church and churchyard; the
-entering thereunto by a south gate to the west porch, a large church,
-having a most fine spired steeple, small, high, and straight, I have not
-seen the like: founded by Humfrey Bohun, Earl of Hereford and Essex,
-in the year 1253. Reginald Cobham gave his messuage in London to the
-enlarging thereof, in the year 1344. Humfrey Bohun, Earl of Hereford
-and Essex, re-edified this church in the year 1354, whose body was
-there buried in the choir. The small spired steeple of this church was
-overthrown by a tempest of wind in the year 1362, but was raised of
-new, as now it standeth, to the beautifying of the city. This house was
-valued at £57, and was surrendered the 12th of November, the 30th of
-Henry VIII.
-
-There lie buried in this Friars church, amongst others, Edward, first
-son to Joan, mother to King Richard II.; Guy de Mericke, Earl of St.
-Paule; Lucie, Countess of Kent, and one of the heirs of Barnabie Lord
-of Millaine, with an epitaph; Dame Ide, wife to Sir Thomas West; Dame
-Margaret West; Stephen Lindericle, esquire; Sir Humfrey Bohun, Earl of
-Hereford and Essex, Lord of Brekenake;[154] Richard, the great Earl of
-Arundell, Surrey, and Warren, beheaded, 1397; Sir Edward Arundell, and
-Dame Elizabeth his wife; Sir Francis Atcourt,[155] Earl of Pembrooke,
-which married Alice, sister to the Earl of Oxford; Dame Lucie Knowles,
-of Kent; Sir Peter Garinsers, of France; the Lord John Vere, Earl of
-Oxford, beheaded on the Tower hill 1463; Aubrey de Vere, son and heir
-to the Earl of Oxford; Sir Thomas Tudnam, knight; William Bourser; Lord
-Fitz Warren; Sir Thomas de la Lande, knight; Dame Joan Norris, the Lady
-of Bedforde; Anne, daughter to John Viscount Welles; Walter Nevell,
-esquire; Sir John Manners, knight; the wife of Sir David Cradocke,
-knight; the mother to the Lord Spencer's wife; Sir Bartlemew Rodlegate;
-John, son to Sir John Wingfield; Sir Walter Mewes; Robert Newenton,
-esquire; Philip Spencer, son to Sir Hugh Spencer; Dame Isabell, daughter
-to Sir Hugh; the Lord Barons slain at Barnet field, buried there 1471.
-In the body of the church: Dame Julian, wife to Sir Richard Lacie;
-Sir Thomas Courtney, son to the Earl of Devonshire, and by him, his
-sister, wedded to Cheverstone; the daughter of the Lord Beaumont; two
-sons of Sir Thomas Morley, to wit, William and Ralph; Sir William
-Talmage, knight; Nicholas Blondell, esquire; Sir Richard Chamberlaine;
-John Halton, gentleman; Sir John Gifford, knight; Thomas Manningham,
-esquire; Sir William Kenude, knight; Sir William, son to Sir Thomas
-Terill; John Surell, gentleman. In the east wing: Margaret Barentin,
-gentlewoman; John Spicer, esquire, and Letis his wife; John le Percers,
-esquire; Roger Chibary, esquire; Peter Morens, esquire; Thomas, son to
-Sir William Beckland; James Cuthing, esquire; John Chorner, esquire;
-William Kenley, esquire; Margery, wife to Thomas Band, and daughter
-to John Hutch; the Lord William, Marquis of Barkeley and Earl of
-Nottingham, and Dame Joan his wife. In the west wing: Sir John Tirrill,
-and Dame Katherine his wife; Sir Walter of Powle, knight; Sir John
-Blanckwell, and his wife Dame Jane Sayne, daughter to Sir John Lee; Sir
-John Dawbeney, son and heir to Sir Giles Dawbeney; William, son to Sir
-Roger Scroope; Dame Joan Dawbeney, wife to Sir William Dawbeney; Thomas
-Charles, esquire; Sir John Dawbeney, knight, and his son Robert; Sir
-James Bell, knight; Sir Oliver Manny, knight; Henry Deskie, esquire; Sir
-Diones Mordaske; Sir Bernard Rolingcort; Sir Peter Kayor; Sir William
-Tirell; Sir William, his brother knights; William Collingborne, esquire,
-beheaded 1484; Sir Roger Clifford, knight; Sir Thomas Coke, mayor in
-the year 1462; William Edward, mayor, 1471; Sir James Tirell, Sir
-John Windany, knights, beheaded 1502; Sir John Dawtrie, knight, 1519;
-Dame Margaret Rede, 1510; Edward, Duke of Buckingham, beheaded 1521;
-Gwiskard, Earl of Huntington.
-
-On the south side, and at the west end of this church, many fair houses
-are built; namely, in Throgmorton street, one very large and spacious,
-built in the place of old and small tenements by Thomas Cromwell, master
-of the king's jewel-house, after that master of the rolls, then Lord
-Cromwell, knight, lord privy seal, vicar-general, Earl of Essex, high
-chamberlain of England, etc. This house being finished, and having
-some reasonable plot of ground left for a garden, he caused the pales
-of the gardens adjoining to the north part thereof on a sudden to be
-taken down; twenty-two feet to be measured forth right into the north
-of every man's ground; a line there to be drawn, a trench to be cast,
-a foundation laid, and a high brick wall to be built. My father had a
-garden there, and a house standing close to his south pale; this house
-they loosed from the ground, and bare upon rollers into my father's
-garden twenty-two feet, ere my father heard thereof; no warning was
-given him, nor other answer, when he spake to the surveyors of that
-work, but that their master Sir Thomas commanded them so to do; no man
-durst go to argue the matter, but each man lost his land, and my father
-paid his whole rent, which was 6_s._ 6_d._ the year, for that half
-which was left. Thus much of mine own knowledge have I thought good to
-note, that the sudden rising of some men causeth them[156] to forget
-themselves.
-
-The company of the Drapers in London bought this house, and now the
-same is their common hall. This company obtained of King Henry VI., in
-the 17th of his reign, to be incorporate: John Gidney was chosen to be
-their first master, and the four wardens were, J. Wotton, J. Darbie,
-Robert Breton, and T. Cooke. The arms granted to the said company by
-Sir William Bridges, knight, first garter king at arms, in blason, are
-thus: Three sunbeams issuing out of three clouds of flame, crowned with
-three crowns imperial of gold, upon a shield azure. From this hall, on
-the same side down to the grates and course of Walbrook, have ye divers
-fair houses for merchants and other; from the which grates back again
-on the other side in Lethbury, so called in record of Edward III., the
-38th year, and now corruptly called Lothbury, are candlestick founders
-placed, till ye come to Bartholomew lane, so called of St. Bartholomew's
-church, at the south-east corner thereof. In this lane also are divers
-fair built houses on both sides, and so likewise have ye in the other
-street, which stretcheth from the Friars Augustine's south gate to the
-corner over against St. Bennet's church. In this street, amongst other
-fair buildings, the most ancient was of old time a house pertaining to
-the abbot of St. Albans; John Catcher, alderman, now dwelleth there;
-then is the free school pertaining to the late dissolved hospital of
-St. Anthony, whereof more shall be shown in another place, and so up to
-Threeneedle street. On the south part of which street, beginning at the
-east, by the well with two buckets, now turned to a pump, is the parish
-church of St. Martin called Oteswich, of Martin de Oteswich, Nicholas
-de Oteswich, William Oteswich, and John Oteswich, founders thereof.
-There be monuments in this church of William Constantine, alderman,
-and Emme his wife; Katherine, wife to Benedick Augustine; Sir William
-Drifield, knight; John Oteswich, and his wife, under a fair monument
-on the south side; John Churchman, one of the sheriffs, in the year
-1385; Richard Naylor, tailor, alderman, 1483; James Falleron; John
-Melchborne; Thomas Hey, and Hellis his wife; William Clitherow, and
-Margaret his wife; Oliver and William, sons to John Woodroffe, esquire;
-Hugh Pemberton, tailor, alderman, 1500, and Katherine his wife; Matthew
-Pemberton, merchant-tailor, about 1514: he gave £50 to the repairing
-of St. Lawrence chapel. The aforesaid John Churchman, for William and
-John Oteswich, by license of Henry IV., the 6th of his reign, gave the
-advowson or patronage of this church, four messuages, and seventeen
-shops, with the appurtenances in the parish of St. Martin's Oteswich,
-etc., to the master and wardens of tailors and linen-armourers, keepers
-of the guild and fraternity of St. John Baptist in London, and to their
-successors, in perpetual alms, to be employed on the poor brethren and
-sisters; whereupon, adjoining unto the west end of this parish church,
-the said master and wardens built about a proper quadrant or squared
-court, seven alms houses, wherein they placed seven alms men of that
-company, and their wives (if they had wives); each of these seven of
-old time had 13_d._ the week, but now of later time their stipend by
-the said master and wardens hath been augmented to the sum of 26_s._
-the quarter, which is £5 4_s._ the year to each of them, besides coals;
-more, to each of them 20_s._ the year, by gift of Walter Fish, sometime
-master of that company, and tailor to her majesty.
-
-Some small distance from thence is the Merchant-tailors'-hall,
-pertaining to the guild and fraternity of St. John Baptist, time out of
-mind called of tailors and linen-armourers of London; for I find that
-Edward I., in the 28th of his reign, confirmed this guild by the name
-of Tailors and Linen-armourers, and also gave to the brethren thereof
-authority every year at Midsummer to hold a feast, and to choose unto
-them a governor, or master, with wardens; whereupon the same year, 1300,
-on the feast day of the nativity of St. John Baptist, they chose Henry
-de Ryall to be their pilgrim for the master of this mystery (as one that
-travelled for the whole company was then so called) until the 11th of
-Richard II.; and the four wardens were then called purveyors of alms
-(now called quarterage) of the said fraternity. This merchant-tailors'
-hall, sometime pertaining to a worshipful gentleman named Edmond Creping
-(Dominus Creping after some record), he in the year of Christ 1331, the
-first of Edward III., for a certain sum of money to him paid, made his
-grant thereof by the name of his principal messuage in the wards of
-Cornehill and Brode street, which Sir Oliver Ingham, knight, did then
-hold, to John of Yakley, the king's pavilion maker. This was called the
-new hall, or tailors' inn, for a difference from their old hall, which
-was about the back side of the Red Lion in Basing lane, and in the ward
-of Cordwayner street.
-
-The 21st of Edward IV., Thomas Holme, _alias_ Clarenciaulx king
-of arms for the south part of England, granted by his patents to
-the said fraternity and guild of St. John Baptist, of tailors and
-linen-armourers, to bear in a field silver, a pavilion between two
-mantels imperial purple garnished with gold, in a chief azure and holy
-Lamb, set within a sun, the crest upon the helm, a pavilion purple
-garnished with gold, etc. After this King Henry VII. being himself a
-brother of this fraternity or guild of St. John Baptist, of tailors or
-linen-armourers (as divers other his predecessors kings before him had
-been, to wit, Richard III., Edward IV., Henry V., Henry IV., and Richard
-II.); and for that divers of that fraternity had, time out of mind, been
-great merchants, and had frequented all sorts of merchandises into most
-parts of the world, to the honour of the king's realm, and to the great
-profit of his subjects, and of his progenitors; and the men of the said
-mystery, during the time aforesaid, had exercised the buying and selling
-of all wares and merchandises, especially of woollen cloth, as well in
-gross, as by retail, throughout all this realm of England, and chiefly
-within the said city; therefore he, of his especial grace, did change,
-transfer, and translate the guild aforesaid, and did incorporate them
-into the name of the Master and Wardens of the Merchant-tailors of the
-fraternity of St. John Baptist, in the city of London.
-
-Some distance west from this the Merchant-tailors' hall is Finke's lane,
-so called of Robert Finke, and Robert Finke his son, James Finke, and
-Rosamond Finke. Robert Finke the elder new built the parish church of
-St. Bennet, commonly called Fink, of the founder; his tenements were
-both of St. Bennet's parish and St. Martin's Oteswich parish. The one
-half of this Finke lane is of Brode street ward, to wit, on the west
-side up to the great and principal house wherein the said Finke dwelt;
-but on the other side, namely the east, not so much towards Cornhill.
-Then without this lane in the aforesaid Threeneedle street is the
-said parish church of St. Bennet, a proper church, in which are these
-monuments of the dead:--Robert Simson, and Elizabeth his wife; Roger
-Strange, esquire; Trerisse; William Coolby; John Frey; Thomas Briar,
-plumber, 1410, etc.
-
-Some distance west is the Royal Exchange, whereof more shall be spoken
-in the ward of Cornhill, and so down to the little conduit, called the
-pissing conduit, by the Stockes market, and this is the south side of
-Threeneedle street.
-
-On the north side of this street, from over against the east corner
-of St. Martin's Oteswich church, have ye divers fair and large houses
-till ye come to the hospital of St. Anthonie, sometime a cell to St.
-Anthonie's of Vienna. For I read that King Henry III. granted to the
-brotherhood of St. Anthonie of Vienna, a place amongst the Jews, which
-was sometime their synagogue, and had been built by them about the
-year 1231; but the Christians obtained of the king that it should be
-dedicated to our Blessed Lady; and since a hospital being there built,
-was called St. Anthonie's in London; it was founded in the parish of St.
-Bennet Finke, for a master, two priests, one schoolmaster, and twelve
-poor men: after which foundation, amongst other things, was given to
-this hospital, one messuage and garden, whereon was built the fair large
-free school, and one other parcel of ground, containing thirty-seven
-feet in length, and eighteen feet in breadth, whereon was built the
-alms houses of hard stone and timber, in the reign of Henry VI., which
-said Henry VI., in the 20th of his reign, gave unto John Carpenter,
-D.D., master of St. Anthonie's hospital, and to his brethren and their
-successors for ever, his manor of Ponington, with the appurtenances,
-with certain pensions and portions of Milburne, Burnworth, Charlton,
-and Up Wimborne, in the county of Southampton, towards the maintenance
-of five scholars in the university of Oxford, to be brought up in the
-faculty of arts, after the rate of ten pence the week for every scholar,
-so that the said scholars shall be first instructed in the rudiments of
-grammar at the college of Eaton, founded by the said king.
-
-In the year 1474, Edward IV. granted to William Say, B.D., master of the
-said hospital, to have priests, clerks, scholars, poor men, and brethren
-of the same, clerks, or laymen, choristers, proctors, messengers,
-servants in household, and other things whatsoever, like as the prior
-and convent of St. Anthonie's of Vienna, etc. He also annexed, united,
-and appropriated the said hospital unto the collegiate church of St.
-George in Windsor.
-
-The proctors of this house were to collect the benevolence of charitable
-persons towards the building and supporting thereof. And amongst other
-things observed in my youth, I remember that the officers charged with
-oversight of the markets in this city, did divers times take from
-the market people, pigs starved, or otherwise unwholesome for man's
-sustenance; these they slit in the ear. One of the proctors for St.
-Anthonie's tied a bell about the neck, and let it feed on the dunghills;
-no man would hurt or take them up, but if any gave to them bread, or
-other feeding, such would they know, watch for, and daily follow,
-whining till they had somewhat given them; whereupon was raised a
-proverb, "Such an one will follow such an one, and whine as it were an
-Anthonie pig;" but if such a pig grew to be fat, and came to good liking
-(as oft times they did), then the proctor would take him up to the use
-of the hospital.
-
-In the year 1499, Sir John Tate, sometime ale-brewer, when a mercer,
-caused his brewhouse, called the Swan, near adjoining to the said free
-chapel, college, or hospital of St. Anthonie, to be taken down for the
-enlarging of the church, which was then new built, toward the building
-whereof the said Tate gave great sums of money, and finished in the
-year 1501. Sir John Tate deceased 1514, and was there buried under a
-fair monument by him prepared. Dr. Tayler, master of the rolls, and
-other.[157]
-
-Walter Champion, draper, one of the sheriffs of London 1529, was buried
-there, and gave to the beadman twenty pounds. The lands by year of this
-hospital were valued in the 37th year of Henry VIII. to be fifty-five
-pounds six shillings and eight pence.
-
-One Johnson (a schoolmaster of the famous free-school there) became a
-prebend of Windsor, and then by little and little followed the spoil
-of this hospital. He first dissolved the choir, conveyed the plate and
-ornaments, then the bells, and lastly put out the alms men from their
-houses, appointing them portions of twelve pence the week to each (but
-now I hear of no such matter performed), their houses with other be
-letten out for rent, and the church is a preaching place for the French
-nation.
-
-This school was commended in the reign of Henry VI., and sithence
-commended above other, but now decayed, and come to nothing, by taking
-that from it what thereunto belonged.
-
-Next is the parish church of St. Bartholomew, at the end of Bartholomew
-lane. Thomas Pike, alderman, with the assistance of Nicholas Yoo, one
-of the sheriffs of London, about the year 1438, new built this church.
-Sir John Fray, knight, was buried there, Margery his daughter and
-heir, wife to Sir John Lepington, knight, founded there a chantry the
-21st of Edward IV. Alderban, a Gascoyne, was buried there; Sir Will.
-Capel, mayor 1509, added unto this church a proper chapel on the south
-side thereof, and was buried there; Sir Giles Cappell was also buried
-there; James Wilford, tailor, one of the sheriffs 1499, appointed by
-his testament a doctor of divinity, every Good Friday for ever, to
-preach there a sermon of Christ's Passion, from six of the clock till
-eight before noon, in the said church. John Wilford, merchant-tailor,
-alderman, 1544; Sir James Wilford, 1550; Sir George Barne, mayor 1552;
-John Dent; Miles Coverdale, Bishop of Excester; Thomas Dancer, and Anne
-his wife.
-
-Then lower down towards the Stocks' market is the parish church of
-St. Christopher, but re-edified of new; for Richard Shore, one of the
-sheriffs 1506, gave money towards the building of the steeple. There lie
-buried Richard Sherington, 1392, who gave lands to that church; the Lady
-Margaret Norford, 1406; John Clavering, 1421, who gave lands thereunto;
-John Godnay, draper, mayor 1427. This Godnay, in the year 1444, wedded
-the widow of Robert Large, late mayor, which widow had taken the mantle
-and ring, and the vow to live chaste to God during the term of her
-life, for the breach whereof, the marriage done, they were troubled
-by the church, and put to penance, both he and she. William Hampton,
-mayor 1472, was a great benefactor, and glazed some of the church
-windows; Sir William Martin, mayor 1492; Roger Achley, mayor 1511,
-he dwelt in Cornehill ward, in a house belonging to Cobham college,
-rented by the year at twenty-six shillings and eight pence; Robert
-Thorne, merchant-tailor, a bachelor, 1532--he gave by his testament in
-charity more than four thousand four hundred and forty-five pounds; John
-Norryholme; Ralph Batte; Alice Percivall; Jane Drew; William Borresbie;
-John Broke; Richard Sutton; William Batte; James Well; Henry Beacher,
-alderman, 1570.
-
-West from this church have ye Scalding alley, of old time called
-Scalding house, or Scalding wike, because that ground for the most part
-was then employed by poulterers that dwelt in the high street from the
-Stocks' market to the great conduit. Their poultry, which they sold at
-their stalls, were scalded there. The street doth yet bear the name of
-the Poultry, and the poulterers are but lately departed from thence into
-other streets, as into Grasse street, and the ends of St. Nicholas flesh
-shambles. This Scalding wike is the farthest west part of Brode street
-ward, and is by the water called Walbrook parted from Cheap ward. This
-Brode street ward hath an alderman, with his deputy, common councillors
-ten, constables ten, scavengers eight, wardmote inquest thirteen, and
-a beadle. It is taxed to the fifteenth in London at seven-and-twenty
-pounds, and accounted in the Exchequer after twenty-five pounds.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[154] "Pembroke."--_1st edition_, p. 136.
-
-[155] "Courtney."--_1st edition_, _ibid._
-
-[156] "In some matters."--_1st edition_, p. 141.
-
-[157] "This goodly foundation having a free schoole and almes houses
-for poore men (builded of hard stone) adjoyning to the west end of the
-church, was of olde time confirmed by Henry the Sixt, in the year 1447.
-The outward work of this new church was finished in the year 1501, the
-said John Tate deceased about the year 1514, and was there buried in a
-monument by him prepared, as appeareth by an indenture tripartite made
-between the said John Tate, the Deane of Windsor, and William Milbourn,
-chamberlaine."--_1st edition_, p. 145.
-
-
-
-
-CORNEHILL WARD
-
-
-The next ward to the south is Cornehill ward, so called of a corn
-market, time out of mind there holden, and is a part of the principal
-high street, beginning at the west end of Leaden hall, stretching down
-west on both the sides by the south end of Finks lane on the right hand,
-and by the north end of Birchovers lane; on the left part of which
-lanes, to wit, to the middle of them, is of this ward, and so down to
-the Stockes market; and this is the bounds.
-
-The upper or east part of this ward, and also a part of Lime street
-ward, hath been (as I said) a market place, especially for corn, and
-since for all kind of victuals, as is partly showed in Lime street
-ward; yet it appeareth of record, that in the year 1522, the rippers
-of Rie and other places, sold their fresh fish in Leaden hall market
-upon Cornehill, but foreign butchers were not admitted there to sell
-flesh till the year 1533; and it was enacted, that butchers should
-sell[158], their beef not above a halfpenny the pound, and mutton a
-halfpenny half-farthing; which act being devised for the great commodity
-of the realm (as it was then thought) hath since proved far otherwise;
-for before that time a fat ox was sold in London for six-and-twenty
-shillings and eight pence at the most, a fat wether for three shillings
-and four pence, a fat calf the like price, a fat lamb for twelve pence,
-pieces of beef weighing two pounds and a half at the least, yea three
-pounds or better, for a penny, on every butcher's stall in this city,
-and of those pieces of beef thirteen or fourteen for twelve pence, fat
-mutton for eight pence the quarter, and one hundred weight of beef for
-four shillings and eight pence, at the dearest. What the price is now I
-need not to set down; many men thought the same act to rise in price,
-by mean that graziers knew or supposed what weight every their beasts
-contained, and so raising their price thereafter, the butcher could
-be no gainer, but by likewise raising his price.[159] The number of
-butchers then in the city and suburbs was accounted six score, of which
-every one killed six oxen a piece weekly, which is in forty-six weeks
-thirty-three thousand one hundred and twenty oxen, or seven hundred and
-twenty oxen weekly. The foreign butchers for a long time stood in the
-high street of Lime Street ward on the north side, twice every week,
-namely, Wednesday and Saturday, and were some gain to the tenants before
-whose doors they stood, and into whose houses they set their blocks and
-stalls; but that advantage being espied, they were taken into Leaden
-hall, there to pay for their standing to the chamber of London. Thus
-much for the market upon Cornhill.
-
-The chief ornaments on Cornhill ward are these: first, at the east
-end thereof, in the middle of the high street, and at the parting
-of four ways, have ye a water standard, placed in the year 1582, in
-manner following. A certain German, named Peter Morris, having made an
-artificial forcier for that purpose, conveyed Thames water in pipes of
-lead over the steeple of St. Magnus church, at the north end of London
-Bridge, and from thence into divers men's houses in Thames street, New
-Fish street, and Grasse street, up to the north-west corner of Leaden
-hall, the highest ground of all the city, where the waste of the main
-pipe rising into this standard, provided at the charges of the city,
-with four spouts did at every tide run (according to covenant) four
-ways, plentifully serving to the commodity of the inhabitants near
-adjoining in their houses, and also cleansed the channels of the street
-towards Bishopsgate, Aldgate, the bridge, and the Stockes' market. But
-now no such matter, through whose default I know not.[160]
-
-Then have ye a fair conduit of sweet water, castellated in the middest
-of that ward and street. This conduit was first built of stone in
-the year 1282, by Henry Walles, mayor of London, to be a prison for
-night-walkers, and other suspicious persons, and was called the Tun
-upon Cornehill, because the same was built somewhat in fashion of a tun
-standing on the one end.
-
-To this prison the night watches of this city committed not only night
-walkers, but also other persons, as well spiritual as temporal, whom
-they suspected of incontinence, and punished them according to the
-customs of this city; but complaint thereof being made, about the year
-of Christ 1297, King Edward I. writeth to his citizens thus:--
-
-"Edward, by the grace of God, etc. Whereas Richard Gravesend, bishop of
-London, hath showed unto us, that by the Great Charter of England, the
-Church hath a privilege, that no clerk should be imprisoned by a lay
-man without our command, and breach of peace, which notwithstanding
-some citizens of London, upon mere spite, do enter in their watches into
-clerks' chambers, and like felons carry them to the Tun, which Henry le
-Walleys, sometime mayor, built for night walkers; wherefore we will that
-this our commandment be proclaimed in full hustings, and that no watch
-hereafter enter into any clerk's chamber, under the forfeit of twenty
-pounds. Dated at Carlisle the 18th of March, the 25th of our reign."
-
-More, I read about the year of Christ 1299, the 27th of Edward I.,
-certain principal citizens of London, to wit, T. Romane, Richard
-Gloucester, Nicholas Faringdon, Adam Helingburie, T. Saly, John
-Dunstable, Richard Ashwy, John Wade, and William Stortford, brake up
-this prison called the Tun, and took out certain prisoners, for which
-they were sharply punished by long imprisonment and great fines. It cost
-the citizens (as some have written) more than twenty thousand marks,
-which they were amerced in, before William le March, treasurer of the
-king's exchequer, to purchase the king's favour, and confirmation of
-their liberties.
-
-Also, that in the year 1383, the 7th of Richard II., the citizens of
-London, taking upon them the rights that belonged to their bishops,
-first imprisoned such women as were taken in fornication or adultery in
-the said Tun, and after bringing them forth to the sight of the world,
-they caused their heads to be shaven, after the manner of thieves, whom
-they named appellators, and so to be led about the city, in sight of
-all the inhabitants, with trumpets and pipes sounding before them, that
-their persons might be the more largely known. Neither did they spare
-such kind of men a whit the more, but used them as hardly, saying, they
-abhorred not only the negligence of their prelates, but also detested
-their avarice, that studying for money, omitted the punishment limited
-by law, and permitted those that were found guilty to live favourably
-in their sin. Wherefore, they would themselves, they said, purge their
-city from such filthiness, lest, through God's vengeance, either the
-pestilence or sword should happen to them, or that the earth should
-swallow them.
-
-Last of all to be noted, I read in the charge of the wardmote inquest
-in every ward of the city, these words:--"If there be any priest in
-service within the ward, which before time hath been set in the Tun in
-Cornhill for his dishonesty, and hath forsworn the city, all such shall
-be presented."
-
-Thus much for the Tun in Cornhill have I read. Now for the punishments
-of priests in my youth: one note and no more. John Atwod, draper,
-dwelling in the parish of St. Michael upon Cornehill, directly against
-the church, having a proper woman to his wife, such an one as seemed the
-holiest among a thousand, had also a lusty chantry priest, of the said
-parish church, repairing to his house; with the which priest the said
-Atwod would sometimes after supper play a game at tables for a pint of
-ale: it chanced on a time, having haste of work, and his game proving
-long, he left his wife to play it out, and went down to his shop, but
-returning to fetch a pressing iron, he found such play to his misliking,
-that he forced the priest to jump out at a window over the penthouse
-into the street, and so to run to his lodging in the churchyard. Atwod
-and his wife were soon reconciled, so that he would not suffer her to
-be called in question; but the priest being apprehended and committed,
-I saw his punishment to be thus:--He was on three market days conveyed
-through the high street and markets of the city with a paper on his
-head, wherein was written his trespass. The first day he rode in a
-carry, the second on a horse, his face to the horse tail, the third led
-betwixt twain, and every day rung with basons, and proclamations made
-of his fact at every turning of the street, as also before John Atwod's
-stall, and the church door of his service, where he lost his chantry of
-twenty nobles the year, and was banished the city for ever.
-
-By the west side of the foresaid prison, then called the Tun, was a
-fair well of spring water, curbed round with hard stone; but in the
-year 1401, the said prison house, called the Tun, was made a cistern
-for sweet water, conveyed by pipes of lead from Tiborne, and was from
-thenceforth called the Conduit upon Cornhill. Then was the well planked
-over, and a strong prison made of timber called a cage, with a pair
-of stocks therein set upon it, and this was for night walkers. On the
-top of which cage was placed a pillory, for the punishment of bakers
-offending in the assize of bread, for millers stealing of corn at the
-mill, for bawds, scolds, and other offenders. As in the year 1468,
-the 7th of Edward IV., divers persons being common jurors, such as at
-assizes were forsworn for rewards, or favour of parties, were judged to
-ride from Newgate to the pillory in Cornhill, with mitres of paper on
-their heads, there to stand, and from thence again to Newgate, and this
-judgment was given by the mayor of London. In the year 1509, the 1st of
-Henry VIII., Darby, Smith, and Simson, ringleaders of false inquests in
-London, rode about the city with their faces to the horse tails, and
-papers on their heads, and were set on the pillory in Cornhill, and
-after brought again to Newgate, where they died for very shame, saith
-Robert Fabian. A ringleader of inquests,[161] as I take it, is he that
-making a gainful occupation thereof, will appear on Nisi-priuses, or he
-be warned, or procure himself to be warned, to come on by a tales. He
-will also procure himself to be foreman when he can, and take upon him
-to overrule the rest to his opinion; such an one shall be laboured by
-plaintiffs and defendants, not without promise of rewards, and therefore
-to be suspected of a bad conscience. I would wish a more careful choice
-of jurors to be had; for I have known a man carted, rung with basons,
-and banished out of Bishopsgate ward, and afterward in Aldgate ward
-admitted to be a constable, a grand juryman, and foreman of the wardmote
-inquest: what I know of the like, or worse men, proffered to the like
-offices, I forbear to write, but wish to be reformed.
-
-The foresaid conduit upon Cornhill, was in the year 1475 enlarged by
-Robert Drope, draper, mayor, that then dwelt in that ward; he increased
-the cistern of this conduit with an east end of stone, and castellated
-in comely manner.
-
-In the year 1546, Sir Martin Bowes, mayor, dwelling in Lombard street,
-and having his back gate opening into Cornehill against the said
-conduit, minded to have enlarged the cistern thereof with a west end,
-like as Robert Drope before had done towards the east; view and measure
-of the plot was taken for this work; but the pillory and cage being
-removed, they found the ground planked, and the well aforesaid worn out
-of memory, which well they revived and restored to use--it is since made
-a pump; they set the pillory somewhat west from the well; and so this
-work ceased.
-
-On the north side of the street, from the east unto the west, have ye
-divers fair houses for merchants and other, amongst the which one large
-house is called the Wey house, where merchandises brought from beyond
-the seas are to be weighed at the king's beam. This house hath a master,
-and under him four master porters, with porters under them: they have a
-strong cart, and four great horses, to draw and carry the wares from the
-merchants' houses to the beam and back again. Sir Thomas Lovell, knight,
-built this house, with a fair front of tenements towards the street; all
-which he gave to the Grocers of London, himself being free of the city,
-and a brother of that company.
-
-Then have ye the said Finke's lane, the south end of which lane on both
-sides is in Cornehill ward.
-
-Then next is the Royal Exchange, erected in the year 1566, after this
-order, namely, certain houses upon Cornehill, and the like upon the
-back thereof, in the ward of Brode street, with three alleys, the
-first called Swan alley, opening into Cornehill, the second New alley,
-passing throughout of Cornehill into Brode street ward, over against
-St. Bartholomew lane, the third St. Christopher's alley, opening into
-Brode street ward, and into St. Christopher's parish, containing in all
-fourscore households, were first purchased by the citizens of London,
-for more than three thousand five hundred and thirty-two pounds, and
-were sold for four hundred and seventy-eight pounds, to such persons as
-should take them down and carry them thence; also the ground or plot was
-made plain at the charges of the city; and then possession thereof was
-by certain aldermen, in name of the whole citizens, given to Sir Thomas
-Gresham, knight, agent to the queen's highness, thereupon to build a
-burse, or place for merchants to assemble, at his own proper charges.
-And he, on the 7th of June, laying the first stone of the foundation,
-being brick, accompanied with some aldermen, every of them laid a piece
-of gold, which the workmen took up, and forthwith followed upon the same
-with such diligence, that by the month of November, in the year 1567,
-the same was covered with slate, and shortly after fully finished.
-
-In the year 1570, on the 23rd of January, the queen's majesty, attended
-with her nobility, came from her house at the Strand, called Somerset
-house, and entered the city by Temple Bar, through Fleet street, Cheape,
-and so by the north side of the burse, through Threeneedle street, to
-Sir Thomas Gresham's in Bishopsgate street, where she dined. After
-dinner her majesty returning through Cornehill, entered the burse on the
-south side; and after that she had viewed every part thereof above the
-ground, especially the pawn, which was richly furnished with all sorts
-of the finest wares in the city, she caused the same burse by an herald
-and trumpet to be proclaimed the Royal Exchange, and so to be called
-from thenceforth, and not otherwise.
-
-Next adjoining this Royal Exchange remaineth one part of a large stone
-house, and is now called the Castle of such a sign; at a tavern door
-there is a passage through out of Cornehill into Threeneedle street;
-the other part of the said stone house was taken down for enlarging
-the Royal Exchange: this stone house was said of some to have been a
-church, whereof it had no proportion, of others a Jew's house, as though
-none but Jews had dwelt in stone houses; but that opinion is without
-warrant, for besides the strong building of stone houses against the
-invasion of thieves in the night, when no watches were kept, in the 1st
-year of Richard I., to prevent the casualties of fire, which often had
-happened in the city, when the houses were built of timber, and covered
-with reed or straw, Henry Fitz Alewine being mayor, it was decreed,
-that from henceforth no man should build within the city but of stone,
-until a certain height, and to cover the same building with slate or
-burnt tile; and this was the very cause of such stone buildings, whereof
-many have remained till our time, that for winning of ground they have
-been taken down, and in place of some one of them being low, as but
-two stories above the ground, many houses of four or five stories high
-are placed. From this stone house down to the Stocks are divers large
-houses, especially for height, for merchants and artificers.
-
-On the south side of this high street is the parish church of St. Peter
-upon Cornehill, which seemeth to be of an ancient building, but not
-so ancient as fame reporteth, for it hath been lately repaired, if
-not all new built, except the steeple, which is ancient. The roof of
-this church, and glazing, were finished in the reign of Edward IV., as
-appeareth by arms of noblemen and aldermen of London then living. There
-remaineth in this church a table whereon it is written, I know not by
-what authority, but of a late hand, that King Lucius founded the same
-church to be an archbishop's see metropolitan,[162] and chief church of
-his kingdom, and that it so endured the space of four hundred years,
-unto the coming of Augustin the monk.
-
-Joceline of Furness writeth, that Thean, the first archbishop of London,
-in the reign of Lucius, built the said church by the aid of Ciran, chief
-butler to King Lucius; and also that Eluanus, the second archbishop,
-built a library to the same adjoining, and converted many of the Druids,
-learned men in the Pagan law, to Christianity. True it is, that a
-library there was pertaining to this parish church of old time, built
-of stone, and of late repaired with brick by the executors of Sir John
-Crosby, alderman, as his arms on the south end doth witness.
-
-This library hath been of late time, to wit, within these fifty years,
-well furnished of books; John Leyland viewed and commended them; but
-now those books be gone, and the place is occupied by a schoolmaster
-and his usher, over a number of scholars learning their grammar rules,
-etc. Notwithstanding, before that time a grammar school had been kept in
-this parish, as appeareth in the year 1425, I read, that John Whitby was
-rector, and John Steward schoolmaster there; and in the 25th of Henry
-VI., it was enacted by parliament, that four grammar schools in London
-should be maintained, namely, in the parishes of Allhallows, in Thames
-street, St. Andrew in Oldbourne, St. Peter's upon Cornehill, and St.
-Thomas of Acars.
-
-Monuments of the dead in this church defaced: I read, that Hugh Waltham,
-Nicholas Pricot, mercer, alderman, Richard Manhall, 1503; William
-Kingston, fishmonger, gave his tenements called the Horse mill in
-Grasse street to this church, and was there buried about the year 1298;
-John Unisburgh, poulterer, 1410; John Law. Also Peter Mason, tailor,
-gave to this church seven pounds sterling yearly for ever, out of his
-tenements in Colechurch parish, and deceased about the year 1416. John
-Foxton founded a chantry there. A brotherhood of St. Peter was in this
-church established by Henry IV., the 4th of his reign. William Brampton
-and William Askham, fishmongers and aldermen, were chief procurers
-thereof, for the fishmongers of late buried there; Sir William Bowyer,
-mayor 1543; Sir Henry Huberthorn, mayor 1546; Sir Christopher Morice,
-master-gunner of England to King Henry VIII.; Edward Elrington, esquire,
-chief-butler to Edward VI.; Thomas Gardener, grocer; and Justice Smith,
-and other.
-
-Then have ye the parish church of St. Michael th' Archangel; for the
-antiquity whereof I find that Alnothus the priest gave it to the abbot
-and convent of Covesham, Reynold abbot, and the convent there did
-grant the same to Sperling the priest, in all measures as he and his
-predecessors before had held it; to the which Sperling also they granted
-all their lands which they there had, except certain lands which Orgar
-le Prowde had held of them, and paid two shilling yearly; for the which
-grant the said Sperling should yearly pay one mark of rent to the said
-abbot of Covesham, and find him and his lodging, salt, water, and fire,
-when he came to London. This was granted 1133, about the 34th of Henry
-I. Thus much for antiquity; of later time I find, that Elizabeth Peake,
-widow, gave the patronage or gift of this benefice to the Drapers in
-London; she lieth buried in the belfry, 1518: her monument yet remaineth.
-
-This hath been a fair and beautiful church, but of late years, since
-the surrender of their lands to Edward VI., greatly blemished by the
-building of lower tenements on the north side thereof towards the high
-street, in place of a green churchyard, whereby the church is darkened,
-and other ways annoyed. The fair new steeple, or bell tower of this
-church, was begun to be built in the year 1421, which being finished,
-and a fair ring of five bells therein placed, a sixth bell[163] was
-added, and given by John Whitwell, Isabel his wife, and William Rus,
-alderman, and goldsmith, about the year 1430, which bell, named "Rus,"
-nightly at eight of the clock, and otherwise for knells, and in peals,
-rung by one man, for the space of one hundred and sixty years, of late
-overhauled by four or five at once, hath been thrice broken, and new
-cast within the space of ten years, to the charges of that parish more
-than one hundred marks.
-
-And here a note of this steeple: as I have oft heard my father report,
-upon St. James' night, certain men in the loft next under the bells,
-ringing of a peal, a tempest of lightning and thunder did arise, an
-ugly shapen sight appeared to them, coming in at the south window, and
-lighted on the north, for fear whereof they all fell down, and lay as
-dead for the time, letting the bells ring and cease of their own accord;
-when the ringers came to themselves, they found certain stones of the
-north window to be razed and scratched, as if they had been so much
-butter, printed with a lion's claw; the same stones were fastened there
-again, and so remain till this day. I have seen them oft, and have put
-a feather or small stick into the holes where the claws had entered
-three or four inches deep. At the same time certain main timber posts at
-Queene Hith were scratched and cleft from the top to the bottom; and the
-pulpit cross in Powle's churchyard was likewise scratched, cleft, and
-overturned. One of the ringers lived in my youth, whom I have oft heard
-to verify the same to be true.
-
-But to return. William Rus was a special benefactor to this church;
-his arms yet remain in the windows. William Comerton, Symon Smith,
-Walter Belingham, were buried there, and founded chantries there;
-John Grace, 1439; Robert Drope, mayor, buried on the north side of
-the choir, under a fair tomb of grey marble, 1485, he gave to poor
-maids' marriages of that parish twenty pounds, to poor of that ward ten
-pounds, shirts and smocks three hundred, and gowns of broad cloth one
-hundred, etc.[164] Jane his wife, matching with Edward Gray, Viscount
-Lisle, was buried by her first husband, 1500; she gave ninety pounds
-in money to the beautifying of that church, and her great messuage,
-with the appurtenance, which was by her executors, W. Caple and other,
-1517, the 9th of Henry VIII., assured to John Wardroper, parson, T.
-Clearke, W. Dixson, and John Murdon, wardens of the said church, and
-their successors for ever, they do keep yearly for her an obite, or
-anniversary, to be spent on the poor, and otherwise, in all three
-pounds, the rest of the profits to be employed in reparation of the
-church. In the 34th year of Henry VIII., Edward Stephan, parson, T.
-Spencer, P. Guntar, and G. Grouch, churchwardens, granted to T. Lodge a
-lease for sixty years of the said great messuage, with the appurtenance,
-which were called the Lady Lisle's lands, for the rent of eight pounds
-thirteen shillings and four pence the year. The parishioners since gave
-it up as chantry land, and wronged themselves. Also the said Robert
-Drope, and Lady Lisle, notwithstanding their liberality to that church
-and parish, their tomb is pulled down, no monument remaineth of them.
-Peter Hawton, late alderman, is laid in their vault, 1596. Robert
-Fabian, alderman, that wrote and published a Chronicle of England and of
-France, was buried there 1511, with this epitaph:--
-
- "Like as the day his course doth consume,
- And the new morrow springeth againe as fast,
- So man and woman, by Nature's custome,
- This life to pass, at last in earth are cast,
- In joy and sorrow, which here their time do wast,
- Never in one state, but in course transitory,
- So full of change is of this world the glory."
-
-His monument is gone. Richard Garnam, 1527, buried there; Edmond Trindle
-and Robert Smith;[165] William Dickson and Margaret his wife,[166]
-buried in the cloister under a fair tomb now defaced; Thomas Stow, my
-grandfather, about the year 1526, and Thomas Stow, my father, 1559;
-John Tolus, alderman, 1548, he gave to John Willowby, parson of that
-church, to Thomas Lodge, G. Hind, P. Bolde, churchwardens, and to
-their successors, towards the reparation of that church, and relief of
-the poor for ever, his tenement with the appurtenances in the parish
-of St. Michael, which he had lately purchased of Alvery Randalph, of
-Badlesmeere in Kent; but the parish never had the gift, nor heard
-thereof by the space of forty years after; such was the conscience of G.
-Barne and other the executors, to conceal it to themselves; and such is
-the negligence of the parishioners, that being informed thereof, make no
-claim thereunto. Philip Gonter, that was alderman for a time, and gave
-four hundred pounds to be discharged thereof, was buried in the cloister
-about the year 1582, and Anne his wife, etc. Thomas Houghton, father to
-the said Peter Houghton, Francis Beneson, and William Towersan.
-
-This parish church hath on the south side thereof a proper cloister,
-and a fair churchyard, with a pulpit cross, not much unlike to that in
-Paule's churchyard. Sir John Rudstone, mayor, caused the same pulpit
-cross in his lifetime to be built, the churchyard to be enlarged, by
-ground purchased of the next parish, and also proper houses to be
-raised for lodging of choir men, such as at that time were assistants
-to divine service, then daily sung by note in that church. The said
-John Rudstone deceased 1531, and was buried in a vault under the pulpit
-cross; he appointed sermons to be preached there, not now performed;
-his tomb before the pulpit cross is taken thence, with the tomb of
-Richard Yaxley, Doctor of Physic to King Henry VIII. and other. The
-choir of that church dissolved, the lodgings of choir men were by the
-grave fathers of that time charitably appointed for receipt of ancient
-decayed parishioners, namely, widows, such as were not able to bear the
-charge of greater rents abroad, which blessed work of harbouring the
-harbourless is promised to be rewarded in the kingdom of heaven.
-
-Then have ye Birchover lane, so called of Birchover, the first builder
-and owner thereof, now corruptly called Birchin lane, the north half
-whereof is of the said Cornehill ward; the other part is of Langborne
-ward.
-
-This lane, and the high street near adjoining, hath been inhabited for
-the most part with wealthy drapers, from Birchover's lane, on that side
-the street down to the stocks, in the reign of Henry VI., had ye for the
-most part dwelling Fripperers or Upholders, that sold old apparel and
-household stuff.
-
-I have read of a countryman, that then having lost his hood in
-Westminster hall, found the same in Cornehill hanged out to be sold,
-which he challenged, but was forced to buy, or go without it, for their
-stall, they said, was their market. At that time also the wine drawer of
-the Pope's head tavern (standing without the door in the high street)
-took the same man by the sleeve, and said, "Sir, will you drink a pint
-of wine?" whereunto he answered, "A penny spend I may;" and so drank his
-pint, for bread nothing did he pay, for that was allowed free.[167]
-
-This Pope's head tavern, with other houses adjoining, strongly built
-of stone, hath of old time been all in one, pertaining to some great
-estate, or rather to the king of this realm, as may be supposed, both by
-the largeness thereof, and by the arms, to wit, three leopards passant,
-gardant, which were the whole arms of England before the reign of Edward
-III., that quartered them with the arms of France, three fleur-de-lis.
-
-These arms of England, supported between two angels, are fair and
-largely graven in stone on the fore front towards the high street, over
-the door or stall of one great house, lately for many years possessed by
-Mr. Philip Gunter. The Pope's head tavern is on the back part thereof
-towards the south, as also one other house called the stone house in
-Lombard street. Some say this was King John's house, which might so be;
-for I find in a written copy of Matthew Paris' History, that in the
-year 1232, Henry III. sent Hubert de Burgh, Earl of Kent, to Cornehill
-in London, there to answer all matters objected against him, where he
-wisely acquitted himself. The Pope's head tavern hath a footway through
-from Cornehill into Lombard street. And down lower on the high street of
-Cornehill, is there one other way through by the Cardinal's hat tavern
-into Lombard street. And so let this suffice for Cornhill ward. In which
-be governors:--an alderman, his deputy, common councillors four or six,
-constables four, scavengers four, wardmote inquest sixteen and a beadle.
-It is charged to the fifteen at sixteen pounds.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[158] "Their beef and mutton by weight, to wit."--_1st edition_, p. 148.
-
-[159] "But the true cause of enhanceing the prices both of those and
-other victuals are not to be disputed here."--_1st edition_, p. 148.
-
-[160] It would seem, from the addition of these words, which are not in
-the first edition, that this conduit ceased so to run between the years
-1598 and 1603.
-
-[161] "Ringleaders of inquests will proffer their service, and bend
-every way for gain. Careful choice of jurors is to be had; a man
-detected, and that had sworn foolishly against his brother, is not
-to be admitted a common juror; neither butcher nor surgeon is to be
-admitted."--_Stow._
-
-[162] "Archbishops of London hard to be proved, and therefore not be
-affirmed."--_Stow._
-
-[163] "This was accounted the best ring of six belles, to bee rung by
-six men, that was in England, for harmonye, sweetness of sound, and
-tune."--_Stow._
-
-[164] "To the poor at his burial sixteen pounds, to prisons, hospitals,
-and lazar houses, liberally; he also gave his house in Cornehill
-to be sold, and the price thereof to be spent on the amendment of
-highways."--_1st edition_, p. 153.
-
-[165] "My godfathers."--_1st edition_, p. 153.
-
-[166] "My godmother."--_Ibid._
-
-[167] "Wine one pint for a pennie, and bread to drink it was given free
-in every tavern."--_Stow._
-
-
-
-
-LANGBORNE WARD, AND FENNIE ABOUT
-
-
-Langborne ward, so called of a long bourne of sweet water, which of old
-time breaking out into Fenchurch street, ran down the same street and
-Lombard street to the west end of St. Mary Woolnoth's church, where
-turning south, and breaking into small shares, rills, or streams, it
-left the name of Share borne lane, or South borne lane (as I have read),
-because it ran south to the river of Thames. This ward beginneth at the
-west end of Aldgate ward in Fenne church street, by the Ironmongers'
-hall, which is on the north side of that street, at a place called
-Culver alley, where sometime was a lane, through the which men went
-into Lime street, but that being long since stopped up for suspicion of
-thieves that lurked there by night, as is shown in Lime street ward,
-there is now this said alley, a tennis-court, etc.
-
-Fenne church street took that name of a fenny or moorish ground, so made
-by means of this borne which passed through it, and therefore until this
-day in the Guildhall of this city, that ward is called by the name of
-Langborne and Fennie about, and not otherwise; yet others be of opinion
-that it took that name of _Foenum_, that is, hay sold there, as Grasse
-street took the name of grass, or herbs, there sold.
-
-In the midst of this street standeth a small parish church called St.
-Gabriel Fen church, corruptly Fan church.
-
-Helming Legget, esquire, by license of Edward III., in the 49th of
-his reign, gave one tenement, with a curtelage thereto belonging,
-and a garden, with an entry thereto leading, unto Sir John Hariot,
-parson of Fenchurch, and to his successors for ever; the house to be a
-parsonage-house, the garden to be a churchyard, or burying-place for the
-parish.
-
-Then have ye Lombard street, so called of the Longobards, and other
-merchants, strangers of divers nations assembling there twice every
-day, of what original or continuance I have not read of record, more
-than that Edward II., in the 12th of his reign, confirmed a messuage,
-sometime belonging to Robert Turke, abutting on Lombard street toward
-the south, and toward Cornehill on the north, for the merchants of
-Florence, which proveth that street to have had the name of Lombard
-street before the reign of Edward II. The meeting of which merchants and
-others there continued until the 22nd of December, in the year 1568; on
-the which day the said merchants began to make their meetings at the
-burse, a place then new built for that purpose in the ward of Cornhill,
-and was since by her majesty, Queen Elizabeth, named the Royal Exchange.
-
-On the north side of this ward is Lime street, one half whereof on both
-the sides is of this Langborne ward, and therein on the west side is the
-Pewterers' hall, which company were admitted to be a brotherhood in the
-13th of Edward IV.
-
-At the south-west corner of Lime street standeth a fair parish church
-of St. Dionys called Backe church, lately new built in the reign of
-Henry VI. John Bugge, esquire, was a great benefactor to that work, as
-appeareth by his arms, three water budgets, and his crest, a Morian's
-head, graven in the stone-work of the choir, the upper end on the north
-side, where he was buried. Also John Darby, alderman, added thereunto
-a fair aisle, or chapel, on the south side, and was there buried about
-the year 1466. He gave (besides sundry ornaments) his dwelling-house and
-others unto the said church. The Lady Wich, widow to Hugh Wich, sometime
-mayor of London, was there buried, and gave lands for sermons, etc.
-John Master, gentleman, was by his children buried there 1444; Thomas
-Britaine; Henry Travers, of Maidstone, in Kent, merchant, 1501; John
-Bond, about 1504; Robert Paget, merchant-tailor, one of the sheriffs,
-1536; Sir Thomas Curteis, pewterer, then fishmonger, mayor, 1557; Sir
-James Harvie, ironmonger, mayor, 1581; William Peterson, esquire;
-William Sherington; Sir Edward Osborne, clothworker, mayor, etc.
-
-Then by the four corners (so called of Fenchurch street in the east,
-Bridge street on the south, Grasse street on the north, and Lombard
-street on the west), in Lombard street is one fair parish church
-called Allhallows Grasse church, in Lombard street; I do so read it
-in evidences of record, for that the grass market went down that way,
-when that street was far broader than now it is, being straitened by
-incroachments.
-
-This church was lately new built. John Warner, armourer, and then
-grocer, sheriff 1494, built the south aisle; his son, Robert Warner,
-esquire, finished it in the year 1516. The pewterers were benefactors
-towards the north aisle, etc. The steeple, or bell tower, thereof was
-finished in the year 1544, about the 36th of Henry VIII. The fair stone
-porch of this church was brought from the late dissolved priory of St.
-John of Jerusalem by Smithfield, so was the frame for their bells, but
-the bells being bought, were never brought thither, by reason that one
-old Warner, draper, of that parish deceasing, his son Marke Warner would
-not perform what his father had begun, and appointed, so that fair
-steeple hath but one bell, as friars were wont to use. The monuments of
-this church be these. The said Warners, and John Walden, draper.
-
-Next is a common hostelry for travellers, called the George, of such a
-sign. This is said to have pertained to the Earl Ferrers, and was his
-London lodging in Lombard street, and that in the year 1175, a brother
-of the said earl, being there privily slain in the night, was there
-thrown down into the dirty street, as I have afore shown in the chapter
-of night watches.
-
-Next to this is the parish church of St. Edmond, the king and martyr, in
-Lombard street, by the south corner of Birchover lane. This church is
-also called St. Edmond Grasse church, because the said grass market came
-down so low. The monuments in this church are these: Sir John Milborne,
-draper, mayor, deceased, 1535, buried there by Dame Joan and Dame
-Margaret his wives, under a tomb of touch; Humfrey Heyford, goldsmith,
-mayor 1477; Sir William Chester, draper, mayor 1560, with his wives,
-amongst his predecessors; Sir George Barne, mayor 1586; Matilde at Vine
-founded a chantry there, etc.
-
-From this church down Lombard street, by Birchover's lane (the one half
-of which lane is of this ward), and so down, be divers fair houses,
-namely, one with a very fair fore front towards the street, built by
-Sir Martin Bowes, goldsmith, since mayor of London, and then one other,
-sometime belonging to William de la Pole, knight banneret, and yet the
-king's merchant,[168] in the 14th of Edward III., and after him to
-Michael de la Pole, Earl of Suffolk, in the 14th of Richard II., and was
-his merchant's house, and so down towards the Stocks market, lacking but
-some three houses thereof.
-
-The south side of this ward beginneth in the east, at the chain to be
-drawn athwart Mart lane up into Fenchurch street, and so west by the
-north end of Minchen lane to St. Margaret Patten's street, or Roode
-lane, and down that street to the midway towards St. Margaret's church;
-then by Philpot lane (so called of Sir John Philpot that dwelt there,
-and was owner thereof), and down that lane some six or eight houses on
-each side, is all of this ward.
-
-Then by Grasse church corner into Lombard street to St. Clement's lane,
-and down the same to St. Clement's church; then down St. Nicholas lane,
-and down the same to St. Nicholas church, and the same church is of this
-ward. Then to Abchurch church lane, and down some small portion thereof;
-then down Sherborne lane, a part thereof, and a part of Bearebinder
-lane, be of this ward; and then down Lombard street to the sign of the
-Angel, almost to the corner over against the Stocks market.
-
-On the south side of this ward, somewhat within Mart lane, have you the
-parish church of Allhallows, commonly called Stane church (as may be
-supposed), for a difference from other churches of that name in this
-city, which of old time were built of timber, and since were built of
-stone. In this church have been divers fair monuments of the dead,
-namely, of John Costin, girdler, a great benefactor: he deceased 1244.
-His name remaineth painted in the church roof; if it had been set in
-brass, it would have been fetched down.[169] He gave out of certain
-tenements to the poor of that parish a hundred quarters of charcoals
-yearly for ever. Sir Robert Test, knight of the holy sepulchre, and
-Dame Joan his wife, about 1486; Robert Stone; Sir John Steward, and
-Dame Alice his wife;[170] John Bostocke, esquire; Christopher Holt,
-Sir Richard Tate, knight, ambassador to King Henry VIII. buried there
-1554. His monument remaineth yet; the rest being all pulled down, and
-swept out of the church, the churchwardens were forced to make a large
-account; 12_s._ that year for brooms, besides the carriage away of
-stone and brass of their own charge. And here I am to note, that being
-informed of the Writhsleys to be buried there, I have since found them
-and other to be buried at St. Giles without Cripplegate, where I mind to
-leave them.
-
-By this church sometime passed a lane, called Cradock's lane, from
-Mart lane, winding by the north side of the said church into Fenchurch
-street, the which lane being straitened by incroachments, is now called
-Church alley.
-
-Then is the parish church of St. Nicholas Acon, or Hacon (for so have
-I read it in records), in Lombard street. Sir John Bridges, draper,
-mayor, 1520, newly repaired this church, and embattled it, and was there
-buried. Francis Boyer, grocer, one of the sheriffs, was buried there
-1580, with other of the Boyers: so was Julian, wife to John Lambart,
-alderman.[171]
-
-Then is there in the high street a proper parish church of St. Mary
-Woolnoth, of the Nativity, the reason of which name I have not yet
-learnt. This church is lately new built. Sir Hugh Brice, goldsmith,
-mayor in the first year of Henry VII., keeper of the king's exchange
-at London, and one of the governors of the king's mint in the Tower of
-London, under William Lord Hastings, the 5th of Edward IV., deceased
-1496. He built in this church a chapel called the Charnell, as also part
-of the body of the church and of the steeple, and gave money toward
-the finishing thereof, besides the stone which he had prepared: he
-was buried in the body of the church. Guy Brice, or Boys, was buried
-there. Dame Joan, wife to Sir William Peach;[172] Thomas Nocket,
-draper, 1396: he founded a chantry there. Simon Eyre, 1459: he gave the
-tavern called the Cardinal's Hat, in Lombard street, with a tenement
-annexed on the east part of the tavern, and a mansion behind the east
-tenement, together with an alley from Lombard street to Cornhill,
-with the appurtenances, all which were by him new built, toward a
-brotherhood of our Lady in St. Mary Woolnoth's church. John Moager,
-pewterer, and Emme his wife, in St. John's chapel; Sir John Percivall,
-merchant-tailor, mayor, about 1504; Thomas Roch, and Andrew Michael,
-vintners, and Joan their wife; William Hilton, merchant-tailor, and
-tailor to King Henry VIII., was buried there 1519, under the chapel of
-St. George, which chapel was built by George Lufken, sometime tailor to
-the prince; Robert Amades, goldsmith, master of the king's jewels; Sir
-Martin Bowes, mayor, buried about 1569: he gave lands for the discharge
-of that Langborn ward, of all fifteens to be granted to the king by
-parliament; George Hasken, Sir Thomas Ramsey, late mayor, etc. Thus
-have ye seven parishes in this ward, one hall of a company, divers fair
-houses for merchants, and other monuments none. It hath an alderman, his
-deputy, common councillors eight, constables fifteen, scavengers nine,
-men of the wardmote inquest seventeen, and a beadle. It is taxed to the
-fifteen,[173] in the exchequer, at £20 9_s._ 8_d._
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[168] "Noblemen of this realm of old time, as also of late years, have
-dealt in merchandises."--_Stow._
-
-[169] "If it had been in brasse, it would not have remained there so
-long."--_1st edition_, p. 159.
-
-[170] In the first edition, p. 159, the following passage is here
-inserted:--
-
-"Alice, William, and John, wife and sons to Thomas Clarell; Agnes,
-daughter to Thomas Niter, gent.; William Atwell; Felix, daughter to
-Sir Thomas Gisers, and wife to Travers Thomas Mason, esquire; Edmond
-Wartar, esquire; Joan, wife to John Chamberlaine, esquire, daughter to
-Roger Lewkner, esquire; William Frier; John Hamburger, esquire; Hugh
-Moresby; Gilbert Prince, alderman; Oliver Chorley, gentleman; Sir John
-Writh, or Writhesley, _alias_ Garter principal king at arms, sometime
-laid under a fair tomb in the choir, now broken down and gone; Joan,
-wife to Thomas Writhesley, son to Sir John Writhesley, Garter, daughter
-and heir to William Hall, esquire; John Writhesley the younger, son
-to Sir John Writhesley, and Alienor, Eleanor, second wife to John
-Writhesley, daughter and heir to Thomas Arnalde, and Agnes his wife;
-John Writhesley, son of Thomas; Agnes Arnold, first married to William
-Writhesley, daughter of Richard Warmeforde; Barbara Hungerford, daughter
-to Sir John Writhesley, wife to Anthony Hungerford, son to Sir Thomas
-Hungerford, of Denmampney, in the county of Gloucester."
-
-The cause for the omission of these names is explained at the close of
-the paragraph in the text; which is however so indistinctly expressed,
-that its meaning could not very well be ascertained except by a
-reference to what was originally written.
-
-[171] "Mother of William Lambert, yet living."--_1st edition_, p. 160.
-
-[172] "Hugh Acton, tailor."--_Ibid._
-
-[173] "In London at twenty-one pound."--_Ibid._
-
-
-
-
-BILLINGSGATE WARD
-
-
-Billingsgate ward beginneth at the west end of Tower street ward in
-Thames street, about Smart's key, and runneth down along that street
-on the south side to St. Magnus church at the bridge foot, and on the
-north side of the said Thames street, from over against Smart's key,
-till over against the north-west corner of St. Magnus church aforesaid,
-on this north side of Thames street, is St. Marie hill lane, up to St.
-Margaret's church, and then part of St. Margaret Patten's street, at the
-end of St. Marie hill lane. Next out of Thames street is Lucas lane, and
-then Buttolph lane, and at the north end thereof Philpot lane; then is
-Rother lane, of old time so called, and thwart the same lane is Little
-Eastcheape; and these be the bounds of Billingsgate ward.
-
-Touching the principal ornaments within this ward. On the south side
-of Thames street, beginning at the east end thereof, there is first
-the said Smart's key, so called of one Smart sometime owner thereof;
-the next is Belinsgate, whereof the whole ward taketh name; the which
-(leaving out of the fable, thereof feigning it to be built by King
-Beline, a Briton, long before the incarnation of Christ), is at this
-present a large water-gate, port, or harborough, for ships and boats,
-commonly arriving there with fish, both fresh and salt, shell-fishes,
-salt, oranges, onions, and other fruits and roots, wheat, rye, and grain
-of divers sorts, for service of the city and the parts of this realm
-adjoining. This gate is now more frequented than of old time, when
-the Queen's hithe was used, as being appointed by the kings of this
-realm, to be the special or only port for taking up of all such kind of
-merchandises brought to this city by strangers and foreigners, and the
-drawbridge of timber at London bridge was then to be raised or drawn up
-for passage of ships with tops thither.
-
-Touching the ancient customs of Belinsgate in the reign of Edward III.,
-every great ship landing there paid for standage two-pence, every
-little ship with orelockes a penny, the lesser boat called a Battle a
-halfpenny; of two quarters of corn measured the king was to have one
-farthing, of a combe of corn a penny, of every weight going out of the
-city a halfpenny, of two quarters of sea coal measured a farthing, and
-of every tun of ale going out of England beyond the seas, by merchant
-strangers, four-pence, of every thousand herrings a farthing, except
-franchises, etc.
-
-Next to this is Sommer's key, which likewise took that name of one
-Sommer dwelling there, as did Lion key of one Lion, owner thereof, and
-since of the sign of a Lion.
-
-Then is there a fair wharf, or key, called Buttolph's gate, by that
-name so called in the times of William the Conqueror, and of Edward the
-Confessor, as I have shown already in the description of the gates.
-
-Next is the parish church of St. Buttolphs, a proper church, and hath
-had many fair monuments therein, now defaced and gone: notwithstanding I
-find, by testimonies abroad, that these were buried there; to wit, Roger
-Coggar, 1384; Andrew Pikeman, and Joan his wife, 1391; Nicholas James,
-ironmonger, one of the sheriffs, 1423; William Rainwell, fishmonger,
-and John Rainwell, his son, fishmonger, mayor 1426, and deceasing 1445,
-buried there with this epitaph:
-
- "Citizens of London, call to your remembrance,
- The famous John Rainwell, sometime your Maior.
- Of the staple of Callis, so was his chance.
- Here lieth now his corps; his soule bright and faire,
- Is taken to heaven's blisse, thereof is no dispaire.
- His acts beare witnes, by matters of recorde,
- How charitable he was, and of what accorde,
- No man hath beene so beneficiall as hee,
- Unto the Citie in giving liberallie," etc.
-
-He gave a stone house to be a revestrie to that church for ever; more,
-he gave lands and tenements to the use of the commonalty, that the
-mayor and chamberlain should satisfy unto the discharge of all persons
-inhabiting the wards of Belinsgate, Downegate, and Aldgate, as oft as it
-shall happen any fifteen, by parliament of the king to be granted, also
-to the Exchequer, in discharge of the sheriffs, ten pounds yearly, which
-the sheriffs used to pay for the farm of Southwark, so that all men of
-the realm, coming or passing with carriage, should be free quitted and
-discharged of all toll and other payments, aforetime claimed by the
-sheriffs. Further, that the mayor and chamberlain shall pay yearly to
-the sheriffs eight pounds, so that the said sheriffs take no manner of
-toll or money of any person of this realm for their goods, merchandises,
-victuals, and carriages, for their passages at the great gate of the
-bridge of the city, nor at the gate called the Drawbridge, etc. The
-overplus of money coming of the said lands and tenements, divided into
-even portions; the one part to be employed to instore the granaries of
-the city with wheat for the release of the poor commonalty, and the
-other moiety to clear and cleanse the shelves, and other stoppages of
-the river of Thames, etc.
-
-Stephen Forstar, fishmonger, mayor in the year 1454, and Dame Agnes his
-wife, lie buried there. William Bacon, haberdasher, one of the sheriffs
-1480, was there buried, besides many other persons of good worship,
-whose monuments are all destroyed by bad and greedy men of spoil.
-
-This parish of St. Buttolph is no great thing, notwithstanding divers
-strangers are there harboured, as may appear by a presentment, not many
-years since made of strangers, inhabitants in the ward of Billingsgate,
-in these words: "In Billingsgate ward were one and fifty households of
-strangers, whereof thirty of these households inhabited in the parish
-of St. Buttolph, in the chief and principal houses, where they give
-twenty pounds the year for a house lately letten for four marks; the
-nearer they dwell to the water-side the more they give for houses, and
-within thirty years before there was not in the whole ward above three
-Netherlanders; at which time there was within the said parish levied,
-for the help of the poor, seven and twenty pounds by the year; but since
-they came so plentifully thither, there cannot be gathered above eleven
-pounds, for the stranger will not contribute to such charges as other
-citizens do." Thus much for that south side of this ward.
-
-On the north side is Bosse alley, so called of a boss of spring water
-continually running, which standeth by Billingsgate against this alley,
-and was sometime made by the executors of Richard Whittington.
-
-Then is St. Marie hill lane, which runneth up north from Billingsgate
-to the end of St. Margaret Pattens, commonly called Roode lane, and the
-greatest half of that lane is also of Belinsgate ward. In this St. Marie
-hill lane is the fair parish church of St. Marie, called on the hill,
-because of the ascent from Billingsgate.
-
-This church hath been lately built, as may appear by this that
-followeth. Richard Hackney, one of the sheriff's in the year 1322, and
-Alice his wife, were there buried, as Robert Fabian writeth, saying
-thus:--"In the year 1497, in the month of April, as labourers digged for
-the foundation of a wall, within the church of St. Marie hill, near unto
-Belinsgate, they found a coffin of rotten timber, and therein the corpse
-of a woman whole of skin, and of bones undissevered, and the joints of
-her arms pliable, without breaking of the skin, upon whose sepulchre
-this was engraven:--'Here lieth the bodies of Richard Hackney,
-fishmonger, and Alice his wife.'"[174] The which Richard was sheriff
-in the 15th of Edward II. Her body was kept above ground three or four
-days without nuisance, but then it waxed unsavoury, and so was again
-buried. John Mordand, stock-fishmonger, was buried there, 1387; Nicholas
-Exton, fishmonger, mayor 1387; William Cambridge, mayor, 1420; Richard
-Goslin, sheriff, 1422; William Philip, sergeant-at-arms, 1473; Robert
-Reuell, one of the sheriffs 1490, gave liberally toward the new building
-of this church and steeple, and was there buried; William Remington,
-mayor, 1500; Sir Thomas Blanke, mayor, 1582; William Holstocke, esquire,
-comptroller of the king's ships; Sir Cuthbert Buckle, mayor, 1594.
-
-This lane on both sides is furnished with many fair houses for
-merchants; and hath at the north end thereof one other lane, called
-St. Margaret Pattens, because of old time pattens were there usually
-made and sold; but of latter time this is called Roode lane, of a roode
-there placed in the churchyard of St. Margaret, whilst the old church
-was taken down, and again newly built; during which time the oblations
-made to this rood were employed towards building of the church; but in
-the year 1538, about the 23rd of May, in the morning, the said rood was
-found to have been in the night preceding, by people unknown, broken
-all to pieces, together with the tabernacle wherein it had been placed.
-Also, on the 27th of the same month, in the same parish, amongst the
-basket makers, a great and sudden fire happened in the night season,
-which within the space of three hours consumed more than a dozen houses,
-and nine persons were burnt to death there: and thus ceased that work of
-this church, being at that time nigh finished to the steeple.
-
-The lane on both sides beyond the same church to the midway towards
-Fenchurch street, is of Bellinsgate ward.
-
-Then again out of Thames street, by the west end of St. Mary hill
-church, runneth up one other lane, of old time called Roape lane, since
-called Lucas lane, of one Lucas, owner of some part thereof, and now
-corruptly called Love lane; it runneth up by the east end of a parish
-church of St. Andrew Hubbert, or St. Andrew in East Cheap. This church,
-and all the whole lane called Lucas lane, is of this Belinsgate ward.
-
-Then have ye one other lane out of Thames street, called Buttolph lane,
-because it riseth over against the parish church of St. Buttolph, and
-runneth up north by the east end of St. George's church to the west end
-of St. Andrew's church, and to the south end of Philpot lane.
-
-This parish church of St. George in Buttolph lane is small, but the
-monuments for two hundred years past are well preserved from spoil,
-whereof one is of Adam Bamme, mayor 1397; Richard Bamme, esquire,
-his son, of Gillingham in Kent, 1452; John Walton, gentleman, 1401;
-Marpor, a gentleman, 1400; John St. John, merchant of Levant, and Agnes
-his wife, 1400; Hugh Spencer, esquire, 1424; William Combes, stock
-fishmonger, one of the sheriffs 1452, who gave forty pounds towards the
-works of that church; John Stokar, draper, one of the sheriffs, 1477;
-Richard Dryland, esquire, and Katherine his wife, daughter of Morrice
-Brune, knight, of Southuckenton in Essex, steward of household to
-Humfrey Duke of Glocester, 1487; Nicholas Patrich, one of the sheriffs,
-1519. In the churchyard: William Forman, mayor, 1538; James Mumford,
-esquire, surgeon to King Henry VIII., buried 1544; Thomas Gayle,
-haberdasher, 1340; Nicholas Wilford, merchant-tailor, and Elizabeth his
-wife, about the year 1551; Edward Heyward, 1573, etc. Roger Delakere
-founded a chantry there.
-
-Then have ye one other lane called Rother lane, or Red Rose lane,
-of such a sign there, now commonly called Pudding lane, because the
-butchers of Eastcheap have their scalding house for hogs there, and
-their puddings, with other filth of beasts, are voided down that way to
-their dung boats on the Thames.
-
-This lane stretcheth from Thames street to Little East Cheape,
-chiefly inhabited by basket-makers, turners, and butchers, and is all
-of Billinsgate ward. The Garland in Little East Cheape, sometime a
-brewhouse, with a garden on the back side, adjoining to the garden of
-Sir John Philpot, was the chief house in this East Cheape; it is now
-divided into sundry small tenements, etc.
-
-This ward hath an alderman, and his deputy, common councillors,
-constables eleven, scavengers six, for the wardmote inquest fourteen,
-and a beadle; it is taxed to the fifteen in London at thirty-two pounds,
-and in the Exchequer at thirty-one pounds ten shillings.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[174] "Alice Hackney found uncorrupted more than one hundred and seventy
-yeres after she was buried."--_Stow._
-
-
-
-
-BRIDGE WARD WITHIN
-
-
-Bridge ward within, so called of London bridge, which bridge is a
-principal part of that ward, and beginneth at the stulpes on the south
-end by Southwark, runneth along the bridge, and north up Bridge street,
-commonly called (of the fish market) New Fish street, from Fish street
-hill, up Grasse street, to the north corner of Grasse church; all the
-bridge is replenished on both the sides with large, fair, and beautiful
-buildings, inhabitants for the most part rich merchants, and other
-wealthy citizens, mercers, and haberdashers.
-
-In New Fish street be fishmongers and fair taverns on Fish street hill
-and Grasse street, men of divers trades, grocers and haberdashers.
-
-In Grasse street have ye one fair conduit of sweet water castellated
-with crest and vent, made by the appointment of Thomas Hill, mayor,
-1484, who gave by his testament one hundred marks towards the conveyance
-of water to this place. It was begun by his executors in the year 1491,
-and finished of his goods whatsoever it cost.
-
-On the east side of this bridge ward have ye the fair parish church
-of St. Magnus; in the which church have been buried many men of good
-worship, whose monuments are now for the most part utterly defaced.
-I find John Blund, mayor, 1307; Henry Yeuele, freemason to Edward
-III., Richard II., and Henry IV., who deceased 1400; his monument
-yet remaineth; William Brampton; John Michell, mayor, 1436; John
-French, baker, yeoman of the crown to Henry VII., 1510; Robert Clarke,
-fishmonger, 1521; Richard Turke, one of the sheriffs, 1549; William
-Steede, alderman; Richard Morgan, knight, chief justice of the common
-pleas, 1556; Mauritius Griffeth, Bishop of Rochester, 1559; Robert
-Blanch, girdler, 1567; Robert Belgrave, girdler; William Brame, John
-Couper, fishmonger, alderman, who was put by his turn of mayoralty
-1584; Sir William Garrard, haberdasher, mayor 1555; a grave, wise, and
-discreet citizen, equal with the best and inferior to none of our time,
-deceased 1571 in the parish of St. Christopher, but was buried in this
-church of St. Magnus as in the parish where he was born; a fair monument
-is there raised on him; Robert Harding, salter, one of the sheriffs,
-1568; Simon Low, merchant-tailor, esquire, etc.
-
-Then is the parish church of St. Margaret on Fish street hill, a proper
-church, but monuments it hath none: a footway passeth by the south side
-of this church from Fish street hill unto Rother lane.
-
-Up higher on this hill is the parish church of St. Leonard, Milke
-church, so termed of one William Melker, an especial builder thereof,
-but commonly called St. Leonard's in East Cheape, because it standeth at
-East Cheape corner. Monuments there be of the Doggets, namely, Walter
-Dogget, vintner, one of the sheriffs, 1380; John Dogget, vintner, and
-Alice his wife, about 1456; this John Dogget gave lands to that church;
-William Dogget, etc.
-
-This church, and from thence into Little East Cheape to the east end of
-the said church, is of the Bridge ward.
-
-Then higher in Grasse street is the parish church of St. Bennet, called
-Grasse church, of the herb-market there kept: this church also is of
-the Bridge ward, and the farthest north end thereof. Some monuments
-remain there undefaced, as of John Harding, salter, 1576; John Sturgeon,
-haberdasher, chamberlain of London; Philip Cushen, Florentine, a famous
-merchant, 1600.
-
-The customs of Grass church market, in the reign of Edward III., as
-I have read in a book of customs, were these: Every foreign cart
-laden with corn or malt, coming thither to be sold, was to pay one
-halfpenny, every foreign cart bringing cheese two-pence, every cart of
-corn and cheese together (if the cheese be more worth than the corn)
-two-pence, and if the corn be more worth than the cheese, it was to pay
-a halfpenny; of two horses laden with corn or malt the bailiff had one
-farthing; the cart of the franchise of the Temple and of St. Martin le
-Grand paid a farthing; the cart of the hospital of St. John of Jerusalem
-paid nothing for their proper goods, and if the corn were brought by
-merchants to sell again, the load paid a halfpenny, etc.
-
-On the west side of this ward, at the north end of London bridge, is a
-part of Thames street, which is also of this ward, to wit, so much as
-of old time was called Stocke Fishmonger row, of the stock fishmongers
-dwelling there, down west to a watergate, of old time called Ebgate,
-since Ebgate lane, and now the Old Swan, which is a common stair on the
-Thames, but the passage is very narrow by means of encroachments. On the
-south side of Thames street, about the midway betwixt the bridge foot
-and Ebgate lane, standeth the Fishmongers' hall, and divers other fair
-houses for merchants.
-
-These fishmongers were sometimes of two several companies, to wit,
-Stock-fishmongers and Salt-fishmongers, of whose antiquity I read, that
-by the name of fishmongers of London, they were, for forestalling,
-etc., contrary to the laws and constitutions of the city, fined to the
-king at five hundred marks, the 18th of King Edward I. More, that the
-said fishmongers, hearing of the great victory obtained by the same
-king against the Scots, in the 26th of his reign, made a triumphant
-and solemn show through the city, with divers pageants, and more than
-one thousand horsemen, etc., as in the chapter of sports and pastimes.
-These two companies of stock-fishmongers and salt-fishmongers of old
-time had their several halls; to wit, in Thames street twain, in New
-Fish street twain, and in Old Fish street twain: in each place one for
-either company, in all six several halls, the company was so great, as I
-have read, and can prove by records. These fishmongers having been jolly
-citizens, and six mayors of their company in the space of twenty-four
-years; to wit, Walter Turke, 1350; John Lofkin, 1359; John Wroth, 1361;
-John Pechie, 1362; Simon Morden, 1369; and William Walworth, 1374. It
-followed that in the year 1382, through the counsel of John Northampton,
-draper, then being mayor, William Essex, John More, mercer, and Richard
-Northburie, the said fishmongers were greatly troubled, hindered of
-their liberties, and almost destroyed by congregations made against
-them, so that in a parliament at London the controversy depending
-between the mayor and aldermen of London, and the fishmongers there,
-Nicholas Exton, speaker for the fishmongers, prayeth the king to receive
-him and his company into his protection, for fear of corporal hurt:
-whereupon it was commanded, either part to keep the peace, on pain
-of losing all they had; hereupon, a fishmonger, starting up, replied
-that the complaint brought against them by the movers, etc., was but
-matter of malice, for that the fishmongers, in the reign of Edward
-III., being chief officers of the city, had for their misdemeanors then
-done, committed the chief exhibitors of those petitions to prison. In
-this parliament the fishmongers, by the king's charter patents, were
-restored to their liberties; notwithstanding in the year next following,
-to wit, 1383, John Cavendish, fishmonger, craveth the peace against the
-chancellor of England, which was granted, and he put in sureties the
-Earls of Stafford and Salisburie. Cavendish challengeth the chancellor
-for taking of a bribe of ten pounds for favour of his case, which the
-chancellor by oath upon the sacrament avoideth. In further trial it
-was found that the chancellor's man, without his master's privity, had
-taken it; whereupon Cavendish was adjudged to prison, and to pay the
-chancellor one thousand marks for slandering him.
-
-After this, many of the nobles assembled at Reading to suppress the
-seditious stirs of the said John Northampton, or Combarton, late
-mayor, that had attempted great and heinous enterprises, of the which
-he was convicted; and when he stood mute, nor would utter one word, it
-was decreed that he should be committed to perpetual prison, his goods
-confiscate to the king's use, and that he should not come within one
-hundred miles of London during his life. He was therefore sent to the
-castle of Tintegall in the confines of Cornewall, and in the mean space
-the king's servants spoiled his goods. John More, Richard Northbery,
-and other, were likewise there convicted, and condemned to perpetual
-prison, and their goods confiscate, for certain congregations by them
-made against the fishmongers in the city of London, as is aforesaid;
-but they obtained and had the king's pardon, in the 14th of his reign,
-as appeareth of record; and thus were all these troubles quieted. Those
-stock-fishmongers and salt-fishmongers were united in the year 1536, the
-28th of Henry VIII.; their hall to be but one, in the house given unto
-them by Sir John Cornwall, Lord Fanhope, and of Ampthull, in the parish
-of St. Michael in Crooked lane, in the reign of Henry VI. Thus much
-have I thought good to note of the fishmongers, men ignorant of their
-antiquities, not able to show a reason why or when they were joined in
-amity with the goldsmiths, do give part of their arms, etc. Neither,
-to say aught of Sir William Walworth,[175] the glory of their company,
-more than that he slew Jack Straw, which is a mere fable, for the said
-Straw was after overthrowing of the rebels, taken, and by judgment of
-the mayor beheaded; whose confession at the gallows is extant in my
-_Annals_, where also is set down the most valiant and praiseworthy act
-of William Walworth against the principal rebel Waltar Tighlar. As in
-reproof of Walworth's monument in St. Michael's church, I have declared,
-and wished to be reformed there, as in other places.
-
-On that south side of Thames street have ye Drinkwater wharf and Fish
-wharf, in the parish of St. Magnus. On the north side of Thames street
-is St. Martin's lane; a part of which lane is also of this ward, to wit,
-on the one side to a well of water, and on the other side as far up
-as against the said well. Then is St. Michael's lane, part whereof is
-also of this ward up to a well there, etc. Then at the upper end of New
-Fish street is a lane turning towards St. Michael's lane, and is called
-Crooked lane, of the crooked windings thereof.
-
-Above this lane's end, upon Fish street hill, is one great house, for
-the most part built of stone, which pertained sometime to Edward the
-Black Prince, son to Edward III., who was in his lifetime lodged there.
-It is now altered to a common hostelry, having the Black Bell for a sign.
-
-Above this house, at the top of Fish street hill, is a turning into
-Great Eastcheape, and so to the corner of Lombard street, over against
-the north-west corner of Grasse church; and these be the whole bounds of
-this Bridge ward within: the which hath an alderman and his deputy, for
-the common council sixteen, constables fifteen, scavengers six, for the
-wardmote inquest sixteen, and a beadle. It is taxed to the fifteen in
-London at forty-seven pounds.[176]
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[175] "W. Walworth slandered by a fable of Jack Straw."--_Stow._
-
-
-
-
-CANDLEWICK STREET WARD
-
-
-Candlewick street, or Candlewright street ward, beginneth at the
-east end of Great Eastcheape; it passeth west through Eastcheape to
-Candlewright street, and through the same, down to the north end of
-Suffolk lane on the south side, and down that lane by the west end of
-St. Laurence churchyard, which is the farthest west part of that ward.
-The street of Great Eastcheape is so called of the market there kept in
-the east part of the city, as Westcheape is a market so called of being
-in the west.
-
-This Eastcheape is now a flesh market of butchers there dwelling on
-both sides of the street: it had sometime also cooks mixed amongst the
-butchers, and such other as sold victuals ready dressed of all sorts.
-For of old time, when friends did meet, and were disposed to be merry,
-they went not to dine and sup in taverns, but to the cooks, where they
-called for meat what they liked, which they always found ready dressed
-at a reasonable rate, as I have before showed.
-
-In the year 1410, the 11th of Henry IV., upon the even of St. John
-Baptist, the king's sons,[177] Thomas and John, being in Eastcheape at
-supper (or rather at breakfast, for it was after the watch was broken
-up, betwixt two and three of the clock after midnight), a great debate
-happened between their men and other of the court, which lasted one
-hour, till the mayor and sheriffs with other citizens, appeased the
-same; for the which afterwards the said mayor, aldermen, and sheriffs
-were called to answer before the king, his sons, and divers lords,
-being highly moved against the city. At which time, William Gascoyne,
-chief justice, required the mayor and aldermen, for the citizens, to put
-them in the king's grace; whereunto they answered, that they had not
-offended, but (according to the law) had done their best in stinting
-debate and maintaining of the peace; upon which answer the king remitted
-all his ire, and dismissed them. And to prove this Eastcheape to be a
-place replenished with cooks, it may appear by a song called London
-Lickepennie, made by Lidgate, a monk of Berrie, in the reign of Henry
-V., in the person of a countryman coming to London, and travelling
-through the same. In Westcheape (saith the song) he was called on to
-buy fine lawn, Paris thread, cotton umble, and other linen clothes,
-and such like (he speaketh of no silks),[178] in Cornhill, to buy old
-apparel[179] and household stuff, where he was forced to buy his own
-hood, which he had lost in Westminster hall: in Candlewright street
-drapers proffered him cheap cloth, in Eastcheape the cooks cried hot
-ribs of beef roasted, pies well baked, and other victuals: there was
-clattering of pewter-pots, harp, pipe, and sawtry, yea by cock, nay by
-cock, for greater oaths were spared: some sang of Jenken, and Julian,
-etc.; all which melody liked well the passenger, but he wanted money to
-abide by it, and therefore gat him into Gravesend barge, and home into
-Kent.
-
-Candlewright (so called in old records of the Guildhall, of St. Marie
-Overies, and other), or Candlewick street, took that name (as may be
-supposed) either of chandlers, or makers of candles, both of wax and
-tallow; for candlewright is a maker of candles, or of wick, which is
-the cotton or yarn thereof; or otherwise wike,[180] which is the place
-where they used to work them, as Scalding wike by the Stocks market was
-called of the poulterers scalding and dressing their poultry there;
-and in divers countries, dairy houses, or cottages, wherein they make
-butter and cheese, are usually called wicks. There dwelt also of old
-time divers weavers of woollen clothes, brought in by Edward III. For
-I read, that in the 44th of his reign, the weavers, brought out of
-Flanders, were appointed their meetings to be in the churchyard of St.
-Laurence Poultney, and the weavers of Brabant in the churchyard of St.
-Mary Sommerset. There were then in this city weavers of divers sorts; to
-wit, of drapery, or tapery, and napery. These weavers of Candlewright
-street being in short time worn out, their place is now possessed by
-rich drapers, sellers of woollen cloth, etc.
-
-On the north side of this ward, at the west end of Eastcheape, have ye
-St. Clement's lane; a part whereof on both sides is of Candlewick street
-ward, to wit, somewhat north beyond the parish church of St. Clement in
-Eastcheape. This is a small church, void of monuments, other than of
-Francis Barnam, alderman, who deceased 1575, and of Benedicke Barnam,
-his son, alderman also, 1598. William Chartney and William Overie
-founded a chantry there.
-
-Next is St. Nicholas lane, for the most part on both sides of this ward,
-almost to St. Nicholas church. Then is Abchurch lane, which is on both
-the sides almost wholly of this ward, the parish church there (called
-of St. Marie Abchurch, Apechurch, or Upchurch, as I have read it),
-standeth somewhat near unto the south end thereof, on a rising ground:
-it is a fair church. Simon de Winchcomb founded a chantry there the
-19th of Richard II.; John Littleton founded another, and Thomas Hondon
-another; and hath the monuments of J. Long, esquire, of Bedfordshire,
-1442; William Wikenson, alderman, 1519; William Jawdrell, tailor, 1440;
-Sir James Hawes, mayor 1574; Sir John Branch, mayor 1580; John Miners;
-William Kettle, etc.
-
-On the south side of this ward, beginning again at the east, is St.
-Michael's lane, which lane is almost wholly of this ward, on both sides
-down towards Thames street, to a well or pump there. On the east side of
-this lane is Crooked lane aforesaid, by St. Michael's church, towards
-New Fish street. One the most ancient house in this lane is called the
-Leaden porch, and belonged sometime to Sir John Merston. knight, the 1st
-of Edward IV. It is now called the Swan in Crooked lane, possessed of
-strangers, and selling of Rhenish wine. The parish church of this St.
-Michael's was sometime but a small and homely thing, standing upon part
-of that ground wherein now standeth the parsonage-house; and the ground
-there about was a filthy plot, by reason of the butchers in Eastcheape,
-who made the same their laystall. William de Burgo gave two messuages to
-that church in Candlewick street, 1317. John Lofkin, stock-fishmonger,
-four times mayor, built in the same ground this fair church of St.
-Michael, and was buried there in the choir, under a fair tomb, with
-the images of him and his wife, in alabaster. The said church hath
-been since increased with a new choir, and side chapels by Sir William
-Walworth, stock-fishmonger, mayor, sometime servant to the said John
-Lofkin: also the tomb of Lofkin was removed, and a flat stone of grey
-marble garnished with plates of copper laid on him, as it yet remaineth
-in the body of the church. This William Walworth is reported to have
-slain Jack Straw,[181] but Jack Straw being afterward taken, was first
-adjudged by the said mayor, and then executed by the loss of his head in
-Smithfield.
-
-True it is that this William Walworth, being a man wise, learned, and
-of an incomparable manhood,[182] arrested Wat Tyler, a presumptuous
-rebel, upon whom no man durst lay hand, whereby he delivered the king
-and kingdom from most wicked tyranny of traitors. The mayor arrested him
-on the head with a sound blow, whereupon Wat Tyler, furiously struck
-the mayor with his dagger, but hurt him not, by reason he was well
-armed. The mayor, having received his stroke, drew his basiliard, and
-grievously wounded Wat in the neck, and withal gave him a great blow on
-the head; in the which conflict, an esquire of the king's house, called
-John Cavendish, drew his sword, and wounded Wat twice or thrice even to
-the death; and Wat, spurring his horse, cried to the commons to revenge
-him: the horse bare him about eighty feet from the place, and there
-he fell down half dead; and by and by they which attended on the king
-environed him about, so as he was not seen of his company: many of them
-thrust him in divers places of his body, and drew him into the hospital
-of St. Bartholomew, from whence again the mayor caused him to be drawn
-into Smithfield, and there to be beheaded. In reward of this service
-(the people being dispersed) the king commanded the mayor to put a
-bascinet on his head; and the mayor requesting why he should do so, the
-king answered, he being much bound unto him, would make him knight: the
-mayor answered, that he was neither worthy nor able to take such estate
-upon him, for he was but a merchant, and had to live by his merchandise
-only; notwithstanding, the king bade him to put on his bascinet, and
-then with a sword in both his hands he strongly stroke him on the neck,
-as the manner was then; and the same day he made three other citizens
-knights for his sake in the same place; to wit, John Philpot, Nicholas
-Brember, and Robert Launde, alderman. The king gave to the mayor one
-hundred pounds land by year, and to each of the other forty pounds land
-yearly, to them and their heirs for ever.
-
-After this, in the same year, the said Sir William Walworth, founded in
-the said parish church of St. Michael a college of a master and nine
-priests, or chaplains, and deceased 1385, was there buried in the north
-chapel by the choir; but his monument being amongst other by bad people
-defaced in the reign of Edward VI., and again since renewed by the
-fishmongers, for lack of knowledge of what before had been written in
-his epitaph, they followed a fabulous book, and wrote Jack Straw instead
-of Wat Tilar, a great error meet to be reformed there and elsewhere; and
-therefore have I the more at large discoursed of this matter.
-
-It hath also been, and is now grown to a common opinion, that in reward
-of this service done by the said William Walworth against the rebel,
-King Richard added to the arms of this city (which was argent, a plain
-cross gules) a sword or dagger (for so they term it), whereof I have
-read no such record, but to the contrary. I find that in the 4th year of
-Richard II.,[183] in a full assembly made in the upper chamber of the
-Guildhall, summoned by this William Walworth, then mayor, as well of
-aldermen as of the common council, in every ward, for certain affairs
-concerning the king, it was there by common consent agreed and ordained,
-that the old seal of the office of the mayoralty of the city being very
-small, old, unapt, and uncomely for the honour of the city, should be
-broken, and one other new should be had, which the said mayor commanded
-to be made artificially, and honourable for the exercise of the said
-office thereafter, in place of the other; in which new seal, besides
-the images of Peter and Paul, which of old were rudely engraven, there
-should be under the feet of the said images a shield of the arms of the
-said city, perfectly graved,[184] with two lions supporting the same,
-with two sergeants of arms; another part, one, and two tabernacles, in
-which above should stand two angels; between whom, above the said images
-of Peter and Paul, shall be set the glorious Virgin. This being done,
-the old seal of the office was delivered to Richard Odiham, chamberlain,
-who brake it, and in place thereof was delivered the new seal to the
-said mayor, to use in his office of mayoralty, as occasion should
-require. This new seal seemeth to be made before William Walworth was
-knighted, for he is not here entitled Sir, as afterwards he was; and
-certain it is that the same new seal then made is now in use, and none
-other in that office of the mayoralty; which may suffice to answer the
-former fable, without showing of any evidence sealed with the old seal,
-which was the cross and sword of St. Paul, and not the dagger of William
-Walworth.
-
-Now of other monuments in that church. Simon Mordon, mayor 1368, was
-buried there; John Olney, mayor 1446; Robert March, stock-fishmonger,
-gave two pieces of ground to be a churchyard; John Radwell,
-stock-fishmonger, buried 1415; George Gowre, esquire, son to
-Edward Gowre, stock-fishmonger, esquire, 1470; Alexander Purpoynt,
-stock-fishmonger, 1373; Andrew Burel, gentleman of Gray's-inn, 1487;
-John Shrow, stock-fishmonger, 1487, with this epitaph:
-
- "Farewell, my friends, the tide abideth no man,
- I am departed hence, and so shall ye.
- But in this passage the best song that I can,
- Is _requiem æternam_, now Jesus grant it me,
- When I have ended all mine adversitie,
- Grant me in Paradise to have a mansion,
- That sheddest thy blood for my redemption."
-
-John Finkell, one of the sheriffs 1487, was knighted, and gave forty
-pounds to this church, the one half for his monument. John Pattesley,
-mayor 1441; Thomas Ewen, grocer, bare half the charges in building of
-the steeple, and was buried 1501; William Combes, gentleman, of Stoke,
-by Guilford in Surrey, 1502; Sir John Brudge, mayor 1530, gave fifty
-pounds for a house called the College in Crooked lane; he lieth buried
-in St. Nicholas Hacon. Waltar Faireford; Robert Barre; Alexander Heyban;
-John Motte; John Gramstone; John Brampton; John Wood, stock-fishmonger,
-1531; Sir Henry Amcots, mayor 1548, etc. Hard by this St. Michael's
-church, on the south side thereof, in the year 1560, on the fifth
-of July, through the shooting of a gun, which brake in the house of
-one Adrian Arten, a Dutchman, and set fire on a firkin and barrel of
-gunpowder, four houses were blown up, and divers other sore shattered;
-eleven men and women were slain, and sixteen so hurt and bruised, that
-they hardly escaped with life.
-
-West from this St. Michael's lane is St. Martin Orgar lane, by
-Candlewick street, which lane is on both sides down to a well,
-replenished with fair and large houses for merchants, and it is of
-this ward; one of which houses was sometime called Beachamp's inn, as
-pertaining unto them of that family. Thomas Arundel, archbishop of
-Canterbury, commonly for his time was lodged there.
-
-The parish church of St. Martin Orgar is a small thing. William Crowmer,
-mayor, built a proper chapel on the south side thereof, and was buried
-there 1533; John Mathew, mayor 1490; Sir William Huet, mayor 1559, with
-his lady and daughter, wife to Sir Edward Osburne; Ralph Tabinham,
-alderman; Alice, wife to Thomas Winslow; Thorudon; Benedicke Reding;
-Thomas Harding; James Smith; Richard Gainford, esquire; John Bold, etc.
-
-Then is there one other lane called St. Laurence, of the parish church
-there. This lane, down to the south side of the churchyard, is of
-Candlewick street ward. The parish church of St. Laurence was increased
-with a chapel of Jesus by Thomas Cole, for a master and chaplain; the
-which chapel and parish church was made a college of Jesus and of Corpus
-Christi, for a master and seven chaplains, by John Poultney, mayor, and
-was confirmed by Edward III., the 20th of his reign: of him was this
-church called St. Laurence Poultney, in Candlewick street; which college
-was valued at £79 17_s._ 11_d._, and was surrendered in the reign of
-Edward VI. Robert Ratcliffe, Earl of Essex, and Henry Ratcliffe, Earl
-of Sussex, was buried there; Alderman Beswicke was buried there; John
-Oliffe, alderman, Robert Browne, and others. Thus much for this ward,
-and the antiquities thereof. It hath now an alderman, his deputy, common
-councillors eight, constables eight, scavengers six, wardmote inquest
-men twelve, and a beadle. It is taxed to the fifteen at sixteen pounds.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[176] "In London at fifty pounds, and in the Exchequer at forty-nine
-pounds ten shillings."--_1st edition_, p. 169.
-
-[177] "The king's sons beaten to Eastcheape; there was no tavern then in
-Eastcheape."--_Stow._
-
-[178] "In Westcheape linen cloth sold, but no silks spoken of."--_Stow._
-
-[179] "Fripparia, upholders upon Cornhill, sellers of old apparel and
-household stuff in Eastcheape."--_Stow._
-
-The following is the stanza alluded to by Stow (see Lydgate's _Minor
-Poems_).
-
- "Then into Corn hyl anon I rode,
- Where was much stolen gere amonge;
- I saw where honge myne owne hoode,
- That I had lost amonge the thronge:
- To by my own hoode I thought it wronge;
- I knew it well as I did my crede,
- But for lack of money I could not spede."
-
-
-[180] "Wike is a working place."--_Stow._
-
-[181] "In Smithfield, and there to have been knighted by the king, but
-that is not true."--_1st edition_, p. 172.
-
-[182] "Fable of William Walworth and Jack Straw reproved. Praise of W.
-Walworth for his manhood in arresting of Wat Tyler. The mayor was well
-armed, and had on his head a basonet."--_Stow._
-
-[183] Dunthorne.
-
-[184] "The armies of this citty were not altered, but remayne as afore;
-to witte, argent, a playne crosse gules, a sword of S. Paul in the first
-quarter, and no dagger of W. Walworth, as is fabuled."--_Stow._
-
-
-
-
-WALBROOK WARD
-
-
-Walbrook ward beginneth at the west end of Candlewick street ward. It
-runneth down Candlewick street west towards Budge row. It hath on the
-north side thereof St. Swithen's lane, so called of St. Swithen, a
-parish church by London stone. This lane is replenished on both the
-sides with fair built houses, and is wholly of Walbrook ward.
-
-The said parish church of St. Swithen standeth at the south-west corner
-of this lane. License was procured to new build and increase the said
-church and steeple in the year 1420. Sir John Hend, draper, mayor,
-was an especial benefactor thereunto, as appeareth by his arms in the
-glass windows, even in the tops of them, which is in a field silver, a
-chief azure, a lion passant silver, a cheveron azure, three escalops
-silver: he lieth buried in the body of this church, with a fair stone
-laid on him, but the plates and inscriptions are defaced. Roger Depham,
-alderman, Thomas Aylesbourgh, William Neve, and Matilda Caxton, founded
-chantries, and were buried there; John Butler, draper, one of the
-sheriffs, 1420; Ralph Jecoline, mayor, a benefactor, buried in a fair
-tomb; William White, draper, one of the sheriffs, 1482, and other.
-
-On the north side of this church and churchyard is one fair and large
-built house, sometime pertaining to the prior of Tortington in Sussex,
-since to the earls of Oxford, and now to Sir John Hart, alderman; which
-house hath a fair garden belonging thereunto, lying on the west side
-thereof. On the back side of two other fair houses in Walbrook, in the
-reign of Henry VII., Sir Richard Empson, knight, chancellor of the duchy
-of Lancaster, dwelt in the one of them, and Edmond Dudley, esquire, in
-the other; either of them had a door of intercourse into this garden,
-wherein they met and consulted of matters at their pleasures. In this
-Oxford place Sir Ambrose Nicholas kept his mayoralty, and since him the
-said Sir John Hart.
-
-On the south side of this high street, near unto the channel, is pitched
-upright a great stone called London stone, fixed in the ground very
-deep, fastened with bars of iron, and otherwise so strongly set, that if
-carts do run against it through negligence, the wheels be broken, and
-the stone itself unshaken.
-
-The cause why this stone was set there, the time when, or other memory
-hereof, is none, but that the same hath long continued there is
-manifest, namely, since (or rather before) the Conquest; for in the end
-of a fair written Gospel book given to Christ's church in Canterburie,
-by Ethelstane, King of the West Saxons, I find noted of lands[185] or
-rents in London belonging to the said church, whereof one parcel is
-described to lie near unto London stone. Of later time we read, that in
-the year of Christ 1135, the 1st of King Stephen, a fire, which began
-in the house of one Ailward, near unto London stone, consumed all east
-to Aldgate, in the which fire the priory of the Holy Trinitie was burnt,
-and west to St. Erkenwald's shrine in Paule's church. And these be the
-eldest notes that I read thereof.
-
-Some have said this stone to be set as a mark in the middle of the city
-within the walls; but in truth it standeth far nearer unto the river
-of Thames than to the wall of the city; some others have said the same
-to be set for the tendering and making of payment by debtors to their
-creditors at their appointed days and times, till of later time payments
-were more usually made at the font in Pont's church, and now most
-commonly at the Royal Exchange; some again have imagined the same to be
-set up by one John or Thomas Londonstone dwelling there against; but
-more likely it is, that such men have taken name of the stone than the
-stone of them, as did John at Noke, Thomas at Stile, William at Wall, or
-at Well, etc.
-
-Down west from this parish church, and from London stone, have ye
-Walbrooke corner; from whence runneth up a street, north to the Stocks,
-called Walbrook, because it standeth on the east side of the same brook,
-by the bank thereof, and the whole ward taketh the name of that street.
-On the east side of this street, and at the north corner thereof, is
-the Stocks market, which had this beginning. About the year of Christ
-1282, Henry Wales, mayor, caused divers houses in this city to be built
-towards the maintenance of London bridge, namely, one void place near
-unto the parish church called Woole church, on the north side thereof,
-where sometime (the way being very large and broad) had stood a pair of
-stocks for punishment of offenders; this building took name of these
-stocks, and was appointed by him to be a market place for fish and flesh
-in the midst of the city. Other houses he built in other places, as by
-the patent of Edward I. it doth appear, dated the 10th of his reign.
-After this, in the year 1322, the 17th of Edward II., a decree was
-made by Hamond Chickwell, mayor, that none should sell fish or flesh
-out of the markets appointed, to wit, Bridge street, East Cheape, Old
-Fish street, St. Nicholas' shambles, and the said Stocks, upon pain to
-forfeit such fish or flesh as were sold, for the first time, and the
-second time to lose their freedom; which act was made by commandment
-of the king under his letters patent, dated at the Tower the 17th of
-his reign, and then was this stocks let to farm for £46 13_s._ 4_d._ by
-year. This Stocks market was again begun to be built in the year 1410,
-in the 11th of Henry IV., and was finished in the year next following.
-In the year 1507, the same was rented £56 19_s._ 10_d._ And in the year
-1543, John Cotes being mayor, there were in this Stocks market for
-fishmongers twenty-five boards or stalls, rented yearly to £34 13_s._
-4_d._, there were for butchers eighteen boards or stalls, rented at £41
-16_s._ 4_d._, and there were also chambers above, sixteen, rented at £5
-13_s._ 4_d._, in all £82 3_s._
-
-Next unto this Stocks is the parish church of St. Mary Wool church, so
-called of a beam placed in the churchyard, which was thereof called
-Wool church haw, of the tronage, or weighing of wool there used; and to
-verify this, I find amongst the customs of London, written in French in
-the reign of Edward II., a chapter intituled _Les Customes de Wolchurch
-Haw_, wherein is set down what was there to be paid for every parcel of
-wool weighed. This tronage or weighing of wool, till the 6th of Richard
-II., was there continued; John Churchman then built the Customhouse
-upon Wool key, to serve for the said tronage, as is before showed in
-Tower street ward. This church is reasonable fair and large, and was
-lately new built by license granted in the 20th of Henry VI., with
-condition to be built fifteen foot from the Stocks market, for sparing
-of light to the same Stocks. The parson of this church is to have four
-marks the year for tithe of the said Stocks, paid him by the masters
-of the Bridge house, by special decree made the 2nd of Henry VII. John
-Winyar, grocer, mayor 1504, was a great helper to the building of this
-church, and was there buried 1505; he gave unto it by his testament two
-large basons of silver, and twenty pounds in money. Also Richard Shore,
-draper, one of the sheriffs 1505, was a great benefactor in his life,
-and by his testament gave twenty pounds to make a porch at the west
-end thereof, and was there buried; Richard Hatfield of Steplemorden in
-Cambridgeshire, lieth entombed there, 1467; Edward Deoly, esquire, 1467.
-John Handford, grocer, made the font of that church, very curiously
-wrought, painted, and gilded, and was there buried; John Archer,
-fishmonger, 1487; Anne Cawode founded a chantry there, etc.
-
-From the Stocks' market and this parish church east up into Lombard
-street, some four or five houses on a side, and also on the south side
-of Wool church, have ye Bearbinder lane, a part whereof is of this
-Walbrooke ward; then lower down in the street called Walbrooke, is one
-other fair church of St. Stephen, lately built on the east side thereof,
-for the old church stood on the west side, in place where now standeth
-the parsonage house, and therefore so much nearer the brook, even on
-the bank. Robert Chichley, mayor in the year 1428, the 6th of Henry
-VI., gave to this parish of St. Stephen one plot of ground, containing
-two hundred and eight feet and a half in length, and sixty-six feet in
-breadth, thereupon to build their new church, and for their churchyard;
-and in the 7th of Henry VI. the said Robert, one of the founders, laid
-the first stone for himself, the second for William Stoddon, mayor, with
-whose goods the ground that the church standeth on, and the housing,
-with the ground of the churchyard, was bought by the said Chichley for
-two hundred marks from the Grocers, which had been letten before for
-six-and-twenty marks the year; Robert Whittingham, draper, laid the
-third stone, Henry Barton then mayor, etc. The said Chichley gave more,
-one hundred pounds to the said work, and bare the charges of all the
-timber work on the procession way, and laid the lead upon it of his
-own cost; he also gave all the timber for the roofing of the two side
-aisles, and paid for the carriage thereof. This church was finished in
-the year 1439; the breadth thereof is sixty-seven feet, and length one
-hundred and twenty-five feet, the churchyard ninety feet in length, and
-thirty-seven in breadth and more. Robert Whittingham (made Knight of the
-Bath), in the year 1432, purchased the patronage of this church from
-John Duke of Bedford, uncle to Henry VI., and Edward IV., in the 2nd of
-his reign, gave it to Richard Lee, then mayor. There be monuments in
-this church of Thomas Southwell, first parson of this new church, who
-lieth in the choir; John Dunstable, master of astronomy and music, in
-the year 1453; Sir Richard Lee, mayor, who gave the said parsonage to
-the Grocers; Rowland Hill, mayor 1549; Sir Thomas Pope, first treasurer
-of the augmentations, with his wife Dame Margaret; Sir John Cootes,
-mayor 1542; Sir John Yorke, knight, merchant-tailor, 1549; Edward
-Jackman, sheriff 1564; Richard Achley, grocer; Dr. Owyn, physician to
-King Henry VIII.; John Kirby, grocer, 1578; and others.
-
-Lower down from this parish church be divers fair houses, namely, one
-wherein of late Sir Richard Baker, a knight of Kent, was lodged, and
-wherein dwelt Master Thomas Gore, a merchant famous for hospitality.
-On the west side of this Walbrooke street, over against the Stocks'
-market, is a part of the high street called the Poultrie, on the south
-side west till over against St. Mildrede's church, and the Skalding wike
-is of this ward. Then down again Walbrooke street some small distance,
-is Buckles bury, a street so called of Buckle, that sometime was owner
-thereof, part of which street on both sides, three or four houses,
-to the course of the brook, is of this ward, and so down Walbrooke
-street to the south corner; from thence west down Budge row some small
-distance, to an alley, and through that alley south by the west end of
-St. John's church upon Walbrooke, by the south side and east end of the
-same again to Walbrooke corner.
-
-This parish church is called St. John upon Walbrooke, because the west
-end thereof is on the very bank of Walbrooke, by Horseshew bridge, in
-Horseshew bridge street. This church was also lately new built; for
-about the year 1412, license was granted by the mayor and commonalty to
-the parson and parish, for enlarging thereof, with a piece of ground on
-the north part of the choir, twenty-one feet in length, seventeen feet
-and three inches in breadth, and on the south side of the choir one
-foot of the common soil. There be no monuments in this church of any
-account, only I have learned, William Cobarton, skinner, who gave lands
-to that church, was there buried 1410, and John Stone, tailor, one of
-the sheriffs 1464, was likewise buried there.
-
-On the south side of Walbrooke ward, from Candlewicke street, in the
-mid way betwixt London stone and Walbrooke corner, is a little lane
-with a turnpike in the midst thereof, and in the same a proper parish
-church, called St. Mary Bothaw, or Boatehaw by the Erber; this church
-being near unto the Downegate on the river of Thames, hath the addition
-of Boathaw or Boat haw, of near adjoining to a haw or yard, wherein of
-old time boats were made, and landed from Downegate to be mended, as may
-be supposed, for other reason I find none why it should be so called.
-Within this church, and the small cloister adjoining, divers noblemen
-and persons of worship have been buried, as appeareth by arms in the
-windows, the defaced tombs, and print of plates torn up and carried
-away: there remain only of John West, esquire, buried in the year 1408;
-Thomas Huytley, esquire, 1539, but his monument is defaced since;
-Lancelot Bathurst, etc.
-
-The Erbar is an ancient place so called, but not of Walbrooke ward, and
-therefore out of that lane to Walbrooke corner, and then down till over
-against the south corner of St. John's church upon Walbrooke. And this
-is all that I can say of Walbrooke ward. It hath an alderman, and his
-deputy, common councillors eleven, constables nine, scavengers six, for
-the wardmote inquest thirteen, and a beadle. It is taxed to the fifteen
-in London to £33 5_s._[186]
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[185] Liber Trinitate.
-
-
-
-
-DOWNEGATE WARD
-
-
-Downegate ward beginneth at the south end of Walbrooke ward over against
-the east corner of St. John's church upon Walbrooke, and descendeth on
-both the sides to Downegate on the Thames, and is so called of that down
-going or descending thereunto; and of this Downgate the ward taketh
-name. This ward turneth into Thames street westward, some ten houses on
-a side to the course of Walbrooke, but east in Thames street on both
-sides to Ebgate lane, or Old Swan, the land side whereof hath many lanes
-turning up, as shall be shown when I come to them.
-
-But first to begin with the high street called Dowgate; at the upper
-end thereof is a fair conduit of Thames water, castellated, and made in
-the year 1568, at charges of the citizens, and is called the conduit
-upon Downegate. The descent of this street is such, that in the year
-1574, on the 4th of September, in the afternoon, there fell a storm of
-rain, where through the channels suddenly arose, and ran with such a
-swift course towards the common shores, that a lad of eighteen years
-old, minding to have leapt over the channel near unto the said conduit,
-was taken with the stream, and carried from thence towards the Thames
-with such a violence, that no man with staves or otherwise could stay
-him, till he came against a cart wheel that stood in the said watergate,
-before which time he was drowned, and stark dead.
-
-On the west side of this street is the Tallow-chandlers' hall, a proper
-house, which company was incorporated in the 2nd year of Edward IV.
-
-Somewhat lower standeth the Skinners' hall, a fair house, which was
-sometime called Copped hall, by Downegate, in the parish of St. John
-upon Walbrooke. In the 19th year of Edward II., Ralph Cobham possessed
-it with five shops, etc.
-
-This company of Skinners in London were incorporate by Edward III. in
-the 1st of his reign; they had two brotherhoods of Corpus Christi,
-viz. one at St. Mary Spittle, the other at St. Mary Bethlem without
-Bishopsgate. Richard II., in the 18th of his reign, granted them to make
-their two brotherhoods one, by the name of the fraternity of Corpus
-Christi. Of Skinners, divers royal persons were named to be founders
-and brethren of this fraternity, to wit, kings six, dukes nine, earls
-two, lords one. Kings, Edward III., Richard II., Henry IV., Henry V.,
-Henry VI., and Edward IV. This fraternity had also once every year, on
-Corpus Christi day afternoon, a procession passed through the principal
-streets of the city, wherein was borne more than one hundred torches
-of wax (costly garnished) burning light, and above two hundred clerks
-and priests, in surplices and copes, singing. After the which were
-the sheriffs' servants, the clerks of the compters, chaplains for the
-sheriffs, the mayor's sergeants, the counsel of the city, the mayor and
-aldermen in scarlet, and then the Skinners in their best liveries. Thus
-much to stop the tongues of unthankful men, such as used to ask, Why
-have ye not noted this, or that? and give no thanks for what is done.
-
-Then lower down was a challenge of priests, called Jesus' Commons, a
-house well furnished with brass, pewter, napery, plate, etc., besides a
-fair library well stored with books, all which of old time was given to
-a number of priests that should keep commons there, and as one left his
-place, by death or otherwise, another should be admitted into his room,
-but this order within this thirty years being discontinued, the said
-house was dissolved and turned to tenements.
-
-Down lower have ye Elbow lane; and at the corner thereof was one
-great stone house, called Olde hall; it is now taken down, and divers
-fair houses of timber placed there. This was sometime pertaining to
-William de Pont le Arch, and by him given to the priory of St. Mary
-Overy in Southwark, in the reign of Henry I. In this Elbow lane is
-the Innholders' hall, and other fair houses; this lane runneth west,
-and suddenly turneth south into Thames street, and therefore of that
-bending is called Elbow lane. On the east side of this Downegate street
-is the great old house before spoken of, called the Erber, near to
-the church of St. Mary Bothaw; Geffrey Scroope held it by the gift of
-Edward III., in the 14th of his reign; it belonged since to John Nevell,
-Lord of Rabie, then to Richard Nevell, Earl of Warwick; Nevell, Earl
-of Salisburie, was lodged there 1457; then it came to George Duke of
-Clarence, and his heirs male, by the gift of Edward IV., in the 14th of
-his reign. It was lately new built by Sir Thomas Pullison, mayor, and
-was afterward inhabited by Sir Francis Drake, that famous mariner. Next
-to this great house is a lane turning to Bush lane (of old time called
-Carter lane, of carts and carmen having stables there), and now called
-Chequer lane, or Chequer alley, of an inn called the Chequer.
-
-In Thames street, on the Thames side, west from Downegate, is Greenewich
-lane, of old time so called, and now Frier lane, of such a sign there
-set up. In this lane is the Joiners' hall, and other fair houses.
-
-Then is Grantham's lane, so called of John Grantham, sometime mayor, and
-owner thereof, whose house was very large and strong, built of stone, as
-appeareth by gates arched, yet remaining. Ralph Dodmer, first a brewer,
-then a mercer, mayor 1529, dwelt there, and kept his mayoralty in that
-house; it is now a brewhouse as it was afore.
-
-Then is Dowgate, whereof is spoken in another place. East from this
-Dowgate is Cosin lane, named of William Cosin that dwelt there in the
-4th of Richard II., as divers his predecessors, father, grandfather,
-etc. had done before him. William Cosin was one of the sheriffs in the
-year 1306. That house standeth at the south end of the lane, having an
-old and artificial conveyance of Thames water into it, and is now a
-dyehouse called Lambard's messuage. Adjoining to that house there was
-lately erected an engine to convey Thames water unto Downegate conduit
-aforesaid.
-
-Next to this lane, on the east, is the Steelyard, as they term it, a
-place for merchants of Almaine, that used to bring hither as well wheat,
-rye, and other grain, as cables, ropes, masts, pitch, tar, flax, hemp,
-linen cloth, wainscots, wax, steel, and other profitable merchandises.
-Unto these merchants, in the year 1259, Henry III., at the request of
-his brother Richard, Earl of Cornewell, king of Almaine, granted that
-all and singular the merchants, having a house in the city of London,
-commonly called _Guilda Aula Theutonicorum_, should be maintained
-and upholden through the whole realm, by all such freedoms, and free
-usages, or liberties, as by the king and his noble progenitors' time
-they had and enjoyed, etc. Edward I. renewed and confirmed that charter
-of liberties granted by his father. And in the 10th year of the same
-Edward, Henry Wales being mayor, a great controversy did arise between
-the said mayor, and the merchants of the Haunce of Almaine, about the
-reparations of Bishopsgate, then likely to fall, for that the said
-merchants enjoyed divers privileges in respect of maintaining the said
-gate, which they now denied to repair; for the appeasing of which
-controversy the king sent his writ to the treasurer and barons of his
-Exchequer, commanding that they should make inquisition thereof; before
-whom the merchants being called, when they were not able to discharge
-themselves, sith they enjoyed the liberties to them granted for the
-same, a precept was sent to the mayor and sheriffs to distrain the
-said merchants to make reparations, namely, Gerard Marbod, alderman of
-the Haunce, Ralph de Cussarde, a citizen of Colen, Ludero de Denevar,
-a burgess of Trivar, John of Aras, a burgess of Trivon, Bartram of
-Hamburdge, Godestalke of Hundondale, a burgess of Trivon, John de Dele,
-a burgess of Munstar, then remaining in the said city of London, for
-themselves and all other merchants of the Haunce, and so they granted
-two hundred and ten marks sterling to the mayor and citizens, and
-undertook that they and their successors should from time to time repair
-the said gate, and bear the third part of the charges in money and men
-to defend it when need were. And for this agreement the said mayor and
-citizens granted to the said merchants their liberties, which till of
-late they have enjoyed, as namely, amongst other, that they might lay
-up their grain which they brought into this realm in inns, and sell it
-in their garners, by the space of forty days after they had laid it
-up, except by the mayor and citizens they were expressly forbidden,
-because of dearth, or other reasonable occasions. Also they might have
-their aldermen as they had been accustomed, foreseeing always that he
-were of the city, and presented to the mayor and aldermen of the city,
-so oft as any should be chosen, and should take an oath before them to
-maintain justice in their courts, and to behave themselves in their
-office according to law, and as it stood with the customs of the city.
-Thus much for their privileges; whereby it appeareth that they were
-great merchants of corn brought out of the east parts hither, insomuch
-that the occupiers of husbandry in this land were inforced to complain
-of them for bringing in such abundance when the corn of this realm was
-at such an easy price; whereupon it was ordained by parliament, that no
-person should bring into any part of this realm, by way of merchandise,
-wheat, rye, or barley, growing out of the said realm, when the quarter
-of wheat exceed not the price of 6_s._ 8_d._, rye 4_s._ the quarter, and
-barley 3_s._ the quarter, upon forfeiture the one half to the king, the
-other half to the seizor thereof. These merchants of Haunce had their
-Guildhall in Thames street in place aforesaid by the said Cosin lane.
-Their hall is large built of stone, with three arched gates towards the
-street, the middlemost whereof is far bigger than the other, and is
-seldom opened, the other two be mured up; the same is now called the
-old hall.
-
-Of later time, to wit, in the 6th of Richard II., they hired one house
-next adjoining to their old hall, which sometime belonged to Richard
-Lions, a famous lapidary, one of the sheriffs of London in the 49th of
-Edward III., and in the 4th of Richard II., by the rebels of Kent, drawn
-out of that house and beheaded in West Cheap. This also was a great
-house with a large wharf on the Thames, and the way thereunto was called
-Windgoose, or Wildgoose lane, which is now called Windgoose alley,
-for that the same alley is for the most part built on by the stilyard
-merchants.
-
-The abbot of St. Alban's had a messuage here with a key, given to him
-in the 34th of Henry VI. Then is one other great house, which sometime
-pertained to John Rainwell, stockfish-monger, mayor, and it was by
-him given to the mayor and commonalty, to the end that the profits
-thereof should be disposed in deeds of piety; which house, in the
-15th of Edward IV., was confirmed unto the said merchants, in manner
-following, namely:--"It is ordayned by our soveraigne lord and his
-parliament, that the said marchants of Almaine, being of the companie
-called the _Guildhall Teutonicorum_ (or the Flemish gild), that now be,
-or hereafter shall be, shall have, hold, and enjoy, to them and their
-successors for ever, the said place called the Steel house, yeelding to
-the said mayor and communaltie an annuall rent of £70 3_s._ 4_d._ etc."
-
-In the year 1551, and the 5th of Edward VI., through complaint of the
-English merchants, the liberty of the steelyard merchants was seized
-into the king's hands, and so it resteth.
-
-Then is Church lane, at the west end of Alhallowes church, called
-Alhallowes the More in Thames street, for a difference from Alhallowes
-the Less in the same street; it is also called Alhallowes _ad foenum_ in
-the Ropery, because hay sold near thereunto at Hay wharf, and ropes of
-old time made and sold in the high street. This is a fair church, with
-a large cloister on the south side thereof about their churchyard, but
-foully defaced and ruinated.
-
-The church also hath had many fair monuments, but now defaced. There
-remaineth in the choir some plates on grave stones--namely, of William
-Lichfield, D.D., who deceased the year 1447: he was a great student,
-and compiled many books, both moral and divine, in prose and in verse,
-namely, one intituled _The Complaint of God unto Sinful Man_. He made
-in his time three thousand and eighty-three sermons, as appeared by
-his own handwriting, and were found when he was dead. One other plate
-there is of John Brickles, draper, who deceased in the year 1451; he was
-a great benefactor to that church, and gave by his testament certain
-tenements to the relief of the poor, etc. Nicholas Loven and William
-Peston founded chantries there.
-
-At the east end of this church goeth down a lane called Hay wharf lane,
-now lately a great brewhouse, built there by one Pot; Henry Campion,
-esquire, a beer-brewer, used it, and Abraham his son now possesseth it.
-Then was there one other lane, sometime called Woolfe's gate, now out of
-use; for the lower part thereof upon the bank of Thames is built by the
-late Earl of Shrewsburie, and the other end is built on and stopped up
-by the chamberlain of London. John Butler, draper, one of the sheriffs
-in the year 1420, dwelt there; he appointed his house to be sold, and
-the price thereof to be given to the poor: it was of Alhallowes parish
-the less. Then is there the said parish church of Alhallowes called the
-Less, and by some Alhallowes on the Cellars, for it standeth on vaults;
-it is said to be built by Sir John Poultney, sometime mayor. The steeple
-and choir of this church standeth on an arched gate, being the entry
-to a great house called Cold Harbrough. The choir of late being fallen
-down, is now again at length, in the year 1594, by the parishioners new
-built. Touching this Cold Harbrough, I find, that in the 13th of Edward
-II., Sir John Abel, knight, demised or let unto Henry Stow, draper, all
-that his capital messuage called the Cold Harbrough, in the parish of
-All Saints _ad foenum_, and all the appurtenances within the gate, with
-the key which Robert Hartford, citizen, son to William Hartford, had,
-and ought; and the foresaid Robert paid for it the rent of thirty-three
-shillings the year. This Robert Hartford being owner thereof, as also
-of other lands in Surrey, deceasing without issue male, left two
-daughters his coheirs, to wit, Idonia, married to Sir Ralph Bigot, and
-Maude, married to Sir Stephen Cosenton, knights, between whom the said
-house and lands were parted. After the which, John Bigot, son to the
-said Sir Ralph, and Sir John Cosenton, did sell their moieties of Cold
-Harbrough unto John Poultney, son of Adam Poultney, the 8th of Edward
-III. This Sir John Poultney dwelling in this house, and being four times
-mayor, the said house took the name of Poultney's inn. Notwithstanding
-this, Sir John Poultney, the 21st of Edward III., by his charter, gave
-and confirmed to Humfrey de Bohun, Earl of Hereford and Essex, his
-whole tenement called Cold Harbrough, with all the tenements and key
-adjoining, and appurtenances, sometime pertaining to Robert de Hereford,
-on the way called Hay wharf lane, etc., for one rose at Midsummer, to
-him and to his heirs for all services, if the same were demanded. This
-Sir John Poultney, deceased 1349, and left issue, by Margaret his wife,
-William Poultney, who died without issue, and Margaret his mother was
-married to Sir Nicholas Lovel, knight, etc. Philip S. Cleare gave two
-messuages pertaining to this Cold Harbrough in the Roperie, towards the
-enlarging of the parish church and churchyard of All Saints, called the
-Less, in the 20th of Richard II.
-
-In the year 1397, the 21st of Richard II., John Holland, Earl of
-Huntingdon, was lodged there, and Richard II., his brother dined with
-him: it was then counted a right fair and stately house; but in the next
-year following I find that Edmond, Earl of Cambridge, was there lodged,
-notwithstanding the said house still retained the name of Poultney's
-inn, in the reign of Henry VI., the 26th of his reign. It belonged since
-to H. Holland, Duke of Excester, and he was lodged there in the year
-1472. In the year 1485, Richard III., by his letters patent, granted and
-gave to John Writh, alias Garter, principal king of arms of Englishmen,
-and to the rest of the king's heralds and pursuivants of arms, all that
-messuage, with the appurtenances, called Cold Harbrough, in the parish
-of All Saints the Little in London, and their successors for ever. Dated
-at Westminster the 2nd of March, _anno regni primo_, without fine or
-fee. How the said heralds departed therewith I have not read; but in the
-reign of Henry VIII. the Bishop of Durham's house near Charing cross,
-being taken into the king's hand, Cuthbert Tunstal, Bishop of Durham,
-was lodged in this Cold Harbrough; since the which time it hath belonged
-to the Earls of Shrewsburie, by composition (as is supposed) from the
-said Cuthbert Tunstall. The last deceased earl took it down, and in
-place thereof built a great number of small tenements, now letten out
-for great rents to people of all sorts.
-
-Then is the Dyers' hall, which company was made a brotherhood or guild,
-in the 4th of Henry VI., and appointed to consist of a guardian or
-warden, and a commonalty, the 12th of Edward IV. Then be there divers
-large brewhouses and others, till you come to Ebgate lane, where that
-ward endeth in the east. On the north side of Thames street be divers
-lanes also; the first is at the south end of Elbow lane, before spoken
-of, west from Downegate, over against Greenwich lane: then be divers
-fair houses for merchants and others all along that side. The next lane
-east from Downegate is called Bush lane, which turneth up to Candlewicke
-street, and is of Downegate ward. Next is Suffolke lane, likewise
-turning up to Candlewicke street. In this lane is one notable grammar
-school, founded in the year 1561 by the master, wardens, and assistants
-of the Merchant-Tailors, in the parish of St. Laurence Poultney; Richard
-Hilles, sometime master of that company, having before given £500
-towards the purchase of a house, called the manor of the Rose, sometime
-belonging to the Duke of Buckingham, wherein the said school is kept.
-Then is there one other lane which turneth up to St. Laurence hill, and
-to the south-west corner of St. Laurence churchyard; then one other
-lane called Poultney lane, that goeth up of this ward to the south-east
-corner of St. Laurence churchyard, and so down again, and to the west
-corner of St. Martin Orgar lane, and over against Ebgate lane; and this
-is all of Downgate ward, the thirteenth in number lying east from the
-water-course of Walbrook, and hath not any one house on the west side
-of the said brook. It hath an alderman, his deputy, common councillors
-nine, constables eight, scavengers five, for the wardmote inquest
-fourteen, and a beadle. It is taxed to the fifteen eight-and-twenty
-pounds.[187]
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[186] "In London to forty pound, and in the Exchequer to thirty-nine
-pound."--_1st edition_, p. 181.
-
-
-
-
-WARDS ON THE WEST SIDE OF WALBROOKE, AND FIRST OF VINTRY WARD
-
-
-Now I am to speak of the other wards, twelve in number, all lying on
-the west side of the course of Walbrooke. And first of Vintry ward, so
-called of vintners, and of the vintry, a part of the bank of the river
-of Thames, where the merchants of Burdeaux craned their wines out of
-lighters and other vessels, and there landed and made sale of them
-within forty days after, until the 28th of Edward I., at which time
-the said merchants complained that they could not sell their wines,
-paying poundage, neither hire houses or cellars to lay them in; and it
-was redressed by virtue of the king's writ, directed to the mayor and
-sheriffs of London, dated at Carlaveroke, or Carlisle, since the which
-time many fair and large houses, with vaults and cellars for stowage of
-wines, and lodging of the Burdeaux merchants have been built in place
-where before time were cooks' houses; for Fitzstephen, in the reign
-of Henry II., writeth, that upon the river's side, between the wine
-in ships, and the wine to be sold in taverns, was a common cookery
-or cooks' row, etc., as in another place I have set down; whereby it
-appeareth, that in those days (and till of late time) every man lived by
-his professed trade, not any one interrupting another: the cooks dressed
-meat, and sold no wine, and the taverner sold wine, but dressed no meat
-for sale, etc.
-
-This ward beginneth in the east at the west end of Downegate ward, as
-the water-course of Walbrooke parteth them, to wit, at Grantham's lane,
-on the Thames side, and at Elbow lane on the land side; it runneth
-along in Thames street west some three houses beyond the Old Swanne, a
-brewhouse, and on the land side some three houses west beyond St. James'
-at Garlicke Hith. In breadth this ward stretcheth from the Vintry, north
-to the wall of the west gate of the Tower Royall; the other north part
-is of Cordwayner street ward. Out of this Royal street, by the south
-gate of Tower Royall, runneth a small street east to St. John's upon
-Walbrooke, which street is called Horshew bridge, of such a bridge
-sometime over the brook there, which is now vaulted over. Then from the
-said south gate west, runneth one other street, called Knightriders'
-street, by St. Thomas Apostle's church on the north side, and Wringwren
-lane by the said church, at the west end thereof, and to the east end
-of the Trinitie church in the said Knightriders' street, where this
-ward endeth on that south side the street; but on the north side it
-runneth no further than the corner against the new built tavern and
-other houses, in a plot of ground where sometime stood Ormond place;
-yet have ye one other lane lower down in Royall street, stretching from
-over against St. Michael's church, to, and by the north side of St.
-James' church by Garlicke Hith; this is called Kerion lane. And thus
-much for the bounds of Vintry ward. Now, on the Thames' side, west from
-Grantham's lane, have ye Herber lane, or Brikels' lane, so called of
-John Brikels, sometime owner thereof.
-
-Then is Simpson's lane, of one Simpson, or Emperor's head lane, of such
-a sign. Then the Three Cranes' lane, so called not only of a sign of
-three cranes at a tavern door, but rather of three strong cranes of
-timber placed on the Vintry wharf by the Thames side, to crane up wines
-there, as is afore showed. This lane was of old time, to wit, the 9th of
-Richard II., called The Painted Tavern lane, of the tavern being painted.
-
-Then next over against St. Martin's church, is a large house built of
-stone and timber, with vaults for the stowage of wines, and is called
-the Vintry. There dwelt John Gisers, vintner, mayor of London, and
-constable of the Tower, and then was Henry Picard, vintner, mayor.
-In this house Henry Picard feasted four kings in one day (as in my
-_Summary_ I have showed). Then next is Vanner's lane, so called of one
-Vanner that was owner thereof; it is now called Church lane, of the
-coming up from the wharf to St. Martin's church. Next is Brode lane,
-for that the same is broader for the passage of carts from the Vintrie
-wharf, than be the other lanes. At the north-west corner of this lane is
-the Parish Clerks' hall, lately by them purchased, since they lost their
-old hall in Bishopsgate street. Next is Spittle lane, of old time so
-called, since Stodie's lane, of the owner thereof named Stodie. Sir John
-Stodie, vintner, mayor in the year 1357, gave it with all the quadrant
-wherein Vintners' hall now standeth, with the tenements round about unto
-the Vintners; the Vintners built for themselves a fair hall, and also
-thirteen alms houses there for thirteen poor people, which are kept of
-charity rent free.
-
-The Vintners in London were of old time called Merchant-vintners of
-Gascoyne; and so I read them in the records of Edward II., the 11th
-year, and Edward III., the 9th year: they were as well Englishmen as
-strangers born beyond the seas, but then subjects to the kings of
-England, great Burdeaux merchants of Gascoyne and French wines, divers
-of them were mayors of this city, namely John Adrian, vintner, Reginold
-at conduit, John Oxenford, Hen. Picard, that feasted the kings of
-England, France, Scotland, and Cypres, John Stodie, that gave Stodie's
-lane to the Vintners; which four last named were mayors in the reign of
-Edward III.; and yet Gascoyne wines were then to be sold at London not
-above four pence, nor Rhenish wine above six pence the gallon. I read of
-sweet wines, that in the 50th of Edward III., John Peachie, fishmonger,
-was accused, for that he procured a license for the only sale of them
-in London; which notwithstanding he justified by law, he was imprisoned
-and fined. More, I read, that in the 6th of Henry VI., the Lombards
-corrupting their sweet wines, when knowledge thereof came to John
-Rainwell, mayor of London, he in divers places of the city commanded the
-heads of the butts and other vessels in the open streets to be broken,
-to the number of one hundred and fifty, so that the liquor running
-forth, passed through the city like a stream of rain water, in the sight
-of all the people, from whence there issued a most loathsome savour.
-
-I read, in the reign of Henry VII., that no sweet wines were brought
-into this realm but Malmesies by the Longabards, paying to the king
-for his license six shillings and eight pence of every butt, besides
-twelve pence for bottle large. I remember within this fifty-four years
-Malmsey not to be sold more than one penny halfpenny the pint. For proof
-whereof, it appeareth in the church book of St. Andrew Undershafte, that
-in the year 1547 I. G. and S. K., then churchwardens, for eighty pints
-of Malmsey spent in the church, after one penny halfpenny the pint, paid
-at the year's end for the same ten shillings. More, I remember that no
-sacks were sold but Rumney, and that for medicine more than for drink,
-but now many kinds of sacks are known and used. And so much for wines.
-
-For the Vintry, to end therewith, I read, that in the reign of Henry
-IV., the young prince Henry, Thomas Duke of Clarence, John Duke of
-Bedford, and Humfrey Duke of Glocester, the king's sons, being at supper
-among the merchants of London in the Vintry, in the house of Lewes John,
-Henry Scogan sent to them a ballad beginning thus:--
-
- "My noble sonnes and eke my lords deare,
- I your father, called unworthily,
- Send unto you this ballad following here,
- Written with mine own hand full rudely,
- Although it be that I not reverently
- Have written to your estates, I you pray
- Mine uncunning, taketh benignely,
- For God's sake, and hearken what I say."
-
-Then follow in like metre twenty-three staves, containing a persuasion
-from losing of time follily in lust and vice, but to spend the same
-in virtue and godliness, as ye may read in Geffrey Chawcer's works
-lately printed. The successors of those vintners and wine-drawers, that
-retailed by the gallons, pottle, quart, and pint, were all incorporated
-by the name of Wine-tunners[188] in the reign of Edward III., and
-confirmed in the 15th of Henry VI.
-
-Next is Palmer's lane, now called Anchor lane; the Plumbers have their
-hall there, but are tenants to the Vintners. Then is Worcester house,
-sometime belonging to the Earls of Worcester, now divided into many
-tenements; the Fruiterers have their hall there. Then is the Old Swan, a
-great brewhouse. And this is all on the Thames' side that I can note in
-this ward.
-
-On the land side is the Royall street and Paternoster lane, I think
-of old time called Arches; for I read that Robert de Suffolke gave to
-Walter Darford his tenement with the appurtenance in the lane called Les
-Arches, in the parish of St. Michael de Paternoster church, between the
-wall of the field called Winchester field on the east, and the same lane
-on the West, etc. More, I read of a stone house called Sto da de Winton
-juxta Stenden bridge, which in that lane was over Walbrooke water.
-
-Then is the fair parish church of St. Michael called Paternoster church
-in the Royall. This church was new built, and made a college of St.
-Spirit and St. Mary, founded by Richard Whitington, mercer, four times
-mayor, for a master, four fellows--masters of art, clerks, conducts,
-chorists, etc., and an alms house called God's house, or hospital, for
-thirteen poor men, one of them to be tutor, and to have sixteen pence
-the week; the other twelve, each of them to have fourteen pence the
-week for ever, with other necessary provisions, a hutch with three
-locks, a common seal, etc. These were bound to pray for the good estate
-of Richard Whitington and Alice his wife, their founders, and for
-Sir William Whitington, knight, and Dame Joan his wife, and for Hugh
-Fitzwaren, and Dame Molde his wife, the fathers and mothers of the
-said Richard Whitington and Alice his wife, for King Richard II., and
-Thomas of Woodstocke, Duke of Glocester, special lords and promoters of
-the said Richard Whitington, etc. The license for this foundation was
-granted by King Henry IV., the 11th of his reign, and in the 12th of the
-same king's reign, the mayor and commonalty of London granted to Richard
-Whitington a vacant piece of ground, thereon to build his college in
-the Royall, all which was confirmed by Henry VI., the 3rd of his reign,
-to John Coventrie, Jenkin Carpenter, and William Grove, executors to
-Richard Whitington. This foundation was again confirmed by parliament,
-the 10th of Henry VI., and was suppressed by the statute of Edward VI.
-
-The alms houses, with the poor men, do remain, and are paid by the
-Mercers. This Richard Whitington was in this church three times buried:
-first by his executors under a fair monument; then in the reign of
-Edward VI., the parson of that church, thinking some great riches (as
-he said) to be buried with him, caused his monument to be broken, his
-body to be spoiled of his leaden sheet, and again the second time to
-be buried; and in the reign of Queen Mary the parishioners were forced
-to take him up, to lap him in lead as afore, to bury him the third
-time, and to place his monument, or the like, over him again, which
-remaineth, and so he resteth. Thomas Windford, alderman, was buried in
-this church 1448; Arnold Macknam, vintner, a merchant of Burdeaux, 1457;
-Sir Heere Tanke, or Hartancleux, knight of the garter, born in Almayne,
-a noble warrior in Henry V. and Henry VI. days; Sir Edmond Mulshew,
-knight, near to Thomas Cokham, recorder of London; the Lady Kyme; Sir
-William Oldhall, knight, 1460; William Barnocke; Sir John Yong, grocer,
-mayor 1466; Agnes, daughter to Sir John Yong, first married to Robert
-Sherington, after to Robert Mulleneux, then to William Cheyney, esquire;
-John Having, gentleman; William Roswell, esquire; William Postar, clerk
-of the crown, 1520; Sir William Bayly, draper, mayor 1533, with Dame
-Katherine his wife, leaving sixteen children; John Haydon, mercer,
-sheriff 1582, who gave legacies to the thirteen alms men, and otherwise,
-for a lecture.
-
-At the upper end of this street is the Tower Royall, whereof that street
-taketh name. This Tower and great place was so called of pertaining to
-the kings of this realm, but by whom the same was first built, or of
-what antiquity continued, I have not read more than that in the reign
-of Edward I., the 2nd, 4th, and 7th years, it was the tenement of Symon
-Beawmes; also, that in the 36th of Edward III., the same was called the
-Royall, in the parish of St. Michael de Paternoster, and that in the
-43rd of his reign, he gave it by the name of his inn, called the Royall,
-in the city of London, in value twenty pounds by year, unto his college
-of St. Stephen at Westminster; notwithstanding, in the reign of Richard
-II. it was called the Queen's Wardrobe, as appeareth by this that
-followeth:--King Richard having in Smithfield overcome and dispersed his
-rebels, he, his lords, and all his company, entered the city of London,
-with great joy, and went to the lady princess his mother, who was then
-lodged in the Tower Royall, called the Queen's Wardrobe, where she had
-remained three days and two nights, right sore abashed; but when she
-saw the king her son she was greatly rejoiced, and said, "Ah, son! what
-great sorrow have I suffered for you this day!" The king answered and
-said, "Certainly, madam, I know it well; but now rejoice, and thank
-God, for I have this day recovered mine heritage, and the realm of
-England, which I had near hand lost."
-
-This tower seemeth to have been at that time of good defence; for when
-the rebels had beset the Tower of London, and got possession thereof,
-taking from thence whom they listed, as in my _Annals_ I have shown, the
-princess being forced to fly, came to this Tower Royal, where she was
-lodged, and remained safe, as ye have heard; and it may be also supposed
-that the king himself was at that time lodged there. I read, that in the
-year 1386, Lyon King of Armonie, being chased out of his realm by the
-Tartarians, received innumerable gifts of the king and of his nobles,
-the king then lying in the Royall, where he also granted to the said
-king of Armonie, a charter of a thousand pounds by year during his
-life. This for proof may suffice that kings of England have been lodged
-in this tower, though the same of later time have been neglected, and
-turned into stabling for the king's horses, and now letten out to divers
-men, and divided into tenements.
-
-In Horsebridge street is the Cutlars' hall. Richard de Wilehale, 1295,
-confirmed to Paul Butelar this house and edifices in the parish of St.
-Michael Paternoster church and St. John's upon Walbrooke, which sometime
-Lawrens Gisors and his son Peter Gisors did possess, and afterward
-Hugonis de Hingham, and lieth between the tenement of the said Richard
-towards the south, and the lane called Horseshew bridge towards the
-north, and between the way called Paternoster church on the west,
-and the course of Walbrooke on the east, paying yearly one clove of
-Gereflowers at Easter, and to the prior and convent of St. Mary Overy
-six shillings. This house sometime belonged to Simon Dolesly, grocer,
-mayor 1359. They of this company were of old time divided into three
-arts or sorts of workmen: to wit, the first were smiths, forgers of
-blades, and therefore called bladers, and divers of them proved wealthy
-men, as namely, Walter Nele, blader, one of the sheriffs the 12th of
-Edward III., deceased 1352, and buried in St. James' Garlicke Hith; he
-left lands to the mending of high ways about London, betwixt Newgate
-and Wicombe, Aldgate and Chelmesford, Bishopsgate and Ware, Southwark
-and Rochester, etc. The second were makers of hafts, and otherwise
-garnishers of blades. The third sort were sheathmakers, for swords,
-daggers, and knives. In the 10th of Henry IV. certain ordinances were
-made betwixt the bladers and the other cutlers; and in the 4th of
-Henry VI. they were all three companies drawn into one fraternity or
-brotherhood by the name of Cutlers.
-
-Then is Knightriders' street, so called (as is supposed) of knights well
-armed and mounted at the Tower Royall, riding from thence through that
-street west to Creed lane, and so out at Ludgate towards Smithfield,
-when they were there to tourney, joust, or otherwise to show activities
-before the king and states of the realm.
-
-In this street is the parish church of St. Thomas Apostle, by Wringwren
-lane, a proper church, but monuments of antiquity be there none, except
-some arms in the windows, as also in the stone work, which some suppose
-to be of John Barns, mercer, mayor of London in the year 1371, a great
-builder thereof; H. Causton, merchant, was a benefactor, and had a
-chantry there about 1396; T. Roman, mayor 1310, had also a chantry there
-1319; Fitzwilliams, also a benefactor, had a chantry there. More, Sir
-William Littlesbery, _alias_ Horne (for King Edward IV. so named him,
-because he was a most excellent blower in a horn); he was a Salter
-and merchant of the staple, mayor of London in the year 1487, and was
-buried in this church, having appointed by his testament the bells to
-be changed for four new bells of good tune and sound, but that was not
-performed; he gave five hundred marks to the repairing of highways
-betwixt London and Cambridge; his dwelling-house, with a garden and
-appurtenances in the said parish to be sold, and bestowed in charitable
-actions, as his executors would answer before God; his house, called the
-George, in Bred street, he gave to the Salters, they to find a priest in
-the said church, to have £6 13_s._ 4_d._ the year, to every preacher at
-Paul's cross and at the Spittle four pence for ever; to the prisoners
-of Newgate, Ludgate, Marshalsey, and King's Bench, in victuals, ten
-shillings at Christmas, and ten shillings at Easter for ever; which
-legacies are not performed. William Shipton, William Champneis, and
-John de Burford, had chantries there; John Martin, butcher, one of the
-sheriffs, was buried there 1533; etc. Then west from the said church,
-on the same side, was one great messuage, sometime called Ipres inn, of
-William Ipres, a Fleming, the first builder thereof. This William was
-called out of Flanders, with a number of Flemings, to the aid of King
-Stephen against Maude the empress, in the year 1138, and grew in favour
-with the said king for his services, so far that he built this his house
-near Tower Royall, in the which tower it seemeth the king was then
-lodged, as in the heart of the city, for his more safety.
-
-Robert, Earl of Gloucester, brother to the empress, being taken, was
-committed to the custody of this William, to be kept in the castle
-of Rochester, till King Stephen was also taken, and then the one was
-delivered in exchange for the other, and both set free. This William of
-Ipres gave Edredes hithe, now called the Queen's hithe, to the prior and
-canons of the Holy Trinity in London: he founded the abbey of Boxley
-in Kent, etc. In the first of Henry II., the said William, with all
-the other Flemings, fearing the indignation of the new king, departed
-the land; but it seemeth that the said William was shortly called back
-again, and restored both to the king's favour and to his old possessions
-here, so that the name and family continued long after in this realm, as
-may appear by this which followeth.
-
-In the year 1377, the 51st of Edward III., the citizens of London,
-minding to have destroyed John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, and Henry
-Percie, marshal (for cause shown in my _Annals_), sought up and down,
-and could not find them, for they were that day to dine with John of
-Ipres at his inn, which the Londoners wist not of, but thought the duke
-and marshal had been at the Savoy, and therefore posted thither; but one
-of the duke's knights seeing these things, came in great haste to the
-place where the duke was, and after that he had knocked and could not be
-let in, he said to Haveland the porter, "If thou love my lord and thy
-life, open the gate;" with which words he gat entry, and with great fear
-he tells the duke, that without the gate were infinite numbers of armed
-men, and unless he took great heed that day would be his last; with
-which words the duke leapt so hastily from his oisters, that he hurt
-both his legs against the form: wine was offered, but he could not drink
-for haste, and so fled with his fellow Henry Percie out at a back gate,
-and entering the Thames, never stayed rowing until they came to a house
-near the manor of Kennington, where at that time the princess lay with
-Richard the young prince, before whom he made his complaint, etc.
-
-On the other side, I read of a messuage called Ringed hall. King Henry
-VIII., the 32nd of his reign, gave the same, with four tenements
-adjoining, unto Morgan Philip, _alias_ Wolfe, in the parish of St.
-Thomas Apostles, in London, etc.
-
-Over against Ipres inn, in Knight riders street, at the corner towards
-St. James at Garlicke hithe, was sometime a great house built of stone
-and called Ormond place, for that it sometimes belonged to the Earls of
-Ormond. King Edward IV., in the 5th of his reign, gave to Elizabeth his
-wife the manor of Greenwich, with the tower and park, in the county
-of Kent. He also gave this tenement called Ormond place, with all the
-appurtenances to the same, situate in the parish of St. Trinitie in
-Knight riders street, in London. This house is now lately taken down,
-and divers fair tenements are built there, the corner house whereof
-is a tavern. Then lower down in Royall street is Kerion lane, of one
-Kerion sometime dwelling there. In this lane be divers fair houses for
-merchants, and amongst others is the Glaziers' hall.
-
-At the south corner of Royall street is the fair parish church of St.
-Martin called in the Vintry, sometime called St. Martin de Beremand
-church. This church was new built about the year 1399 by the executors
-of Mathew Columbars a stranger born, a Burdeaux merchant of Gascoyne and
-French wines; his arms remain yet in the east window, and are between
-a cheveron, three columbins. There lie buried in this church--Sir John
-Gisors, mayor 1311; Henry Gisors, his son, 1343, and John Gisors, his
-brother, 1350; he gave to his son Thomas his great mansion-house called
-Gisors hall, in the parish of St. Mildred, in Bread street. This Thomas
-had issue, John and Thomas; John made a feoffment, and sold Gisors hall
-and other his lands in London, about the year 1386; Thomas deceased
-1395. Henry Vennar; Bartholomew de la Vauch; Thomas Cornwalles, one
-of the sheriffs 1384; John Cornwalles, esquire, 1436; John Mustrell,
-vintner, 1424; William Hodson; William Castleton; John Gray; Robert
-Dalusse, barber, in the reign of Edward IV., with this epitaph:
-
- "As flowers in the field thus passeth life,
- Naked, then clothed, feeble in the end,
- It sheweth by Robert Dalusse, and Alison his wife,
- Christ them save from the power of the fiend."
-
-Sir Raph Austrie, fishmonger, new roofed this church with timber,
-covered it with lead, and beautifully glazed it: he deceased 1494, and
-was there buried with his two wives; Raph Austrie, his son, gentleman;
-William Austrie, and other of that name; Bartrand, wife to Grimond
-Descure, esquire, a Gascoyne and merchant of wines, 1494; Thomas Batson;
-Alice Fowler, daughter and heir to John Howton, wife to John Hulton;
-James Bartlet, and Alice his wife; William Fennor; Roger Cotton;
-Robert Stocker; John Pemberton; Philip de Plasse; John Stapleton; John
-Mortimer; William Lee; William Hamsteed; William Stoksbie, and Gilbert
-March, had chantries there.
-
-Then is the parish church of St. James, called at Garlick hithe, or
-Garlicke hive; for that of old time, on the bank of the river of Thames,
-near to this church, garlick was usually sold. This is a proper church,
-whereof Richard Rothing, one of the sheriffs 1326, is said to be the new
-builder, and lieth buried in the same: so was Waltar Nele, blader, one
-of the sheriffs 1337; John of Oxenford, vintner, mayor 1341. I read, in
-the 1st of Edward III., that this John of Oxenford gave to the priory
-of the Holy Trinity in London two tofts of land, one mill, fifty acres
-of land, two acres of wood, with the appurtenances, in Kentish town, in
-value 20_s._ 3_d._ by year. Richard Goodcheape, John de Cressingham,
-and John Whitthorne, and before them, Galfrid Moncley, 1281, founded a
-chantry there.
-
-Monuments remaining there: Robert Gabeter, esquire, mayor of
-Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 1310; John Gisors; William Tiligham; John Stanley;
-Lord Strange, eldest son of the Earl of Derby, 1503; Nicholas Statham;
-Robert de Luton, 1361; Richard Lions, a famous merchant of wines, and
-a lapidary, sometime one of the sheriffs, beheaded in Cheape by Wat
-Tyler and other rebels in the year 1381; his picture on his gravestone,
-very fair and large, is with his hair rounded by his ears, and curled;
-a little beard forked; a gown, girt to him down to his feet, of
-branched damask, wrought with the likeness of flowers; a large purse
-on his right side, hanging in a belt from his left shoulder; a plain
-hood about his neck covering his shoulders, and hanging back behind
-him. Sir John Wrotch, fishmonger, mayor 1361, deceased 1407; Thomas
-Stonarde, of Oxfordshire; John Bromer, fishmonger, alderman 1474; the
-Lady Stanley, mother to the Lord Strange; the Countess of Huntingdon;
-the Lady Harbert; Sir George Stanley; Gilbert Bovet, 1398; a Countess
-of Worcester, and one of her children; William More, vintner, mayor
-1395; William Venor, grocer, mayor 1389; Robert Chichley, mayor 1421;
-James Spencer, vintner, mayor 1543; Richard Plat, brewer, founded a free
-school there 1601.
-
-And thus an end of Vintry ward, which hath an alderman, with a deputy,
-common councillors nine, constables nine, scavengers four, wardmote
-inquest fourteen, and a beadle. It is taxed to the fifteen[189] at £6
-13_s._ 4_d._
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[187] "In London at thirty-six pound, and in the Exchequer at
-thirty-four pound ten shillings."--_1st edition_, p. 189.
-
-[188] "Having thus much, not without travail and some charges, noted for
-the antiquitie of the Vintners, about two years since or more I repayred
-to the common-hall of that company, and there showed and read it in
-a court of assistance, requiring them, as being one of the principal
-companies in the citie (of whom I meant therefore to write the more at
-large) that if they knew any more which might sound to their worship or
-commendation, at their leisure to send it me, and I would joyne it to
-my former collection; at which time I was answered by some that tooke
-upon them the speech, that they were none of the principall, but of
-the inferior companies; and so willing me to leave them, I departed,
-and never since heard from them, which hath somewhat discouraged me
-any farther to travail amongst the companies to learne ought at their
-handes."--_1st edition_, p. 192.
-
-His comment (in a side note) is equally worth preserving: "The readiest
-to speake not alwaies the wisest men."
-
-[189] "In London at six and thirty pounds, and in the Exchequer at
-thirty-five pounds five shillings."--_1st edition_, p. 195.
-
-
-
-
-CORDWAINER STREET WARD
-
-
-The next is Cordwainer street ward, taking that name of cordwainers, or
-shoemakers, curriers, and workers of leather, dwelling there; for it
-appeareth in the records of Henry VI., the 9th of his reign, that an
-order was taken then for cordwainers and curriers in Corney street and
-Sopars lane.
-
-This ward beginneth in the east, on the west side of Walbrook, and
-turneth west through Budge row (a street so called of the Budge furre,
-and of skinners dwelling there), then up by St. Anthony's church through
-Aetheling (or Noble street), as Leland termeth it, commonly called
-Wathling street, to the Red Lion, a place so called of a great lion
-of timber placed there at a gate, entering a large court, wherein are
-divers fair and large shops, well furnished with broad cloths and other
-draperies of all sorts, to be sold: and this is the farthest west part
-of this ward.
-
-On the south side of this street from Budge row lieth a lane turning
-down by the west gate of the Tower Royal, and to the south end of the
-stone wall beyond the said gate is of this ward, and is accounted a part
-of the Royal street: against this west gate of the Tower Royal is one
-other lane that runneth west to Cordwainer street, and this is called
-Turnebase lane; on the south side whereof is a piece of Wringwren lane,
-to the north-west corner of St. Thomas Church the Apostle. Then again,
-out of the high street called Wathling, is one other street, which
-runneth thwart the same; and this is Cordwainer street, whereof the
-whole ward taketh name. This street beginneth by West Cheape, and St.
-Mary Bow church is the head thereof on the west side, and it runneth
-down south through that part which of later time was called Hosier
-lane, now Bow lane, and then by the west end of Aldmary church to the
-new built houses, in place of Ormond house, and so to Garlicke hill,
-or hithe, to St. James' church. The upper part of this street towards
-Cheape was called Hosier lane, of hosiers dwelling there in place of
-shoemakers; but now those hosiers being worn out by men of other trades
-(as the hosiers had worn out the shoemakers), the same is called Bow
-lane of Bow church. On the west side of Cordewainers street is Basing
-lane, right over against Turnebasse lane. This Basing lane west to the
-back gate of the Red Lion, in Wathling street, is of this Cordwainers
-street ward.
-
-Now again, on the north side of the high street in Budge row, by the
-east end of St. Anthonie's church, have ye St. Sithes lane, so called of
-St. Sithes church (which standeth against the north end of that lane),
-and this is wholly of Cordwainers street ward: also the south side of
-Needlers lane, which reacheth from the north end of St. Sithes lane west
-to Sopar's lane; then west from St. Anthonies church is the south end
-of Sopar's lane, which lane took that name, not of soap-making, as some
-have supposed, but of Alen le Sopar, in the 9th of Edward II. I have not
-read or heard of soap-making in this city till within this fourscore
-years; that John Lame, dwelling in Grasse street, set up a boiling-house
-for this city, of former time, was served of white soap in hard cakes
-(called Castell soap, and other), from beyond the seas, and of grey
-soap,[190] speckled with white, very sweet and good, from Bristow, sold
-here for a penny the pound, and never above a penny farthing, and black
-soap for a halfpenny the pound. Then in Bow lane (as they now call it)
-is Goose lane, by Bow church. William Essex, mercer, had tenements there
-in the 26th of Edward III.
-
-Then from the south end of Bow lane, by Wathling street, till over
-against the Red Lion: and these be the bounds of Cordwainer street ward.
-
-Touching monuments therein, first you have the fair parish church of
-St. Anthonies in Budge row, on the north side thereof. This church
-was lately re-edified by Thomas Knowles, grocer, mayor, and by Thomas
-Knowles, his son, both buried there, with epitaphs, of the father thus:
-
- "Here lieth graven vnder this stone,
- Thomas Knowles, both flesh and bone;
- Grocer and alderman, yeares fortie,
- Shiriffe, and twice maior truly.
- And for he should not lie alone,
- Here lieth with him his good wife Joan.
- They were togither sixtie yeare,
- And ninteene children they had in feere," etc.
-
-Thomas Holland, mercer, was there buried 1456; Thomas Windent, mercer,
-alderman, and Katherine his wife; Thomas Hind, mercer, 1528; he was a
-benefactor to this church, to Aldermarie church, and to Bow; Hugh Acton,
-merchant-tailor, buried 1520; he gave thirty-six pounds to the repairing
-of the steeple of this church. Simon Street, grocer, lieth in the
-church wall toward the south; his arms be three colts, and his epitaph
-thus:
-
- "Such as I am, such shall you be,
- Grocer of London sometime was I,
- The king's wayer more then yeares twentie,
- Simon Streete called in my place,
- And good fellowship faine would trace;
- Therefore in heaven, everlasting life,
- Jesu send me, and Agnes my wife:
- Kerlie Merlie, my words were tho,
- And _Deo gratias_ I coupled thereto:
- I passed to God in the yeare of grace,
- A thousand foure hundred it was," etc.
-
-William Dauntsey, mercer, one of the sheriffs, buried 1542. Henry
-Collet, mercer, mayor, a great benefactor to this church; the pictures
-of him, his wife, ten sons, and ten daughters, remain in the glass
-window on the north side of the church; but the said Henry Collet
-was buried at Stebunhith. Henry Halton, grocer, one of the sheriffs,
-deceased 1415; Thomas Spight, merchant-tailor, 1533; and Roger Martin,
-mercer, mayor, deceased 1573. John Grantham and Nicholas Bull had
-chantries there.
-
-Next on the south side of Budge row, by the west corner thereof, and
-on the east side of Cordwainer street, is one other fair church called
-Aldemarie church, because the same was very old, and elder than any
-church of St. Marie in the city, till of late years the foundation of a
-very fair new church was laid there by Henry Keble, grocer, mayor, who
-deceased 1518, and was there buried in a vault by him prepared, with a
-fair monument raised over him on the north side the choir, now destroyed
-and gone: he gave by his testament one thousand pounds towards the
-building up of that church, and yet not permitted a resting-place for
-his bones there. Thomas Roman, mayor 1310, had a chantry there. Richard
-Chawcer,[191] vintner, gave to that church his tenement and tavern,
-with the appurtenance, in the Royal street, the corner of Kerion lane,
-and was there buried 1348. John Briton; Ralph Holland, draper, one of
-the sheriffs, deceased 1452; William Taylor, grocer, mayor, deceased
-1483: he discharged that ward of fifteens to be paid by the poor. Thomas
-Hinde, mercer, buried in St. Anthonies, gave ten fodder of lead to the
-covering of the middle aisle of this Aldemarie church. Charles Blunt,
-Lord Montjoy, was buried there about the year 1545; he made or glazed
-the east window, as appeareth by his arms: his epitaph, made by him in
-his lifetime, thus:
-
- "Willingly have I fought, and willingly have I found
- The fatall end that wrought thither as dutie bound:
- Discharged I am of that I ought to my country by honest wound,
- My soule departed Christ hath bought, the end of man is ground."
-
-Sir William Laxton, grocer, mayor, deceased 1556, and Thomas Lodge,
-grocer, mayor 1583, were buried in the vault of Henry Keble, whose bones
-were unkindly cast out, and his monument pulled down;[192] in place
-whereof monuments are set up of the later buried. William Blunt, Lord
-Mountjoy, buried there 1594, etc.
-
-At the upper end of Hosier lane, toward Westcheape, is the fair parish
-church of St. Mary Bow. This church, in the reign of William Conqueror,
-being the first in this city built on arches of stone, was therefore
-called New Marie church, of St. Marie de Arcubus,[193] or Le Bow, in
-West Cheaping; as Stratford bridge being the first built (by Matilde the
-queen, wife to Henry I.) with arches of stone, was called Stratford le
-Bow; which names to the said church and bridge remaineth till this day.
-The court of the Arches is kept in this church, and taketh name of the
-place, not the place of the court; but of what antiquity or continuation
-that court hath there continued I cannot learn.
-
-This church is of Cordwainer street ward, and for divers accidents
-happening there, hath been made more famous than any other parish church
-of the whole city or suburbs. First, we read, that in the year 1090, and
-the 3rd of William Rufus, by tempest of wind, the roof of the church of
-St. Marie Bow, in Cheape, was overturned, wherewith some persons were
-slain, and four of the rafters, of twenty-six feet in length, with such
-violence were pitched in the ground of the high street, that scantly
-four feet of them remained above ground, which were fain to be cut even
-with the ground, because they could not be plucked out (for the city of
-London was not then paved, and a marish ground).
-
-In the year 1196, William Fitz Osbert, a seditious tailor, took the
-steeple of Bow, and fortified it with munitions and victuals, but it
-was assaulted, and William with his accomplices were taken, though not
-without bloodshed, for he was forced by fire and smoke to forsake the
-church; and then, by the judges condemned, he was by the heels drawn
-to the Elms in Smithfield, and there hanged with nine of his fellows;
-where, because his favourers came not to deliver him, he forsook Mary's
-son (as he termed Christ our Saviour), and called upon the devil to help
-and deliver him. Such was the end of this deceiver, a man of an evil
-life, a secret murderer, a filthy fornicator, a pollutor of concubines,
-and (amongst other his detestable facts) a false accuser of his elder
-brother,[194] who had in his youth brought him up in learning, and done
-many things for his preferment.
-
-In the year 1271, a great part of the steeple of Bow fell down, and
-slew many people, men and women. In the year 1284, the 13th of Edward
-I., Laurence Ducket, goldsmith, having grievously wounded one Ralph
-Crepin in Westcheape, fled into Bow church; into the which in the night
-time entered certain evil persons, friends unto the said Ralph, and
-slew the said Laurence lying in the steeple, and then hanged him up,
-placing him so by the window as if he had hanged himself, and so was it
-found by inquisition; for the which fact Laurence Ducket, being drawn
-by the feet, was buried in a ditch without the city; but shortly after,
-by relation of a boy, who lay with the said Laurence at the time of
-his death, and had hid him there for fear, the truth of the matter was
-disclosed; for the which cause, Jordan Goodcheape, Ralph Crepin, Gilbert
-Clarke, and Geffrey Clarke, were attainted; a certain woman named Alice,
-that was chief causer of the said mischief, was burnt, and to the number
-of sixteen men were drawn and hanged, besides others that being richer,
-after long imprisonment, were hanged by the purse.
-
-The church was interdicted, the doors and windows were stopped up with
-thorns, but Laurence was taken up, and honestly buried in the churchyard.
-
-The parish church of St. Mary Bow, by mean of incroachment and building
-of houses, wanting room in their churchyard for burial of the dead, John
-Rotham, or Rodham, citizen and tailor, by his testament, dated the year
-1465, gave to the parson and churchwardens a certain garden in Hosier
-lane to be a churchyard, which so continued near a hundred years; but
-now is built on, and is a private man's house. The old steeple of this
-church was by little and little re-edified, and new built up, at the
-least so much as was fallen down, many men giving sums of money to the
-furtherance thereof; so that at length, to wit, in the year 1469, it
-was ordained by a common council that the Bow bell should be nightly
-rung at nine of the clock. Shortly after, John Donne, mercer, by his
-testament, dated 1472, according to the trust of Reginald Longdon, gave
-to the parson and churchwardens of St. Mary Bow two tenements, with the
-appurtenances, since made into one, in Hosier lane, then so called, to
-the maintenance of Bow bell, the same to be rung as aforesaid, and other
-things to be observed, as by the will appeareth.
-
-This bell being usually rung somewhat late, as seemed to the young men
-'prentices, and other in Cheape, they made and set up a rhyme against
-the clerk, as followeth:
-
- "Clarke of the Bow bell with the yellow lockes,
- For thy late ringing thy head shall have knocks."
-
-Whereunto the clerk replying, wrote,
-
- "Children of Cheape, hold you all still,
- For you shall have the Bow bell rung at your will."
-
-Robert Harding, goldsmith, one of the sheriffs 1478, gave to the new
-work of that steeple forty pounds; John Haw, mercer, ten pounds; Doctor
-Allen, four pounds; Thomas Baldry, four pounds, and other gave other
-sums, so that the said work of the steeple was finished in the year
-1512. The arches or bowes thereupon, with the lanthorns, five in number,
-to wit, one at each corner, and one on the top in the middle upon
-the arches, were also afterward finished of stone, brought from Caen
-in Normandy, delivered at the Customers key for 4_s._ 8_d._ the ton;
-William Copland, tailor, the king's merchant, and Andrew Fuller, mercer,
-being churchwardens 1515 and 1516. It is said that this Copland gave the
-great bell, which made the fifth in the ring, to be rung nightly at nine
-of the clock. This bell was first rung as a knell at the burial of the
-same Copland. It appeareth that the lanthorns on the top of this steeple
-were meant to have been glazed, and lights in them placed nightly in
-the winter, whereby travellers to the city might have the better sight
-thereof, and not to miss of their ways.
-
-In this parish also was a grammar school, by commandment of King Henry
-VI., which school was of old time kept in a house for that purpose
-prepared in the churchyard; but that school being decayed, as others
-about this city, the school-house was let out for rent, in the reign of
-Henry VIII., for four shillings the year, a cellar for two shillings the
-year, and two vaults under the church for fifteen shillings both.
-
-The monuments in this church be these; namely, of Sir John Coventrie,
-mercer, mayor 1425; Richard Lambert, alderman; Nicholas Alwine, mercer,
-mayor 1499; Robert Harding, goldsmith, one of the sheriffs 1478; John
-Loke, one of the sheriffs 1461; Edward Bankes, alderman, haberdasher,
-1566; John Warde; William Pierson, scrivener and attorney in the Common
-Pleas. In a proper chapel on the south side the church standeth a tomb,
-elevated and arched.[195] Ade de Buke, hatter, glazed the chapel and
-most part of the church, and was there buried. All other monuments be
-defaced. Hawley and Southam had chantries there.
-
-Without the north side of this church of St. Mary Bow, towards West
-Cheape, standeth one fair building of stone, called in record Seldam,
-a shed, which greatly darkeneth the said church; for by means thereof
-all the windows and doors on that side are stopped up. King Edward III.
-upon occasion, as shall be shown in the ward of Cheape, caused this sild
-or shed to be made, and to be strongly built of stone, for himself, the
-queen, and other estates to stand in, there to behold the joustings and
-other shows at their pleasures. And this house for a long time after
-served to that use, namely, in the reign of Edward III. and Richard II.;
-but in the year 1410, Henry IV., in the 12th of his reign, confirmed the
-said shed or building to Stephen Spilman, William Marchford, and John
-Whateley, mercers, by the name of one New Seldam, shed, or building,
-with shops, cellars, and edifices whatsoever appertaining, called
-Crounsilde, or Tamersilde,[196] situate in the mercery in West Cheape,
-and in the parish of St. Mary de Arcubus in London, etc. Notwithstanding
-which grant, the kings of England, and other great estates, as well
-of foreign countries, repairing to this realm, as inhabitants of the
-same, have usually repaired to this place, therein to behold the shows
-of this city passing through West Cheape, namely, the great watches
-accustomed in the night, on the even of St. John Baptist, and St. Peter
-at Midsummer, the examples whereof were over long to recite, wherefore
-let it suffice briefly to touch one. In the year 1510, on St. John's
-even, at night, King Henry VIII. came to this place, then called the
-King's Head in Cheape, in the livery of a yeoman of the guard, with an
-halbert on his shoulder (and there beholding the watch) departed privily
-when the watch was done, and was not known to any but to whom it pleased
-him; but on St. Peter's night next following, he and the queen came
-royally riding to the said place, and there with their nobles beheld the
-watch of the city, and returned in the morning.
-
-This church of St. Mary, with the said shed of stone, all the housing
-in or about Bow church yard, and without on that side the high street
-of Cheape to the Standard, be of Cordewainer street ward. These houses
-were of old time but sheds; for I read of no housing otherwise on that
-side the street, but of divers sheds from Sopar's lane to the Standard,
-etc. Amongst other, I read of three shops or sheds by Sopar's lane,
-pertaining to the priory of the Holy Trinity within Aldgate; the one
-was let out for twenty-eight shillings, one other for twenty shillings,
-and the third for twelve shillings, by the year. Moreover, that Richard
-Goodchepe, mercer, and Margery his wife, son to Jordaine Goodchepe, did
-let to John Dalinges the younger, mercer, their shed and chamber in West
-Cheape, in the parish of St. Mary de Arches for three shillings and four
-pence by the year. Also the men of Bread street ward contended with
-the men of Cordwayner street ward for a seld or shed opposite to the
-Standard, on the south side, and it was found to be of Cordwayner street
-ward; W. Waldorne being then mayor, the 1st of Henry VI. Thus much for
-Cordwainer street ward; which hath an alderman, his deputy, common
-councillors eight, constables eight, scavengers eight, wardmote inquest
-men fourteen, and a beadle. It standeth taxed to the fifteen in London
-at £52 16_s._, in the Exchequer at £52 6_s._[197]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[190] "Gray sope made in London dearer than bought from
-Bristol."--_Stow._
-
-[191] "Richard Chaucer, father to Geffrey Chaucer, the poet, as may be
-supposed."--_Stow._
-
-[192] "Sir William Laxton, grocer, mayor, deceased 1556, was buried in
-the vault prepared by Henry Keble, principall founder of that church,
-for himself, but now his bones are unkindly cast out, his monuments
-pulled downe, and the bodies of the said Sir William Laxton, and of Sir
-Thomas Lodge, grocer, mayor, are laid in place, with monuments over them
-for the time, till an other give money for their place, and then away
-with them."--_1st edition_, p. 199.
-
-[193] "Called _de Arcubus_ of the stone arches or bowes on the top of
-the steeple or bell tower thereof, which arching was as well on the old
-steeple as on the new, for no other part of the church seemeth to have
-been arched at any time; yet hath the said church never been knowne by
-any other name than St. Mary Bow, or le Bow; neither is that church so
-called of the court there kept, but the said court taketh name of the
-place wherein it is kept, and is called the Court of Arches."--_1st
-edition_, p. 203.
-
-[194] "A false accuser of his elder brother, in the end was
-hanged."--_Stow._
-
-In his first edition, p. 203, this note is continued as follows: "God
-amend, or shortly send such an end to such false brethren."
-
-[195] "Of some unknowne founder."--_1st edition_, p. 205.
-
-[196] "And in the 8th of the same Henry called Tamarsilde."--_1st
-edition_, p. 206.
-
-[197] "In London at £72 16_s._, in the Exchequer at £72."--_1st
-edition_, p. 207.
-
-
-
-
-CHEAPE WARD
-
-
-Next adjoining is Cheape ward, and taketh name of the market there kept,
-called West Cheping. This ward also beginneth in the east, on the course
-of Walbrooke in Buckles bury, and runneth up on both the sides to the
-great conduit in Cheape. Also on the south side of Buckles bury, a lane
-turning up by St. Sithes church, and by St. Pancrates church, through
-Needler's lane, on the north side thereof, and then through a piece of
-Sopar's lane, on both sides up to Cheape, be all of Cheape ward.
-
-Then to begin again in the east upon the said course of Walbrooke,
-is St. Mildred's church in the Poultrie, on the north side, and over
-against the said church gate, on the south, to pass up all that high
-street called the Poultrie, to the great conduit in Cheape, and then
-Cheape itself, which beginneth by the east end of the said conduit, and
-stretcheth up to the north-east corner of Bow lane on the south side,
-and to the Standard on the north side; and thus far to the west is of
-Cheape ward.
-
-On the south side of this high street is no lane turning south out of
-this ward, more than some portion of Sopar's lane, whereof I have before
-written. But on the north side of this high street is Conyhope lane,
-about one quarter of Old Jury lane on the west side, and on the east
-side almost as much, to the sign of the Angel. Then is Ironmonger's
-lane, all wholly on both sides, and from the north end thereof through
-Catton street, west to the north end of St. Lawrence lane, and some four
-houses west beyond the same on that side, and over against Ironmonger's
-lane end on the north side of Catton street up by the Guildhall and St.
-Lawrence church in the Jurie, is altogether of Cheape ward. Then again
-in Cheape, more towards the west, is of St. Lawrence lane before named,
-which is all wholly of this ward. And last of all is Hony lane, and up
-to the Standard on the north side of Cheape. And so stand the bounds of
-Cheape ward.
-
-Now for antiquities there. First is Buckles bury, so called of a manor
-and tenements pertaining to one Buckle, who there dwelt and kept his
-courts. This manor is supposed to be the great stone building, yet in
-part remaining on the south side of the street, which of late time hath
-been called the Old Barge, of such a sign hanged out near the gate
-thereof. This manor or great house hath of long time been divided and
-letten out into many tenements; and it hath been a common speech, that
-when Walbrooke did lie open, barges were rowed out of the Thames, or
-towed up so far, and therefore the place hath ever since been called the
-Old Barge.
-
-Also on the north side of this street, directly over against the said
-Buckles bury, was one ancient and strong tower of stone, the which
-tower King Edward III., in the 18th of his reign, by the name of the
-king's house, called Cornette stoure in London, did appoint to be his
-Exchange of money there to be kept. In the 29th he granted it to Frydus
-Guynysane and Landus Bardoile, merchants of Luke, for twenty pounds the
-year. And in the 32nd he gave the same tower to his college or free
-chapel of St. Stephen at Westminster, by the name of Cernet's Tower at
-Buckles bury in London. This tower of late years was taken down by one
-Buckle, a grocer, meaning in place thereof to have set up and built a
-goodly frame of timber; but the said Buckle greedily labouring to pull
-down the old tower, a part thereof fell upon him, which so sore bruised
-him that his life was thereby shortened, and another that married his
-widow set up the new prepared frame of timber, and finished the work.
-
-This whole street called Buckles bury on both the sides throughout is
-possessed of grocers and apothecaries towards the west end thereof: on
-the south side breaketh out one other short lane, called in records
-Peneritch street; it reacheth but to St. Sythe's lane, and St. Sythe's
-church is the farthest part thereof, for by the west end of the said
-church beginneth Needlar's lane, which reacheth to Sopar's lane, as is
-aforesaid. This small parish church of St. Sith hath also an addition of
-Bennet shorne (or Shrog or Shorehog), for by all these names have I read
-it, but the most ancient is Shorne, wherefore it seemeth to take that
-name of one Benedict Shorne, sometime a citizen and stock-fishmonger of
-London, a new builder, repairer, or benefactor thereof, in the reign
-of Edward II., so that Shorne is but corruptly called Shrog, and more
-corruptly Shorehog.
-
-There lie buried in this church, John Froysh, mercer, mayor 1394; John
-Rochford and Robert Rochford; John Hold, alderman: Henry Froweke,
-mercer, mayor 1435; Edward Warrington; John Morrice; John Huntley;
-Richard Lincoln, fellmonger, 1546; Sir Ralph Warren, mercer, mayor
-1553; Sir John Lion, grocer, mayor 1554: these two last have monuments,
-the rest are all defaced. Edward Hall, gentleman of Greyes inn, common
-sergeant of this city, and then under-sheriff of the same; he wrote the
-large chronicles from Richard II. till the end of Henry VIII., and was
-buried in this church.
-
-Then in Needelars lane have ye the parish church of St. Pancrate, a
-proper small church, but divers rich parishioners therein, and hath had
-of old time many liberal benefactors, but of late such as (not regarding
-the order taken by her majesty), the least bell in their church being
-broken, have rather sold the same[198] for half the value than put the
-parish to charge with new casting; late experience hath proved this to
-be true, besides the spoil of monuments there. In this church are buried
-Sir Aker; John Aker; John Barens, mercer, mayor 1370; John Beston and
-his wife; Robert Rayland; John Hamber; John Gage; John Rowley; John
-Lambe; John Hadley, grocer, mayor 1379; Richard Gardener, mercer, mayor
-1478; John Stockton, mercer, mayor 1470; John Dane, mercer; John Parker;
-Robert Marshall, alderman, 1439; Robert Corcheforde; Robert Hatfielde;
-and Robert Hatfield; Nicholas Wilfilde, and Thomas his son; the
-monuments of all which be defaced and gone. There do remain of Robert
-Burley, 1360; Richard Wilson, 1525; Robert Packenton, mercer, slain with
-a gun shot at him in a morning,[199] as he was going to morrow mass
-from his house in Cheape to St. Thomas of Acars, in the year 1536; the
-murderer was never discovered, but by his own confession made when he
-came to the gallows at Banbury to be hanged for felony; T. Wardbury,
-haberdasher, 1545; James Huish, grocer, 1590; Ambrose Smith, etc. Then
-is a part of Soper's lane turning up to Cheape.
-
-By the assent of Stephen Abunden, mayor, the Pepperers in Soper's lane
-were admitted to sell all such spices and other wares as grocers now use
-to sell, retaining the old name of pepperers in Soper's lane, till at
-length, in the reign of Henry VI., the same Soper's lane was inhabited
-by cordwainers and curriers, after that the pepperers or grocers had
-seated themselves in a more open street, to wit, in Buckles bury, where
-they yet remain. Thus much for the south wing of Cheape ward.
-
-Now to begin again on the bank of the said Walbrooke, at the east end
-of the high street called the Poultrie, on the north side thereof, is
-the proper parish church of St. Mildred, which church was new built upon
-Walbrooke in the year 1457. John Saxton their parson gave thirty-two
-pounds towards the building of the new choir, which now standeth upon
-the course of Walbrooke. Lovell and Puery, and Richard Keston, have
-their arms in the east window as benefactors. The roofing of that
-church is garnished with the arms of Thomas Archehull, one of the
-churchwardens in the year 1455, who was there buried; Thomas Morsted,
-esquire, and chirurgeon to King Henry IV., V., and VI., one of the
-sheriff's of London in the year 1436, gave unto this church a parcel
-of ground, containing in length from the course of Walbrooke toward the
-west forty-five feet, and in breadth from the church toward the north
-thirty-five feet, being within the gate called Scalding wike, in the
-said parish, to make a churchyard wherein to bury their dead. Richard
-Shore, draper, one of the sheriffs 1505, gave fifteen pounds for making
-a porch to this church. Salomon Lanuare had a chantry there in the 14th
-of Edward II. Hugh Game had one other. Buried here, as appeareth by
-monuments, John Hildye, poulter, 1416; John Kendall, 1468; John Garland,
-1476; Robert Bois, 1485, and Simon Lee, poulters, 1487; Thomas Lee of
-Essex, gentleman: William Hallingridge; Christopher Feliocke, 1494;
-Robert Draiton, skinner, 1484; John Christopherson, doctor of physic,
-1524; William Turner, skinner, 1536; Blase White, grocer, 1558; Thomas
-Hobson, haberdasher, 1559; William Hobson, haberdasher, 1581; Thomas
-Tusser, 1580, with this epitaph:--
-
- "Here Thomas Tusser, clad in earth, doth lie,
- That sometime made the Poyntes of Husbandrie;
- By him then learne thou maist, here learne we must,
- When all is done we sleepe and turne to dust,
- And yet through Christ to heaven we hope to go,
- Who reades his bookes shall find his faith was so."
-
-On the north side of the churchyard remain two tombs of marble, but not
-known of whom, or otherwise than by tradition it is said, they were of
-Thomas Monshampe and William, brothers, about 1547, etc.
-
-Some four houses west from this parish church of St. Mildred is a prison
-house pertaining to one of the sheriffs of London, and is called the
-Compter in the Poultrie. This hath been there kept and continued time
-out of mind, for I have not read of the original thereof. West from
-this compter was a proper chapel, called of Corpus Christi, and St.
-Mary, at Conyhope lane end, in the parish of St. Mildred, founded by one
-named Ion. Irunnes, a citizen of London, in the reign of Edward III.,
-in which chapel was a guild or fraternity, that might dispend in lands
-better than twenty pounds by year: it was suppressed by Henry VIII., and
-purchased by one Thomas Hobson, haberdasher; he turned this chapel into
-a fair warehouse and shops towards the street, with lodgings over them.
-
-Then is Conyhope lane, of old time so called of such a sign of three
-conies hanging over a poulterer's stall at the lane's end. Within this
-lane standeth the Grocers' hall, which company being of old time called
-Pepperers, were first incorporated by the name of Grocers in the year
-1345, at which time they elected for custos, or guardian, of their
-fraternity, Richard Oswin and Laurence Haliwell, and twenty brethren
-were then taken in to be of their society. In the year 1411, the custos,
-or guardian, and the brethren of this company, purchased of the Lord Ro.
-Fitzwaters one plot of ground, with the building thereupon, in the said
-Conyhope lane, for three hundred and twenty marks, and then laid the
-foundation of their new common hall.
-
-About the year 1429, the Grocers had license to purchase five hundred
-marks land, since the which time, near adjoining unto the Grocers'
-hall, the said company had built seven proper houses for seven aged
-poor alms people. Thomas Knowles, grocer, mayor, gave his tenement in
-St. Anthonie's churchyard to the Grocers, towards the relief of the
-poor brethren in that company. Also H. Keeble, grocer, mayor, gave to
-the seven alms people six pence the piece weekly forever; which pension
-is now increased by the masters, to some of them two shillings the
-piece weekly, and to some of them less, etc. Henry Adie, grocer, 1563,
-gave one thousand marks to the Grocers to purchase lands. And Sir John
-Pechie, knight banneret, free of that company, gave them five hundred
-pounds to certain uses; he built alms houses at Ludingstone in Kent, and
-was there buried.
-
-West from this Conyhope lane is the Old Jurie, whereof some portion is
-of Cheape ward, as afore is showed: at the south end of this lane is the
-parish church of St. Mary Colechurch, named of one Cole that built it;
-this church is built upon a wall above ground, so that men are forced
-to go to ascend up thereunto by certain steps. I find no monuments of
-this church, more than that Henry IV. granted license to William Marshal
-and others, to found a brotherhood of St. Katherine therein, because
-Thomas Becket, and St. Edmond, the archbishop, were baptized there.
-More, I read of Bordhangly lane, to be in that parish. And thus much for
-the north side of the Poultrie. The south side of the said Poultrie,
-beginning on the bank of the said brook over against the parish church
-of St. Mildred, passing up to the great conduit, hath divers fair
-houses, which were sometimes inhabited by poulters, but now by grocers,
-haberdashers, and upholsters.
-
-At the west end of this Poultrie, and also of Buckles bury, beginneth
-the large street of West Cheaping, a market place so called, which
-street stretcheth west till ye come to the little conduit by Paul's
-gate, but not all of Chepe ward. In the east part of this street
-standeth the great conduit of sweet water, conveyed by pipes of
-lead under ground from Paddington[200] for the service of this city,
-castellated with stone, and cisterned in lead, about the year 1285, and
-again new built and enlarged by Thomas Ilam, one of the sheriffs 1479.
-
-About the midst of this street is the Standard in Cheape, of what
-antiquity the first foundation I have not read. But Henry VI. by
-his patent dated at Windsor the 21st of his reign, which patent was
-confirmed by parliament 1442, granted license to Thomas Knolles, John
-Chichle, and other, executors to John Wels, grocer, sometime mayor
-of London, with his goods to make new the highway which leadeth from
-the city of London towards the palace of Westminster, before and nigh
-the manor of Savoy, parcel of the Duchy of Lancaster, a way then very
-ruinous, and the pavement broken, to the hurt and mischief of the
-subjects, which old pavement then remaining in that way within the
-length of five hundred feet, and all the breadth of the same before and
-nigh the site of the manor aforesaid, they to break up, and with stone,
-gravel, and other stuff, one other good and sufficient way there to make
-for the commodity of the subjects.
-
-And further, that the Standard in Cheape, where divers executions of the
-law before time had been performed, which Standard at the present was
-very ruinous with age, in which there was a conduit, should be taken
-down, and another competent standard of stone, together with a conduit
-in the same of new, strongly to be built, for the commodity and honour
-of the city, with the goods of the said testator, without interruption,
-etc.
-
-Of executions at the Standard in Cheape, we read, that in the year
-1293 three men had their right hands smitten off there, for rescuing
-of a prisoner arrested by an officer of the city. In the year 1326,
-the burgesses of London caused Walter Stapleton, Bishop of Excester,
-treasurer to Edward II., and other, to be beheaded at the standard in
-Cheape (but this was by Paul's gate); in the year 1351, the 26th of
-Edward III., two fishmongers were beheaded at the standard in Cheape,
-but I read not of their offence; 1381, Wat Tyler beheaded Richard Lions
-and other there. In the year 1399, Henry IV. caused the blanch charters
-made by Richard II. to be burnt there. In the year 1450, Jack Cade,
-captain of the Kentish rebels, beheaded the Lord Say there. In the
-year 1461, John Davy had his hand stricken off there, because he had
-stricken a man before the judges at Westminster, etc.
-
-Then next is a great cross in West Cheape, which cross was there erected
-in the year 1290 by Edward I. upon occasion thus:--Queen Elianor his
-wife died at Hardeby (a town near unto the city of Lincoln), her body
-was brought from thence to Westminster; and the king, in memory of her,
-caused in every place where her body rested in the way, a stately cross
-of stone to be erected, with the queen's image and arms upon it, as at
-Grantham, Woborne, Northampton, Stony Stratford, Dunstable, St. Albones,
-Waltham, West Cheape, and at Charing, from whence she was conveyed to
-Westminster, and there buried.
-
-This cross in West Cheape being like to those other which remain to
-this day, and being by length of time decayed, John Hatherly, mayor
-of London, procured, in the year 1441, license of King Henry VI. to
-re-edify the same in more beautiful manner for the honour of the city,
-and had license also to take up two hundred fodder of lead for the
-building thereof of certain conduits, and a common garnery. This cross
-was then curiously wrought at the charges of divers citizens: John
-Fisher, mercer, gave six hundred marks toward it; the same was begun to
-be set up 1484, and finished 1486, the 2nd of Henry VII. It was new gilt
-over in the year 1522, against the coming of Charles V., emperor; in
-the year 1553, against the coronation of Queen Anne;[201] new burnished
-against the coronation of Edward VI.; and again new gilt 1554, against
-the coming in of King Philip; since the which time the said cross having
-been presented by divers juries (or inquests of wardmote) to stand in
-the high way to the let of carriages (as they alleged), but could not
-have it removed, it followed that in the year 1581, the 21st of June,
-in the night, the lowest images round about the said cross (being of
-Christ's resurrection, of the Virgin Mary, King Edward the Confessor,
-and such like) were broken and defaced, proclamation was made, that
-who so would bewray the doers, should have forty crowns, but nothing
-came to light; the image of the Blessed Virgin, at that time robbed of
-her Son, and her arms broken, by which she stayed him on her knees;
-her whole body also was haled with ropes, and left likely to fall,
-but in the year 1595 was again fastened and repaired; and in the year
-next following a new misshapen son, as born out of time, all naked, was
-laid in her arms, the other images remaining broke as afore. But on the
-east side of the same cross, the steps taken thence, under the image
-of Christ's resurrection defaced, was then set up a curiously wrought
-tabernacle of grey marble, and in the same an image alabaster of Diana,
-and water conveyed from the Thames prilling from her naked breast for a
-time, but now decayed.
-
-In the year 1599, the timber of the cross at the top being rotted
-within the lead, the arms thereof bending, were feared to have fallen
-to the harming of some people, and therefore the whole body of the
-cross was scaffolded about, and the top thereof taken down, meaning
-in place thereof to have set up a piramis; but some of her majesty's
-honourable councillors directed their letters to Sir Nicholas Mosley,
-then mayor, by her highness' express commandment concerning the cross,
-forthwith to be repaired, and placed again as it formerly stood, etc.;
-notwithstanding the said cross stood headless more than a year after:
-whereupon the said councillors, in greater number, meaning not any
-longer to permit the continuance of such a contempt, wrote to William
-Rider, then mayor, requiring him, by virtue of her highness' said former
-direction and commandment, that without any further delay to accomplish
-the same her majesty's most princely care therein, respecting especially
-the antiquity and continuance of that monument, an ancient ensign of
-Christianity, etc. Dated the 24th of December, 1600. After this a cross
-of timber was framed, set up, covered with lead, and gilded, the body of
-the cross downward cleansed of dust, the scaffold carried thence. About
-twelve nights following, the image of Our Lady was again defaced, by
-plucking off her crown, and almost her head, taking from her her naked
-child, and stabbing her in the breast, etc. Thus much for the cross in
-West Cheape.
-
-Then at the west end of West Cheape street, was sometime a cross of
-stone, called the Old Cross. Raph Higden, in his _Policronicon_, saith,
-that Waltar Stapleton, Bishop of Excester, treasurer to Edward II., was
-by the burgesses of London beheaded at this cross called the Standard,
-without the north door of St. Paul's church; and so is it noted in other
-writers that then lived. This old cross stood and remained at the east
-end of the parish church called St. Michael in the corner by Paule's
-gate, near to the north end of the old Exchange, till the year 1390, the
-13th of Richard II., in place of which old cross then taken down, the
-said church of St. Michael was enlarged, and also a fair water conduit
-built about the 9th of Henry VI.
-
-In the reign of Edward III. divers joustings were made in this street,
-betwixt Sopar's lane and the great cross, namely, one in the year 1331,
-the 21st of September, as I find noted by divers writers of that time.
-In the middle of the city of London (say they), in a street called
-Cheape, the stone pavement being covered with sand, that the horses
-might not slide when they strongly set their feet to the ground, the
-king held a tournament three days together, with the nobility, valiant
-men of the realm, and other some strange knights. And to the end the
-beholders might with the better ease see the same, there was a wooden
-scaffold erected across the street, like unto a tower, wherein Queen
-Philippa, and many other ladies, richly attired, and assembled from
-all parts of the realm, did stand to behold the jousts; but the higher
-frame, in which the ladies were placed, brake in sunder, whereby they
-were with some shame forced to fall down, by reason whereof the knights,
-and such as were underneath, were grievously hurt; wherefore the queen
-took great care to save the carpenters from punishment, and through her
-prayers (which she made upon her knees) pacified the king and council,
-and thereby purchased great love of the people. After which time the
-king caused a shed to be strongly made of stone, for himself, the queen,
-and other estates to stand on, and there to behold the joustings, and
-other shows, at their pleasure, by the church of St. Mary Bow, as is
-showed in Cordwainer street ward. Thus much for the high street of
-Cheape.
-
-Now let us return to the south side of Cheape ward. From the great
-conduit west be many fair and large houses, for the most part possessed
-of mercers up to the corner of Cordwainer street, corruptly called
-Bow lane, which houses in former times were but sheds or shops, with
-solers[202] over them, as of late one of them remained at Sopar's lane
-end, wherein a woman sold seeds, roots, and herbs; but those sheds or
-shops, by encroachments on the high street, are now largely built on
-both sides outward, and also upward, some three, four, or five stories
-high.
-
-Now of the north side of Cheape street and ward, beginning at the great
-conduit, and by St. Mary Cole church, where we left. Next thereunto
-westward is the Mercers' chapel, sometime an hospital, intituled of
-St. Thomas of Acon, or Acars, for a master and brethren, "_Militia
-hospitalis_," etc., saith the record of Edward III., the 14th year; it
-was founded by Thomas Fitzthebald de Heili, and Agnes his wife, sister
-to Thomas Becket, in the reign of Henry II.; they gave to the master
-and brethren the lands, with the appurtenances that sometimes were
-Gilbart Becket's, father to the said Thomas, in the which he was born,
-there to make a church. There was a charnel, and a chapel over it, of
-St. Nicholas and St. Stephen. This hospital was valued to dispend £277
-3_s._ 4_d._, surrendered the 30th of Henry VIII.: the 21st of October,
-and was since purchased by the Mercers, by means of Sir Richard Gresham,
-and was again set open on the eve of St. Michael, 1541, the 33rd of
-Henry VIII.: it is now called the Mercers' chapel; therein is kept a
-free grammar school, as of old time had been accustomed, commanded by
-parliament.[203] Here be many monuments remaining, but more have been
-defaced:--James Butler, Earl of Ormond, and Dame Joan his countess,
-1428; John Norton, esquire; Stephen Cavendish, draper, mayor 1362;
-Thomas Cavendish; William Cavendish; Thomas Ganon, called Pike, one
-of the sheriffs 1410; Hungate, of Yorkshire; Ambrose Cresacre; John
-Chester, draper; John Trusbut, mercer, 1437; Tho. Norland, sheriff 1483;
-Sir Edmond Sha, goldsmith, mayor 1482; Sir Thomas Hill, mayor 1485;
-Thomas Ilam, sheriff 1479;[204] Lancelot Laken, esquire; Raph Tilney,
-sheriff 1488; Garth, esquire; John Rich; Thomas Butler, Earl of Ormond,
-1515; Sir W. Butler, grocer, mayor 1515; W. Browne, mercer, mayor 1513;
-John Loke, 1519;[205] Sir T. Baldry, mercer, mayor 1523; Sir W. Locke,
-mercer, sheriff 1548; Sir John Allen, mercer, mayor 1525, deceased 1544;
-Sir Thomas Leigh, mercer, mayor 1558; Sir Richard Malory, mercer, mayor
-1564; Humf. Baskervile, mercer, sheriff 1561; Sir G. Bond, mayor 1587;
-etc.
-
-Before this hospital, towards the street, was built a fair and beautiful
-chapel, arched over with stone, and thereupon the Mercers' hall, a most
-curious piece of work; Sir John Allen, mercer, being founder of that
-chapel, was there buried; but since his tomb is removed thence into the
-body of the hospital church, and his chapel, divided into shops, is
-letten out for rent.
-
-These Mercers were enabled to be a company, and to purchase lands to
-the value of twenty pounds the year, the 17th of Richard II.; they
-had three messuages and shops in the parish of St. Martin Oteswitch,
-in the ward of Bishopsgate, for the sustentation of the poor, and a
-chantry of the 22nd of Richard II. Henry IV., in the 12th of his reign,
-confirmed to Stephen Spilman, W. Marchford, and John Whatile, mercers,
-by the name of one new seldam, shed, or building, with shops, cellars,
-and edifices whatsoever appertaining called Crownsild, situate in the
-Mercery in West Cheape, in the parish of St. Mary de Arcubus in London,
-etc., to be holden in burgage, as all the city of London is, and which
-were worth by year in all issues, according to the true value of them,
-£7 13_s._ 4_d._, as found by inquisition before T. Knolles, mayor, and
-escheator in the said city. Henry VI., in the 3rd of his reign, at the
-request of John Coventrie, John Carpenter, and William Grove, granted
-to the Mercers to have a chaplain and a brotherhood, for relief of such
-of their company as came to decay by misfortune on the sea. In the year
-1536, on St. Peter's night, King Henry VIII. and Queen Jane his wife,
-stood in this Mercers' hall, then new built, and beheld the marching
-watch of this city most bravely set out, Sir John Allen, mercer, one of
-the king's council, being mayor.
-
-Next beyond the Mercers' chapel, and their hall, is Ironmonger lane, so
-called of ironmongers dwelling there, whereof I read, in the reign of
-Edward I., etc. In this lane is the small parish church of St. Martin
-called Pomary, upon what occasion I certainly know not. It is supposed
-to be of apples growing where houses are now lately built; for myself
-have seen large void places there. Monuments in that church none to be
-accounted of.
-
-Farther west is St. Laurence lane, so called of St. Laurence church,
-which standeth directly over against the north end thereof. Antiquities
-in this lane I find none other, than that among many fair houses, there
-is one large inn for receipt of travellers called Blossoms inn, but
-corruptly Bosoms inn, and hath to sign St. Laurence the Deacon, in a
-border of blossoms or flowers.
-
-Then near to the Standard in Cheape is Honey lane, so called, not of
-sweetness thereof, being very narrow, and somewhat dark, but rather of
-often washing and sweeping, to keep it clean. In this lane is the small
-parish church called Alhallows in Honey lane; there be no monuments in
-this church worth the noting. I find that John Norman, draper, mayor
-1453, was buried there; he gave to the Drapers his tenements on the
-north side the said church, they to allow for the beam light and lamp,
-13_s._ 4_d._ yearly from this lane to the Standard. And thus much for
-Cheape ward in the high street of Cheape, for it stretcheth no farther.
-
-Now for the north wing of Cheape ward have ye Catte street, corruptly
-called Catteten street, which beginneth at the north end of Ironmonger
-lane, and runneth to the west end of St. Lawrence church, as is afore
-showed.
-
-On the north side of the street is the Guildhall, wherein the courts
-for the city be kept, namely, 1. The court of common council; 2. The
-court of the lord mayor and his brethren the aldermen; 3. The court
-of hustings; 4. The court of orphans; 5. The court of the sheriff; 6.
-The court of the wardmote; 7. The court of hallmote; 8. The court of
-requests, commonly called the court of conscience; 9. The chamberlain's
-court for apprentices, and making them free. This Guildhall, saith
-Robert Fabian, was begun to be built new in the year 1411, the 12th of
-Henry IV., by Thomas Knoles, then mayor, and his brethren the aldermen:
-the same was made, of a little cottage, a large and great house, as
-now it standeth; towards the charges whereof the companies gave large
-benevolences; also offences of men were pardoned for sums of money
-towards this work, extraordinary fees were raised, fines, amercements,
-and other things employed during seven years, with a continuation
-thereof three years more, all to be employed to this building.
-
-The 1st year of Henry VI., John Coventrie and John Carpenter, executors
-to Richard Whitington, gave towards the paving of this great hall twenty
-pounds, and the next year fifteen pounds more, to the said pavement,
-with hard stone of Purbeck; they also glazed some windows thereof,
-and of the mayor's court; on every which windows the arms of Richard
-Whitington are placed. The foundation of the mayor's court was laid in
-the 3rd year of the reign of Henry VI., and of the porch on the south
-side of the mayor's court, in the 4th of the said king. Then was built
-the mayor's chamber, and the council chamber, with other rooms above the
-stairs; last of all a stately porch entering the great hall was erected,
-the front thereof towards the south being beautified with images of
-stone, such as is showed by these verses following, made about some
-thirty years since by William Elderton, at that time an attorney in the
-sheriffs' courts there:--
-
- "Though most of the images be pulled down,
- And none be thought remayne in towne,
- I am sure there be in London yet,
- Seven images in such and in such a place;
- And few or none I think will hit,
- Yet every day they show their face,
- And thousands see them every year,
- But few I thinke can tell me where,
- Where Jesu Christ aloft doth stand:
- Law and Learning on eyther hand,
- Discipline in the Devil's necke,
- And hard by her are three direct,
- There Justice, Fortitude, and Temperance stand,
- Where find ye the like in all this land?"
-
-Divers aldermen glazed the great hall and other courts, as appeareth
-by their arms in each window. William Hariot, draper, mayor 1481, gave
-forty pounds to the making of two loovers in the said Guildhall, and
-towards the glazing thereof. The kitchens and other houses of office
-adjoining to this Guildhall, were built of later time, to wit, about
-the year 1501, by procurement of Sir John Sha, goldsmith, mayor (who
-was the first that kept his feast there); towards the charges of
-which work the mayor had of the fellowships of the city, by their own
-agreement, certain sums of money, as of the Mercers forty pounds, the
-Grocers twenty pounds, the Drapers thirty pounds, and so of the other
-fellowships through the city, as they were of power. Also widows and
-other well-disposed persons gave certain sums of money, as the Lady
-Hill ten pounds, the Lady Austrie ten pounds, and so of many other,
-till the work was finished, since the which time the mayor's feasts
-have been yearly kept there, which before time had been kept in the
-Tailors' hall, and in the Grocers' hall. Nicholas Alwyn, grocer, mayor
-1499, deceased 1505, gave by his testament for a hanging of tapestry,
-to serve for principal days in the Guildhall, £73 6_s._ 8_d._ How this
-gift was performed I have not heard, for executors of our time having no
-conscience (I speak of my own knowledge) prove more testaments than they
-perform.
-
-Now for the chapel or college of our Lady Mary Magdalen, and of All
-Saints, by the Guildhall, called London college, I read that the same
-was built about the year 1299, and that Peter Fanelore, Adam Frauncis,
-and Henry Frowike, citizens, gave one messuage, with the appurtenances,
-in the parish of St. Fawstar, to William Brampton, custos of the
-chantry, by them founded in the said chapel with four chaplains, and one
-other house in the parish of St. Giles without Cripplegate, in the 27th
-of Edward III., was given to them. Moreover, I find that Richard II., in
-the 20th of his reign, granted to Stephen Spilman, mercer, license to
-give one messuage, three shops, and one garden, with the appurtenances,
-being in the parish of St. Andrew Hubbard, to the custos and chaplains
-of the said chapel, and to their successors, for their better relief and
-maintenance for ever.
-
-King Henry VI., in the 8th of his reign, gave license to John Barnard,
-custos, and the chaplains, to build of new the said chapel or college of
-Guildhall: and the same Henry VI., in the 27th of his reign, granted to
-the parish clerks in London a guild of St. Nicholas, for two chaplains
-by them to be kept in the said chapel of St. Mary Magdalen, near unto
-the Guildhall, and to keep seven alms people. Henry Barton, skinner,
-mayor, founded a chaplaincy there; Roger Depham, mercer, and Sir William
-Langford, knight, had also chaplaincies there. This chapel or college
-had a custos, seven chaplains, three clerks, and four choristers.
-
-Monuments there have been sundry, as appeareth by the tombs of marble
-yet remaining, seven in number, but all defaced. The uppermost in the
-choir, on the south side thereof, above the revestry door, was the tomb
-of John Wells, grocer, mayor 1451. The likeness of Wells are graven
-on the tomb on the revestry door, and other places on that side the
-choir. Also in the glass window over this tomb, and in the east window,
-is the likeness of Wells, with hands elevated out of the same Wells,
-holding scrolls, wherein is written "Mercy!"--the writing in the east
-window being broken, yet remaineth Wells. I found his arms also in the
-south glass window; all which do show that the east end and south side
-the choir of this chapel, and the revestry, were by him both built
-and glazed. On the north side the choir the tomb of Thomas Knesworth,
-fishmonger, mayor 1505, who deceased 1515, was defaced, and within these
-forty-four years again renewed by the Fishmongers. Two other tombs lower
-there are; the one of a draper, the other of a haberdasher, their names
-not known. Richard Stomine is written in the window by the haberdasher.
-Under flat stones do lie divers custos of the chapel, chaplains and
-officers to the chamber. Amongst others, John Clipstone, priest,
-sometime custos of the library of the Guildhall, 1457; another of Edmond
-Alison, priest, one of the custos of the library, 1510, etc. Sir John
-Langley, goldsmith, mayor 1576, lieth buried in the vault, under the
-tomb of John Wells before-named. This chapel, or college, valued to
-dispend £15 8_s._ 9_d._ by the year, was surrendered amongst other: the
-chapel remaineth to the mayor and commonalty, wherein they have service
-weekly, as also at the election of the mayor, and at the mayor's feast,
-etc.
-
-Adjoining to this chapel, on the south side, was sometime a fair and
-large library, furnished with books, pertaining to the Guildhall and
-college. These books, as it is said, were in the reign of Edward VI.
-sent for by Edward, Duke of Somerset, lord protector, with promise to
-be restored: men laded from thence three carries with them, but they
-were never returned. This library was built by the executors of Richard
-Whittington, and by William Burie: the arms of Whittington are placed on
-the one side in the stone work, and two letters, to wit, W. and B., for
-William Bury, on the other side: it is now lofted through, and made a
-storehouse for clothes.
-
-South-west from this Guildhall is the fair parish church of St.
-Laurence, called in the Jury, because of old time[206] many Jews
-inhabited thereabout. This church is fair and large, and hath some
-monuments, as shall be shown. I myself, more than seventy years
-since,[207] have seen in this church the shank-bone of a man (as it
-is taken), and also a tooth,[208] of a very great bigness, hanged up
-for show in chains of iron, upon a pillar of stone; the tooth (being
-about the bigness of a man's fist) is long since conveyed from thence:
-the thigh, or shank-bone, of twenty-five inches in length by the rule,
-remaineth yet fastened to a post of timber, and is not so much to be
-noted for the length as for the thickness, hardness, and strength
-thereof; for when it was hanged on the stone pillar it fretted with
-moving the said pillar, and was not itself fretted, nor, as seemeth,
-is not yet lightened by remaining dry; but where or when this bone was
-first found or discovered I have not heard, and therefore, rejecting
-the fables of some late writers, I overpass them. Walter Blundell
-had a chantry there, the 14th of Edward II. There lie buried in this
-church--Elizabeth, wife to John Fortescue; Katherine Stoketon; John
-Stratton; Philip Albert; John Fleming; Philip Agmondesham; William
-Skywith; John Norlong; John Baker; Thomas Alleyne; William Barton,
-mercer, 1410; William Melrith, mercer, one of the sheriffs, 1425; Simon
-Bartlet, mercer, 1428; Walter Chartsey, draper, one of the sheriffs
-1430; Richard Rich, esquire, of London, the father, and Richard Rich,
-his son, mercer, one of the sheriffs 1442, deceased 1469, with this
-epitaph:
-
- "Respice quod opus est præsentis temporis æuum,
- Omne quod est, nihil est præter amare Deum."
-
-This Richard was father to John, buried in St. Thomas Acars, which
-John was father to Thomas, father to Richard Lord Ritch, etc.; John
-Pickering, honourable for service of his prince and for the English
-merchants beyond the seas, who deceased 1448; Godfrey Bollen, mercer,
-mayor 1457; Thomas Bollen, his son, esquire, of Norfolk, 1471; John
-Atkenson, gentleman; Dame Mary St. Maure; John Waltham; Roger Bonifant;
-John Chayhee; John Abbot; Geffrey Filding, mayor 1452, and Angell his
-wife; Simon Benington, draper, and Joan his wife; John Marshal, mercer,
-mayor 1493; William Purchat, mayor 1498; Thomas Burgoyne, gentleman,
-mercer, 1517; the wife of a master of defence, servant to the Princess
-of Wales, Duchess of Cornwall, and Countess of Chester;[209] Sir Richard
-Gresham, mayor 1537; Sir Michell Dormer, mayor 1541; Robert Charsey, one
-of the sheriffs 1548; Sir William Row, ironmonger, mayor 1593; Samuel
-Thornhill, 1397. Thus much for Cheape ward, which hath an alderman,
-his deputy, common councillors eleven, constables eleven, scavengers
-nine, for the wardmote inquest twelve, and a beadle. It is taxed to the
-fifteen at £72 16_s._, and in the Exchequer at £52 11_s._[210]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[198] "Justices charged to punish such as sel bels from their churches,
-Elizabeth 14."--_Stow._
-
-[199] "The 13th of November."--_1st edition_, p. 210.
-
-[200] "This conduite was the first sweete water that was conveyed
-by pipes of lead under ground to this place in the citie from
-Paddington."--_1st edition_, p. 210.
-
-[201] This is obviously an error. It occurs in the first edition, is
-repeated in that of 1603, and by Anthony Munday, in his edition of 1618.
-Strype (vol. i. book iii. p. 35), endeavours to correct it, by reading
-"Mary," who was crowned in 1553, instead of Anne. The error, however, is
-in the date, which should be 1533, the year of Anne Boleyn's coronation,
-as we learn from the description of that ceremony given by Stow in his
-_Annals_, "that she went forward by the crosse which was _newly gilt_."
-
-[202] _Soler_ is described by Tyrwhitt, in his edition of Chaucer's
-_Canterbury Tales_, as originally signifying an open gallery or balcony
-at the top of the house, though latterly used for any upper room, loft,
-or garret. Tyrwhitt refers in his Glossary, to the _Cook's Tale of
-Gamelyn_, for an authority for the use of the word in the latter sense--
-
- "He fleigh up until alofte,
- And shet the dore fast.
-
- * * * * *
-
- And saugh where he looked out
- At a _solere_ window."
-
-The German _Söller_ is used by Luther in his magnificent translation
-of the Bible in both senses:--"Peter went up upon the house-top to
-pray"--"_Stieg Petrus hinauf auf den SÖLLER zu beten._" Acts x. 9. "And
-when they were come in, they went up into an upper room"--"_Und als sie
-hinein kamen, stiegen sie auf den SÖLLER._" Acts i. 13.
-
-[203] "There is also a preaching in the Italian tongue to the Italians
-and others on the Sondaies."--_1st edition_, p. 214.
-
-[204] "Henry Frowicke."--_Ibid._
-
-[205] "Locke his armes in the windowes."--_Stow._
-
-[206] Because "of old time, since the raigne of William the Conqueror
-(that first brought Jewes from Roan into this realme), many Jewes
-inhabited thereabouts, until that in the year 1290, the 18th of Edw. I.,
-they were wholly and for ever by the said king banished this realme,
-having of their owne goodes to beare their charges, till they were out
-of dominions. The number of the Jewes at that time banished were 15,060
-persons, whose houses being sold, the king made of them a mightie masse
-of money."--_1st edition_, p. 219.
-
-[207] "Sixty years since."--_Ibid._
-
-[208] "The tooth of some monstrous fish, as I take it. A shank-bone,
-of twenty-five inches long, of a man, as is said, but might be of an
-oliphant."--_Stow._
-
-[209] "A Countess of Cornwall and Chester, but her name and time is not
-apparent."--_1st edition_, p. 220.
-
-[210] "In the Exchequer at seventy-two pound."--_Ibid._
-
-
-
-
-COLEMAN STREET WARD
-
-
-Next to Cheape ward, on the north side thereof, is Coleman street ward,
-and beginneth also in the east, on the course of Walbrook in Lothbury,
-and runneth west on the south side to the end of Ironmongers' lane, and
-on the north side to the west corner of Bassinges hall street.
-
-On the south side of Lothbury is the street called the Old Jury; the one
-half, and better on both sides, towards Cheape, is of this ward. On the
-north side lieth Coleman street, whereof the ward taketh name, wholly
-on both sides north to London wall, and from that north end along by
-the wall, and Moregate east, to the course of Walbrook; and again from
-Coleman street west to the iron grates: and these be the bounds of this
-ward.
-
-Antiquities to be noted therein are these: First, the street of
-Lothberie, Lathberie, or Loadberie (for by all these names have I read
-it), took the name (as it seemeth) of berie, or court of old time there
-kept, but by whom is grown out of memory. This street is possessed for
-the most part by founders, that cast candlesticks, chafing-dishes, spice
-mortars, and such like copper or laton works, and do afterward turn them
-with the foot, and not with the wheel, to make them smooth and bright
-with turning and scrating (as some do term it), making a loathsome noise
-to the by-passers that have not been used to the like, and therefore by
-them disdainfully called Lothberie.
-
-On the south side of this street, amongst the founders, be some fair
-houses and large for merchants, namely, one that of old time was the
-Jews' synagogue, which was defaced by the citizens of London, after
-that they had slain seven hundred Jews, and spoiled the residue of
-their goods, in the year 1262, the 47th of Henry III. And not long
-after, in the year 1291, King Edward I. banished the remnant of the
-Jews out of England, as is afore showed. The said synagogue being so
-suppressed, certain friars got possession thereof; "for in the year
-1257," saith Mathew Paris, "there were seen in London a new order of
-friars, called _De Poenitentia Jesu_, or _Fratres de Sacca_, because
-they were apparelled in sackcloth, who had their house in London, near
-unto Aldersgate without the gate, and had license of Henry III., in the
-54th of his reign, to remove from thence to any other place; and in the
-56th he gave unto them this Jews' synagogue; after which time, Elianor
-the queen, wife to Edward I., took into her protection, and warranted
-unto the prior and brethren _De Penitentia Jesu Christi_ of London,
-the said land and building in Colechurch street, in the parish of St.
-Olave in the Jury, and St. Margaret in Lothbery, by her granted, with
-consent of Stephen de Fulbourne, under-warden of the Bridge-house, and
-other brethren of that house, for sixty marks of silver, which they had
-received of the said prior and brethren of repentance, to the building
-of the said bridge." This order of friars gathered many good scholars,
-and multiplied in number exceedingly, until the council at Lyons, by
-the which it was decreed, that from that time forth there should be no
-more orders of begging friars permitted, but only the four orders; to
-wit, the Dominicke, or preachers, the Minorites, or grey friars, the
-Carmelites, or white friars, and the Augustines: and so from that time
-the begging friars deceased, and fell to nothing.
-
-Now it followed, that in the year 1305, Robert Fitzwalter requested
-and obtained of the said King Edward I., that the same friars of the
-Sacke might assign to the said Robert their chapel or church, of old
-time called the Synagogue of the Jews, near adjoining to the then
-mansion place of the same Robert, which was in place where now standeth
-the Grocers' hall; and the said Synagogue was at the north corner of
-the Old Jury. Robert Large, mercer, mayor in the year 1439, kept his
-mayoralty in this house, and dwelt there until his dying day. This
-house standeth, and is of two parishes, as opening into Lothberie, of
-St. Margaret's parish, and opening into the Old Jury of St. Olave's
-parish. The said Robert Large gave liberally to both these parishes, but
-was buried at St. Olave's. Hugh Clopton, mercer, mayor 1492, dwelt in
-this house, and kept his mayoralty there: it is now a tavern, and hath
-to sign a windmill. And thus much for this house, sometime the Jews'
-synagogue, since a house of friars, then a nobleman's house, after that
-a merchant's house, wherein mayoralties have been kept, and now a wine
-tavern.
-
-Then is the Old Jurie, a street so called of Jews sometime dwelling
-there, and near adjoining, in the parishes of St. Olave, St. Michael
-Basings hall, St. Martin Ironmonger lane, St. Lawrence, called the Jury,
-and so west to Wood street. William, Duke of Normandy, first brought
-them from Rouen to inhabit here.
-
-William Rufus favoured them so far, that he sware by Luke's face, his
-common oath, if they could overcome the Christians, he would be one of
-their sect.
-
-Henry II. grievously punished them for corrupting his coin.
-
-Richard I. forbad Jews and women to be present at his coronation, for
-fear of enchantments; for breaking of which commandment many Jews
-were slain, who being assembled to present the king with some gift,
-one of them was stricken by a Christian, which some unruly people
-perceiving, fell upon them, beat them to their houses, and burnt them
-therein, or slew them at their coming out. Also the Jews at Norwich,
-St. Edmondsbury, Lincoln, Stamford, and Lynne, were robbed and spoiled;
-and at York, to the number of five hundred, besides women and children,
-entered a tower of the castle, proffered money to be in surety of their
-lives, but the Christians would not take it, whereupon they cut the
-throats of their wives and children, and cast them over the walls on the
-Christians' heads, and then entering the king's lodging, they burnt both
-the house and themselves.
-
-King John, in the 11th of his reign, commanded all the Jews, both men
-and women, to be imprisoned and grievously punished, because he would
-have all their money: some of them gave all they had, and promised more,
-to escape so many kinds of torments, for every one of them had one of
-their eyes at the least plucked out; amongst whom there was one, which
-being tormented many ways, would not ransom himself, till the king had
-caused every day one of his great teeth to be plucked out by the space
-of seven days, and then gave the king ten thousand marks of silver, to
-the end they should pull out no more: the said king at that time spoiled
-the Jews of sixty-six thousand marks.
-
-The 17th of this king, the barons brake into the Jews' houses, rifled
-their coffers, and with the stone of their houses repaired the gates and
-walls of London.
-
-King Henry III., in the 11th of his reign, granted to Semayne, or
-Balaster, the house of Benonye Mittun the Jew, in the parish of St.
-Michael Bassinghaughe, in which the said Benonye dwelt, with the fourth
-part of all his land, in that parish which William Elie held of the fee
-of Hugh Nevell, and all the land in Coleman street belonging to the said
-Benonye, and the fourth part of the land in the parish of St. Lawrence,
-which was the fee of T. Buckerell, and were escheated to the king for
-the murder which the said Benonye committed in the city of London, to
-hold to the said Semaine, and his heirs, of the king, paying at Easter
-a pair of gilt spurs, and to do the service thereof due unto the lord's
-court. In like manner, and for like services, the king granted to Guso
-for his homage the other part of the lands of the said Bononye in St.
-Michael's parish, which lands that Paynter held, and was the king's
-escheat, and the lands of the said Bononye in the said parish, which
-Waltar Turnar held, and fifteen feet of land, which Hugh Harman held,
-with fifteen iron ells of land, and half in the front of Ironmonger
-lane, in the parish of St. Martin, which were the said Bononies of the
-fee of the hospital of St. Giles, and which Adam the smith held, with
-two stone-houses, which were Moses', the Jew of Canterbury, in the
-parish of St. Olave, and which are of the fee of Arnold le Reus, and are
-the king's escheats as before said.
-
-The 16th of the said Henry, the Jews in London built a synagogue, but
-the king commanded it should be dedicated to our Blessed Lady, and
-after gave it to the brethren of St. Anthonie of Vienna, and so was it
-called St. Anthonie's hospital: this Henry founded a church and house
-for converted Jews in New street, by the Temple, whereby it came to
-pass that in short time there was gathered a great number of converts.
-The 20th of this Henry, seven Jews were brought from Norwich, which
-had stolen a christened child, had circumcised, and minded to have
-crucified him at Easter, wherefore their bodies and goods were at the
-king's pleasure: the 26th, the Jews were constrained to pay to the king
-twenty thousand marks, at two terms in the year, or else to be kept
-in perpetual prison: the 35th, he taketh inestimable sums of money of
-all rich men, namely, of Aaron, a Jew, born at York, fourteen thousand
-marks for himself and ten thousand marks for the queen; and before he
-had taken of the same Jew as much as in all amounted to thirty thousand
-marks of silver, and two hundred marks of gold to the queen: in the
-40th, were brought up to Westminster two hundred and two Jews from
-Lincoln, for crucifying of a child named Hugh; eighteen of them were
-hanged: the 43rd, a Jew at Tewkesbery fell into a privy on the Saturday,
-and would not that day be taken out for reverence of his Sabbath;
-wherefore Richard Clare, Earl of Gloucester, kept him there till Monday,
-that he was dead: the 47th, the barons slew the Jews at London seven
-hundred; the rest were spoiled, and their synagogue defaced, because one
-Jew would have forced a Christian to have paid more than two pence for
-the loan of twenty shillings a week.
-
-The 3rd of Edward I., in a parliament at London, usury was forbidden
-to the Jews; and that all usurers might be known, the king commanded
-that every usurer should wear a table on his breast, the breadth of a
-paveline, or else to avoid the realm. The 6th of the said King Edward
-a reformation was made for clipping of the king's coin, for which
-offence two hundred and sixty-seven Jews were drawn and hanged; three
-were English Christians, and other were English Jews: the same year the
-Jews crucified a child at Northampton, for the which fact many Jews at
-London were drawn at horse-tails and hanged. The 11th of Edward I., John
-Perkham, Archbishop of Canterbury, commanded the Bishop of London to
-destroy all the Jews' synagogues in his diocese. The 16th of the said
-Edward, all the Jews in England were in one day apprehended by precept
-from the king, but they redeemed themselves for twelve thousand pounds
-of silver; notwithstanding, in the 19th of his reign, he banished them
-all out of England, giving them only to bear their charge, till they
-were out of his realm: the number of Jews then expulsed were fifteen
-thousand and sixty persons. The king made a mighty mass of money of
-their houses, which he sold, and yet the commons of England had granted
-and gave him a fifteenth of all their goods to banish them: and thus
-much for the Jews.
-
-In this said street, called the Old Jury, is a proper parish church
-of St. Olave Upwell, so called in record, 1320. John Brian, parson of
-St. Olave Upwell, in the Jury, founded there a chantry, and gave two
-messuages to that parish, the 16th of Edward II., and was by the said
-king confirmed. In this church,[211] to the commendation of the parsons
-and parishioners, the monuments of the dead remain less defaced than in
-many other: first, of William Dikman, fereno or ironmonger, one of the
-sheriffs of London 1367; Robert Haveloke, ironmonger, 1390; John Organ,
-mercer, one of the sheriffs 1385; John Forest, vicar of St. Olave's, and
-of St. Stephen, at that time as a chapel annexed to St. Olave, 1399;
-H. Friole, tailor, 1400; T. Morsted, esquire, chirurgeon to Henry IV.,
-V., and VI., one of the sheriffs, 1436: he built a fair new aisle to
-the enlargement of this church, on the north side thereof, wherein he
-lieth buried, 1450; Adam Breakspeare, chaplain, 1411; William Kerkbie,
-mercer, 1465; Robert Large, mercer, mayor 1440; he gave to that church
-two hundred pounds; John Belwine, founder, 1467; Gabriel Rave, fuller,
-1511; Wentworth, esquire, 1510; Thomas Michell, ironmonger, 1527;
-Giles Dewes, servant to Henry VII. and to Henry VIII., clerk of their
-libraries, and schoolmaster for the French tongue to Prince Arthur and
-to the Lady Mary, 1535; Richard Chamberlaine, ironmonger, one of the
-sheriffs, 1562; Edmond Burlacy, mercer, 1583; John Brian, etc.
-
-From this parish church of St. Olave, to the north end of the Old Jewry,
-and from thence west to the north end of Ironmongers' lane, and from
-the said corner into Ironmongers' lane, almost to the parish church of
-St. Martin, was of old time one large building of stone, very ancient,
-made in place of Jews' houses, but of what antiquity, or by whom the
-same was built, or for what use, I have not learnt, more than that King
-Henry VI., in the 16th of his reign, gave the office of being porter or
-keeper thereof unto John Stent for term of his life, by the name of his
-principal palace in the Old Jury: this was in my youth called the old
-Wardrobe, but of later time the outward stone wall hath been by little
-and little taken down, and divers fair houses built thereupon, even
-round about.
-
-Now for the north side of this Lothburie, beginning again at the east
-end thereof, upon the water-course of Walbrooke, have ye a proper parish
-church called St. Margaret, which seemeth to be newly re-edified and
-built about the year 1440; for Robert Large gave to the choir of that
-church one hundred shillings and twenty pounds for ornaments; more, to
-the vaulting over the water-course of Walbrook by the said church, for
-the enlarging thereof two hundred marks.
-
-There be monuments in this church,--of Reginald Coleman, son to Robert
-Coleman, buried there 1483: this said Robert Coleman may be supposed
-the first builder or owner of Coleman street, and that St. Stephen's
-church, then built in Coleman street, was but a chapel belonging to the
-parish church of St. Olave in the Jury; for we read (as afore) that John
-Forest, vicar of St. Olave's, and of the chapel annexed of St. Stephen,
-deceased in the year 1399.[212] Hugh Clopton, mercer, mayor, deceased
-1496; John Dimocke, Anselme Becker, John Julian, and William Ilford,
-chantries there; Sir Brian Tewke, knight, treasurer of the chamber to
-King Henry VIII., and Dame Grisilde his wife, that deceased after him,
-were there buried 1536; John Fetiplace, draper, esquire, 1464, and Joan
-his wife; Sir Hugh Witch, mercer, mayor, son to Richard Witch, entombed
-there 1466: he gave to his third wife three thousand pounds, and to
-maids' marriages five hundred marks; Sir John Leigh, 1564, with this
-epitaph:
-
- "No wealth, no prayse, no bright renowne, no skill,
- No force, no fame, no princes loue, no toyle,
- Though forraigne land by trauell search ye will,
- No faithfull seruice of the country soyle,
- Can life prolong one minute of an houre,
- But death at length will execute his power;
- For Sir John Leigh to sundry countries knowne,
- A worthy knight well of his prince esteemde,
- By seeing much, to great experience growne,
- Though safe on seas, though sure on land he seemde,
- Yet here he lyes too soone by death opprest,
- His fame yet liues, his soule in heauen doth rest."
-
-By the west end of this parish church have ye a fair water conduit,
-built at the charges of the city in the year 1546. Sir Martin Bowes
-being mayor, two fifteens were levied of the citizens toward the charges
-thereof. This water is conveyed in great abundance from divers springs
-lying betwixt Hoxton and Iseldon.
-
-Next is the Founders' hall, a proper house, and so to the south-west
-corner of Bassinges hall street, have ye fair and large houses for
-merchants; namely, the corner house at the end of Bassinges hall street;
-an old piece of work, built of stone, sometime belonging to a certain
-Jew named Mansere, the son of Aaron, the son of Coke the Jew, the 7th
-of Edward I.; since to Rahere de Sopar's lane, then to Simon Francis.
-Thomas Bradbery, mercer, kept his mayoralty there; deceased 1509. Part
-of this house hath been lately employed as a market-house for the sale
-of woollen bays, watmols, flannels, and such like. Alderman Bennet now
-possesseth it.
-
-On this north side against the Old Jury is Coleman street, so called of
-Coleman, the first builder and owner thereof; as also of Colechurch,
-or Coleman church, against the great conduit in Cheape. This is a fair
-and large street, on both sides built with divers fair houses, besides
-alleys, with small tenements in great number. On the east side of this
-street, almost at the north end thereof, is the Armourers' hall, which
-company of armourers were made a fraternity or guild of St George, with
-a chantry in the chapel of St. Thomas in Paule's church, in the 1st of
-Henry VI. Also on the same side is King's alley and Love lane, both
-containing many tenements; and on the west side, towards the south end,
-is the parish church of St. Stephen, wherein the monuments are defaced:
-notwithstanding, I find that William Crayhag founded a chantry there in
-the reign of Edward II., and was buried there:[213] also John Essex,
-the 35th of Edward III.; Adam Goodman, the 37th of Edward III.; William
-King, draper, sometime owner of King's alley, the 18th of Richard II.;
-John Stokeling, the 10th of Henry VI.; John Arnold, leather-seller, the
-17th of Henry VI.; Thomas Bradberie, mercer, mayor, the 1st of Henry
-VIII.; his tomb remaineth on the north side the choir; Richard Hamney,
-1418; Kirnigham, 1468; Sir John Garme; Richard Colsel; Edmond Harbeke,
-currier; all these were benefactors, and buried there. This church was
-sometime a synagogue of the Jews, then a parish church, then a chapel
-to St. Olave's in the Jury, until the 7th of Edward IV., and was then
-incorporated a parish church.
-
-By the east end of this church is placed a cock of sweet water, taken of
-the main pipe that goeth into Lothberie. Also in London wall, directly
-against the north end of Coleman street, is a conduit of water, made
-at the charges of Thomas Exmew, goldsmith, mayor 1517. And let here
-be the end of this ward, which hath an alderman, his deputy, common
-councillors four, constables four, scavengers four, of the wardmote
-inquest thirteen, and a beadle. It is taxed to the fifteen at £15 16_s._
-9_d._[214]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[211] "A well was under the east end of this church, late turned to a
-pumpe, but decayed."--_Stow._
-
-[212] "This may be some argument which I overpasse."--_1st edition_, p.
-223.
-
-
-
-
-BASSINGS HALL WARD
-
-
-The next adjoining to Coleman street, on the west side thereof, is
-Bassings hall ward, a small thing, and consisteth of one street called
-Bassings hall street, of Bassings hall, the most principal house whereof
-the ward taketh name. It beginneth in the south by the late spoken
-market-house called the Bay hall, which is the last house of Coleman
-street ward. This street runneth from thence north down to London wall,
-and some little distance, both east and west, against the said hall; and
-this is the bound of Bassings hall ward.
-
-Monuments on the east side thereof, amongst divers fair houses for
-merchants, have ye three halls of companies; namely, the Masons'
-hall for the first, but of what antiquity that company is I have not
-read. The next is the Weavers' hall, which company hath been of great
-antiquity in this city, as appeareth by a charter of Henry II., in these
-words, _Rex omnibus ad quos_, etc., to be Englished thus:--"Henrie,
-king of England, duke of Normandie, and of Guian, Earl of Anjou, to
-the bishop, justices, shiriffes, barons, ministers, and all his true
-lieges of London, sendeth greeting: Know ye that we have granted to the
-weavers in London their guild, with all the freedomes and customes that
-they had in the time of King Henrie my grandfather, so that none but
-they intermit within the citie of their craft but he be of their guild,
-neither in Southwark, or other places pertaining to London, otherwise
-than it was done in the time of King Henrie my grandfather; wherefore
-I will and straightly commaund that over all lawfully they may treate,
-and have all aforesaid, as well in peace, free, worshipfull, and wholy,
-as they had it, freer, better, worshipfullier, and wholier, than in
-the time of King Henrie my grandfather, so that they yeeld yearely
-to mee two markes of gold at the feast of St. Michaell; and I forbid
-that any man to them do any unright, or disseise, upon paine of ten
-pound. Witnes, Thomas of Canterburie, Warwicke fili Gar, Chamberlaine
-at Winchester."[215] Also I read, that the same Henry II., in the 31st
-of his reign, made a confirmation to the weavers that had a guild or
-fraternity in London, wherein it appeareth that the said weavers made
-woollen cloth, and that they had the correction thereof; but amongst
-other articles in that patent, it was decreed, that if any man made
-cloth of Spanish wool, mixed with English wool, the portgrave, or
-principal magistrate of London, ought to burn it, etc.
-
-Moreover, in the year 1197,[216] King Richard I., at the instance of
-Hubert, Archbishop of Canterbury, and Justicier of England, ordained
-that the woollen cloths in every part of this realm should be in breadth
-two yards within the lists, and as good in the midst as in the sides,
-etc. King Henry III. granted that they should not be vexed, for the
-burels, or cloth listed, according to the constitution made for breadth
-of cloth the 9th of his reign, etc. Richard II., in the 3rd of his
-reign, granted an order of agreement between the weavers of London,
-Englishmen, and aliens, or strangers born, brought in by Edward III.
-
-Lower down is the Girdlers'[217] hall, and this is all touching the east
-side of this ward.
-
-On the west side, almost at the south end thereof, is Bakewell hall,
-corruptly called Blackewall hall: concerning the original whereof I
-have heard divers opinions, which I overpass as fables without colour
-of truth; for though the same seemed a building of great antiquity,
-yet in mine opinion the foundation thereof was first laid since the
-conquest of William, Duke of Normandie; for the same was built upon
-vaults of stone, which stone was brought from Caen in Normandie, the
-like of that of Paule's church, built by Mauritius and his successors,
-bishops of London; but that this house hath been a temple or Jewish
-synagogue (as some have fantasied) I allow not, seeing that it had no
-such form of roundness, or other likeness, neither had it the form of a
-church, for the assembly of Christians, which are built east and west,
-but contrariwise the same was built north and south, and in form of a
-nobleman's house; and therefore the best opinion in my judgment is,
-that it was of old time belonging to the family of the Bassings, which
-was in this realm a name of great antiquity and renown, and that it
-bare also the name of that family, and was called therefore Bassings
-haugh, or hall; whereunto I am the rather induced, for that the arms of
-that family were of old time so abundantly placed in sundry parts of
-that house, even in the stone-work, but more especially on the walls
-of the hall, which carried a continual painting of them on every side,
-so close together as one escutcheon could be placed by another, which
-I myself have often seen and noted before the old building was taken
-down: these arms were a gyronny of twelve points, gold and azure. Of the
-Bassinges therefore, builders of this house and owners of the ground
-near adjoining, that ward taketh the name, as Coleman street ward of
-Coleman, and Faringden ward of William and Nicholas Faringden, men that
-were principal owners of those places.
-
-And of old time the most noble persons that inhabited this city were
-appointed to be principal magistrates there, as was Godfrey de Magun (or
-Magnavile), portgrave, or sheriff, in the reign of William Conqueror,
-and of William Rufus; Hugh de Buch, in the reign of Henry I.; Auberie de
-Vere, Earl of Oxford; after him, Gilbert Becket, in the reign of King
-Stephen; after that, Godfrey de Magnavile, the son of William, the son
-of Godfrey de Magnavile, Earls of Essex, were portgraves or sheriffs of
-London and Middlesex. In the reign of Henry II., Peter Fitzwalter; after
-him, John Fitznigel, etc.; so likewise in the reign of King John, the
-16th of his reign, a time of great troubles, in the year 1214, Salomon
-Bassing and Hugh Bassing, barons of this realm, as may be supposed, were
-sheriffs; and the said Salomon Bassing was mayor in the year 1216,
-which was the 1st of Henry III. Also Adam Bassing, son to Salomon (as it
-seemeth), was one of the sheriffs in the year 1243, the 28th of Henry
-III.
-
-Unto this Adam de Bassing King Henry III., in the 31st of his reign,
-gave and confirmed certain messuages in Aldermanbury, and in Milke
-street (places not far from Bassinges hall), the advowson of the church
-at Bassinges hall, with sundry liberties and privileges.
-
-This man was afterwards mayor in the year 1251, the 36th of Henry III.;
-moreover, Thomas Bassing was one of the sheriffs 1269; Robert Bassing,
-sheriff, 1279; and William Bassing was sheriff 1308, etc.; for more of
-the Bassings in this city I need not note, only I read of this family
-of Bassinges in Cambridgeshire,[218] called Bassing at the bourn, and
-more shortly Bassing bourn, and gave arms, as is afore showed, and was
-painted about this old hall. But this family is worn out, and hath left
-the name to the place where they dwelt. Thus much for this Bassings hall.
-
-Now how Blakewell hall took that name is another question; for which
-I read that Thomas Bakewell dwelt in this house in the 36th of Edward
-III.; and that in the 20th of Richard II., the said king, for the sum
-of fifty pounds, which the mayor and commonalty had paid into the
-hanaper, granted licence so much as was in him to John Frosh, William
-Parker, and Stephen Spilman (citizens and mercers), that they, the said
-messuage called Bakewell hall, and one garden, with the appurtenances,
-in the parish of St. Michael of Bassings haugh, and of St. Laurence
-in the Jurie of London, and one messuage, two shops, and one garden,
-in the said parish of St. Michael, which they held of the king in
-burghage, might give and assign to the mayor and commonalty for ever.
-This Bakewell hall, thus established, hath been long since employed as a
-weekly market-place for all sorts of woollen cloths, broad and narrow,
-brought from all parts of this realm, there to be sold. In the 21st of
-Richard II., R. Whittington, mayor, and in the 22nd, Drengh Barringtine
-being mayor, it was decreed that no foreigner or stranger should sell
-any woollen cloth but in the Bakewell hall, upon pain of forfeiture
-thereof.
-
-This house of late years growing ruinous, and in danger of falling,
-Richard May, merchant-tailor, at his decease gave towards the new
-building of the outward part thereof three hundred pounds, upon
-condition that the same should be performed within three years after
-his decease; whereupon the old Bakewell hall was taken down, and in the
-month of February next following, the foundation of a new, strong, and
-beautiful storehouse being laid, the work thereof was so diligently
-applied, that within the space of ten months after, to the charges of
-two thousand five hundred pounds, the same was finished in the year 1588.
-
-Next beyond this house be placed divers fair houses for merchants and
-others, till ye come to the back gate of Guildhall, which gate and part
-of the building within the same is of this ward. Some small distance
-beyond this gate the coopers have their common hall. Then is the parish
-church of St. Michaell, called St. Michaell at Bassings hall, a proper
-church lately re-edified or new built, whereto John Barton, mercer, and
-Agnes his wife, were great benefactors, as appeareth by his mark placed
-throughout the whole roof of the choir and middle aisle of the church:
-he deceased in the year 1460, and was buried in the choir, with this
-epitaph:
-
- "John Barton lyeth vnder here,
- Sometimes of London, citizen and mercer,
- And Ienet his wife, with their progenie,
- Beene turned to earth as ye may see:
- Friends free what so ye bee,
- Pray for vs we you pray,
- As you see vs in this degree,
- So shall you be another day."
-
-Frances Cooke, John Martin, Edward Bromflit, esquire, of Warwickshire,
-1460; Richard Barnes, Sir Roger Roe, Roger Velden, 1479; Sir James
-Yarford, mercer, mayor, deceased 1526, buried under a fair tomb with
-his lady in a special chapel by him built on the north side of the
-choir; Sir John Gresham, mercer, mayor, deceased 1554; Sir John Ailife,
-chirurgeon, then a grocer, one of the sheriffs 1548; Nicholas Bakhurst,
-one of the sheriffs 1577; Wolston Dixi, skinner, mayor, 1585, etc.
-Thus have you noted one parish church of St. Michaell, Bakewell hall,
-a market-place for woollen cloths; the Masons' hall, Weavers' hall,
-Cordellers' hall, and Coopers' hall. And thus I end this ward, which
-hath an alderman, his deputy, for common council four, constables two,
-scavengers two, for the wardmote inquest seventeen, and a beadle. It
-is taxed to the fifteen in London at seven pounds, and likewise in the
-Exchequer at seven pounds.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[213] "There is one tomb on the south side the quire, but without
-inscription."--_1st edition_, p. 225.
-
-[214] "It is taxed to the fifteen in London at nineteen pound, and in
-the Exchequer at nineteen pound"--_Ibid._
-
-[215] Patent.
-
-[216] Matthew Paris.
-
-[217] The Girdlers were incorporated by letters patent of 27th Henry
-VI. 6th Aug. 1449, which were confirmed by Elizabeth in 1568, when the
-pinners and wire-drawers were incorporated with them. Strype says they
-seem to have been a fraternity of St. Lawrence, because of the three
-gridirons their arms; but those north country readers, who know what a
-_girdle iron_ is, will probably agree with me in thinking the gridirons
-or girdle irons are borne with reference to the name of the company.
-
-[218] "Only I read of a branch of this family of Bassinges to have
-spread itself into Cambridgeshire, near unto a water or bourne, and was
-therefore, for a difference from other of that name, called Bassing
-at the bourn, and more shortly Bassing borne. But this family is also
-worne out, and hath left the name to the place where they dwell."--_1st
-edition_, p. 228.
-
-
-
-
-CRIPPLESGATE WARD
-
-
-The next ward is called of Cripplesgate, and consisteth of divers
-streets and lanes, lying as well without the gate and wall of the city
-as within: first within the wall, on the east part thereof, towards the
-north, it runneth to the west side of Bassings hall ward, and towards
-the south it joineth to the ward of Cheape. It beginneth at the west
-end of St. Laurence church in the Jurie, on the north side, and runneth
-west to a pump, where sometime was a well with two buckets, at the
-south corner of Aldermanburie street; which street runneth down north
-to Gayspurre lane, and so to London wall, which street and lane are
-wholly on both sides of this ward, and so be some few houses on both
-the sides from Gayspurre lane, by and against the wall of the city,
-east to the grates made for the water-course of the channels, and west
-to Cripplesgate. Now on the south side, from over against the west end
-of St. Laurence church to the pump, and then by Milke street south unto
-Cheape, which Milke street is wholly on both the sides of Cripplegate
-ward, as also without the south end of Milke street, a part of West
-Cheape, to wit, from the Standard to the Cross, is all of Cripplegate
-ward. Then down Great Wood street, which is wholly of this ward on both
-the sides thereof; so is Little Wood street, which runneth down to
-Cripplegate.
-
-Out of this Wood street be divers lanes; namely, on the east side is
-Lad lane, which runneth east to Milke street corner; down lower in Wood
-street is Love lane, which lieth by the south side of St. Alban's church
-in Wood street, and runneth down to the Conduit in Aldermanburie street.
-Lower down in Wood street is Addle street, out of the which runneth
-Phillip lane down to London wall. These be the lanes on the east side.
-
-On the west side of Wood street is Huggen lane, by the south side of St.
-Michael's church, and goeth through to Guthuruns lane. Then lower is
-Maiden lane, which runneth west to the north end of Gutherons lane, and
-up the said lane on the east side thereof, till against Kery lane, and
-back again: then the said Maiden lane, on the north side, goeth up to
-Staining lane, and up a part thereof, on the east side, to the farthest
-north part of Haberdashers' hall, and back again to Wood street; and
-there lower down to Silver street, which is of this ward, till ye come
-to the east end of St. Olave's church, on the south side, and to Munkes
-well street on the north side; then down the said Munkes well street on
-the east side thereof, and so to Cripplegate, do make the bounds of this
-ward within the walls.
-
-Without Cripplegate, Fore street runneth thwart before the gate, from
-against the north side of St. Giles church, along to More lane end,
-and to a Postern lane end, that runneth betwixt the town ditch on the
-south, and certain gardens on the north, almost to Moregate; at the
-east of which lane is a pot-maker's house, which house, with all other
-the gardens, houses, and alleys, on that side the Morefields, till ye
-come to a bridge and cow-house near unto Fensburie court, is all of
-Cripplegate ward; then to turn back again through the said Postern lane
-to More lane, which More lane, with all the alleys and buildings there,
-is of this ward; after that is Grub street, more than half thereof to
-the straitening of the street; next is Whitecrosse street, up to the end
-of Bech lane, and then Redcrosse street wholly, with a part of Golding
-lane, even to the posts there placed, as a bounder.
-
-Then is Bech lane before spoken of, on the east side of the Red Crosse
-and the Barbican street, more than half thereof toward Aldersgate
-street; and so have you all the bounds of Cripplegate ward without the
-walls.
-
-Now for antiquities and ornaments in this ward to be noted: I find
-first, at the meeting of the corners of the Old Jurie, Milke street,
-Lad lane, and Aldermanburie, there was of old time a fair well with two
-buckets, of late years converted to a pump. How Aldermanbury street
-took that name many fables have been bruited, all which I overpass as
-not worthy the counting; but to be short, I say, this street took the
-name of Alderman's burie (which is to say a court), there kept in their
-bery, or court, but now called the Guildhall; which hall of old time
-stood on the east side of the same street, not far from the west end of
-Guildhall, now used. Touching the antiquity of this old Alderman's burie
-or court, I have not read other than that Richard Renery, one of the
-sheriffs of London in the 1st of Richard I., which was in the year of
-Christ 1189, gave to the church of St. Mary at Osney, by Oxford, certain
-ground and rents in Aldermanbery of London, as appeareth by the register
-of that church, as is also entered into the hoistinges of the Guildhall
-in London. This old bery court or hall continued, and the courts of the
-mayor and aldermen were continually holden there, until the new bery
-court, or Guildhall that now is, was built and finished; which hall was
-first begun to be founded in the year 1411, and was not fully finished
-in twenty years after. I myself have seen the ruins of the old court
-hall in Aldermanbery street, which of late hath been employed as a
-carpenter's yard, etc.
-
-In this Aldermanbery street be divers fair houses on both the sides,
-meet for merchants or men of worship, and in the midst thereof is a fair
-conduit, made at the charges of William Eastfield, sometime mayor, who
-took order as well for water to be conveyed from Teyborne, and for the
-building of this Conduit, not far distant from his dwelling-house, as
-also for a Standard of sweet water, to be erected in Fleet street, all
-which was done by his executors, as in another place I have showed.
-
-Then is the parish church of St. Mary Aldermanbury, a fair church,
-with a churchyard, and cloister adjoining; in the which cloister is
-hanged and fastened a shank-bone of a man (as is said), very great,
-and larger by three inches and a half than that which hangeth in St.
-Lawrence church in the Jury, for it is in length twenty-eight inches
-and a half of assise, but not so hard and steele-like as the other,
-for the same is light, and somewhat pory and spongy. This bone is said
-to be found amongst the bones of men removed from the charnel-house of
-Powles, or rather from the cloister of Powles church; of both which
-reports I doubt, for that the late Reyne Wolfe, stationer (who paid for
-the carriage of those bones from the charnel to the Morefields), told
-me of some thousands of carrie loads and more to be conveyed, whereof
-he wondered, but never told me of any such bone in either place to be
-found; neither would the same have been easily gotten from him if he
-had heard thereof, except he had reserved the like for himself, being
-the greatest preserver of antiquities in those parts for his time.[219]
-True it is, that this bone (from whence soever it came) being of a man
-(as the form showeth), must needs be monstrous, and more than after the
-proportion of five shank-bones of any man now living amongst us.
-
-There lie buried in this church--Simon Winchcombe, esquire, 1391; Robert
-Combarton, 1422; John Wheatley, mercer, 1428; Sir William Estfild,
-knight of the bath, mayor 1438, a great benefactor to that church, under
-a fair monument: he also built their steeple, changed their old bells
-into five tuneable bells, and gave one hundred pounds to other works of
-that church. Moreover, he caused the Conduit in Aldermanbury, which he
-had begun, to be performed at his charges, and water to be conveyed by
-pipes of lead from Tyborne to Fleet street, as I have said: and also
-from High Berie to the parish of St. Giles without Cripplegate, where
-the inhabitants of those parts incastellated the same in sufficient
-cisterns. John Midleton, mercer, mayor 1472; John Tomes, draper, 1486;
-William Bucke, tailor, 1501; Sir William Browne, mayor 1507; Dame
-Margaret Jeninges, wife to Stephen Jeninges, mayor 1515; a widow named
-Starkey, sometime wife to Modie; Raffe Woodcock, grocer, one of the
-sheriffs 1586; Dame Mary Gresham, wife to Sir John Gresham, 1538; Thomas
-Godfrey, remembrancer of the office of the first fruits, 1577.
-
-Beneath this church have ye Gay spur lane, which runneth down to London
-wall, as is afore showed. In this lane, at the north end thereof, was
-of old time a house of nuns; which house being in great decay, William
-Elsing, mercer, in the year of Christ 1329, the 3rd of Edward III.,
-began in place thereof the foundation of an hospital for sustentation
-of one hundred blind men; towards the erection whereof he gave his
-two houses in the parishes of St. Alphage, and our Blessed Lady in
-Aldermanbury, near Cripplegate.[220] This house was after called a
-priory, or hospital, of St. Mary the Virgin, founded in the year 1332 by
-W. Elsing, for canons regular; the which William became the first prior
-there. Robert Elsing, son to the said William, gave to the hospital
-twelve pounds by the year, for the finding of three priests: he also
-gave one hundred shillings towards the inclosing of the new churchyard
-without Aldgate, and one hundred shillings to the inclosing of the new
-churchyard without Aldersgate; to Thomas Elsing, his son, eighty pounds,
-the rest of his goods to be sold and given to the poor. This house,
-valued £193 15_s._ 5_d._, was surrendered the eleventh of May, the 22nd
-of Henry VIII.
-
-The monuments that were in this church defaced:--Thomas Cheney, son to
-William Cheney; Thomas, John, and William Cheney; John Northampton,
-draper, mayor 1381; Edmond Hungerford; Henry Frowike; Joan, daughter to
-Sir William Cheney, wife to William Stoke; Robert Eldarbroke, esquire,
-1460; Dame Joan Ratcliffe; William Fowler; William Kingstone; Thomas
-Swineley, and Helen his wife, etc. The principal aisle of this church
-towards the north was pulled down, and a frame of four houses set up
-in place: the other part, from the steeple upward, was converted into
-a parish church of St. Alphage; and the parish church which stood
-near unto the wall of the city by Cripplesgate was pulled down, the
-plot thereof made a carpenter's yard, with saw-pits. The hospital
-itself, the prior and canons' house, with other lodgings, were made a
-dwelling-house; the churchyard is a garden plot, and a fair gallery on
-the cloister; the lodgings for the poor are translated into stabling for
-horses.
-
-In the year 1541, Sir John Williams, master of the king's jewels,
-dwelling in this house on Christmas even at night, about seven of the
-clock, a great fire began in the gallery thereof, which burned so sore,
-that the flame firing the whole house, and consuming it, was seen all
-the city over, and was hardly quenched, whereby many of the king's
-jewels were burnt, and more embezzled (as was said).[221] Sir Rowland
-Heyward, mayor, dwelt in this Spittle, and was buried there 1593;
-Richard Lee, _alias_ Clarenciaux king of arms, 1597.
-
-Now to return to Milk street, so called of milk sold there,[222] there
-be many fair houses for wealthy merchants and other; amongst the which
-I read, that Gregory Rokesley, chief assay master of the king's mints,
-and mayor of London in the year 1275, dwelt in this Milk street, in a
-house belonging to the priory of Lewes in Sussex, whereof he was tenant
-at will, paying twenty shillings by the year, without[223] other charge:
-such were the rents of those times.
-
-In this Milke street is a small parish church of St. Marie Magdalen,
-which hath of late years been repaired. William Browne, mayor 1513, gave
-to this church forty pounds, and was buried there; Thomas Exmew, mayor
-1528, gave forty pounds, and was buried there; so was John Milford, one
-of the sheriffs, 1375; John Olney, mayor 1475; Richard Rawson, one of
-the sheriffs 1476; Henry Kelsey; Sir John Browne, mayor 1497; Thomas
-Muschampe, one of the sheriffs 1463; Sir William Cantilo, knight,
-mercer, 1462; Henry Cantlow, mercer, merchant of the Staple, who built
-a chapel, and was buried there 1495; John West, alderman, 1517; John
-Machell, alderman, 1558; Thomas Skinner, clothworker, mayor 1596.
-
-Then next is Wood street, by what reason so called I know not. True it
-is, that of old time, according to a decree made in the reign of Richard
-I., the houses in London were built of stone for defence of fire; which
-kind of building was used for two hundred years or more, but of later
-time for the winning of ground taken down, and houses of timber set up
-in place. It seemeth therefore that this street hath been of the latter
-building, all of timber (for not one house of stone hath been known
-there), and therefore called Wood street; otherwise it might take the
-name of some builder or owner thereof.
-
-Thomas Wood, one of the sheriffs in the year 1491, dwelt there; he was
-an especial benefactor towards the building of St. Peter's church at
-Wood street end; he also built the beautiful front of houses in Cheape
-over against Wood street end, which is called Goldsmiths' row, garnished
-with the likeness of woodmen; his predecessors might be the first
-builders, owners, and namers of this street after their own name.
-
-On the east side of this street is one of the prison houses pertaining
-to the sheriffs of London, and is called the Compter in Wood street,
-which was prepared to be a prison house in the year 1555; and on the eve
-of St. Michael the Archangel, the prisoners that lay in the Compter in
-Bread street were removed to this Compter in Wood street. Beneath this
-Compter is Lad lane, or Ladle lane, for so I find it of record in the
-parish of St. Michaell Wood street; and beneath that is Love lane, so
-called of wantons.
-
-By this lane is the parish church of St. Alban, which hath the monuments
-of Sir Richard Illingworth, baron of the exchequer; Thomas Chatworth,
-grocer, mayor 1443; John Woodcocke, mayor 1405; John Collet, and Alice
-his wife; Ralph Thomas; Ralph and Richard, sons of Ralph Illingworth,
-which was son to Sir Richard Illingworth, baron of the exchequer;
-Thomas, son of Sir Thomas Fitzwilliams; Thomas Halton, mercer, mayor
-1450; Thomas Ostrich, haberdasher, 1483; Richard Swetenham, esquire; and
-William Dunthorne, town-clerk of London, with this epitaph:
-
- "_Foelix prima dies postquam mortalibus ævi
- Cesserit, hic morbus subit, atque repente senectus
- Tum mors, qua nostrum Dunthorn cecidisse Wilelmum.
- Haud cuiquam latuisse reor, dignissimus (inquam),
- Artibus hic Doctor, nec non celeberrimus hujus,
- Clericus Urbis erat, primus, nullique secundus,
- Moribus, ingenio, studio, nil dixeris illi,
- Quin dederit natura boni, pius ipse modestus,
- Longanimus, solers, patiens, super omnia gratus,
- Quique sub immensas curas variosque labores,
- Anxius atteritur vitæ, dum carpserit auras,
- Hoc tetro in tumulo, compostus pace quiescit._"
-
-Simon Morsted; Thomas Pikehurst, esquire; Richard Take; Robert
-Ashcombe; Thomas Lovet, esquire, sheriff of Northamptonshire 1491; John
-Spare; Katheren, daughter to Sir Thomas Mirley, knight;[224] William
-Linchdale, mercer, 1392; John Penie, mercer, 1450; John Thomas, mercer,
-1485; Christopher Hawse, mercer, one of the sheriffs 1503; William
-Skarborough, vintner; Simon de Berching; Sir John Cheke, knight,
-schoolmaster to King Edward VI., deceased 1557; do lie here.
-
-Then is Adle street, the reason of which name I know not, for at this
-present it is replenished with fair buildings on both sides; amongst
-the which there was sometime the Pinners' hall, but that company being
-decayed, it is now the Plaisterers' hall.
-
-Not far from thence is the Brewers' hall, a fair house, which company of
-Brewers was incorporated by King Henry VI., in the 16th of his reign,
-confirmed by the name of St. Mary and St. Thomas the Martyr, the 19th of
-Edward IV.
-
-From the West end of this Adle street, Little Wood street runneth down
-to Cripplesgate: and somewhat east from the Sun tavern, against the wall
-of the city, is the Curriers' hall.
-
-Now, on the west side of Wood street, have ye Huggen lane, so called of
-one Hugan that of old time dwelt there: he was called Hugan in the lane,
-as I have read in the 34th of Edward I. This lane runneth down by the
-south side of St. Michael's church in Wood street, and so growing very
-narrow by means of late encroachments to Guthuron's lane.
-
-The parish church of St. Michael in Wood street is a proper thing, and
-lately well repaired. John Ive, parson of this church, John Forster,
-goldsmith, and Peter Fikelden, tailor, gave two messuages, and two
-shops, with solars, cellars, and other edifices, in the same parish and
-street, and in Ladle lane, to the reparations of the church, chancel,
-and other works of charity, the 16th of Richard II.
-
-The monuments here be of William Bambrough, the son of Henry Bambrough
-of Skardborough, 1392; William Turner, waxchandler, 1400; John Peke,
-goldsmith, 1441; William Taverner, girdler, 1454; William Mancer,
-ironmonger, 1465; John Nash, 1466, with an epitaph; John Allen,
-timbermonger, 1441; Robert Draper, 1500; John Lamberde, draper,
-alderman, one of the sheriffs of London, who deceased 1554, and was
-father to[225] William Lambarde, esquire, well known by sundry learned
-books that he hath published; John Medley, chamberlain of London; John
-Marsh, esquire, mercer, and common sergeant of London, etc. There is
-also (but without any outward monument) the head of James, the fourth
-king of Scots of that name, slain at Flodden field, and buried here by
-this occasion: After the battle the body of the said king being found,
-was enclosed in lead, and conveyed from thence to London, and so to the
-monastery of Shene in Surrey, where it remained for a time, in what
-order I am not certain; but since the dissolution of that house, in the
-reign of Edward VI., Henry Grey, Duke of Suffolk, being lodged, and
-keeping house there, I have been shown the same body so lapped in lead,
-close to the head and body, thrown into a waste room amongst the old
-timber, lead, and other rubble. Since the which time workmen there, for
-their foolish pleasure, hewed off his head; and Launcelot Young,[226]
-master glazier to her majesty, feeling a sweet savour to come from
-thence, and seeing the same dried from all moisture, and yet the form
-remaining, with the hair of the head, and beard red, brought it to
-London to his house in Wood street, where for a time he kept it for the
-sweetness, but in the end caused the sexton of that church to bury it
-amongst other bones taken out of their charnel, etc.
-
-I read in divers records of a house in Wood street, then called Black
-hall, but no man at this day can tell thereof.
-
-On the north side of this St. Michael's church is Mayden lane, now so
-called, but of old time Ingene lane, or Ing lane. In this lane the
-Waxchandlers have their common hall, on the south side thereof; and
-the Haberdashers have their like hall on the north side, at Stayning
-lane end. This company of the Haberdashers, or Hurrers, of old time so
-called, were incorporated a brotherhood of St. Katherine, the 26th of
-Henry VI., and so confirmed by Henry VII., the 17th of his reign, the
-Cappers and Hat merchants, or Hurrers, being one company of Haberdashers.
-
-Down lower in Wood street is Silver street (I think of silversmiths
-dwelling there), in which be divers fair houses.
-
-And on the north side thereof is Monkeswell street, so called of a well
-at the north end thereof, where the Abbot of Garendon had a house, or
-cell, called St. James in the wall by Cripplesgate, and certain monks of
-their house were the chaplains there, wherefore the well (belonging to
-that cell, or hermitage) was called Monks' well, and the street, of the
-well, Monkswell street.
-
-The east side of this street, down against London wall, and the south
-side thereof to Cripplesgate, be of Cripplesgate ward, as is afore
-shown. In this street, by the corner of Monkswell street, is the
-Bowyers' hall. On the east side of Monkswell street be proper alms
-houses, twelve in number founded by Sir Ambrose Nicholas, salter, mayor
-1575, wherein be placed twelve poor and aged people rent free, having
-each of them seven pence the week, and once the year, each of them five
-sacks of charcoal, and one quarter of a hundred fagots, of his gift, for
-ever.
-
-Then, in Little Wood street be seven proper chambers in an alley on the
-west side, founded for seven poor people therein to dwell rent free, by
-Henry Barton, skinner, mayor 1416. Thus much for the monuments of this
-ward within the walls.
-
-Now, without the postern of Cripplesgate, first is the parish church
-of St. Giles, a very fair and large church, lately repaired, after
-that the same was burnt in the year 1545, the 37th of Henry VIII., by
-which mischance the monuments of the dead in this church are very few:
-notwithstanding I have read of these following:--Alice, William, and
-John, wife and sons to T. Clarell; Agnes, daughter to Thomas Niter,
-gentleman; William Atwell; Felix, daughter to Sir Thomas Gisors, and
-wife to Thomas Travars; Thomas Mason, esquire; Edmond Wartar, esquire;
-Joan, wife to John Chamberlaine, esquire, daughter to Roger Lewkner;
-William Fryer; John Hamberger, esquire; Hugh Moresbye; Gilbert Prince,
-alderman; Oliver Cherley, gentleman; Sir John Wright or Writhesley,
-_alias_ Garter king-at-arms; Joan, wife to Thomas Writhesley, Garter,
-daughter and heir to William Hal, esquire; John Writhesley, the younger,
-son to Sir John Writhesley and Alianor; Alianor, second wife to John
-Writhesley, daughter and heir to Thomas Arnold, sister and heir to
-Richard Arnold, esquire; John, her son and heir; Margaret, with her
-daughter; John Brigget; Thomas Ruston, gentleman; John Talbot, esquire,
-and Katheren his wife; Thomas Warfle, and Isabel his wife; Thomas
-Lucie, gentleman, 1447; Ralph Rochford, knight, 1409; Edmond Watar,
-esquire; Elizabeth, wife to Richard Barnes, sister and heir to Richard
-Malgrave, esquire, of Essex; Richard Gowre, and John Gowre, esquires;
-John Baronie, of Millain, 1546; Sir Henry Grey, knight, son and heir to
-George Grey, Earl of Kent, 1562; Reginald Grey, Earl of Kent; Richard
-Choppin, tallowchandler, one of the sheriffs 1530; John Hamber, esquire,
-1573; Thomas Hanley, _alias_ Clarenciaux king-at-arms; Thomas Busby,
-cooper, who gave the Queen's Head tavern to the relief of the poor in
-the parish, 1575; John Whelar, goldsmith, 1575; Richard Bolene, 1563;
-William Bolene, 1575; W. Bolene, physician, 1587; Robert Crowley, vicar
-there--all these four under one old stone in the choir; the learned John
-Foxe, writer of the _Acts and Monuments of the English Church_, 1587;
-the skilful Robert Glover, _alias_ Sommerset herald, 1588.
-
-There was in this church of old time a fraternity, or brotherhood, of
-Our Blessed Lady, or Corpus Christi, and St. Giles, founded by John
-Belancer, in the reign of Edward III., the 35th year of his reign.
-
-Some small distance from the east end of this church is a water conduit,
-brought in pipes of lead from Highbery, by John Middleton, one of the
-executors to Sir William Eastfield, and of his goods; the inhabitants
-adjoining castellated it of their own cost and charges about the year
-1483.
-
-There was also a bosse of clear water in the wall of the churchyard,
-made at the charges of Richard Whitington, sometimes mayor, and was like
-to that of Bilinsgate: of late the same was turned into an evil pump,
-and so is clean decayed.
-
-There was also a fair pool of clear water near unto the parsonage, on
-the west side thereof, which was filled up in the reign of Henry VI.,
-the spring was coped in, and arched over with hard stone, and stairs of
-stone to go down to the spring on the bank of the town ditch: and this
-was also done of the goods, and by the executors of Richard Whitington.
-
-In White Crosse street King Henry V. built one fair house, and founded
-there a brotherhood of St. Giles, to be kept, which house had sometime
-been an hospital of the French order, by the name of St. Giles
-without Cripplesgate, in the reign of Edward I., the king having the
-jurisdiction, and appointing a custos thereof for the precinct of the
-parish of St. Giles, etc. patent Richard II., the 15th year; which
-hospital being suppressed, the lands were given to the brotherhood for
-the relief of the poor.
-
-One alley of divers tenements over against the north wall of St. Giles'
-churchyard, was appointed to be alms houses for the poor, wherein they
-dwelt rent free, and otherwise were relieved; but the said brotherhood
-was suppressed by Henry VIII.; since which time Sir John Gresham, mayor,
-purchased the lands, and gave part thereof to the maintenance of a free
-school which he had founded at Holt, a market town in Norfolk.
-
-In Red Cross street, on the west side from St. Giles' churchyard up to
-the said cross, be many fair houses built outward, with divers alleys
-turning into a large plot of ground, called the Jews' Garden, as being
-the only place appointed them in England, wherein to bury their dead,
-till the year 1177, the 24th of Henry II., that it was permitted to
-them (after long suit to the king and parliament at Oxford) to have a
-special place assigned them in every quarter where they dwelt. This
-plot of ground remained to the said Jews till the time of their final
-banishment out of England, and is now turned into fair garden plots and
-summer-houses for pleasure.
-
-On the east side of this Red Cross street be also divers fair houses,
-up to the cross. And there is Beech lane, peradventure so called of
-Nicholas de la Beech, lieutenant of the Tower of London, put out of that
-office in the 13th of Edward III. This lane stretcheth from the Red
-Cross street to White Cross street, replenished, not with beech trees,
-but with beautiful houses of stone, brick, and timber. Amongst the which
-was of old time a great house, pertaining to the Abbot of Ramsey, for
-his lodging when he repaired to the city: it is now called Drewry house,
-of Sir Drewe Drewrie, a worshipful owner thereof.
-
-On the north side of this Beech lane, towards White Cross street, the
-Drapers of London have lately built eight alms houses of brick and
-timber, for eight poor widows of their own company, whom they have
-placed there rent free, according to the gift of Lady Askew, widow to
-Sir Christopher Askew, sometime draper, and mayor 1533.
-
-Then in Golding lane, Richard Gallard of Islington, esquire, citizen
-and painter-stainer of London, founded thirteen alms houses for so many
-poor people placed in them rent free; he gave to the poor of the same
-alms houses two pence the piece weekly, and a load of charcoal amongst
-them yearly for ever: he left fair lands about Islington to maintain
-his foundation. Thomas Hayes, sometime chamberlain of London, in the
-latter time of Henry VIII., married Elizabeth, his daughter and heir;
-which Hayes and Elizabeth had a daughter named Elizabeth, married to
-John Ironmonger, of London, mercer, who now hath the order of the alms
-people.
-
-On the west side of the Red Cross is a street, called the Barbican,
-because sometime there stood, on the north side thereof, a burgh-kenin,
-or watch-tower, of the city, called in some language a barbican, as a
-bikening is called a beacon; this burgh-kenning, by the name of the
-Manor of Base court, was given by Edward III. to Robert Ufford, Earl
-of Suffolk, and was lately appertaining to Peregrine Bartie, Lord
-Willoughby of Ersby.
-
-Next adjoining to this is one other great house, called Garter house,
-sometime built by Sir Thomas Writhe, or Writhesley, knight, _alias_
-Garter principal king-of-arms, second son of Sir John Writhe, knight,
-_alias_ Garter, and was uncle to the first Thomas, Earl of Southampton,
-knight of the Garter, and chancellor of England; he built this house,
-and in the top thereof a chapel, which is dedicated by the name of St.
-Trinitatis in Alto.
-
-Thus much for that part of Cripplegate ward without the wall, whereof
-more shall be spoken in the suburb of that part. This ward hath an
-alderman, and his deputy, within the gate, common council eight,
-constables nine, scavengers twelve, for wardmote inquest fifteen, and
-a beadle. Without the gate it hath also a deputy, common council two,
-constables four, scavengers four, wardmote inquest seventeen, and a
-beadle. It is taxed in London to the fifteen at forty pound.[227]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[219] "Reyne Wolf, a grave antiquary, collected the great chronicles,
-increased and published by his executors, under the name of Ralph
-Holonshead."--_Stow._
-
-The first edition of Holinshed's _Chronicles of England, Scotland,
-and Ireland_, was printed for John Harrison the elder in 1577. From
-Holinshed's dedicatory epistle to Lord Burleigh, it would seem that
-Reginald Wolfe projected and even executed the greater part of the
-work, it having "pleased God to call him to his mercie after xxv.
-years travail spent therein." Wolfe, in fact, intended to make these
-Chronicles the foundation of "_An Universall Cosmographie of the Whole
-World_."
-
-[220] "Obtaining first the king's licence of mortmain under the great
-seal of England."--_1st edition_, p. 234.
-
-[221] "The Lord William of Thame was buried in this church, and so was
-his successor in that house, Sir Rowland Heyward."--_1st edition_, p.
-235.
-
-[222] "As is supposed."--_Ibid._
-
-[223] "Without being bounden to reparations or other charge."--_Ibid._
-
-[224] "John Collet."--_1st edition_, p. 257.
-
-[225] "My loving friend."--_1st edition_, p. 238.
-
-[226] "At this present."--_Ibid._
-
-
-
-
-ALDERSGATE WARD
-
-
-The next is Aldersgate ward, taking name of that north gate of the city.
-This ward also consisteth of divers streets and lanes, lying as well
-within the gate and wall as without. And first to speak of that part
-within the gate, thus it is.
-
-The east part thereof joineth unto the west part of Cripplegate ward
-in Engain lane, or Maiden lane. It beginneth on the north side of that
-lane, at Stayning lane end, and runneth up from the Haberdashers' hall
-to St. Mary Staining church, and by the church, east, winding almost to
-Wood street; and west through Oate lane, and then by the south side of
-Bacon house in Noble street, back again by Lilipot lane, which is also
-of that ward, to Maiden lane, and so on that north side west to St. John
-Zacharies church, and to Foster lane.
-
-Now on the south side of Engain or Maiden lane is the west side of
-Guthuruns lane to Kery lane, and Kery lane itself (which is of this
-ward), and back again into Engain lane, by the north side of the
-Goldsmiths' hall to Foster lane: and this is the east wing of this ward.
-Then is Foster lane almost wholly of this ward, beginneth in the south
-toward Cheap, on the east side by the north side of St. Foster's church,
-and runneth down north-west by the west end of Engain lane, by Lilipot
-lane and Oate lane to Noble street, and through that by Shelly house (of
-old time so called, as belonging to the Shelleys); Sir Thomas Shelley,
-knight, was owner thereof in the 1st of Henry IV. It is now called Bacon
-house, because the same was new built by Sir Nicholas Bacon, lord keeper
-of the great seal. Down on that side, by Sergeant Fleetwood's house,
-recorder of London, who also new built it, to St. Olave's church in
-Silver street, which is by the north-west end of this Noble street.
-
-Then again in Foster lane this ward beginneth on the west side thereof,
-over against the south-west corner of St. Foster's church, and runneth
-down by St. Leonard's church, by Pope lane end, and by St. Ann's lane
-end, which lane is also of this ward, north to the stone wall by the
-wall of the city, over against Bacon house, which stone wall, and so
-down north to Cripplegate on that side, is of Faringdon ward.
-
-Then have ye the main street of this ward, which is called St. Martin's
-lane, including St. Martin, on the east side thereof, and so down on
-both the sides to Aldersgate. And these be the bounds of this ward
-within the wall and gate.
-
-Without the gate the main street called Aldersgate street runneth up
-north on the east side to the west end of Howndes ditch, or Barbican
-street; a part of which street is also of this ward. And on the west
-side to Long lane, a part whereof is likewise of this ward. Beyond the
-which Aldersgate street is Goswell street up to the bars.
-
-And on this west side of Aldersgate street, by St. Buttolph's church
-is Briton street, which runneth west to a pump, and then north to the
-gate which entereth the churchyard, sometime pertaining to the priory
-of St. Bartholomew on the east side; and on the west side towards St.
-Bartholomew's Spittle, to a pair of posts there fixed. And these be the
-bounds of this Aldersgate ward without.
-
-The antiquities be these, first in Stayning lane, of old time so called,
-as may be supposed, of painter-stainers dwelling there.
-
-On the east side thereof, adjoining to the Haberdashers' hall, be ten
-alms houses, pertaining to the Haberdashers, wherein be placed ten alms
-people of that company, every of them having eight pence the piece every
-Friday for ever, by the gift of Thomas Huntlow, haberdasher, one of the
-sheriffs in the year 1539. More, Sir George Baron gave them ten pounds
-by the year for ever.
-
-Then is the small parish church of St. Mary, called Stayning, because it
-standeth at the north end of Stayning lane. In the which church, being
-but newly built, there remains no monument worth the noting.
-
-Then is Engain lane, or Mayden lane, and at the north-west corner
-thereof the parish church of St. John Zachary; a fair church, with the
-monuments well preserved, of Thomas Lichfield, who founded a chantry
-there in the 14th of Edward II.; of Sir Nicholas Twiford, goldsmith,
-mayor 1388, and Dame Margery his wife, of whose goods the church was
-made and new built, with a tomb for them, and others of their race,
-1390; Drugo Barentine, mayor 1398; he gave fair lands to the Goldsmiths;
-he dwelt right against the Goldsmiths' hall; between the which hall and
-his dwelling house he built a gallery thwarting the street, whereby
-he might go from one to the other; he was buried in this church, and
-Christian his wife, 1427; John Adis, goldsmith, 1400, and Margaret his
-wife; John Francis, goldsmith, mayor 1400, and Elizabeth his wife,
-1450; I. Sutton, goldsmith, one of the sheriffs 1413; Bartholomew
-Seman, goldbeater, master of the king's mints within the Tower of
-London and the town of Calice, 1430;[228], John Hewet, esquire, 1500;
-William Breakespere, goldsmith, 1461; Christopher Eliot, goldsmith,
-1505; Bartholomew Reade, goldsmith, mayor 1502, was buried in the
-Charterhouse, and gave to this, his parish church, one hundred pounds;
-his wife was buried here with a fair monument, her picture in habit of a
-widow; Thomas Keyton Lorimar, 1522; William Potken, esquire, 1537; John
-Cornish, with an epitaph, 1470; Robert Fenruther, goldsmith, one of the
-sheriffs in the year 1512.
-
-On the east side of this Foster lane, at Engain lane end, is the
-Goldsmiths' hall, a proper house, but not large; and, therefore, to say
-that Bartholomew Read, goldsmith, mayor in the year 1502, kept such a
-feast in this hall, as some have fabuled,[229] is far incredible, and
-altogether impossible, considering the smallness of the hall, and number
-of the guests, which, as they say, were more than a hundred persons of
-great estate. For the messes and dishes of meats to them served, the
-paled park in the same hall furnished with fruitful trees, beasts of
-venery, and other circumstances of that pretended feast, well weighed,
-Westminster hall would hardly have sufficed; and, therefore, I will
-overpass it, and note somewhat of principal goldsmiths.
-
-First I read, that Leofstane, goldsmith, was provost of this city in
-the reign of Henry I. Also, that Henry Fitz Alewin Fitz Leafstane,
-goldsmith, was mayor of London in the 1st of Richard I., and continued
-mayor twenty-four years. Also that Gregory Rocksly, chief say-master of
-all the king's mints within England, (and therefore by my conjecture)
-a goldsmith, was mayor in the 3rd of Edward I., and continued mayor
-seven years together. Then, William Faringdon, goldsmith, alderman of
-Faringdon ward, one of the sheriffs 1281, the 9th of Edward I., who was
-a goldsmith, as appeareth in record, as shall be shown in Faringdon
-ward. Then Nicholas Faringdon his son, goldsmith, alderman of Faringdon
-ward, four times mayor in the reign of Edward II., etc. For the rest
-of latter time are more manifestly known, and therefore I leave them.
-The men of this mystery were incorporated or confirmed in the 16th of
-Richard II.
-
-Then at the north end of Noble street is the parish church of St. Olave
-in Silver street, a small thing, and without any noteworthy monuments.
-
-On the west side of Foster lane is the small parish church of St.
-Leonard's, for them of St. Martin's le Grand. A number of tenements
-being lately built in place of the great collegiate church of St.
-Martin, that parish is mightily increased. In this church remain these
-monuments. First, without the church is graven in stone on the east end,
-John Brokeitwell, an especial re-edifier, or new builder thereof. In
-the choir, graven in brass, Robert Purfet, grocer, 1507; Robert Trapis,
-goldsmith, 1526, with this epitaph:--
-
- "When the bels be merily roong,
- And the masse devoutly sung,
- And the meat merily eaten,
- Then shall Robert Trips, his wives
- And children be forgotten."
-
-Then in Pope lane, so called of one Pope that was owner thereof, on
-the north side of the parish church of St. Anne in the Willows, so
-called, I know not upon what occasion, but some say of willows growing
-thereabouts; but now there is no such void place for willows to grow,
-more than the churchyard, wherein do grow some high ash trees.
-
-This church, by casualty of fire in the year 1548, was burnt, so far as
-it was combustible, but since being newly repaired, there remain a few
-monuments of antiquity: of Thomas Beckhenton, clerk of the pipe, was
-buried there 1499; Raph Caldwell, gentleman, of Grays inn, 1527; John
-Lord Sheffelde; John Herenden, mercer, esquire, 1572, these verses on an
-old stone:--[230]
-
- _Qu an Tris di c vul stra
- os guis ti ro um nere uit
- h san Chris mi T mu la_
-
-William Gregory, skinner, mayor of London in the year 1451, was there
-buried, and founded a chantry, but no monument of him remaineth.
-
-Then in St. Martin's lane was of old time a fair and large college of
-a dean and secular canons or priests, and was called St. Martin's le
-Grand, founded by Ingelricus and Edwardus his brother, in the year
-of Christ 1056, and confirmed by William the Conqueror, as appeareth
-by his charter dated 1068. This college claimed great privileges of
-sanctuary and otherwise, as appeareth in a book, written by a notary of
-that house about the year 1442, the 19th of Henry VI., wherein, amongst
-other things, is set down and declared, that on the 1st of September,
-in the year aforesaid, a soldier, prisoner in Newgate, as he was led by
-an officer towards the Guildhall of London, there came out of Panyer
-alley five of his fellowship, and took him from the officer, brought
-him into sanctuary at the west door of St. Martin's church, and took
-grithe of that place; but the same day Philip Malpas and Rob. Marshall,
-then sheriffs of London, with many other, entered the said church, and
-forcibly took out with them the said five men thither fled, led them
-fettered to the Compter, and from thence, chained by the necks, to
-Newgate; of which violent taking the dean and chapter in large manner
-complained to the king, and required him, as their patron, to defend
-their privileges, like as his predecessors had done, etc. All which
-complaint and suit the citizens by their counsel, Markam, sergeant at
-the law, John Carpenter, late common clerk of the city, and other,
-learnedly answered, offering to prove that the said place of St. Martin
-had no such immunity or liberty as was pretended; namely, Carpenter
-offered to lose his livelihood, if that church had more immunity than
-the least church in London. Notwithstanding, after long debating of
-this controversy, by the king's commandment, and assent of his council
-in the starred chamber, the chancellor and treasurer sent a writ unto
-the sheriffs of London, charging them to bring the said five persons
-with the cause of their taking and withholding afore the king in his
-Chancery, on the vigil of Allhallows. On which day the said sheriffs,
-with the recorder and counsel of the city, brought and delivered them
-accordingly, afore the said lords; whereas the chancellor, after he had
-declared the king's commandment, sent them to St. Martin's, there to
-abide freely, as in a place having franchises, whiles them liked, etc.
-
-Thus much out of that book have I noted concerning the privilege of that
-place challenged in these days, since the which time, to wit, in the
-year 1457, the 36th of the said Henry VI., an ordinance was made by the
-king and his council concerning the said sanctuary men in St. Martin's
-le Grand, whereof the articles are set down in the book of K., within
-the chamber of the Guildhall, in the lease 299.
-
-This college was surrendered to King Edward VI., the 2nd of his reign,
-in the year of Christ 1548; and the same year the college church being
-pulled down, in the east part thereof a large wine tavern was built,
-and with all down to the west, and throughout the whole precinct of
-that college, many other houses were built and highly prized, letten to
-strangers born, and other such, as there claimed benefit of privileges
-granted to the canons serving God day and night (for so be the words in
-the charter of William the Conqueror), which may hardly be wrested to
-artificers, buyers and sellers, otherwise than is mentioned in the 21st
-of St. Matthew's Gospel.
-
-Lower down on the west side of St. Martin's lane, in the parish of
-St. Anne, almost by Aldersgate, is one great house, commonly called
-Northumberland house; it belonged to H. Percy. King Henry IV., in
-the 7th of his reign, gave this house, with the tenements thereunto
-appertaining, to Queen Jane his wife, and then it was called her
-Wardrobe: it is now a printing house.
-
-Without Aldersgate, on the east side of Aldersgate street, is the Cooks'
-hall; which Cooks (or Pastelars) were admitted to be a company, and to
-have a master and wardens, in the 22nd of Edward IV. From thence along
-into Houndsditch, or Barbican street, be many fair houses. On the west
-side also be the like fair buildings till ye come to Long lane, and so
-to Goswell street.
-
-In Briton street, which took that name of the dukes of Brittany lodging
-there, is one proper parish church of St. Buttolph, in which church was
-sometime a brotherhood of St. Fabian and Sebastian, founded in the year
-1377, the 51st of Edward III., and confirmed by Henry IV., in the 6th
-of his reign. Then Henry VI., in the 24th of his reign, to the honour
-of the Trinity, gave license to Dame Joan Astley, sometime his nurse,
-to R. Cawod and T. Smith, to found the same a fraternity, perpetually
-to have a master and two custoses, with brethren and sisters, etc. This
-brotherhood was endowed with lands more than thirty pounds by the year,
-and was suppressed by Edward VI. There lie buried, John de Bath, weaver,
-1390; Philip at Vine, capper, 1396; Benet Gerard, brewer, 1403; Thomas
-Bilsington founded a chantry there, and gave to that church a house,
-called the Helmet upon Cornhill; John Bradmore, chirurgeon, Margaret and
-Katheren his wives, 1411; John Michaell, sergeant-at-arms, 1415; Allen
-Bret, carpenter, 1425; Robert Malton, 1426; John Trigilion, brewer,
-1417; John Mason, brewer, 1431; Rob. Cawood, clerk of the pipe in the
-king's exchequer, 1466; Ri. Emmessey; John Walpole; I. Hartshorne,
-esquire, servant to the king, 1400, and other of that family, great
-benefactors to that church; W. Marrow, grocer, mayor, and Katherine his
-wife, were buried there about 1468. The Lady Ann Packington, widow, late
-wife to Jo. Packinton, knight, chirographer of the court of the common
-pleas; she founded alms houses near unto the White Fryers' church in
-Fleet street: the Clothworkers in London have oversight thereof.
-
-And thus an end of this ward; which hath an alderman, his deputy, common
-councillors five, constables eight, scavengers nine, for the wardmote
-inquest fourteen, and a beadle. It is taxed to the fifteen in London
-seven pounds, and[231] in the exchequer six pounds nineteen shillings.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[227] "It is taxed in London to the fifteene at forty pound, and in the
-Exchequer at thirty-nine pound ten shillings."--_1st edition_, p. 242.
-
-[228] "Thomas Leichfield."--_1st edition_, p. 244.
-
-[229] R. Grafton.
-
-[230] These disjointed syllables, it will be seen, may be so read as to
-form the following rhyming couplet:--
-
- "_Quos anguis tristi diro cum vulnere stravit,
- Hos sanguis Christi miro tum munere lavit._"
-
-
-[231] "Likewise in the exchequer."--_1st edition_, p. 247.
-
-
-
-
-FARINGDON WARD INFRA, OR WITHIN
-
-
-On the south side of Aldersgate ward lieth Faringdon ward, called
-_infra_ or within, for a difference from another ward of that name,
-which lieth without the walls of the city, and is therefore called
-Faringdon _extra_. These two wards of old time were but one, and had
-also but one alderman, till the 17th of Richard II., at which time the
-said ward, for the greatness thereof, was divided into twain, and by
-parliament ordered to have two aldermen, and so it continueth till this
-day. The whole great ward of Farindon, both _infra_ and _extra_, took
-name of W. Farindon, goldsmith, alderman of that ward, and one of the
-sheriffs of London in the year 1281, the 9th of Edward I. He purchased
-the Aldermanry of this ward, as by the abstract of deeds, which I have
-read thereof, may appear.
-
-"Thomas de Arderne, son and heir to Sir Ralph Arderne, knight, granted
-to Ralph le Feure, citizen of London, one of the sheriffs in the year
-1277, all the aldermanry, with the appurtenances within the city of
-London, and the suburbs of the same between Ludgate and Newgate, and
-also without the same gates: which aldermanry, Ankerinus de Averne
-held during his life, by the grant of the said Thomas de Arderna, to
-have and to hold to the said Ralph, and to his heirs, freely without
-all challenge, yielding therefore yearly to the said Thomas and his
-heirs one clove[232] or slip of gilliflowers, at the feast of Easter,
-for all secular service and customs, with warranty unto the said Ralph
-le Fevre and his heirs, against all people, Christians and Jews, in
-consideration of twenty marks, which the said Ralph le Fevre did give
-beforehand, in name of a gersum[233] or fine, to the said Thomas, etc.,
-dated the 5th of Edward I. Witness, G. de Rokesley, maior; R. Arrar,
-one of the shiriffes; H. Wales, P. le Taylor, T. de Basing, I. Horne,
-N. Blackthorn, aldermen of London." After this, John le Fevre, son and
-heir to the said Ralph le Fevre, granted to William Farindon, citizen
-and goldsmith of London, and to his heirs, the said aldermanry, with the
-appurtenances, for the service thereunto belonging, in the 7th of Edward
-I., in the year of Christ 1279. This aldermanry descended to Nicholas
-Farindon, son to the said William, and to his heirs; which Nicholas
-Farindon, also a goldsmith, was four times mayor, and lived many years
-after; for I have read divers deeds, whereunto he was a witness, dated
-the year 1360: he made his testament 1361, which was fifty-three years
-after his first being mayor, and was buried in St. Peter's church in
-Cheape. So this ward continued under the government of William Faringdon
-the father, and Nicholas his son, by the space of eighty-two years, and
-retaineth their name until this present day.
-
-This ward of Faringdon within the walls is bounded thus: Beginning in
-the east, at the great cross in Westcheape, from whence it runneth west.
-On the north side from the parish church of St. Peter, which is at the
-south-west corner of Wood street, on to Guthurun's lane, and down that
-lane to Hugon lane on the east side, and to Kery lane on the west.
-
-Then again into Cheape and to Foster lane, and down that lane on the
-east side, to the north side of St. Foster's church, and on the west,
-till over against the south-west corner of the said church, from whence
-down Foster lane and Noble street is all of Aldersgate street ward,
-till ye come to the stone wall, in the west side of Noble street, as is
-afore showed. Which said wall, down to Nevil's inn or Windsor house,
-and down Monkes well street, on that west side, then by London wall to
-Cripplegate, and the west side of that same gate is all of Faringdon
-ward.
-
-Then back again into Cheape, and from Foster lane end to St. Martin's
-lane end, and from thence through St. Nicholas shambles, by Penticost
-lane and Butchers' alley, and by Stinking lane through Newgate market to
-Newgate; all which is the north side of Faringdon ward.
-
-On the south, from against the said great cross in Cheape west to
-Fridayes street, and down that street on the east side, till over
-against the north-east corner of St. Mathew's church; and on the west
-side, till the south corner of the said church.
-
-Then again along Cheape to the old Exchange, and down that lane (on the
-east side) to the parish church of St. Augustine, which church, and one
-house next adjoining in Watheling street, be of this ward, and on the
-west side of this lane, to the east arch or gate by St. Augustine's
-church, which entereth the south churchyard of St. Paules, which arch
-or gate was built by Nicholas Faringdon about the year 1361, and within
-that gate, on the said north side, to the gate that entereth the north
-churchyard, and all the north churchyard is of this Faringdon ward.
-
-Then again into Cheape, and from the north end of the Old Exchange, west
-by the north gate of Paules churchyard, by Pater noster row, by the two
-lanes out of Paules church, and to a sign of the Golden Lion, which is
-some twelve houses short of Ave Mary lane; the west side of which lane
-is of this ward.
-
-Then at the south end of Ave Mary lane is Creed lane; the west side
-whereof is also of this ward.
-
-Now betwixt the south end of Ave Mary lane and the north end of Creede
-lane, is the coming out of Paules churchyard on the east, and the high
-street called Bowier row to Ludgate on the west, which way to Ludgate is
-of this ward. On the north side whereof is St. Martin's church, and on
-the south side a turning into the Blacke friars.
-
-Now to turn up again to the north end of Ave Mary lane, there is a short
-lane which runneth west some small distance, and is there closed up with
-a gate into a great house: and this is called Amen lane.
-
-Then on the north side of Pater noster row, beginning at the Conduit
-over against the Old Exchange lane end, and going west by St. Michael's
-church; at the west end of which church is a small passage through
-towards the north: and beyond this church some small distance is another
-passage, which is called Paniar alley, and cometh out against St.
-Martin's lane end.
-
-Then further west in Pater noster row is Ivie lane, which runneth north
-to the west end of St. Nicholas shambles; and then west Pater noster
-row, till over against the Golden Lion, where the ward endeth for that
-street.
-
-Then about some dozen houses (which is of Baynard's castle ward) to
-Warwick lane end; which Warwick lane stretcheth north to the high
-street of Newgate market. And the west side of Warwick lane is of this
-Faringdon ward; for the east side of Warwick lane, of Ave Marie lane,
-and of Creede lane, with the west end of Pater noster row, are all of
-Baynardes castle ward.
-
-Yet to begin again at the said Conduit by the Old Exchange, on the
-north side thereof is a large street that runneth up to Newgate, as is
-aforesaid. The first part, or south side whereof, from the Conduit to
-the shambles, is called Bladder street. Then on the back side of the
-shambles be divers slaughter-houses, and such like, pertaining to the
-shambles; and this is called Mount Godard street. Then is the shambles
-itself, and then Newgate market; and so the whole street, on both sides
-up to Newgate, is of this ward; and thus it is wholly bounded.
-
-Monuments in this ward be these: First, the great cross in Westcheape
-street, but in the ward of Faringdon; the which cross was first erected
-in that place by Edward I., as before is showed in Westcheape street.
-
-At the south-west corner of Wood street is the parish church of St.
-Peter the Apostle by the said cross, a proper church lately new built.
-John Sha, goldsmith, mayor, deceased 1508, appointed by his testament
-the said church and steeple to be newly built of his goods, with a flat
-roof; notwithstanding, Thomas Wood, goldsmith, one of the sheriffs
-1491, is accounted principal benefactor, because the roof of the middle
-aisle is supported by images of woodmen. I find to have been buried
-in this church--Nicholas Farendon, mayor; Richard Hadley, grocer,
-1592; John Palmer, fishmonger, 1500; William Rus, goldsmith, sheriff
-1429; T. Atkins, esquire, 1400; John Butler, sheriff 1420;[234] Henry
-Warley, alderman 1524; Sir John Monday, goldsmith, mayor, deceased
-1537; Augustine Hinde, cloth-worker, one of the sheriffs in the year
-1550, whose monument doth yet remain, the others be gone; Sir Alexander
-Auenon, mayor 1570.
-
-The long shop, or shed, incroaching on the high street before this
-church wall was licensed to be made in the year 1401, yielding to the
-chamber of London thirty shillings and four pence yearly for the time,
-but since thirteen shillings and four pence. Also the same shop was
-letten by the parish for three pounds at the most many years since.
-
-Then is Guthurun's lane, so called of Guthurun, sometime owner thereof.
-The inhabitants of this lane of old time were goldbeaters, as doth
-appear by records in the Exchequer; for the Easterling money was
-appointed to be made of fine silver, such as men made into foil, and was
-commonly called silver of Guthurun's lane, etc. The Embroiderers' hall
-is in this lane. John Throwstone, embroiderer, then goldsmith, sheriff,
-deceased 1519, gave forty pounds towards the purchase of this hall.
-Hugon lane on the east side, and Kery lane (called of one Kery) on the
-west.
-
-Then in the high street on the same north side is the Saddlers' hall,
-and then Fauster lane (so called) of St. Fauster's, a fair church lately
-new built. Henry Coote, goldsmith, one of the sheriffs, deceased 1509,
-built St. Dunston's chapel there. John Throwstone, one of the sheriffs,
-gave to the building thereof one hundred pounds by his testament.
-John Browne, sergeant painter, alderman, deceased 1532, was a great
-benefactor, and was there buried. William Trist, cellarer to the king,
-1425, John Standelfe,[235] goldsmiths, lie buried there; Richard
-Galder, 1544; Agnes, wife to William Milborne, chamberlain of London,
-1500, etc.
-
-Then down Foster lane and Noble street, both of Aldersgate street ward,
-till ye come to the stone wall which incloseth a garden plot before
-the wall of the city, on the west side of Noble street, and is of
-this Faringdon ward. This garden-plot, containing ninety-five ells in
-length, nine ells and a half in breadth, was by Adam de Burie, mayor,
-the alderman, and citizens of London, letten to John de Nevill, Lord of
-Raby, Radulph and Thomas his sons, for sixty years, paying 6_s._ 8_d._
-the year, dated the 48th of Edward III., having in a seal pendant on
-the one side, the figure of a walled city and of St. Paul, a sword in
-his right hand, and in the left a banner; three leopards about that
-seal, on the same side, written, _Sigillum Baronium Londoniarum_. On the
-other side, the like figure of a city, a bishop sitting on an arch; the
-inscription, _Me : que : te : peperi : ne : Cesses : Thoma : tueri_.
-Thus much for the barons of London, their common seal at that time. At
-the north end of this garden-plot is one great house built of stone and
-timber, now called the Lord Windsor's house, of old time belonging to
-the Nevils; as in the 19th of Richard II. it was found by inquisition
-of a jury, that Elizabeth Nevil died, seised of a great messuage in the
-parish of St. Olave, in Monk's well street in London, holden of the
-king in free burgage, which she held of the gift of John Nevell of Raby
-her husband, and that John Latimer was next son and heir to the said
-Elizabeth.
-
-In this west side is the Barbers-Chirurgeons' hall. This company was
-incorporated by means of Thomas Morestede, esquire, one of the sheriffs
-of London 1436, chirurgeon to the kings of England, Henry IV., V., and
-VI.: he deceased 1450. Then Jaques Fries, physician to Edward IV.,
-and William Hobbs, physician and chirurgeon for the same king's body,
-continuing the suit the full time of twenty years, Edward IV., in the
-2nd of his reign, and Richard, Duke of Gloucester, became founders of
-the same corporation in the name of St. Cosme and St. Damiane. The first
-assembly of that craft was Roger Strippe, W. Hobbs, T. Goddard, and
-Richard Kent; since the which time they built their hall in that street,
-etc.
-
-At the north corner of this street, on the same side, was sometime an
-hermitage, or chapel of St. James, called in the wall, near Cripplegate:
-it belonged to the abbey and convent of Garadon, as appeareth by a
-record, the 27th of Edward I., and also the 16th of Edward III. William
-de Lions was hermit there, and the abbot and convent of Geredon found
-two chaplains, Cistercian monks of their house, in this hermitage; one
-of them for Aymor de Valence, Earl of Pembroke, and Mary de Saint Paule,
-his countess.
-
-Of these monks, and of a well pertaining to them, the street took
-that name, and is called Monks' well street. This hermitage, with the
-appurtenances, was in the reign of Edward VI. purchased from the said
-king by William Lambe, one of the gentlemen of the king's chapel,
-citizen and cloth-worker of London: he deceased in the year 1577, and
-then gave it to the clothworkers of London, with other tenements, to the
-value of fifty pounds the year, to the intent they shall hire a minister
-to say divine service there, etc.
-
-Again to the high street of Cheape, from Fauster lane end to St.
-Martin's, and by that lane to the shambles or flesh-market, on the north
-side whereof is Penticost lane, containing divers slaughter-houses for
-the butchers.
-
-Then was there of old time a proper parish church of St. Nicholas,
-whereof the said flesh-market took the name, and was called St.
-Nicholas' shambles. This church, with the tenements and ornaments, was
-by Henry VIII. given to the mayor and commonalty of the city, towards
-the maintenance of the new parish church then to be erected in the late
-dissolved church of the Grey Friars; so was this church dissolved and
-pulled down. In place whereof, and of the churchyard, many fair houses
-are now built in a court with a well, in the midst whereof the church
-stood.
-
-Then is Stinking lane, so called, or Chick lane, at the east end of the
-Grey Friars church, and there is the Butchers' hall.
-
-In the 3rd of Richard II. motion was made that no butcher should kill
-no flesh within London, but at Knightsbridge, or such like distance of
-place from the walls of the city.
-
-Then the late dissolved church of the Grey Friars; the original whereof
-was this:
-
-The first of this order of friars in England, nine in number, arrived
-at Dover; five of them remained at Canterburie, the other four came to
-London, were lodged at the preaching friars in Oldborne for the space of
-fifteen days, and then they hired a house in Cornhill of John Trevers,
-one of the sheriffs of London. They built there little cells, wherein
-they inhabited; but shortly after, the devotion of citizens towards
-them, and the number of the friars so increased, that they were by the
-citizens removed to a place in St. Nicholas' shambles; which John Ewin,
-mercer, appropriated unto the commonalty, to the use of the said friars,
-and himself became a lay brother amongst them. About the year 1225,
-William Joyner built their choir, Henry Walles the body of the church,
-Walter Potter, alderman, the chapter house, Gregorie Rokesley their
-dorter; Bartholomew of the Castle made the refectory, Peter de Heliland
-made the infirmitory, Bevis Bond, king of heralds, made the study, etc.
-
-Margaret, queen, second wife to Edward I., began the choir of their
-new church in the year 1306; to the building whereof, in her lifetime,
-she gave two thousand marks, and one hundred marks by her testament.
-John Britaine, Earl of Richmond, built the body of the church to the
-charges of three hundred pounds, and gave many rich jewels and ornaments
-to be used in the same; Marie, Countess of Pembroke, seventy pounds.
-Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester, bestowed twenty great beams out of
-his forest of Tunbridge, and twenty pounds sterling. Lady Helianor le
-Spencer, Lady Elizabeth de Burgh, sister to Gilbert de Clare, gave sums
-of money; and so did divers citizens; as Arnald de Tolinea, one hundred
-pounds; Robert, Baron Lisle, who became a friar there, three hundred
-pounds; Bartholomew de Almaine, fifty pounds. Also Philippa, queen,
-wife to Edward III., gave sixty-two pounds; Isabell, queen, mother to
-Edward III., gave threescore and ten pounds. And so the work was done
-within the space of twenty-one years, 1337. This church was furnished
-with windows made at the charges of divers persons. The Lady Margaret
-Segrave, Countess of Norfolk, bare the charges of making the stalls in
-the choir, to the value of three hundred and fifty marks, about the
-year 1380. Richard Whittington, in the year 1429, founded the library,
-which was in length one hundred and twenty-nine feet, and in breadth
-thirty-one, all sealed with wainscot, having twenty-eight desks and
-eight double settles of wainscot; which in the next year following was
-altogether finished in building, and within three years after furnished
-with books, to the charges of five hundred and fifty-six pounds ten
-shillings; whereof Richard Whittington bare four hundred pounds; the
-rest was borne by Doctor Thomas Winchelsey, a friar there; and for
-the writing out of D. Nicholas de Lira, his works, in two volumes, to
-be chained there, one hundred marks, etc. The ceiling of the choir at
-divers men's charges, two hundred marks, and the painting at fifty
-marks; their conduit head and water-course given them by William Tailor,
-tailor to Henry III., etc.
-
-This whole church containeth in length three hundred feet, of the feet
-of St. Paule; in breadth eighty-nine feet, and in height from the ground
-to the roof sixty-four feet and two inches, etc. It was consecrated
-1325, and at the general suppression was valued at thirty-two pounds
-nineteen shillings, surrendered the 12th of November 1538, the 30th of
-Henry VIII., the ornaments and goods being taken to the king's use. The
-church was shut up for a time, and used as a storehouse for goods taken
-prizes from the French; but in the year 1546, on the 3rd of January, was
-again set open. On the which day preached at Paule's cross the Bishop of
-Rochester, where he declared the king's gift thereof to the city for the
-relieving of the poor. Which gift was by patent--of St. Bartholomew's
-Spittle, lately valued at three hundred and five pounds six shillings
-and seven pence, and surrendered to the king; of the said church of
-the Grey Friars, and of two parish churches, the one of St. Nicholas
-in the shambles, and the other of St. Ewines in Newgate market, which
-were to be made one parish church in the said Friars church; and in
-lands he gave for maintenance for the said church, with divine service,
-reparations, etc., five hundred marks by year for ever.
-
-The 13th of January, the 38th of Henry VIII., an agreement was made
-betwixt the king and the mayor[236] and commonalty of London, dated the
-27th of December, by which the said gift of the Grey Friars church, with
-all the edifices and ground, the fratry, the library, the dortor, and
-chapter-house, the great cloister and the lesser, tenements, gardens,
-and vacant grounds, lead, stone, iron, etc., the hospital of St.
-Bartholomew in West Smithfield, the church of the same, the lead, bells,
-and ornaments of the same hospital, with all the messuages, tenements,
-and appurtenances; the parishes of St. Nicholas and of St. Ewin, and
-so much of St. Sepulcher's parish as is within Newgate, were made one
-parish church in the Gray Friars church, and called Christ's church,
-founded by Henry VIII.
-
-The vicar of Christ's church was to have twenty-six pounds thirteen
-shillings and four pence the year; the vicar of St. Bartholomew thirteen
-pounds six shillings and eight pence; the visitor of Newgate (being
-a priest), ten pounds; and other five priests in Christ's church,
-all to be helping in Divine service, ministering the sacraments and
-sacramentals; the five priests to have eight pounds the piece, two
-clerks six pounds each, a sexton four pounds. Moreover, he gave them
-the hospital of Bethelem; with the laver of brass in the cloister, by
-estimation eighteen feet in length, and two feet and a half in depth;
-and the water-course of lead, to the said Friar house belonging,
-containing by estimation in length eighteen acres.
-
-In the year 1552 began the repairing of the Grey Friars house for the
-poor fatherless children; and in the month of November the children were
-taken into the same, to the number of almost four hundred. On Christmas
-day, in the afternoon, while the lord mayor and aldermen rode to Paules,
-the children of Christ's hospital stood, from St. Lawrence lane end
-in Cheape towards Paules, all in one livery of russet cotton, three
-hundred and forty in number; and in Easter next they were in blue at the
-Spittle, and so have continued ever since.
-
-The defaced monuments in this church were these; First in the choir,
-of the Lady Margaret, daughter to Philip, king of France, and wife to
-Edward I., foundress of this new church, 1317; of Isabel, queen, wife
-to Edward II., daughter to Philip, king of France, 1358; John of the
-Tower; Queen of Scots, wife to David Bruce, daughter to Edward II.,
-died in Hartford castle, and was buried by Isabel her mother 1362;
-William Fitzwarren, baron, and Isabel his wife, sometime Queen of Man;
-Isabel, daughter to Edward III., wedded to the Lord Courcy of France,
-after created Earl of Bedford; Elianor, wife to John, Duke of Britaine:
-Beatrix, Duchess of Britaine, daughter to Henry III.; Sir Robert Lisle,
-baron; the Lady Lisle, and Margaret de Rivers, Countess of Devon, all
-under one stone; Roger Mortimer, Earl of March, beheaded 1329; Peter,
-Bishop of Carbon in Hungary, 1331; Gregory Rocksley, mayor, 1282; Sir
-John Devereux, knight, 1385; John Hastings, Earl of Pembroke, 1389;
-Margaret, daughter to Thomas Brotharton, Earl Marshal; she was Duchess
-of Norfolk, and Countess Marshal and Lady Segrave, 1389; Richard
-Havering, knight, 1388; Robert Trisilian, knight justice, 1308; Geffrey
-Lucy, son of Geffrey Lucy; John Anbry, son to John, mayor of Norwich,
-1368; John Philpot, knight, mayor of London, and the Lady Jane Samford
-his wife, 1384; John, Duke of Bourbon and Anjou, Earl of Claremond,
-Montpensier, and Baron Beaujeu, who was taken prisoner at Agincourt,
-kept prisoner eighteen years, and deceased 1433; Robert Chalons, knight,
-1439; John Chalons; Margaret, daughter to Sir John Philpot, first
-married to T. Santlor, esquire, and after to John Neyband, esquire;
-Sir Nicholas Brimbar, mayor of London, buried 1386; Elizabeth Nevel,
-wife to John, son and heir to Ralph, Earl of Westmoreland, and mother
-to Ralph, Earl of Westmoreland, and daughter to Thomas Holland, Earl
-of Kent, 1423; Edward Burnell, son to the Lord Burnell. In Allhallows
-chapel: James Fines, Lord Say, 1450, and Helinor his wife, 1452; John
-Smith, Bishop of Landafe, 1478; John, Baron Hilton; John, Baron Clinton;
-Richard Hastings, knight, Lord of Willowby and Welles; Thomas Burdet,
-esquire, beheaded 1477; Robert Lisle, son and heir to the Lord Lisle.
-In our Lady's chapel: John Gisors, of London, knight; Hunfrey Stafford,
-esquire, of Worcestershire, 1486; Robert Bartram, Baron of Bothell;
-Ralph Barons, knight; William Apleton, knight; Reynold de Cambrey,
-knight; Thomas Beaumont, son and heir to Henry Lord Beaumont; John
-Butler, knight; Adam de Howton, knight, 1417; Bartholomew Caster, knight
-of London; Reinfride Arundele, knight, 1460; Thomas Covil, esquire,
-1422. In the 'Postles chapel: Walter Blunt, knight of the Garter,
-and Lord Mountjoy, treasurer of England, son and heir to T. Blunt,
-knight, treasurer of Normandy,[237] 1474; E. Blunt, Lord Mountjoy,
-1475; Alice Blunt Mountjoy, sometime wife to William Brown, mayor of
-London, and daughter to H. Kebel, mayor 1521; Anne Blunt, daughter to
-John Blunt, knight; Lord Mountjoy, 1480; Sir Allen Cheinie, knight, and
-Sir T. Greene, knight; William Blunt, esquire, son and heir to Walter
-Blunt,[238] captain of Gwynes, 1492; Elizabeth Blunt, wife to Robert
-Curson, knight, 1494; Bartholomew Burwashe, and John Burwashe his
-son; John Blunt, Lord Mountjoy, captain of Gwins and Hams, 1485; John
-Dinham, baron, sometime treasurer of England, knight of the Garter,
-1501; Elianor, Duchess of Buckingham, 1530; John Blunt, knight, 1531;
-Rowland Blunt, esquire, 1509; Robert Bradbury, 1489; Nicholas Clifton,
-knight; Francis Chape; two sons of Allayne Lord Cheiney, and John, son
-and heir to the same; Lord Allaine Cheinie, knight; John Robsart, knight
-of the Garter, 1450; Alleyne Cheiney, knight; Thomas Malory, knight,
-1470; Thomas Young, a justice of the bench, 1476; John Baldwin, fellow
-of Gray's inn, and common sergeant of London, 1469; Walter Wrotsley,
-knight of Warwickshire, 1473; Steven Jenins, mayor, 1523; Thomas a Par,
-and John Wiltwater, slain at Barnet, 1471; Nicholas Poynes, esquire,
-1512; Robert Elkenton, knight, 1460; John Water, alias Yorke herald,
-1520; John More, alias Norroy king of arms, 1491; George Hopton, knight,
-1489. Between the choir and the altar: Ralph Spiganel, knight; John
-Moyle, gentleman, of Gray's inn, 1495; William Huddy, knight, 1501;
-John Cobham, a baron of Kent; John Mortain, knight; John Deyncort,
-knight; John Norbery, esquire, high treasurer of England; Henry Norbery,
-his son, esquire; John Southlee, knight; Thomas Sakvile; Thomas Lucy,
-knight; 1525; Robert de la Rivar, son to Mauricius de la Rivar, Lord of
-Tormerton, 1457; John Malmaynas, esquire, and Thomas Malmaynas, knight;
-Hugh Acton, tailor, 1530; Nicholas Malmains; Hugh Parsal, knight, 1490;
-Alexander Kirketon, knight, etc. In the body of the church: William
-Paulet, esquire of Somersetshire, 1482; John Moyle, gentleman, 1530;
-Peter Champion, esquire, 1511; John Hart, gentleman, 1449; Alice Lat
-Hungerford, hanged at Tiborne for murdering her husband, 1523; Edward
-Hall, gentleman, of Gray's inn, 1470; Richard Churchyard, gentleman,
-fellow of Gray's inn, 1498; John Bramre, gentleman, of Gray's inn,
-1498; John Mortimar, knight, beheaded 1423; Henry Frowike, alderman;
-Renauld Frowike; Philip Pats, 1518; William Porter, sergeant at arms,
-1515; Thomas Grantham, gentleman, 1511; Edmond Rotheley, gentleman,
-1470; Henry Roston, gentleman, of Gray's inn, 1485; Nicholas Montgomery,
-gentleman, son to John Montgomery, of Northamptonshire, 1485; Sir
-Bartholomew Emfield, knight; Sir Barnard St. Peter, knight; Sir Ralph
-Sandwich, knight, custos of London; Sir Andrew Sakevile, knight; John
-Treszawall, gentleman and tailor of London, 1520. All these and five
-times so many more have been buried there, whose monuments are wholly
-defaced; for there were nine tombs of alabaster and marble, environed
-with strikes of iron in the choir, and one tomb in the body of the
-church, also coped with iron, all pulled down, besides sevenscore
-grave-stones of marble, all sold for fifty pounds, or thereabouts, by
-Sir Martin Bowes, goldsmith and alderman of London. Of late time buried
-there, Walter Hadden, doctor, etc. From this church west to Newgate is
-of this ward.
-
-Now for the south side of this ward, beginning again at the cross in
-Cheape, from thence to Friday street, and down that street on the west
-side, till over against the north-west corner of St. Matthew's church;
-and on the west side, to the south corner of the said church, which is
-wholly in the ward of Faringdon. This church hath these few monuments:
-Thomas Pole, goldsmith, 1395; Robert Johnson, goldsmith, alderman;
-John Twiselton, goldsmith, alderman, 1525; Ralph Allen, grocer, one
-of the sheriffs, deceased 1546; Anthony Gamage, ironmonger, one of
-the sheriffs, deceased 1579; Anthony Cage; John Mabbe, chamberlain of
-London, etc. Allen at Condit, and Thomas Warlingworth, founded a chantry
-there. Sir Nicholas Twiford, goldsmith, mayor, gave to that church a
-house, with the appurtenances, called the Griffon on the Hope, in the
-same street.[239]
-
-From this Friday street, west to the Old Exchange, a street so called
-of the king's exchange there kept, which was for the receipt of bullion
-to be coined. For Henry III., in the 6th of his reign, wrote to the
-Scabines and men of Ipre, that he and his council had given prohibition,
-that none, Englishmen or other, should make change of plate or other
-mass of silver, but only in his Exchange at London, or at Canterbury.
-Andrew Buckerell then had to farm the Exchange of England, and was mayor
-of London in the reign of Henry III. John Somercote had the keeping of
-the king's Exchange over all England. In the 8th of Edward I., Gregory
-Rockesly was keeper of the said Exchange for the king. In the 5th of
-Edward II., William Hausted was keeper thereof; and in the 18th, Roger
-de Frowicke, etc.
-
-These received the old stamps, or coining-irons, from time to time, as
-the same were worn, and delivered new to all the mints in London, as
-more at large in another place I have noted.
-
-This street beginneth by West Cheape in the north, and runneth down
-south to Knightriders street; that part thereof which is called Old Fish
-street, but the very housing and office of the Exchange and coinage was
-about the midst thereof, south from the east gate that entereth Paules
-churchyard, and on the west side in Baynard's castle ward.
-
-On the east side of this lane, betwixt West Cheape and the church of St.
-Augustine, Henry Walles, mayor (by license of Edward I.), built one row
-of houses, the profits rising of them to be employed on London bridge.
-
-The parish church of St. Augustine, and one house next adjoining in
-Watheling street, is of this ward called Faringdon. This is a fair
-church, and lately well repaired, wherein be monuments remaining--of
-H. Reade, armourer, one of the sheriffs 1450; Robert Bellesdon,
-haberdasher, mayor 1491; Sir Townley William Dere, one of the sheriffs
-1450; Robert Raven, haberdasher, 1500; Thomas Apleyard, gentleman,
-1515; William Moncaster, merchant-tailor, 1524; William Holte,
-merchant-tailor, 1544, etc.
-
-Then is the north churchyard of Paules, in the which standeth the
-cathedral church, first founded by Ethelbert, king of Kent, about the
-year of Christ 610: he gave thereto lands as appeareth:
-
-"_Ædelbertus Rex, Deo inspirante, pro animæ suæ remedio dedit episcopo
-Melito terram quæ appellatur Tillingeham ad monasterii sui solatium,
-scilicet monasterium Sancti Pauli: et ego Rex Æthelbertus ita firmiter
-concedo tibi presuli Melito potestatem ejus habendi & possidendi ut in
-perpetuum in monasterii utilitate permaneat_," etc. Athelstan, Edgar,
-Edward the Confessor, and others, also gave lands thereunto. William
-the Conqueror gave to the church of St. Paule, and to Mauricius,
-then bishop, and his successors, the castle of Stortford, with the
-appurtenances, etc. He also confirmed the gifts of his predecessors in
-these words: "_W. Rex Angl. concedo Deo et S. Paulo in perpetuum, 24
-Hidas quas Rex Æthelbert dedit S. Paulo juxta London_," etc. The charter
-of King William the Conqueror, exemplified in the Tower, englished thus:
-
-"William, by the grace of God, king of Englishmen, to all his welbeloued
-French and English people, greeting: Know ye that I do giue vnto God
-and the church of S. Paule of London, and to the rectors and seruitors
-of the same, in all their lands which the church hath, or shall have,
-within borough and without, sack and sock, thole and theam, infangthefe
-and grithbriche, and all freeships, by strand and by land, on tide
-and off tide, and all the rights that into them christendome byrath,
-on morth sprake, and on unright hamed, and on unright work, of all
-that bishoprick on mine land, and on each other man's land. For I will
-that the church in all things be as free as I would my soul to be in
-the day of judgement. Witnesses: Osmund, our Chancellor; Lanfrank,
-the Archbishop of Canterbury; and T. Archbishop of York; Roger, Earle
-of Shrewesbury; Alane, the county; Geffrey de Magnavilla; and Ralph
-Peuerel."
-
-In the year 1087, this church of St. Paule was burnt with fire, and
-therewith the most part of the city; which fire began at the entry of
-the west gate, and consumed the east gate. Mauricius the bishop began
-therefore the foundation of a new church of St. Paule, a work that men
-of that time judged would never have been finished, it was to them so
-wonderful for length and breadth; and also the same was built upon
-arches (or vaults) of stone, for defence of fire, which was a manner
-of work before that time unknown to the people of this nation, and
-then brought in by the French; and the stone was fetched from Caen in
-Normandy.
-
-This Mauricius deceased in the year 1107. Richard Beamor succeeded
-him in the bishopric, who did wonderfully increase the said church,
-purchasing of his own cost the large streets and lanes about it, wherein
-were wont to dwell many lay people; which ground he began to compass
-about with a strong wall of stone and gates. King Henry I. gave to the
-said Richard so much of the moat (or wall) of the castle, on the Thames
-side, to the south, as should be needful to make the said wall of the
-church, and so much as should suffice to make a wall without the way on
-the north side, etc.
-
-It should seem that this Richard inclosed but two sides of the said
-church or cemetery of St. Paule, to wit, the south and north side;
-for King Edward II., in the 10th of his reign, granted that the said
-churchyard should be inclosed with a wall where it wanted, for the
-murders and robberies that were there committed. But the citizens then
-claimed the east part of the churchyard to be the place of assembly to
-their folkemotes, and that the great steeple there situate was to that
-use, their common bell, which being there rung, all the inhabitants of
-the city might hear and come together. They also claimed the west side,
-that they might there assemble themselves together, with the lord of
-Baynard's castle, for view of their armour, in defence of the city. This
-matter was in the Tower of London referred to Harvius de Stanton, and
-his fellow justices itinerants; but I find not the decision or judgment
-of that controversy.
-
-True it is, that Edward III., in the 17th of his reign, gave commandment
-for the finishing of that wall, which was then performed, and to this
-day it continueth; although now on both the sides (to wit, within and
-without) it be hidden with dwelling-houses. Richard Beamer deceased in
-the year 1127, and his successors in process of time performed the work
-begun.
-
-The steeple of this church was built and finished in the year 1222; the
-cross on the said steeple fell down, and a new was set up in the year
-1314. The new work of Pauls (so called) at the east end above the choir,
-was begun in the year 1251.
-
-Henry Lacy, Earl of Lincoln, constable of Chester, and custos of
-England, in his time was a great benefactor to this work, and was there
-buried in the year 1310. Also Ralph Baldocke, Bishop of London, in his
-lifetime gave two hundred marks to the building of the said new work,
-and left much by his testament towards the finishing thereof: he
-deceased in the year 1313, and was buried in the Lady chapel. Also the
-new work of Paules, to wit, the cross aisles, were begun to be new built
-in the year 1256.
-
-The 1st of February, in the year 1444, about two of the clock in the
-afternoon, the steeple of Paules was fired by lightning, in the midst
-of the shaft or spire, both on the west side and on the south; but by
-labour of many well-disposed people the same to appearance was quenched
-with vinegar, so that all men withdrew themselves to their houses,
-praising God; but between eight and nine of the clock in the same night
-the fire burst out again more fervently than before, and did much hurt
-to the lead and timber, till by the great labour of the mayor and people
-that came thither, it was thoroughly quenched.
-
-This steeple was repaired in the year 1462, and the weather-cock again
-erected. Robert Godwin winding it up, the rope brake, and he was
-destroyed on the pinnacles, and the cock was sore bruised; but Burchwood
-(the king's plumber) set it up again: since the which time, needing
-reparation, it was both taken down and set up in the year 1553; at which
-time it was found to be of copper, gilt over; and the length from the
-bill to the tail being four feet, and the breadth over the wings three
-feet and a half, it weighed forty pounds; the cross from the bowl to the
-eagle (or cock) was fifteen feet and six inches, of assize; the length
-thereof overthwart was five feet and ten inches, and the compass of the
-bowl was nine feet and one inch.
-
-The inner body of this cross was oak, the next cover was lead, and the
-uttermost was of copper, red varnished. The bowl and eagle, or cock,
-were of copper, and gilt also.
-
-The height of the steeple was five hundred and twenty feet, whereof the
-stone-work is two hundred and sixty feet, and the spire was likewise two
-hundred and sixty feet: the length of the whole church is two hundred
-and forty tailors' yards, which make seven hundred and twenty feet;
-the breadth thereof is one hundred and thirty feet, and the height of
-the body of that church is one hundred and fifty feet. This church
-hath a bishop, a dean, a precentor, chancellor, treasurer, and five
-archdeacons; to wit, of London, Middlesex, Essex, Colchester, and St.
-Albans: it hath prebendaries thirty, canons twelve, vicars choral six,
-etc.
-
-The college of petty canons there was founded by King Richard II. in
-honour of Queen Anne his wife, and of her progenitors, in the 17th of
-his reign. Their hall and lands were then given unto them, as appeareth
-by the patent; Master Robert Dokesworth then being master thereof. In
-the year 1408, the petty canons then building their college, the mayor
-and commonalty granted them their water-courses, and other easements.
-
-There was also one great cloister, on the north side of this church,
-environing a plot of ground, of old time called Pardon churchyard;
-whereof Thomas More, dean of Paules, was either the first builder, or
-a most especial benefactor, and was buried there. About this cloister
-was artificially and richly painted the Dance of Machabray, or Dance of
-Death, commonly called the Dance of Paul's; the like whereof was painted
-about St. Innocent's cloister at Paris, in France. The metres, or poesy
-of this dance, were translated out of French into English by John
-Lidgate, monk of Bury,[240] and with the picture of death leading all
-estates, painted about the cloister, at the special request and at the
-dispence of Jenken Carpenter, in the reign of Henry VI. In this cloister
-were buried many persons, some of worship, and others of honour; the
-monuments of whom, in number and curious workmanship, passed all other
-that were in that church.
-
-Over the east quadrant of this cloister was a fair library, built at
-the costs and charges of Walter Sherington, chancellor of the duchy of
-Lancaster, in the reign of Henry VI., which hath been well furnished
-with fair written books in vellum, but few of them now do remain there.
-In the midst of this Pardon churchyard was also a fair chapel, first
-founded by Gilbert Becket, portgrave and principal magistrate of this
-city, in the reign of King Stephen, who was there buried.
-
-Thomas Moore, dean of Paul's before named, re-edified or new built this
-chapel, and founded three chaplains there, in the reign of Henry V.
-
-In the year 1549, on the 10th of April, the said chapel, by commandment
-of the Duke of Somerset, was begun to be pulled down, with the whole
-cloister, the Dance of Death, the tombs and monuments; so that nothing
-thereof was left but the bare plot of ground, which is since converted
-into a garden for the petty canons. There was also a chapel at the north
-door of Paules, founded by the same Walter Sherrington, by license
-of Henry VI., for two, three, or four chaplains, endowed with forty
-pounds, by the year. This chapel also was pulled down in the reign of
-Edward VI., and in place thereof a fair house built.
-
-There was furthermore a fair chapel of the Holy Ghost in Paules church,
-on the north side, founded in the year 1400 by Roger Holmes, chancellor
-and prebendary of Paules, for Adam Berie, alderman, mayor of London
-1364, John Wingham and others, for seven chaplains, and called Holme's
-college. Their common hall was in Paul's churchyard, on the south
-side, near unto a carpenter's yard. This college was, with others,
-suppressed in the reign of Edward VI. Then under the choir of Paules is
-a large chapel, first dedicated to the name of Jesu, founded, or rather
-confirmed, the 37th of Henry VI., as appeareth by his patent thereof,
-dated at Croydone, to this effect: "Many liege men, and Christian
-people, having begun a fraternitie and guild, to the honour of the most
-glorious name of Jesus Christ our Saviour, in a place called the Crowdes
-of the cathedrall church of Paul's in London, which hath continued long
-time peaceably till now of late; whereupon they have made request, and
-we have taken upon us the name and charge of the foundation, to the
-laud of Almightie God, the Father, the Sonne, and the Holy Ghost, and
-especially to the honour of Jesu, in whose honour the fraternitie was
-begun," etc.
-
-The king ordained William Say, then dean of Paules, to be the rector,
-and Richard Ford (a remembrancer in the Exchequer), and Henry Bennis
-(clerk of his privy seal), the guardians of those brothers and sisters;
-they and their successors to have a common seal, license to purchase
-lands or tenements to the value of forty pounds by the year, etc.
-
-This foundation was confirmed by Henry VII., the 22nd of his reign, to
-Doctor Collet, then dean of Paules, rector there, etc.; and by Henry
-VIII., the 27th of his reign, to Richard Pace, then dean of Paules, etc.
-
-At the west end of this Jesus chapel, under the choir of Paules, also
-was a parish church of St. Faith, commonly called St. Faith under
-Paul's, which served for the stationers and others dwelling in Paule's
-churchyard, Paternoster row, and the places near adjoining. The said
-chapel of Jesus being suppressed in the reign of Edward VI., the
-parishioners of St. Faith's church were removed into the same, as to a
-place more sufficient for largeness and lightsomeness, in the year 1551,
-and so it remaineth.
-
-Then was there on the north side of this churchyard a large charnel
-house for the bones of the dead, and over it a chapel of an old
-foundation, such as followeth. In the year 1282, the 10th of Edward
-I., it was agreed, that Henry Walles, mayor, and the citizens, for
-the cause of shops by them built, without the wall of the churchyard,
-should assign to God and to the church of St. Paul ten marks of rent by
-the year for ever, towards the new building of a chapel of the Blessed
-Virgin Mary, and also to assign five marks of yearly rent to a chaplain
-to celebrate there.
-
-Moreover, in the year 1430, the 8th of Henry VI., license was granted
-to Jenkin Carpenter (executor to Richard Whittington) to establish upon
-the said charnel a chaplain, to have eight marks by the year. Then was
-also in this chapel two brotherhoods. In this chapel were buried Robert
-Barton, Henry Barton, mayor, and Thomas Mirfin, mayor, all skinners, and
-were entombed with their images of alabaster over them, grated or coped
-about with iron before the said chapel, all which were pulled down in
-the year 1549: the bones of the dead, couched up in a charnel under the
-chapel, were conveyed from thence into Finsbery field (by report of him
-who paid for the carriage[241]), amounting to more than one thousand
-cart-loads, and there laid on a moorish ground; in short space after
-raised, by soilage of the city upon them, to bear three windmills. The
-chapel and charnel were converted into dwelling-houses, warehouses, and
-sheds before them, for stationers, in place of the tombs.
-
-In the east part of this churchyard standeth Paules school, lately new
-built, and endowed in the year 1512 by John Collet, doctor of divinity
-and dean of Paules, for one hundred and fifty-three poor men's children,
-to be taught free in the same school; for which he appointed a master,
-a surmaster, or usher, and a chaplain, with large stipends for ever,
-committing the oversight thereof to the masters, wardens, and assistants
-of the mercers in London, because he was[242] son to Henry Collet,
-mercer, sometime mayor. He left to these mercers lands to the yearly
-value of one hundred and twenty pounds, or better.
-
-Near unto this school, on the north side thereof, was of old time a
-great and high clochier, or bell-house, four square, built of stone, and
-in the same a most strong frame of timber, with four bells, the greatest
-that I have heard; these were called Jesus' bells, and belonged to
-Jesus' chapel, but I know not by whose gift: the same had a great spire
-of timber covered with lead, with the image of St. Paul on the top, but
-was pulled down by Sir Miles Partridge, knight, in the reign of Henry
-VIII. The common speech then was, that he did set a hundred pounds upon
-a cast at dice against it, and so won the said clochiard and bells of
-the king; and then causing the bells to be broken as they hung, the rest
-was pulled down. This man was afterward executed on the Tower hill for
-matters concerning the Duke of Somerset, the 5th of Edward VI.
-
-In place of this clochiard, of old times the common bell of the city was
-used to be rung for the assembly of the citizens to their folke motes,
-as I have before showed.
-
-About the midst of this churchyard is a pulpit cross of timber, mounted
-upon steps of stone, and covered with lead, in which are sermons
-preached by learned divines every Sunday in the forenoon; the very
-antiquity of which cross is to me unknown. I read, that in the year
-1259, King Henry III. commanded a general assembly to be made at this
-cross, where he in proper person commanded the mayor, that on the next
-day following, he should cause to be sworn before the alderman every
-stripling of twelve years of age or upward, to be true to the king and
-his heirs, kings of England. Also, in the year 1262, the same king
-caused to be read at Paul's cross a bull, obtained from Pope Urban IV.,
-as an absolution for him, and for all that were sworn to maintain the
-articles made in parliament at Oxford. Also in the year 1299, the dean
-of Paules accursed at Paules cross all those which had searched in the
-church of St. Martin in the Field for a hoard of gold, etc. This pulpit
-cross was by tempest of lightning and thunder defaced. Thomas Kempe,
-Bishop of London, new built it in form as it now standeth.
-
-In the year 1561, the 4th of June, betwixt the hours of three and four
-of the clock in the afternoon, the great spire of the steeple of St.
-Paule's church was fired by lightning, which brake forth (as it seemed)
-two or three yards beneath the foot of the cross; and from thence it
-went downward the spire to the battlements, stone-work, and bells,
-so furiously, that within the space of four hours the same steeple,
-with all the roofs of the church, were consumed, to the great sorrow
-and perpetual remembrance of the beholders. After this mischance, the
-queen's majesty directed her letters to the mayor, willing him to take
-order for the speedy repairing of the same: and she, of her gracious
-disposition, for the furtherance thereof, did presently give and deliver
-in gold one thousand marks, with a warrant for a thousand loads of
-timber, to be taken out of her woods or elsewhere.
-
-The citizens also gave first a great benevolence, and after that three
-fifteens, to be speedily paid. The clergy of England likewise, within
-the province of Canterbury, granted the fortieth part of the value of
-their benefices, charged with first fruits, the thirtieth part of such
-as were not so charged; but the clergy of London diocese granted the
-thirtieth part of all that paid first fruits, and the twentieth part of
-such as had paid their fruits.
-
-Six citizens of London, and two petty canons of Paules church, had
-charge to further and oversee the work, wherein such expedition was
-used, that within one month next following the burning thereof, the
-church was covered with boards and lead, in manner of a false roof,
-against the weather; and before the end of the said year, all the said
-aisles of the church were framed out of new timber, covered with lead,
-and fully finished. The same year also the great roofs of the west and
-east ends were framed out of great timber in Yorkshire, brought thence
-to London by sea, and set up and covered with lead; the north and south
-ends were framed of timber, and covered with lead, before April 1566.
-Concerning the steeple, divers models were devised and made, but little
-else was done, through whose default, God knoweth; it was said that the
-money appointed for new building of the steeple was collected.[243]
-
-Monuments in this church be these: first, as I read, of Erkenwalde,
-Bishop of London, buried in the old church about the year of Christ 700,
-whose body was translated into the new work in the year 1140, being
-richly shrined above the choir behind the high altar.
-
-Sebba, or Seba, King of the East Saxons, first buried in the old church,
-since removed into the new, and laid in a coffin of stone, on the north
-side without the choirs; Ethelred, King of the West Saxons, was likewise
-buried and removed; William Norman, Bishop of London in the reigns of
-Edward the Confessor and of William the Conqueror, deceased 1070, and
-is new buried in the body of the church, with an epitaph, as in my
-_Summary_ I have shown; Eustauchius de Fauconbridge, Bishop of London,
-1228, buried in the south isle above the choir; Martin Pateshull,
-Dean of Powle's, 1239; W. Havarhul, canon; the king's treasurer, Hugh
-Pateshull, 1240; Roger Nigar, Bishop of London, 1241, buried in the
-north side of the choir; Fulco Basset, Bishop of London, 1259, and his
-brother, Philip Basset, knight, 1261; Henry Wingham, Bishop of London,
-buried in the south aisle above the choir, 1262; Geffrey de Arca,
-chaplain in the chapel of St. James, under the rood at north door, 1264;
-Alexander de Swarford, 1273; John Grantham, 1273; John Braynford, and
-Richard Umframuile, 1275; Roger de Iale, Archdeacon of Essex, 1280;
-Ralph Donion, canon, 1382; Godfrey S. Donstan, 1274; Fulke Lovell, 1298;
-William Harworth, clerk, 1302; Reginald Brandon, in the new Lady chapel,
-1305; Richard Newporte, Archdeacon of Middlesex, 1309; Henry Lacie, Earl
-of Lincolne, in the new work of Paules betwixt the Lady chapel and St.
-Dunston's chapel, where a fair monument was raised for him, with his
-picture in armour, cross-legged, as one professed for defence of the
-Holy Land against the infidels, 1310, his monument is foully defaced;
-Ralph Baldoke, Bishop of London, 1313, in the said Lady chapel, whereof
-he was founder.
-
-Some have noted,[244] that in digging the foundation of this new work,
-namely of a chapel on the south side of Paule's church, there were found
-more than a hundred scalps of oxen or kine, in the year 1316; which
-thing (say they) confirmed greatly the opinion of those which have
-reported, that of old time there had been a temple of Jupiter, and that
-there was daily sacrifice of beasts.
-
-Othersome, both wise and learned, have thought the buck's head, borne
-before the procession of Paule's on St. Paul's day, to signify the like.
-But true it is, I have read an ancient deed to this effect.
-
-Sir William Baud, knight, the 3rd of Edward I., in the year 1274, on
-Candlemas day, granted to Harvy de Borham, dean of Powle's, and to the
-chapter there, that in consideration of twenty-two acres of ground or
-land, by them granted, within their manor of Westley in Essex, to be
-inclosed into his park of Curingham, he would for ever, upon the feast
-day of the Conversion of St. Paul in winter, give unto them a good doe,
-seasonable and sweet, and upon the feast of the commemoration of St.
-Paul in summer, a good buck, and offer the same upon the high altar; the
-same to be spent amongst the canons residents. The doe to be brought by
-one man at the hour of procession, and through the procession to the
-high altar; and the bringer to have nothing: the buck to be brought
-by all his men in like manner, and they to have paid unto them by the
-chamberlain of the church twelve pence only, and no more to be required.
-This grant he made, and for performance bound the lands of him and his
-heirs to be distrained on; and if the lands should be evicted, that
-yet he and his heirs should accomplish the gift. Witnesses: Richard
-Tilberie, William de Wockendon, Richard de Harlowe, knights, Peter of
-Stanforde, Thomas of Waldon, and some others.
-
-Sir Walter Baude, son to William, confirmed this gift, in the 30th of
-the said king, and the witnesses thereunto were Nicholas de Wokendon,
-Richard de Rokeley, Thomas de Mandevile, John de Rochford, knights,
-Richard de Broniford, William de Markes, William de Fulham, and other.
-Thus much for the grant.
-
-Now what I have heard by report, and have partly seen, it followeth.
-On the feast day of the commemoration of St. Paul, the buck being
-brought up to the steps of the high altar in Paul's church, at the
-hour of procession, the dean and chapter being apparelled in copes and
-vestments, with garlands of roses on their heads, they sent the body
-of the buck to baking, and had the head fixed on a pole, borne before
-the cross in their procession, until they issued out of the west door,
-where the keeper that brought it blowed the death of the buck, and then
-the horners that were about the city presently answered him in like
-manner; for the which pains they had each one of the dean and chapter,
-four pence in money, and their dinner, and the keeper that brought it,
-was allowed during his abode there, for that service, meat, drink, and
-lodging, at the dean and chapter's charges, and five shillings in money
-at his going away, together with a loaf of bread, having the picture of
-St. Paul upon it, etc.
-
-There was belonging to the church of St. Paul, for both the days, two
-special suits of vestments, the one embroidered with bucks, the other
-with does, both given by the said Bauds (as I have heard). Thus much for
-the matter.
-
-Now to the residue of the monuments:--Sir Ralph Hingham, chief justice
-of both Benches successively, buried in the side of the north walk
-against the choir, 1308; Henry Guildford, clerk at the altar of the
-Apostles, 1313; Richard Newport, Bishop of London, 1318; William
-Chateslehunt, canon, in the new work, 1321, had a chantry there; Sir
-Nicholas Wokenden, knight, at the altar of St. Thomas in the new work,
-1323; John Cheshull, Bishop of London, 1279; Roger Waltham, canon,
-1325; Hamo Chikewell, six times mayor of London, 1328; Robert Monden,
-and John Monden his brother, canons, in the new work, 1332; Walter
-Thorpe, canon, in the new work, 1333; John Fable, 1334; James Fisil,
-chaplain, 1341; William Melford, Archdeacon of Colchester, 1345;
-Richard de Placeto, Archdeacon of Colchester, 1345, before St. Thomas'
-chapel; Geffrey Eton, canon, 1345; Nicholas Husband, canon, 1347; Sir
-John Poultney, mayor 1348, in a fair chapel by him built on the north
-side of Paule's, wherein he founded three chaplains; William Eversden,
-canon, in the crowds, 1349; Alan Hotham, canon, in the new crowds, 1351;
-Henry Etesworth, under the rood at north door, 1353; John Beauchampe,
-constable of Dover, warden of the ports, knight of the Garter, son to
-Guy Beauchampe, Earl of Warwick, and brother to Thomas Earl of Warwick,
-in the body of the church, on the south side, 1358, where a proper
-chapel and fair monument remaineth of him; he is by ignorant people
-misnamed to be Humfrey, Duke of Glocester, who lieth honourably buried
-at St. Albon's, twenty miles from London, and therefore such as merrily
-or simply profess themselves to serve Duke Humfrey in Paule's, are to
-be punished here, and sent to St. Albon's, there again to be punished
-for their absence from their lord and master, as they call him; Michael
-Norborow, Bishop of London, 1361; Walter Nele, blader, and Avis his
-wife, 1361; Gilbert Brewer, dean of Paule's, 1366; Richard Wendover,
-1366; John Hiltoft, goldsmith, and Alice his wife, in the new works,
-St. Dunston's chapel, 1368; Adam de Bery, mayor in the year 1364,
-buried in a chapel of St. Mary Magdalen, or of the Holy Ghost, called
-Holmes' college, behind the rood at the north door of Paul's, 1390;
-Roger Holmes, chancellor and prebend of Paul's, was buried there 1400;
-John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, 1399, buried on the north side the
-choir, beside Blanch his first wife, who deceased 1368; Sir Richard
-Burley, knight of the Garter, under a fair monument in the side of the
-north walk against the choir, a chantry was there founded for him,
-1409; Beatrix his wife, after his death, married to Thomas Lord Rouse,
-was buried in the chapel of St. John Baptist (or Poultney's chapel)
-near the north door of Paule's, 1409; Thomas Evers, dean of Paule's, in
-St. Thomas' chapel, the new work, 1411; Thomas More, dean of Paule's,
-in the chapel of St. Anne and St. Thomas, by him new built in Pardon
-churchyard, 1419; Thomas Ston, dean of Paule's, by the tomb of John
-Beauchampe, 1423; the Duchess of Bedford, sister to Philip Duke of
-Burgoyne, 1433; Robert Fitzhugh, Bishop of London, in the choir, 1435;
-Walter Sherington, in a chapel without the north door by him built,
-1457; John Drayton, goldsmith, in Alhallowes chapel, 1456; William
-Say, dean of Paul's, in the Crowds, or Jesus' chapel, 1468; Margaret,
-Countess of Shrewsbury, in the Crowds, or Jesus' chapel, as appeareth by
-an inscription on a pillar there.
-
-Here before the image of Jesu lieth the worshipful and right noble lady,
-Margaret Countess of Shrewsbury, late wife of the true and victorious
-knight and redoubtable warrior, John Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury, which
-worship died in Guien for the right of this land. The first daughter,
-and one of the heirs of the right famous and renowned knight, Richard
-Beauchamp, late Earl of Warwick, which died in Rouen, and Dame Elizabeth
-his wife, the which Elizabeth was daughter and heir to Thomas, late Lord
-Berkeley, on his side, and of her mother's side, Lady Lisle and Tyes,
-which countess passed from this world the 14th day of June, in the year
-of our Lord 1468, on whose soul Jesu have mercy. Amen.
-
-John Wenlocke, by his last will, dated 1477, appointed there should
-be dispended upon a monument over the Lady of Shrewsbury where she is
-buried afore Jesus, one hundred pounds. He left Sir Humfrey Talbot his
-supervisor. This Sir Humfrey Talbot, knight, lord marshal of the town of
-Calais, made his will the year 1492. He was younger son of John Earl of
-Shrewsbury, and Margaret his wife; he appointed a stone to be put in a
-pillar before the grave of his lady mother in Paul's, of his portraiture
-and arms, according to the will of John Wenlocke, but for want of room
-and lightsomeness in that place, it was concluded, the image of Jesus to
-be curiously painted on the wall of Paul's church, over the door that
-entereth into the said chapel of Jesus, and the portraiture also of the
-said Lady Margaret, Countess of Shrewsbury, kneeling in her mantle of
-arms, with her progeny; all which was so performed, and remaineth till
-this day.
-
-In the chapel of Jesus, Thomas Dowcrey, William Lambe, 1578, and many
-other, have been interred; John of London, under the north rood, 1266;
-John Lovell, clerk; John Romane; John of St. Olave; Waltar Bloxley;
-Sir Alen Boxhull, knight of the Garter, constable of the Tower, custos
-of the forest and park of Clarendon, the forest of Brokholt, Grovell,
-and Melchet, buried beside St. Erkenwald's shrine, and of later time
-Thomas Kempe, Bishop of London, in a proper chapel of the Trinity by
-him founded in the body of the church, on the north side, 1489; Thomas
-Linacre, doctor of physic; John Collet, dean of Paule's, on the south
-side without the choir, 1519; John Dowman, canon of Paule's, 1525;
-Richard Fitz-James, Bishop of London, hard beneath the north-west
-pillar of Paule's steeple, under a fair tomb, and a chapel of St. Paul,
-built of timber, with stairs mounting thereunto over his tomb, of grey
-marble, 1521. His chapel was burned by fire falling from the steeple,
-his tomb was taken thence. John Stokesley, Bishop of London, in our
-Lady chapel, 1539; John Nevill, Lord Latimer, in a chapel by the north
-door of Paule's, about 1542; Sir John Mason, knight, in the north walk,
-against the choir, 1566; William Herbert, Earl of Pembroke, knight of
-the Garter, on the north side of the choir, 1569; Sir Nicholas Bacon,
-lord-keeper of the great seal, on the south side of the choir, 1578;
-Sir Philip Sidney, above the choir on the north side, 1586; Sir Frances
-Walsingham, knight, principal secretary, and chancellor of the duchy of
-Lancaster, 1590; Sir Christopher Hatton, lord chancellor of England,
-knight of the Garter, above the choir, 1591, under a most sumptuous
-monument, where a merry poet wrote thus:--
-
- "Philip and Francis have no tombe,
- For _great_ Christopher takes all the roome."
-
-John Elmer, Bishop of London, before St. Thomas' chapel, 1594; the Lady
-Heneage, and her husband, Sir Thomas Heneage, chancellor of the duchy,
-1595; Richard Fletcher, Bishop of London, 1596. These, as the chief,
-have I noted to be buried there.
-
-Without the north gate of Paule's church from the end of the Old
-Exchange, west up Paternoster row, by the two lanes out of Paule's
-church, the first out of the cross aisle of Paule's, the other out of
-the body of the church, about the midst thereof, and so west to the
-Golden Lion, be all of this ward, as is aforesaid. The houses in this
-street, from the first north gate of Paule's churchyard unto the next
-gate, was first built without the wall of the churchyard, by Henry
-Walles, mayor in the year 1282. The rents of those houses go to the
-maintenance of London bridge. This street is now called Pater Noster
-row, because of stationers or text writers that dwelt there, who wrote
-and sold all sorts of books then in use, namely, A. B. C. with the Pater
-Noster, Ave, Creed, Graces, etc.
-
-There dwelt also turners of beads, and they were called Pater Noster
-makers, as I read in a record of one Robert Nikke, Pater Noster maker,
-and citizen, in the reign of Henry IV., and so of other. At the end of
-Pater Noster row is Ave Mary lane, so called upon the like occasion of
-text writers and bead makers then dwelling there; and at the end of
-that lane is likewise Creede lane, late so called, but sometime Spurrier
-row, of spurriers dwelling there; and Amen lane is added thereunto
-betwixt the south end of Warwicke lane and the north end of Ave Mary
-lane. At the north end of Ave Mary lane is one great house, built of
-stone and timber, of old time pertaining to John Duke of Britaine, Earl
-of Richmond, as appeareth by the records of Edward II., since that, it
-is called Pembrook's inn, near unto Ludgate, as belonging to the earls
-of Pembrook, in the times of Richard II., the 18th year, and of Henry
-VI., the 14th year. It is now called Burgaveny house, and belongeth to
-Henry, late Lord of Burgaveny.
-
-Betwixt the south end of Ave Mary lane, and the north end of Creed lane,
-is the coming out of Paule's church yard on the east, and the high
-street on the west, towards Ludgate, and this is called Bowyer row, of
-bowyers dwelling there in old time, now worn out by mercers and others.
-In this street, on the north side, is the parish church of St. Martin,
-a proper church, and lately new built; for in the year 1437, John
-Michael, mayor, and the commonalty, granted to William Downe, parson
-of St. Martin's at Ludgate, a parcel of ground, containing in length
-twenty-eight feet, and in breadth four feet, to set and build their
-steeple upon, etc. The monuments here have been of William Sevenoake,
-mayor 1418; Henry Belwase and John Gest, 1458; William Taverner,
-gentleman, 1466; John Barton, esquire, 1439; Stephen Peacock, mayor
-1533; Sir Roger Cholmley, John Went, and Roger Paine, had chantries
-there.
-
-On the south side of this street is the turning into the Black Friers,
-which order sometime had their houses in Old borne, where they remained
-for the space of fifty-five years, and then in the year 1276, Gregorie
-Roksley, mayor, and the barons of this city, granted and gave to Robert
-Kilwarby, Archbishop of Canterbury, two lanes or ways next the street of
-Baynard's castle, and also the tower of Mountfitchit, to be destroyed;
-in place of which the said Robert built the late new church of the Black
-Friers, and placed them therein. King Edward I., and Elianor his wife,
-were great benefactors thereunto. This was a large church, and richly
-furnished with ornaments, wherein divers parliaments, and other great
-meetings, hath been holden; namely, in the year 1450, the 28th of Henry
-VI., a parliament was begun at Westminster, and adjourned to the Black
-Friers in London, and from thence to Leycester. In the year 1522, the
-Emperor Charles V. was lodged there. In the year 1524, the 15th of
-April, a parliament was begun at the Black Friers, wherein was demanded
-a subsidy of eight hundred thousand pounds to be raised of goods and
-lands, four shillings in every pound, and in the end was granted two
-shillings of the pound of goods or lands that were worth twenty pounds,
-or might dispend twenty pounds by the year, and so upward, to be paid
-in two years. This parliament was adjourned to Westminster amongst the
-black monks, and ended in the king's palace there, the 14th of August,
-at nine of the clock in the night, and was therefore called the Black
-parliament. In the year 1529, Cardinal Campeius, the legate, with
-Cardinal Woolsey, sat at the said Black Friars, where before them, as
-legates and judges, was brought in question the king's marriage with
-Queen Katherine, as unlawful, before whom the king and queen were cited
-and summoned to appear, etc. whereof more at large in my _Annals_ I have
-touched.
-
-The same year, in the month of October, began a parliament in the Black
-Friers, in the which Cardinal Woolsey was condemned in the premunire;
-this house, valued at £104 15_s._ 5_d._, was surrendered the 12th of
-November, the 30th of Henry VIII. There were buried in this church,
-Margaret Queen of Scots; Hubert de Burgh, Earl of Kent, translated from
-their old church by Oldborne; Robert de Attabeto, Earl of Bellimon; Dame
-Isabel, wife to Sir Roger Bygot, earl marshal; William and Jane Huse,
-children to Dame Ellis, Countess of Arundell; and by them lieth Dame
-Ellis, daughter to the Earl Warren, and after Countess of Arundell;
-Dame Ide, wife to Sir Waltar ----, daughter to Ferrers of Chartley;
-Richard de Brewes; Richard Strange, son to Roger Strange; Elizabeth,
-daughter to Sir Barthol. Badlesmere, wife to Sir William Bohun, Earl
-of Northampton; Marsh; the Earls of Marsh and Hereford; and Elizabeth
-Countess of Arundell; Dame Joan, daughter to Sir John Carne, first
-wife to Sir Gwide Brian; Hugh Clare, knight, 1295; the heart of Queen
-Helianor, the foundress; the heart of Alfonce, her son; the hearts of
-John and Margaret, children to W. Valence; Sir William Thorpe, justice;
-the Lord Lioth of Ireland; Maude, wife to Geffrey Say, daughter to the
-Earl of Warwick; Dame Sible, daughter to Wil. Pattehulle, wife to Roger
-Beauchampe; and by her Sir Richard or Roger Beauchampe; Lord St. Amand,
-and Dame Elizabeth his wife, daughter to the Duke of Lancaster; Sir
-Stephen Collington, knight; Sir William Peter, knight; the Countess of
-Huntington; Duchess of Excester, 1425; Sir John Cornwall; Lord Fanhope,
-died at Amphill in Bedfordshire, and was buried here in 1443; Sir John
-Triptoste, Earl of Worcester, beheaded 1470; and by him in his chapel,
-James Tuochet Lord Audley, beheaded 1497; William Paston, and Anne,
-daughter to Edmond Lancaster; the Lord Beamount; Sir Edmond Cornewall,
-Baron of Burford; the Lady Nevell, wedded to Lord Dowglas, daughter
-to the Duke of Excester; Richard Scrope, esquire; Dame Katheren Vaux,
-_alias_ Cobham; Sir Thomas Browne, and Dame Elizabeth his wife; Jane
-Powell; Thomas Swinforth; John Mawsley, esquire, 1432; John De la Bere,
-Nicholas Eare, Geffrey Spring, William Clifford, esquires; Sir Thomas
-Brandon, knight of the Garter, 1509; William Stalworth, merchant-tailor,
-1518; William Courtney, Earl of Devonshire nominate, but not created,
-the 3rd of Henry VIII., etc.
-
-There is a parish of St. Anne within the precinct of the Black Friers,
-which was pulled down with the Friers' church, by Sir Thomas Carden;
-but in the reign of Queen Mary, he being forced to find a church to
-the inhabitants, allowed them a lodging chamber above a stair, which
-since that time, to wit, in the year 1597, fell down, and was again by
-collection therefore made, new built and enlarged in the same year, and
-was dedicated on the 11th of December.
-
-Now to turn again out of the Black Friers through Bowyer row, Ave Mary
-lane, and Pater Noster row, to the church of St. Michael _ad Bladum_,
-or at the corne (corruptly at the querne), so called, because in place
-thereof was sometime a corn market, stretching by west to the shambles.
-It seemeth that the church was new built[245] about the reign of Edward
-III. Thomas Newton, first parson there, was buried in the choir the
-year 1461. At the east end of this church stood a cross, called the old
-cross in West Cheape, which was taken down in the year 1390; since the
-which time the said parish church was also taken down, but new built
-and enlarged in the year 1430, the 8th of Henry VI. William Eastfield,
-mayor, and the commonalty, granted of the common soil of the city three
-feet and a half in breadth on the north part, and four feet in breadth
-toward the east. This is now a proper church, and hath the monuments
-of Thomas Newton, first parson; Roger Woodcocke, hatter, 1475; Thomas
-Rossel, brewer, 1473; John Hulton, stationer, 1475; John Oxney; Roger
-North, merchant-haberdasher, 1509; John Leiland, the famous antiquary;
-Henry Pranell, vintner, one of the sheriffs 1585; William Erkin, one of
-the sheriffs 1586; Thomas Bankes, barber-chirurgeon, 1598, etc. John
-Mundham had a chantry there in the reign of Edward II.
-
-At the east end of this church, in place of the old cross, is now a
-water-conduit placed. W. Eastfield, mayor the 9th of Henry VI., at the
-request of divers common councils, granted it so to be; whereupon, in
-the 19th of the same Henry, one thousand marks were granted by a common
-council towards the works of this conduit, and the reparations of other:
-this is called the little conduit in West Cheape by Paule's gate. At the
-west end of this parish church is a small passage for people on foot
-through the same church; and west from the said church, some distance,
-is another passage out of Pater Noster row, and is called, of such a
-sign, Panyar alley, which cometh out into the north over against St.
-Martin's lane. Next is Ivie lane, so called of ivy growing on the walls
-of the prebend[246] houses; but now the lane is replenished on both
-sides with fair houses, and divers offices be there kept by registers,
-namely, for the Prerogative Court of the Archbishop of Canterbury,
-the probate of wills, and for the lord treasurer's remembrance of the
-exchequer, etc.
-
-This lane runneth north to the west end of St. Nicholas shambles. Of old
-time was one great house sometimes belonging to the Earls of Britain,
-since that to the Lovels, and was called Lovels' inn; for Mathild, wife
-to John Lovell, held it in the 1st of Henry VI. Then is Eldenese lane,
-which stretcheth north to the high street of Newgate market; the same
-is now called Warwicke lane, of an ancient house there built by an Earl
-of Warwicke, and was since called Warwicke inn. It is in record called
-a messuage in Eldenese lane, in the parish of St. Sepulchre, the 28th
-of Henry the VI. Cicille Duchess of Warwicke possessed it. Now again
-from the conduit by Paule's gate on the north side is a large street
-running west to Newgate, the first part whereof, from the conduit to
-the shambles, is of selling bladders there, called Bladder street.
-Then behind the butchers' shops be now divers slaughter houses inward,
-and tippling houses outward. This is called Mountgodard street of the
-tippling houses there, and the goddards mounting from the tap to the
-table, from the table to the mouth, and sometimes over the head. This
-street goeth up to the north end of Ivie lane.
-
-Before this Mountgodard street stall boards were of old time set up by
-the butchers to show and sell their flesh meat upon, over the which
-stallboards they first built sheds to keep off the weather; but since
-that, encroaching by little and little, they have made their stallboards
-and sheds fair houses, meet for the principal shambles. Next is Newgate
-market, first of corn and meal, and then of other victuals, which
-stretcheth almost to Eldenese lane. A fair, new, and strong frame of
-timber, covered with lead, was therefore set up at the charges of the
-city, near to the west corner of St. Nicholas' shambles, for the meal to
-be weighed, in the 1st of Edward VI., Sir John Gresham being then mayor.
-On this side the north corner of Eldenese lane stood sometime a proper
-parish church of St. Ewine, as is before said, given by Henry VIII.,
-towards the erecting of Christ's church; it was taken down, and in place
-thereof a fair strong frame of timber erected, wherein dwell men of
-divers trades. And from this frame to Newgate is all of this ward, and
-so an end thereof.
-
-It hath an alderman, his deputy, common council twelve, constables
-seventeen, scavengers eighteen, wardmote inquest eighteen, and a beadle.
-And is taxed to the fifteen fifty pounds.[247]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[232] The word _clove_ is from the Anglo-Saxon _Clifian_ (the low German
-_Klöven_, and Dutch _Klooven_), to split, or _clufe_, an ear of corn
-or _clove_ of garlic. In this case the flower is the common Stock,
-or Stock Gilliflower, so long a favourite in the gardens of England,
-and indeed a native of the cliffs by the sea-side. "The old English
-name of Gilliflower," says the author of the _Flora Domestica_, "which
-is now almost lost in the prefix Stock, is corrupted from the French
-_Giroflier_. Chaucer writes it _Gylofre_; but, by associating it with
-the nutmeg and other spices, appears to mean the clove-tree, which is in
-fact the proper signification of that word. Turner calls it _Gelover_
-and _Gelyflower_, Gerrarde and Parkinson _Gilloflower_."
-
-[233] The Anglo-Saxon _Gærsuma_--treasure, riches, fine, etc.
-
-[234] "John Palmer."--_1st edition_, p. 252.
-
-[235] "John Standelfe and John Standelfe."--_1st edition_, p. 253.
-
-[236] "The maior and communalty of London, parsons of Christ's church,
-the vicar to be at their appointment."--_Stow._
-
-[237] "Treasurer of England."--_1st edition_, p. 258.
-
-[238] "And father to Edward Lord Mountjoy; James Blunt, knighte, son to
-Walter Blunt, captain of Gwynes, 1492."--_Ibid._
-
-[239] In the first edition, Sir Nicholas Twiford is described as having
-a monument in the church.
-
-[240] Lydgate's verses were first printed at the end of Tottell's
-edition of the translation of his _Fall of Princes_, from Boccaccio,
-1554, folio, and afterwards in Sir W. Dugdale's _History of St. Paul's
-Cathedral_.
-
-[241] Reign Wolfe.
-
-[242] "Born in London, and son to Henry Collet."--_1st edition_, p. 267.
-
-[243] "And brought to the hands of Edmond Grendall, then Bishop of
-London."--_1st edition_, p. 269.
-
-[244] W. Paston.
-
-[245] "Was first builded about the reigne of Edward III. Thomas Newton,
-the first parson there, was buried in the quire, the year 1361, which
-was the 35th of Edward the Thirde."--_1st edition_, p. 277.
-
-[246] "Prebend almes houses."--_1st edition_, p. 277.
-
-
-
-
-BREAD STREET WARD
-
-
-Bred street ward beginneth in the high street of West Cheape, to wit,
-on the south side from the standard to the great cross. Then is also a
-part of Watheling street of this ward, to wit, from over against the
-Lion on the north side up almost to Paule's gate, for it lacketh but one
-house of St. Augustine's church. And on the south side, from the Red
-Lion gate to the Old Exchange, and down the same exchange on the east
-side by the west end of Mayden lane, or Distar lane, to Knightriders
-street, or, as they call that part thereof, Old Fish street. And all the
-north side of the said Old Fish street to the south end of Bread street,
-and by that still in Knightriders street till over against the Trinity
-church and Trinity lane. Then is Bread street itself, so called of bread
-in old time there sold; for it appeareth by records, that in the year
-1302, which was the 30th of Edward I., the bakers of London were bound
-to sell no bread in their shops or houses, but in the market, and that
-they should have four hallmotes in the year, at four several terms, to
-determine of enormities belonging to the said company.
-
-This street giving the name to the whole ward, beginneth in West Cheap,
-almost by the Standard, and runneth down south through or thwart
-Watheling street to Knightriders street aforesaid, where it endeth. This
-Bread street is wholly on both sides of this ward. Out of the which
-street, on the east side, is Basing lane, a piece whereof, to wit, to
-and over against the back gate of the Red Lion in Watheling street, is
-of this Bread street ward.
-
-Then is Fryday street beginning also in West Cheap, and runneth down
-south through Watheling street to Knightriders street, or Old Fish
-street. This Friday street is of Bread street ward on the east side from
-over against the north-east corner of St. Matthew's church, and on the
-west side from the south corner of the said church, down as aforesaid.
-
-In this Fryday street, on the west side thereof, is a lane, commonly
-called Mayden lane, or Distaffe lane, corruptly for Distar lane, which
-runneth west into the Old Exchange; and in this lane is also one other
-lane, on the south side thereof, likewise called Distar lane, which
-runneth down to Knightriders street, or Old Fish street; and so be the
-bounds of this whole ward.
-
-Monuments to be noted here, first at Bread street corner, the north-east
-end, 1595, of Thomas Tomlinson, causing in the high street of Cheape a
-vault to be digged and made, there was found, at fifteen feet deep, a
-fair pavement like unto that above ground, and at the further end at
-the channel was found a tree sawed into five steps, which was to step
-over some brook running out of the west towards Walbrooke; and upon the
-edge of the said brook, as it seemeth, there were found lying along
-the bodies of two great trees, the ends whereof were then sawed off,
-and firm timber as at the first when they fell, part of the said trees
-remain yet in the ground undigged. It was all forced ground until they
-went past the trees aforesaid, which was about seventeen feet deep or
-better; thus much hath the ground of this city in that place been raised
-from the main.
-
-Next to be noted, the most beautiful frame of fair houses and shops that
-be within the walls of London, or elsewhere in England, commonly called
-Goldsmith's row, betwixt Bread street end and the cross in Cheape,
-but is within this Bread street ward; the same was built by Thomas
-Wood, goldsmith, one of the sheriffs of London, in the year 1491. It
-containeth in number ten fair dwelling-houses and fourteen shops, all
-in one frame, uniformly built four stories high, beautified towards the
-street with the Goldsmiths' arms and the likeness of woodmen, in memory
-of his name, riding on monstrous beasts, all which is cast in lead,
-richly painted over and gilt: these he gave to the Goldsmiths, with
-stocks of money, to be lent to young men having those shops, etc. This
-said front was again new painted and gilt over in the year 1594; Sir
-Richard Martin being then mayor, and keeping his mayoralty in one of
-them, serving out the time of Cuthbert Buckle in that office from the
-2nd of July till the 28th of October.
-
-Then for Watheling street, which Leyland called Atheling or Noble
-street; but since he showeth no reason why, I rather take it to be so
-named of the great highway of the same calling. True it is, that at
-this present the inhabitants thereof are wealthy drapers, retailers of
-woollen cloths, both broad and narrow, of all sorts, more than in any
-one street of this city.
-
-Of the Old Exchange, I have noted in Faringdon ward; wherefore I pass
-down to Knightriders street, whereof I have also spoken in Cordwainers
-street ward; but in this part of the said Knightriders street is a fish
-market kept, and therefore called Old Fish street for a difference from
-New Fish street.
-
-In this Old Fish street is one row of small houses, placed along in
-the midst of Knightriders street, which row is also of Bread street
-ward: these houses, now possessed by fishmongers, were at the first but
-moveable boards (or stalls), set out on market-days, to show their fish
-there to be sold; but procuring license to set up sheds, they grew to
-shops, and by little and little to tall houses, of three or four stories
-in height, and now are called Fish street. Walter Turke, fishmonger,
-mayor 1349, had two shops in Old Fish street, over against St. Nicholas
-church; the one rented five shillings the year, the other four shillings.
-
-Bread street, so called of bread sold there (as I said), is now wholly
-inhabited by rich merchants; and divers fair inns be there, for good
-receipt of carriers and other travellers to the city.
-
-On the east side of this street, at the corner of Watheling street,
-is the proper church of Alhallowes in Bread street, wherein are the
-monuments--of James Thame, goldsmith; John Walpole, goldsmith, 1349;
-Thomas Beamount, alderman, one of the sheriffs 1442; Robert Basset,
-salter, mayor 1476; Sir Richard Chaury, salter, mayor 1509; Sir Thomas
-Pargitar, salter, mayor 1530; Henry Sucley, merchant-tailor, one of
-the sheriffs 1541; Richard Reade, alderman, that served and was taken
-prisoner in Scotland, 1542; Robert House, one of the sheriffs 1589;
-William Albany, Richard May, and Roger Abde, merchant-tailors.
-
-In the 23rd of Henry VIII., the 17th of August, two priests of this
-church fell at variance, that the one drew blood of the other; wherefore
-the same church was suspended, and no service sung or said therein for
-the space of one month after: the priests were committed to prison,
-and the 15th of October, being enjoined penance, went before a general
-procession, bare-headed, bare-footed, and bare-legged, before the
-children, with beads and books in their hands, from Paules, through
-Cheape, Cornehill, etc.
-
-More to be noted of this church, which had sometime a fair spired
-steeple of stone. In the year 1559, the 5th of September, about mid-day,
-fell a great tempest of lightning, with a terrible clap of thunder,
-which struck the said spire about nine or ten feet beneath the top; out
-of the which place fell a stone that slew a dog, and overthrew a man
-that was playing with the dog. The same spire being but little damnified
-thereby, was shortly after taken down, for sparing the charges of
-reparation.
-
-On the same side is Salters' hall, with six alms houses in number, built
-for poor decayed brethren of that company. This hall was burnt in the
-year 1539, and again re-edified.
-
-Lower down on the same side is the parish church of St. Mildred the
-Virgin. The monuments in this church be--of the Lord Trenchaunt of
-St. Alban's, knight, who was supposed to be either the new builder of
-this church, or best benefactor to the works thereof, about the year
-1300; and Odde Cornish, gentleman, 1312; William Palmer, blader, a
-great benefactor also, 1356; John Shadworth, mayor 1401, who gave the
-parsonage-house, a re-vestry, and churchyard to that parish, in the
-year 1428; notwithstanding, his monument is pulled down; Stephen Bugge,
-gentleman; his arms be three water-bugs,[248] 1419; Henry Bugge founded
-a chantry there 1419; Roger Forde, vintner, 1440; Thomas Barnwell,
-fishmonger, one of the sheriffs 1434; Sir John Hawlen, clerk, parson
-of that church, who built the parsonage-house newly after the same had
-been burnt to the ground, together with the parson and his man also,
-burnt in that fire, 1485; John Parnell, 1510; William Hurstwaight,
-pewterer to the king, 1526; Christopher Turner, chirurgeon to King Henry
-VIII., 1530; Ralph Simonds, fishmonger, one of the sheriffs in the year
-1527; Thomas Langham gave to the poor of that parish four tenements
-1575; Thomas Hall, salter, 1582; Thomas Collins, salter, alderman; Sir
-Ambrose Nicholas, salter, mayor 1575, was buried in Sir John Shadworth's
-vault.
-
-Out of this Bread street, on the same side, is Basing lane; a part
-whereof (as is afore showed) is of this ward, but how it took the name
-of Basing I have not read: in the 20th year of Richard II. the same was
-called the bakehouse, whether meant for the king's bakehouse, or of
-bakers dwelling there, and baking bread to serve the market in Bread
-street, where the bread was sold, I know not; but sure I am, I have not
-read of Basing, or of Gerrarde the giant, to have anything there to do.
-
-On the south side of this lane is one great house, of old time built
-upon arched vaults, and with arched gates of stone, brought from Caen in
-Normandy. The same is now a common hostrey for receipt of travellers,
-commonly and corruptly called Gerrardes hall, of a giant said to have
-dwelt there. In the high-roofed hall of this house sometime stood a
-large fir pole, which reached to the roof thereof, and was said to be
-one of the staves[249] that Gerrarde the giant used in the wars to
-run withal. There stood also a ladder of the same length, which (as
-they say) served to ascend to the top of the staff. Of later years
-this hall is altered in building, and divers rooms are made in it.
-Notwithstanding, the pole is removed to one corner of the hall, and
-the ladder hanged broken upon a wall in the yard. The hostelar of that
-house said to me, "the pole lacketh half a foot of forty in length:" I
-measured the compass thereof, and found it fifteen inches. Reason of
-the pole could the master of the hostrey give me none, but bade me read
-the great Chronicles, for there he heard of it: which answer seemed to
-me insufficient, for he meant the description of Britaine, for the most
-part drawn out of John Leyland his commentaries (borrowed of myself),
-and placed before Reyne Wolfe's Chronicle,[250] as the labours of
-another (who was forced to confess he never travelled further than from
-London to the university of Oxford): he writing a chapter of giants or
-monstrous men, hath set down more matter than truth, as partly against
-my will I am enforced here to touch. R. G., in his brief collection of
-histories (as he termeth it) hath these words: "I, the writer hereof,
-did see, the 10th day of March, in the yeare of our Lord 1564, and had
-the same in my hand, the tooth of a man, which weighed ten ounces of
-troy weight; and the skull of the same man is extant, and to be seene,
-which will hold five pecks of wheat; and the shin-bone of the same man
-is six foote in length, and of a marvellous greatness." Thus far of
-R. G.[251] The error thereof is thus: He affirmeth a stone to be the
-tooth of a man, which stone (so proved) having no shape of a tooth, had
-neither skull or shin-bone. Notwithstanding, it is added in the said
-description, that by conjectural symetry of those parts the body to be
-twenty-eight feet long, or more. From this he goeth to another like
-matter, of a man with a mouth sixteen feet wide, and so to Gerrard the
-giant and his staff. But to leave these fables, and return where I left,
-I will note what myself hath observed concerning that house.
-
-I read that John Gisors, mayor of London in the year 1245, was owner
-thereof, and that Sir John Gisors, knight, mayor of London, and
-constable of the Tower 1311, and divers others of that name and family,
-since that time owned it. William Gisors was one of the sheriffs 1329.
-More, John Gisors had issue, Henry and John; which John had issue,
-Thomas; which Thomas deceasing in the year 1350, left unto his son
-Thomas his messuage called Gisor's hall, in the parish of St. Mildred
-in Bread street; John Gisors made a feoffment thereof, 1386, etc. So
-it appeareth that this Gisor's hall, of late time by corruption hath
-been called Gerrard's hall[252] for Gisor's hall; as Bosom's inn for
-Blossom's inn, Bevis marks for Buries marks, Marke lane for Marte lane,
-Belliter lane for Belsetter's lane, Gutter lane for Guthuruns lane, Cry
-church for Christ's church, St. Mihel in the quorn for St. Mihel at
-corne, and sundry such others. Out of this Gisor's hall, at the first
-building thereof, were made divers arched doors, yet to be seen, which
-seem not sufficient for any great monster, or other than man of common
-stature to pass through, the pole in the hall might be used of old time
-(as then the custom was in every parish), to be set up in the summer
-as May-pole, before the principal house in the parish or street, and
-to stand in the hall before the screen, decked with holme and ivy, all
-the feast of Christmas.[253] The ladder served for the decking of the
-may-pole and roof of the hall. Thus much for Gisor's hall, and for that
-side of Bread street, may suffice.
-
-Now on the west side of Bread street, amongst divers fair and large
-houses for merchants, and fair inns for passengers, had ye one
-prison-house pertaining to the sheriffs of London, called the compter
-in Bread street; but in the year 1555 the prisoners were removed
-from thence to one other new compter in Wood street, provided by
-the city's purchase, and built for that purpose; the cause of which
-remove was this: Richard Husband, pastelar, keeper of this compter
-in Bread street, being a wilful and head-strong man, dealt, for his
-own advantage, hard with the prisoners under his charge, having also
-servants such as himself liked best for their bad usage, and would not
-for any complaint be reformed; whereupon, in the year 1550, Sir Rowland
-Hill being mayor, by the assent of a court of aldermen, he was sent to
-the gaol of Newgate, for the cruel handling of his prisoners; and it
-was commanded to the keeper to set those irons on his legs which are
-called the widow's alms. These he ware from Thursday to Sunday in the
-afternoon, and being by a court of aldermen released on the Tuesday,
-was bound in a hundred marks to observe from thenceforth an act made
-by the common council, for the ordering of prisoners in the compters;
-all which notwithstanding, he continued as afore, whereof myself am
-partly a witness; for being of a jury to inquire against a sessions of
-gaol delivery,[254] in the year 1552, we found the prisoners hardly
-dealt withal, for their achates and otherwise; as also that thieves
-and strumpets were there lodged for four pence the night, whereby
-they might be safe from searches that were made abroad; for the which
-enormities, and other not needful to be recited, he was indighted at
-that session, but did rub it out, and could not be reformed till this
-remove of prisoners, for the house in Bread street was his own by lease,
-or otherwise, so that he could not be put from it. Note, that gaolers
-buying their offices will deal hardly with pitiful prisoners.
-
-Now in Friday street, so called of fishmongers dwelling there, and
-serving Friday's market, on the east side, is a small parish church,
-commonly called St. John Evangelist: the monuments therein be of John
-Dogget, merchant tailor, one of the sheriffs in the year 1509; Sir
-Christopher Askew, draper, mayor 1533; William de Avinger, farrier, was
-buried there in the 34th of Edward III. Then lower down, is one other
-parish church of St. Margaret Moyses, so called (as seemeth) of one
-Moyses, that was founder or new builder thereof. The monuments there be
-of Sir Richard Dobbes, skinner, mayor 1551; William Dane, ironmonger,
-one of the sheriffs 1569; Sir John Allet, fishmonger, mayor 1591. There
-was of older time buried, Nicholas Stanes, and Nicholas Braye; they
-founded chantries there.
-
-On the west side of this Friday street, is Mayden lane, so named of
-such a sign, or Distaffe lane, for Distar lane, as I read in the record
-of a brewhouse called the Lamb, in Distar lane, the 16th of Henry VI.
-In this Distar lane, on the north side thereof, is the Cordwainers, or
-Shoemakers' hall, which company were made a brotherhood or fraternity,
-in the 11th of Henry IV. Of these cordwainers I read, that since the
-fifth of Richard II. (when he took to wife Anne, daughter to Vesalaus,
-King of Boheme), by her example, the English people had used piked
-shoes, tied to their knees with silken laces, or chains of silver or
-gilt, wherefore in the 4th of Edward IV. it was ordained and proclaimed,
-that beaks of shoone and boots, should not pass the length of two
-inches, upon pain of cursing by the clergy, and by parliament to pay
-twenty shillings for every pair. And every cordwainer that shod any man
-or woman on the Sunday, to pay thirty shillings.
-
-On the south side of this Distar lane, is also one other lane, called
-Distar lane, which runneth down to Knightriders' street, or Old Fish
-street, and this is the end of Bread street ward; which hath an
-alderman, his deputy, common council ten, constables ten, scavengers
-eight, wardmote inquest thirteen, and a beadle. It standeth taxed to the
-fifteen in London, at £37, and in the Exchequer at £36 18_s._ 2_d._[255]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[247] "In London at fifty-four pounds, and in the Exchequer at
-fifty-three pounds six shillings and eight pence."--_1st edition_, p.
-345.
-
-[248] Water Bougets--heraldic representations of the leathern bottles in
-which water was anciently carried.
-
-[249] "A pole of forty foote long, and fifteen inches about, fabuled to
-be the iusting staffe of Gerrard a giant."--_Stow._
-
-[250] "Which aunswere seemed to me insufficient, for hee meant the
-description of Brittaine, before Reinwolfe's Chronicle, wherein the
-author writing a chapter of Gyaunts, and having been deceived by some
-authours, too much crediting their smoothe speeche, hath set down more
-matter than troth, as partly (and also against my will) I am enforced to
-touch."--_1st edition_, p. 283.
-
-[251] "R. G. saw a stone, and said the same to bee a tooth, but being
-by my selfe proued a stone, there fayled both scull and shank-bone,
-and followed a cluster of lies together, yet since increased by
-other."--_Stow._
-
-[252] "Gerrard's hall overthrowne with Gerrard the giant, and his great
-spear."--_Stow._
-
-[253] "Every man's house of old time was decked with holly and ivy in
-the winter, especially at Christmas."--_Stow._
-
-[254] "Quest of inquiry indight the keepers of the gayles for dealing
-hardly with their prisoners. They indighted the bowling alleys,
-etc."--_Stow._
-
-
-
-
-QUEENE HITHE WARD
-
-
-Next unto Bread street ward, on the south side thereof, is Queene Hithe
-ward, so called of a water gate, or harbour for boats, lighters, and
-barges; and was of old time for ships, at what time the timber bridge of
-London was drawn up, for the passage of them to the said hithe, as to a
-principal strand for landing and unlading against the midst and heart of
-the city.
-
-This ward beginneth in the east, in Knightriders' street, on the south
-side thereof, at the east end of the parish church called the Holy
-Trinity, and runneth west on the south side to a lane called Lambert
-hill, which is the length of the ward in Knightriders' street, out of
-the which street are divers lanes, running south to Thames street, and
-are of this ward: the first is Trinity lane, which runneth down by the
-west end of Trinity church; then is Spuren lane, or Spooner's lane, now
-called Huggen lane; then Bread street hill; then St. Mary Mounthaunt,
-out of the which lane, on the east side thereof, is one other lane,
-turning east, through St. Nicholas Olave's churchyard to Bread street
-hill. This lane is called Finimore lane, or Fivefoot lane, because it
-is but five feet in breadth at the west end; in the midst of this lane
-runneth down one other lane broader, south to Thames street, I think
-the same to be called Desbourne lane, for I read of such a lane to have
-been in the parish of Mary Summerset, in the 22nd year of Edward III.,
-where there is said to lie between the tenement of Edward de Montacute,
-knight, on the east part, and the tenement some time pertaining to
-William Gladwine on the west, one plot of ground, containing in length
-towards Thames street, twenty-five feet, etc.
-
-Last of all, have you Lambart-hill lane, so called of one Lambart, owner
-thereof; and this is the furthest west part of this ward.
-
-On the north side coming down from Knightriders' street, the east side
-of Lambart hill, is wholly of this ward; and the west side, from the
-north end of the Blackesmiths' hall (which is about the midst of this
-lane) unto Thames street; then part of Thames street is also of this
-ward, to wit, from a cook's house called the sign of King David, three
-houses west from the Old Swan brewhouse in the east, unto Huntington
-house, over against St. Peter's church in the west, near unto Paul's
-wharf; and on the land side, from a cook's house called the Blue Boar,
-to the west end of St. Peter's church, and up St. Peter's hill, two
-houses north above the said church. And these be the bounds of this
-ward, in which are parish churches seven, halls of companies two, and
-other ornaments as shall be shewed.
-
-First in Knightriders' street, is the small parish church of the Holy
-Trinity, very old, and in danger of down falling: collections have been
-made for repairing thereof, but they will not stretch so far, and,
-therefore, it leaneth upon props or stilts. Monuments as followeth.
-
-John Brian, alderman in the reign of Henry V., a great benefactor; John
-Chamber had a chantry there; Thomas Rishby, esquire, and Alice his wife,
-within the chancel; John Mirfin, auditor of the exchequer 1471; Sir
-Richard Fowler, of Ricks in Oxfordshire, 1528; George Cope, second son
-to Sir John Cope of Copasashby in Northamptonshire, 1572.
-
-Towards the west end of Knightriders' street is the parish church of St.
-Nicolas Cold Abbey, a proper church, somewhat ancient, as appeareth by
-the ways raised thereabout, so that men are forced to descend into the
-body of the church: it hath been called of many Golden Abbey, of some,
-Gold Abbey, or Cold Bey, and so hath the most ancient writings,[256] as
-standing in a cold place, as Cold harbour, and such like. The steeple or
-tall tower of this church, with the south aisle, have been of a later
-building: to wit, the 1st of Richard II., when it was meant the whole
-old church should have been new built, as appeareth by the arching begun
-on the east side the steeple, under the which, in the stone work, the
-arms of one Buckland, esquire, and his wife, daughter to Beaupere, are
-cut in stone, and also are in the glass windows, whereby it appeareth
-he was the builder of the steeple, and repairer of the residue. The
-26th of Edward III., An. Aubrey being mayor,[257] T. Frere, fishmonger,
-gave one piece of ground to the said parish church of St. Nicholas,
-containing eighty-six feet in length, and forty-three feet at one end,
-and thirty-four at the other, in breadth, for a cemetery or churchyard.
-The 20th of Richard II., Thomas Barnard Castle, clerke, John Sonderash,
-clerke, and John Nouncy, gave to the parson and churchwardens of the
-said church and their successors, one messuage and one shop, with the
-appurtenances, in Distaffe lane and Old Fish street, for the reparation
-of the body of the said church, the belfry or steeple, and ornaments.
-
-Buried in this church, John Calfe, and William Cogeshall, 1426; Waltar
-Turke, fishmonger, mayor 1349; Richarde Esastone, fishmonger, 1330;
-Nicholas Wolberge, fishmonger, 1407; Thomas Paddington, fishmonger,
-1485; Robert Hary, fishmonger, John Suring, 1490; Roger Darlington,
-fishmonger, 1557; Richard Lacty, parson, under a fair tomb on the
-north side the choir, 1491; Richard Bradbrudge, 1497; William Clarke,
-1501; James Picman, 1507; Richard Farneford, 1525; Thomas Nicholas,
-fishmonger, 1527; William Barde, fishmonger, 1528.
-
-On the north side of this church, in the wall thereof, was of late built
-a convenient cistern of stone and lead, for receipt of Thames water,
-conveyed in pipes of lead to that place, for the ease and commodity of
-the fishmongers and other inhabitants in and about Old Fish street.
-Barnard Randolph, common serjeant of the city of London, did in his
-lifetime deliver to the company of Fishmongers the sum of nine hundred
-pounds, to be employed towards the conducting of the said Thames water,
-and cisterning the same, etc.; in the parishes of St. Mary Magdalen, and
-St. Nicholas Colde Abbey, near unto Fish street, seven hundred pounds;
-and other two hundred pounds to charitable deeds: he deceased 1583, and
-shortly after this conduit with the other was made and finished.
-
-In Trinity lane, on the west side thereof, is the Painterstainers'
-hall, for so of old time were they called, but now that workmanship of
-staining is departed out of use in England. Lower down in Trinity lane,
-on the east side thereof, was sometime a great messuage pertaining unto
-John, earl of Cornwall, in the 14th of Edward III. On Bread street hill,
-down to the Thames on both sides, be divers fair houses, inhabited
-by fishmongers, cheesemongers, and merchants of divers trades. On
-the west side whereof is the parish church of St. Nicholas Olive, a
-convenient church, having the monuments of W. Newport, fishmonger, one
-of the sheriffs 1375; Richard Willowes, parson, 1391; Richard Sturges,
-fishmonger, 1470; Thomas Lewen, ironmonger, one of the sheriffs 1537,
-who gave his messuage, with the appurtenances, wherein he dwelt, with
-fourteen tenements in the said parish of St. Nicholas, to be had
-after the decease of Agnes his wife, to the ironmongers, and they to
-give stipends appointed to almsmen, in five houses by them built in
-the churchyard of that parish, more to poor scholars in Oxford and
-Cambridge, etc. Blitheman, an excellent organist of the Queen's chapel,
-lieth buried there with an epitaph, 1591, etc.
-
-The next is Old Fishstreet hill, a lane so called, which also runneth
-down to Thames street. In this lane, on the east side thereof, is the
-one end of Finimore, or Five foot lane. On the west side of this Old
-Fishstreet hill is the Bishop of Hereford's inn or lodging, an ancient
-house and large rooms, built of stone and timber, which sometime
-belonged to the Mounthauntes in Norfolk. Radulphus de Maydenstone,
-Bishop of Hereford, about 1234, bought it of the Mounthauntes, and gave
-it to the Bishops of Hereford, his successors. Charles, both Bishop of
-Hereford and Chancellor of the Marches, about the year 1517, repaired
-it, since the which time the same is greatly ruinated, and is now
-divided into many small tenements; the hall and principal rooms, are a
-house to make sugar-loaves, etc.
-
-Next adjoining is the parish church of St. Mary de Monte Alto, or
-Mounthaunt; this is a very small church, and at the first built to
-be a chapel for the said house of the Mounthaunts, and for tenements
-thereunto belonging. The Bishop of Hereford is patron thereof. Monuments
-in this church of John Glocester, alderman 1345, who gave Salt wharf
-for two chantries there; John Skip, Bishop of Hereford, 1539, sate
-twelve years, died at London in time of parliament, and was buried in
-this church. There was sometime a fair house in the said parish of
-St. Mary Mounthaunt, belonging to Robert Belkenape, one of the king's
-justices, but the said Belkenape being banished this realm. King Richard
-II. in the twelfth of his reign, gave it to William Wickham, Bishop of
-Winchester.
-
-On the east side of this Old Fishstreet hill, is one great house, now
-let out for rent, which house sometime was one of the halls, pertaining
-to the company of Fishmongers, at such time as they had six hallmotes or
-meeting places: namely, two in Bridge street, or New Fish street; two in
-Old Fish street, whereof this was one; and two in Stockfishmonger row,
-or Thames street, as appeareth by a record, the 22nd of Richard II.
-
-Next westward is one other lane called Lambard hill, the east side
-whereof is wholly of this ward, and but half the west side, to wit, from
-the north end of the Blacksmiths' hall.
-
-Then in Thames street of this ward, and on the north side over against
-the Queen's hith, is the parish church of St. Michaell, a convenient
-church, but all the monuments therein are defaced.
-
-I find that Stephen Spilman, gentleman, of that family in Norfolk,
-sometime mercer, chamberlain of London, then one of the sheriffs, and
-alderman in the year 1404, deceasing without issue, gave his lands to
-his family the Spilmans, and his goods to the making or repairing of
-bridges and other like godly uses; and amongst others in this church he
-founded a chantry, and was buried in the choir.
-
-Also Richard Marlowe, ironmonger, mayor 1409, gave twenty pounds to the
-poor of that ward, and ten marks to the church.
-
-Richard Gray, ironmonger, one of the sheriffs 1515, gave forty pounds to
-that church, and was buried there. At the west end of that church goeth
-up a lane, called Pyel lane. On the same north side, at the south end of
-St. Mary Mounthaunt lane, is the parish church of St. Mary Summerset,
-over against the Broken wharf; it is a proper church, but the monuments
-are all defaced. I think the same to be of old time called Summer's
-hith, of some man's name that was owner of the ground near adjoining, as
-Edred's hithe was so called of Edred owner thereof, and thence called
-Queene hithe, as pertaining to the queen, etc.
-
-Then is a small parish church of St. Peter, called _parva_, or little,
-near unto Powle's wharf; in this church no monuments do remain. At the
-west end thereof, is a lane called St. Peter's hill, but two houses up
-that lane on the east side is of this ward, and the rest is of Castle
-Baynarde ward.
-
-On the south side of Thames street, beginning again in the east, among
-the cooks, the first in this ward, is the sign of David the King; then
-is Towne's end lane, turning down to the Thames; then is Queene hithe, a
-large receptacle for ships, lighters, barges, and such other vessels.
-
-Touching the antiquity and use of this gate and hithe, first, I find
-the same belongeth to one named Edred, and was then called Edred's
-hithe, which since falling to the hands of King Stephen, it was by his
-charter confirmed to William De Ypre;[258] the farm thereof in fee and
-in heritage, William De Ypre gave unto the prior and convent of the Holy
-Trinity within Aldgate, as appeareth by this charter:--
-
-"To Theobalde, by the grace of God, Archbishop of Canterbury, primate of
-England, and Legate Apostolike, to the Bishoppe of London, and to all
-faithful people, clarkes and layemen, William de Ypre sendeth greeting.
-
-"Know ye me to have given and graunted to God, and to the church of
-the Holy Trinitie of London, to the prior and canons there serving
-God in perpetuall almes, Edred's hith, with the appurtenances, with
-such devotion, that they shall send every yeare twentie pound unto the
-maintenance of the hospital of St. Katherens, which hospitall they have
-in their hands, and one hundred shillinges to the monkes of Bermondsey,
-and sixty shillinges to the brethren of the hospitall of St. Giles,
-and that which remayneth, the said prior and canons shall enjoy to
-themselves. Witnesses, Richard de Lucie, Raph Picot, etc."
-
-This Edred's hithe, after the aforesaid grants, came again to the king's
-hands, by what means I have not read, but it pertained unto the queen,
-and, therefore, was called _Ripa reginæ_, the Queene's bank, or Queen's
-hithe, and great profit thereof was made to her use, as may appear by
-this which followeth.
-
-King Henry III. in the 9th of his reign, commanded the constables of the
-Tower of London to arrest the ships of the Cinque Ports on the river of
-Thames, and to compel them to bring their corne to no other place, but
-to the Queen's hithe only. In the eleventh of his reign, he charged the
-said constable to distrain all fish offered to be sold in any place of
-this city, but at the Queene hithe. Moreover, in the 28th of the said
-king's reign, an inquisition was made before William of Yorke, provost
-of Beverley, Henry of Bath, and Hierome of Caxton, justices itinerant,
-sitting in the Tower of London, touching the customs of Queen hithe,
-observed in the year last before the wars between the king and his
-father, and the barons of England, and of old customs of other times,
-and what customs had been changed, at what time the tax and payment of
-all things coming together, and between Woore path and Anedehithe,[259]
-were found and ceased, according to the old order, as well corn and fish
-as other things: all which customs were as well to be observed in the
-part of Downegate, as in Queen hithe, for the king's use. When also it
-was found that the corn arriving between the gate of the Guildhall of
-the merchants of Cologne, and the soke of the Archbishop of Canterbury
-(for he had a house near unto the Blacke Fryers), was not to be measured
-by any other quarter, than by that of the Queene's soke.
-
-After this, the bailiff of the said hithe complained that, since the
-said recognition, fourteen foreign ships laden with fish, arrived at
-Belinge's gate, which ships should have arrived at the same hithe;
-and, therefore, it was ordered, that if any foreign ship laden with
-fish, should in form aforesaid, arrive elsewhere than at this hithe,
-it should be at the king's pleasure to amerce them at forty shillings.
-Notwithstanding, the ships of the citizens of London were at liberty to
-arrive where the owners would appoint them.
-
-After this, the said Henry III. confirmed the grant of Richard Earl of
-Cornwall for the farm of the Queen hithe unto John Gisors, then mayor,
-and to the commonalty of London, and their successors for ever, as by
-this his charter appeareth:
-
-"Henry, by the grace of God, King of England, Lord of Ireland, Duke of
-Guien, and Earl of Anjou, to all archbishops, etc. Be it known, that we
-have seen the covenant between our brother, Richard Earl of Cornwall,
-on the one part, and the mayor and commonalty on the other part, which
-was in this sort. In the 30th year of Henry, the son of King John,[260]
-upon the feast of the Translation of St. Edward, at Westminster, this
-covenant was made between the honourable Lord Richard Earl of Cornwall,
-and John Gisors, then mayor of London, and the commons thereof,
-concerning certain exactions and demands pertaining to the Queen hithe
-of London. The said earl granted for himself and his heirs, that the
-said mayor, and all mayors ensuing, and all the commons of the city,
-should have and hold the Queen hithe, with all the liberties, customs,
-and other appurtenances, repaying yearly to the said earl, his heirs and
-assigns, fifty pounds, at Clarkenwell, at two several terms; to wit, the
-Sunday after Easter twenty-five pounds, and at Michaelmas twenty-five
-pounds. And for more surety hereof the said earl hath set thereunto his
-seal, and left it with the mayor, and the mayor and commonalty have
-set to their seal, and left it with the earl. Wherefore we confirm and
-establish the said covenant for us, and for our heirs. Witnesses, Raph
-Fitz Nichol, Richard Gray, John and Wil. Brithem, Paulin Painter, Raph
-Wancia, John Cumbaud, and other, at Windsor, 26th of February, in the
-31st of our reign."
-
-The charge of this Queen hithe was then committed to the sheriffs, and
-so hath continued ever since; the profits whereof are sore diminished,
-so that (as writeth Robert Fabian) it was worth in his time little above
-twenty marks, or fifteen pounds, one year with another. Now for customs
-of this Queen hithe.[261] In the year 1302, the 30th of Edward I., it
-was found by the oath of divers men, that bakers, brewers, and others,
-buying their corn at Queen hithe, should pay for measuring, portage,
-and carriage, for every quarter of corn whatsoever, from thence to West
-Cheap, to St. Anthonie's church, to Horshew bridge, and to Woolsey
-street, in the parish of Allhallowes the Less, and such like distances,
-one halfpenny farthing; to Fleet bridge, to Newgate, Cripplegate, to
-Bircheovers lane, to Eastcheape, and Billingsgate, one penny. Also, that
-the measure (or the meter) ought to have eight chief master-porters,
-every master to have three porters under him, and every one of them
-to find one horse, and seven sacks; and he that so did not, to lose
-his office. This hithe was then so frequented with vessels, bringing
-thither corn (besides fish, salt, fuel, and other merchandises), that
-all these men, to wit, the meter, and porters, thirty-seven in number,
-for all their charges of horses and sacks, and small stipend, lived well
-of their labours; but now[262] the bakers of London, and other citizens,
-travel into the countries, and buy their corn of the farmers, after the
-farmers' price.
-
-King Edward II., in the 1st of his reign, gave to Margaret, wife to
-Piers de Gavestone, forty-three pounds twelve shillings and nine pence
-halfpenny farthing, out of the rent of London, to be received of the
-Queen's hithe. Certain impositions were set upon ships and other vessels
-coming thither, as upon corn, salt, and other things, toward the charge
-of cleansing Roome-land there, the 41st of Edward III.
-
-The 3rd of Edward IV., the market at Queen hithe being hindered by the
-slackness of drawing up London bridge, it was ordained, that all manner
-of vessels, ships, or boats, great or small, resorting to the city with
-victual, should be sold by retail; and that if there came but one vessel
-at a time, were it salt, wheat, rye, or other corn, from beyond the
-seas, or other grains, garlic, onions, herrings, sprats, eels, whiting,
-plaice, cods, mackarel, etc., then that one vessel should come to Queen
-hithe, and there to make sale; but if two vessels come, the one should
-come to Queen hithe, the other to Billingsgate; if three, two of them
-should come to Queen hithe, the third to Billingsgate, etc., always the
-more to Queen hithe; if the vessel being great, coming with salt from
-the Bay, and could not come to these keys, then the same to be conveyed
-by lighters, as before is meant.
-
-One large house for stowage of corn craned out of lighters and barges,
-is there lately built; Sir John Lion, grocer, mayor 1554, by his
-testament, gave a hundred pounds towards it; but since increased and
-made larger at the charges of the city, in the year 1565.
-
-Against this Queen's hithe, on the river Thames, of late years, was
-placed a corn mill, upon or betwixt two barges or lighters, and there
-ground corn, as water mills in other places, to the wonder of many that
-had not seen the like; but this lasted not long without decay, such as
-caused the same barges and mill to be removed, taken asunder, and soon
-forgotten. I read of the like to have been in former time, as thus:--In
-the year 1525, the 16th of Henry VIII., Sir William Bayly being mayor,
-John Cooke of Glocester, mercer, gave to the mayor and commonalty of
-London, and theirs for ever, one great barge, in the which two corn
-mills were made and placed, which barge and mills were set in and upon
-the stream of the river of Thames, within the jurisdiction and liberty
-of the said city of London.
-
-And also he gave to the city all such timber, boards, stones, iron,
-etc., provided for making, mending, and repairing of the said barge and
-mills, in reward whereof the mayor gave him fifty pounds presently, and
-fifty pounds yearly during his life; and if the said Cooke deceased
-before Johan his wife, then she to have forty marks the year during her
-life.
-
-Next adjoining to this Queen hithe, on the west side thereof, is Salt
-wharf, named of salt taken up, measured, and sold there. The next is
-Stew lane, of a stew or hothouse there kept. After that is Timber hithe,
-or Timber street, so called of timber or boards there taken up and
-wharfed; it is in the parish of St. Mary Somershithe, as I read in the
-56th of Henry III., and in the 9th of Edward II. Then is Brookes wharf,
-and Broken wharf, a water gate or key, so called of being broken and
-fallen down into the Thames. By this Broken wharf remaineth one large
-old building of stone, with arched gates, which messuage, as I find,
-in the reign of Henry III., the 43rd year, pertaining unto Hugh de
-Bygot; and in the 11th of Edward III., to Thomas Brotherton, the king's
-brother, Earl of Norfolk, Marshal of England; in the 11th of Henry VI.
-to John Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk, etc.
-
-Within the gate of this house (now belonging to the city of London)
-is lately, to wit, in the years 1594 and 1595, built one large house
-of great height, called an engine, made by Bevis Bulmar, gentleman,
-for the conveying and forcing of Thames water to serve in the middle
-and west parts of the city. The ancient great hall of this messuage
-is yet standing, and pertaining to a great brewhouse for beer. West
-from this is Trigge lane, going down to Thames. Next is called Bosse
-lane, of a bosse of water, like unto that of Billingsgate, there placed
-by the executors of Richard Whittington. Then is one great messuage,
-sometime belonging to the abbots of Chertsey in Surrey, and was their
-inn, wherein they were lodged when they repaired to the city; it is now
-called Sandie house, by what reason I have not heard: I think the Lord
-Sands have been lodged there.
-
-And this is an end of this Queen hithe ward; which hath an alderman and
-his deputy, common council six, constables nine, scavengers eight,
-wardmote inquest thirteen, and a beadle. It is taxed to the fifteen in
-London twenty pounds, and in the Exchequer at nineteen pounds sixteen
-shillings and two pence.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[255] "In the Exchequer thirty-six pounds, ten shillings."--_1st
-edition_, p. 285.
-
-[256] "But I could never learne the cause why it should be so called,
-and therefore I will let it passe."--_1st edition_, p. 287.
-
-[257] "There bee monumentes in this church of Andrew Awbery, grocer,
-mayor, and Thomas Fryar, fishmonger, in the yeare 1351, who gave to this
-church and parish one plot of ground, containing fiftie-six foote in
-length, and fortie-three foote in breadth at both endes, to be a buriall
-place for the dead of the said parish, the twenty-sixt of Edward the
-third. Also Thomas Madefry, clarke, and John Pylot, gave to the wardens
-of that parish one shop and a house in Distar lane, for the continual
-repairing of the body of that church, the belles and ornaments, the
-twentieth of Richard II."--_1st edition_, p. 287.
-
-[258] Liber Trinitate.
-
-[259] It appears from Strype's _Stow_ (i. p, 214, ed. 1720), that "Were
-path or Wore path, is in the east part of the Flete of Barking, about
-seven miles from London; and Anedeheth is near Westminster, on the west
-part of London."
-
-[260] Liber Trinitate, Lon.
-
-[261] Liber Constitut.
-
-[262] "But now that case is altered."--_1st edition_, p. 293.
-
-
-
-
-CASTLE BAYNARD WARD
-
-
-The next is Castle Baynard ward, so named of an old castle there.
-This ward beginneth in the east on the Thames side, at a house called
-Huntingdon house, and runneth west by Paule's wharf, by Baynard's
-castle, Puddle wharf, and by the south side of Black Friers. Then
-turning by the east wall of the said Friers to the south-west end of
-Creed lane. Then, on the north side of Thames street, over against
-Huntington house, by St. Peter's church and lane, called Peter hill,
-along till over against Puddle wharf, and then north up by the great
-Wardrobe to the west end of Carter lane, then up Creed lane, Ave Mary
-lane, and a piece of Pater Noster row, to the sign of the Golden Lion,
-and back again up Warwicke lane, and all the east side thereof, to the
-sign of the Crown by Newgate market; and this is the farthest north part
-of this ward.
-
-Then out of Thames street be lanes ascending north to Knightriders
-street; the first is Peter hill lane, all of that ward (two houses
-excepted, adjoining to St. Peter's church). The next is Paule's wharf
-hill, which thwarting Knightriders street and Carter lane, goeth up to
-the south chain of Paule's churchyard.
-
-Then in Adle street, over against the west part of Baynard's castle,
-going up by the west end of Knightriders street and to Carter lane. Thus
-much for lanes out of Thames street. The one half of the west side of
-Lambard hill lane being of this ward, at the north-west end thereof, on
-the south side, and at the west end of St. Mary Magdalen's church on the
-north side beginneth Knightriders street to be of this ward, and runneth
-west on both sides to the parish church of St. Andrew by the Wardrobe.
-
-Then at the end of St. Mary Magdalen's church goeth up the Old Exchange,
-all the west side whereof up to the south-east gate of Paule's
-churchyard, and by St. Austen's church, is of this ward. About the midst
-of this Old Exchange, on the west side thereof is Carter lane, which
-runneth west to the east entry of the Blacke Friers, and to the south
-end of Creed lane, out of the which Carter lane descendeth a lane called
-Do-little lane, and cometh into Knightriders street by the Boar's head
-tavern; and more west is Sermon lane, by an inn called the Paule head.
-Then out of Carter lane, on the north side thereof, the south chain
-of Paules churchyard, and the churchyard itself on that south side of
-Paules church, and the church of St. Gregorie, the bishop's palace,
-and the dean's lodging, be all of this ward; and such be the bounds
-thereof. The ornaments in this ward be parish churches four. Of old time
-a castle, divers noblemen's houses, halls of companies twain, and such
-others, as shall be shown.
-
-In Thames street, at the south-east end, is an ancient messuage, of old
-time called Beaumount's inn, as belonging to that family of noblemen
-of this realm in the 4th of Edward III. Edward IV., in the 5th of his
-reign, gave it to W. Hastings, lord chamberlain, master of his mints. It
-is now called Huntington house, as belonging to the earls of Huntington.
-Next is Paul's wharf, a large landing place, with a common stair upon
-the river of Thames, at the end of a street called Paule's wharf hill,
-which runneth down from Paule's chain. Next is a great messuage, called
-Scropes inn, sometime belonging to Scropes, in the 31st of Henry VI.
-
-Then is one other great messuage, sometime belonging to the abbey of
-Fiscampe, beyond the sea, and by reason of the wars, it coming to the
-hands of King Edward III., the same was given to Sir Simon Burley,
-knight of the Garter, and, therefore, called Burley house in Thames
-street, between Baynard's castle and Paule's wharf.
-
-Then have you Baynard's castle, whereof this whole ward taketh the
-name. This castle banketh on the river Thames, and was called Baynard's
-castle, of Baynard, a nobleman that came in with William the Conqueror,
-of the which castle, and of Baynard himself, I have spoken in another
-place.
-
-There was also another tower by Baynard's castle, built by King Edward
-II. Edward III., in the 2nd of his reign, gave it to William Duke of
-Hamelake, in the county of York, and his heirs, for one rose yearly, to
-be paid for all service, the same place (as seemeth to me) was since
-called Legate's inn, in the 7th of Edward IV., where be now divers wood
-wharfs in place.
-
-Then is there a great brewhouse, and Puddle wharf, a watergate into the
-Thames, where horses use to water, and therefore being defiled with
-their trampling, and made puddle, like as also of one Puddle dwelling
-there, it is called Puddle wharf. Then is there a lane between the
-Blacke Fryers and the Thames, called in the 26th of Edward III. Castle
-lane.
-
-In this lane also is one great messuage, of old time belonging to the
-priory of Okeborne in Wiltshire, and was the prior's lodging when
-he repaired to London. This priory being of the French order, was
-suppressed by Henry V., and with other lands and tenements pertaining
-to the said priory, was by Henry VI. given to his college in Cambridge,
-called now the King's college. About this castle lane was sometime a
-mill or mills belonging to the Templars of the New Temple, as appeareth
-of record; for King John, in the 1st year of his reign, granted a place
-in the Fleet, near unto Baynard's castle, to make a mill, and the whole
-course of water of the Fleet to serve the said mill.
-
-I read also, that in the year 1247, the 2nd of Edward I., Ri. Raison,
-and Atheline his wife, did give to Nicho. de Musely, clerk, ten
-shillings of yearly free and quiet rent, out of all his tenements, with
-the houses thereupon built, and their appurtenances, which they had of
-the demise of the master and brethren of Knights Templars, in England,
-next to their mill of Fleet, over against the houses of Laurence de
-Brooke, in the parish of St. Andrew, next to Baynard's castle, which
-tenements lie between the way leading towards the said mill on the west
-part. Also in the rights belonging to Robert Fitzwater, and to his
-heirs, in the city of London, in the time of peace, it was declared
-in the year 1303, that the said Robert, castellan of London, and
-banner-bearer, had a soke (or ward) in the city, that was by the wall of
-St. Paule, as men go down the street before the brewhouse of St. Paule
-unto the Thames, and so to the side of the mill, which is in the water
-that cometh down from Fleet bridge, and goeth by London wall, betwixt
-Fryers preachers church and Ludgate; and so that ward turned back by the
-house of the said Fryers unto the said common wall of the said canonry
-of St. Paul; that is, all of the parish of St. Andrew, which is in the
-gift of his ancestors by seniority, as more I have shown in the Castles.
-
-Now here is to be noted, that the wall of London at that time went
-straight south from Ludgate down to the river of Thames; but for
-building of the Blacke Fryers church, the said wall in that place was by
-commandment taken down, and a new wall made straight west from Ludgate
-to Fleet bridge, and then by the water of Fleet to the river of Thames,
-etc.
-
-In the year 1307, the 35th of Edward I., in a parliament at Carlisle,
-Henry Lacie, Earl of Lincoln, complained of noyances done to the water
-of the Fleet; whereupon it was granted that the said mill should be
-removed and destroyed.
-
-This ward ascendeth up by the east wall of the Black Fryers to the
-south-west end of Creed lane, where it endeth on that side.
-
-Then to begin again on the north side of Thames street, over against
-Huntington house, by St. Peter's church and lane, called Peter hill, and
-so to St. Benet Hude (or Hithe) over against Powle's wharf, a proper
-parish church, which hath the monuments of Sir William Cheiny, knight,
-and Margaret his wife, 1442, buried there; Doctor Caldwell, physician;
-Sir Gilbert Dethik, knight, _alias_ Garter king at arms. West from this
-church, by the south end of Adle street, almost against Pudle wharf,
-there is one ancient building of stone and timber, built by the lords
-of Barkley, and therefore called Barklies inn. This house is all in
-ruin, and letten out in several tenements, yet the arms of the Lord
-Barkley remain in the stone work of an arched gate, gules, between a
-cheveron, crosses ten--three, three, and four. Richard Beauchampe, Earl
-of Warwicke, was lodged in this house, then called Barklies inn, in the
-parish of St. Andrew, in the reign of Henry VI.
-
-Then turning up towards the north is the parish church of St. Andrew in
-the Wardrobe, a proper church, but few monuments hath it. John Parnt
-founded a chantry there. Then is the king's Great Wardrobe: Sir John
-Beauchamp, knight of the Garter, Constable of Dover, Warden of the Sinke
-ports (son to Guido de Beauchampe, Earl of Warwicke), built this house,
-was lodged there, deceased in the year 1359, and was buried on the south
-side of the middle aisle of Paule's church. His executors sold the house
-to King Edward III., unto whom the parson of St. Andrewe's complaining
-that the said Beauchampe had pulled down divers houses, in their place
-to build the same house, where through he was hindered of his accustomed
-tithes, paid by the tenants of old time, granted him forty shillings by
-year out of that house for ever. King Richard III. was lodged there in
-the second of his reign.
-
-In this house of late years is lodged Sir John Fortescue, knight, master
-of the wardrobe, chancellor and under-treasurer of the exchequer, and
-one of her majesty's most honourable privy council. The secret letters
-and writings touching the estate of the realm were wont to be enrolled
-in the king's wardrobe, and not in the chancery, as appeareth by the
-records. Claus. 18. E. 4. 1. Memb. 13. Claus. 33. E. 1. Memb. 3. Et
-liberat. 1. E. 2. Memb. 4, etc. From this wardrobe, by the west end of
-Carter lane, then up Creede lane, Ave Mary lane, a piece of Pater Noster
-row, up Warwick lane, all the east side, to a brewhouse called the
-Crown, as I said is of this ward. Touching lanes ascending out of Thames
-street to Knightriders' street, the first is Peter's hill, wherein I
-find no matter of note, more than certain alms houses, lately founded on
-the west side thereof, by David Smith, embroiderer, for six poor widows,
-whereof each to have twenty shillings by the year.
-
-On the east side of this lane standeth a large house, of ancient
-building, sometime belonging to the abbot of St. Mary in York, and was
-his abiding house when he came to London; Thomas Randolfe, esquire, hath
-lately augmented and repaired it.
-
-At the upper end of this lane, towards the north, the corner-houses
-there be called Peters key, but the reason thereof I have not heard.
-Then is Paules wharf hill, on the east side whereof is Woodmongers'
-hall. And next adjoining is Darby house, sometime belonging to the
-Stanleys, for Thomas Stanley, first Earl of Derby of that name, who
-married the Lady Margaret, Countess of Richmond, mother to Henry VII.,
-in his time built it.
-
-Queen Mary gave it to Gilbert Dethike, then Garter principal king of
-arms of Englishmen; Thomas Hawley, Clarenceaux king of arms of the south
-parts; William Harvy, _alias_ Norroy king of arms of the north parts,
-and the other heralds and pursuivants of arms, and to their successors,
-all the same capital messuage or house called Derby house, with the
-appurtenances, situate in the parish of St. Benet and St. Peter, then
-being in the tenure of Sir Richard Sackvile, knight, and lately parcel
-of the lands of Edward, Earl of Derby, etc., to the end that the said
-kings of arms, heralds, and pursuivants of arms, and their successors,
-might at their liking dwell together, and at meet times to congregate,
-speak, confer, and agree among themselves, for the good government of
-their faculty, and their records might be more safely kept, etc. Dated
-the 18th of July, 1555, Philip and Mary I., and third year.
-
-Then higher up, near the south chain of Paules churchyard, is the Paule
-Head tavern, which house, with the appurtenances, was of old time called
-Paules brewhouse, for that the same was so employed, but been since left
-off, and let out.
-
-On the west side of this street, is one other great house, built of
-stone, which belongeth to Paules church, and was sometime let to the
-Blunts, Lords Mountjoy, but of latter time to a college in Cambridge,
-and from them to the doctors of the civil law and Arches, who keep a
-commons there; and many of them being there lodged, it is called the
-Doctors' Commons. Above this, on the same side, was one other great
-building over-against Paules brewhouse, and this was called Paules
-bakehouse, and was employed in baking of bread for the church of Paules.
-
-In Addle street, or lane, I find no monuments.
-
-In Lambart hill lane on the west side thereof, is the Blacksmiths' hall,
-and adjoining to the north side thereof have ye one plot of ground,
-inclosed with a brick wall for a churchyard, or burying-plot for the
-dead of St. Mary Magdalen's by Old Fish street, which was given to that
-use by John Iwarby, an officer in the receipt of the exchequer, in the
-26th of King Henry VI., as appeareth by patent. John Iwarby, etc., gave
-a piece of land lying void in the parish of St. Mary Magdalen, nigh to
-Old Fish street, between the tenement of John Philpot on the south,
-and the tenement of Bartholomewe Burwash on the west, and the tenement
-pertaining to the convent of the Holy Well on the north, and the way
-upon Lambarde's hill on the east, for a churchyard, to the parson, and
-churchwardens, etc.
-
-Over-against the north-west end of this Lambard hill lane in
-Knightriders' street, is the parish church of St. Mary Magdalen, a small
-church, having but few monuments, Richard Woodroffe, merchant tailor,
-1519; Barnard Randolph, esquire, 1583.
-
-On the west side of this church, by the porch thereof, is placed a
-conduit or cistern of lead, castellated with stone, for receipt of
-Thames water, conveyed at the charges of the before-named Barnard
-Randolph, esquire. By the east end of St. Mary Magdalen's church,
-runneth up the Old Exchange lane, by the west end of Carter lane, to
-the south-east gate or chain of Paule's churchyard, as is before shown.
-And in this part was the Exchange kept, and bullion was received for
-coinage, as is noted in Faringdon ward within.
-
-In this parish church of St. Mary Magdalen, out of Knightriders' street
-up to Carter lane, be two small lanes, the one of them called Do Little
-lane, as a place not inhabited by artificers or open shopkeepers, but
-serving for a near passage from Knightriders' street to Carter lane.
-
-The other, corruptly called Sermon lane, for Sheremoniers' lane, for
-I find it by that name recorded in the 14th of Edward I., and in that
-lane, a place to be called the Blacke loft (of melting silver) with four
-shops adjoining. It may, therefore, be well supposed that lane to take
-name of Sheremonyars, such as cut and rounded the plates to be coined
-or stamped into sterling pence; for the place of coining was the Old
-Exchange, near unto the said Sheremoniars' lane. Also I find that in the
-13th of Richard II. William de la Pole had a house there.
-
-In Knightriders' street is the College of Physicians, wherein was
-founded in the year 1582 a public lecture in surgery, to be read twice
-every week, etc., as is shown elsewhere.
-
-In the south churchyard of Paules, is the south side and west end of the
-said church; in the which west end be three stately gates or entries,
-curiously wrought of stone: namely, the middle gate, in the midst
-whereof is placed a massy pillar of brass, whereunto the leaves of the
-said great gate are closed and fastened with locks, bolts, and bars of
-iron; all which, notwithstanding, on the 24th of December in the year
-1565, by a tempest of wind then rising from the west, these gates were
-blown open, the bars, bolts, and locks broken in sunder, or greatly
-bended. Also on the 5th of January in the year 1589, by a like tempest
-of wind, then in the south-west, the lesser west gate of the said
-church, next to the bishop's palace, was broken, both bolts, bars, and
-locks, so that the same was blown over.
-
-At either corner of this west end is, also of ancient building, a strong
-tower of stone, made for bell towers: the one of them, to wit, next to
-the palace, is at this present to the use of the same palace; the other,
-towards the south, is called the Lowlardes' tower,[263] and hath been
-used as the bishop's prison, for such as were detected for opinions in
-religion, contrary to the faith of the Church.
-
-The last prisoner which I have known committed thereto, was in the
-year 1573, one Peter Burcher, gentleman, of the Middle Temple, for
-having desperately wounded, and minding to have murdered, a serviceable
-gentleman named John Hawkins, esquire, in the high street near unto the
-Strand, who being taken and examined, was found to hold certain opinions
-erroneous, and therefore committed thither, and convicted; but in the
-end, by persuasion, he promised to abjure his heresies; and was, by
-commandment of the council, removed from thence to the Tower of London,
-etc., where he committed as in my _Annales_ I have expressed.
-
-Adjoining to this Lowlardes' tower is the parish-church of St. Gregory,
-appointed to the petty canons of Paules. Monuments of note I know none
-there.
-
-The rest of that south side of St. Paules church, with the chapter-house
-(a beautiful piece of work, built about the reign of Edward III.) is
-now defaced by means of licenses granted to cutlers, budget-makers, and
-others, first to build low sheds, but now high houses, which do hide
-that beautiful side of the church, save only the top and south gate.
-
-On the north-west side of this churchyard is the bishop's palace, a
-large thing for receipt, wherein divers kings have been lodged, and
-great household hath been kept, as appeareth by the great hall, which
-of late years, since the rebatement of bishops' livings, hath not been
-furnished with household menie and guests, as was meant by the builders
-thereof, and was of old time used.
-
-The dean's lodging on the other side, directly against the palace,
-is a fair old house, and also divers large houses are on the same
-side builded, which yet remain, and of old time were the lodgings of
-prebendaries and residentiaries, which kept great households and liberal
-hospitality, but now either decayed, or otherwise converted.
-
-Then is the Stationers' hall on the same side, lately built for them in
-place of Peter College, where in the year 1549, the 4th of January, five
-men were slain by the fall of earth upon them, digging for a well. And
-let this be an end of Baynardes Castle ward, which hath an alderman, his
-deputy, common council nine, constables ten, scavengers seven, wardmote
-inquest fourteen, and a beadle. And to the fifteen is taxed at £12, in
-the exchequer £11 13_s._
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[263] For Lowlardes' Tower, read M. Foxe.--_Stow._
-
-
-
-
-THE WARD OF FARINGDON EXTRA, OR WITHOUT
-
-
-The farthest west ward of this city, being the twenty-fifth ward of
-London, but without the walls, is called Faringdon Without, and was of
-old time part of the other Faringdon Within, until the 17th of Richard
-II., that it was divided and made twain, by the names of Faringdon
-_infra_ and Faringdon _extra_, as is afore shown.
-
-The bounds of which ward without Newgate and Ludgate are these: first,
-on the east part thereof, is the whole precinct of the late priory
-of St. Bartholomew, and a part of Long lane on the north, towards
-Aldersgate street and Ducke lane, with the hospital of St. Bartholomew
-on the west, and all Smithfield to the bars in St. John Street. Then
-out of Smithfield, Chicke lane toward Turmile brook, and over that
-brook by a bridge of timber into the field, then back again by the
-pens (or folds) in Smithfield, by Smithfield pond to Cow lane, which
-turneth toward Oldborne, and then Hosiar lane out of Smithfield, also
-toward Oldborne, till it meet with a part of Cow lane. Then Cocke
-lane out of Smithfield, over-against Pie corner, then also is Giltspur
-street, out of Smithfield to Newgate, then from Newgate west by St.
-Sepulchres church to Turnagaine lane, to Oldborne conduit, on Snow hill,
-to Oldborne bridge, up Oldborne hill to the bars on both sides. On the
-right hand or north side, at the bottom of Oldborne hill, is Gold lane,
-sometime a filthy passage into the fields, now both sides built with
-small tenements. Then higher is Lither lane, turning also to the field,
-lately replenished with houses built, and so to the bar.
-
-Now on the left hand or south side from Newgate lieth a street called
-the Old Bayly, or court of the chamberlain of this city; this stretcheth
-down by the wall of the city unto Ludgate, on the west side of which
-street breaketh out one other lane, called St. Georges lane, till ye
-come to the south end of Seacole lane, and then turning towards Fleet
-street it is called Fleet lane. The next out of the high street from
-Newgate turning down south, is called the Little Bayly, and runneth down
-to the east of St. George's lane. Then is Seacole lane which turneth
-down into Fleet lane; near unto this Seacole lane, in the turning
-towards Oldborne conduit, is another lane, called in records Wind Againe
-lane, it turneth down to Turnemill brook, and from thence back again,
-for there is no way over. Then beyond Oldborne bridge to Shoe lane,
-which runneth out of Oldborne unto the Conduit in Fleet street. Then
-also is Fewtars lane, which likewise stretcheth south into Fleet street
-by the east end of St. Dunstans church, and from this lane to the bars
-be the bounds without Newgate.
-
-Now without Ludgate, this ward runneth by from the said gate to Temple
-bar, and hath on the right hand or north side the south end of the Old
-Bayly, then down Ludgate hill to the Fleet lane over Fleet bridge, and
-by Shoe lane and Fewters lane, and so to New street (or Chancery lane),
-and up that lane to the house of the Rolles, which house is also of this
-ward, and on the other side to a lane over against the Rolles, which
-entereth Ficquets' field.
-
-Then hard by the bar is one other lane called Shyre lane, because it
-divideth the city from the shire, and this turneth into Ficquets' field.
-
-From Ludgate again on the left hand, or south side to Fleet bridge, to
-Bride lane, which runneth south by Bridewell, then to Water lane, which
-runneth down to the Thames.
-
-Then by the White Fryers and by the Temple, even to the bar aforesaid,
-be the bounds of this Faringdon Ward without.
-
-Touching ornaments and antiquities in this ward, first betwixt the said
-Newgate and the parish church of St. Sepulchre's, is a way towards
-Smithfield, called Gilt Spurre, or Knightriders' street, of the knights
-and others riding that way into Smithfield, replenished with buildings
-on both sides up to Pie corner, a place so called of such a sign,
-sometimes a fair inn for receipt of travellers, but now divided into
-tenements, and over against the said Pie corner lieth Cocke lane, which
-runneth down to Oldborne conduit.
-
-Beyond this Pie corner lieth West Smithfield, compassed about with
-buildings, as first on the south side following the right hand, standeth
-the fair parish church and large hospital of St. Bartilmew, founded by
-Rahere, the first prior of St. Bartilmewes thereto near adjoining, in
-the year 1102.
-
-Alfune, that had not long before built the parish church of St. Giles
-without Criplegate, became the first hospitaller, or proctor, for the
-poor of the house, and went himself daily to the shambles and other
-markets, where he begged the charity of devout people for their relief,
-promising to the liberal givers (and that by alleging testimonies of
-the holy scripture) reward at the hands of God. Henry III. granted
-to Katherine, late wife to W. Hardell, twenty feet of land in length
-and breadth in Smithfield, next to the chapel of the hospital of St.
-Bartilmew, to build her a recluse or anchorage, commanding the mayor and
-sheriffs of London to assign the said twenty feet to the said Katherine,
-Carta II of Henry III. The foundation of this hospital, for the poor
-and diseased their special sustentation, was confirmed by Edward III.
-the 26th of his reign: it was governed by a master and eight brethren,
-being priests, for the church, and four sisters to see the poor served.
-The executors of R. Whitington, sometime mayor of London, of his goods
-repaired this hospital, about the year 1423.
-
-Sir John Wakering, priest, master of this house in the year 1463,
-amongst other books, gave to their common library the fairest Bible that
-I have seen, written in large vellum by a brother of that house named
-John Coke, at the age of sixty-eight years, when he had been priest
-forty-three years: since the spoil of that library, I have seen this
-book in the custody of my worshipful friend, Master Walter Cope.
-
-Monuments in this church of the dead, benefactors thereunto, be these:
-Elizabeth, wife to Adam Hone, gentleman; Bartilmew Bildington; Jane,
-wife to John Cooke; Dame Alis, wife to Sir Richarde Isham; Alice, wife
-to Nicholas Bayly; John Woodhouse, esquire; Robert Palmar, gentleman;
-Idona, wife to John Walden, lying by her husband on the north side,
-late newly built, 1424; Sir Thomas Malifant, or Nanfant, Baron of
-Winnow, Lord St. George in Glamorgan, and Lord Ockeneton and Pile in the
-county of Pembroke, 1438; Dame Margaret his wife, daughter to Thomas
-Astley, esquire, with Edmond and Henry his children; William Markeby,
-gentleman, 1438; Richard Shepley, and Alice his wife; Thomas Savill,
-serjeant-at-arms; Edward Beastby, gentleman, and Margaret his wife;
-Waltar Ingham, and Alienar his wife; Robert Warnar, and Alice Lady
-Carne; Robert Caldset, Johan and Agnes his wives; Sir Robert Danvars,
-and Dame Agnes his wife, daughter to Sir Richard Delaber; William
-Brookes, esquire; John Shirley, esquire, and Margaret his wife, having
-their pictures of brass, in the habit of pilgrims, on a fair flat stone,
-with an epitaph thus:--
-
- "Beholde how ended is our poore pilgrimage,
- Of John Shirley, esquier, with Margaret his wife,
- That xii. children had together in marriage,
- Eight sonnes and foure daughters withouten strife,
- That in honor, nurtur, and labour flowed in fame,
- His pen reporteth his lives occupation,
- Since Pier his life time, John Shirley by name,
- Of his degree, that was in Brutes Albion,
- That in the yeare of grace deceased from hen,
- Fourteene hundred winter, and sixe and fiftie.
- In the yeare of his age, fourescore and ten,
- Of October moneth, the day one and twenty."
-
-This gentleman, a great traveller in divers countries, amongst other
-his labours, painfully collected the works of Geffrey Chaucer, John
-Lidgate, and other learned writers, which works he wrote in sundry
-volumes to remain for posterity; I have seen them, and partly do possess
-them. Jane, Lady Clinton, gave ten pounds to the poor of this house,
-was there buried, 1458; Agnes, daughter to Sir William St. George;
-John Rogerbrooke, esquire; Richard Sturgeon; Thomas Burgan, gentleman;
-Elizabeth, wife to Henry Skinard, daughter to Chincroft, esquire;
-William Mackley, gentleman, and Alice his wife; W. Fitzwater, gentleman,
-1466.
-
-This hospital was valued at the suppression in the year 1539, the
-31st of Henry VIII., to thirty-five pounds five shillings and seven
-pence yearly. The church remaineth a parish church to the tenants
-dwelling in the precinct of the hospital; but in the year 1546, on the
-13th of January, the bishop of Rochester, preaching at Paules cross,
-declared the gift of the said king to the citizens for relieving of
-the poor, which contained the church of the Gray Fryers, the church of
-St. Bartilmew, with the hospital, the messuages, and appurtenances in
-Giltspurre _alias_ Knightriders' street, Breton street, Petar quay,
-in the parish of St. Mary Magdalen, in Old Fish street, and in the
-parish of St. Benet Buda, Lymehurst, or Limehost, in the parish of
-Stebunheth, etc. Then also were orders devised for relief of the poor,
-the inhabitants were all called to their parish churches, whereby Sir
-Richard Dobbes, then mayor, their several aldermen, or other grave
-citizens, they were by eloquent orations persuaded how great and how
-many commodities would ensue unto them and their city, if the poor of
-divers sorts, which they named, were taken from out their streets,
-lanes, and alleys, and were bestowed and provided for in hospitals
-abroad, etc. Therefore was every man moved liberally to grant, what they
-would impart towards the preparing and furnishing of such hospitals, and
-also what they would contribute weekly towards their maintenance for a
-time, which they said should not be past one year, or twain, until they
-were better furnished of endowment: to make short, every man granted
-liberally, according to his ability; books were drawn of the relief in
-every ward of the city, towards the new hospitals, and were delivered
-by the mayor to the king's commissioners, on the 17th of February, and
-order was taken therein; so as the 26th of July in the year 1552, the
-repairing of the Gray Fryers' house, for poor fatherless children, was
-taken in hand; and also in the latter end of the same month, began the
-repairing of this hospital of St. Bartilmew, and was of new endowed, and
-furnished at the charges of the citizens.
-
-On the east side of this hospital lieth Ducke lane, which runneth out
-of Smithfield south to the north end of Little Britaine street. On the
-east side of this Ducke lane, and also of Smithfield, lieth the late
-dissolved priory of St. Bartilmew, founded also by Rahere, a pleasant
-witted gentleman, and therefore in his time called the king's minstrel,
-about the year of Christ 1102; he founded it in a part of the oft
-before-named morish ground, which was therefore a common laystall of all
-filth that was to be voided out of the city; he placed canons there,
-himself became their first prior, and so continued till his dying day,
-and was there buried in a fair monument,[264] of late renewed by Prior
-Bolton.
-
-Amongst other memorable matters touching this priory, one is of an
-archbishop's visitation, which Matthew Paris hath thus:--Boniface
-(saith he) Archbishop of Canterbury, in his visitation came to this
-priory, where being received with procession in the most solemn wise,
-he said, that he passed not upon the honour, but came to visit them;
-to whom the canons answered, that they having a learned bishop, ought
-not in contempt of him to be visited by any other: which answer so
-much offended the archbishop, that he forthwith fell on the subprior,
-and smote him on the face, saying, "Indeed, indeed, doth it become you
-English traitors so to answer me." Thus raging, with oaths not to be
-recited, he rent in pieces the rich cope of the subprior, and trod it
-under his feet, and thrust him against a pillar of the chancel with such
-violence, that he had almost killed him; but the canons seeing their
-subprior thus almost slain, came and plucked off the archbishop with
-such force that they overthrew him backwards, whereby they might see
-that he was armed and prepared to fight; the archbishop's men seeing
-their master down, being all strangers, and their master's countrymen,
-born at Provence, fell upon the canons, beat them, tare them, and trod
-them under feet; at length the canons getting away as well as they
-could, ran bloody and miry, rent and torn, to the bishop of London to
-complain, who bade them go to the king at Westminster, and tell him
-thereof; whereupon four of them went thither, the rest were not able,
-they were so sore hurt; but when they came to Westminster, the king
-would neither hear nor see them, so they returned without redress. In
-the mean season the whole city was in an uproar, and ready to have rung
-the common bell, and to have hewn the archbishop into small pieces, who
-was secretly crept to Lambhith, where they sought him, and not knowing
-him by sight, said to themselves, Where is this ruffian? that cruel
-smiter! he is no winner of souls, but an exactor of money, whom neither
-God, nor any lawful or free election did bring to this promotion, but
-the king did unlawfully intrude him, being utterly unlearned, a stranger
-born, and having a wife, etc. But the archbishop conveyed himself over,
-and went to the king with a great complaint against the canons, whereas
-himself was guilty. This priory of St. Bartholomew was again new built
-in the year 1410.
-
-Bolton was the last prior of this house, a great builder there; for
-he repaired the priory church, with the parish church adjoining, the
-offices and lodgings to the said priory belonging, and near adjoining;
-he built anew the manor of Canonbery at Islington, which belonged to the
-canons of this house, and is situate in a low ground, somewhat north
-from the parish church there; but he built no house at Harrow on the
-Hill, as Edward Hall hath written, following a fable then on foot. The
-people (saith he) being feared by prognostications, which declared,
-that in the year of Christ 1524 there should be such eclipses in watery
-signs, and such conjunctions, that by waters and floods many people
-should perish, people victualled themselves, and went to high grounds
-for fear of drowning, and especially one Bolton, which was prior of St.
-Bartholomewes in Smithfield, built him a house upon Harrow on the Hill,
-only for fear of this flood; thither he went, and made provision of all
-things necessary within him for the space of two months, etc.; but this
-was not so indeed, as I have been credibly informed. True it is, that
-this Bolton was also parson of Harrow, and therefore bestowed some small
-reparations on the parsonage-house, and built nothing there more than a
-dove-house, to serve him when he had forgone his priory.
-
-To this priory King Henry II. granted the privilege of fair, to be kept
-yearly at Bartholomew tide for three days, to wit, the eve, the day,
-and next morrow, to the which the clothiers of all England, and drapers
-of London, repaired,[265] and had their booths and standings within the
-churchyard of this priory, closed in with walls, and gates locked every
-night, and watched, for safety of men's goods and wares; a court of
-pie powders was daily during the fair holden for debts and contracts.
-But now, notwithstanding all proclamations of the prince, and also the
-act of parliament, in place of booths within this churchyard (only let
-out in the fair-time, and closed up all the year after), be many large
-houses built, and the north wall towards Long lane taken down, a number
-of tenements are there erected for such as will give great rents.
-
-Monuments of the dead in this priory are these: of Rahere, the first
-founder; Roger Walden, Bishop of London, 1406; John Wharton, gentleman,
-and Elizabeth his wife, daughter to William Scot, esquire; John Louth,
-gentleman; Robert Shikeld, gentleman; Sir ---- Bacon, knight; John
-Ludlow and Alice his wife; W. Thirlewall, esquire; Richard Lancaster,
-herald-at-arms; Thomas Torald; John Royston; John Watforde; John
-Carleton; Robert, son to Sir Robert Willowby; Gilbert Halstocke;
-Eleanor, wife to Sir Hugh Fen, mother to Margaret Lady Burgavenie;
-William Essex, esquire; Richard Vancke, baron of the exchequer, and
-Margaret his wife, daughter to William de la Rivar; John Winderhall;
-John Duram, esquire, and Elizabeth his wife; John Malwaine; Alice, wife
-to Balstred, daughter to Kniffe; William Scarlet, esquire; John Golding;
-Hugh Waltar, gentleman; and the late Sir Waltar Mildmay, knight,
-chancellor of the exchequer, etc.
-
-This priory at the late surrender, the 30th of Henry VIII., was valued
-at £653 15_s._ by year.
-
-This church having in the bell-tower six bells in a tune, those bells
-were sold to the parish of St. Sepulchre's; and then the church being
-pulled down to the choir, the choir was, by the king's order, annexed
-for the enlarging of the old parish church thereto adjoining, and so was
-used till the reign of Queen Mary, who gave the remnant of the priory
-church to the Friers preachers, or Black Friers, and was used as their
-conventual church until, the 1st of our sovereign lady Queen Elizabeth,
-those friars were put out, and all the said church, with the old parish
-church, was wholly as it stood in the last year of Edward VI., given by
-parliament to remain for ever a parish church to the inhabitants within
-the close called Great St. Bartholomewes. Since the which time that old
-parish church is pulled down, except the steeple of rotten timber ready
-to fall of itself. I have oft heard it reported, that a new steeple
-should be built with the stone, lead, and timber of the old parish
-church, but no such thing was performed. The parish have lately repaired
-the old wooden steeple to serve their turn. On the north side of this
-priory is the lane truly called Long, which reacheth from Smithfield to
-Aldersgate street. This lane is now lately built on both the sides with
-tenements for brokers, tipplers, and such like; the rest of Smithfield
-from Long lane end to the bars is enclosed with inns, brewhouses, and
-large tenements; on the west side is Chicken lane down to Cowbridge.
-Then be the pens or folds, so called, of sheep there parted, and penned
-up to be sold on the market-days.
-
-Then is Smithfield pond, which of old time in records was called
-Horse-pool, for that men watered horses there, and was a great water.
-In the 6th of Henry V. a new building was made in this west part of
-Smithfield betwixt the said pool and the river of the Wels, or Turnemill
-brooke, in a place then called the Elmes, for that there grew many
-elm-trees; and this had been the place of execution for offenders; since
-the which time the building there hath been so increased, that now
-remaineth not one tree growing.
-
-Amongst these new buildings is Cowbridge street, or Cow lane, which
-turneth toward Oldborne, in which lane the prior of Semperingham had his
-inn, or London lodging.
-
-The rest of that west side of Smithfield hath divers fair inns, and
-other comely buildings, up to Hosiar lane, which also turneth down to
-Oldborne till it meet with Cowbridge street. From this lane to Cocke
-lane, over against Pie corner.
-
-And thus much for encroachments and enclosure of this Smithfield,
-whereby remaineth but a small portion for the old uses; to wit, for
-markets of horses and cattle, neither for military exercises, as
-joustings, turnings, and great triumphs, which have been there performed
-before the princes and nobility both of this realm and foreign countries.
-
-For example to note:--In the year 1357, the 31st of Edward III., great
-and royal jousts were there holden in Smithfield; there being present,
-the Kings of England, France, and Scotland, with many other nobles and
-great estates of divers lands.
-
-1362, the 36th of Edward III., on the first five days of May, in
-Smithfield, were jousts holden, the king and queen being present, with
-the most part of the chivalry of England, and of France, and of other
-nations, to the which came Spaniards, Cyprians and Arminians, knightly
-requesting the king of England against the pagans that invaded their
-confines.
-
-The 48th of Edward III., Dame Alice Perrers (the king's concubine),
-as Lady of the Sun, rode from the Tower of London, through Cheape,
-accompanied of many lords and ladies, every lady leading a lord by his
-horse-bridle, till they came into West Smithfield, and then began a
-great joust, which endured seven days after.
-
-Also, the 9th of Richard II., was the like great riding from the Tower
-to Westminster, and every lord led a lady's horse-bridle; and on the
-morrow began the joust in Smithfield, which lasted two days: there
-bare them well, Henry of Darby, the Duke of Lankester's son, the Lord
-Beaumont, Sir Simon Burley, and Sir Paris Courtney.
-
-In the 14th of Richard II., after Froisart, royal jousts and tournaments
-were proclaimed to be done in Smithfield, to begin on Sunday next
-after the feast of St. Michael. Many strangers came forth of other
-countries, namely, Valarian, Earl of St. Paul, that had married King
-Richard's sister, the Lady Maud Courtney, and William, the young Earl
-of Ostervant, son to Albart of Baviere, Earl of Holland and Henault.
-At the day appointed there issued forth of the Tower, about the third
-hour of the day, sixty coursers, apparelled for the jousts, and upon
-every one an esquire of honour, riding a soft pace; then came forth
-sixty ladies of honour, mounted upon palfreys, riding on the one side,
-richly apparelled, and every lady led a knight with a chain of gold,
-those knights being on the king's party, had their harness and apparel
-garnished with white harts, and crowns of gold about the harts' necks,
-and so they came riding through the streets of London to Smithfield,
-with a great number of trumpets, and other instruments of music before
-them. The king and queen, who were lodged in the bishop's palace of
-London, were come from thence, with many great estates, and placed in
-chambers to see the jousts; the ladies that led the knights were taken
-down from their palfreys, and went up to chambers prepared for them.
-Then alighted the esquires of honour from their coursers, and the
-knights in good order mounted upon them; and after their helmets were
-set on their heads, and being ready in all points, proclamation made by
-the heralds, the jousts began, and many commendable courses were run, to
-the great pleasure of the beholders. These jousts continued many days,
-with great feasting, as ye may read in Froisart.
-
-In the year 1393, the 17th of Richard II., certain lords of Scotland
-came into England to get worship by force of arms; the Earl of Mare
-challenged the Earl of Notingham to joust with him, and so they rode
-together certain courses, but not the full challenge, for the Earl
-of Mare was cast both horse and man, and two of his ribs broken with
-the fall, so that he was conveyed out of Smithfield, and so towards
-Scotland, but died by the way at Yorke. Sir William Darell, knight,
-the king's banner-bearer of Scotland, challenged Sir Percie Courtney,
-knight, the king's banner-bearer of England; and when they had run
-certain courses, gave over without conclusion of victory. Then
-Cookeborne, esquire, of Scotland, challenged Sir Nicholas Hawberke,
-knight, and rode five courses, but Cookeborne was borne over horse and
-man, etc.
-
-In the year 1409, the 10th of Henry IV., a great play was played at the
-Skinners' well, which lasted eight days, where were to see the same the
-most part of the nobles and gentles in England. And forthwith began
-a royal jousting in Smithfield between the Earl of Somerset, and the
-Seneschal of Henalt, Sir John Cornwall, Sir Richard Arrundell, and the
-son of Sir John Cheiney, against certain Frenchmen. And the same year
-a battle was fought in Smithfield between two esquires, the one called
-Glaucester, appellant, and the other Arthure, defendant; they fought
-valiantly, but the king took up the quarrel into his hands, and pardoned
-them both.
-
-In the year 1430, the 8th of Henry VI., the 14th of January, a battle
-was done in Smithfield, within the lists, before the king, between two
-men of Feversham in Kent, John Upton, notary, appellant, and John Downe,
-gentleman, defendant; John Upton put upon John Downe, that he and his
-compeers should imagine the king's death the day of his coronation. When
-these had fought long, the king took up the matter, and forgave both the
-parties.
-
-In the year 1442, the 20th of Henry VI., the 30th of January, a
-challenge was done in Smithfield, within lists, before the king, there
-being Sir Philip la Beaufe of Aragon, knight, the other an esquire of
-the king's house, called John Ansley or Anstley; they came to the field
-all armed, the knight with his sword drawn, and the esquire with his
-spear, which spear he cast against the knight, but the knight avoided
-it with his sword, and cast it to the ground; then the esquire took his
-axe, and smote many blows on the knight, and made him let fall his axe,
-and brake up his uniber three times, and would have smote him on the
-face with his dagger, for to have slain him, but then the king cried
-hold, and so they were departed. The king made John Ansley, knight, and
-the knight of Aragon offered his harness at Windsor.
-
-In the year 1446, the 24th of Henry VI., John David appeached his
-master, Wil. Catur, of treason, and a day being assigned them to fight
-in Smithfield; the master being well-beloved, was so cherished by
-his friends, and plied with wine, that being therewith overcome, was
-also unluckily slain by his servant; but that false servant (for he
-falsely accused his master) lived not long unpunished, for he was after
-hanged at Teyborne for felony. Let such false accusers note this for
-example,[266] and look for no better end without speedy repentance.
-
-The same year Thomas Fitz-Thomas Prior of Kilmaine appeached Sir James
-Butlar, Earl of Ormond, of treasons; which had a day assigned them to
-fight in Smithfield, the lists were made, and the field prepared; but
-when it came to the point, the king commanded they should not fight, and
-took the quarrel into his hands.
-
-In the year 1467, the 7th of Edward IV., the Bastard of Burgoine
-challenged the Lord Scales, brother to the queen, to fight with him
-both on horseback and on foot; the king, therefore, caused lists to be
-prepared in Smithfield, the length of one hundred and twenty tailors'
-yards and ten feet, and in breadth eighty yards and twenty feet,
-double-barred, five feet between the bars, the timber-work whereof
-cost two hundred marks, besides the fair and costly galleries prepared
-for the ladies and other, at the which martial enterprise the king and
-nobility were present. The first day they ran together with spears, and
-departed with equal honour. The next day they tourneyed on horseback,
-the Lord Scales horse having on his chafron, a long spear pike of
-steel; and as the two champions coped together, the same horse thrust
-his pike into the nostrils of the Bastard's horse, so that for very
-pain he mounted so high that he fell on the one side with his master,
-and the Lord Scales rode about him with his sword drawn, till the king
-commanded the marshal to help up the Bastard, who said, I cannot hold me
-by the clouds; for though my horse fail me, I will not fail an encounter
-companion; but the king would not suffer them to do any more that day.
-
-The next morrow they came into the lists on foot with two pole-axes, and
-fought valiantly; but at the last the point of the pole-axe of the Lord
-Scales entered into the side of the Bastard's helm, and by force might
-have placed him on his knees; but the king cast down his warder, and the
-marshal severed them. The Bastard required that he might perform his
-enterprise; but the king gave judgment as the Bastard relinquished his
-challenge, etc. And this may suffice for jousts in Smithfield.
-
-Now to return through Giltspur street by Newgate, where I first began,
-there standeth the fair parish church called St. Sepulchers in the
-Bayly, or by Chamberlain gate, in a fair churchyard, though not so
-large as of old time, for the same is letten out for buildings and a
-garden-plot.
-
-This church was newly re-edified or built about the reign of Henry VI.
-or of Edward IV. One of the Pophames was a great builder there, namely,
-of one fair chapel on the south side of the choir, as appeareth by his
-arms and other monuments in the glass windows thereof, and also the fair
-porch of the same church towards the south; his image, fair graven in
-stone, was fixed over the said porch, but defaced and beaten down; his
-title by offices was this, Chancellor of Normandy, Captain of Vernoyle,
-Pearch, Susan, and Bayon, and treasurer of the king's household: he died
-rich, leaving great treasure of strange coins, and was buried in the
-Charterhouse church by West Smithfield. The first nobilitating of these
-Pophames was by Matilda the empress, daughter to Henry I., and by Henry
-her son: one Pophame, gentleman, of very fair lands in Southamptonshire,
-died without issue male, about Henry VI., and leaving four daughters,
-they were married to Fostar, Barentine, Wodham, and Hamden. Popham Deane
-(distant three miles from Clarendon, and three miles from Mortisham) was
-sometime the chief lordship or manor-house of these Pophames.
-
-There lie buried in this church, William Andrew, Stephen Clamparde,
-Lawrence Warcam, John Dagworth, William Porter, Robert Scarlet, esquires.
-
-Next to this church is a fair and large inn for receipt of travellers,
-and hath to sign the Sarasen's head.
-
-There lieth a street from Newgate west to the end of Turnagaine lane,
-and winding north to Oldborne conduit. This conduit by Oldborne cross
-was first built 1498. Thomasin, widow to John Percival, mayor, gave to
-the second making thereof twenty marks, Richard Shore ten pounds. Thomas
-Knesworth and others also did give towards it.
-
-But of late a new conduit was there built in place of the old, namely,
-in the year 1577, by William Lamb, sometime a gentleman of the chapel
-to King Henry VIII., and afterward a citizen and clothworker of London;
-the water thereof he caused to be conveyed in lead, from divers springs
-to one head, and from thence to the said conduit, and waste of one cock
-at Oldborne bridge, more than two thousand yards in length; all of which
-was by him performed at his own charges, amounting to the sum of fifteen
-hundred pounds.
-
-From the west side of this conduit is the high way, there called Snor
-hill; it stretcheth out by Oldborne bridge over the oft-named water of
-Turmill brook, and so up to Oldborne hill, all replenished with fair
-building.
-
-Without Oldborne bridge, on the right hand, is Gold lane, as is before
-shown; up higher on the hill be certain inns, and other fair buildings,
-amongst the which of old time was a messuage called Scropes inn, for so
-I find the same recorded in the 37th of Henry VI.
-
-This house was sometime letten out to serjeants-at-the-law, as
-appeareth, and was found by inquisition taken in the Guild hall of
-London, before William Purchase, mayor, and escheator for the king,
-Henry VII., in the 14th of his reign, after the death of John Lord
-Scrope, that he died deceased in his demesne of fee, by the feoffment
-of Guy Fairfax, knight, one of the king's justices, made in the 9th of
-the same king, unto the said John Scrope, knight. Lord Scrope of Bolton,
-and Robert Wingfield, esquire, of one house or tenement, late called
-Sergeants' inn, situate against the church of St. Andrew in Oldborne,
-in the city of London, with two gardens and two messuages to the same
-tenement belonging in the said city, to hold in burgage, valued by the
-year in all reprises ten shillings.
-
-Then is the bishop of Elie's inn,[267] so called of belonging and
-pertaining to the bishops of Elie. William de Luda, bishop of Elie,
-deceased 1297, gave this house by the name of his manor, with the
-appurtenances in Oldborne, to his successors, with condition his
-next successor should pay one thousand marks to the finding of three
-chaplains in the chapel there. More, John Hotham, bishop of Elie, did
-give by the name of six messuages, two cellars, and forty acres of land,
-in the suburbs of London, in the parish of St. Andrew in Oldborne, to
-the prior and convent of Elie, as appeareth by patent, the 9th of Edward
-III.: this man was bishop of Elie twenty years, and deceased 1336.
-
-Thomas Arundell, bishop of Elie, beautifully built of new his palace
-at Elie, and likewise his manors in divers places, especially this
-in Oldborne, which he did not only repair, but rather new-built, and
-augmented it with a large port, gate-house, or front, towards the street
-or highway; his arms are yet to be discerned in the stone-work thereof:
-he sat bishop of Elie fourteen years, and was translated to Yorke.
-
-In this house, for the large and commodious rooms thereof,
-divers great and solemn feasts have been kept, especially by the
-serjeants-at-the-law, whereof twain are to be noted for posterity.
-
-The first in the year 1464, the 4th of Edward IV., in Michaelmas term,
-the serjeants-at-law held their feast in this house, to the which,
-amongst other estates, Matthew Phillip, mayor of London, with the
-aldermen, sheriffs, and commons, of divers crafts, being invited, did
-repair; but when the mayor looked to keep the state in the hall, as
-it had been used in all places within the city and liberties (out of
-the king's presence), the Lord Gray of Ruthen, then lord treasurer of
-England, unwitting the Serjeants, and against their wills (as they
-said), was first placed; whereupon the mayor, aldermen, and commons,
-departed home, and the mayor made the aldermen to dine with him; howbeit
-he and all the citizens were wonderfully displeased, that he was so
-dealt with; and the new serjeants and others were right sorry therefore,
-and had rather then much good (as they said) it had not so happened.
-
-One other feast was likewise there kept in the year 1531, the 23rd of
-King Henry VIII.: the serjeants then made were in number eleven; namely,
-Thomas Audeley, Walter Luke, I. Bawdwine, I. Hinde, Christopher Jennie,
-John Dowsell, Edward Mervine, Edmond Knightley, Roger Chomley, Edward
-Montague, and Robert Yorke.
-
-These also held their feast in this Elie house for five days, to wit,
-Friday the 10th of November, Saturday, Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday. On
-Monday (which was their principal day) King Henry and Queen Katherine
-dined there (but in two chambers), and the foreign ambassadors in a
-third chamber. In the hall, at the high table, sat Sir Nicholas Lambard,
-Mayor of London, the judges, the barons of the exchequer, with certain
-aldermen of the city. At the board on the south side sat the master
-of the rolls, the master of the chancery, and worshipful citizens. On
-the north side of the hall certain aldermen began the board, and then
-followed merchants of the city; in the cloister, chapel, and gallery,
-knights, esquires, and gentlemen, were placed; in the halls the crafts
-of London; the serjeants-of-law and their wives, kept in their own
-chambers.
-
-It were tedious to set down the preparation of fish, flesh, and other
-victuals, spent in this feast, and would seem almost incredible,
-and, as to me it seemeth, wanted little of a feast at a coronation;
-nevertheless, a little I will touch, for declaration of the change of
-prices. There were brought to the slaughter-house twenty-four great
-beefs at twenty-six shillings and eight pence the piece from the
-shambles, one carcass of an ox at twenty-four shillings, one hundred
-fat muttons, two shillings and ten pence the piece, fifty-one great
-veals at four shillings and eight pence the piece, thirty-four porks
-three shillings and eight pence the piece, ninety-one pigs, sixpence the
-piece, capons of grese, of one poulter (for they had three) ten dozens
-at twenty pence the piece, capons of Kent, nine dozens and six at twelve
-pence the piece, capons coarse, nineteen dozen at six pence the piece,
-cocks of grose, seven dozen and nine at eight pence the piece, cocks
-coarse, fourteen dozen and eight at three pence the piece, pullets, the
-best, two pence halfpenny, other pullets two pence, pigeons thirty-seven
-dozen at ten pence the dozen, swans fourteen dozen, larks three hundred
-and forty dozen at five pence the dozen, etc. Edward Nevill was
-seneschal or steward, Thomas Ratcliffe, comptroller, Thomas Wildon,
-clerk of the kitchen.
-
-Next beyond this manor of Ely house is Lither lane, turning into the
-field. Then is Furnivalles inn, now an inn of chancery, but sometime
-belonging to Sir William Furnivall, knight, and Thomesin his wife, who
-had in Oldborne two messuages and thirteen shops, as appeareth by record
-of Richard II., in the 6th of his reign.
-
-Then is the Earl of Bathes inn, now called Bath place, of late for the
-most part new built, and so to the bars.
-
-Now again, from Newgate, on the left hand, or south side, lieth the Old
-Bayly, which runneth down by the wall upon the ditch of the city, called
-Houndes ditch, to Ludgate. I have not read how this street took that
-name, but is like to have risen of some court, of old time there kept;
-and I find, that in the year 1356, the 34th of Edward III., the tenement
-and ground upon Houndes ditch, between Ludgate on the south, and Newgate
-on the north, was appointed to John Cambridge, fishmonger, Chamberlain
-of London, whereby it seemeth that the chamberlains of London have
-there kept their courts, as now they do by the Guildhall, and till this
-day the mayor and justices of this city kept their sessions in a part
-thereof, now called the Sessions hall, both for the city of London and
-shire of Middlesex. Over against the which house, on the right hand,
-turneth down St. George's lane towards Fleet lane.
-
-In this St. George's lane, on the north side thereof, remaineth yet an
-old wall of stone, enclosing a piece of ground up Seacole lane, wherein
-by report sometime stood an inn of chancery; which house being greatly
-decayed, and standing remote from other houses of that profession, the
-company removed to a common hostelry, called of the sign Our Lady inn,
-not far from Clement's inn, which they procured from Sir John Fineox,
-lord chief justice of the king's bench, and since have held it of the
-owners by the name of the New inn, paying therefore six pounds rent by
-the year, as tenants at their own will, for more (as is said) cannot be
-gotten of them, and much less will they be put from it. Beneath this St.
-George's lane, the lane called Fleet lane, winding south by the prison
-of the Fleet into Fleet street by Fleet bridge. Lower down in the Old
-Bayly is at this present a standard of timber, with a cock or cocks,
-delivering fair spring water to the inhabitants, and is the waste of the
-water serving the prisoners in Ludgate.
-
-Next out of the high street turneth down a lane called the Little
-Bayly, which runneth down to the east end of St. George's lane. The next
-is Seacole lane, I think called Limeburner's lane, of burning lime there
-with seacole. For I read in record of such a lane to have been in the
-parish of St. Sepulcher, and there yet remaineth in this lane an alley
-called Limeburner's alley. Near unto this Seacole lane, in the turning
-towards Oldborne conduit is Turnagain lane, or rather, as in a record
-of the 5th of Edward III., Windagain lane, for that it goeth down west
-to Fleet dike, from whence men must turn again the same way they came,
-for there it stopped. Then the high street turneth down Snore hill to
-Oldborne conduit, and from thence to Oldborne bridge, beyond the which
-bridge, on the left hand, is Shoe lane, by the which men pass from
-Oldborne to Fleet street, by the conduit there. In this Shoe lane, on
-the left hand, is one old house called Oldborne hall, it is now letten
-out into divers tenements.
-
-On the other side, at the very corner, standeth the parish church of
-St. Andrew, in the which church, or near thereunto, was sometime kept
-a grammar school, as appeareth in another place by a patent made, as
-I have shown, for the erection of schools. There be monuments in this
-church of Thomas Lord Wriothesley, Earl of Southampton, buried 1550;
-Ralph Rokeby of Lincoln's inn, esquire, Master of St. Katherine's and
-one of the masters of requests to the queen's majesty, who deceased the
-14th of June, 1596. He gave by his testament to Christ's Hospital in
-London one hundred pounds, to the college of the poor of Queen Elizabeth
-in East Greenwich one hundred pounds, to the poor scholars in Cambridge
-one hundred pounds, to the poor scholars in Oxford one hundred pounds,
-to the prisoners in the two compters in London two hundred pounds, to
-the prisoners in the Fleet one hundred pounds, to the prisoners in
-Ludgate one hundred pounds, to the prisoners in Newgate one hundred
-pounds, to the prisoners in the King's Bench one hundred pounds, to the
-prisoners in the Marshalsea one hundred pounds, to the prisoners in the
-White Lion twenty pounds, to the poor of St. Katherine's twenty pounds,
-and to every brother and sister there forty shillings; William Sydnam
-founded a chantry there. There was also of old time (as I have read
-in the 3rd of Henry V.) an hospital for the poor, which was a cell to
-the house of Cluny in France, and was, therefore, suppressed among the
-priories aliens.
-
-From this church of St. Andrew, up Oldborne hill be divers fair built
-houses, amongst the which, on the left hand, there standeth three inns
-of Chancery, whereof the first adjoining unto Crookhorn alley is called
-Thaves inn, and standeth opposite, or over against the said Elyhouse.
-Then is Fewter lane, which stretcheth south into Fleet street, by the
-east end of St. Dunstone's church, and is so called of Fewters'[268] (or
-idle people) lying there, as in a way leading to gardens; but the same
-is now of latter years on both sides built through with many fair houses.
-
-Beyond this Fewter lane is Barnard's inn, _alias_ Mackworth's inn, which
-is of Chancery, belonging to the dean and chapter of Lincoln, as saith
-the record of Henry VI., the 32nd of his reign, and was founded by
-inquisition in the Guildhall of London, before John Norman, mayor, the
-king's escheator; the jury said, that it was not hurtful for the king to
-license T. Atkens, citizen of London, and one of the executors to John
-Mackworth, Dean of Lincoln, to give one messuage in Holborn in London,
-with the appurtenances called Mackworth's inn, but now commonly known by
-the name of Barnardes inn, to the dean and chapter of Lincoln, to find
-one sufficient chaplain to celebrate Divine service in the chapel of St.
-George, in the cathedral church of Lincoln, where the body of the said
-John is buried, to have and to hold the said messuage to the said dean
-and chapter, and to their successors for ever, in part of satisfaction
-of twenty pounds lands and rents, which Edward III. licensed the said
-dean and chapter to purchase to their own use, either of their own fee
-or tenor, or of any other, so the lands were not holden of the king _in
-capite_.
-
-Then is Staple inn, also of Chancery, but whereof so named I am
-ignorant; the same of late is for a great part thereof fair built, and
-not a little augmented. And then at the bar endeth this ward without
-Newgate.
-
-Without Ludgate, on the right hand, or north side from the said gate
-lieth the Old Bayly, as I said, then the high street called Ludgate hill
-down to Fleet lane, in which lane standeth the Fleet, a prison house so
-called of the Fleet or water running by it, and sometime flowing about
-it, but now vaulted over.
-
-I read that Richard I., in the 1st of his reign, confirmed to Osbert,
-brother to William Longshampe, Chancellor of England and elect of
-Elie, and to his heirs for ever, the custody of his house or palace
-at Westminster, with the keeping of his gaol of the Fleet at London;
-also King John, by his patent, dated the 3rd of his reign, gave to
-the Archdeacon of Welles, the custody of the said king's house at
-Westminster, and of his gaol of the Fleet, together with the wardship
-of the daughter and heir of Robert Loveland, etc. Then is Fleet bridge
-pitched over the said water, whereof I have spoken in another place.
-
-Then also against the south end of Shoe lane standeth a fair
-water-conduit, whereof William Eastfield, sometime mayor, was founder;
-for the mayor and commonalty of London being possessed of a conduit
-head, with divers springs of water gathered thereinto in the parish of
-Padington, and the water conveyed from thence by pipes of lead towards
-London unto Teyborne; where it had lain by the space of six years or
-more; the executors of Sir William Eastfield obtained licence of the
-mayor and commonalty for them, in the year 1453, with the goods of
-Sir William to convey the said waters, first in pipes of lead into a
-pipe begun to be laid beside the great conduit head at Maribone, which
-stretcheth from thence unto a separall, late before made against the
-chapel of Rounsevall by Charing cross, and no further, and then from
-thence to convey the said water into the city, and there to make receipt
-or receipts for the same unto the common weal of the commonalty, to wit,
-the poor to drink, the rich to dress their meats; which water was by
-them brought thus into Fleet street to a standard, which they had made
-and finished 1471.
-
-The inhabitants of Fleet street, in the year 1478, obtained licence of
-the mayor, aldermen, and commonalty, to make at their own charges two
-cisterns, the one to be set at the said standard, the other at Fleet
-bridge, for the receipt of the waste water; this cistern at the standard
-they built, and on the same a fair tower of stone, garnished with images
-of St. Christopher on the top, and angels round about lower down, with
-sweet sounding bells before them, whereupon, by an engine placed in the
-tower, they divers hours of the day and night chimed such an hymn as was
-appointed.
-
-This conduit, or standard, was again new built with a larger cistern, at
-the charges of the city, in the year 1582.
-
-From this conduit up to Fewtars lane, and further, is the parish church
-of St. Dunstan called in the West (for difference from St. Dunstan in
-the East), here lieth buried T. Duke, skinner, in St. Katherin's chapel
-by him built, 1421; Nicholas Coningstone, John Knape, and other, founded
-chantries there; Ralph Bane, Bishop of Coventrie and Lichfield, 1559,
-and other.
-
-Next beyond this church is Clifford's inn, sometime belonging to Robert
-Clifford, by gift of Edward II. in these words: "The king granteth to
-Robert Clifford that messuage, with the appurtenances, next the church
-of St. Dunstane in the West, in the suburbs of London, which messuage
-was sometime Malculines de Herley, and came to the hands of Edward
-I., by reason of certaine debts which the said Malculine was bound at
-the time of his death to our styde father, from the time that hee was
-escaetor on this side Trent; which house John, Earle of Richmount, did
-holde of our pleasure, and is now in our possession."--Patent, the 3rd
-of Edward II. After the death of this Robert Clifford, Isabel, his wife,
-let the same messuage to students of the law, as by the record following
-may appear:--
-
-"_Isabel quæ fuit uxor Roberti Clifford, Messuagium unipartitum, quod
-Robertus Clifford habuit in parochia sci. Dunstonis West. in suburbio
-Londini, etc., tenuit, et illud dimisit post mortem dict. Roberti,
-Apprenticiis de banco, pro x. li. annuatium, etc. Anno 18 Eduardi
-Tertii, inquisitio post mortem Roberti Clifford._"
-
-This house hath since fallen into the king's hands, as I have heard, but
-returned again to the Cliffordes, and is now let to the said students
-for four pounds by the year.
-
-Somewhat beyond this Clifford's inn is the south end of New street (or
-Chancelar lane), on the right hand whereof is Sergeantes' inn called in
-Chauncery lane. And then next was sometime the house of the converted
-Jewes, founded by King Henry III., in place of a Jewe's house to him
-forfeited, in the year 1233, and the 17th of his reign, who built
-there for them a fair church now used, and called the chapel for the
-custody of the Rolles and Records of Chancerie. It standeth not far
-from the Old Temple, but in the midway between the Old Temple and the
-New, in the which house all such Jewes and infidels, as were converted
-to the Christian faith, were ordained and appointed, under an honest
-rule of life, sufficient maintenance, whereby it came to pass, that in
-short time there were gathered a great number of converts, which were
-baptized, instructed in the doctrine of Christ, and there lived under
-a learned Christian appointed to govern them; since the which time, to
-wit, in the year 1290, all the Jews in England were banished out of the
-realm, whereby the number of converts in this place was decayed: and,
-therefore, in the year 1377, this house was annexed by patent to William
-Burstall Clearke, custos rotulorum, or keeper of the Rolles of the
-Chauncerie, by Edward III., in the 5th year of his reign; and this first
-Master of the Rolles was sworn in Westminster hall, at the table of
-marble stone; since the which time, that house hath been commonly called
-the Rolles in Chancerie lane.
-
-Notwithstanding such of the Jewes, or other infidels, as have in this
-realm been converted to Christianity, and baptized, have been relieved
-there; for I find in record that one William Piers, a Jew that became a
-Christian, was baptised in the fifth of Richard II., and had two pence
-the day allowed him during his life by the said king.
-
-On the west side was sometime a house pertaining to the prior of Necton
-Parke, a house of canons in Lincolnshire; this was commonly called
-Hereflete inn, and was a brewhouse, but now fair built for the five
-clerks of the Chancerie, and standeth over against the said house called
-the Rolles, and near unto the lane which now entereth Fickets croft, or
-Fickets field. Then is Shere lane, opening also into Fickets field, hard
-by the bars.
-
-On this north side of Fleet street, in the year of Christ 1595, I
-observed, that when the labourers had broken up the pavement, from
-against Chancerie lane's end up towards St. Dunston's church, and had
-digged four feet deep, they found one other pavement of hard stone, more
-sufficient than the first, and, therefore, harder to be broken, under
-the which they found in the made ground, piles of timber driven very
-thick, and almost close together, the same being as black as pitch or
-coal, and many of them rotten as earth, which proveth that the ground
-there (as sundry other places of the city) have been a marish, or full
-of springs.
-
-On the south side from Ludgate, before the wall of the city be fair
-built houses to Fleet bridge, on the which bridge a cistern for receipt
-of spring water was made by the men of Fleet street, but the watercourse
-is decayed, and not restored.
-
-Next is Bride lane, and therein Bridewell, of old time the king's house,
-for the kings of this realm have been there lodged; and till the ninth
-of Henry III. the courts were kept in the king's house, wheresoever he
-was lodged, as may appear by ancient records, whereof I have seen many,
-but for example set forth one in the Chapter of Towers and Castles.
-
-King Henry VIII. built there a stately and beautiful house of new, for
-receipt of the Emperor Charles V., who, in the year of Christ 1522, was
-lodged himself at the Blacke Friers, but his nobles in this new built
-Bridewell, a gallery being made out of the house over the water, and
-through the wall of the city, into the emperor's lodging at the Blacke
-Friers. King Henry himself oftentimes lodged there also, as, namely,
-in the year 1525, a parliament being then holden in the Black Friers,
-he created estates of nobility there, to wit, Henry Fitz Roy, a child
-(which he had by Elizabeth Blunt) to be Earl of Nottingham, Duke of
-Richmond and of Somerset, Lieutenant General from Trent northward,
-Warden of the East, Middle, and West Marches for anenst Scotland; Henry
-Courtney, Earl of Devonshire, cousin-german to the king, to be marquis
-of Exeter; Henry Brandon a child of two years old, son to the Earl of
-Suffolke, to be Earl of Lincolne; Sir Thomas Mannars, Lord Rose, to
-be Earl of Rutland; Sir Henry Clifford, to be Earl of Cumberland; Sir
-Robert Ratcliffe, to be Viscount Fitzwater; and Sir Thomas Boloine,
-treasurer of the king's household, to be Viscount Rochford.
-
-In the year 1528, Cardinal Campeius was brought to the king's presence,
-being then at Bridewell, whither he had called all his nobility, judges,
-and councillors, etc. And there, the 8th of November, in his great
-chamber, he made unto them an oration touching his marriage with Queen
-Katherine, as ye may read in Edward Hall.
-
-In the year 1529, the same King Henry and Queen Katherine were lodged
-there, whilst the question of their marriage was argued in the Blacke
-Friers, etc.
-
-But now you shall hear how this house became a house of correction. In
-the year 1553, the 7th of King Edward VI., the 10th of April, Sir George
-Baron, being mayor of this city, was sent for to the court at Whitehall,
-and there at that time the king gave unto him for the commonalty and
-citizens to be a workhouse for the poor and idle persons of the city,
-his house of Bridewell, and seven hundred marks land, late of the
-possessions of the house of the Savoy, and all the bedding and other
-furniture of the said hospital of the Savoy, towards the maintenance
-of the said workhouse of Bridewell, and the hospital of St. Thomas in
-Southwark.
-
-This gift King Edward confirmed by his charter, dated the 26th of June
-next following; and in the year 1555, in the month of February, Sir
-William Gerarde, mayor, and the aldermen entered Bridewell, and took
-possession thereof according to the gift of the said King Edward, the
-same being confirmed by Queen Mary.
-
-The Bishop of St. David's had his inn over against the north side of
-this Bridwell, as I have said.
-
-Then is the parish church of St. Bridges, or Bride, of old time a small
-thing, which now remaineth to be the choir, but since increased with a
-large body and side aisles towards the west, at the charges of William
-Venor, esquire, warden of the Fleet, about the year 1480, all which he
-caused to be wrought about in the stone in the figure of a vine with
-grapes, and leaves, etc. The partition betwixt the old work and the new,
-sometime prepared as a screen to be set up in the hall of the Duke of
-Somerset's house at Strand, was brought for eight score pounds, and set
-up in the year 1557; one wilful body began to spoil and break the same
-in the year 1596, but was by the high commissioners forced to make it up
-again, and so it resteth. John Ulsthorpe, William Evesham, John Wigan,
-and other, found chantries there.
-
-The next is Salisburie court, a place so called for that it belonged to
-the Bishops of Salisburie, and was their inn, or London house, at such
-time as they were summoned to come to the parliament, or came for other
-business; it hath of late time been the dwelling, first of Sir Richard
-Sackvile, and now of Sir Thomas Sackvile his son, Baron of Buckhurst,
-Lord Treasurer, who hath lately enlarged it with stately buildings.
-
-Then is Water lane, running down, by the west side of a house called the
-Hanging Sword, to the Thames.
-
-Then was the White Friers' church, called _Fratres beatæ Mariæ de Monte
-Carmeli_, first founded (saith John Bale) by Sir Richard Gray, knight,
-ancestor to the Lord Gray Codnor, in the year 1241. King Edward I.
-gave to the prior and brethren of that house a plot of ground in Fleet
-street, whereupon to build their house, which was since re-edified or
-new built, by Hugh Courtney, Earl of Devonshire, about the year 1350,
-the 24th of Edward III. John Lutken, mayor of London, and the commonalty
-of the city, granted a lane called Crockers lane, reaching from Fleet
-street to the Thames, to build in the west end of that church. Sir
-Robert Knoles, knight, was a great builder there also, in the reign
-of Richard II., and of Henry IV.; he deceased at his manor of Scone
-Thorpe, in Norffolke, in the year 1407, and was brought to London, and
-honourably buried by the Lady Constance his wife, in the body of the
-said White Friers' church, which he had newly built.
-
-Robert Marshall, Bishop of Hereford, built the choir, presbytery,
-steeple, and many other parts, and was there buried, about the year
-1420. There were buried also in the new choir, Sir John Mowbery, Earl
-of Nottingham, 1398; Sir Edwarde Cortney; Sir Hugh Montgomerie, and Sir
-John his brother; John Wolle, son to Sir John Wolle; Thomas Bayholt,
-esquire; Elizabeth, Countess of Athole; Dame Johan, wife to Sir Thomas
-Say of Alden; Sir Pence Castle, Baron; John, Lord Gray, son to Reginald,
-Lord Gray of Wilton, 1418; Sir John Ludlow, knight; Sir Richard Derois,
-knight; Richarde Gray, knight; John Ashley, knight; Robert Bristow,
-esquire; Thomas Perry, esquire; Robert Tempest, esquire; William Call;
-William Neddow.
-
-In the old choir were buried: Dame Margaret, etc.; Eleanor Gristles; Sir
-John Browne, knight, and John his son and heir; Sir Simon de Berforde,
-knight; Peter Wigus, esquire; Robert Mathew, esquire; Sir John Skargell,
-knight; Sir John Norice, knight; Sir Geffrey Roose, knight; Mathew
-Hadocke, esquire; William Clarell, esquire; John Aprichard, esquire;
-William Wentworth, esquire; Thomas Wicham, esquire; Sir Terwit, knight;
-Sir Stephen Popham, knight; Bastard de Scales; Henrie Blunt, esquire;
-Elizabeth Blunt; John Swan, esquire; Alice Foster, one of the heirs of
-Sir Stephen Popham; Sir Robert Brocket, knight; John Drayton, esquire;
-John, son to Robert Chanlowes, and his daughter Katherine; John Salvin,
-William Hampton, John Bampton, John Winter, Edmond Oldhall, William
-Appleyard, Thomas Dabby, esquires; Sir Hugh Courtney, knight; John
-Drury, son to Robert Drurie; Elizabeth Gemersey, gentlewoman; Sir Thomas
-Townsend, knight; Sir Richarde Greene, knight; William Scot, esquire;
-Thomas Federinghey, I. Fulforde, esquire; Edward Eldsmere, gentleman;
-W. Hart, gentleman; Dame Mary Senclare, daughter to Sir Thomas Talbot,
-knight; Ancher, esquire; Sir William Moris, knight, and Dame Christian
-his wife; Sir Peter de Mota, knight; Richard Hewton, esquire; Sir I.
-Heron, knight; Richard Eton, esquire; Hugh Stapleton, gentleman; William
-Copley, gentleman; Sir Ralph Saintowen, knight; Sir Hugh Bromeflete,
-knight; Lord Vessey, principal founder of that order, the 6th of Edward
-IV., etc.
-
-This house was valued at £62 7_s._ 3_d._, and was surrendered the 10th
-of November, the 30th of Henry VIII.
-
-In place of this Friers' church be now many fair houses built, lodgings
-for noblemen and others.
-
-Then is the Sargeants' inn, so called, for that divers judges and
-sargeants at the law keep a commons, and are lodged there in term time.
-
-Next is the New Temple, so called because the Templars, before the
-building of this house, had their Temple in Oldborne. This house was
-founded by the Knights Templars in England, in the reign of Henry II.,
-and the same was dedicated to God and our blessed Lady, by Heraclius,
-Patriarch of the church called the Holy Resurrection, in Jerusalem, in
-the year of Christ, 1185.
-
-These Knights Templars took their beginning about the year 1118, in
-manner following. Certain noblemen, horsemen, religiously bent, bound
-by vow themselves in the hands of the Patriarch of Jerusalem, to serve
-Christ after the manner of regular canons in chastity and obedience, and
-to renounce their own proper wills for ever; the first of which order
-were Hugh Paganus, and Geffrey de S. Andromare. And whereas at the first
-they had no certain habitation, Baldwin, king of Jerusalem, granted unto
-them a dwelling place in his palace by the Temple, and the canons of the
-same Temple gave them the street thereby to build therein their houses
-of office, and the patriarch, the king, the nobles, and prelates gave
-unto them certain revenues out of their lordships.
-
-Their first profession was for safeguard of the pilgrims coming to
-visit the sepulchre, and to keep the highways against the lying in wait
-of thieves, etc. About ten years after they had a rule appointed unto
-them, and a white habit, by Honorius II. then Pope; and whereas they
-had but nine in number, they began to increase greatly. Afterward, in
-Pope Eugenius' time, they bare crosses of red cloth on their uppermost
-garments, to be known from others; and in short time, because they had
-their first mansion hard by the Temple of our Lord in Jerusalem, they
-were called Knights of the Temple.
-
-Many noble men in all parts of Christendom became brethren of this
-order, and built for themselves temples in every city or great town in
-England, but this at London was their chief house, which they built
-after the form of the temple near to the sepulchre of our Lord at
-Jerusalem; they had also other temples in Cambridge,[269] Bristow,
-Canterbury, Dover, Warwick.[270] This Temple in London, was often made a
-storehouse of men's treasure, I mean such as feared the spoil thereof in
-other places.
-
-Matthew Paris noteth, that in the year 1232, Hubert de Burgh, Earl of
-Kent, being prisoner in the Tower of London, the king was informed that
-he had much treasure laid up in this New Temple, under the custody
-of the Templars; whereupon he sent for the master of the Temple, and
-examined him straitly, who confessed that money being delivered unto him
-and his brethren to be kept, he knew not how much there was of it; the
-king demanded to have the same delivered, but it was answered, that the
-money being committed unto their trust, could not be delivered without
-the licence of him that committed it to ecclesiastical protection,
-whereupon the king sent his Treasurer and Justiciar of the Exchequer
-unto Hubert, to require him to resign the money wholly into his hands,
-who answered that he would gladly submit himself, and all his, unto the
-king's pleasure; and thereupon desired the knights of the Temple, in his
-behalf, to present all the keys unto the king, to do his pleasure with
-the goods which he had committed unto them. Then the king commanded the
-money to be faithfully told and laid up in his treasury, by inventory,
-wherein was found (besides ready money) vessels of gold and silver
-unpriceable, and many precious stones, which would make all men wonder
-if they knew the worth of them.
-
-This Temple was again dedicated 1240, belike also newly re-edified then.
-
-These Templars at this time were in so great glory, that they
-entertained the nobility, foreign ambassadors, and the prince himself
-very often, insomuch that Matthew Paris crieth out on them for their
-pride, who being at the first so poor, as they had but one horse to
-serve two of them (in token whereof they gave in their seal two men
-riding of one horse), yet suddenly they waxed so insolent, that they
-disdained other orders, and sorted themselves with noblemen.
-
-King Edward I. in the year 1283, taking with him Robert Waleran, and
-other, came to the Temple, where calling for the keeper of the treasure
-house, as if he meant to see his mother's-jewels, that were laid up
-there to be safely kept, he entered into the house, breaking the coffers
-of certain persons that had likewise brought their money thither, and he
-took away from thence to the value of a thousand pounds.
-
-Many parliaments and great councils have been there kept, as may appear
-by our histories. In the year 1308, all the Templars in England, as also
-in other parts of Christendom, were apprehended and committed to divers
-prisons. In 1310, a provincial council was holden at London, against the
-Templars in England, upon heresy and other articles whereof they were
-accused, but denied all except one or two of them, notwithstanding they
-all did confess that they could not purge themselves fully as faultless,
-and so they were condemned to perpetual penance in several monasteries,
-where they behaved themselves modestly.
-
-Philip, king of France, procured their overthrow throughout the whole
-world, and caused them to be condemned by a general council to his
-advantage, as he thought, for he believed to have had all their lands
-in France, and, therefore, seized the same in his hands (as I have
-read), and caused the Templars to the number of four and fifty (or after
-Fabian, threescore) to be burned at Paris.
-
-Edward II. in the year 1313, gave unto Aimer de Valence, Earl of
-Pembroke, the whose place and houses called the New Temple at London,
-with the ground called Ficquetes Croft, and all the tenements and rents,
-with the appurtenances, that belonged to the Templars in the city of
-London and suburbs thereof.
-
-After Aimer de Valence (sayeth some) Hugh Spencer, usurping the same,
-held it during his life, by whose death it came again to the hands of
-Edward III.; but in the meantime, to wit, 1324, by a council holden at
-Vienna, all the lands of the Templars (lest the same should be put to
-profane uses) were given to the knights hospitalers of the order of St.
-John Baptist, called St. John of Jerusalem, which knights had put the
-Turkes out of the Isle of Rhodes, and after won upon the said Turkes
-daily for a long time.
-
-The said Edward III., therefore, granted the same to the said knights,
-who possessed it, and in the eighteenth year of the said king's reign,
-were forced to repair the bridge of the said Temple. These knights had
-their head house for England by West Smithfield, and they in the reign
-of the same Edward III. granted (for a certain rent of ten pounds by the
-year) the said Temple, with the appurtenances thereunto adjoining, to
-the students of the common laws of England, in whose possession the same
-hath ever since remained; and is now divided into two houses of several
-students, by the same of inns of court, to wit, the Inner Temple, and
-the Middle Temple, who kept two several halls, but they resort all to
-the said Temple church, in the round walk whereof (which is the west
-part without the choir) there remaineth monuments of noblemen buried, to
-the number of eleven, eight of them are images of armed knights, five
-lying cross-legged as men vowed to the Holy Land, against the infidels
-and unbelieving Jews; the other three straight-legged; the rest are
-coped stones all of grey marble; the first of the cross-legged was W.
-Marshall, the elder Earl of Pembroke, who died 1219; Will. Marshall
-his son, Earl of Pembroke, was the second, he died, 1231; and Gilbert
-Marshall his brother, Earl of Pembroke, slain in a tournament at
-Hertford, beside Ware, in the year 1241.
-
-After this Robert Rose, otherwise called Fursan, being made a Templar in
-the year 1245, died and was buried there, and these are all that I can
-remember to have read of. Sir Nicholas Hare, Master of the Rolls, was
-buried there in the year 1557.
-
-In the year 1381, the rebels of Essex and of Kent destroyed and plucked
-down the houses and lodgings of this Temple, took out of the church the
-books and records that were in hutches of the apprentices of the law,
-carried them into the streets, and burnt them; the house they spoiled
-and burnt for wrath that they bare Sir Robert Halles, Lord-prior of St.
-John's in Smithfield; but it was since again at divers times repaired,
-namely, the gate-house of the Middle Temple, in the reign of Henry
-VIII., by Sir Amias Paulet, knight, upon occasion, as in my _Annales_ I
-have shown. The great hall of the Middle Temple was newly built in the
-year 1572, in the reign of our Queen Elizabeth.
-
-This Temple church hath a master and four stipendiary priests, with a
-clerk: these for the ministration of Divine service there have stipends
-allowed unto them out of the possessions and revenues of the late
-hospital and house of St. John's of Jerusalem in England, as it had
-been in the reign of Edward VI.; and thus much for the said new Temple,
-the farthest west part of this ward, and also of this city for the
-liberties thereof; which ward hath an alderman, and his deputies three.
-In Sepulchre's parish, common council six, constables four, scavengers
-four, wardmote inquest twelve; St. Bridgetes parish, common councillors
-eight, constables eight, scavengers eight, wardmote inquest twenty; in
-St. Andrewes, common council two, constables two, scavengers three,
-wardmote inquest twelve. It is taxed to the fifteen at thirty-five
-pounds one shilling.[271]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[264] With the following inscription: "_Hic jacet Raherus primus
-canonicus, et primus prior istius Ecclesiæ_."
-
-[265] "The forrens were licensed for three dayes; the freemen so long as
-they would, which was sixe or seven dayes."--_Stow._
-
-[266] "John Davy, a false accuser of his master, of him was raised the
-by-word,--If ye serve me so, I will call you Davy."--_Stow._
-
-[267] "Commonly called Ely place."--_1st edition_, p. 323.
-
-[268] Fewters, idle people, probably from the old French _Fautier_,
-which Roquefort, _Glossaire de la Langue Romane_, defines "_Criminel
-Coupable_," or from _Fautteur_, "_rempli de défauts et de mauvaises
-habitudes_."
-
-[269] Matthew Paris.
-
-[270] "And others in other places."--_1st edition_, p. 325.
-
-
-
-
-BRIDGE WARDE WITHOUT, THE TWENTY-SIXTH IN NUMBER; CONSISTING OF THE
-BOROUGH OF SOUTHWARKE, IN THE COUNTY OF SURREY.
-
-
-Having treated of wards in London, on the north side of the Thames (in
-number twenty-five), I am now to cross over the said river into the
-borough of Southwark, which is also a ward of London without the walls,
-on the south side thereof, as is Portsoken on the east, and Farringdon
-extra on the west.
-
-This borough being in the county of Surrey, consisteth of divers
-streets, ways, and winding lanes, all full of buildings, inhabited; and,
-first, to begin at the west part thereof, over against the west suburb
-of the city.
-
-On the bank of the river Thames there is now a continual building of
-tenements, about half a mile in length to the bridge. Then from the
-bridge, straight towards the south, a continual street, called Long
-Southwark, built on both sides with divers lanes and alleys up to St.
-George's church, and beyond it through Blackman street towards New
-town (or Newington); the liberties of which borough extend almost to
-the parish church of New town aforesaid, distant one mile from London
-Bridge, and also south-west a continual building almost to Lambeth, more
-than one mile from the said bridge.
-
-Then from the bridge along by the Thames eastward is St. Olave's street,
-having continual building on both the sides, with lanes and alleys, up
-to Battle bridge, to Horsedowne, and towards Rother hithe; also some
-good half mile in length from London Bridge.
-
-So that I account the whole continual buildings on the bank of the said
-river, from the west towards the east, to be more than a large mile in
-length.
-
-Then have ye, from the entering towards the said Horsedown, one other
-continual street called Bermondes high street, which stretcheth south,
-likewise furnished with buildings on both sides, almost half a mile
-in length, up to the late dissolved monastery of St. Saviour called
-Bermondsey. And from thence is one Long lane (so called of the length),
-turning west to St. George's church afore named. Out of the which lane
-mentioned Long lane breaketh one other street towards the south and by
-east, and this is called Kentish street, for that is the way leading
-into that country: and so have you the bounds of this borough.
-
-The antiquities most notable in this borough are these: First, for
-ecclesiastical, there was Bermondsey, an abbey of black monks, St. Mary
-Overies, a priory of canons regular, St. Thomas, a college or hospital
-for the poor, and the Loke, a lazar house in Kent street. Parish
-churches there have been six, whereof five do remain; viz., St. Mary
-Magdalen, in the priory of St. Mary Overy, now the same St. Mary Overy
-is the parish church for the said Mary Magdalen, and for St. Margaret on
-the hill, and is called St. Saviour.
-
-St. Margaret on the hill being put down is now a court for justice;
-St. Thomas in the hospital serveth for a parish church as before; St.
-George a parish church as before it did; so doth St. Olave and St. Mary
-Magdalen, by the abbey of Bermondsey.
-
-There be also these five prisons or gaols:
-
- The Clinke on the Banke.
- The Compter, in the late parish church of St. Margaret.
- The Marshalsey.
- The Kinges Bench.
- And the White Lion, all in Long Southwarke.
-
-Houses most notable be these:
-
- The Bishop of Winchester's house.
- The Bishop of Rochester's house.
- The Duke of Suffolk's house, or Southwark place.
- The Tabard, an hostery or inn.
- The Abbot of Hyde, his house.
- The Prior of Lewes, his house.
- The Abbot of St. Augustine, his house.
- The Bridge house.
- The Abbot of Battaile, his house.
- Battaile bridge.
- The Stewes on the bank of Thames.
- And the Bear gardens there.
-
-Now, to return to the west bank, there be two bear gardens, the old
-and new places, wherein be kept bears, bulls, and other beasts, to be
-baited; as also mastiffs in several kennels, nourished to bait them.
-These bears and other beasts are there baited in plots of ground,
-scaffolded about for the beholders to stand safe.
-
-Next on this bank was sometime the Bordello, or Stewes, a place so
-called of certain stew-houses privileged there, for the repair of
-incontinent men to the like women; of the which privilege I have read
-thus:
-
-In a parliament holden at Westminster, the 8th of Henry II., it was
-ordained by the commons, and confirmed by the king and lords, that
-divers constitutions for ever should be kept within that lordship or
-franchise, according to the old customs that had been there used time
-out of mind: amongst the which these following were some, viz.
-
-"That no stew-holder or his wife should let or stay any single woman, to
-go and come freely at all times when they listed.
-
-"No stew-holder to keep any woman to board, but she to board abroad at
-her pleasure.
-
-"To take no more for the woman's chamber in the week than fourteen pence.
-
-"Not to keep open his doors upon the holidays.
-
-"Not to keep any single woman in his house on the holidays, but the
-bailiff to see them voided out of the lordship.
-
-"No single woman to be kept against her will that would leave her sin.
-
-"No stew-holder to receive any woman of religion, or any man's wife.
-
-"No single woman to take money to lie with any man, but she lie with him
-all night till the morrow.
-
-"No man to be drawn or enticed into any stew-house.
-
-"The constables, bailiff, and others, every week to search every
-stew-house.
-
-"No stew-holder to keep any woman that hath the perilous infirmity
-of burning, not to sell bread, ale, flesh, fish, wood, coal, or any
-victuals, etc."
-
-These and many more orders were to be observed upon great pain and
-punishment. I have also seen divers patents of confirmation, namely, one
-dated 1345, the 19th of Edward III.[272] Also I find, that in the 4th
-of Richard II., these stew-houses belonging to William Walworth, then
-mayor of London, were farmed by Froes of Flanders, and spoiled by Walter
-Tyler, and other rebels of Kent: notwithstanding, I find that ordinances
-for the same place and houses were again confirmed in the reign of Henry
-VI., to be continued as before. Also, Robert Fabian writeth, that in the
-year 1506, the 21st of Henry VII., the said stew-houses in Southwarke
-were for a season inhibited, and the doors closed up, but it was not
-long (saith he) ere the houses there were set open again, so many as
-were permitted, for (as it was said) whereas before were eighteen
-houses, from thenceforth were appointed to be used but twelve only.
-These allowed stew-houses had signs on their fronts, towards the Thames,
-not hanged out, but painted on the walls, as a Boar's head, the Cross
-keys, the Gun, the Castle, the Crane, the Cardinal's hat, the Bell,
-the Swan, etc. I have heard of ancient men, of good credit, report,
-that these single women were forbidden the rites of the church, so long
-as they continued that sinful life, and were excluded from Christian
-burial, if they were not reconciled before their death. And therefore
-there was a plot of ground called the Single Woman's churchyard,
-appointed for them far from the parish church.
-
-In the year of Christ 1546, the 37th of Henry VIII., this row of
-stews in Southwarke was put down by the king's commandment, which was
-proclaimed by sound of trumpet, no more to be privileged, and used as a
-common brothel, but the inhabitants of the same to keep good and honest
-rule as in other places of this realm, etc.
-
-Then next is the Clinke, a gaol or prison for the trespassers in those
-parts; namely, in old time, for such as should brabble, frey, or break
-the peace on the said bank, or in the brothel houses, they were by the
-inhabitants thereabout apprehended and committed to this gaol, where
-they were straitly imprisoned.
-
-Next is the bishop of Winchester's house, or lodging, when he cometh to
-this city; which house was first built by William Gifford, bishop of
-Winchester, about the year 1107, the 7th of Henry I., upon a plot of
-ground pertaining to the prior of Bermondsey, as appeareth by a writ
-directed unto the barons of the Exchequer, in the year 1366, the 41st of
-Edward III. (the bishop's see being void), for eight pounds, due to the
-monks of Bermondsey for the bishop of Winchester's lodging in Southwark.
-This is a very fair house, well repaired, and hath a large wharf and
-landing-place, called the bishop of Winchester's stairs.
-
-Adjoining to this, on the south side the roof, is the bishop of
-Rochester's inn or lodging, by whom first erected I do not now remember
-me to have read; but well I wot the same of long time hath not been
-frequented by any bishop, and lieth ruinous for any lack of reparations.
-The abbot of Maverley had a house there.
-
-East from the bishop of Winchester's house, directly over against it,
-standeth a fair church called St. Mary over the Rie, or Overie, that
-is over the water. This church, or some other in place thereof, was
-of old time, long before the Conquest, a house of sisters, founded by
-a maiden named Mary; unto the which house and sisters she left (as
-was left to her by her parents) the oversight and profits of a cross
-ferry, or traverse ferry over the Thames, there kept before that any
-bridge was built. This house of sisters was after by Swithen, a noble
-lady, converted into a college of priests, who in place of the ferry
-built a bridge of timber, and from time to time kept the same in good
-reparations, but lastly the same bridge was built of stone; and then
-in the year 1106 was this church again founded for canons regulars by
-William Pont de la Arche and William Dauncy, knights, Normans.
-
-William Gifford, bishop of Winchester, was a good benefactor also, for
-he, as some have noted, built the body of that church in the year 1106,
-the 7th of Henry I.
-
-The canons first entered the said church then; Algodus was the first
-prior.
-
-King Henry I. by his charter gave them the church of St. Margaret in
-Southwarke.
-
-King Stephen confirmed the gift of King Henry, and also gave the
-stone-house, which was William Pont de le Arche's, by Downegate.
-
-This priory was burnt about the year 1207, wherefore the canons did
-found a hospital near unto their priory, where they celebrated until the
-priory was repaired; which hospital was after, by consent of Peter de la
-Roch, bishop of Winchester, removed into the land of Anicius, archdeacon
-of Surrey, in the year 1228, a place where the water was more plentiful,
-and the air more wholesome, and was dedicated to St. Thomas.
-
-This Peter de Rupibus, or de la Roch, founded a large chapel of St. Mary
-Magdalen, in the said church of St. Mary Overie; which chapel was after
-appointed to be the parish church for the inhabitants near adjoining.
-
-This church was again newly built in the reign of Richard II. and King
-Henry IV.
-
-John Gower, esquire, a famous poet,[273] was then an especial benefactor
-to that work, and was there buried on the north side of the said church,
-in the chapel of St. John, where he founded a chantry: he lieth under a
-tomb of stone, with his image, also of stone, over him: the hair of his
-head, auburn, long to his shoulders, but curling up, and a small forked
-beard; on his head a chaplet, like a coronet of four roses; a habit of
-purple, damasked down to his feet; a collar of esses gold about his
-neck; under his head the likeness of three books, which he compiled. The
-first, named _Speculum Meditantis_, written in French; the second, _Vox
-Clamantis_, penned in Latin; the third, _Confessio Amantis_, written in
-English, and this last is printed. _Vox Clamantis_, with his _Cronica
-Tripartita_, and other, both in Latin and French, never printed, I have
-and do possess, but _Speculum Meditantis_ I never saw, though heard
-thereof to be in Kent. Beside on the wall where he lieth, there was
-painted three virgins crowned; one of the which was named Charity,
-holding this device:
-
- "En toy qui es Fitz de dieu le pere,
- Sauve soit, que gist souz cest piere."
-
-The second writing, Mercy, with this device:
-
- "O bone Jesu, fait ta mercie,
- Al alme, dont le corps gist icy."
-
-The third writing, Pity, with this device:
-
- "Pur ta pité Jesu regarde,
- Et met cest alme en sauve garde."
-
-His arms a field argent, on a cheveron azure, three leopards' heads
-gold, their tongues gules; two angels supporters, on the crest a talbot:
-his epitaph,
-
- "Armigeri scutum nihil a modo fert sibi tutum,
- Reddidit immolutum morti generale tributum,
- Spiritus exutum se gaudeat esse solutum,
- Est ubi virtutum regnum sine labe statutum,"
-
-The roof of the middle west aisle fell down in the year 1469. This
-priory was surrendered to Henry VIII., the 31st of his reign, the 27th
-of October, the year of Christ 1539, valued at £624 6_s._ 6_d._ by the
-year.
-
-About Christmas next following, the church of the said priory was
-purchased of the king by the inhabitants of the borough, Doctor Stephen
-Gardner, bishop of Winchester, putting to his helping hand; they made
-thereof a parish church for the parish church of St. Mary Magdalen, on
-the south side of the said choir, and of St. Margaret on the hill, which
-were made one parish of St. Saviour.
-
-There be monuments in this church,--of Robert Liliarde, or Hiliarde,
-esquire; Margaret, daughter to the Lady Audley, wife to Sir Thomas
-Audley; William Grevill, esquire, and Margaret his wife; one of the
-heirs of William Spershut, esquire; Dame Katherine, wife to John Stoke,
-alderman; Robert Merfin, esquire; William Undall, esquire; Lord Ospay
-Ferar; Sir George Brewes, knight; John Browne; Lady Brandon, wife to
-Sir Thomas Brandon; William, Lord Scales; William, Earl Warren; Dame
-Maude, wife to Sir John Peach; Lewknor; Dame Margaret Elrington, one
-of the heirs of Sir Thomas Elrington; John Bowden, esquire; Robert St.
-Magil; John Sandhurst; John Gower; John Duncell, merchant-tailor, 1516;
-John Sturton, esquire; Robert Rouse; Thomas Tong, first Norroy, and
-after Clarenceaux king of arms; William Wickham, translated from the
-see of Lincoln to the bishopric of Winchester in the month of March,
-1595, deceased the 11th of June next following, and was buried here;
-Thomas Cure, esquire, saddler to King Edward VI., Queen Mary, and Queen
-Elizabeth, deceased the 24th of May, 1598, etc.
-
-Now passing through St. Mary Over's close (in possession of the Lord
-Mountacute), and Pepper alley, into Long Southwark, on the right hand
-thereof the market-hill, where the leather is sold, there stood the late
-named parish church of St. Margaret, given to St. Mary Overies by Henry
-I., put down and joined with the parish of St. Mary Magdalen, and united
-to the late dissolved priory church of St. Mary Overy.
-
-A part of this parish church of St. Margaret is now a court, wherein the
-assizes and sessions be kept, and the court of admiralty is also there
-kept. One other part of the same church is now a prison, called the
-Compter in Southwark, etc.
-
-Farther up on that side, almost directly over against St. George's
-church, was sometime a large and most sumptuous house, built by Charles
-Brandon, late Duke of Suffolk, in the reign of Henry VIII., which was
-called Suffolk house, but coming afterwards into the king's hands, the
-same was called Southwarke place, and a mint of coinage was there kept
-for the king.
-
-To this place came King Edward VI., in the second of his reign, from
-Hampton Court, and dined in it. He at that time made John Yorke, one
-of the sheriffs of London, knight, and then rode through the city to
-Westminster.
-
-Queen Mary gave this house to Nicholas Heath, Archbishop of Yorke, and
-to his successors, for ever, to be their inn or lodging for their repair
-to London, in recompense of Yorke house near to Westminster, which King
-Henry her father had taken from Cardinal Wolsey, and from the see of
-Yorke.
-
-Archbishop Heath sold the same house to a merchant, or to merchants,
-that pulled it down, sold the lead, stone, iron, etc.; and in place
-thereof built many small cottages of great rents, to the increasing
-of beggars in that borough. The archbishop bought Norwich house, or
-Suffolke place, near unto Charing cross, because it was near unto the
-court, and left it to his successors.
-
-Now on the south side to return back again towards the bridge, over
-against this Suffolke place, is the parish church of St. George,
-sometime pertaining to the priory of Barmondsey, by the gift of Thomas
-Arderne and Thomas his son, in the year 1122. There lie buried in this
-church, William Kirton, esquire, and his wives, 1464.
-
-Then is the White Lion, a gaol so called, for that the same was a common
-hosterie for the receipt of travellers by that sign. This house was
-first used as a gaol within these forty years last, since the which time
-the prisoners were once removed thence to a house in Newtowne, where
-they remained for a short time, and were returned back again to the
-foresaid White Lion, there to remain as in the appointed gaol for the
-county of Surrey.
-
-Next is the gaol or prison of the King's Bench, but of what antiquity
-the same is I know not. For I have read that the courts of the King's
-Bench and Chancery have ofttimes been removed from London to other
-places, and so hath likewise the gaols that serve those courts; as in
-the year 1304, Edward I. commanded the courts of the King's Bench and
-the Exchequer, which had remained seven years at Yorke, to be removed to
-their old places at London. And in the year 1387, the 11th of Richard
-II., Robert Tresilian, chief justice, came to the city of Coventrie, and
-there sate by the space of a month, as justice of the Kinge's benches,
-and caused to be indited in that court, about the number of two thousand
-persons of that country, etc.
-
-It seemeth, therefore, that for that time, the prison or gaol of that
-court was not far off. Also in the year 1392, the 16th of the same
-Richard, the Archbishop of York being Lord Chancellor, for good will
-that he bare to his city, caused the King's Bench and Chancery to be
-removed from London to York, but ere long they were returned to London.
-
-Then is the Marshalsey, another gaol or prison, so called, as pertaining
-to the marshals of England. Of what continuance kept in Southwark I have
-not learned; but like it is, that the same hath been removable, at the
-pleasure of the marshals: for I find that in the year 1376, the 50th
-of Edward III., Henry Percie (being marshal) kept his prisoners in the
-city of London, where having committed one John Prendergast, of Norwich,
-contrary to the liberties of the city of London, the citizens, by
-persuasion of the Lord Fitzwalter their standard-bearer, took armour and
-ran with great rage to the marshal's inn, brake up the gates, brought
-out the prisoner, and conveyed him away, minding to have burnt the
-stocks in the midst of their city, but they first sought for Sir Henry
-Percy to have punished him, as I have noted in my _Annales_.
-
-More about the feast of Easter next following, John, Duke of Lancaster,
-having caused all the whole navy of England to be gathered together at
-London: it chanced a certain esquire to kill one of the shipmen, which
-act the other shipmen taking in ill part, they brought their suit into
-the king's court of the Marshalsey, which then as chanced (saith mine
-author) was kept in Southwark: but when they perceived that court to be
-so favourable to the murderer, and further that the king's warrant was
-also gotten for his pardon, they in great fury ran to the house wherein
-the murderer was imprisoned, brake into it, and brought forth the
-prisoner with his gyves on his legs, they thrust a knife to his heart,
-and sticked him as if he had been a dog; after this they tied a rope
-to his gyves, and drew him to the gallows, where when they had hanged
-him, as though they had done a great act, they caused the trumpets to
-be sounded before them to their ships, and there in great triumph they
-spent the rest of the day.
-
-Also the rebels of Kent, in the year 1381, brake down the houses of
-the Marshalsey and King's Bench in Southwark, took from thence the
-prisoners, brake down the house of Sir John Immorth, then marshal of the
-Marshalsey and King's Bench, etc. After this, in the year 1387, the 11th
-of Richard II., the morrow after Bartholomew day, the king kept a great
-council in the castle of Nottingham, and the Marshalsey of the king was
-then kept at Loughborrow by the space of five days or more. In the year
-1443, Sir Walter Manny was marshal of the Marshalsey, the 22nd of Henry
-VI. William Brandon, esquire, was marshal in the 8th of Edward IV. In
-the year 1504 the prisoners of the Marshalsey, then in Southwark, brake
-out, and many of them being taken were executed, especially such as had
-been committed for felony or treason.
-
-From thence towards London bridge, on the same side, be many fair inns,
-for recepit of travellers, by these signs, the Spurre, Christopher,
-Bull, Queene's Head, Tabarde, George, Hart, Kinge's Head, etc. Amongst
-the which, the most ancient is the Tabard, so called of the sign, which,
-as we now term it, is of a jacket, or sleeveless coat, whole before,
-open on both sides, with a square collar, winged at the shoulders; a
-stately garment of old time, commonly worn of noblemen and others, both
-at home and abroad in the wars, but then (to wit in the wars) their arms
-embroidered, or otherwise depict upon them, that every man by his coat
-of arms might be known from others: but now these tabards are only worn
-by the heralds, and be called their coats of arms in service; for the
-inn of the tabard, Geffrey Chaucer, esquire, the most famous poet of
-England, in commendation thereof, writeth thus:--
-
- "Befell that in that season, on a day,
- In Southwarke at the Tabard, as I lay,
- Readie to wenden on my Pilgrimage
- To Canterburie with devout courage,
- At night was come into that hosterie,
- Well nine-and-twentie in a companie,
- Of sundrie folke, by adventure yfall,
- In fellowship, and pilgrimes were they all,
- That toward Canterburie woulden ride,
- The chambers and the stables weren wide,
- And well we weren eased at the best," etc.
-
-Within this inn was also the lodging of the abbot of Hide (by the city
-of Winchester), a fair house for him and his train, when he came to that
-city to parliament, etc.
-
-And then Theeves lane, by St. Thomas' hospital. The hospital of St.
-Thomas, first founded by Richard Prior of Bermondsey, in the Selerers
-ground against the wall of the monastery, in the year 1213, he named
-it the Almerie, or house of alms for converts and poor children; for
-the which ground the prior ordained that the almoner should pay ten
-shillings and four pence yearly to the Selerer at Michaelmas.
-
-But Peter de Rupibus,[274] Bishop of Winchester, in the year 1215,
-founded the same again more fully for canons regular in place of the
-first hospital; he increased the rent thereof to three hundred and
-forty-four pounds in the year. Thus was this hospital holden of the
-prior and abbot of Bermondsey till the year 1428, at which time a
-composition was made between Thomas Thetford, abbot of Bermondsey, and
-Nicholas Buckland, master of the said hospital of St. Thomas, for all
-the lands and tenements which were holden of the said abbot and convent
-in Southwark, or elsewhere, for the old rent to be paid unto the said
-abbot.
-
-There be monuments in this hospital church of Sir Robert Chamber,
-knight; William Fines, Lord Say; Richard Chaucer, John Gloucester,
-Adam Atwood, John Ward, Michael Cambridge, William West, John Golding,
-esquires; John Benham, George Kirkes, Thomas Kninton, Thomas Baker,
-gentlemen; Robert, son to Sir Thomas Fleming; Agnes, wife to Sir Walter
-Dennis, knight, daughter, and one of the heirs of Sir Robert Danvars;
-John Evarey, gentleman; etc.
-
-This hospital was by the visitors, in the year 1538, valued at two
-hundred and sixty-six pounds seventeen shillings and six pence, and was
-surrendered to Henry VIII., in the 30th of his reign.
-
-In the year 1552, the citizens of London having purchased the void
-suppressed hospital of St. Thomas in Southwark, in the month of July
-began the reparations thereof, for poor, impotent, lame, and diseased
-people, so that in the month of November next following, the sick and
-poor people were taken in. And in the year 1553, on the 10th of April,
-King Edward VI., in the 7th of his reign, gave to the mayor, commonalty,
-and citizens of London, to be a workhouse for the poor and idle persons
-of this city, his house of Bridewell, and seven hundred marks land
-of the Savoy rents, which hospital he had suppressed, with all the
-beds, bedding, and other furniture belonging to the same, towards the
-maintenance of the said workhouse of Bridewell, and of this hospital of
-St. Thomas in Southwark. This gift the king confirmed by his charter,
-dated the 26th of June next following, and willed it to be called the
-King's hospital in Southwark.
-
-The church of this hospital, which of old time served for the tenements
-near adjoining, and pertaining to the said hospital, remaineth as a
-parish church.
-
-But now to come to St. Olave's street. On the bank of the river of
-Thames, is the parish church of St. Olave, a fair and meet large church,
-but a far larger parish especially of aliens or strangers, and poor
-people; in which church there lieth entombed Sir John Burcettur, knight,
-1466.
-
-Over against this parish church, on the south side the street was
-sometime one great house built of stone, with arched gates, pertaining
-to the prior of Lewes in Sussex, and was his lodging when he came to
-London; it is now a common hosterie for travellers, and hath to sign the
-Walnut Tree.
-
-Then east from the said parish church of St. Olave is a key. In the
-year 1330, by the license of Simon Swanlond, mayor of London, built by
-Isabel, widow to Hamond Goodchepe. And next thereunto was then a great
-house of stone and timber, belonging to the abbot of St. Augustine
-without the walls of Canterburie, which was an ancient piece of work,
-and seemeth to be one of the first built houses on that side the river
-over-against the city; it was called the abbot's inn of St. Augustine in
-Southwark, and was sometime holden of the Earls of Warren and Surrey, as
-appeareth by a deed made 1281, which I have read, and may be Englished
-thus:--
-
-"To all whom this present writing shall come, John Earl Warren sendeth
-greeting. Know ye, that we have altogether remised and quit-claimed for
-us and our heirs for ever, to Nicholas, abbot of St. Augustine's of
-Canterburie, and the convent of the same, and their successors, suit to
-our court of Southwarke, which they owe unto us, for all that messuage
-and houses thereon built, and all their appurtenances, which they have
-of our fee in Southwarke, situate upon the Thames, between the Bridge
-house and the church of St. Olave. And the said messuage, with the
-buildings thereon built, and all their appurtenances, to them and their
-successors, we have granted in perpetual alms, to hold of us and our
-heirs for the same, saving the service due to any other persons, if any
-such be, then to us; and for this remit and grant the said abbot and
-convent have given unto us five shillings of rent yearly in Southwarke,
-and have received us and our heirs in all benefices which shall be in
-their church for ever." This suit of court one William Graspeis was
-bound to do to the said earl for the said messuage, and heretofore to
-acquit in all things the church of St. Augustine against the said earl.
-
-This house of late time belonged to Sir Anthony Sentlegar, then to
-Warham Sentlegar, etc., and is now called Sentlegar house, but divided
-into sundry tenements. Next is the Bridgehouse, so called as being a
-storehouse for stone, timber, or whatsoever pertaining to the building
-or repairing of London bridge.
-
-This house seemeth to have taken beginning with the first founding of
-the bridge either of stone or timber; it is a large plot of ground, on
-the bank of the river Thames, containing divers large buildings for
-stowage of things necessary towards reparation of the said bridge.
-
-There are also divers garners, for laying up of wheat, and other
-grainers for service of the city, as need requireth. Moreover, there
-be certain ovens built, in number ten, of which six be very large, the
-other four being but half so big. These were purposely made to bake out
-the bread corn of the said grainers, to the best advantage for relief of
-the poor citizens, when need should require. Sir John Throstone, knight,
-sometime an embroiderer, then a goldsmith, one of the sheriffs 1516,
-gave by his testament towards the making of these ovens, two hundred
-pounds, which thing was performed by his executors. Sir John Munday,
-goldsmith, then being mayor, there was of late, for the enlarging of the
-said Bridge house, taken in an old brewhouse, called Goldings, which
-was given to the city by George Monex, sometime mayor, and in place
-thereof, is now a fair brewhouse new built, for service of the city with
-beer.
-
-Next was the abbot of Battailes inn, betwixt the Bridge house and
-Battaile bridge, likewise on the bank of the river of Thames; the walks
-and gardens thereunto appertaining, on the other side of the way before
-the gate of the said house, and was called the Maze; there is now an
-inn, called the Flower de Luce, for that the sign is three Flower de
-Luces. Much other buildings of small tenements are thereon builded,
-replenished with strangers and other, for the most part poor people.
-
-Then is Battaile bridge, so called of Battaile abbey, for that it
-standeth on the ground, and over a water-course (flowing out of Thames)
-pertaining to that abbey, and was, therefore, both built and repaired by
-the abbots of that house, as being hard adjoining to the abbot's lodging.
-
-Beyond this bridge is Bermondsey street, turning south, in the south end
-whereof was sometime a priory or abbey of St. Saviour, called Bermond's
-Eye in Southwark, founded by Alwin Childe, a citizen of London, in the
-year 1081.
-
-Peter, Richard, Obstert, and Umbalde, monks de Charitate, came unto
-Bermondsey, in the year 1089, and Peter was made first prior there, by
-appointment of the prior of the house, called Charity in France, by
-which means this priory of Bermondsey (being a cell to that in France)
-was accounted a priory of Aliens.
-
-In the year 1094 deceased Alwin Childe, founder of this house. Then
-William Rufus gave to the monks his manor of Bermondsey, with the
-appurtenances, and built for them there a new great church.
-
-Robert Blewet, Bishop of Lincolne (King William's chancellor), gave them
-the manor of Charlton, with the appurtenances. Also Geffrey Martell, by
-the grant of Geffrey Magnavile, gave them the land of Halingbury, and
-the tithe of Alferton, etc.
-
-More, in the year 1122, Thomas of Arderne, and Thomas his son, gave to
-the monks of Bermond's Eye the church of St. George in Southwark, etc.
-
-In the year 1165, King Henry II. confirmed to them the hyde or territory
-of Southwark, and Laygham Wadden, with the land of Coleman, etc.
-
-In the year 1371, the priors of Aliens, throughout England, being seized
-into the king's hands, Richard Denton an Englishman was made prior of
-Bermondsey, to whom was committed the custody of the said priory, by the
-letters patents of King Edward III., saving to the king the advowsons of
-churches.
-
-In the year 1380, the 4th of Richard II., this priory was made a denison
-(or free English) for the fine of two hundred marks paid to the king's
-Hanaper in the Chancery. In the year 1399 John Attelborough, prior of
-Bermondsey, was made the first abbot of that house by Pope Boniface IX.,
-at the suit of King Richard II.
-
-In the year 1417, Thomas Thetford, abbot of Bermondsey, held a plea in
-chancery against the king, for the manors of Preston, Bermondsey, and
-Stone, in the county of Somerset, in the which suit the abbot prevailed
-and recovered against the king.
-
-In the year 1539 this abbey was valued to dispend by the year four
-hundred and seventy-four pounds fourteen shillings and four pence
-halfpenny, and was surrendered to Henry VIII., the 31st of his reign;
-the abbey church was then pulled down by Sir Thomas Pope, knight, and in
-place thereof a goodly house built of stone and timber, now pertaining
-to the earls of Sussex.
-
-There are buried in that church, Leoftane, provost, shrive or domesman
-of London, 1115; Sir William Bowes, knight, and Dame Elizabeth his wife;
-Sir Thomas Pikeworth, knight; Dame Anne Audley; George, son to John Lord
-Audley; John Winkefield, esquire; Sir Nicholas Blonket, knight; Dame
-Bridget, wife to William Trussell; Holgrave, baron of the exchequer; etc.
-
-Next unto this abbey church standeth a proper church of St. Mary
-Magdalen, built by the priors of Bermondsey, serving for resort of the
-inhabitants (tenants to the prior or abbots near adjoining) there to
-have their Divine service: this church remaineth, and serveth as afore,
-and is called a parish church.
-
-Then in Kent street is a lazar house for leprous people, called the Loke
-in Southwark; the foundation whereof I find not. Now, having touched
-divers principal parts of this borough, I am to speak somewhat of its
-government, and so to end.
-
-This borough, upon petition made by the citizens of London to Edward
-I., in the 1st year of his reign, was, for divers causes, by parliament
-granted to them for ever, yielding into the exchequer the fee-firm of
-ten pounds by the year; which grant was confirmed by Edward III., who,
-in the 3rd of his reign gave them license to take a toll towards the
-charge of paving the said borough with stone. Henry IV. confirmed the
-grant of his predecessors, so did Edward IV., etc.
-
-But in the year 1550, King Edward VI., for the sum of six hundred and
-forty-seven pounds two shillings and one penny, paid into his court
-of augmentations and revenues of his crown, granted to the mayor
-and commonalty all his lands and tenements in Southwark, except, and
-reserved, the capital messuage, two mansions, called Southwark place,
-late the Duke of Suffolk's, and all the gardens and lands to the same
-appertaining, the park, and the messuage called the Antilope. Moreover,
-he gave them the lordship and manor of Southwark, with all members and
-rights thereof, late pertaining to the monastery of Bermondsey. And
-all messuages, places, buildings, rents, courts, waifs and strays, to
-the same appertaining, in the county of Surrey, except as is before
-excepted. He also granted unto them his manor and borough of Southwark,
-with all the members, rights, and appurtenances, late of the possession
-of the Archbishop of Canterbury and his see in Southwark. Moreover,
-for the sum of five hundred marks, he granted to the said mayor and
-commonalty, and their successors, in and through the borough and town of
-Southwark, and in all the parishes of St. Saviour, St. Olave, and St.
-George, and the parish of St. Thomas Hospital, now called the King's
-hospital, and elsewhere, in the said town and borough of Southwark,
-and Kentish street, Bermondsey street, in the parish of Newington, all
-waifs and strays, treasure trove, all felons' goods, etc., within the
-parishes and precinct aforesaid, etc.: the return of writs, processes,
-and warrants, etc.: together with a fair in the whole town for three
-days, to wit, the 7th, 8th, and 9th of September, yearly, with a court
-of pye powders. A view of franke pledge, with attachments, arrests, etc.
-Also to arrest all felons, and other malefactors, within their precinct,
-and send them to ward, and to Newgate. Provided that nothing in that
-grant should be prejudicial to the stewards and marshal of the king's
-house. The same premises to be holden of the manor of East Greenwich, in
-the county of Kent, by fealty in free forage. Dated at Westminster, the
-23rd of April, in the 4th of his reign. All which was also confirmed by
-parliament, etc. And the same year, in the Whitsun week, in a court of
-aldermen, kept at the Guildhall of London, Sir John Aylophe, knight, was
-sworn the first alderman of Bridge ward without, and made up the number
-of twenty-six aldermen of London.
-
-This borough at a subsidy to the king yieldeth about one thousand
-marks, or eight hundred pounds, which is more than any one city in
-England payeth, except the city of London. And also the muster of men
-in this borough doth likewise in number surpass all other cities,
-except London. And thus much for the borough of Southwark, one of the
-twenty-six wards of London, which hath an alderman, deputies three,
-and a bailiff, common-council none, constables sixteen, scavengers six,
-wardmote inquest twenty. And is taxed to the fifteen at seventeen pounds
-seventeen shillings and eight pence.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[271] "And in the Exchequer at thirty-four pounds."--_1st edition_, p.
-338.
-
-[272] "Li. St. Mary Eborum. English people disdayned to be baudes. Froes
-of Flaunders were women for that purpose."--_Stow._
-
-[273] "John Gower was no knight, neither had he any garland of ivie and
-roses, but a chaplet of foure roses onely."--_Stow._
-
-[274] Li. St. Marie Overy.
-
-
-
-
-THE SUBURBS WITHOUT THE WALLS OF THE SAID CITY BRIEFLY TOUCHED. AS ALSO
-WITHOUT THE LIBERTIES MORE AT LARGE DESCRIBED.
-
-
-Having spoken of this city, the original, and increase, by degrees: the
-walls, gates, ditch, castles, towers, bridges, the schools, and houses
-of learning: of the orders and customs, sports, and pastimes: of the
-honour of citizens, and worthiness of men: and last of all, how the same
-city is divided into parts and wards: and how the same be bounded: and
-what monuments of antiquity, or ornaments of building, in every of them,
-as also in the borough of Southwark: I am next to speak briefly of the
-suburbs, as well without the gates and walls as without the liberties,
-and of the monuments in them.
-
-Concerning the estate of the suburbs of this city, in the reign of Henry
-II., Fitz Stephen hath these words:--"Upwards, on the west (saith he),
-is the king's palace, which is an incomparable building, rising with a
-vawmure and bulwark aloft upon the river, two miles from the wall of the
-city, but yet conjoined with a continual suburb. On all sides, without
-the houses of the suburbs, are the citizens' gardens and orchards,
-planted with trees, both large, sightly, and adjoining together. On
-the north side are pastures and plain meadows, with brooks running
-through them, turning water-mills with a pleasant noise. Not far off
-is a great forest, a well wooded chase, having good covert for harts,
-bucks, does, boars, and wild bulls. The corn fields are not of a hungry
-sandy mould, but as the fruitful fields of Asia, yielding plentiful
-increase, and filling the barns with corn. There are near London, on the
-north side, especial wells in the suburbs, sweet, wholesome, and clear.
-Amongst which, Holywell, Clarkenwell, and St. Clement's well, are most
-famous, and most frequented by scholars and youths of the city in summer
-evenings, when they walk forth to take the air." Thus far out of Fitz
-Stephen for the suburbs at that time.
-
-The 2nd of King Henry III. the forest of Middlesex, and the warren of
-Staines, were disafforested; since the which time the suburbs about
-London hath been also mightily increased with buildings; for first,
-to begin in the East, by the Tower of London, is the hospital of St.
-Katherine, founded by Matilda the queen, wife to King Stephen, as is
-afore shown in Portsoken ward; from this precinct of St. Katherine to
-Wapping in the west,[275] the usual place of execution for hanging of
-pirates and sea rovers, at the low-water mark, and there to remain,
-till three tides had overflowed them, was never a house standing within
-these forty years; but since the gallows being after removed farther
-off, a continual street, or filthy strait passage, with alleys of small
-tenements, or cottages, built, inhabited by sailors' victuallers, along
-by the river of Thames, almost to Radcliff, a good mile from the Tower.
-
-On the east side, and by north of the Tower, lieth East Smithfield,
-Hogs' street, and Tower hill; and east from them both, was the new abbey
-called Grace, founded by Edward III. From thence Radcliffe, up East
-Smithfield, by Nightingall lane (which runneth south to the hermitage,
-a brewhouse so called of a hermit sometime being there), beyond this
-lane to the manor of Bramley (called in record of Richard II. Villa
-East Smithfield, and Villa de Bramley), and to the manor of Shadwell,
-belonging to the Dean of Pauls, there hath been of late, in place of
-elm trees, many small tenements raised towards Radcliffe; and Radcliffe
-itself hath been also increased in building eastward (in place where I
-have known[276] a large highway, with fair elm trees on both the sides),
-that the same hath now taken hold of Lime hurst, or Lime host, corruptly
-called Lime house, sometime distant a mile from Ratcliffe.
-
-Having said this much for building at Wapping, East Smithfield, Bramley,
-and Shadwell, all on the south side of the highway to Radcliffe, now
-one note on the north side, also concerning pirates. I read that in the
-year 1440, in the Lent season, certain persons, with six ships, brought
-from beyond the seas fish to victual the city of London, which fish,
-when they had delivered, and were returning homeward, a number of sea
-thieves, in a barge, in the night came upon them, when they were asleep
-in their vessels, riding at anchor on the river Thames, and slew them,
-cut their throats, cast them overboard, took their money, and drowned
-their ships, for that no man should espy or accuse them. Two of these
-thieves were after taken, and hanged in chains upon a gallows set
-upon a raised hill, for that purpose made, in the field beyond East
-Smithfield, so that they might be seen far into the river Thames. The
-first building at Radcliffe in my youth (not to be forgotten) was a fair
-free school and alms houses, founded by Avice Gibson, wife to Nicholas
-Gibson, grocer, as before I have noted: but of late years shipwrights,
-and (for the most part) other marine men, have built many large and
-strong houses for themselves, and smaller for sailors, from thence
-almost to Poplar, and so to Blake wall. Now for Tower hill; the plain
-there is likewise greatly diminished by merchants[277] for building of
-small tenements; from thence towards Aldgate was the Minories, whereof I
-have spoken.
-
-From Aldgate east again lieth a large street, replenished with
-buildings; to wit, on the north side the parish church of St. Botolph,
-and so other buildings, to Hog lane, and to the bars on both sides.
-
-Also without the bars both the sides of the street be pestered with
-cottages and alleys, even up to Whitechapel church, and almost half a
-mile beyond it, into the common field; all which ought to be open and
-free for all men. But this common field, I say, being sometime the
-beauty of this city on that part, is so encroached upon by building of
-filthy cottages, and with other purpressors, inclosures, and laystalls
-(notwithstanding all proclamations and acts of parliament made to
-the contrary), that in some places it scarce remaineth a sufficient
-highway for the meeting of carriages and droves of cattle; much less is
-there any fair, pleasant, or wholesome way for people to walk on foot;
-which is no small blemish to so famous a city to have so unsavoury and
-unseemly an entrance or passage thereunto.
-
-Now of Whitechapel church somewhat, and then back again to Aldgate. This
-church is, as it were, a chapel of ease to the parish of Stebinhith,
-and the parson of Stebinhith hath the gift thereof; which being first
-dedicated to the name of God and the blessed Virgin, is now called St.
-Mary Matfellon. About the year 1428, the 6th of King Henry VI., a devout
-widow of that parish had long time cherished and brought up of alms a
-certain Frenchman, or Breton born, which most unkindly and cruelly in
-a night murdered the said widow sleeping in her bed, and after fled
-with such jewels and other stuff of her as he might carry; but he was
-so freshly pursued, that for fear he took the church of St. George in
-Southwark, and challenged privilege of sanctuary there, and so abjured
-the king's land. Then the constables (having charge of him) brought him
-into London, intending to have conveyed him eastward; but so soon as
-he was come into the parish, where before he had committed the murder,
-the wives cast upon him so much filth and odour of the street, that
-(notwithstanding the best resistance made by the constables) they slew
-him out of hand; and for this feat, it hath been said, that parish to
-have purchased that name of St. Mary Matfellon; but I find in record the
-same to be called Villa beatæ Mariæ de Matfellon, in the 21st of Richard
-II.
-
-More, we read, that in the year 1336, the 10th of Edward III., the
-bishop of Alba, cardinal and parson of Stebinhith, procurator general
-in England, presented a clerk to be parson in the church of the blessed
-Mary called Matfellon, without Aldgate of London, etc.
-
-Now again from Aldgate north-west to Bishopsgate, lieth Houndsditch, and
-so to Bishopsgate.
-
-North, and by east from Bishopsgate, lieth a large street or highway,
-having on the west side thereof the parish church of St. Buttolph.
-
-Then is the hospital of St. Mary of Bethelem, founded by a citizen
-of London, and as before is showed: up to the bars without the which
-is Norton fall gate, a liberty so called, belonging to the dean of
-Pauls; thence up to the late dissolved priory of St. John Baptist,
-called Holywell, a house of nuns, of old time founded by a bishop of
-London. Stephen Grausend, bishop of London, about the year 1318, was a
-benefactor thereunto; re-edified by Sir Thomas Lovel,[278] knight of the
-garter, who built much there in the reigns of Henry VII. and of Henry
-VIII.; he endowed this house with fair lands, and was there buried in a
-large chapel by him built for that purpose. This priory was valued at
-the suppression to have of lands two hundred and ninety-three pounds
-by year, and was surrendered 1539, the 31st of Henry VIII. The church
-thereof being pulled down, many houses have been built for the lodgings
-of noblemen, of strangers born, and other.[279]
-
-From Holywell in the high street is a continual building of tenements
-to Sewers ditch,[280] having one small side of a field, already made a
-garden plot. Over against the north corner of this field, between it and
-the church of St. Leonarde in Shoreditch, sometime stood a cross, now
-a smith's forge, dividing three ways: forth right the highway is built
-upon either side, more than a good flight shot, towards Kinges land,
-Newington, Totanham, etc.
-
-On the left hand is Galde street, which reacheth west to a stone cross,
-over against the north end of Golden lane,[281] and so to the end of
-Goswell street. On the right hand of this Galde street, not far from
-Sowers ditch, but on the north side thereof, is Hoxton, a large street
-with houses on both sides, and is a prebend belonging to Pauls church in
-London, but of Soers ditch parish.
-
-On the right hand beyond Soers ditch church toward Hackney are some late
-built houses upon the common soil, for it was a leystall, but those
-houses belong to the parish of Stebunhith.
-
-On the other side of the highway from Bishopsgate and Houndsditch is the
-Dolphin, a common inn for receipt of travellers; then a house built by
-the Lord John Powlet, then Fisher's folly,[282] and so up to the west
-end of Berwardes lane, is a continual building of small cottages, then
-the hospital called St. Mary Spittle, hard within the bars, whereof I
-have spoken in Bishopsgate ward.
-
-From the which bars towards Soers ditch[283] on that side is all along a
-continual building of small and base tenements, for the most part lately
-erected.
-
-Amongst the which (I mean of the ancientest building) was one row
-of proper small houses, with gardens for poor decayed people, there
-placed by the prior of the said hospital; every one tenant whereof paid
-one penny rent by the year at Christmas, and dined with the prior on
-Christmas day: but after the suppression of the hospital, these houses,
-for want of reparations, in few years were so decayed, that it was
-called Rotten row, and the poor worn out (for there came no new in their
-place) houses, for a small portion of money, were sold from Goddard to
-Russell, a draper, who new built them, and let them out for rent enough,
-taking also large fines of the tenants, near as much as the houses cost
-him purchase and building; for he made his bargains so hardly with all
-men, that both carpenter, bricklayer, and plasterer, were by that work
-undone: and yet, in honour of his name, it is now called Russell's row.
-
-Now for the parish of St. Leonard at Soers ditch, the archdeacon of
-London is always parson thereof, and the cure is served by a vicar. In
-this church have been divers honourable persons buried, as appeareth
-by monuments yet remaining: Sir John Elrington, with Margaret his
-wife, daughter and heir to Thomas Lord Itchingham, widow to William
-Blount, son and heir to Walter Blount, the first Lord Mountjoy, which
-Margaret died 1481, Sir Humfrey Starkie, recorder of London, baron of
-the Exchequer; John Gadde, shereman of London, and Anne his wife, 1480;
-Sir Thomas Seymore, mayor of London, deceased 1535; Sir Thomas Ligh,
-doctor of law, 1545. Item, under one fair monument lieth buried the Lady
-Katherine, daughter to Edward, duke of Buckingham, wife to Ralph Nevell,
-Earl of Westmoreland, who died 1553; also Elianor, daughter to Sir
-William Paston, wife to Thomas Mannars, earl of Rutland, 1551; Margaret,
-daughter to Ralph Nevel, earl of Westmoreland, and wife to Henry
-Mannars, earl of Rutland, 1560; Katherine, daughter to Henry Nevel, earl
-of Westmoreland, and wife to Sir John Constable of Holderness, 1591;
-Anne, daughter to T. Mannars, earl of Rutland; Sir T. Mannars, fourth
-son to Thomas, earl of Rutland, 1591; Oliver Mannars, fifth son to
-Thomas, earl of Rutland, 1563, all under one monument; Richard and Harry
-Young, 1545.
-
-Notwithstanding that of late one vicar there, for covetousness of the
-brass, which he converted into coined silver, plucking up many plates
-fixed on the graves, and left no memory of such as had been buried under
-them, a great injury both to the living and the dead, forbidden by
-public proclamation, in the reign of our sovereign lady Queen Elizabeth,
-but not forborne by many, that either of a preposterous zeal, or of a
-greedy mind, spare not to satisfy themselves by so wicked a means.
-
-One note of Shoreditch, and so an end of that suburb. I read, that in
-the year 1440, the 18th of Henry VI. a fuller of Shoreditch appeached
-of treason many worthy esquires and gentlemen of Kent, but he being
-proved false, was attainted, condemned, and had judgment to be drawn,
-hanged, and quartered; which was done; his head set on London bridge,
-and his quarters on the gates. This justice was done according to the
-xvith of Deuteronomy: "The judges shall make diligent inquisition, and
-if the witness be found false, and to have given false witness against
-his brother, then shall they do unto him as he had thought to do unto
-his brother," etc. I read of the King's Manor vocatur Shoreditch-place,
-in the parish of Hackney, but how it took that name I know not, and
-therefore I will turn back from Shoreditch cross to Bethelem cross, and
-so pass through that hospital into the Morefield, which lieth without
-the postern called Moregate.
-
-This field of old time was called the More, as appeareth by the charter
-of William the Conqueror to the college of St. Martin, declaring a
-running water to pass into the city from the same More. Also Fitzstephen
-writeth of this More, saying thus: "When the great fen, or moor, which
-watereth the walls on the north side, is frozen," etc. This fen, or moor
-field, stretching from the wall of the city betwixt Bishopsgate and the
-postern called Cripples gate, to Fensbery and to Holy well, continued
-a waste and unprofitable ground a long time, so that the same was all
-letten for four marks the year, in the reign of Edward II.; but in
-the year 1415, the 3rd of Henry V., Thomas Fawconer, mayor, as I have
-showed, caused the wall of the city to be broken toward the said moor,
-and built the postern called Moregate, for the ease of the citizens to
-walk that way upon causeys towards Iseldon and Hoxton: moreover, he
-caused the ditches of the city, and other the ditches from Soers ditch
-to Deepe ditch, by Bethelem, into the More ditch, to be new cast and
-cleansed; by means whereof the said fen or moor was greatly drained and
-dried; but shortly after, to wit, in 1477, Ralph Joceline, mayor, for
-repairing of the wall of the city, caused the said moor to be searched
-for clay, and brick to be burnt there, etc.; by which means this field
-was made the worse for a long time.
-
-In the year 1498, all the gardens, which had continued time out of mind
-without Moregate, to wit, about and beyond the lordship of Finsbury,
-were destroyed; and of them was made a plain field for archers to shoot
-in. And in the year 1512, Roger Archley, mayor, caused divers dikes
-to be cast, and made to drain the waters of the said Morefielde, with
-bridges arched over them, and the grounds about to be levelled, whereby
-the said field was made somewhat more commodious, but yet it stood
-full of noisome waters; whereupon, in the year 1527, Sir Thomas Semor,
-mayor, caused divers sluices to be made to convey the said waters over
-the Town ditch, into the course of Walbrooke, and so into the Thames;
-and by these degrees was this fen or moor at length made main and hard
-ground, which before being overgrown with flags, sedges, and rushes,
-served to no use; since the which time also the further grounds beyond
-Finsbury court have been so overheightened with lay-stalls of dung, that
-now three windmills are thereon set; the ditches be filled up, and the
-bridges overwhelmed.
-
-And now concerning the inclosures of common grounds about this city,
-whereof I mind not much to argue, Edward Hall setteth down a note of
-his time, to wit, in the 5th, or rather 6th of Henry VIII. "Before this
-time," saith he, "the inhabitants of the towns about London, as Iseldon,
-Hoxton, Shoreditch, and others, had so inclosed the common fields with
-hedges and ditches, that neither the young men of the city might shoot,
-nor the ancient persons walk for their pleasures in those fields, but
-that either their bows and arrows were taken away or broken, or the
-honest persons arrested or indicted; saying, 'that no Londoner ought to
-go out of the city, but in the highways.' This saying so grieved the
-Londoners, that suddenly this year a great number of the city assembled
-themselves in a morning, and a turner, in a fool's coat, came crying
-through the city, 'Shovels and spades! shovels and spades!' so many
-of the people followed, that it was a wonder to behold; and within
-a short space all the hedges about the city were cast down, and the
-ditches filled up, and every thing made plain, such was the diligence
-of these workmen. The king's council hearing of this assembly, came
-to the Gray Friars and sent for the mayor and council of the city to
-know the cause, which declared to them the injury and annoying done to
-the citizens and to their liberties, which though they would not seek
-disorderly to redress, yet the commonalty and young persons could not
-be stayed thus to remedy the same. When the king's council had heard
-their answer, they dissimuled the matter, and commanded the mayor to
-see that no other thing were attempted, but that they should forthwith
-call home the younger sort; who having speedily achieved their desire,
-returned home before the king's council, and the mayor departed without
-more harm: after which time (saith Hall) these fields were never hedged,
-but now we see the thing in worse case than ever, by means of inclosure
-for gardens, wherein are built many fair summer-houses;[284] and, as
-in other places of the suburbs, some of them like Midsummer pageants,
-with towers, turrets, and chimney-tops, not so much for use of profit
-as for show and pleasure, betraying the vanity of men's minds, much
-unlike to the disposition of the ancient citizens, who delighted in the
-building of hospitals and alms-houses for the poor, and therein both
-employed their wits, and spent their wealths in preferment of the common
-commodity of this our city."
-
-But to come back again to Moregate, and from thence west through a
-narrow lane called the Postern, because it hath at either end a door to
-be shut in the night season, betwixt the More ditch inclosed with brick
-for tenter-yards, and the gardens of the said More field, to More lane;
-a part of the suburb without Cripplegate, without this postern, called
-Cripplegate, also lay a part of the said More even to the river of the
-Wells, as in another place I have showed; and no houses were there built
-till the latter end of the reign of William the Conqueror, and of his
-son William Rufus; about which times some few houses being there built
-along east and west, thwart before the said gate, one Alfune built for
-the inhabitants a parish church, which is of St. Giles, somewhat west
-from the said gate, and is now on the bank of the town ditch; and so was
-there a street, since called Fore street, as standing before the gate.
-
-This Alfune, in the reign of Henry I., became the first hospitaller of
-St. Bartlemewe's hospital in Smithfield, as in another place I have
-noted. And this parish church of St. Giles being at the first a small
-thing, stood in place where now standeth the vicarage-house, but hath
-been since at divers times much enlarged, according as the parish
-hath increased, and was at the length newly built in place where now
-it standeth. But the same new church being large, strongly built, and
-richly furnished with ornaments, was in the year 1545, by casualty of
-fire, sore burnt and consumed, notwithstanding it was again within a
-short space of time repaired, as now it showeth.
-
-Some little distance from the east end of this church standeth a fair
-conduit, castellated, in Fore street. Then have ye a boss of sweet water
-in the wall of the churchyard, lately made a pump, but already decayed.
-
-Then have ye a fair pool of sweet water near to the church of St. Giles,
-wherein Anne of Lodbery was drowned, as I have before declared.
-
-In the east end of Fore street is More lane: then next is Grub street;
-of late years inhabited, for the most part, by bowyers, fletchers,
-bow-string makers, and such like occupations, now little occupied;
-archery giving place to a number of bowling-alleys and dicing-houses,
-which in all places are increased, and too much frequented.
-
-This street stretcheth north to Guerades Well street, which thwarteth it
-to White cross street; the next from Fore street north is White cross
-street, likewise extending itself up to the west end of Guerades Well
-street, and from the end thereof to Eald street.
-
-From the west end of Fore street lieth Red cross street; from the which
-cross on the right hand east lieth Beech lane, and reacheth to the White
-cross street. From Red cross north lieth Golding lane, which stretcheth
-up to a cross in Ealde street, which Golding lane on both the sides is
-replenished with many tenements of poor people.
-
-On the left hand, and west of the Red cross, lieth a street of old
-time called Houndes ditch, and of later time named Barbican, of such
-cause as I have before noted. And thus have you all the suburb without
-Cripplegate, being almost altogether in the parish of St. Giles, which
-hath more than eighteen hundred householders, and above four thousand
-communicants.
-
-Without Aldersgate on the left hand is the parish church of St.
-Buttolph; on the north side of the which church lieth a way called
-Little Britane street, towards the priory of St. Bartholomew in
-Smithfield; but the highway without Aldersgate runneth straight north
-from the said gate unto Houndes ditch, or Barbican street, on the right
-hand, and Long lane on the left hand, which runneth into Smithfield.
-
-Then from the farther end of Aldersgate street, straight north to
-the bar, is called Goswell street, replenished with small tenements,
-cottages, and alleys, gardens, banqueting-houses, and bowling-places.
-
-Beyond these bars, leaving the Charter-house on the left hand, or the
-west side, the way stretcheth up towards Iseldon, and on the right hand,
-or east side, at a Red cross, turneth into Eald street, so called, for
-that it was the old highway from Aldersgate, for the north-east parts
-of England, before Bishopsgate was built, which street runneth east
-to a smith's forge, sometime a cross before Shoreditch church, from
-whence the passengers and carriages were to turn north to King's land,
-Tottenham, Waltham, Ware, etc.
-
-There was sometime in this suburb without Aldersgate an hospital for the
-poor, but an alien of Clunie, a French order, and therefore suppressed
-by King Henry V., who gave the house, with lands and goods, to the
-parish of St. Buttolph, and a brotherhood of the Trinity was there
-founded, which was afterward suppressed by Henry VIII. or Edward VI.
-
-There is at the farthest north corner of this suburb a windmill, which
-was sometime by a tempest of wind overthrown, and in place thereof a
-chapel was built by Queen Katherine (first wife to Henry VIII.), who
-named it the Mount of Calvary, because it was of Christ's passion, and
-was in the end of Henry VIII. pulled down, and a windmill newly set up
-as afore.
-
-Without Newgate lieth the west and by north suburb; on the right hand,
-or north side whereof, betwixt the said gate and the parish of St.
-Sepulchre, turneth a way towards West Smithfield, called, as I have
-showed, Giltspurre street, or Knightriders street; then is Smithfield
-itself compassed about with buildings, as I have before declared, in
-Faringdon ward without.
-
-And without the bar of West Smithfield lieth a large street or way,
-called of the house of St. John there St. John's street, and stretcheth
-toward Iseldon, on the right hand whereof stood the late dissolved
-monastery called the Charterhouse, founded by Sir Walter Manny, knight,
-a stranger born, lord of the town of Manny, in the diocese of Cambrey,
-beyond the seas, who for service done to King Edward III. was made
-knight of the garter: so his house he founded upon this occasion. A
-great pestilence entering this island, began first in Dorsetshire,
-then proceeded into Devonshire, Somersetshire, Gloucestershire, and
-Oxfordshire, and at length came to London, and overspread all England,
-so wasting the people, that scarce the tenth person of all sorts was
-left alive, and churchyards were not sufficient to receive the dead,
-but men were forced to choose out certain fields for burials; whereupon
-Ralph Stratford, bishop of London, in the year 1348, bought a piece of
-ground called No Man's Land, which he inclosed with a wall of brick, and
-dedicated for burial of the dead, building thereupon a proper chapel,
-which is now enlarged and made a dwelling-house; and this burying plot
-is become a fair garden, retaining the old name of Pardon churchyard.
-
-About this, in the year 1349, the said Sir Walter Manny, in respect
-of danger that might befall in this time of so great a plague and
-infection, purchased thirteen acres and a rod of ground adjoining to the
-said No Man's Land, and lying in a place called Spittle cross, because
-it belonged to St, Bartilmewe's hospital, since that called the New
-church haw, and caused it to be consecrated by the said bishop of London
-to the use of burials.
-
-In this plot of ground there were in that year more than fifty thousand
-persons buried, as I have read in the charters of Edward III.: also,
-I have seen and read an inscription fixed on a stone cross, sometime
-standing in the same churchyard, and having these words:--"_Anno Domini
-1349, regnante magna pestilentia consecratum fuit hoc Coemiterium, in quo
-et infra septa presentis monasterii, sepulta fuerunt mortuorum corpora
-plusquam quinquaginta millia, præter alia multa abhinc usque ad presens,
-quorum animabus propitietur Deus. Amen._"
-
-In consideration of the number of Christian people here buried, the
-said Sir Walter Manny caused first a chapel to be built, where for
-the space of twenty-three years offerings were made; and it is to be
-noted, that above one hundred thousand bodies of Christian people had
-in that churchyard been buried; for the said knight had purchased that
-place for the burial of poor people, travellers, and other that were
-deceased, to remain for ever; whereupon an order was taken for the
-avoiding of contention between the parsons of churches and that house;
-to wit, that the bodies should be had unto the church where they were
-parishioners, or died, and, after the funeral service done, had to
-the place where they should be buried. And in the year 1371 he caused
-there to be founded a house of Carthusian monks, which he willed to be
-called the Salutation, and that one of the monks should be called prior;
-and he gave them the said place of thirteen acres and a rod of land,
-with the chapel and houses there built, for their habitation: he also
-gave them the three acres of land lying without the walls on the north
-part, betwixt the lands of the abbot of Westminster and the lands of
-the prior of St. John (which three acres were purchased, inclosed, and
-dedicated by Ralph Stratford, bishop of London, as is afore showed),
-and remained till our time by the name of Pardon churchyard, and served
-for burying of such as desperately ended their lives, or were executed
-for felonies, who were fetched thither usually in a close cart, bailed
-over and covered with black, having a plain white cross thwarting, and
-at the fore end a St. John's cross without, and within a bell ringing by
-shaking of the cart, whereby the same might be heard when it passed; and
-this was called the friary cart, which belonged to St. John's, and had
-the privilege of sanctuary.
-
-In this charter-house were the monuments of the said Sir Walter Manny,
-and Margaret his wife; Marmaduke Lumley; Laurence Brumley, knight; Sir
-Edward Hederset, knight; Sir William Manny, knight; Dame Joan Borough;
-John Dore; Want Water, knight; Robert Olney, esquire; Katherine,
-daughter to Sir William Babington, knight; Blanch, daughter to Hugh
-Waterton; Katherine, wife to John at Poote, daughter and heir to Richard
-de Lacie; William Rawlin; Sir John Lenthaine, and Dame Margaret his
-wife, daughter to John Fray; John Peake, esquire; William Baron, and
-William Baron, esquire; Sir Thomas Thawites, knight; Philip Morgan,
-bishop of Ely, 1434.
-
-In the cloister:--Bartholomew Rede, knight, mayor of London, buried
-1505; Sir John Popham, etc.
-
-This monastery, at the suppression in the 29th of Henry VIII., was
-valued at six hundred and forty-two pounds and four pence halfpenny
-yearly.
-
-A little without the bars of West Smithfield is Charterhouse lane, so
-called, for that it leadeth to the said plot of the late dissolved
-monastery; in place whereof, first the Lord North, but since Thomas
-Howard, late Duke of Norfolk, have made large and sumptuous buildings
-both for lodging and pleasure. At the gate of this Charter-house is a
-fair water conduit, with two cocks, serving the use of the neighbours to
-their great commodity.
-
-St. John's street, from the entering this lane, is also on both the
-sides replenished with buildings up to Clerkenwell. On the left hand of
-which street lieth a lane called Cow cross, of a cross sometime standing
-there; which lane turneth down to another lane called Turnemill street,
-which stretcheth up to the west of Clerkenwell, and was called Turnemill
-street, for such cause as is afore declared.
-
-One other lane there is called St. Peter's lane, which turneth from St.
-John's street to Cow cross.
-
-On the left hand also stood the late dissolved priory of St. John of
-Jerusalem in England, founded about the year of Christ 1100 by Jorden
-Briset, baron, and Muriell his wife, near unto Clarkes well besides West
-Smithfield; which Jorden having first founded the priory of nuns at
-Clarkes well, bought of them ten acres of land, giving them in exchange
-ten acres of land in his lordship of Welling hall, in the county of
-Kent. St. John's church was dedicated by Eraclius, patriarch of the holy
-resurrection of Christ at Jerusalem, in the year 1185, and was the chief
-seat in England of the religious knights of St. John of Jerusalem; whose
-profession was, besides their daily service of God, to defend Christians
-against pagans, and to fight for the church, using for their habit a
-black upper garment, with a white cross on the fore part thereof; and
-for their good service was so highly esteemed, that when the order of
-Templars was dissolved, their lands and possessions were by parliament
-granted unto these, who after the loss of Jerusalem recovered the isle
-of Rhodes from the Turks, and there placed themselves, being called
-thereof for many years knights of the Rhodes; but after the loss
-thereof, 1523, they removed to the isle of Malta, manfully opposing
-themselves against the Turkish invasions.
-
-The rebels of Essex and of Kent, 1381, set fire on this house, causing
-it to burn by the space of seven days together, not suffering any to
-quench it; since the which time the priors of that house have new built
-both the church and houses thereunto appertaining; which church was
-finished by Thomas Docwrey, late lord prior there, about the year 1504,
-as appeareth by the inscription over the gate-house, yet remaining.
-This house, at the suppression in the 32nd of Henry VIII., was valued
-to dispend in lands three thousand three hundred and eighty-five pounds
-nineteen shillings and eight pence yearly. Sir W. Weston being then
-lord prior, died on the same seventh of May, on which the house was
-suppressed; so that great yearly pensions being granted to the knights
-by the king, and namely to the lord prior during his life one thousand
-pounds, he never received a penny.
-
-The king took into his hands all the lands that belonged to that house
-and that order, wheresoever in England and Ireland, for the augmentation
-of his crown.
-
-This priory church and house of St. John was preserved from spoil or
-down pulling, so long as King Henry VIII. reigned, and was employed
-as a store-house for the king's toils and tents, for hunting, and for
-the wars, etc.; but in the 3rd of King Edward VI., the church, for the
-most part, to wit, the body and side aisles, with the great bell tower
-(a most curious piece of workmanship, graven, gilt, and enamelled, to
-the great beautifying of the city, and passing all other that I have
-seen), was undermined and blown up with gunpowder; the stone thereof
-was employed in building of the lord protector's house at the Strand.
-That part of the choir which remaineth, with some side chapels, was by
-cardinal Pole, in the reign of Queen Mary, closed up at the west end,
-and otherwise repaired; and Sir Thomas Tresham, knight, was then made
-lord prior there, with restitution of some lands, but the same was again
-suppressed in the first year of Queen Elizabeth.
-
-There were buried in this church brethren of that house and knights
-of that order: John Botell; William Bagecore; Richard Barrow; John
-Vanclay; Thomas Launcelen; John Mallory; William Turney; William
-Hulles, Hils, or Hayles; John Weston; Redington; William Longstrother;
-John Longstrother; William Tong; John Wakeline. Then of other: Thomas
-Thornburgh, gentleman; William West, gentleman; John Fulling, and Adam
-Gill, esquires; Sir John Mortimor, and Dame Elianor his wife; Nicholas
-Silverston; William Plompton, esquire; Margaret Tong, and Isabel Tong;
-Walter Bellingham, alias Ireland, king of arms of Ireland; Thomas Bedle,
-gentleman; Katherine, daughter of William Plompton, esquire; Richard
-Turpin, gentleman; Joan, wife to Alexander Dikes; John Bottle, and
-Richard Bottle, esquires; Rowland Darcie; Richard Sutton, gentleman;
-Richard Bottill, gentleman; Sir W. Harpden, knight; Robert Kingston,
-esquire, and Margery his wife; John Roch; Richard Cednor, gentleman;
-Simon Mallory, 1442; William Mallory, Robert Longstrother, Ralph
-Asteley, William Marshall, Robert Savage, Robert Gondall, esquires, and
-Margery his wife; William Bapthorpe, baron of the Exchequer, 1442.
-
-North from the house of St. John's was the priory of Clarkenwell, so
-called of Clarkes well adjoining; which priory was also founded about
-the year 1100 by Jorden Briset, baron, the son of Ralph, the son of
-Brian Briset; who gave to Robert, a priest, fourteen acres of land lying
-in the field next adjoining to the said Clarkes well, thereupon to
-build a house of religious persons, which he founded to the honour of
-God and the assumption of our lady, and placed therein black nuns. This
-Jorden Briset gave also to that house one piece of ground, thereby to
-build a windmill upon, etc. He and Muriall his wife were buried in the
-Chapter-house there. More buried in this church: John Wikes, esquire,
-and Isabel his wife; Dame Agnes Clifford; Ralph Timbleby, esquire; Dame
-Jahan, baroness of Greystocke; Dame Jahan, Lady Ferrars. And of later
-time in the parish church, Constances Bennet, a Greek born: he gave two
-houses, the one in St. John's street, the other in Turnmill street; the
-rents of them to be distributed in coals every year against Christmas to
-the poor of that parish.
-
-William Herne, a master of defence, and yeoman of the guard, 1580,
-gave lands and tenements to the clothworkers in London; they to pay
-yearly for ever fourteen pounds to the churchwardens of Clarkenwell,
-and fourteen pounds to the churchwardens of St. Sepulcher's, towards
-reparations of these churches, and relief of the poor men; more he gave
-after the death of one man, yet living, eight pounds the year for ever
-to the mending of highways.
-
-Thomas Sackeford, esquire, one of the masters of requests, gave to
-the poor of that parish forty shillings the year for ever, out of his
-alms-house at Woodbridge in Suffolk, where he is buried. Henry Stoke,
-gardener, buried there, gave twenty shillings the year for ever, towards
-reparation of that church. This priory was valued to dispend two hundred
-and sixty-two pounds nine shillings by the year, and was surrendered the
-31st of Henry VIII. Many fair houses are now built about the priory,
-namely, by the highway towards Iseldon.
-
-So much of the church which remaineth (for one great aisle thereof fell
-down) serveth as a parish church of St. John, not only for the tenements
-and near inhabitants, but also (as is aforesaid) for all up to Highgate,
-Muswell, etc.
-
-Near unto this church, beside Clarke's well lane, divers other wells,
-namely, Skinners well, Fags well, Tode well, Loder's well, Rede well,
-etc., now dammed up.
-
-Now to return again to Giltspurre street, where I first began with
-this suburb, there standeth the parish church of St. Sepulchre in the
-Bayly, as is before showed; from this street to Turnagaine lane, by
-Hosiar lane, Cow lane, and Holdborn conduit, down Snore hill to Oldborne
-bridge, and up Oldborne hill, by Gold lane on the right hand, and Lither
-lane beyond it, to the bars; beyond the which bars on the same side is
-Porte pool, or Grayes inn lane, so called of the inn of court, named
-Grayes inn, a goodly house there situate, by whom built or first begun I
-have not yet learned, but seemeth to be since Edward III.'s time, and is
-a prebend to Paule's church in London.
-
-This lane is furnished with fair buildings and many tenements on both
-the sides, leading to the fields towards Highgate and Hamsted.
-
-On the high street have ye many fair houses built, and lodgings for
-gentlemen, inns for travellers, and such like up almost (for it lacketh
-but little) to St. Giles in the fields; amongst the which buildings,
-for the most part being very new, one passeth the rest in largeness
-of rooms, lately built by a widow, sometime wife to Richard Alington,
-esquire; which Richard Alington deceased in the year 1561. And thus much
-for that north side of Oldborne.
-
-Now from Newgate, on the left hand or south side, lieth the Old Bayly,
-and so down by Seacole lane end to Oldborne bridge, up Oldborne hill, by
-Shoe lane and Fewters lane, to the bars.
-
-Beyond the bars had ye in old time a temple built by the Templars, whose
-order first began in the year of Christ 1118, in the 19th of Henry I.
-This temple was left and fell to ruin since the year 1184, when the
-Templars had built them a new temple in Fleet street, near to the river
-of Thames. A great part of this old temple was pulled down, but of late
-in the year 1595. Adjoining to this old Temple[285] was sometime the
-bishop of Lincolne's inn, wherein he lodged when he repaired to this
-city. Robert de Curars, bishop of Lincoln, built it about the year 1147.
-John Russell, bishop of Lincoln, chancellor of England, in the reign of
-Richard III., was lodged there. It hath of late years belonged to the
-earls of Southampton, and therefore called Southampton house. Master
-Ropar hath of late built much there; by means whereof part of the ruins
-of the old Temple were seen to remain built of Caen stone, round in form
-as the new Temple, by Temple bar, and other temples in England. Beyond
-this old Temple and the bishop of Lincoln's house[286] is New street, so
-called in the reign of Henry III., when he of a Jew's house founded the
-house of Converts, betwixt the old Temple and the new.
-
-The same street hath since been called Chancery lane, by reason that
-King Edward III. annexed the house of Converts by patent to the office
-of Custos Rotulorum, or master of the rolls, in the 15th of his reign.
-
-In this street the first fair building to be noted on the east side
-is called the Coursitors' office, built with divers fair lodgings for
-gentlemen, all of brick and timber, by Sir Nicholas Bacon, late lord
-keeper of the great seal.
-
-Near unto this Coursitors' office be divers fair houses and large
-gardens, built and made in a ground sometime belonging to one great
-house on the other side the street, there made by Ralph Nevel, bishop of
-Chichester. This ground he had by the gift of Henry III., as appeareth.
-The king granteth to Ralph, bishop of Chichester, chancellor, that
-place, with the garden, which John Herlirum forfeited in that street,
-called New street, over against the land of the said bishop in the same
-street; which place, with the garden and appurtenance, was the king's
-escheat by the liberty of the city of London, as it was acknowledged
-before the king in his court at the Tower of London, in the last pleas
-of the crown of that city, cart. 11 Henry III.
-
-Then was the house of Converts, wherein now the rolls of Chancery be
-kept; then the Sergeants' inn, etc.
-
-On the west side of New street, towards the north end thereof, was
-of old time the church and house of the Preaching Friers; concerning
-the which house I find, that in the year of Christ 1221, the friars'
-preachers, thirteen in number, came into England, and having to their
-prior one named Gilbert de Fraxineto, in company of Peter de la Roche,
-bishop of Winchester, came to Canterbury, where presenting themselves
-before the archbishop Steven, he commanded the said prior to preach,
-whose sermon he liked so well, that ever after he loved that order.
-These friars came to London, and had their first house without the wall
-of the city by Oldborne, near unto the old Temple.
-
-Hubert de Burgh, earl of Kent, was a great benefactor unto these friars,
-and deceasing at his manor of Bansted in Surrey, or, after some writers,
-at his castle of Barkhamsted in Hartfordshire, in the year 1242, was
-buried in their church; unto the which church he had given his place
-at Westminster, which the said friars afterwards sold to Walter Grey,
-archbishop of York; and he left it to his successors in that see for
-ever, to be their house, when they should repair to the city of London.
-And therefore the same was called York place; which name so continued
-until the year 1529, that King Henry VIII. took it from Thomas Wolsey,
-cardinal and archbishop of York, and then gave it to name White hall.
-
-Margaret, sister to the king of Scots, widow to Geffrey, earl marshal,
-deceased 1244, and was buried in this church.
-
-In the year 1250, the friars of this order of preachers through
-Christendom and from Jerusalem, were by a convocation assembled together
-at this their house by Oldborne, to intreat of their estate, to the
-number of four hundred, having meat and drink found them of alms,
-because they had no possessions of their own. The first day, the king
-came to their chapter, found them meat and drink, and dined with them.
-Another day the queen found them meat and drink; afterward the bishop
-of London, then the abbot of Westminster, of St. Alban's, Waltham, and
-others. In the year 1276, Gregory Rokesley, mayor, and the barons of
-London, granted and gave to Robert Kilwarbie, archbishop of Canterbury,
-two lanes or ways next the street of Baynard's castle, and the tower of
-Mountfichet, to be destroyed. On the which place the said Robert built
-the late new church, with the rest of the stones that were left of
-the said tower: and thus the black friars left their church and house
-by Oldborne, and departed to their new. This old friar house (juxta
-Holborne, saith the patent) was by King Edward I., in the 16th of his
-reign, given to Henry Lacy, earl of Lincoln.
-
-Next to this house of friars was one other great house, sometime
-belonging to the bishop of Chichester, whereof Matthew Paris writeth
-thus:--"Ralph de Nova Villa, or Nevill, bishop of Chichester and
-chancellor of England, sometime built a noble house, even from the
-ground, not far from the new Temple and house of Converts; in the which
-place he deceased in the year 1244. In this place, after the decease
-of the said bishop, and in place of the house of black friars before
-spoken of, Henry Lacy, earl of Lincoln, constable of Chester, and custos
-of England, built his inn, and for the most part was lodged there: he
-deceased in this house in the year 1310, and was buried in the new work
-(whereunto he had been a great benefactor) of St. Paul's church betwixt
-our Lady chapel and St. Dunstan's chapel. This Lincoln's inn, sometime
-pertaining to the bishops of Chichester, as a part of the said great
-house, is now an inn of court, retaining the name of Lincoln's inn as
-afore, but now lately increased with fair buildings, and replenished
-with gentlemen studious in the common laws. In the reign of Henry VIII.
-Sir Thomas Lovell was a great builder there; especially he built the
-gate-house and fore front towards the east, placing thereon as well
-the Lacies' arms as his own: he caused the Lacies' arms to be cast and
-wrought in lead, on the louer of the hall of that house, which was in
-the three escutcheons, a lion rampant for Lacie, seven mascules voided
-for Quincie, and three wheatsheafs for Chester. This louer being of late
-repaired, the said escutcheons were left out. The rest of that side,
-even to Fleet street, is replenished with fair buildings."
-
-Now the High Oldborne street, from the north end of New street,
-stretcheth on the left hand in building lately framed, up to St. Giles
-in the field, which was an hospital founded by Matilda the queen, wife
-to Henry I., about the year 1117. This hospital, said the record of
-Edward III., the 19th year, was founded without the bar: _Veteris Templi
-London, et conversorum_.
-
-This hospital was founded as a cell to Burton Lager of Jerusalem, as may
-appear by a deed dated the 24th of Henry VII. in these words:--"Thomas
-Norton, knight, master of Burton Lager of Jerusalem in England, and
-the brethren of the same place, keepers of the hospital of St. Giles,
-without the bars of the old Temple of London, have sold to Geffrey
-Kent, citizen and draper of London, a messuage or house, with two
-cellars above, edified in the parish of Alhallowes, Hony lane, in West
-Chepe, adjoining to the west part of a tenement called the Cote on the
-Hope, pertaining to the drapers of London, for thirty-one pounds."
-
-At this hospital, the prisoners conveyed from the city of London
-towards Teyborne, there to be executed for treasons, felonies, or other
-trespasses, were presented with a great bowl of ale, thereof to drink at
-their pleasure, as to be their last refreshing in this life.
-
-Now without Ludgate lieth the south end of the Old Bayly, then down
-Ludgate hill by Fleet lane, over Fleet bridge, up Fleet street, by Shoe
-lane, Fewtar's lane, New street, or Chauncerie lane, and to Shire lane,
-by the bar on the right hand; and from Ludgate on the left hand, or
-south side, by Bride lane, Water lane, Croker's lane, Sergeants' inn,
-and the new Temple, by the bar; all which is of Faringdon ward, as is
-afore showed.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[275] "To Wapping in the Wose, and Wapping itself, the usual place,
-etc."--_1st edition_, p. 347.
-
-[276] "Fayre hedges, long rowes of elme, and other trees."--_Ibid._
-
-[277] "By encroachments for building of small tenements, and taking
-in of garden-plots, timber-yards, or what they list. From this tower
-hill towards Aldgate (being a long continuous street), amongst
-other buildings, was that abbey of nunnes called the Minorities, or
-Minories, whereof I have spoken. And on the other side of that streete
-lyeth the ditche without the wall of the citie from the Tower unto
-Aldegate."--_1st edition_, pp. 347-8.
-
-[278] "Brought up in Lincoln's inn."--_1st edition_, p. 349.
-
-[279] "And neare thereunto are builded two publique houses for the
-acting and shewe of comedies, tragedies, and histories, for recreation.
-Whereof one is called the Courtein, the other the Theatre; both standing
-on the south-west side towards the field."--_Ibid._
-
-[280] Shoreditch. In the first edition, it is called Sors ditch, or
-Sewers ditch.
-
-[281] "Over against the north end of Grub street."--_1st edition_, p.
-349.
-
-[282] "Next to that a large house, with gardens of pleasure, builded by
-Jasper Fisher, from this up to the west end of Hog lane, etc."--_1st
-edition_, p. 350.
-
-[283] "Soerditch, so called more than four hundred yeares since, as I
-can prove by record."--_Stow._
-
-[284] "Banqueting houses like banqueroutes, bearing great shew and
-little worth."--_Stow._
-
-[285] "The same was after the bishop of Lincoln's inn."--_1st edition_,
-p. 361.
-
-[286] "Beyond this Southampton house."--_Ibid._
-
-
-
-
-LIBERTIES OF THE DUCHY OF LANCASTER
-
-
-Next without the bar is the New Temple, and liberties of the city
-of London, in the suburbs, is a liberty pertaining to the duchy of
-Lancaster, which beginneth in the east, on the south side or left
-hand, by the river Thames, and stretcheth west to Ivie bridge, where
-it endeth; and again on the north side, or right hand, some small
-distance without Temple bar, in the high street, from a pair of stocks
-there standing, stretcheth one large Middle row, or troop of small
-tenements, partly opening to the south, partly towards the north, up
-west to a stone cross, now headless, over against the Strand; and this
-is the bounds to that liberty, which sometime belonged to Briane Lisle,
-since to Peter of Savoy, and then to the house of Lancaster, as shall
-be showed. Henry III., in the 30th year of his reign, did grant to his
-uncle Peter of Savoy all those houses upon the Thames, which sometimes
-pertained to Briane de Insula, or Lisle, without the walls of his city
-of London, in the way or street called the Strand, to hold to him and
-to his heirs, yielding yearly in the Exchequer, at the feast of St.
-Michaell the Archangell, three barbed arrows, for all services, dated at
-Reding, etc. This Peter of Savoy built the Savoy.
-
-But first amongst other buildings memorable for greatness, on the river
-of Thames, Excester house, so called for that the same belonged to the
-bishops of Excester, and was their inn or London lodging: who was first
-builder thereof I have not read, but that Walter Stapleton was a great
-builder there in the reign of Edward II. is manifest; for the citizens
-of London, when they had beheaded him in Cheape, near unto the cathedral
-church of St. Paule, they buried him in a heap of sand or rubbish in his
-own house without Temple bar, where he had made great building. Edmond
-Lacie, bishop of Excester, built the great hall in the reign of Henry
-VI., etc. The same hath since been called Paget house, because William
-Lord Paget enlarged and possessed it. Then Leycester house, because
-Robert Dudley, earl of Leycester, of late new built there, and now Essex
-house, of the earl of Essex lodging there.
-
-Then west was a chapel dedicated to the Holy Ghost, called St. Sprite,
-upon what occasion founded I have not read. Next is Milford lane down to
-the Thames, but why so called I have not read as yet.
-
-Then was the bishop of Bathes inn, lately new built, for a great part
-thereof, by the Lord Thomas Seymour, admiral; which house came since to
-be possessed by the earl of Arundel, and thereof called Arundel house.
-
-Next beyond the which, on the street side, was sometime a fair cemetery
-or churchyard, and in the same a parish church called of the Nativity
-of our Lady, and the Innocents of the Strand, and of some by means of
-a brotherhood kept there, called St. Ursula at the Strand. And near
-adjoining to the said church, betwixt it and the river of Thames, was an
-inn of Chancery commonly called Chester's inn (because it belonged to
-the bishop of Chester), by others, named of the situation, Strand inn.
-
-Then was there a house belonging to the bishop of Landaff; for I find in
-record, the 4th of Edward II., that a vacant place lying near the church
-of our Lady at Strand, the said bishop procured it of Thomas, earl of
-Lancaster, for the enlarging of this house. Then had ye in the high
-street a fair bridge called Strand bridge, and under it a lane or way
-down to the landing-place on the bank of Thames.
-
-Then was the bishop of Chester's (commonly called of Lichfield and
-Coventrie), his inn or London lodging: this house was first built by
-Walter Langton, bishop of Chester, treasurer of England in the reign of
-Edward I.
-
-And next unto it adjoining was the bishop of Worcester's inn: all which,
-to wit, the parish of St. Mary at Strand, Strand inn, Strand bridge,
-with the lane under it, the bishop of Chester's inn, the bishop of
-Worcester's inn, with all the tenements adjoining, were by commandment
-of Edward, duke of Somerset, uncle to Edward VI., and lord protector,
-pulled down, and made level ground in the year 1549; in place whereof he
-built that large and goodly house, now called Somerset house.
-
-In the high street, near unto the Strand, sometime stood a cross of
-stone against the bishop of Coventrie or Chester his house; whereof
-I read, that in the year 1294, and divers other times, the justices
-itinerants sate without London, at the stone cross over against the
-bishop of Coventrie's house, and sometime they sate in the Bishop's
-house, which was hard by the Strand, as is aforesaid.
-
-Then next is the Savoy, so called of Peter, earl of Savoy, and Richmond,
-son to Thomas, earl of Savoy, brother to Boniface, archbishop of
-Canterbury, and uncle unto Eleanor, wife to King Henry III.
-
-He first built this house in the year 1245; and here is occasion
-offered me for satisfying of some deniers thereof, to prove that this
-Peter of Savoy was also earl of Savoy: wherefore, out of a book of the
-genealogies of all the whole house of Savoy, compiled by Phillebert
-Pingonio, baron of Guzani, remaining in the hands of W. Smith, alias
-Rougedragon, officer of arms, I have gathered this:--Thomas, earl of
-Savoy, had issue by Beatrix, daughter to Aimon, earl of Geneva, nine
-sons and three daughters. Amades, his first son, succeeded earl of Savoy
-in the year 1253; Peter, his second son, earl of Savoy and of Richmond,
-in 1268; Philip, his third son, earl of Savoy and Burgundie, 1284;
-Thomas, the fourth, earl of Flanders and prince of Piemont; Boniface,
-the eighth, archbishop of Canterbury; Beatrix, his daughter, married to
-Raymond Beringarius of Aragon, earl of Province and Narbone, had issue,
-and was mother to five queens: the first, Margaret, wife to Lewes, king
-of France; the second, Eleanor, wife to Henry III. king of England;
-the third, Sanctia, wife to Richard, king of the Romans; the fourth,
-Beatrix, wife to Charles, king of Naples; the fifth, Johanna, wife to
-Philip, king of Navarre.
-
-To return again to the house of Savoy: Queen Eleanor, wife to king Henry
-III., purchased this place afterwards of the fraternity or brethren of
-Montjoy;[287] unto whom Peter of Savoy, as it seemeth, had given it,
-for her son, Edmond earl of Lancaster (as M. Camden hath noted out of
-a register-book of the dukes of Lancaster). Henry, duke of Lancaster,
-repaired or rather new built it, with the charges of fifty-two thousand
-marks, which money he had gathered together at the town of Bridgerike.
-John, the French king, was lodged there in the year 1357, and also in
-the year 1363; for it was at that time the fairest manor in England.
-
-In the year 1381, the rebels of Kent and Essex burnt this house; unto
-the which there was none in the realm to be compared in beauty and
-stateliness (saith mine author).[288] They set fire on it round about,
-and made proclamation that none, on pain to lose his head, should
-convert to his own use anything that there was, but that they should
-break such plate and vessels of gold and silver as was found in that
-house (which was in great plenty) into small pieces, and throw the same
-into the river of Thames: precious stones they should bruise in mortars,
-that the same might be to no use, and so it was done by them. One of
-their companions they burnt in the fire, because he minded to have
-reserved one goodly piece of plate.[289]
-
-They found there certain barrels of gunpowder, which they thought had
-been gold or silver, and throwing them into the fire more suddenly
-than they thought, the hall was blown up, the houses destroyed, and
-themselves very hardly escaped away.
-
-This house being thus defaced, and almost overthrown by these rebels
-for malice they bare to John of Gaunt, duke of Lancaster, of latter
-time came to the king's hands, and was again raised and beautifully
-built for an hospital of St. John Baptist by King Henry VII. about
-the year 1509, for the which hospital, retaining still the old name
-of Savoy, he purchased lands to be employed upon the relieving of a
-hundred poor people. This hospital being valued to dispend five hundred
-and twenty-nine pounds fifteen shillings, etc. by year, was suppressed
-the tenth of June, the 7th of Edward VI.: the beds, bedding, and other
-furniture belonging thereunto, with seven hundred marks of the said
-lands by year, he gave to the citizens of London, with his house of
-Bridewell, to the furnishing thereof, to be a workhouse for the poor and
-idle persons, and towards the furnishing of the hospital of St. Thomas
-in Southwark, lately suppressed.
-
-This hospital of Savoy was again new founded, erected, corporated, and
-endowed with lands by Queen Mary, the third of November: in the 4th of
-her reign, one Jackson took possession, and was made master thereof
-in the same month of November. The ladies of the court and maidens of
-honour (a thing not to be forgotten) stored the same of new with beds,
-bedding, and other furniture, in very ample manner, etc.; and it was by
-patent so confirmed at Westminster the 9th of May, the 4th and 5th of
-Philip and Mary. The chapel of this hospital serveth now as a parish
-church to the tenements thereof near adjoining, and others.
-
-The next was sometime the bishop of Carlisle's inn, which now belongeth
-to the earl of Bedford, and is called Russell or Bedford house. It
-stretcheth from the hospital of Savoy, west to Ivie bridge, where Sir
-Robert Cecill, principal secretary to her majesty, hath lately raised a
-large and stately house of brick and timber, as also levelled and paved
-the highway near adjoining, to the great beautifying of that street and
-commodity of passengers. Richard II., in the 8th of his reign, granted
-license to pave with stone the highway called Strand street from Temple
-bar to the Savoy, and toll to be taken towards the charges; and again
-the like was granted in the 42nd of Henry VI.
-
-Ivie bridge, in the high street, which had a way under it leading down
-to the Thames, the like as sometime had the Strand bridge, is now taken
-down, but the lane remaineth as afore, or better, and parteth the
-liberty of the duchy and the city of Westminster on that south side.
-
-Now to begin again at Temple bar, over against it.[290] In the high
-street, as is afore showed, is one large Middle row of houses and small
-tenements built, partly opening to the south, partly towards the north;
-amongst the which standeth the parish church of St. Clement Danes, so
-called because Harold, a Danish king, and other Danes, were buried
-there. This Harold, whom king Canutus had by a concubine, reigned three
-years, and was buried at Westminster; but afterward Hardicanutus, the
-lawful son of Canutus, in revenge of a displeasure done to his mother,
-by expelling her out of the realm, and the murder of his brother
-Allured, commanded the body of Harold to be digged out of the earth,
-and to be thrown into the Thames, where it was by a fisherman taken up
-and buried in this churchyard; but out of a fair ledger-book, sometime
-belonging to the abbey of Chartsey, in the county of Surrey, is noted,
-as in Francis Thin, after this sort. In the reign of king Etheldred,
-the monastery of Chartsey was destroyed: ninety monks of that house
-were slain by the Danes, whose bodies were buried in a place next to
-the old monastery. William Malmseberie saith,--"They burnt the church,
-together with the monks and abbot; but the Danes continuing in their
-fury (throughout the whole land), desirous at the length to return home
-into Denmarke, were by the just judgment of God all slain at London in a
-place which is called the church of the Danes."
-
-This said middle row of houses stretching west to a stone cross, now
-headless, by or against the Strand, including the said parish church of
-St. Clement, is also wholly of the liberty and duchy of Lancaster.
-
-Thus much for the bounds and antiquities of this liberty, wherein I
-have noted parish churches twain, sometime three, houses of name six;
-to wit, the Savoy or Lancaster house, now a hospital, Somerset house,
-Essex house, Arundel house, Bedford or Russell house, and Sir Robert
-Cecil's house; besides of Chester's inn or Strand inn, sometime an inn
-of Chancery, etc. This liberty is governed by the chancellor of that
-duchy at this present, Sir Robert Cecil, knight, principal secretary to
-her majesty, and one of her majesty's most honourable privy councillors;
-there is under him a steward that keepeth court and leet for the queen;
-giveth the charge and taketh the oaths of every under officer: then is
-there four burgesses and four assistants, to take up controversies;
-a bailiff, which hath two or three under-bailiffs, that make arrests
-within that liberty; four constables; four wardens, that keep the lands
-and stock for the poor; four wardens for highways; a jury or inquest of
-fourteen or sixteen, to present defaults; four ale-conners, which look
-to assize of weights and measures, etc.; four scavengers and a beadle;
-and their common prison is Newgate. There is in this liberty fifty men,
-which is always to be at an hour's warning, with all necessary furniture
-to serve the queen, as occasion shall require. Their charge at a fifteen
-is thirteen shillings and four pence. Thus much for the suburb in the
-liberty of the duchy of Lancaster.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[287] "Fratres de Monte Jovis, or Priory de Cornuto, by Havering at the
-Bower."--_Stow._
-
-[288] H. Knighton.--_Stow._
-
-[289] "Savoy brent: blown up with gunpowder. Rebels, more malitious then
-covetous, spoyle all before them."--_Stow._
-
-[290] "In the high street standeth a pair of stocks."--_1st edition_, p.
-369.
-
-
-
-
-THE CITY OF WESTMINSTER, WITH THE ANTIQUITIES, BOUNDS, AND LIBERTIES
-THEREOF
-
-
-Now touching the city of Westminster, I will begin at Temple bar, on
-the right hand or north side, and so pass up west through a back lane
-or street, wherein do stand three inns of chancery; the first called
-Clement's inn, because it standeth near to St. Clement's church, but
-nearer to the fair fountain called Clement's well; the second, New
-inn, so called as latelier made, of a common hostery, and the sign
-of Our Lady, an inn of chancery for students than the other, to wit,
-about the beginning of the reign of Henry VII., and not so late as
-some have supposed; to wit, at the pulling down of Strand inn, in the
-reign of King Edward VI.; for I read that Sir Thomas More, sometime
-lord chancellor, was a student in this new inn, and went from thence to
-Lincolne's inn, etc. The third is Lyon's inn, an inn of chancery also.
-
-This street stretcheth up unto Drury lane, so called, for that there
-is a house belonging to the family of the Druries. This lane turneth
-north toward St. Giles in the field: from the south end of this lane in
-the high street are divers fair buildings, hosteries, and houses for
-gentlemen and men of honour; amongst the which Cicile house is one,
-which sometime belonged to the parson of St. Martin's in the field, and
-by composition came to Sir Thomas Palmer, knight, in the reign of Edward
-VI., who began to build the same of brick and timber, very large and
-spacious, but of later time it hath been far more beautifully increased
-by the late Sir William Cicile, baron of Burghley, lord treasurer, and
-great councillor of the estate.
-
-From thence is now a continual new building of divers fair houses,
-even up to the earl of Bedford's house,[291] lately built nigh to Ivy
-bridge, and so on the north side to a lane that turneth to the parish
-church of St. Martin's in the field, in the liberty of Westminster. Then
-had ye one house, wherein sometime were distraught and lunatic people,
-of what antiquity founded or by whom I have not read, neither of the
-suppression; but it was said that sometime a king of England, not liking
-such a kind of people to remain so near his palace, caused them to be
-removed farther off, to Bethlem without Bishops gate of London, and to
-that hospital: the said house by Charing cross doth yet remain.
-
-Then is the Mewse, so called of the king's falcons there kept by the
-king's falconer, which of old time was an office of great account,
-as appeareth by a record of Richard II., in the first year of his
-reign. Sir Simon Burley, knight, was made constable for the castles of
-Windsor, Wigmore, and Guilford, and of the manor of Kenington, and also
-master of the king's falcons at the Mewse, near unto Charing cross by
-Westminster; but in the year of Christ 1534, the 28th of Henry VIII.,
-the king having fair stabling at Lomsbery (a manor in the farthest west
-part of Oldborne), the same was fired and burnt, with many great horses
-and great store of hay: after which time, the fore-named house, called
-the Mewse by Charing cross, was new built, and prepared for stabling of
-the king's horses, in the reign of Edward VI. and Queen Mary, and so
-remaineth to that use: and this is the farthest building west on the
-north side of that high street.
-
-On the south side of the which street, in the liberties of Westminster
-(beginning at Ivie bridge), first is Durham house, built by Thomas
-Hatfielde, bishop of Durham, who was made bishop of that see in the year
-1545, and sat bishop there thirty-six years.
-
-Amongst matters memorable concerning this house, this is one:--In the
-year of Christ 1540, the 32nd of Henry VIII., on May-day, a great and
-triumphant justing was holden at Westminster, which had been formerly
-proclaimed in France, Flanders, Scotland, and Spain, for all comers that
-would undertake the challengers of England; which were, Sir John Dudley,
-Sir Thomas Seymour, Sir Thomas Ponings, and Sir George Carew, knights,
-and Anthonie Kingston and Richarde Cromwell, esquires; all which came
-into the lists that day richly apparelled, and their horses trapped
-all in white velvet. There came against them the said day forty-six
-defendants or undertakers, viz., the earl of Surrey, foremost, Lord
-William Howard, Lord Clinton, and Lord Cromwell, son and heir to Thomas
-Cromwell, earl of Essex, and chamberlain of England, with other; and
-that day, after the justs performed, the challengers rode unto this
-Durham house, where they kept open household, and feasted the king and
-queen, with her ladies, and all the court: the second day, Anthonie
-Kingston and Richard Cromwell were made knights there: the third day
-of May the said challengers did tournay on horseback with swords, and
-against them came forty-nine defendants; Sir John Dudley and the earl of
-Surrey running first, which at the first course lost their gauntlets;
-and that day Sir Richarde Cromwell overthrew master Palmer and his horse
-in the field, to the great honour of the challengers: the fifth of May
-the challengers fought on foot at the barriers, and against them came
-fifty defendants, which fought valiantly; but Sir Richard Cromwell
-overthrew that day at the barriers master Culpepper in the field; and
-the sixth day the challengers brake up their household.
-
-In this time of their housekeeping they had not only feasted the
-king, queen, ladies, and all the court, as is afore shewed; but also
-they cheered all the knights and burgesses of the common house in the
-parliament, and entertained the mayor of London, with the aldermen,
-and their wives, at a dinner, etc. The king gave to every of the said
-challengers, and their heirs for ever, in reward of their valiant
-activity, one hundred marks and a house to dwell in, of yearly revenue,
-out of the lands pertaining to the hospital of St. John of Jerusalem.
-
-Next beyond this Durham house is another great house, sometime
-belonging to the bishop of Norwich, and was his London lodging, which
-now pertaineth to the archbishop of York by this occasion. In the
-year 1529, when Cardinal Wolsey, archbishop of Yorke, was indicted in
-the Premunire, whereby King Henry VIII. was entitled to his goods and
-possessions: he also seized into his hands the said archbishop's house,
-commonly called Yorke place, and changed the name thereof into White
-hall; whereby the archbishops of Yorke being dispossessed, and having no
-house of repair about London, Queen Mary gave unto Nicholas Heath, then
-archbishop of Yorke, and to his successors, Suffolke house in Southwark,
-lately built by Charles Brandon, duke of Suffolke, as I have showed.
-
-This house the said archbishop sold, and bought the aforesaid house
-of old time belonging to the bishops of Norwich, which of this last
-purchase is now called Yorke house, the lord chancellors or lord keepers
-of the great seal of England, have been lately there lodged.
-
-Then was there an hospital of St. Marie Rouncivall by Charing cross
-(a cell to the priory and covent of Rouncivall in Navar, in Pampelion
-diocese), where a fraternity was founded in the 15th of Edward IV., but
-now the same is suppressed and turned into tenements.
-
-Near unto this hospital was a hermitage, with a chapel of St. Katherine,
-over against Charing cross; which cross, built of stone, was of old time
-a fair piece of work, there made by commandment of Edward I., in the
-21st year of his reign, in memory of Eleanor, his deceased queen, as is
-before declared.
-
-West from this cross stood sometime an hospital of St. James, consisting
-of two hides of land, with the appurtenances, in the parish of St.
-Margaret in Westminster, and founded by the citizens of London, before
-the time of any man's memory, for fourteen sisters, maidens, that were
-leprous, living chastely and honestly in divine service.
-
-Afterwards divers citizens of London gave five-and-fifty pounds rent
-thereunto, and then were adjoined eight brethren to minister divine
-service there. After this, also, sundry devout men of London gave to
-this hospital four hides of land in the field of Westminster; and in
-Hendon, Calcote, and Hampsted, eighty acres of land and wood, etc. King
-Edward I. confirmed those gifts, and granted a fair to be kept on the
-eve of St. James, the day, the morrow, and four days following, in the
-18th of his reign.
-
-This hospital was surrendered to Henry VIII. the 23rd of his reign: the
-sisters being compounded with, were allowed pensions for the term of
-their lives; and the king built there a goodly manor, annexing thereunto
-a park, closed about with a wall of brick, now called St. James' park,
-serving indifferently to the said manor, and to the manor or palace of
-White hall.
-
-South from Charing cross, on the right hand, are divers fair houses
-lately built before the park, then a large tilt-yard for noblemen, and
-other, to exercise themselves in justing, turning, and fighting at
-barriers.
-
-On the left hand from Charing cross be also divers fair tenements lately
-built, till ye come to a large plot of ground inclosed with brick, and
-is called Scotland, where great buildings have been for receipt of the
-kings of Scotland, and other estates of that country; for Margaret,
-queen of Scots, and sister to King Henry VIII., had her abiding there,
-when she came into England after the death of her husband, as the kings
-of Scotland had in former times, when they came to the parliament of
-England.
-
-Then is the said White hall, sometime belonging to Hubert de Burgh,
-earl of Kent, and justice of England, who gave it to the Black Friars
-in Oldborne, as I have before noted. King Henry VIII. ordained it to be
-called an honour, and built there a sumptuous gallery and a beautiful
-gate-house, thwart the high street to St. James' park, etc.
-
-In this gallery the princes, with their nobility, used to stand or sit,
-and at windows, to behold all triumphant justings and other military
-exercises.
-
-Beyond this gallery, on the left hand, is the garden or orchard
-belonging to the said White hall.
-
-On the right hand be divers fair tennis-courts, bowling-alleys, and a
-cock-pit, all built by King Henry VIII.; and then one other arched
-gate, with a way over it, thwarting the street from the king's gardens
-to the said park.
-
-From this gate up King's street to a bridge over Long ditch (so called
-for that the same almost insulateth the city of Westminster), near
-which bridge is a way leading to Chanon row, so called for that the
-same belonged to the dean and chanons of St. Stephen's chapel, who were
-there lodged, as now divers noblemen and gentlemen be; whereof one is
-belonging to Sir Edward Hobbey, one other to John Thine, esquire, one
-stately built by Ann Stanhope, duchess of Somerset, mother to the earl
-of Hartford, who now enjoyeth that house. Next a stately house, now in
-building by William earl of Darby; over against the which is a fair
-house, built by Henry Clinton, earl of Lincoln.
-
-From this way up to the Woolestaple and to the high tower, or gate
-which entereth the palace court, all is replenished with buildings and
-inhabitants.
-
-Touching this Woolestaple, I read, that in the reign of Edward I.,
-the staple being at Westminster, the parishioners of St. Margaret and
-merchants of the staple built of new the said church, the great chancel
-excepted, which was lately before new built by the abbot of Westminster.
-
-Moreover, that Edward III., in the 17th of his reign, decreed that no
-silver be carried out of the realm on pain of death; and that whosoever
-transporteth wool should bring over for every sack four nobles of silver
-bullion.
-
-In the 25th of his reign, he appointed the staple of wool to be kept
-only at Canterbury, for the honour of St. Thomas; but in the 27th
-of the same King Edward, the staple of wool, before kept at Bruges
-in Flanders, was ordained by parliament to be kept in divers places
-of England, Wales, and Ireland, as at Newcastle, Yorke, Lincoln,
-Canterbury, Norwich, Westminster, Chichester, Winchester, Excester,
-Bristow, Carmardyn, etc., to the great benefit of the king and loss unto
-strangers and merchants: for there grew unto the king by this means
-(as it was said) the sum of one thousand one hundred and two pounds
-by the year, more than any his predecessors before had received; the
-staple at Westminster at that time began on the next morrow after the
-feast of St. Peter ad vincula. The next year was granted to the king by
-parliament, towards the recovery of his title in France, fifty shillings
-of every sack of wool transported over seas, for the space of six years
-next ensuing; by means whereof the king might dispend daily during
-those years more than a thousand marks sterling: for by the common
-opinion there were more than one hundred thousand sacks of wool yearly
-transported into foreign lands, so that during six years the said grant
-extended to fifteen hundred thousand pounds sterling.
-
-In the 37th of Edward III., it was granted unto him for two years, to
-take five-and-twenty shillings and eight pence upon every sack of wool
-transported; and the same year the staple of wool (notwithstanding the
-king's oath and other great estates) was ordained to be kept at Callis,
-and six-and-twenty merchants, the best and wealthiest of all England, to
-be farmers there, both of the town and staple, for three years: every
-merchant to have six men of arms and four archers at the king's cost. He
-ordained there also two mayors, one for the town and one for the staple;
-and he took for _mala capta_, commonly called Maltorth,[292] twenty
-shillings, and of the said merchants' guardians of the town forty pence,
-upon every sack of wool.
-
-In the 44th of Edward III., Quinborough, Kingston-upon-Hull, and Boston,
-were made staples of wool; which matter so much offended some, that in
-the 50th of his reign, in a parliament at London, it was complained
-that the staple of wool was so removed from Callis to divers towns in
-England, contrary to the statute, appointing that citizens and merchants
-should keep it there, and that the king might have the profits and
-customs, with the exchange of gold and silver, that was there made by
-all the merchants in Christindome (esteemed to amount to eight thousand
-pounds by year), the exchange only; and the citizens and merchants so
-ordered the matter, that the king spent nothing upon soldiers, neither
-upon defence of the town against the enemies; whereas now he spent eight
-thousand pounds by year.
-
-In the 51st of Edward III., when the staple was sealed at Callis, the
-mayor of the staple did furnish the captain of the town upon any road
-with one hundred bilmen, twelve hundred archers of merchants and their
-servants, without any wages.
-
-In the year 1388, the 12th of Richard II., in a parliament at Cambridge,
-it was ordained that the staple of wools should be brought from
-Middleborough in Holland to Callis.
-
-In the 14th of his reign, there was granted forty shillings upon every
-sack of wool, and in the 21st was granted fifty shillings upon every
-sack transported by Englishmen, and three pounds by strangers, etc. It
-seemeth that the merchants of this staple be the most ancient merchants
-of this realm; and that all commodities of the realm are staple
-merchandises by law and charter as wools, leather, wool fells, lead,
-tin, cloth, etc.
-
-King Henry VI. had six wool-houses within the staple at Westminster:
-those he granted to the dean and canons of St. Stephen at Westminster,
-and confirmed it the 21st of his reign. Thus much for the staple have I
-shortly noted.
-
-And now to pass to the famous monastery of Westminster: at the very
-entrance of the close thereof, is a lane that leadeth toward the
-west, called Thieving lane, for that thieves were led that way to the
-gate-house, while the sanctuary continued in force.
-
-This monastery was founded and built by Sebert,[293] king of the East
-Saxons, upon the persuasion of Ethelbert, king of Kent, how having
-embraced Christianity, and being baptised by Melitus, bishop of London,
-immediately (to show himself a Christian indeed) built a church to the
-honour of God and St. Peter, on the west side of the city of London,
-in a place which (because it was overgrown with thorns, and environed
-with water) the Saxons called Thorney, and now of the monastery and west
-situation thereof is called Westminster.
-
-In this place (saith Sulcardus) long before was a temple of Apollo,
-which being overthrown, King Lucius built therein a church of
-Christianity.
-
-Sebert was buried in this church, with his wife Athelgoda; whose
-bodies many years after, to wit, in the reign of Richard II. (saith
-Walsingham), were translated from the old church to the new, and there
-entered.
-
-Edgar, king of the West Saxons, repaired this monastery about the year
-of Christ 958; Edward the Confessor built it of new, whereupon T.
-Clifford writeth thus:
-
-"Without the walls of London (saith he), upon the river of Thames,
-there was in times passed a little monastery, built to the honour of
-God and St. Peter, with a few Benedict monks in it, under an abbot,
-serving Christ: very poor they were, and little was given them for their
-relief. Here the king intended (for that it was near to the famous
-city of London and the river of Thames, that brought in all kinds of
-merchandises from all parts of the world) to make his sepulchre: he
-commanded, therefore, that of the tenths of all his rents the work
-should be begun in such sort as should become the prince of the Apostles.
-
-"At this his commandment the work is nobly begun, even from the
-foundation, and happily proceedeth till the same was finished: the
-charges bestowed, or to be bestowed, are not regarded. He granted to
-this church great privileges, above all the churches in this land, as
-partly appeareth by this his charter:--
-
- "Edwarde, king, greets William, bishop, and Leofstane, and
- Aelsie Portreves, and all my burgesses of London friendly, and I
- tell you, that I have this gift given and granted to Christ and St.
- Peter the holy Apostle, at Westminster, full freedome over all the
- land that belongeth to that holy place, etc."
-
-He also caused the parish church of St. Margaret to be newly built
-without the abbey church of Westminster, for the ease and commodity of
-the monks, because before that time the parish church stood within the
-old abbey church in the south aisle, somewhat to their annoyance.
-
-King Henry III., in the year of Christ 1220, and in the 5th of his
-reign, began the new work of our Lady's chapel, whereof he laid the
-first stone in the foundation; and in the year 1245, the walls and
-steeple of the old church (built by King Edward) were taken down, and
-enlarging the same church, caused them to be made more comely; for the
-furtherance whereof, in the year 1246, the same king (devising how to
-extort money from the citizens of London towards the charges) appointed
-a mart to be kept at Westminster, the same to last fifteen days, and
-in the mean space all trade of merchandise to cease in the city; which
-thing the citizens were fain to redeem with two thousand pounds of
-silver.
-
-The work of this church, with the houses of office, was finished to the
-end of the choir, in the year 1285, the 14th of Edward I.: all which
-labour of sixty-six years was in the year 1299 defaced by a fire kindled
-in the lesser hall of the king's palace at Westminster; the same, with
-many other houses adjoining, and with the queen's chamber, were all
-consumed; the flame thereof also (being driven with the wind), fired the
-monastery, which was also with the palace consumed.
-
-Then was this monastery again repaired by the abbots of that church;
-King Edward I. and his successors putting to their helping hands.
-
-Edward II. appropriated unto this church the patronages of the churches
-of Kelveden and Sawbridgeworth in Essex, in the diocese of London.
-
-Simon Langham, abbot (having been a great builder there in the year
-1362), gave forty pounds to the building of the body of the church; but
-(amongst others) Abbot Islip was in his time a great builder there, as
-may appear in the stonework and glass windows of the church; since whose
-decease that work hath staid as he left it, unperfected, the church and
-steeple being all of one height.
-
-King Henry VII., about the year of Christ 1502, caused the chapel of
-our Lady, built by Henry III., with a tavern also, called the White
-Rose, near adjoining, to be taken down: in which plot of ground, on
-the 24th of January, the first stone of the new chapel was laid by the
-hands of Abbot Islip, Sir Reginald Bray, knight of the garter, Doctor
-Barnes, master of the Rolls, Doctor Wall, chaplain to the king, Master
-Hugh Aldham, chaplain to the countess of Darby and Richmond (the king's
-mother), Sir Edward Stanhope, knight, and divers other: upon the which
-stone was engraven the same day and year, etc.
-
-The charges in building this chapel amounted to the sum of fourteen
-thousand pounds. The stone for this work (as I have been informed) was
-brought from Huddlestone quarry in Yorkshire.
-
-The altar and sepulture of the same King Henry VII., wherein his body
-resteth in this his new chapel, was made and finished in the year 1519
-by one Peter, a painter of Florence; for the which he received one
-thousand pounds sterling for the whole stuff and workmanship at the
-hands of the king's executors; Richard, bishop of Winchester; Richard,
-bishop of London; Thomas, bishop of Durham; John, bishop of Rochester;
-Thomas, duke of Norfolk, treasurer of England; Charles, earl of
-Worcester, the king's chamberlain; John Fineaux, knight, chief justice
-of the King's bench; Robert Reade, knight, chief justice of the Common
-Pleas.
-
-This monastery being valued to dispend by the year three thousand four
-hundred and seventy pounds, etc., was surrendered to Henry VIII. in
-the year 1539. Benson, then abbot, was made the first dean, and not
-long after it was advanced to a bishop's see in the year 1541. Thomas
-Thirlby being both the first and last bishop there, who, when he had
-impoverished the church, was translated to Norwich in the year 1550, the
-4th of Edward VI., and from thence to Elie in the year 1554, the 2nd of
-Queen Mary. Richard Cox, doctor in divinity (late schoolmaster to King
-Edward VI.), was made dean of Westminster, whom Queen Mary put out, and
-made Doctor Wonest dean until the year 1556, and then he being removed
-from thence on the 21st of November, John Feckenham (late dean of
-Pauls) was made abbot of Westminster, and took possession of the same,
-being installed, and fourteen monks more received the habit with him
-that day of the order of St. Benedict; but the said John Feckenham, with
-his monks, enjoyed not that place fully three years, for in the year
-1559, in the month of July, they were all put out, and Queen Elizabeth
-made the said monastery a college, instituting there a dean, twelve
-prebends, a schoolmaster, and usher, forty scholars, called commonly the
-Queen's scholars, twelve alms men; and so it was named the Collegiate
-church of Westminster, founded by Queen Elizabeth, who placed Doctor
-Bill,[294] first dean of that new erection; after whom succeeded Doctor
-Gabriel Goodman, who governed that church forty years, and after Doctor
-Lancelot Andrewes.
-
-Kings and queens crowned in this church: William, surnamed the
-Conqueror, and Matilde his wife, were the first, and since them all
-other kings and queens of this realm have been there crowned.
-
-Kings and queens buried in this church are these: Sebert, king of the
-East Saxons, with his wife Athelgede; Harold, surnamed Harefoot, king of
-the West Saxons; Edward the Simple, surnamed Confessor, sometime richly
-shrined in a tomb of silver and gold, curiously wrought by commandment
-of William the Conqueror; Egitha his wife was there buried also;
-Hugolyn, chamberlain to Edward the Confessor; King Henry III., whose
-sepulture was richly garnished with precious stones of jasper, which his
-son Edward I. brought out of France for that purpose; Eleanor, wife to
-Henry III.; Edward I., who offered to the shrine of Edward the Confessor
-the chair of marble, wherein the kings of Scotland were crowned, with
-the sceptre and crown, also to the same king belonging.
-
-He gave also to that church lands to the value of one hundred pounds by
-the year; twenty pounds thereof yearly to be distributed to the poor
-for ever. Then there lieth Eleanor, his wife, daughter to Ferdinando,
-king of Castile, 1293; Edward III. by Queen Philippa of Henault his
-wife; Richard II. and Anne his wife, with their images upon them, which
-cost more than four hundred marks for the gilding; Henry V., with a
-royal image of silver and gilt, which Katherine his wife caused to be
-laid upon him, but the head of this image being of massy silver, is
-broken off, and conveyed away with the plates of silver and gilt that
-covered his body; Katherine, his wife, was buried in the old Lady
-chapel 1438, but her corpse being taken up in the reign of Henry VII.,
-when a new foundation was to be laid, she was never since buried, but
-remaineth above ground in a coffin of boards behind the east end of
-the presbytery; Henry VII. in a sumptuous sepulture and chapel before
-specified, and Elizabeth his wife; Edward VI. in the same chapel,
-without any monument; Queen Mary, without any monument, in the same
-chapel; Matilde, daughter to Malcolm, king of Scots, wife to Henry I.,
-died 1118, lieth in the revestry; Anne, wife to Richard III.; Margaret,
-countess of Richmond and Darby, mother to Henry VII.; Anne of Cleves,
-wife to Henry VIII.; Edmond, second son to Henry III., first earl of
-Lancaster, Darby, and Leycester, and Aveline his wife, daughter and heir
-to William de Fortibus, earl of Albemarle. In St. Thomas' chapel lie the
-bones of the children of Henry III. and of Edward I., in number nine.
-In the chapter-house,--Elianor, countess of Barre, daughter to Edward
-I.; William of Windsor, and Blaunch his sister, children to Edward III.;
-John of Eltham, earl of Cornewell, son to Edward II.; Elianor, wife to
-Thomas of Woodstocke, duke of Gloucester; Thomas of Woodstocke by King
-Edward III. his father; Margaret, daughter to Edward IV.; Elizabeth,
-daughter to Henry VII.; William de Valence, earl of Pembroke; Aymer
-de Valence, earl of Pembroke; Margaret and John, son and daughter to
-William de Valence; John Waltham, bishop of Sarum, treasurer of England;
-Thomas Ruthal, bishop of Durham, 1522; Giles, Lord Dawbeny,[295]
-lord lieutenant of Callis, chamberlain to King Henry VII., 1508, and
-Elizabeth his wife, of the family of the Arundels in Cornwal, 1500;
-John, Viscount Wells, 1498; the Lady Katherine, daughter to the duchess
-of Norfolk; Sir Thomas Hungerford, knight, father to Sir John Hungerford
-of Downampney, knight; a son and daughter to Humfrey Bohun, earl of
-Hereford and Essex, and Elizabeth his wife; Philippa, duchess of York,
-daughter to the Lord Mohun, thrice married, to the Lord Fitzwalter, Sir
-John Golofer, and to the duke of Yorke; William Dudley, bishop elect
-of Durham, son to John, baron of Dudley; Nicholas, Baron Carew, 1470;
-Walter Hungerford, son to Edward Hungerford, knight; Sir John Burley,
-knight, and Anne his wife, daughter to Alane Buxull, knight, 1416; Sir
-John Golofer, knight, 1396; Humfrey Burcher, Lord Cromwell, son to
-Bourchier, earl of Essex, slain at Barnet; Henry Bourchier, son and
-heir to John Bourchier, Lord Barners, also slain at Barnet, 1471; Sir
-William Trussell, knight; Sir Thomas Vaughan, knight; Frances Brandon,
-duchess of Suffolke, 1560; Mary Gray, her daughter, 1578; Sir John
-Hampden, knight; Sir Lewis, Viscount Robsart, knight; Lord Bourchere of
-Henalt, 1430, and his wife, daughter and heir to the Lord Bourchere;
-Robert Brown, and William Browne, esquires; the Lady Johane Tokyne,
-daughter of Dabridge Court; George Mortimer, bastard; John Felbye,
-esquire; Ann, wife to John Watkins; William Southwike, esquire; William
-Southcot, esquire; Ralph Constantine, gentleman; Arthur Troffote,
-esquire; Robert Hawley, esquire, slain in that church; Sir Richarde
-Rouse, knight; Sir Geffrey Maundevile, earl of Essex, and Athelarde
-his wife; Sir Foulke of Newcastle; Sir James Barons, knight; Sir John
-Salisbury, knight; Margaret Dowglas, countess of Lennox, with Charles
-her son, earl of Lennox; Henrie Scogan, a learned poet, in the cloister;
-Geffrey Chaucer, the most famous poet of England, also in the cloister,
-1400, but since Nicholas Brigham, gentleman, raised a monument for him
-in the south cross aisle of the church: his works were partly published
-in print by William Caxton, in the reign of Henry VI., increased by
-William Thinne, esquire, in the reign of Henry VIII.; corrected and
-twice increased, through mine own painful labours, in the reign of Queen
-Elizabeth, to wit, in the year 1561; and again beautified with notes by
-me, collected out of divers records and monuments, which I delivered to
-my loving friend, Thomas Speght; and he having drawn the same into a
-good form and method, as also explained the old and obscure words, etc.,
-hath published them in anno 1597.
-
-Anne Stanhope, duchess of Somerset, and Jane her daughter; Anne Cecill,
-countess of Oxford, daughter to the Lord Burghley, with Mildred Burghley
-her mother; Elizabeth Barkley, countess of Ormond; Frances Sidney,
-countess of Sussex; Francis Howard, countess of Hertford, 1598; Thomas,
-Baron Wentworth; Thomas, Baron Warton; John, Lord Russell; Sir Thomas
-Bromley, lord chancellor; Sir John Puckering, lord keeper; Sir Henry
-Cary, Lord Hunsdon, and lord chamberlain, 1596, to whose memory his son,
-Sir George Cary, Lord Hunsdon, and lord chamberlain, hath created a
-stately monument.
-
-This church hath had great privilege of sanctuary within the precinct
-thereof, to wit, the church, churchyard, and close, etc.; from whence
-it hath not been lawful for any prince or other to take any person that
-fled thither for any cause: which privilege was first granted by Sebert,
-king of the East Saxons, since increased by Edgar, king of the West
-Saxons, renewed and confirmed by King Edward the Confessor, as appeareth
-by this his charter following:
-
-"Edward, by the grace of God, king of Englishmen: I make it to be known
-to all generations of the world after me, that by speciall commandement
-of our holy father, Pope Leo, I have renewed and honored the holy
-church of the blessed apostle St. Peter, of Westminster; and I order
-and establish for ever, that what person, of what condition or estate
-soever he be, from whence soever he come, or for what offence or cause
-it be, either for his refuge into the said holy place, he be assured of
-his life, liberty, and limbs. And over this I forbid, under the paine of
-everlasting damnation, that no minister of mine, or of my successors,
-intermeddle them with any the goods, lands, or possessions of the said
-persons taking the said sanctuary; for I have taken their goodes and
-livelode into my special protection, and therefore I grant to every each
-of them, in as much as my terrestriall power may suffice, all maner
-freedom of joyous libertie; and whosoever presumes or doth contrary to
-this my graunt, I will hee lose his name, worship, dignity, and power,
-and that with the great traytor Judas that betraied our Saviour, he be
-in the everlasting fire of hell; and I will and ordayne that this my
-graunt endure as long as there remayneth in England eyther love or dread
-of Christian name."
-
-More of this sanctuary ye may read in our histories, and also in the
-statute of Henry VIII., the 32nd year.
-
-The parish church of St. Margaret, sometime within the abbey, was
-by Edward the Confessor removed, and built without, for ease of the
-monks. This church continued till the days of Edward I., at which time
-the merchants of the staple and parishioners of Westminster built it
-all of new, the great chancel excepted, which was built by the abbots
-of Westminster; and this remaineth now a fair parish church, though
-sometime in danger of down pulling. In the south aisle of this church is
-a fair marble monument of Dame Mary Billing, the heir of Robert Nesenham
-of Conington, in Huntingdonshire, first married to William Cotton, to
-whose issue her inheritance alone descended, remaining with Robert
-Cotton at this day, heir of her and her first husband's family; her
-second husband was Sir Thomas Billing, chief justice of England; and her
-last, whom likewise she buried, was Thomas Lacy; erecting this monument
-to the memory of her three husbands, with whose arms she hath garnished
-it, and for her own burial, wherein she was interred in the year 1499.
-
-Next to this famous monastery is the king's principal palace, of what
-antiquity it is uncertain; but Edward the Confessor held his court
-there, as may appear by the testimony of sundry, and, namely, of
-Ingulphus, as I have before told you. The said king had his palace, and
-for the most part remained there; where he also so ended his life, and
-was buried in the monastery which he had built. It is not to be doubted
-but that King William I., as he was crowned there, so he built much at
-his palace, for he found it far inferior to the building of princely
-palaces in France: and it is manifest, by the testimony of many authors,
-that William Rufus built the great hall there about the year of Christ
-1097. Amongst others, Roger of Wendover and Mathew Paris do write, that
-King William (being returned out of Normandy into England) kept his
-feast of Whitsontide very royally at Westminster, in the new hall which
-he had lately built; the length whereof (say some) was two hundred and
-seventy feet, and seventy-four feet in breadth; and when he heard men
-say that this hall was too great, he answered and said, "This hall is
-not big enough by the one half, and is but a bed-chamber in comparison
-of that I mean to make." A diligent searcher (saith Paris) might find
-out the foundation of the hall, which he was supposed to have built,
-stretching from the river of Thames, even to the common highway.
-
-This palace was repaired about the year 1163 by Thomas Becket,
-chancellor of England, with exceeding great celerity and speed, which
-before was ready to have fallen down. This hath been the principal seat
-and palace of all the kings of England since the Conquest; for here have
-they in the great hall kept their feasts of coronation especially, and
-other solemn feasts, as at Christmas and such like, most commonly: for
-proof whereof, I find recorded, that in the year 1236, and the 20th of
-Henry, III., on the 29th of December, William de Haverhull, the king's
-treasurer, is commanded, that upon the day of circumcision of our Lord,
-he caused six thousand poor people to be fed at Westminster, for the
-state of the king, the queen, and their children; the weak and aged to
-be placed in the great hall and in the lesser; those that were most
-strong, and in reasonable plight, in the king's chamber; the children in
-the queen's; and when the king knoweth the charge, he would allow it in
-the accounts.[296]
-
-In the year 1238, the same King Henry kept his feast of Christmas at
-Westminster in the great hall; so did he in the year 1241, where he
-placed the legate in the most honourable place of the table, to wit, in
-the midst, which the noblemen took in evil part: the king sat on the
-right hand, and the archbishop on the left, and then all the prelates
-and nobles according to their estates; for the king himself set the
-guests. The year 1242 he likewise kept his Christmas in the hall, etc.
-Also, in the year 1243, Richard, earl of Cornewall, the king's brother,
-married Cincia, daughter to Beatrice, countess of Province, and kept his
-marriage-feast in the great hall at Westminster, with great royalty and
-company of noblemen: insomuch that there were told (_triginta millia_)
-thirty thousand dishes of meats at that dinner.
-
-In the year 1256, King Henry sate in the exchequer of this hall, and
-there set down order for the appearance of sheriffs, and bringing in of
-their accounts: there were five marks set on every sheriff's head for a
-fine, because they had not distrained every person that might dispend
-fifteen pounds land by the year to receive the order of knighthood,
-as the same sheriffs were commanded. Also, the mayor, aldermen, and
-sheriffs of London, being accused of oppression and wrongs done by them,
-and submitting themselves in this place before the king sitting in
-judgment upon that matter, they were condemned to pay their fines for
-their offences committed, and further, every one of them discharged of
-assise and ward.
-
-In the years 1268 and 1269, the same king kept his Christmas feasts
-at Westminster as before; and also in the same 1269 he translated
-with great solemnity the body of King Edward the Confessor into a new
-chapel, at the back of the high altar: which chapel he had prepared of a
-marvellous workmanship, bestowing a new tomb or shrine of gold; and on
-the day of his translation he kept a royal feast in the great hall of
-the palace. Thus much for the feasts of old time in this hall.
-
-We read also, that in the year 1236, the river of Thames overflowing the
-banks, caused the marshes about Woolwitch to be all on a sea, wherein
-boats and other vessels were carried with the stream; so that besides
-cattle, the greatest number of men, women, and children, inhabitants
-there, were drowned: and in the great palace of Westminster men did row
-with wherries in the midst of the hall, being forced to ride to their
-chambers.
-
-Moreover, in the year 1242, the Thames overflowing the banks about
-Lambhithe, drowned houses and fields by the space of six miles, so
-that in the great hall at Westminster men took their horses, because
-the water ran over all. This palace was (in the year 1299, the 27th of
-Edward I.) burnt by a vehement fire, kindled in the lesser hall of the
-king's house: the same, with many other houses adjoining, and with the
-queen's chamber, were consumed, but after that repaired.
-
-In the year 1313, the 31st of Edward I., the king's treasury at
-Westminster was robbed; for the which, Walter, abbot of Westminster,
-with forty-nine of his brethren and thirty-two other, were thrown into
-the Tower of London, and indicted of the robbery of a hundred thousand
-pounds; but they affirming themselves to be clear of the fact, and
-desiring the king of speedy justice, a commission was directed for
-inquiry of the truth, and they were freed.
-
-In the year 1316, Edward II. did solemnize his feast of Penticost at
-Westminster, in the great hall; where sitting royally at the table, with
-his peers about him, there entered a woman adorned like a minstrel,
-sitting on a great horse, trapped as minstrels then used, who rode
-round about the tables, showing pastime, and at length came up to the
-king's table, and laid before him a letter, and forthwith turning her
-horse, saluted every one, and departed. The letter being opened, had
-these contents:,--"Our soveraigne lord and king, hath nothing curteously
-respected his knights, that in his father's time, and also in his owne,
-have put forth their persons to divers perils, and have utterly lost, or
-greatly diminished their substance, for honor of the said king, and he
-hath inriched abundantly such as have not borne the waight as yet of the
-busines, etc."
-
-This great hall was begun to be repaired in the year 1397 by Richard
-II., who caused the walls, windows, and roof, to be taken down, and new
-made, with a stately porch, and divers lodgings of a marvellous work,
-and with great costs; all which he levied of strangers banished or
-flying out of their countries, who obtained license to remain in this
-land, by the king's charters, which they had purchased with great sums
-of money; John Boterell being then clerk of the works.
-
-This hall being finished in the year 1398, the same king kept a most
-royal Christmas there, with daily justings and runnings at tilt;
-whereunto resorted such a number of people, that there was every day
-spent twenty-eight or twenty-six oxen, and three hundred sheep, besides
-fowl without number: he caused a gown for himself to be made of gold,
-garnished with pearl and precious stones, to the value of three thousand
-marks: he was guarded by Cheshire men, and had about him commonly
-thirteen bishops, besides barons, knights, esquires, and other more
-than needed; insomuch, that to the household came every day to meat ten
-thousand people, as appeareth by the messes told out from the kitchen to
-three hundred servitors.
-
-Thus was this great hall, for the honour of the prince, oftentimes
-furnished with guests, not only in this king's time (a prodigal
-prince), but in the time of other also, both before and since, though
-not so usually noted. For when it is said, the king held his feast of
-Christmas, or such a feast at Westminster, it may well be supposed to be
-kept in this great hall, as most sufficient to such a purpose.
-
-I find noted by Robert Fabian (sometime an alderman of London), that
-King Henry VII., in the 9th of his reign (holding his royal feast of
-Christmas at Westminster), on the twelfth day, feasted Ralph Austry,
-then mayor of London, and his brethren the aldermen, with other
-commoners in great number, and after dinner dubbing the mayor knight,
-caused him with his brethren to stay and behold the disguisings and
-other disports in the night following, showed in the great hall,
-which was richly hanged with arras, and staged about on both sides;
-which disports being ended in the morning, the king, the queen, the
-ambassadors, and other estates, being set at a table of stone, sixty
-knights and esquires served sixty dishes to the king's mess, and as
-many to the queen's (neither flesh nor fish), and served the mayor with
-twenty-four dishes to his mess, of the same manner, with sundry wines
-in most plenteous wise: and finally, the king and queen being conveyed
-with great lights into the palace, the mayor with his company in barges
-returned and came to London by break of the next day. Thus much for
-building of this great hall, and feasting therein.
-
-It moreover appeareth that many parliaments have been kept there; for I
-find noted, that in the year 1397, the great hall at Westminster being
-out of reparations, and therefore, as it were, new built by Richard II.
-(as is afore showed), the same Richard, in the mean time having occasion
-to hold a parliament, caused for that purpose a large house to be built
-in the midst of the palace-court, betwixt the clock tower and the gate
-of the old great hall. This house was very large and long, made of
-timber, covered with tile, open on both the sides and at both the ends,
-that all men might see and hear what was both said and done.
-
-The king's archers (in number four thousand Cheshire men) compassed the
-house about with their bows bent, and arrows knocked in their hands,
-always ready to shoot: they had bouch of court (to wit, meat and drink),
-and great wages of six pence by the day.
-
-The old great hall being new built, parliaments were again there kept
-as before:[297] namely, one in the year 1399, for the deposing of
-Richard II. A great part of this palace at Westminster was once again
-burnt in the year 1512, the 4th of Henry VIII.; since the which time it
-hath not been re-edified: only the great hall, with the offices near
-adjoining, are kept in good reparations, and serveth as afore for feasts
-at coronations, arraignments of great persons charged with treasons,
-keeping of the courts of justice, etc. But the princes have been lodged
-in other places about the city, as at Baynarde's castle, at Bridewell,
-and White hall, sometime called York place, and sometime at St. James'.
-
-This great hall hath been the usual place of pleadings, and ministration
-of justice, whereof somewhat shortly I will note. In times past the
-courts and benches followed the king wheresoever he went, as well since
-the Conquest as before; which thing at length being thought cumbersome,
-painful, and chargeable to the people, it was in the year 1224, the 9th
-of Henry III., agreed that there should be a standing place appointed,
-where matters should be heard and judged, which was in the great hall at
-Westminster.
-
-In this hall he ordained three judgment seats; to wit, at the entry
-on the right hand, the Common Pleas, where civil matters are to be
-pleaded, specially such as touch lands or contracts: at the upper end
-of the hall, on the right hand, or south-east corner, the King's Bench,
-where pleas of the crown have their hearing; and on the left hand, or
-south-west corner, sitteth the lord chancellor, accompanied with the
-master of the rolls, and other men, learned for the most part in the
-civil law, and called masters of the chancery, which have the king's
-fee. The times of pleading in these courts are four in the year, which
-are called terms: the first is Hillary term, which beginneth the 23rd
-of January, if it be not Sunday, and endeth the 12th of February; the
-second is Easter term, and beginneth seventeen days after Easter day,
-and endeth four days after Ascension day; the third term beginneth six
-or seven days after Trinity Sunday, and endeth the Wednesday fortnight
-after; the fourth is Michaelmas term, which beginneth the 9th of
-October, if it be not Sunday, and endeth the 28th of November.
-
-And here it is to be noted, that the kings of this realm have used
-sometimes to sit in person in the King's Bench; namely, King Edward IV.,
-in the year 1462, in Michaelmas term, sat in the King's Bench three days
-together, in the open court, to understand how his laws were ministered
-and executed.
-
-Within the port, or entry into the hall, on either side are ascendings
-up into large chambers, without the hall adjoining thereunto, wherein
-certain courts be kept, namely, on the right hand, is the court of the
-Exchequer, a place of account for the revenues of the crown: the hearers
-of the account have auditors under them; but they which are the chief
-for accounts of the prince, are called barons of the Exchequer, whereof
-one is called the chief baron. The greatest officer of all is called the
-high treasurer.[298] In this court be heard those that are delators,
-or informers, in popular and penal actions, having thereby part of the
-profit by the law assigned unto them.
-
-In this court, if any question be, it is determined after the order of
-the common law of England by twelve men, and all subsidies, taxes, and
-customs, by account; for in this office the sheriffs of the shire do
-attend upon the execution of the commandments of the judges, which the
-earl should do, if he were not attending upon the princes in the wars,
-or otherwise about him; for the chief office of the earl was to see the
-king's justice to have course, and to be well executed in the shire, and
-the prince's revenues to be well answered and brought into the treasury.
-
-If any fines or amerciaments be extracted out of any of the said courts
-upon any man, or any arrerages of accounts of such things as is of
-customs, taxes, and subsidies, or other such like occasions, the same
-the sheriff of the shire doth gather, and is answerable therefore in
-the Exchequer: as for other ordinary rents of patrimonial lands, and
-most commonly of taxes, customs, and subsidies, there be particular
-receivers and collectors, which do answer it into the Exchequer. This
-court of the Exchequer hath of old time, and, as I think, since the
-Conquest, been kept at Westminster, notwithstanding sometimes removed
-thence by commandment of the king, and after restored again, as, namely,
-in the year 1209, King John commanded the Exchequer to be removed from
-Westminster to Northampton, etc.
-
-On the left hand above the stair is the Duchy chamber, wherein is kept
-the court for the duchy of Lancaster by a chancellor of that duchy, and
-other officers under him. Then is there in another chamber the office of
-the receipts of the queen's revenues for the crown: then is there also
-the Star chamber, where in the term time, every week once at the least,
-which is commonly on Fridays and Wednesdays, and on the next day after
-the term endeth, the lord chancellor, and the lords, and other of the
-privy council, and the chief justices of England, from nine of the clock
-till it be eleven, do sit.
-
-This place is called the Star chamber, because the roof thereof is
-decked with the likeness of stars gilt: there be plaints heard of riots,
-routs, and other misdemeanors; which if they be found by the king's
-council, the party offender shall be censured by these persons, which
-speak one after another, and he shall be both fined and commanded to
-prison.
-
-Then at the upper end of the great hall, by the King's Bench, is a going
-up to a great chamber, called the White hall, wherein is now kept the
-court of Wards and Liveries, and adjoining thereunto is the Court of
-Requests. Then is St. Stephen's chapel, of old time founded by King
-Stephen. King John, in the 7th of his reign, granted to Baldwinus de
-London, clerk of his Exchequer, the chapelship of St. Stephen's at
-Westminster, etc. This chapel was again since, of a far more curious
-workmanship, new built by King Edward III. in the year 1347, for
-thirty-eight persons in that church to serve God; to wit, a dean,
-twelve secular canons, thirteen vicars, four clerks, five choristers,
-two servitors, to wit, a verger and a keeper of the chapel. He built
-for those from the house of Receipt, along nigh to the Thames, within
-the same palace, there to inhabit; and since that there was also built
-for them, betwixt the clock-house and the wool staple, called the Wey
-house. He also built to the use of this chapel (though out of the palace
-court), some distance west, in the little sanctuary, a strong clochard
-of stone and timber, covered with lead, and placed therein three great
-bells, since usually rung at coronations, triumphs, funeral of princes,
-and their obits. Of those bells men fabuled that their ringing soured
-all the drink in the town: more, that about the biggest bell was
-written,--
-
- "King Edward made me,
- Thirtie thousand and three;
- Take me downe and wey me,
- And more shall ye find me."
-
-But these bells being taken down indeed, were found all three not
-to weigh twenty thousand. True it is, that in the city of Rouen, in
-Normandie, there is one great bell, that hath such inscription as
-followeth:--
-
- "Je suis George de Ambois,
- Qui trente cinq mil a pois,
- Mes lui qui me pesera,
- Trente six mil me trouera.
-
- "I am George of Ambois,
- Thirty-five thousand in pois;
- But he that shall weigh me,
- Thirty-six thousand shall find me."
-
-The said King Edward endowed this chapel with lands to the yearly value
-of five hundred pounds. Doctor John Chambers, the king's physician,
-the last dean of this college, built thereunto a cloister of curious
-workmanship, to the charges of eleven thousand marks. This chapel, or
-college, at the suppression, was valued to dispend in lands by the year
-one thousand and eighty-five pounds ten shillings and five pence, and
-was surrendered to Edward VI.; since the which time the same chapel hath
-served as a parliament house.
-
-By this chapel of St. Stephen was sometime one other smaller chapel,
-called our Lady of the Pew, to the which lady great offerings were
-used to be made: amongst other things, I have read, that Richard II.,
-after the overthrow of Wat Tyler and other his rebels, in the 4th of
-his reign, went to Westminster, and there giving thanks to God for his
-victory, made his offering in this chapel; but as divers have noted,
-namely, John Piggot, in the year 1252, on the 17th of February, by
-negligence of a scholar appointed by his schoolmaster to put forth
-the lights of this chapel, the image of our lady, richly decked with
-jewels, precious stones, pearls, and rings, more than any jeweller could
-judge the price for, so saith mine author, was, with all this apparel,
-ornaments, and chapel itself, burnt; but since again re-edified by
-Anthonie, Earl Rivers, Lord Scales, and of the Isle of Wight, uncle and
-governor to the Prince of Wales, that should have been King Edward V.,
-etc.
-
-The said palace, before the entry thereunto, hath a large court, and
-in the same a tower of stone, containing a clock, which striketh every
-hour on a great bell, to be heard into the hall in sitting time of the
-courts, or otherwise; for the same clock, in a calm, will be heard into
-the city of London. King Henry VI. gave the keeping of this clock,
-with the tower called the clock-house, and the appurtenances, unto
-William Walsby, dean of St. Stephen's, with the wages of six pence the
-day out of his Exchequer. By this tower standeth a fountain, which at
-coronations and great triumphs is made to run with wine out of divers
-spouts.
-
-On the east side of this court is an arched gate to the river of Thames,
-with a fair bridge and landing-place for all men that have occasion. On
-the north side is the south end of St. Stephen's alley, or Canon row,
-and also a way into the old wool staple; and on the west side is a very
-fair gate, begun by Richard III. in the year 1484, and was by him built
-a great height, and many fair lodgings in it, but left unfinished, and
-is called the high tower of Westminster. Thus much for the monastery
-and palace may suffice. And now will I speak of the gate-house, and of
-Totehill street, stretching from the west part of the close.
-
-The gate-house is so called of two gates, the one out of the College
-court towards the north, on the east side whereof was the bishop of
-London's prison for clerks' convict; and the other gate, adjoining to
-the first, but towards the west, is a gaol or prison for offenders
-thither committed. Walter Warfield, cellarer to the monastery, caused
-both these gates, with the appurtenances, to be built in the reign of
-Edward III.
-
-On the south side of this gate, King Henry VII. founded an alms-house
-for thirteen poor men; one of them to be a priest, aged forty-five
-years, a good grammarian, the other twelve to be aged fifty years,
-without wives: every Saturday the priest to receive of the abbot, or
-prior, four pence by the day, and each other two pence halfpenny by the
-day for ever, for their sustenance, and every year to each one a gown
-and a hood ready made; and to three women that dressed their meat, and
-kept them in their sickness, each to have every Saturday sixteen pence,
-and every year a gown ready made. More, to the thirteen poor men yearly
-eighty quarters of coal and one thousand of good faggots to their use,
-in the hall and kitchen of their mansion; a discreet monk to be overseer
-of them, and he to have forty shillings by the year, etc.; and hereunto
-was every abbot and prior sworn.
-
-Near unto this house westward was an old chapel of St. Anne; over
-against the which the Lady Margaret, mother to King Henry VII., erected
-an alms-house for poor women, which is now turned into lodgings for the
-singing men of the college. The place wherein this chapel and alms-house
-standeth was called the Elemosinary, or Almonry, now corruptly the
-Ambry,[299] for that the alms of the abbey were there distributed to
-the poor. And therein Islip, abbot of Westminster, erected the first
-press of book printing that ever was in England, about the year of
-Christ 1471. William Caxton, citizen of London, mercer, brought it into
-England, and was the first that practised it in the said abbey; after
-which time, the like was practised in the abbeys of St. Augustine at
-Canterbury, St. Alban's, and other monasteries.
-
-From the west gate runneth along Totehil street, wherein is a house
-of the Lord Gray of Wilton; and on the other side, at the entry into
-Totehill field, Stourton house, which Gyles, the last Lord Dacre of
-the south, purchased and built new, whose lady and wife Anne, sister
-to Thomas, the Lord Buckhurst, left money to her executors to build an
-hospital for twenty poor women, and so many children, to be brought up
-under them, for whose maintenance she assigned lands to the value of one
-hundred pounds by the year, which hospital her executors have new begun
-in the field adjoining. From the entry into Totehill field the street is
-called Petty France, in which, and upon St. Hermit's hill, on the south
-side thereof, Cornelius Van Dun (a Brabander born, yeoman of the guard
-to King Henry VIII., King Edward VI., Queen Mary, and Queen Elizabeth,)
-built twenty houses for poor women to dwell rent-free: and near hereunto
-was a chapel of Mary Magdalen, now wholly ruinated.
-
-In the year of Christ 1256, the 40th of Henry III., John Mansell, the
-king's councillor and priest, did invite to a stately dinner the kings
-and queens of England and Scotland, Edward the king's son, earls,
-barons, and knights, the Bishop of London, and divers citizens, whereby
-his guests did grow to such a number, that his house at Totehill could
-not receive them, but that he was forced to set up tents and pavilions
-to receive his guests, whereof there was such a multitude that seven
-hundred messes of meat did not serve for the first dinner.
-
-The city of Westminster for civil government is divided into twelve
-several wards; for the which the dean of the collegiate church of
-Westminster, or the high-steward, do elect twelve burgesses, and as
-many assistants; that is, one burgess, and one assistant, for every
-ward; out of the which twelve burgesses two are nominated yearly, upon
-Thursday in Easter week, for chief burgesses to continue for one year
-next following, who have authority given them by the act of parliament,
-27th Elizabeth, to hear, examine, determine, and punish, according to
-the laws of the realm, and lawful customs of the city of London, matters
-of incontinency, common scolds, inmates, and common annoyances; and
-likewise, to commit such persons as shall offend against the peace, and
-thereof to give knowledge within four-and-twenty hours to some justice
-of peace, in the county of Middlesex.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[291] "Which is a goodly house, lately builded nigh to Ivy bridge, over
-against the old Bedforde house, namely, called Russell house and Dacres
-house, now the house of Sir Thomas Cecile, Lorde Burghley; and so on the
-north side to a lane that turneth to the parish church of St. Martin in
-the Fielde, and stretcheth to St. Giles in the Fielde."--_1st edition_,
-pp. 370-1.
-
-[292] "I thinke custome."--_1st edition_, p. 376.
-
-[293] "Foundation of Westminster by Sebert, a Christian king, not onely
-in word, but in deed."--_Stow._
-
-[294] "One of her majesties chaplens."--_1st edition_, p. 381.
-
-[295] "Earle of Bridgewater."--_1st edition_, p. 382.
-
-[296] In the first edition, the passage relative to Henry II.'s command
-to Hugh Gifford and William Browne, to distribute alms "according to
-the weight and measure of the king's children" (see ante, page 83), is
-inserted in this place.
-
-[297] "I find of record, the 50th of Edward III., that the chapter-house
-of the abbot of Westminster was then the usual house for the commons in
-parliament."--_Stow._
-
-[298] "Of England."--_1st edition_, p. 387.
-
-[299] The corruption alluded to by Stow exists to the present day--the
-Almonry being styled by the lower classes in Westminster, the Ambry. The
-house said to have been Caxton's is also, we believe, still remaining,
-though in a state of great dilapidation.
-
-
-
-
-GOVERNORS OF THE CITY OF LONDON; AND FIRST OF ECCLESIASTICAL BISHOPS AND
-OTHER MINISTERS THERE
-
-
-Having thus run through the description of these cities of London
-and Westminster, as well in their original foundations, as in their
-increases of buildings and ornaments, together with such incidents of
-sundry sorts as are before, both generally and particularly discoursed,
-it remaineth that somewhat be noted by me touching the policy and
-government, both ecclesiastical and civil, of London, as I have already
-done for Westminster, the order whereof is appointed by the late
-statute, even as that of London is maintained by the customs thereof,
-most laudably used before all the time of memory.
-
-And first, to begin with the ecclesiastical jurisdiction: I read that
-the Christian faith was first preached in this island (then called
-Britaine) by Joseph of Arimathea, and his brethren, disciples of Christ,
-in the time of Aruiragus, then governor here under the Roman emperor;
-after which time, Lucius, king of the Britaines, sent his ambassadors,
-Eluanus and Meduvanus, two men learned in the Scriptures, with letters
-to Eleutherius,[300] bishop of Rome, desiring him to send some devout
-and learned men, by whose instruction he and his people might be taught
-the faith and religion of Christ. Eleutherius baptised those messengers,
-making Eluanus a bishop, and Meduvius a teacher, and sent over with
-them into Britain two other famous clerks, Faganus and Deruvianus, by
-whose diligence Lucius, and his people of Britaine, were instructed in
-the faith of Christ, and baptized, the temples of idols were converted
-into cathedral churches, and bishops were placed where Flammines
-before had been; at London, Yorke, and Carleon upon Uske, were placed
-archbishops, saith some. The epistle said to be sent by Eleutherius
-to king Lucius, for the establishing of the faith, ye may read in my
-_Annals_, _Summaries_, and _Chronicles_, truly translated and set down
-as mine author hath it, for some have curtailed and corrupted it, and
-then fathered it upon reverend Bede, who never wrote word thereof, or
-otherwise to that effect, more than this as followeth.
-
-In the year 156, Marcus Aurelius Verus, the fourteenth emperor after
-Augustus, governed the empire with his brother Aurelius Comodus;
-in whose time, Glutherius, a holy man, being pope of the church of
-Rome, Lucius, king of Britaines, wrote unto him, desiring that by his
-commandment he might be made Christian; which his request was granted
-him; whereby the Britaines receiving then the faith, kept it sound and
-undefiled in rest and peace until Dioclesian the emperor's time. Thus
-far Bede, which may suffice to prove the Christian faith there to be
-received here. And now of the London bishops as I find them.
-
-There remaineth in the parish church of St. Peter upon Cornhill in
-London a table, wherein is written, that Lucius founded the same church
-to be an archbishop's see, and metropolitan or chief church of his
-kingdom, and that it so endured the space of four hundred years, until
-the coming of Augustine the monk, and others, from Rome, in the reign
-of the Saxons. The archbishops' names I find only to be set down by
-Joceline of Furnes, in his book of British bishops, and not elsewhere.
-Thean (saith he) was the first archbishop of London, in the time of
-Lucius, who built the said church of St. Peter, in a place called
-Cornhill in London, by the aid of Ciran, chief butler to King Lucius.
-
-2. Eluanus was the second, and he built a library to the same church
-adjoining, and converted many of the Druids (learned men in the Pagan
-law) to the Christian faith.
-
-3. Cadar was the third; then followed,
-
-4. Obinus.
-
-5. Conan.
-
-6. Paludius.
-
-7. Stephen.
-
-8. Iltute.
-
-9. Dedwin.
-
-10. Thedred.
-
-11. Hillary.
-
-12. Guidelium.
-
-13. Vodimus, slain by the Saxons.
-
-14. Theanus, the fourteenth, fled with the Britaines into Wales, about
-the year of Christ 587.
-
-Thus much out of Joceline of the archbishops; the credit whereof I leave
-to the judgment of the learned; for I read of a bishop of London (not
-before named) in the year of Christ 326, to be present at the second
-council, holden at Arles, in the time of Constantine the Great, who
-subscribed thereunto in these words: _Ex provinciæ Britaniæ Civitate
-Londiniensi Restitutus Episcopus_, as plainly appeareth in the first
-tome of the councils, he writeth not himself archbishop, and therefore
-maketh the matter of archbishops doubtful, or rather, overthroweth that
-opinion.
-
-The Saxons being pagans, having chased the Britons, with the Christian
-preachers, into the mountains of Wales and Cornewall; and having divided
-this kingdom of the Britons amongst themselves, at the length, to wit,
-in the year 596, Pope Gregory, moved of a godly instinction (sayeth
-Bede), in the 147th year after the arrival of the Angles or Saxons in
-Britaine, sent Augustine, Miletus, Justus, and John, with other monks,
-to preach the Gospel to the said nation of the Angles: these landed
-in the isle of Thanet, and were first received by Ethelbert, king of
-Kent, whom they converted to the faith of Christ, with divers other of
-his people, in the 34th year of his reign, which Ethelbert gave unto
-Augustine the city of Canterbury.
-
-This Augustine, in the year of Christ 604, consecrated Miletus and
-Justus bishops, appointing Miletus to preach unto the East Saxons, whose
-chief city was London; and there King Sebert, nephew to Ethelbert, by
-preaching of Miletus, received the Word of Life: and then Ethelbert king
-of Kent, built in the city of London St. Paul's church, wherein Miletus
-began to be bishop in the year 619, and sat five years. Ethelbert, by
-his charter, gave lands to this church of St. Paul, so did other kings
-after him. King Sebert, through the good life, and like preaching of
-Miletus, having received baptism, to show himself a Christian, built a
-church to the honour of God and St. Peter, on the west side of London,
-which church is called Westminster; but the successors of Sebert being
-pagans, expelled Miletus out of their kingdoms.
-
-Justus, the second bishop for a time, and then Miletus again; after
-whose decease the seat was void for a time. At length Sigebert, son to
-Sigebert, brother to Sebert, ruled in Essex; he became a Christian,
-and took to him a holy man named Cedde, or Chadde, who won many by
-preaching, and good life, to the Christian religion.
-
-Cedde, or Chad, was by Finan consecrated bishop of the East Saxons, and
-he ordered priests and deacons in all the parts of Essex, but especially
-at Ithancaster and Tilberie.
-
-This city of Ithancaster (saith Raph Cogshall) stood on the bank of the
-river Pante, that runneth by Maldun, in the hundred of Danesey, but now
-is drowned in Pante, so that nothing remaineth but the ruin of the city
-in the river Tilberie (both the west and east) standeth on the Thames
-side, nigh over against Gravesend.
-
-Wina, expelled from the church of Winchester by Cenewalche the king, was
-adopted to be the fourth bishop of London, in the reign of Wolferus king
-of Mercia, and sat nine years.
-
-Erkenwalde, born in the castle or town of Stallingborough in Lindsey,
-first abbot of Crotesey, was by Theodore archbishop of Canterbury
-appointed to be bishop of the East Saxons, in the city of London. This
-Erkenwalde, in the year of Christ 677, before he was made bishop, had
-built two monasteries, one for himself, being a monk, in the isle of
-Crote in Surrey, by the river of Thames, and another for his sister
-Edilburge, being a nun, in a certain place called Berching in Essex;
-he deceased at Berching in the year 697, and was then buried in Paul's
-church, and translated into the new church of St. Paul in the year 1148.
-
-Waldhere was bishop of London. Sebba king of the East Saxons at his
-hands received the habit of monk, for at that time there were monks
-in Paul's church, as writeth Radulphus de Diceto, and others. To this
-bishop he brought a great sum of money, to be bestowed and given to the
-poor, reserving nothing to himself, but rather desired to remain poor
-in goods as in spirit, for the kingdom of heaven. When he had reigned
-thirty years he deceased at Paul's, and was there buried, and lieth now
-in a coffin of stone, on the north side of the aisle next the choir.
-
-Ingwaldus bishop of London was at the consecration of Tatwine archbishop
-of Canterbury; he confirmed the foundation of Crowland in the year 716,
-saith Ingulfus, and deceased in the year 744, as saith Hoveden.
-
-746. Engulfe bishop of London.
-
-754. Wichet, or Wigerus, bishop of London.
-
-761. Eaderightus, or Edbrithe, bishop of London.
-
-768. Eadgain, or Eadgarus, bishop of London.
-
-773. Kenewallth bishop of London.
-
-784. Eadbaldus bishop of London.
-
-795. Heatbright bishop of London, deceased 802, saith Hoveden.
-
-813. Osmond bishop of London; he was witness to a charter made to
-Crowland in the year 833, saith Ingulphus.
-
-835. Ethelmothe bishop of London.
-
-838. Elbertus, or Celbertus, bishop of London.
-
-841. Caulfe bishop of London.
-
-850. Swithulfus bishop of London; he likewise was witness to a charter
-of Crowland 851.
-
-860. Edstanus bishop of London; witness to a charter to Crowland 860.
-
-870. Ulsius bishop of London.
-
-878. Ethelwardus bishop of London.
-
-886. Elstanus bishop of London, died in the year 900, saith Asser; and
-all these, saith the author of _Flores Historiarum_, were buried in the
-old church of St. Paul, but there remaineth now no memory of them.
-
-900. Theodricus bishop of London; this man confirmed King Edred's
-charter made to Winchester in the year 947, whereby it seemeth that he
-was bishop of London of a later time than is here placed.
-
-922. Welstanus bishop of London.
-
-941. Brithelme bishop of London.
-
-958. Dunstanus, abbot of Glastonberie, then bishop of Worcester, and
-then bishop of London; he was afterwards translated to Canterbury 960.
-
-960. Ealfstanus bishop of London; the 28th in number.
-
-981. Edgare bishop of London; he confirmed the grants made to Winchester
-and to Crowland 966, and again to Crowland 970, the charter of Ethelred,
-concerning Ulfrunhampton, 996.
-
-1004. Elphinus bishop of London.
-
-1010. Alwinus bishop of London; he was sent into Normandy in the year
-1013, saith Asser.
-
-1044. Robert, a monk of Gemerisins in Normandy, bishop of London seven
-years, afterwards translated from London to Canterbury.
-
-1050. Specgasius, elected, but rejected by the king.
-
-1051. William, a Norman chaplain to Edward the Confessor, was made
-bishop of London 1051, sate 17 years, and deceased 1070. He obtained of
-William the Conqueror the charter of liberties for the city of London,
-as I have set down in my _Summary_, and appeareth by his epitaph in
-Paul's church. 1070. Hugh de Orwell bishop of London; he died of a
-leprosy when he had sitten fifteen years.
-
-1085. Maurice bishop of London; in whose time, to wit, in the year
-1086, the church of St. Paul was burnt, with the most part of this city;
-and therefore he laid the foundation of a new large church; and having
-sat twenty-two years he deceased 1107, saith Paris.
-
-1108. Richard Beame, or Beamor, bishop of London, did wonderfully
-increase the work of this church begun, purchasing the streets and lanes
-adjoining with his own money; and he founded the monastery of St. Osyth
-in Essex. He sat bishop nineteen years, and deceased 1127.
-
-1127. Gilbertus Universalis, a canon of Lyons, elected by Henry I.; he
-deceased 1141, when he had sat fourteen years.
-
-1142. Robert de Segillo, a monk of Reading, whom Mawde the empress made
-bishop of London, where he sat eleven years. Geffrey de Magnavile took
-him prisoner at Fulham, and he deceased 1152.
-
-1153. Richard Beames, archdeacon of Essex, bishop of London ten years,
-who deceased 1162.
-
-1163. Gilbert Foliot, bishop of Hereford, from whence translated to
-London, sat twenty-three years, and deceased 1186.
-
-1189. Richard Fitz Nele, the king's treasurer, archdeacon of Essex,
-elected bishop of London at Pipwel, 1189. He sate nine years, and
-deceased 1198. This man also took great pains about the building of
-Paul's church, and raised many other goodly buildings in his diocese.
-
-1199. William S. Mary Church, a Norman, bishop of London, who was one
-of the three bishops that, by the pope's commandment, executed his
-interdiction, or curse, upon the whole realm of England; but he was
-forced, with the other bishops, to flee the realm in 1208; and his
-castle at Stratford in Essex was by commandment of King John overthrown,
-1210. This William, in company of the archbishop of Canterburie, and of
-the bishop of Elie, went to Rome, and there complained against the king,
-1212, and returned, so as in the year 1215 King John, in the church of
-St. Paul, at the hands of this William, took upon him the cross for the
-Holy Land. He resigned his bishoprick of his own voluntary in the year
-1221, saith Cogshall.
-
-1221. Eustachius de Fauconbridge, treasurer of the exchequer (saith
-Paris), chancellor of the exchequer (saith Textor and Cogshall), bishop
-of London, 1223, whilst at Chelmesforde he was giving holy orders, a
-great tempest of wind and rain annoyed so many as came thither, whereof
-it was gathered how highly God was displeased with such as came to
-receive orders, to the end that they might live a more easy life of the
-stipend appointed to the churchmen, giving themselves to banquetting;
-and so with unclean and filthy bodies (but more unclean souls) presume
-to minister unto God, the author of purity and cleanness. Falcatius de
-Brent was delivered to his custody in the year 1224. This Eustachius
-deceased in the year 1228, and was buried in Paul's church, in the south
-side, without, or above, the choir.
-
-1229. Roger Niger, archdeacon of Colchester, made bishop of London. In
-the year 1230 (saith Paris), upon the feast day of the Conversion of St.
-Paul, when he was at mass in the cathedral church of St. Paul, a great
-multitude of people being there present, suddenly the weather waxed
-dark, so as one could scantly see another, and a horrible thunder-clap
-lighted on the church, which so shook it, that it was like to have
-fallen, and therewithal out of a dark cloud proceeded a flash of
-lightning, that all the church seemed to be on fire, whereupon such a
-stench ensued, that all men thought they should have died; thousands of
-men and women ran out of the church, and being astonied, fell upon the
-ground void of all sense and understanding; none of all the multitude
-tarried in the church save the bishop and one deacon, which stood still
-before the high altar, awaiting the will of God. When the air was
-cleansed, the multitude returned into the church, and the bishop ended
-the service.
-
-This Roger Niger is commended to have been a man of worthy life,
-excellently well-learned, a notable preacher, pleasant in talk, mild
-of countenance, and liberal at his table. He admonished the usurers of
-his time to leave such enormities as they tendered the salvation of
-their souls, and to do penance for that they had committed. But when
-he saw they laughed him to scorn, and also threatened him, the bishop
-generally excommunicated and accursed all such, and commanded straitly
-that such usurers should depart farther from the city of London, which
-hither towards had been ignorant of such mischief and wickedness, least
-his diocese should be infected therewithal. He fell sick and died at his
-manor of Bishops hall, in the lordship and parish of Stebunheth, in the
-year 1241, and was buried in Paul's church, on the north side of the
-presbytery, in a fair tomb, coped, of grey marble.
-
-1241. Fulco Basset, dean of Yorke, by the death of Gilbert Basset,
-possessed his lands, and was then made bishop of London, deceased on the
-21st of May, in the year 1259, as saith John Textor, and was buried in
-Paul's church.
-
-1259. Henry Wingham, chancellor of England, made bishop of London,
-deceased in the year 1262, saith Textor, and was buried in Paul's
-church, on the south side, without or above the choir, in a marble
-monument, close at the head of Fauconbridge.
-
-1262. Richard Talbot, bishop of London, straightways after his
-consecration deceased, saith Eversden.
-
-1262. Henry Sandwich, bishop of London, deceased in the year 1273, the
-same author affirmeth.
-
-1273. John Cheshul, dean of Paul's, treasurer of the Exchequer, and
-keeper of the great seal, was bishop of London, and deceased in the year
-1279, saith Eversden.
-
-1280. Fulco Lovel, archdeacon of Colchester, elected bishop of London,
-but refused that place.
-
-1280. Richard Gravesend, archdeacon of Northampton, bishop of London.
-It appeareth by the charter-warren granted to this bishop, that in his
-time there were two woods in the parish of Stebunhith pertaining to the
-said bishop. I have since I kept house for myself known the one of them
-by Bishops hall; but now they are both made plain of wood, and not to
-be discerned from other grounds. Some have fabuled that this Richard
-Gravesend, bishop of London, in the year 1392, the 16th of Richard II.,
-purchased the charter of liberties to this city; which thing hath no
-possibility of truth, as I have proved, for he deceased in the year
-1303, almost ninety years before that time.
-
-1307. Raph Baldocke, dean of Paul's, bishop of London, consecrated
-at Lyons by Peter, bishop of Alba, in the year 1307; he was a great
-furtherer of the new work of Paul's; to wit, the east end, called our
-Lady chapel, and other adjoining. This Raph deceased in the year 1313,
-and was buried in the said Lady chapel, under a flat stone.
-
-1313. Gilbert Segrave was consecrated bishop of London, and sat three
-years.
-
-1317. Richard Newport, bishop of London, sat two years, and was buried
-in Paul's church.
-
-1318. Stephen Gravesend, bishop of London, sat twenty years.
-
-1338. Richard Wentworth, bishop of London, and chancellor of England,
-and deceased the year 1339.
-
-1339. Raph Stratford, bishop of London; he purchased the piece of ground
-called No Man's land, beside Smithfield, and dedicated it to the use of
-burial, as before hath appeared. He was born at Stratford upon Avon, and
-therefore built a chapel to St. Thomas there: he sat fourteen years,
-deceased at Stebunhith.
-
-1354. Michael Norbroke, bishop of London, deceased in the year 1361,
-saith Mirimouth, sat seven years.
-
-1362. Simon Sudbery, bishop of London, sat thirteen years, translated to
-be archbishop of Canterbury in the year 1375.
-
-1375. William Courtney, translated from Hereford to the bishoprick
-of London, and after translated from thence to the archbishoprick of
-Canterbury in the year 1381.
-
-1381. Robert Breybrook, canon of Lichfield, bishop of London, made
-chancellor in the 6th of Richard II., sat bishop twenty years, and
-deceased in the year 1404: he was buried in the said Lady chapel at
-Paul's.
-
-1405. Roger Walden, treasurer of the exchequer, archbishop of
-Canterbury, was deposed, and after made bishop of London; he deceased in
-the year 1406, and was buried[301] in Paul's church, Allhallowes altar.
-
-1406. Richard Bubwith, bishop of London, treasurer of the exchequer,
-translated to Salisbury, and from thence to Bathe, and lieth buried at
-Wels.
-
-1407. Richard Clifford, removed from Worcester to London, deceased 1422,
-as saith Thomas Walsingham, and was buried in Paul's.
-
-1422. John Kempe, fellow of Martin college in Oxford, was made bishop of
-Rochester, from whence removed to Chichester, and thence to London; he
-was made the king's chancellor in the year 1425, the 4th of Henry VI.,
-and was removed from London to York in the year 1426: he sat archbishop
-there twenty-five years, and was translated to Canterbury; he was
-afterwards made cardinal in the year 1452. In the bishop of London's
-house at Fulham he received the cross, and the next day the pall, at the
-hands of Thomas Kempe, bishop of London. He deceased in the year 1454.
-
-1426. William Gray, dean of York, consecrated bishop of London, who
-founded a college at Thele in Hartfordshire, for a master and four
-canons, and made it a cell to Elsing spittle in London; it had of old
-time been a college, decayed, and therefore newly-founded. He was
-translated to Lincoln 1431.
-
-1431. Robert Fitzhugh, archdeacon of Northampton, consecrated bishop of
-London, sat five years, deceased 1435, and was buried on the south side
-of the choir of Paul's.
-
-1435. Robert Gilbert, doctor of divinity, dean of York, consecrated
-bishop of London, sat twelve years, deceased 1448.
-
-1449. Thomas Kempe, archdeacon of Richmond, consecrated bishop of London
-at York house (now Whitehall), by the hands of his uncle John Kemp,
-archbishop of York, the 8th of February, 1449; he founded a chapel of
-the Trinity in the body of St. Paul's church, on the north side; he
-sat bishop of London thirty-nine years and forty-eight days, and then
-deceased in the year 1489, was there buried.
-
-1489. John Marshal, bishop of London, deceased in the year 1493.
-
-1493. Richard Hall, bishop of London, deceased 1495, and was buried in
-the body of St. Paul's church.
-
-1496. Thomas Savage, first bishop of Rochester, then bishop of London
-five years, was translated to York 1501, where he sat archbishop seven
-years, and was there buried in the year 1507.
-
-1502. William Warrham, bishop of London, made keeper of the great seal,
-sat two years, was translated to Canterbury.
-
-1504. William Barons, bishop of London, sat ten months and eleven days,
-deceased in the year 1505.
-
-1505. Richard Fitz James, fellow of Merton college in Oxford, in the
-reign of Henry VI., was made bishop of Rochester, after bishop of
-Chichester, then bishop of London; he deceased 1521, and lieth buried
-hard beneath the north-west pillar of the steeple in St. Paul's, under a
-fair tomb of marble, over the which was built a fair chapel of timber,
-with stairs mounting thereunto: this chapel was burned with fire from
-the steeple 1561, and the tomb was taken down.
-
-1521. Cuthbert Tunstal, doctor of law, master of the rolls, lord privy
-seal, and bishop of London, was thence translated to the bishopric of
-Durham in the year 1529.
-
-1529. John Stokeley, bishop of London, sat thirteen years, deceased in
-the year 1539, and was buried in the Lady chapel in Paul's.
-
-1539. Edmond Boner, doctor of the civil law, archdeacon of Leycester,
-then bishop of Hereford, was elected to London in the year 1539, whilst
-he was beyond the seas, ambassador to King Henry VIII. On the 1st of
-September, 1549, he preached at Paul's cross; for the which sermon he
-was charged before the council of King Edward VI., by William Latimer,
-parson of St. Lawrence Poltney, and John Hooper, sometime a white monk,
-and being convented before certain commissioners at Lambith, was for his
-disobedience to the king's order, on the 20th day of the same month sent
-to the Marshalsey, and deprived from his bishopric.
-
-1550. Nicholas Ridley, bishop of Rochester, elected bishop of London,
-was installed in Paul's church on the 12th of April. This man by his
-deed, dated the twelfth day after Christmas, in the 4th year of Edward
-VI., gave to the king the manors of Branketrie and Southminster, and the
-patronage of the church of Cogshall in Essex, the manors of Stebunheth
-and Hackney, in the county of Middlesex, and the marsh of Stebunheth,
-with all and singular messuages, lands, and tenements, to the said
-manors belonging, and also the advowson of the vicarage of the parish
-church of Cogshall in Essex aforesaid; which grant was confirmed by the
-dean and chapter of Paul's, the same day and year, with exception of
-such lands in Southminster, Stebunheth, and Hackney, as only pertained
-to them. The said King Edward, by his letters patents, dated the 16th
-of April, in the said 4th year of his reign, granted to Sir Thomas
-Wentworth, Lord Wentworth, lord chamberlain of the king's household,
-for, and in consideration of his good and faithful service before done,
-a part of the late received gift, to wit, the lordships of Stebunheth
-and Hackney, with all the members and appurtenances thereunto belonging,
-in Stebunheth, Hackney way, Shoreditch, Holiwell street, Whitechappell,
-Stratford at Bow, Poplar, North street, Limehouse, Ratliffe, Cleve
-street, Brock street, Mile end, Bleten hall green, Oldford, Westheth,
-Kingsland, Shakelwell, Newinton street _alias_ Hackney street, Clopton,
-Church street, Wel street, Humbarton, Grove street, Gunston street,
-_alias_ More street, in the county of Middlesex, together with the marsh
-of Stebunhith, etc. The manor of Hackney was valued at sixty-one pounds
-nine shillings and fourpence, and the manor Stebunhith at one hundred
-and forty pounds eight shillings and eleven pence, by year, to be holden
-in chief, by the service of the twentieth part of a knight's fee. This
-bishop, Nicholas Ridley, for preaching a sermon at Paul's cross, on the
-16th of July, in the year 1553, was committed to the Tower of London,
-where he remained prisoner till the 10th of April, 1554, and was thence
-sent to Oxford, there to dispute with the divines and learned men of the
-contrary opinion; and on the 16th of October, 1555, he was burned at
-Oxford for opinions against the Romish order of sacraments, etc.
-
-1553. Edmond Boner aforesaid, being released out of the Marshalsey,
-was restored to the bishoprick of London, by Queen Mary, on the 5th
-of August, in the year 1553, and again deposed by Queen Elizabeth, in
-the month of July 1559, and was eftsoones committed to the Marshalsey,
-where he died on the 5th of September, 1569, and was at midnight buried
-amongst other prisoners in St. George's churchyard.
-
-1559. Edmond Grindal, bishop of London, being consecrated the 21st of
-December, 1559, was translated to York in the year 1570, and from thence
-removed to Canterbury in the year 1575. He died blind 1583 on the 6th of
-July, and was buried at Croydowne in Surrey.
-
-1570. Edwine Stands, being translated from Worcester to the bishoprick
-of London, in the year 1570, was thence translated to Yorke in the year
-1576, and died in the year 1588.
-
-1576. John Elmere, bishop of London, deceased in the year 1594, on the
-3rd of June at Fulham, and was buried in Paul's church, before St.
-Thomas chapel.
-
-1594. Richard Fletcher, bishop of Worcester, was on the 30th of December
-in Paul's church elected bishop of London, and deceased on the 15th of
-June, 1596: he was buried in Paul's church without any solemn funeral.
-
-1597. Richard Bancroft, doctor of divinity, consecrated at Lambeth on
-Sunday, the 8th of May, now sitteth bishop of London, in the year 1598
-being installed there.
-
-This much for the succession of the bishops of London, whose diocese
-containeth the city of London, the whole shires of Middlesex and
-Essex and part of Hartfordshire. These bishops have for assistants in
-the cathedral church of St. Paul, a dean, a chaunter, a chancellor,
-a treasurer, five archdeacons--to wit, London, Middlesex, Essex,
-Colchester, and St. Alban's, and thirty prebendaries; there appertaineth
-also to the said churches for furniture of the choir in Divine service,
-and ministration of the sacraments, a college of twelve petty canons,
-six vicars choral, and choristers, etc.
-
-This diocese is divided into parishes, every parish having its parson,
-or vicar at the least, learned men for the most part, and sufficient
-preachers, to instruct the people. There were in this city, and within
-the suburbs thereof, in the reign of Henry II. (as writeth Fitz
-Stephens), thirteen great conventual churches, besides the lesser sort
-called parish churches, to the number of one hundred and twenty-six,
-all which conventual churches, and some others since that time founded,
-are now suppressed and gone, except the cathedral church of St. Paul in
-London, and the college of St. Peter at Westminster; of all which parish
-churches, though I have spoken, yet for more ease to the reader I will
-here again set them down in manner of a table, not by order of alphabet,
-but as they be placed in the wards and suburbs.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[300] "Eleutherius died in the yeare 186, when he had sitten bishop 15
-yeares."--_Stow._
-
-[301] "At Bartholomew's priory in Smithfield."--_1st edition_, p. 304.
-
-
-
-
-PARISH CHURCHES
-
-
-1. _In Portsoken ward, parish churches, three._
-
- The hospital of St. Katherine, serveth for that liberty.
- Trinity, in the Minories, for precinct thereof.
- St. Bottolphe, by Aldegate, the only parish church for that ward.
-
-2. _In Tower street ward, four._
-
- In the Tower, St. Peter, for the inhabitants there.
- Alhallowes Barking, by the Tower.
- St. Olave, in Hart street.
- St. Dunstone in the East.
-
-3. _In Aldgate ward, three._
-
- St. Katheren Christ's church.
- St. Andrewes Undershafte.
- St. Katheren Colman church.
-
-4. _In Lime street ward none. There was St. Mary at the Axe, and St.
-Augustine in the Wall, both suppressed and united, the one to Alhallowes
-in the Wall in Brode street ward, the other to St. Andrewe Undershaft in
-Lime street ward._
-
-5. _In Bishopsgate ward, three._
-
- St. Bottolphes, without Bishopsgate.
- St. Ethelburge, within the gate.
- St. Helens', adjoining the nuns' priory.
-
-6. _In Brode street ward, six._
-
- Alhallowes by the Wall.
- St. Peter's the Poor.
- St. Martin's Oteswitche.
- St. Benet Fynke.
- St. Bartilmew, by the Exchange.
- St. Christopher, by the Stocks' market.
-
-7. _In Cornhill ward, two._
-
- St. Peter, upon Cornehill.
- St. Michaell, upon Cornehill.
-
-8. _In Langborne ward, seven._
-
- St. Gabriel Fenchurch.
- St. Dyones Backchurch.
- Alhallowes, in Lombard street.
- St. Edmond, in Lombard street.
- Alhallowes Staning, at Mart lane end.
- St. Nicholas Acon, in Lombard street.
- St. Mary Wolnoth, in Lombard street.
-
-9. _In Billingsgate ward, five._
-
- St. Buttolph, by Billingsgate.
- St. Mary, on the hill.
- St. Margaret Pattens.
- St. Andrew Hubert, in Eastcheape.
- St. George, in Buttolph lane.
-
-10. _In Bridge ward within, four._
-
- St. Magnus, at the bridge foot.
- St. Margaret, Bridge street.
- St. Leonard Milkchurch, Fish street hill.
- St. Benet Grasse church.
-
-11. _In Candlewike street ward, five._
-
- St. Clement's, Eastcheape.
- St. Mary Abchurch.
- St. Michael, in Crooked lane, sometime a college.
- St. Martin's Orgars.
- St. Laurence Pountney, sometime a college.
-
-12. _In Walbrooke ward, five._
-
- St. Swithen, by London stone.
- St. Mary Woolchurch.
- St. Stephen, by Walbrooke.
- St. John, upon Walbrooke.
- St. Mary Bothaw.
-
-13. _In Downegate ward, two._
-
- Alhallowes, Hay wharf, in the Roperie.
- Alhallowes the Less, in the Roperie.
-
-14. _In the Vintry ward, four._
-
- St. Michael Paternoster, in the Royall, sometime a college.
- St. Thomas Apostles.
- St. Martin, in the Vintrie.
- St. James, in Garlicke hith.
-
-15. _In Cordwainer street ward, three._
-
- St. Anthonies, in Budge row.
- Alde Mary church, new Mary church, or Mary le Bow.
-
-16. _In Cheap ward, seven, and a chapel._
-
- St. Benet Sorhoge, or Syth.
- St. Pancreate, by Sopar's lane.
- St. Mildred, in the Poultrie.
- St. Mary Colchurch.
- St. Martin's Pomerie, in Ironmonger lane.
- Alhallowes, Honie lane.
- St. Laurence, in the Jury.
- The Chapel in Guildhall, sometime a college.
-
-17. _In Coleman street ward, three._
-
- St. Olave Upwell, in the Old Jurie.
- St. Margaret, in Lothburie.
- St. Stephen, in Coleman street.
-
-18. _In Bassings hall ward, one._
-
- St. Michael, at Bassings hall.
-
-19. _In Cripplegate ward, six._
-
- St. Mary Aldermanburie.
- St. Alphage, sometime an hospital of Elsing.
- St. Mary Magdalen, in Milk street.
- St. Albon's, in Wood street.
- St. Michael, in Hugen lane.
- St. Giles, without Cripplegate.
-
-20. _In Aldersgate ward, six._
-
- St. John Zachery.
- St. Mary Staning.
- St. Olave, in Silver street.
- St. Leonard, in Foster Lane.
- St. Anne, by Aldersgate.
- St. Buttolph, without Aldgate.
-
-21. _In Faringdon ward within, the cathedral church of St. Paule, and
-parish churches nine._
-
- St. Peter's, at the Cross in Cheape.
- St. Fauster, in Fauster lane.
- Christ church, made a parish church of the Gray Friers
- church, and of two parish churches, St. Nicholas
- and St. Ewin, and also an hospital for poor children.
- St. Mathew, in Fryday street.
- St. Augustine, by Paules gate.
- St. Faith, under Paules church.
- St. Martin's, at Ludgate.
- St. Anne, at the Blacke Friers.
- St. Michael at Corne, by Paules.
- Chapel of St. James, by Cripplegate.
-
-22. _In Bread Street ward, four._
-
- Alhallowes, in Bread street.
- St. Mildred's, in Bread street.
- St. John Evangelist, in Fryday street.
- St. Margaret Moses, in Fryday street.
-
-23. _In Queene hithe ward, seven._
-
- St. Trinitie, in Trinity lane.
- St. Nicholas, Cold abbey.
- St. Nicholas, Olave.
- St. Mary Mounthaunt.
- St. Michael, at Queene hithe.
- St. Mary, at Sommers hithe.
- St. Peter's, at Paules wharf.
-
-24. _In Castle Baynard's ward, four._
-
- St. Benet Hude, or hith, by Paules wharf.
- St. Andrewe, by the Wardrobe.
- St. Mary Magdalen, in Old Fish street.
- St. Gregorie, by Paules church
-
-25. _In Faringdon ward without, seven._
-
- St. Sepulcher's, without Newgate.
- St. Andrew, in Oldborne.
- St. Dunstone in the West.
- St. Bartlemew, by the priory.
- St. Bartlemew, the hospital.
- St. Briget, or Brides, in Fleet street.
- St. Parnell, in the Temple, for the students there.
-
-26. _In the borough of Southwark, and Bridge ward without, four._
-
- St. Saviour's in Southwark, made of }
- twain, viz., St. Mary Magdalen, and } Diocese
- St. Margaret. } of
- St. George the Martyr. } Winchester.
- St. Thomas, the hospital. }
- St. Olave, in Southwark. }
-
-Thus have ye in the twenty-six wards of London and borough of Southwark
-parish churches to the number of one hundred and fourteen.
-
-_And in the suburbs adjoining, parish churches nine, as followeth_:--
-
- St. Mary Magdalen, at Bermondsey, in the borough of
- Southwark, diocese of Winton.
- St. Mary Matfellon, Whitechapel.
- St. Leonard, Shoreditch.
- St. John Baptist, Clearken well.
- St. Giles in the Field, sometime an hospital.
-
-_In the duchy of Lancaster_:
-
- St. Clement Danes, without Temple bar.
- St. John Baptist, Savoy, an hospital.
-
-_In the city of Westminster, that liberty, as followeth_:
-
- The college of St. Peter, called Westminster.
-
-_Parish churches twain_:
-
- St. Margaret, a parish church, by Westminster.
- St. Martin in the Field, by Charing cross.
-
-Thus have ye in the wards of London, and in the suburbs of the same
-city, the borough of Southwark, and the city of Westminster, a cathedral
-church of St. Paul, a collegiate church of St. Peter in Westminster, and
-parish churches one hundred and twenty-three.
-
-
-
-
-HOSPITALS IN THIS CITY, AND SUBURBS THEREOF, THAT HAVE BEEN OF OLD TIME,
-AND NOW PRESENTLY ARE, I READ OF THESE AS FOLLOWETH:
-
-
-Hospital of St. Mary, in the parish of Barking church, that was provided
-for poor priests and others, men and women in the city of London, that
-were fallen into frenzy or loss of their memory, until such time as they
-should recover, was since suppressed and given to the hospital of St.
-Katherine, by the Tower.
-
-St. Anthonies, an hospital of thirteen poor men, and college, with a
-free school for poor men's children, founded by citizens of London,
-lately by John Tate, first a brewer and then a mercer, in the ward of
-Broad street, suppressed in the reign of Edward VI., the school in some
-sort remaining, but sore decayed.
-
-St. Bartlemew, in Smithfield, an hospital of great receipt and relief
-for the poor, was suppressed by Henry VIII., and again by him given to
-the city, and is endowed by the citizens' benevolence.
-
-St. Giles in the Fields was an hospital for leprous people out of the
-city of London and shire of Middlesex, founded by Matilde the queen,
-wife to Henry I., and suppressed by King Henry VIII.
-
-St. John of Jerusalem, by West Smithfield, an hospital of the Knights of
-the Rhodes, for maintenance of soldiers against the Turks and infidels,
-was suppressed by King Henry VIII.
-
-St. James in the Field was an hospital for leprous virgins of the city
-of London, founded by citizens for that purpose, and suppressed by King
-Henry VIII.
-
-St. John, at Savoy, an hospital for relief of one hundred poor people,
-founded by Henry VII., suppressed by Edward VI.: again new founded,
-endowed, and furnished by Queen Mary, and so remaineth.
-
-St. Katherine, by the Tower of London, an hospital, with a master,
-brethren, and sisters, and alms women, founded by Matilde, wife to King
-Stephen; not suppressed, but in force as before.
-
-St. Mary within Cripplegate, an hospital founded by William Elsing, for
-a hundred blind people of the city, was suppressed by King Henry VIII.
-
-St. Mary Bethelem, without Bishopsgate, was an hospital, founded
-by Simon Fitzmary, a citizen of London, to have been a priory, and
-remaineth for lunatic people, being suppressed and given to Christ's
-hospital.
-
-St. Mary, without Bishopsgate, was an hospital and priory, called St.
-Mary Spittle, founded by a citizen of London for relief of the poor,
-with provision of one hundred and eighty beds there for the poor: it was
-suppressed in the reign of King Henry VIII.
-
-St. Mary Rouncevall, by Charing cross, was an hospital suppressed with
-the priories aliens in the reign of King Henry V.; then was it made a
-brotherhood in the 15th of Edward IV., and again suppressed by King
-Edward VI.
-
-St. Thomas of Acres, in Cheape, was an hospital for a master and
-brethren (in the record called Militia); it was surrendered and sold to
-the mercers.
-
-St. Thomas, in Southwark, being an hospital of great receipt for the
-poor, was suppressed, but again newly founded and endowed by the
-benevolence and charity of the citizens of London.
-
-An hospital there was without Aldersgate, a cell to the house of Cluny,
-of the French order, suppressed by King Henry V.
-
-An hospital without Cripplegate, also a like cell to the said house of
-Cluny, suppressed by King Henry V.
-
-A third hospital in Oldborne, being also a cell to the said house of
-Cluny, suppressed by King Henry V.
-
-The hospital, or alms-house, called God's house, for thirteen poor
-men, with a college, called Whitington college, founded by Richard
-Whitington, mercer, and suppressed; but the poor remain, and are paid
-their allowance by the mercers.
-
-Christ's hospital, in Newgate market, of a new foundation in the Grey
-Fryers church by King Henry VIII.: poor fatherless children be there
-brought up and nourished at the charges of the citizens.
-
-Bridewell, now an hospital (or house of correction), founded by King
-Edward VI., to be a workhouse for the poor and idle persons of the
-city, wherein a great number of vagrant persons be now set a-work,
-and relieved at the charges of the citizens. Of all these hospitals,
-being twenty in number, you may read before in their several places,
-as also of good and charitable provisions made for the poor by sundry
-well-disposed citizens.
-
-
-
-
-NOW OF LEPROSE PEOPLE, AND LAZAR HOUSES
-
-
-It is to be observed that leprous persons were always, for avoiding the
-danger of infection, to be separated from the sound, etc.; God himself
-commanding to put out of the host every leper.[302] Whereupon I read,
-that in a provincial synod holden at Westminster by Hubert, archbishop
-of Canterbury, in the year of Christ 1200, the 2nd of King John, it
-was decreed, according to the institution of the Lateran council, that
-when so many leprous people were assembled, that might be able to build
-a church, with a churchyard, for themselves, and to have one especial
-priest of their own, that they should be permitted to have the same
-without contradiction, so they be not injurious to the old churches,
-by that which was granted to them for pity's sake. And further, it was
-decreed that they be not compelled to give any tithes of their gardens
-or increase of cattle.
-
-I have moreover heard, that there is a writ in our law, _de leproso
-amovendo_; and I have read that King Edward III., in the 20th year of
-his reign, gave commandment to the mayor and sheriffs of London, to make
-proclamation in every ward of the city and suburbs, that all leprous
-persons inhabiting there should avoid within fifteen days next, and
-that no man suffer any such leprous person to abide within his house,
-upon pain to forfeit his said house, and to incur the king's further
-displeasure; and that they should cause the said lepers to be removed
-into some out places of the fields, from the haunt or company of sound
-people: whereupon certain lazar-houses, as may be supposed, were then
-built without the city some good distance; to wit, the Locke without
-Southwark in Kent street; one other betwixt the Miles end and Stratford,
-Bow; one other at Kingsland, betwixt Shoreditch and Stoke Newington; and
-another at Knightes bridge, west from Charing cross. These four I have
-noted to be erected for the receipt of leprous people sent out of the
-city. At that time, also, the citizens required of the guardian of St.
-Giles' hospital to take from them, and to keep continually, the number
-of fourteen persons leprous, according to the foundation of Matilde the
-queen, which was for leprous persons of the city of London and the shire
-of Middlesex, which was granted. More, the wardens, or keepers of the
-ports, gates, or posterns of this city, were sworn in the mayor's court
-before the recorder, etc., that they should well and faithfully keep the
-same ports and posterns, and not to suffer any leprous person to enter
-the said city.
-
-John Gardener, porter of the postern by the Tower, his oath before
-the mayor and recorder of London, on Monday, after the feast of St.
-Bartlemew, the 49th of Edward III.: That the gates and postern be well
-and faithfully kept in his office and baylywicke, and that he should
-not suffer any lepers or leper to enter the city, or to remain in the
-suburbs; and if any leper or lepers force themselves to enter by his
-gates or postern, he to bind them fast to horses, and send them to be
-examined of the superiors, etc.
-
-Finally, I read that one William Pole, yeoman of the crown to King
-Edward IV., being stricken with a leprosy, was also desirous to build
-an hospital, with a chapel, to the honour of God and St. Anthony, for
-the relief and harbouring of such leprous persons as were destitute in
-the kingdom, to the end they should not be offensive to other in their
-passing to and fro: for the which cause Edward IV. did by his charter,
-dated the 12th of his reign, give unto the said William for ever a
-certain parcel of his land lying in his highway of Highgate and Haloway,
-within the county of Middlesex, containing sixty feet in length and
-thirty-four in breadth.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[302] "Leviticus 13. Numbers 5. Leprose persons to be separated from the
-sound."--_Stow._
-
-
-
-
-THE TEMPORAL GOVERNMENT OF THIS CITY, SOMEWHAT IN BRIEF MANNER
-
-
-This city of London, being under the government of the Britons, Romans,
-and Saxons, the most ancient and famous city of the whole realm, was at
-length destroyed by the Danes, and left desolate, as may appear by our
-histories. But Aelfred, king of the West Saxons, having brought this
-whole realm (from many parts) into one monarchy, honourably repaired
-this city, and made it again habitable, and then committed the custody
-thereof to his son-in-law Adhered, earl of Mercia; after whose decease
-the city, with all other possessions pertaining to the said earl,
-returned to King Edward, surnamed the Elder, etc.: and so remained in
-the king's hands, being governed under him by portgraves (or portreves),
-which name is compounded of the two Saxon words, _porte_ and _gerefe_,
-or _reve_. Porte betokeneth a town, and gerefe signifieth a guardian,
-ruler, or keeper of the town.
-
-These governors of old time (saith Robert Fabian), with the laws and
-customs then used within this city, were registered in a book called the
-Dooms' day, written in the Saxon tongue; but of later days, when the
-said laws and customs were changed, and for that also the said book was
-of a small hand, sore defaced, and hard to be read or understood, it was
-less set by, so that it was embezzled and lost. Thus far Fabian.
-
-Notwithstanding, I have found, by search of divers old registers and
-other records abroad, namely, in a book sometime appertaining to the
-monastery of St. Alban's, of the portgraves, and other governors of this
-city, as followeth:
-
-First, that in the reign of King Edward, the last before the Conquest,
-Wolfegare was portgrave, as may appear by the charter of the same king,
-in these words: "Edward, king, greeteth Alfward, bishop, and Wolfegare,
-my portgrave, and all the burgesses in London." And afterward that, in
-another charter, "King Edward greeteth William, bishop, and Sweetman, my
-portgrave." And after, that in another charter to the abbey of Chertsey,
-to William, bishop, and Leofstane and Alsy, portgraves. In the reign of
-William the Conqueror, William, bishop of London, procured of the said
-Conqueror his charter of liberties, to the same William, bishop, and
-Godfrey, portgrave, in Saxon tongue, and corrected in English thus:
-
-"William, king, greet William, bishop, and Godfrey, portgrave, and all
-the burgeses within London, French and English. And I graunt that they
-be all their law worthy that they were in Edward's dayes the king. And I
-will that each child bee his father's heire. And I will not suffer that
-any man do you wrong, and God you keepe." And then in the reign of the
-said Conqueror and of William Rufus, Godfrey de Magnavile was portgrave
-(or sheriff), as may appear by their charters, and Richard de Par was
-provost.
-
-In the reign of King Henry I., Hugh Buche was portgrave, and Leofstanus,
-goldsmith, provost, buried at Bermondsey.
-
-After them Aubrey de Vere was portgrave, and Robert Bar Querel provost.
-This Aubrey de Vere was slain in the reign of King Stephen. It is to be
-noted, also, that King Henry I. granted to the citizens of London the
-shrivewick thereof, and of Middlesex, as in another place is showed.
-
-In the reign of King Stephen, Gilbert Becket was portgrave, and Andrew
-Buchevet provost.
-
-After him, Godfrey Magnavile, the son of William, the son of Godfrey
-Magnavile, by the gift of Maude, the empress, was portgrave, or sheriff
-of London and Middlesex, for the yearly farm of three hundred pounds, as
-appeareth by the charter.
-
-In the time of King Henry II., Peter Fitzwalter was portgrave; after
-him John Fitznigel was portgrave; after him Ernulfus Buchel became
-portgrave; and after him William Fitz Isabel. These portgraves are also
-in divers records called vice-counties, vicounties, or sheriffs,[303]
-as being under an earl; for that they then, as since, used that office
-as the sheriffs of London do till this day. Some authors do call them
-domesmen, aldermen, or judges of the king's court,
-
-William Fitz Stephen, noting the estate of this city, and government
-thereof in his time, under the reign of King Stephen and of Henry II.,
-hath these words:
-
-"This city (saith he), even as Rome, is divided into wards; it hath
-yearly sheriffs instead of consuls; it hath the dignity of senators and
-aldermen; it hath under officers, and, according to the quality of laws,
-it hath several courts and general assemblies upon appointed days." Thus
-much for the antiquity of sheriffs, and also of aldermen, in several
-wards of this city, may suffice. And now for the name of bailiffs, and
-after that of mayors, as followeth:
-
-In the first year of King Richard I., the citizens of London obtained
-to be governed by two bailiffs, which bailiffs are in divers ancient
-deeds called sheriffs, according to the speech of the law, which called
-the shire Balliva, for that they, like as the portgraves, used the same
-office of shrivewicke, for the which the city paid to fee farm three
-hundred pounds yearly as before, since the reign of Henry I., which also
-is yet paid by the city into the Exchequer until this day.
-
-They also obtained to have a mayor, to be their principal governor and
-lieutenant of the city, as of the king's chamber.
-
-1180. The names of the first bailiffs, or officers, entering into
-their office at the feast of St. Michael the Archangel, in the year of
-Christ 1189, were named Henry Cornhill and Richard Reynere, bailiffs or
-sheriffs.
-
-Their first mayor was Henry Fitz Alwin Fitz Liefstane, goldsmith,
-appointed by the said king, and continued mayor from the 1st of Richard
-I. until the 15th of King John, which was twenty-four years and more.
-
-1190. The 2nd of Richard I., sheriffs, John Herlion, Roger Duke; mayor,
-Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1191. The 3rd, sheriffs, William Haverill, John Bucknote; mayor, Henry
-Fitz Alwin.
-
-1192. The 4th, Nicholas Duke, Peter Newlay; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1193. The 5th, Roger Duke, Richard Fitz Alwin; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1194. The 6th, William Fitz Isabel, William Fitz Arnold; mayor, Henry
-Fitz Alwin.
-
-1195. The 7th, Robert Besaunt, John de Josue; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1196. The 8th, Gerard de Anteloche, Robert Durant; mayor, Henry Fitz
-Alwin.
-
-1197. The 9th, Roger Blunt, Nicholas Ducket; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1198. The 10th, Constantine Fitz Arnold, Richard de Beaco; mayor, Henry
-Fitz Alwin.
-
- * * * * *
-
-King John began his reign the 6th of April, 1199.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1199. The 1st of King John, sheriffs, Arnold Fitz Arnold, Richard Fitz
-Bartilmew; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-King John granted the sheriffwicke of London and Middlesex to the
-citizens thereof, as King Henry I. before had done, for the sum of three
-hundred pounds yearly. Also he gave them authority to choose and deprive
-their sheriffs at their pleasure.
-
-1200. The 2nd, sheriffs, Roger Dorsit, James Bartilmew; mayor, Henry
-Fitz Alwin.
-
-1201. The 3rd, Walter Fitz Alis, Simon de Aldermanbury; mayor, Henry
-Fitz Alwin.
-
-1202. The 4th, Norman Blundel, John de Glie; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1203. The 5th, Walter Browne, William Chamberlain; mayor, Henry Fitz
-Alwin.
-
-Walter Brune, and Rose his wife, founded the hospital of St. Mary
-without Bishopsgate, commonly called St. Mary Spittle.
-
-1204. The 6th, Thomas Haverel, Hamond Brond; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1205. The 7th, John Walgrave, Richard Winchester; mayor, Henry Fitz
-Alwin.
-
-1206. The 8th, John Holland, Edmond Fitz Gerard; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1207. The 9th, Roger Winchester, Edmond Hardle; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1208. The 10th, Peter Duke, Thomas Nele; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-The king, by his letters patents, granted to the citizens of London
-liberty and authority yearly to choose to themselves a mayor.
-
-1209. The 11th, Peter le Josue, William Blund; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1210. The 12th, Adam Whitley, Stephen le Grace; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1211. The 13th, John Fitz Peter, John Garland; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1212. The 14th, Randolph Giland, Constantine Josue; mayor, Henry Fitz
-Alwin.
-
-This Henry Fitz Alwin deceased, and was buried in the priory of the Holy
-Trinity, near unto Aldgate.
-
-1213. The 15th, Martin Fitz Alis, Peter Bate; mayor, Roger Fitz Alwin.
-
-This year the ditch about London was begun to be made, of two hundred
-and four feet broad, by the Londoners.
-
-1214. The 16th, Salomon Basing, Hugh Basing; mayor, Serle Mercer.
-
-1215. The 17th, John Travars, Andrew Newland; mayor, William Hardel.
-
- * * * * *
-
-King Henry III. began his reign the 19th of October, 1216.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1216. The 1st, sheriffs, Benet Senturer, William Bluntinars: mayor,
-James Alderman for part, and Salomon Basing for part.
-
-1217. The 2nd, Thomas Bokerel, Ralph Eiland; mayor, Serle Mercer.
-
-1218. The 3rd, John Viel, John le Spicer; mayor, Serle Mercer.
-
-The forest of Middlesex and the warren of Staines were this year
-disafforested.
-
-1219. The 4th, Richard Wimbledon, John Viel; mayor, Serle Mercer.
-
-1220. The 5th, Richard Renger, John Viel; mayor, Serle Mercer.
-
-1221. The 6th, Richard Renger, Thomas Lambart; mayor, Serle Mercer.
-
-1222. The 7th, Richard Renger, Thomas Lambart; mayor, Serle Mercer.
-
-Constantine Fitz Aluf raised great troubles in this city, and was hanged
-with his nephew and other.
-
-1223. The 8th, John Travars, Andrew Bokerel; mayor, Richard Renger.
-
-1224. The 9th, John Travars, Andrew Bokerel; mayor Richard Renger.
-
-The king granted to the commonalty of London to have a common seal.
-
-1225. The 10th, Roger Duke, Martin Fitz William; mayor, Richard Renger.
-
-1226. The 11th, Roger Duke, Martin Fitz William; mayor, Richard Renger.
-
-This year the king confirmed to the citizens of London free warren
-or liberty to hunt a certain circuit about the city, in the warren
-of Staines, etc. And, also, that the citizens of London should pass
-toll-free throughout all England, and that the keddles, or wears, in the
-river of Thames and Medway should be plucked up and destroyed for ever,
-etc. Patent, 16th Henry III.
-
-1227. The 12th, Stephen Bokerel, Henry Cocham; mayor, Roger Duke.
-
-The liberties and franchises of London were ratified; and the king
-granted that either sheriff should have two clerks and two sergeants,
-also that the citizens should have a common seal.
-
-1228. The 13th, Stephen Bokerell, Henry Cocham; mayor, Roger Duke.
-
-1229. The 14th, William Winchester, Robert Fitz John; mayor, Roger Duke.
-
-1230. The 15th, Richard Walter, John de Woborne; mayor, Roger Duke.
-
-1231. The 16th, Michael S. Helan, Walter de Bussell; mayor, Andrew
-Bokerel, pepperer.
-
-1232. The 17th, Henry de Edmonton, Gerard Bat; mayor, Andrew Bokerel,
-pepperer.
-
-1233. The 18th, Simon Fitzmary, Roger Blunt; mayor, Andrew Bokerel,
-pepperer.
-
-1234. The 19th, Raph Ashwye, John Norman; mayor, Andrew Bokerel,
-pepperer.
-
-1235. The 20th, Gerard Bat, Richard Hardle; mayor, Andrew Bokerel,
-pepperer.
-
-1236. The 21st, Henry Cocham, Jordan of Coventrie; mayor, Andrew
-Bokerel, pepperer.
-
-1237. The 22nd, John Toloson, Gervais the cordwainer; mayor, Andrew
-Bokerel, pepperer.
-
-1238. The 23rd, John Codras, John Withal; mayor, Richard Renger.
-
-1239. The 24th, Roger Bongey, Raph Ashwye; mayor, William Joyner.
-
-This William Joyner builded the choir of the Grey Friers church in
-London, and became a lay brother of that house.
-
-1240. The 25th, John Gisors, Michael Tony; mayor, Gerard Bat.
-
-This year aldermen of London were chosen, and changed yearly, but that
-order lasted not long. Gerard Bat was again elected mayor for that year
-to come, but the king would not admit him, being charged with taking
-money of the victuallers in the precedent year.
-
-1241. The 26th, Thomas Duresme, John Viel; mayor, Reginald Bongey.
-
-1242. The 27th, John Fitzjohn, Raph Ashwye; mayor, Reginald Bongey.
-
-1243. The 28th, Hugh Blunt, Adam Basing; mayor, Raph Ashwye.
-
-1244. The 29th, Raph Foster, Nicholas Bat; mayor, Michael Tony.
-
-1245. The 30th, Robert of Cornehil, Adam of Bentley; mayor, John Gisors,
-pepperer.
-
-1246. The 31st, Simon Fitz Mary, Laurence Frowicke; mayor, John Gisors,
-pepperer.
-
-Simon Fitz Mary founded the hospital of Mary, called Bethlem without
-Bishopsgate. Queene hithe let to farm to the citizens of London.
-
-1247. The 32nd, John Viel, Nicholas Bat; mayor, Peter Fitz Alwin.
-
-1248. The 33rd, Nicholas Fitz Josey, Geffrey Winchester; mayor, Michael
-Tony.
-
-1249. The 34th, Richard Hardell, John Tholason; mayor, Roger Fitz Roger.
-
-1250. The 35th, Humfrey Bat, William Fitz Richard; mayor, John Norman.
-
-The king granted that the mayor should be presented to the barons of the
-exchequer, and they should admit him.
-
-1251. The 36th, Laurence Frowike, Nicholas Bat; mayor, Adam Basing.
-
-1252. The 37th, William Durham, Thomas Wimborne; mayor, John Tolason,
-draper.
-
-The liberties of this city were seized, the mayor charged that he looked
-not to the assise of bread.
-
-1253. The 38th, John Northampton, Richard Pickard; mayor, Richard
-Hardell, draper.
-
-1254. The 39th, Raph Ashwie, Robert of Limon; mayor, Richard Hardell,
-draper.
-
-1255. The 40th, Stephen Doo, Henry Walmond; mayor, Richard Hardle,
-draper.
-
-The mayor, divers aldermen, and the sheriffs of London, were deprived,
-and others placed in their rooms.
-
-1256. The 41st, Michael Bockeril, John the Minor; mayor, Richard Hardle,
-draper.
-
-1257. The 42nd, Richard Owel, William Ashwie; mayor, Richard Hardle,
-draper.
-
-The king caused the walls of this city to be repaired and made with
-bulwarks.
-
-1258. The 43rd, Robert Cornhill, John Adrian; mayor, Richard Hardle,
-draper.
-
-1259. The 44th, John Adrian, Robert Cornhill; John Gisors, pepperer.
-
-1260. The 45th, Adam Browning, Henry Coventry; mayor, William Fitz
-Richard.
-
-1261. The 46th, John Northampton, Richard Picard; mayor, William Fitz
-Richard.
-
-1262. The 47th, John Tailor, Richard Walbrooke; mayor, Thomas Fitz
-Richard.
-
-1263. The 48th, Robert de Mountpilier, Osbert de Suffolke; mayor, Thomas
-Fitz Thomas Fitz Richard.
-
-The citizens of London fortified the city with iron chains drawn thwart
-their streets.
-
-1264. The 49th, Gregory Rokesly, Thomas de Deford; mayor, Thomas Fitz
-Thomas Fitz Richard.
-
-1265. The 50th, Edward Blund, Peter Angar; mayor, Thomas Fitz Thomas
-Fitz Richard.
-
-The chains and posts in London were plucked up, the mayor and principal
-citizens committed to ward, and Othon, constable of the tower, was made
-custos of the city, etc.
-
-1266. The 51st, John Hind, John Walraven; mayor, William Richards.
-
-The earl of Gloucester entered the city with an army, and therein
-builded bulwarks, cast trenches, etc.
-
-1267. The 52nd, John Adrian, Lucas de Batencourt; mayor, Alen de la
-Souch. This Alen de la Souch, being a baron of this realm, and also
-chief justice, was in the year 1270 slain in Westminster hall by John
-Warren earl of Surrey.
-
-Thomas Fitz Theobald and Agnes his wife, founded the hospital of St.
-Thomas of Acon in Westcheap.
-
-1268. The 53rd, Walter Harvy, William Duresm, Thomas Wimborn; mayor, Sir
-Stephen Edward.
-
-A variance fell in London between the goldsmiths and the tailors,
-wherethrough many men were slain.
-
-1269. The 54th, Thomas Basing, Robert Cornhill; custos, Hugh Fitz
-Ottonis, custos of London, and constable of the tower.[304]
-
-1270. The 55th, Walter Potter, Philip Tailor; mayor, John Adrian,
-vintner.
-
-1271. The 56th, Gregory Rocksley, Henry Waleys; mayor, John Adrian,
-vintner.
-
-The steple of Bow church in Cheap fell down, and slew many people.
-
-1272. The 57th, Richard Paris, John de Wodeley; mayor, Sir Walter Harvy;
-custos, Henry Frowike, pepperer, for part of that year.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Edward I. began his reign the 16th of November, 1272.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1273. The first sheriffs, John Horne, Walter Potter; mayor, Sir Walter
-Harvy, knight.
-
-1274. The 2nd, Nicholas Winchester, Henry Coventry; mayor, Henry Walles.
-
-1275. The 3rd, Lucas Batecorte, Henry Frowike; mayor, Gregory Rocksley:
-chief say-master of all the king's mints throughout England, and keeper
-of the king's exchange at London.
-
-1276. The 4th, John Horn, Raph Blunt; mayor, Gregory Rocksley.
-
-1277. The 5th, Robert de Arar, Raph L. Fewre; mayor, Gregory Rocksley.
-
-1278. The 6th, John Adrian, Walter Langley; mayor, Gregory Rocksley.
-
-1279. The 7th, Robert Basing, William Maraliver; mayor, Gregory Rocksley.
-
-1280. The 8th, Thomas Fox, Raph Delamere; mayor, Gregory Rocksley.
-
-1281. The 9th, William Farindon, Nicholas Winchester; mayor, Gregory
-Rocksley.
-
-This William Farindon, goldsmith, one of the sheriffs, was father to
-Nicholas Farindon: of these two, Farindon ward took that name.
-
-1282. The 10th, William Maraliver, Richard Chigwel; mayor, Henry Walleis.
-
-This Henry Walleis builded the tun upon Cornhill to be a prison, and the
-stocks to be a market house.
-
-1283. The 11th, Raph Blund, Anketrin de Betanil; mayor, Henry Walleis.
-
-1284. The 12th, Jordain Goodcheape, Martin Box: mayor, Henry Walleis.
-
-Laurence Ducket, goldsmith, murdered in Bow church, and the murderers
-hanged.
-
-1285. The 13th, Stephen Cornhill, Robert Rocksley; mayor, Gregory
-Rocksley; custos, Raph Sandwitch, and John Briton.
-
-It was ordained, that millers should have but one halfpenny for a
-quarter of wheat grinding, and the great water conduit in Cheap was
-begun to be made.
-
-1286. The 14th, Walter Blunt, John Wade; custos, Raph Sandwitch.
-
-Wheat was sold at London for sixteen pence, and for twelve pence the
-quarter.
-
-1287. The 15th, Thomas Cros, Walter Hawtoune; custos, Raph Sandwitch.
-
-1288. The 16th, William Hereford, Thomas Stanes; custos, Raph Sandwitch.
-
-1289. The 17th, William Betain, John Canterbury; custos, Raph Sandwitch,
-Raph Barnauars, and Sir John Britaine.
-
-This year a subsidy was granted, for the reparations of London bridge.
-
-1290. The 18th, Falke S. Edmond, Salamon Le Sotel; custos, Sir John
-Briton, knight.
-
-1291. The 19th, Thomas Romain, William de Lier; custos, Sir John Briton,
-knight, Raph Sandwitch.
-
-1292. The 20th, Raph Blunt, Hamo. Box; custos, Raph Sandwitch.
-
-1293. The 21st, Henry Bole, Elias Russel; custos, Raph Sandwitch.
-
-Three men had their right hands cut off at the Standard in Cheape, for
-rescuing of a prisoner, arrested by a sergeant of London.
-
-1294. The 22nd, Robert Rokesley the younger, Martin Amersbery; custos,
-Sir Raph Sandwitch.
-
-1295. The 23rd, Henry Box, Richard Gloucester; custos, Sir Raph
-Sandwitch.
-
-1296. The 24th, John Dunstable, Adam de Halingbery; custos, Sir John
-Briton.
-
-This year all the liberties of the city were restored, the mayoralty
-excepted.
-
-1297. The 25th, Thomas of Suffolke, Adam of Fulham; custos, Sir John
-Briton.
-
-1298. The 26th, Richard Resham, Thomas Sely; mayor, Henry Walleis.
-
-Certain citizens of London brake up the tun upon Cornhill, and took out
-prisoners, for the which they were grievously punished.
-
-1299. The 27th, John Amenter, Henry Fingene; mayor, Elias Russel.
-
-1300. The 28th, Lucas de Havering, Richard Champs; mayor, Elias Russel.
-
-1301. The 29th, Robert Callor, Peter de Bosenho; mayor, Sir John Blunt,
-knight.
-
-1302. The 30th, Hugh Pourt, Simon Paris; mayor, Sir John Blunt.
-
-1303. The 31st, William Combmartin, John Buckford; custos, Sir John
-Blunt.
-
-1304. The 32nd, Roger Paris, John de Lincolne; custos, Sir John Blunt.
-
-Geffrey Hertilepole Alderman was elected to be recorder of London, and
-took his oath, and was appointed to wear his apparel as an alderman.
-
-1305. The 33rd, William Cosine, Reginald Thunderley; custos, Sir John
-Blunt.
-
-1306. The 34th, Geffrey Cundute, Simon Bilet; custos, Sir John Blunt.
-
-Seacoal was forbid to be burned in London, Southwark, etc.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Edward II. began his reign 7th of July, the year of Christ, 1307.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1307. The 1st, sheriffs, Nicholas Pigot, Nigellus Drury; mayor, Sir John
-Blunt.
-
-1308. The 2nd, William Basing, James Botenar; mayor, Nicholas
-Farringdon, goldsmith.
-
-1309. The 3rd, Roger le Paumer, James of St. Edmond; mayor, Thomas
-Romaine.
-
-1310. The 4th, Simon de Corpe, Peter Blakney; mayor, Richard Reffam,
-mercer.
-
-The king commanded the mayor and commonality, to make the wall of London
-from Ludgate to Fleetbridge, and from thence to the Thames.
-
-1311. The 5th, Simon Merwood, Richard Wilford; mayor, Sir John Gisors,
-pepperer.
-
-Order was taken, that merchant strangers should sell their wares within
-forty days after their arrival, or else the same to be forfeited.
-
-1312. The 6th, John Lambin, Adam Lutkin; mayor, Sir John Gisors,
-pepperer.
-
-1313. The 7th, Robert Gurden, Hugh Garton; mayor, Nicholas Farrindon,
-goldsmith.
-
-Prices set on victuals:--a fat stalled ox, twenty-four shillings; a fat
-mutton, twenty pence; a fat goose, two pence halfpenny; a fat capon, two
-pence; a fat hen, one penny; two chickens, one penny; three pigeons, one
-penny; twenty-four eggs, one penny, etc.
-
-1314. The 8th, Stephen Abingdon, Hamond Chigwel; mayor, Sir John Gisors,
-pepperer.
-
-Famine and mortality of the people, so that the quick might unneath bury
-the dead; horse-flesh, and dogs-flesh, was good meat.
-
-1315. The 9th, Hamond Goodcheap, William Bodelay; mayor, Stephen
-Abendon.
-
-1316. The 10th, William Canston, Raph Belancer; mayor, John Wingrave.
-
-An early harvest, a bushel of wheat that had been sold for ten
-shillings, was now sold for ten pence, etc.
-
-1317. The 11th, John Prior, William Furneis; mayor, John Wingrave.
-
-Such a murrain of kine, that dogs and ravens that fed on them were
-poisoned.
-
-1318. The 12th, John Pontel, John Dalling; mayor, John Wingrave.
-
-1319. 13th, Simon Abindon, John Preston; mayor, Hamond Chickwel,
-pepperer.
-
-John Gisors late mayor of London, and many other citizens, fled the city
-for things laid to their charge.
-
-1320. The 14th, Renauld at Conduit, William Produn; mayor, Nicholas
-Farindon, goldsmith.
-
-1321. The 15th, Richard Constantine, Richard Hackney; mayor, Hamond
-Chickwell, pepperer.
-
-1322. The 16th, John Grantham, Richard Elie; mayor, Hamond Chickwell,
-pepperer.
-
-Fish and flesh market established at the Stocks in the midst of the city.
-
-1323. The 17th, Adam of Salisbury, John of Oxford; mayor, Nicholas
-Farindon, goldsmith.
-
-Of this Nicholas Farindon, and of William Farindon, and of William
-Farindon his father, read more in Farindon ward.
-
-1324. The 18th, Benet of Fulham, John Cawson; mayor, Hamond Chickwell,
-pepperer.
-
-1325. The 19th, Gilbert Mordon, John Cotton; mayor, Hamond Chickwell,
-pepperer.
-
-The citizens of London took the bishop of Exeter, and cut off his head
-at the Standard in Cheape.
-
-1326. The 20th, Richard Rothing, Roger Chaunteclere; mayor, Richard
-Britaine, goldsmith.
-
-This Richard Rothing is said to new build the parish church of St. James
-at Garlicke hith.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Edward III. began his reign the 25th of January, the year 1326.
-
- * * * * *
-
-This King Edward granted, that the mayor should be justice for the
-gaol delivery at Newgate, that the citizens of London should not be
-constrained to go out of the city of London to any war. More he granted,
-that the liberties and the franchises of the city should not after
-this time for any cause be taken into the king's hands, etc. More,
-he granted by his letters patents, dated the 6th of March, that no
-Escheater should be in the city, but the mayor for his time.
-
-1327. The 1st sheriffs, Henry Darcie, John Hauton; mayor, Hamond
-Chickwell, pepperer.
-
-This year the walls of London were repaired.
-
-1328. The 2nd, Simon Francis, Henry Combmartin; mayor, John Grantham.
-
-1329. The 3rd, Richard Lazar, William Gisors; mayor, Richard Swandland.
-
-This year, the king kept a great justing in Cheape, betwixt Sopars lane
-and the great Crosse.
-
-1330. The 4th, Robert of Elie, Thomas Whorwode; mayor, Sir John Pultney,
-draper.
-
-1331. The 5th, John Mocking, Andrew Auberie; mayor, Sir John Pultney,
-draper.
-
-1332. The 6th, Nicholas Pike, John Husbond; mayor, John Preston, draper.
-
-This year was founded Elsinges' spittle, by W. Elsing, mercer, that
-became first prior of that hospital.
-
-1333. The 7th, John Hamond, William Hansard; mayor, Sir John Pultney,
-draper.
-
-1334. The 8th, John Hingstone, Walter Turke; mayor, Reginald at Conduct,
-vintner.
-
-1335. The 9th, Walter Motdon, Richard Upton; mayor, Nicholas Woton.
-
-1336. The 10th, John Clark, William Curtis; mayor, Sir John Pultney,
-draper.
-
-This Sir John Pultney founded a college in the parish church of St.
-Laurence, by Candlewicke street.
-
-1337. The 11th, Walter Nele, Nicholas Crane; mayor, Henry Darcy.
-
-Walter Nele, bladesmith, gave lands to the repairing of the high ways
-about London.
-
-1338. The 12th, William Pomfret, Hugh Marbeler; mayor, Henry Darcy.
-
-The king granted that the sergeants of the mayor, and sheriffs of
-London, should bear maces of silver and gilt with the king's arms.
-
-1339. The 13th, William Thorney, Roger Frosham; mayor, Andrew Aubery,
-grocer.
-
-1340. The 14th, Adam Lucas, Bartemew Maris; mayor, Andrew Aubery,
-grocer.
-
-1341. The 15th, Richard de Barking, John de Rokesley: mayor, John of
-Oxenford, vintner.
-
-1342. The 16th, John Louekin, Richard Killingbury; mayor, Simon Francis,
-mercer.
-
-The price of Gascoyn wines at London, four pence, and Rheinish wine, six
-pence the gallon.
-
-1343. The 17th, John Steward, John Aylesham; mayor, John Hamond.
-
-1344. The 18th, Geffrey Wichingham, Thomas Leg; mayor, John Hamond.
-
-1345. The 19th, Edmond Hemenhall, John of Gloucester; mayor, Richard
-Leget.
-
-1346. The 20th, John Croyden, William Cloptun; mayor, Geffrey
-Winchingham.
-
-1347. The 21st, Adam Brapsen, Richard Bas; mayor, Thomas Leggy, skinner.
-
-King Edward won Calais from the French.
-
-1348. The 22nd, Henry Picard, Simon Dolseby; mayor, John Louekin,
-fishmonger.
-
-A great pest. Sir Walter Mannie, knight, founded the Charterhouse by
-Smithfield, to be a burial for the dead.
-
-1349. The 23rd, Adam of Bury, Raph of Lym; mayor, Walter Turk,
-fishmonger.
-
-1350. The 24th, John Notte, W. Worcester; mayor, Richard Killingbury.
-
-1351. The 25th, John Wroth, Gilbert of Stenineshorpe; mayor, Andrew
-Aubery, grocer.
-
-1352. The 26th, John Pech, John Stotley; mayor, Adam Francis, mercer.
-
-This mayor procured an act of parliament, that no known whore should
-wear any hood or attire on her head, except red or striped cloth of
-divers colours, etc.
-
-1353. The 27th, William Wilde, John Little; mayor, Adam Francis, mercer.
-
-This Adam Francis was one of the founders of the college in Guildhall
-chapel, etc., Henry Fowke was the other.
-
-1354. The 28th, William Tottingham, Richard Smelt; mayor, Thomas Leggy,
-skinner.
-
-Aldermen of London were used to be changed yearly, but now it was
-ordained that they should not be removed without some special cause.
-
-1355. The 29th, Walter Foster, Thomas Brandon; mayor, Simon Francis,
-mercer.
-
-1356. The 30th, Richard Nottingham, Thomas Dossel; mayor, Henry Picard,
-vintner.
-
-This Henry Picard feasted the kings of England, of France, Cypres, and
-Scots, with other great estates, all in one day.
-
-1357. The 31st, Stephen Candish, Bartilmew Frostling; mayor, Sir John
-Stody, vintner.
-
-This John Stody gave tenements to the vintners in London, for relief of
-the poor of that company.
-
-1358. The 32nd, John Barnes, John Buris; mayor, John Louekin,
-stock-fishmonger.
-
-1359. The 33rd, Simon of Benington, John of Chichester; mayor, Simon
-Dolseby, grocer.
-
-1360. The 34th, John Denis, Walter Berny; mayor, John Wroth, fishmonger.
-
-1361. The 35th, William Holbech, James Tame; mayor, John Peche,
-fishmonger.
-
-1362. The 36th, John of St. Albans, James Andrew; mayor, Stephen
-Gondish, draper.
-
-1363. The 37th, Richard Croyden, John Litoft; mayor, John Not, pepperer.
-
-1364. The 38th, John de Mitford, Simon de Mordon; mayor, Adam of Bury,
-skinner.
-
-1365. The 39th, John Bukulsworth, Thomas Ireland; mayor, John Louekin,
-fishmonger, and Adam of Bury, skinner.
-
-1366. The 40th, John Warde, Thomas of Lee; mayor, John Lofkin,
-fishmonger.
-
-This John Lofkin builded the parish church of St. Michael in Crooked
-lane.
-
-1367. The 41st, John Turngold, William Dikeman; mayor, James Andrew,
-draper.
-
-1368. The 42nd, Robert Cordeler, Adam Wimondham; mayor, Simon Mordon,
-stock-fishmonger.
-
-This year wheat was sold for two shillings and six pence the bushel.
-
-1369. The 43rd, John Piel, Hugh Holdich; mayor, John Chichester,
-goldsmith.
-
-1370. The 44th, William Walworth, Robert Geyton; mayor, John Barnes,
-mercer.
-
-1371. The 45th, Adam Staple, Robert Hatfield; mayor, John Barnes, mercer.
-
-This John Barnes gave a chest with three locks, and one thousand marks
-to be lent to poor young men.
-
-1372. The 46th, John Philpot, Nicholas Brembar; mayor, John Piel, mercer.
-
-1373. The 47th, John Aubery, John Fished; mayor, Adam of Bury, skinner.
-
-1374. The 48th, Richard Lions, William Woodhouse; mayor, William
-Walworth, fishmonger.
-
-1375. The 49th, John Hadley, William Newport; mayor, John Ward, grocer.
-
-1376. The 50th, John Northampton, Robert Laund; mayor, Adam Staple,
-mercer.
-
-The Londoners meant to have slain John duke of Lancaster: Adam Staple,
-mayor, put down, and Nicholas Brembar elected. Also the aldermen were
-deposed, and others set in their places.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Richard II. began his reign the 21st of June, in the year 1377.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1377. The 1st sheriffs, Nicholas Twiford, Andrew Pikeman; mayor, Sir
-Nicholas Brembar, grocer.
-
-John Philpot, a citizen of London, sent ships to the sea, and scoured it
-of pirates, taking many of them prisoners.
-
-1378. The 2nd, John Boseham, Thomas Cornwalis; mayor, Sir John Philpot,
-grocer.
-
-This Sir John Philpot gave to the city, lands for the finding of
-thirteen poor people for ever.
-
-1379. The 3rd, John Helisdon, William Barat; mayor, John Hadley, grocer.
-
-1380. The 4th, Walter Doget, William Knightcoate; mayor, William
-Walworth, fishmonger.
-
-This William Walworth arrested Wat Tyler the rebel, and was knighted. He
-increased the parish church of St. Michael in Crooked lane, and founded
-there a college. Other aldermen were also knighted for their service in
-the field.
-
-1381. The 5th, John Rote, John Hend; mayor, John Northampton, draper.
-
-1382. The 6th, Adam Bamme, John Sely; mayor, John Northampton, draper,
-or skinner, as I find in record.
-
-1383. The 7th, Simon Winchcombe, John More; mayor, Sir Nicholas Brembar,
-grocer.
-
-John Northampton, late mayor of London, was committed to perpetual
-prison, and his goods confiscated.
-
-1384. The 8th, Nicholas Exton, John French; mayor, Sir Nicholas Brembar,
-grocer, knighted with William Walworth.
-
-1385. The 9th, John Organ, John Churchman; mayor, Sir Nicholas Brembar,
-grocer.
-
-The foresaid John Churchman new-built the custom-house, near to the
-Tower of London, and did many other works for the commodity of this city.
-
-1386. The 10th, W. Standone, W. More; mayor, Nicholas Exton, fishmonger.
-
-This year the citizens of London, fearing the French, pulled down houses
-near about their city, repaired their walls, and cleansed their ditches,
-etc.
-
-1387. The 11th, William Venor, Hugh Forstalfe; mayor, Nicholas Exton,
-fishmonger.
-
-Sir Nicholas Brembar, late mayor of London, was this year beheaded.
-
-1388. The 12th, Thomas Austin, Adam Carlhul; mayor, Nicholas Tuiford,
-goldsmith, knighted with W. Walworth.
-
-1389. The 13th, John Walcot, John Lovenay; mayor, William Venor, grocer.
-
-1390. The 14th, John Francis, Thomas Vivent; mayor, Adam Bamme,
-goldsmith.
-
-This Adam Bamme provided from beyond the seas corn in great abundance,
-so that the city was able to serve the country.
-
-1391. The 15th, John Shadworth, Henry Vamer; mayor, John Hend, draper.
-
-This mayor was for displeasure taken, sent to Windsor castle, and the
-king made wardens of the city, etc.
-
-1392. The 16th, Gilbert Maghfield, Thomas Newington; mayor, William
-Stondon, grocer.
-
-1393. The 17th, Drew Barintin, Richard Whitington; mayor, John Hadley,
-grocer.
-
-Faringdon ward was by parliament appointed to be divided into two wards,
-to wit, infra and extra.
-
-1394. The 18th, William Branston, Thomas Knoles; mayor, John Froshe,
-mercer.
-
-1395. The 19th, Roger Elles, William Sevenoke; mayor, William More,
-vintner.
-
-1396. The 20th, Thomas Wilford, William Parker; mayor, Adam Bamme,
-goldsmith.
-
-1397. The 21st, John Wodcoke, William Askam; mayor, Richard Whitington,
-mercer.
-
-1398. The 22nd, John Wade, John Warnar; mayor, Drew Barentin, goldsmith.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Henry IV. began his reign the 29th of September, the year 1399.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1399. The 1st sheriffs, William Waldern, William Hende; mayor, Thomas
-Knoles, grocer.
-
-1400. The 2nd, John Wakel, William Ebot; mayor, John Francis, goldsmith.
-
-1401. The 3rd, William Venor, John Fremingham; mayor, John Shadworth,
-mercer.
-
-The conduit upon Cornhill was this year made of an old prison house
-called the Tun.
-
-1402. The 4th, Richard Marlow, Robert Chicheley; mayor, I. Walcote,
-draper.
-
-1403. The 5th, Thomas Falconer, Thomas Poole; mayor, W. Ascham,
-fishmonger.
-
-1404. The 6th, William Bouth, Stephen Spilman; mayor, John Hend, draper.
-
-This John Hend was a new builder of the parish church of St. Swithen, by
-London stone.
-
-1405. The 7th, Henry Barton, William Grome; mayor, John Wodcocke, mercer.
-
-This mayor caused all the weirs in the river of Thames, from Stanes to
-the river of Medway, to be destroyed, and the trinkes to be burned, etc.
-
-1406. The 8th, Nicholas Wooton, Gefferey Brooke; mayor, Richard
-Whitington, mercer.
-
-This year a great pestilence in London took away more than thirty
-thousand people.
-
-1407. The 9th, Henry Pontfrackt, Henry Halton, mercer; mayor, William
-Sandon, grocer.
-
-1408. The 10th, Thomas Ducke, William Norton; mayor, Drew Barentine,
-goldsmith.
-
-This Drew Barentine built a part of the Goldsmiths' hall, and gave them
-lands.
-
-1409. The 11th, John Law, William Chichley; mayor, Richard Marlow,
-ironmonger.
-
-A great play at Skinners' well, which lasted eight days, and was of
-matter from the Creation of the world; the most part of all the great
-estates of England were there to behold it.
-
-1410. The 12th, John Penne, Thomas Pike; mayor, Thomas Knoles, grocer.
-
-This Thomas Knoles began anew to build the Guildhall in London, etc.
-
-1411. The 13th, John Rainwel, William Cotton; mayor, Robert Chichley,
-grocer.
-
-1412. The 14th, Raph Lovinhinde, William Sevenocke; mayor, William
-Waldren, mercer.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Henry V. began his reign, the 20th of March, the year 1412.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1413. The 1st sheriffs, John Sutton, John Michell; mayor, William
-Cromar, draper.
-
-Sir John Oldcastle assembled a great power in Fickets field, by London,
-which power was overcome and taken by the king and his power.
-
-1414. The 2nd, John Michell, Thomas Allen; mayor, Th. Falconer, mercer.
-
-This mayor caused the postern called Moregate to be built, and he lent
-to the king ten thousand marks upon jewels, etc.
-
-1415. The 3rd, William Cambridge, Alen Everard; mayor, Nicholas Wotton,
-draper.
-
-1416. The 4th, Robert Whittington, John Coventrie; mayor, Henry Barton,
-skinner.
-
-This Henry Barton ordained lanthorns with lights to be hanged out on the
-winter evening betwixt Hallontide[305] and Candlemasse.
-
-1417. The 5th, H. Read, John Gidney; mayor, Richard Marlow, ironmonger.
-
-1418. The 6th, John Brian, Raph Barton, John Parnesse; mayor, William
-Sevenoke.
-
-This William Sevenoke, son to William Rumsched of Sevenoke in Kent, was
-by his father bound an apprentice with Hugh de Bois, citizen and ferrer
-of London, for a term of years, which being expired in the year 1394,
-the 18th of Richard II., John Hadley being mayor of London, and Stephen
-Spilman, chamberlain of the Guildhall, he alleged that his master
-had used the trade or mystery of a grocer, and not of a ferrer, and
-therefore required to be made free of the grocers' company, which was
-granted. This William Sevenoke founded in the town of Sevenoke a free
-school, and alms houses for the poor.
-
-1419. The 7th, Robert Whittington, John Butler; mayor, Richard
-Whittington, mercer.
-
-This mayor founded Whittington college.
-
-1420. The 8th, John Butler, John Wels; mayor, William Cambridge, grocer.
-
-1421. The 9th, Richard Gosseline, William Weston; mayor, Robert
-Chichley, grocer.
-
-This mayor gave one plot of ground, thereupon to build the parish church
-of St. Stephen upon Walbrooke.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Henry VI. began his reign the 31st of August, the year 1422.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1422. The 1st sheriffs, William Eastfield, Robert Tatarsal; mayor,
-William Waldern, mercer.
-
-This year the west gate of London was begun to be built by the executors
-of Richard Whitington.
-
-1423. The 2nd, Nicholas James, Thomas Windford; mayor, William Cromer,
-draper.
-
-1424. The 3rd, Simon Seman, John Bywater; mayor, John Michel, fishmonger.
-
-1425. The 4th, William Melreth, John Brokell; mayor, John Coventrie,
-mercer.
-
-1426. The 5th, John Arnold, John Higham; mayor, John Reinwell,
-fishmonger.
-
-This mayor gave tenements to the city for the discharge of three wards
-in London for fifteens, etc.
-
-1427. The 6th, Henry Frowicke, Robert Oteley; mayor, John Gidney, draper.
-
-1428. The 7th, Thomas Duffehouse, John Abbot; mayor, Henry Barton,
-skinner.
-
-1429. The 8th, William Russe, Raph Holland; mayor, William Eastfield,
-mercer.
-
-Raph Holland gave to impotent poor, one hundred and twenty pounds, to
-prisoners eighty pounds, to hospitals forty pounds, etc.
-
-1430. The 9th, Walter Chartesey, Robert Large; mayor, Nicholas Wootton,
-draper.
-
-Walter Chartesey, draper, gave to the poor one hundred pounds, besides
-twenty pounds to the hospitals, etc.
-
-1431. The 10th, John Aderley, Stephen Browne; mayor, John Wels, grocer.
-
-This John Wels, a great benefactor to the new building of the chapel by
-the Guildhall, and of his goods the standard in West Cheape was made.
-
-1432. The 11th, John Olney, John Paddesley; mayor, John Patneis,
-fishmonger.
-
-1433. The 12th, Thomas Chalton, John Ling; mayor, John Brokle, draper.
-
-1434. The 13th, Thomas Barnewell, Simon Eyre; mayor, Roger Oteley,
-grocer.
-
-1435. The 14th, Thomas Catworth, Robert Clopton; mayor, Henry Frowicke,
-mercer.
-
-1436. The 15th, Thomas Morsted, William Gregorie; mayor, John Michel,
-fishmonger.
-
-1437. The 16th, William Hales, William Chapman; mayor, Sir William
-Eastfield, mercer.
-
-This Sir William Eastfield, knight of the Bath, a great benefactor to
-the water-conduits.
-
-1438. The 17th, Hugh Diker, Nicholas Yoo; mayor, Stephen Brown, grocer.
-
-Wheat sold for three shillings the bushel; but this man sent into
-Prussia, and caused to be brought from thence certain ships laden with
-rye, which did great relief.
-
-1439. The 18th, Philip Malpas, Robert Marshal; mayor, Robert Large,
-mercer.
-
-Philip Malpas at his decease gave one hundred and twenty pounds to poor
-prisoners, and every year for five years four hundred and three shirts
-and smocks, forty pairs of sheets, and one hundred and fifty gowns of
-frieze to the poor, to poor maids' marriages one hundred marks, to
-highways one hundred marks, and to five hundred poor people in London
-every one six shillings and eight pence, etc.
-
-1440. The 19th, John Sutton, William Wetinhall; mayor, John Paddesley,
-goldsmith, master of the works of money in the Tower of London.
-
-1441. The 20th, William Combis, Richard Rich; mayor, Robert Clopton,
-draper.
-
-1442. The 21st, Thomas Beamont, Richard Morden; mayor, John Hatherley,
-ironmonger.
-
-1443. The 22nd, Nicholas Wilforde, John Norman; mayor, Thomas Catworth,
-grocer.
-
-1444. The 23rd, Stephen Forstar, Hugh Witch; mayor, Henry Frowicke,
-mercer.
-
-This year Paul's steeple was fired with lightning, and hardly quenched.
-
-1445. 24th, John Darby, Godfrey Fielding; mayor, Simon Eyre, draper.
-
-This Simon Eyre built the Leaden hall in London, to be a common garner
-for the city, etc.
-
-1446. The 25th, Robert Horne, Godfrey Bolaine; mayor, John Olney, mercer.
-
-1447. The 26th, William Abraham, Thomas Scot; mayor, John Sidney,
-draper.
-
-1448. The 27th, William Catlow, William Marrow; mayor, Stephen Browne,
-grocer.
-
-1449. The 28th, William Hulin, Thomas Caninges; mayor, Thomas Chalton,
-mercer.
-
-This year Jack Cade, a rebel of Kent, came to London, entered the city,
-etc.
-
-1450. The 29th, I. Middleton, William Deere; mayor, Nicholas Wilforde,
-grocer.
-
-Soldiers made a fray against the mayor the same day he took his charge
-at Westminster.
-
-1451. The 30th, Matthew Philip, Christopher Warton; mayor, William
-Gregory, skinner.
-
-1452. The 31st, Richard Lee, Richard Alley; mayor, Godfrey Fielding,
-mercer, of council to Henry VI. and Edward IV.
-
-This year was a great fray at the wrestling.
-
-1453. The 32nd, John Waldron, Thomas Cooke; mayor, John Norman, draper.
-
-This John Norman was the first mayor that was rowed to Westminster by
-water, for before that time they rode on horseback.
-
-1454. The 33rd, John Field, W. Taylor; mayor, Stephen Forstar,
-fishmonger.
-
-This Stephen Forstar enlarged Ludgate, for the ease of prisoners there,
-etc.
-
-1455. The 34th, John Yong, Thomas Olgrave; mayor, William Marrow, grocer.
-
-The mercers' servants made a riot upon the Lombards and other strangers.
-
-1456. The 35th, John Steward, Raph Verney; mayor, Thomas Caning, grocer.
-
-1457. The 36th, William Edwards, Thomas Reiner; mayor, Godfrey Boloine,
-mercer.
-
-This Godfrey Boloine gave one thousand pounds to poor householders in
-London, etc.
-
-1458. The 37th, Ralph Joceline, Richard Medham; mayor, Thomas Scot,
-draper.
-
-1459. The 38th, John Plommar, John Stockar; mayor, William Hulin,
-fishmonger.
-
-1460. 39th, Richard Fleming, John Lambard; mayor, Richard Lee, grocer.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Edward IV. began his reign the 4th of March, in the year 1460, after the
-account of the Church of England.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1461. The 1st sheriffs, George Ireland, John Locke; mayor, Hugh Witch,
-mercer.
-
-1462. The 2nd, William Hampton, Bartholomew James; mayor, Thomas Cooke,
-draper, made knight of the Bath in the 5th of Edward IV. and had great
-troubles after.
-
-1463. The 3rd, Robert Baslet, Thomas Muschampe; mayor, Matthew Philip,
-goldsmith, made knight of the Bath the 5th of Edward IV., and after in
-the field, the 10th of Edward IV.
-
-1464. The 4th, John Tate, John Stone; mayor, Raph Joceline, draper,
-knight of the Bath, and also in the field.
-
-1465. The 5th, Henry Waver, William Constantine; mayor, Raph Verney,
-mercer. Henry Waver, one of the sheriffs, made knight of the Bath.
-
-1466. The 6th, John Browne, Henry Brice; mayor, John Yong, grocer, made
-knight in the field.
-
-This year began the troubles of Sir Thomas Cooke, and other aldermen, as
-ye may read in my Summary.
-
-1467. The 7th, Thomas Stalbroke, Humfrey Heyford; mayor, Thomas
-Oldgrave, skinner.
-
-1468. The 8th, Symon Smith, William Hariot; mayor, William Taylor,
-grocer.
-
-This mayor gave tenements to discharge Cordwainer street ward of
-fifteens.
-
-1469. The 9th, Richard Gardener, Robert Drope; mayor, Richard Lee,
-grocer.
-
-This year the Tower of London being delivered to the mayor and his
-brethren, they delivered King Henry from thence.
-
-1470. The 10th, Sir John Crosbie, John Ward; mayor, Sir John Stockton,
-mercer.
-
-Thomas the Bastard Fauconbridge, with a riotous company, set upon this
-city at Aldgate, Bishopsgate, the Bridge, etc., and twelve aldermen,
-with the recorder, were knighted in the field by Edward IV., to wit,
-John Stockton, mayor, Raph Verney, late mayor, John Yong, later mayor,
-William Tayler, late mayor, Richard Lee, late mayor, Matthew Philips,
-late mayor, George Ireland, William Stoker, William Hampton, since
-mayor, Thomas Stolbroke, John Crosbie, and Bartlemew James, since mayor,
-with Thomas Urswike, recorder.
-
-1471. The 11th, John Allin, John Shelley; mayor, William Edward, grocer.
-
-The water-conduit at Aldermanburie, and the standard in Fleet street
-were finished.
-
-1472. The 12th, John Browne, Thomas Bedlow; mayor, Sir William Hampton,
-fishmonger.
-
-This Sir William Hampton punished strumpets, and caused stocks to be set
-in every ward to punish vagabonds.
-
-1473. The 13th, Sir William Sokar, Robert Belisdon; mayor, John Tate,
-mercer.
-
-This year the sheriffs of London were appointed each of them to have
-sixteen serjeants, every serjeant to have his yeoman, and six clerks, to
-wit, a secondary, a clerk of the papers, and four other clerks, besides
-the under-sheriff's clerks.
-
-1474. The 14th, Edmond Shaw, Thomas Hill; mayor, Robert Drope, draper.
-
-This Robert Drope increased the water-conduit upon Cornhill, etc.
-
-1475. The 15th, Hugh Brice, Robert Colwich; mayor, Robert Basset, salter.
-
-This Robert Basset corrected the bakers and other victuallers of this
-city.
-
-1476. The 16th, Richard Rawson, William Horne; mayor, Sir Raph Joceline,
-draper, knight of the Bath.
-
-By the diligence of this mayor the walls of the city were repaired.
-
-1477. The 17th, Henry Collet, John Stoker; mayor, Humphrey Hayford,
-goldsmith.
-
-1478. The 18th, Robert Harding, Robert Bifield; mayor, Richard Gardener,
-mercer.
-
-Robert Bifield, sheriff, was fined by the mayor, and paid fifty pounds
-toward the water-conduits.
-
-1479. The 19th, Thomas Ilam, John Warde; mayor, Sir Bartholomew James,
-draper, made knight in the field by Edward IV.
-
-Thomas Ilam newly built the great conduit in West Cheape.
-
-1480. The 20th, Thomas Daniel, William Bacon; mayor, John Browne, mercer.
-
-1481. The 21st, Robert Tate, William Wiking; mayor, William Hariot,
-draper.
-
-1482. The 22nd, William Whit, John Mathew; mayor, Edmond Sha, goldsmith.
-
-This Edmond Sha caused the postern called Cripplesgate to be newly
-built, etc.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Edward V. began his reign the 9th of April, in the year 1483.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Richard III. began his reign the 22nd of June, in the year 1483.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1483. The 1st sheriffs, Thomas Norland, William Martin; mayor, Robert
-Bilisden, haberdasher.
-
-1484. The 2nd, Richard Chester, Thomas Brittaine, Raphe Austrie; mayor,
-Thomas Hill, grocer, Sir William Stoaker, draper, John Ward, grocer.
-
-Three sheriffs and three mayors this year by means of the sweating
-sickness, etc. Thomas Hill appointed by his testament the water-conduit
-in Grasse street to be built.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Henry VII. began his reign the 22nd of August, in the year 1485.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1485. The 1st sheriffs, John Tate, John Swan; mayor, Hugh Brise,
-goldsmith.
-
-This Hugh Brise was keeper of the king's mints at London.
-
-1486. The 2nd, John Percivall, Hugh Clopton; mayor, Henry Cellet, mercer.
-
-The cross in Cheap was new built in beautiful manner.
-
-1487. The 3rd, John Fenkell, William Remington; mayor, Sir William
-Horne, salter.
-
-This William Horne made knight in the field by Henry VII., gave to the
-repairing of highways betwixt London and Cambridge five hundred marks,
-and to the preachers at Paul's cross, etc.
-
-1488. The 4th, W. Isaack, Raph Tilney; mayor, Robert Tate, mercer.
-
-1489. The 5th, William Caple, John Brocke; mayor, W. White, draper.
-
-1490. The 6th, Henry Cote, Robert Revell, Hugh Pemberton; mayor, John
-Mathew, mercer.
-
-1491. The 7th, Thomas Wood, William Browne; mayor, Hugh Clopton, mercer.
-
-Hugh Clopton built the great stone bridge at Stratford upon Haven in
-Warwickshire.
-
-1492. The 8th, William Purchase, William Welbecke; mayor, William
-Martin, skinner.
-
-A riot made upon the Esterlings by the mercers' servants and other.
-
-1493. The 9th, Robert Fabian, John Winger; mayor, Sir Raph Astrie,
-fishmonger, made knight by Henry VII.
-
-Robert Fabian, alderman, made _Fabian's Chronicle_, a painful labour, to
-the honour of the city, and the whole realm.
-
-1494. The 10th, Nicholas Alwine, John Warner; mayor, Richard Chawry,
-salter.
-
-1495. The 11th, Thomas Knesworth, Henry Somer; mayor, Henry Colet,
-mercer.
-
-1496. The 12th, Sir John Sha, Sir Richard Haddon; mayor, Sir John Tate,
-the younger, mercer.
-
-The king made this mayor, Robert Shefield, recorder, and both the
-sheriffs, knights, for their good service against the rebels at Black
-Hith field.
-
-1497. The 13th, Bartlemew Read, Thomas Windout; mayor, W. Purchase,
-mercer.
-
-All the gardens in the Morefield were destroyed, and made plain ground.
-
-1498. Thomas Bradbury, Stephen Jeninges; mayor, Sir John Percevall, made
-knight in the field by King Henry VII.
-
-1499. The 15th, James Wilford, Thomas Brond; mayor, Nicholas Alwin,
-mercer.
-
-This Nicholas Alwin gave to three thousand poor people in London twelve
-pence the piece, and to three thousand in the town of Spalding, the
-like, etc.
-
-1500. The 16th, John Hawes, William Steede; mayor, W. Remington,
-fishmonger.
-
-1501. The 17th, Lawrence Ailmer, Henry Hede; mayor, Sir John Sha,
-goldsmith, made knight in the field by Henry VII.
-
-This Sir John Sha caused his brethren the aldermen to ride from the
-Guildhall unto the water's side, where he took his barge to Westminster;
-he was sworn by the king's council: he commonly in the afternoons kept a
-court alone, called before him many matters, and redressed them.
-
-1502. The 18th, Henry Kebel, Nicholas Nines; mayor, Bartlemew Reade,
-goldsmith.
-
-1503. The 19th, Christopher Hawes, Robert Wats, Thomas Granger; mayor,
-Sir William Capell, draper, made knight by Henry VII.
-
-This Sir William caused a cage in every ward to be set for punishing of
-vagabonds.
-
-1504. The 20th, Roger Acheley, William Brown; mayor, John Winger, grocer.
-
-1505. The 21st, Richard Shore, Roger Grove; mayor, Thomas Knesworth,
-fishmonger.
-
-This Thomas Knesworth appointed the water-conduit at Bishopsgate to be
-built, etc.
-
-1506. The 22nd, William Copenger, Thomas Johnson, William Fitzwilliams,
-merchant-tailor, after of council to Henry VIII.; mayor, Sir Richard
-Haddon, mercer.
-
-1507. The 23rd, William Butler, John Kirkby; mayor, William Browne,
-mercer, for part, Lawrence Ailmer, draper.
-
-1508. The 24th, Thomas Exmew, Richard Smith; mayor, Stephen Jeninges,
-merchant-tailor.
-
-This Stephen Geninges built the greatest part of St. Andrewes church
-called Undershaft. He built a free-school at Ulfrunehampton in
-Staffordshire, etc.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Henry VIII. began his reign the 22nd of April, the year 1509.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1509. The 1st sheriffs, George Monoxe, John Doget; mayor, Thomas
-Bradbury, mercer, for part, Sir William Caple, draper.
-
-1510. The 2nd, John Milborne, John Rest; mayor, Henry Keble, grocer.
-
-This Henry Keble gave one thousand pounds toward the new building of his
-parish church of Aldermary.
-
-1511. The 3rd, Nicholas Shelton, Thomas Mirfine; mayor, Roger Achiley,
-draper.
-
-This Roger Achiley provided corn for service of this city in great
-plenty. He caused the same to be stowed up in the common garner called
-Leaden hall.
-
-1512. The 4th, Robert Aldarnes, Robert Fenrother; mayor, Sir William
-Copinger, fishmonger, for part, Richard Haddon, mercer, for the rest.
-
-Sir W. Copinger gave half his goods to his wife, and the other half to
-the poor that had most need.
-
-1513. The 5th, John Dawes, John Bridges, Roger Bafford; mayor, W.
-Browne, mercer, and John Tate, mercer.
-
-This John Tate new built the church of St. Anthonies hospital in London.
-
-1514. The 6th, James Yarford, John Monday; mayor, George Monoux, draper.
-
-1515. The 7th, Henry Warley, Richard Grey, W. Bayly; mayor, Sir William
-Butler, grocer.
-
-1516. The 8th, Thomas Seimer, John Thurstone; mayor, John Rest, grocer.
-
-1517. The 9th, Thomas Baldrie, Raph Simondes; mayor, Sir Thomas Exmew,
-goldsmith.
-
-Sir Thomas Exmew made the water-conduit in London wall by Mooregate, etc.
-
-1518. The 10th, John Allen, James Spencer; mayor, Thomas Mirfin, skinner.
-
-1519. The 11th, John Wilkenson, Nicholas Partrich; mayor. Sir James
-Yarford, mercer.
-
-From this time the mayors of London, for the most part, have been
-knighted by courtesy of the kings, and not otherwise.
-
-1520. The 12th, Sir John Skevington, John Kyme; mayor, Sir John Bruge,
-draper.
-
-1521. The 13th, John Breton, Thomas Pargetor; mayor, Sir John Milborne,
-draper.
-
-This Sir John Milborne founded fourteen alms houses by the Crossed
-Fryers church, etc.
-
-1522. The 14th, John Rudstone, John Champneis; mayor, Sir John Mundy,
-goldsmith.
-
-1523. The 15th, Michael English, Nicholas Jenines; mayor, Sir T. Baldry,
-mercer.
-
-1524. The 16th, Raph Dodmer, William Roch; mayor, Sir W. Bayly, draper.
-
-1525. The 17th, John Caunton, Christopher Askew; mayor, Sir John Allen,
-mercer.
-
-1526. The 18th, Stephen Peacocke, Nicholas Lambert; mayor, Sir Thomas
-Seamer, mercer.
-
-1527. The 19th, John Hardy, William Holles; mayor, Sir James Spencer,
-vintner.
-
-1528. The 20th, Raph Warren, John Long; mayor, Sir John Rudstone, draper.
-
-1529. The 21st, Michael Dormer, Walter Champion; mayor, Sir Raph Dodmer,
-mercer.
-
-This year it was decreed that no man should be mayor of London more than
-one year.
-
-1530. The 22nd, William Dauntsey, Richard Champion; mayor, Sir T.
-Pargitor, salter.
-
-1531. The 23rd, Richard Gresham, Edward Altham; mayor, Sir Nicholas
-Lambard, grocer.
-
-1532. The 24th, Richard Reynoldes, Nicholas Pinchon, John Martin, John
-Prist; mayor, Sir Stephen Pecocke, haberdasher.
-
-1533. The 25th, William Forman, Sir T. Kitson; mayor, Sir Christopher
-Askew, draper.
-
-1534. The 26th, Nicholas Levison, W. Denham; mayor, Sir John Chamneis,
-skinner.
-
-1535. The 27th, Humfrey Munmoth, John Cootes; mayor, Sir John Allen,
-mercer. By the king's appointment he was of his council. A man of great
-wisdom, and also of great charity.
-
-The forenamed sheriffs, Munmouth and Cootes, put away twelve serjeants
-and twelve yeomen, but were by a common council forced to take them
-again.
-
-1536. The 28th, Robert Paget, William Boyer; mayor, Sir Raph Waren,
-mercer.
-
-1537. The 29th, Sir John Gresham, Thomas Lewen; mayor, Sir Richard
-Gresham, mercer.
-
-1538. The 30th, William Welkenson, Nicholas Gibson; mayor, William
-Forman, haberdasher.
-
-1539. The 31st, John Feiry, Thomas Huntlow; mayor, Sir W. Holles, mercer.
-
-1540. The 32nd, Sir William Laxton, Martin Bowes; mayor, Sir William
-Roch, draper.
-
-1541. The 33rd, Rowland Hill, Henry Suckley; mayor, Sir Michael Dormer,
-mercer.
-
-1542. The 34th, Henry Habberthorne, Henry Amcotes; mayor, John Cootes,
-salter.
-
-1543. The 35th, John Toleus, Richard Dobbes; mayor, Sir W. Bowyer,
-draper, for part, Sir Raph Waren, mercer.
-
-1544. The 36th, John Wilford, Andrew Jude; mayor, Sir W. Laxton, grocer.
-
-1545. The 37th, George Barnes, Ralph Alley; mayor, Sir Martin Bowes,
-goldsmith.
-
-1546. The 38th, Richard Jarveis, Thomas Curteis; mayor, Sir Henry
-Hubbathorne, merchant-tailor.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Edward VI. began his reign the 28th of January, in the year 1546.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1547. The 1st sheriffs, Thomas White, Robert Charsey; mayor, Sir John
-Gresham, mercer.
-
-1548. The 2nd, William Locke, Sir John Ailife; mayor, Sir Henry Amcotes,
-fishmonger.
-
-1549. The 3rd, Richard Turke, John Yorke; mayor, Rowland Hill, mercer.
-
-1550. The 4th, Augustine Hind, John Lyon; mayor, Sir Andrew Jude,
-skinner.
-
-1551. The 5th, John Lamberd, John Cowper; mayor, Sir Richard Dobbes,
-skinner.
-
-1552. The 6th, William Gerard, John Maynard; mayor, Sir George Barnes,
-haberdasher.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Queen Mary began her reign, the 6th of July, the year 1553.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1553. The 1st sheriffs, Thomas Ofley, William Huet; mayor, Sir Thomas
-White, merchant-tailor.
-
-This Thomas White founded St. John's college, in Oxford. He gave to the
-city of Bristow two thousand pounds.
-
-1554. The 2nd, David Woodrofe, William Chester; mayor, Sir John Lion,
-grocer.
-
-1555. The 3rd, Thomas Leigh, John Machil; mayor, Sir William Gerard,
-haberdasher.
-
-1556. The 4th, William Harper, John White; mayor, Sir Thomas Ofley,
-merchant-tailor.
-
-1557. The 5th, Richard Malorie, James Aitham; mayor, Sir Thomas Curteis,
-fishmonger.
-
-1558. The 6th, John Halse, Richard Champion; mayor, Sir Thomas Legh,
-mercer.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Queen Elizabeth began her reign, the 17th of November, in the year of
-Christ 1558.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1559. The 1st sheriffs, Thomas Lodge, Roger Martin; mayor, Sir William
-Huet, clothworker.
-
-1560. The 2nd, Christopher Draper, Thomas Row; mayor, Sir William
-Chester, draper.
-
-This year the merchant-tailors founded their notable free-school for
-poor men's children, etc.
-
-1561. The 3rd, Alexander Avenon, Humfrey Baskervile; mayor, Sir William
-Harper, merchant-tailor.
-
-1562. The 4th, William Alin, Richard Chamberlaine; mayor, Sir Thomas
-Lodge, grocer.
-
-1563. The 5th, Edward Bankes, Rowland Heyward; mayor, Sir John White,
-grocer.
-
-1564. The 6th, Edward Jackeman, Lionel Ducket; mayor, Sir Richard
-Malorie, mercer.
-
-1565. The 7th, John Rivers, James Hawes; mayor, Sir Richard Champion,
-draper.
-
-1566. The 8th, Richard Lambert, Ambrose Nicholas, John Langley; mayor,
-Sir Christopher Draper, ironmonger.
-
-1567. The 9th, Thomas Ramsey, William Bond; mayor, Sir Roger Martin,
-mercer.
-
-1568. The 10th, John Oleph, Robert Harding, James Bacon; mayor, Sir
-Thomas Row, merchant-tailor.
-
-1569. The 11th, Henry Becher, William Dane; mayor, Alexander Avenon,
-ironmonger.
-
-1570. The 12th, Francis Bernam, William Box; mayor, Sir Rowland Heyward,
-clothworker.
-
-1571. The 13th, Henry Miles, John Braunch; mayor, Sir William Allin,
-mercer.
-
-1572. The 14th, Richard Pipe, Nicholas Woodrofe; mayor, Sir Lionel
-Ducket, mercer.
-
-1573. The 15th, James Harvy, Thomas Pullison; mayor, Sir J. Rivers,
-grocer.
-
-1574. The 16th, Thomas Blanke, Anthony Gamage; mayor, James Hawes,
-clothworker.
-
-1575. The 17th, Edward Osborne, Wolstane Dixie; mayor, Ambrose Nicholas,
-salter.
-
-1576. The 18th, William Kimpton, George Barne; mayor, Sir John Langley,
-goldsmith.
-
-1577. The 19th, Nicholas Backhouse, Francis Bowyer; mayor, Sir Thomas
-Ramsey, grocer.
-
-1578. The 20th, George Bond, Thomas Starkie; mayor, Sir Richard Pipe,
-draper.
-
-1579. The 21st, Martin Calthrope, John Hart; mayor, Sir Nicholas
-Woodrofe, haberdasher.
-
-1580. The 22nd, Ralph Woodcock, John Alate; mayor, Sir John Branch,
-draper.
-
-1581. The 23rd, Richard Martin, William Webbe; mayor, Sir James Harvie,
-ironmonger.
-
-1582. The 24th, William Roe, John Hayden, Cuthbert Buckle; mayor, Sir
-Thomas Blancke, haberdasher.
-
-1583. The 25th, William Masham, John Spencer; mayor, Edward Osborne,
-clothworker.
-
-1584. The 26th, Stephen Slany, Henry Billingsley; mayor, Sir Thomas
-Pullison, draper.
-
-1585. The 27th, Anthony Radclife, Henry Pranell; mayor, Sir Wolstane
-Dixie, skinner.
-
-1586. The 28th, Robert House, William Elkin; mayor, Sir George Barne,
-haberdasher.
-
-1587. The 29th, Thomas Skinner, John Katcher; mayor, Sir George Bond,
-haberdasher.
-
-1588. The 30th, Hugh Ofley, Richard Saltenstall; mayor, Sir Martin
-Calthorpe, draper, for part, and Richard Martin, goldsmith, for the rest
-of that year.
-
-1589. The 31st, Richard Gurney, Stephen Some; mayor, Sir John Hart,
-grocer.
-
-1590. The 32nd, Nicholas Mosley, Robert Broke; mayor, John Allot,
-fishmonger, for part, Sir Rowland Heyward, clothworker, for the rest.
-
-1591. The 33rd, William Rider, Benet Barnham; mayor, Sir William Webb,
-salter.
-
-1592. The 34th, John Garrard, Robert Taylor; mayor, Sir William Roe,
-ironmonger.
-
-1593. The 35th, Paule Banning, Peter Hauton; mayor, Sir Cuthbert
-Buckle, vintner, for part, Sir Richard Martin, goldsmith, for the rest.
-
-1594. The 36th, Robert Lee, Thomas Benet; mayor, Sir John Spencer,
-clothworker.
-
-1595. The 37th, Thomas Low, Leonard Holiday; mayor, Sir Stephen Slany,
-skinner.
-
-1596. The 38th, John Wattes, Richard Godard; mayor, Thomas Skinner,
-clothworker, for part, Sir Henry Billingsley, haberdasher.
-
-1597. The 39th, Henry Roe, John More; mayor, Sir Richard Saltenstall,
-skinner.
-
-1598. The 40th, Edward Holmeden, Robert Hampson; mayor, Sir Stephen
-Some, grocer.
-
-1599. The 41st, Humfrey Welde, grocer, Roger Clarke, salter; mayor, Sir
-Nicholas Mosley, clothworker.
-
-1600. The 42nd, Thomas Cambell, ironmonger, Thomas Smith, haberdasher,
-William Craven, merchant-tailor; mayor, Sir William Rider, haberdasher.
-
-1601. The 43rd, Henry Anderson, girdler; William Glover, dyer; mayor,
-Sir John Garrard, haberdasher.
-
-1602. The 44th, James Pemberton, goldsmith, John Swinerton,
-merchant-tailor; mayor, Robert Lee, merchant-tailor.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Thus much for the chief and principal governors of this famous city; of
-whose public government, with the assistance of inferior officers, their
-charges for keeping of the peace, service of the prince, and honour of
-this city, much might have been said, and I had thought to have touched
-more at large; but being informed that a learned gentleman (James
-Dalton, a citizen born), minded such a labour, and promised to perform
-it, I have forborne and left the same to his good leisure, but he being
-now lately deceased without finishing any such work (a common fault to
-promise more than to perform), and I hear not of any other that taketh
-it in hand, I have been divers times minded to add certain chapters
-to this book, but being (by the good pleasure of God) visited with
-sickness, such as my feet (which have borne me many a mile) have of late
-years refused, once in four or five months, to convey me from my bed to
-my study, and therefore could not do as I would.
-
-At length, remembering I had long since gathered notes to have
-chaptered, am now forced to deliver them unperfected, and desire the
-readers to pardon me, that want not will to pleasure them.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[303] "Since called shiriffes, and judges of the King's court, and have
-therefore under-shiriffes, men learned in the law, to sit in their
-courts. Domesmen, or judges of the King's court."--_Stow._
-
-[304] The first edition has "mayor Hugh Fitz Thomas," and does not make
-mention of "Fitz Ottonis."
-
-[305] Hallontide,--or, as it was more generally designated, All
-Hallontide,--is the older designation of All Saints' day, the 1st of
-November.
-
-
-
-
-ALDERMEN AND SHERIFFS OF LONDON
-
-
-There be in this city, according to the number of wards, twenty-six
-aldermen; whereof yearly, on the feast day of St. Michael the Archangel,
-one of them is elected to be mayor for the year following, to begin
-on the 28th of October: the other aldermen, his brethren, are to him
-assistants in councils, courts, etc.
-
-More, there is a recorder of London, a grave and learned lawyer, skilful
-in the customs of this city, also assistant to the lord mayor: he taketh
-place in councils and in courts before any man that hath not been mayor,
-and learnedly delivereth the sentences of the whole court.
-
-The sheriffs of London, of old time chosen out of the commonalty,
-commoners, and oftentimes never came to be aldermen, as many aldermen
-were never sheriffs, and yet advanced to be mayor, but of late (by
-occasion) the sheriffs have been made aldermen before or presently after
-their election.
-
-Nicholas Faringdon was never sheriff, yet four times mayor of this city,
-and so of other, which reproveth a bye word, such a one will be mayor,
-or he be sheriff, etc.
-
-Then is there a chamberlain of London. A common clerk, or town clerk. A
-common sergeant.
-
-
-
-
-OFFICERS BELONGING TO THE LORD MAYOR'S HOUSE
-
-
- Sword-bearer, }
- Common hunt, } esquires, four.
- Common crier, }
- Water bailiff. }
- Coroner of London.
- Sergeant carvers, three.
- Sergeants of the chamber, three.
- Sergeant of the channel.
- Yeoman of the channel.
- Yeomen of the water side, four.
- Under water-bailiff.
- Yeomen of the chamber, two.
- Meal weighers, three.
- Yeomen of the wood wharfs, two.
- The sword-bearer's man. }
- Common hunt's men, two. }
- Common crier's man. } gentlemen's men, seven.
- Water-bailiffs' men, two. }
- The carver's man. }
-
-Whereof nine of these have liveries of the lord mayor, viz., the
-sword-bearer, and his man, the three carvers, and the four yeomen of the
-water side; all the rest have their liveries from the chamber of London.
-
-Thus far after my notes delivered by an officer of the lord mayor's
-house, but unperfected; for I remember a crowner, an under-chamberlain,
-and four clerks of the mayor's court, and others.
-
-
-
-
-THE SHERIFFS OF LONDON; THEIR OFFICERS
-
-
-The sheriffs of London, in the year 1471, were appointed each of them
-to have sixteen sergeants, every sergeant to have his yeoman, and six
-clerks; to wit, a secondary, a clerk of the papers, and four other
-clerks, besides the under sheriffs' clerks, their stewards, butlers,
-porters, and other in household many.
-
-
-
-
-OF THE MAYOR'S AND SHERIFFS' LIVERIES SOMEWHAT
-
-
-To follow precedent of former time, the clerks of companies were to
-inquire for them of their companies that would have the mayor's livery,
-their money as a benevolence given, which must be twenty shillings at
-the least put in a purse, with their names that gave it, and the wardens
-to deliver it to the mayor by the first of December; for the which
-every man had then sent him four yards of broad cloth, rowed or striped
-athwart, with a different colour to make him a gown, and these were
-called ray gowns, which was then the livery of the mayor, and also of
-the sheriffs, but each differing from others in the colours.
-
-Of older times I read, that the officers of this city wore gowns of
-party colours, as the right side of one colour and the left side of
-another; as, for example, I read in books of accounts in the Guildhall,
-that in the 19th year of Henry VI. there was bought for an officer's
-gown two yards of cloth, coloured mustard villars (a colour now out of
-use), and two yards of cloth, coloured blue, price two shillings the
-yard, in all eight shillings. More, paid to John Pope, draper, for two
-gown cloths, eight yards of two colours, _eux ombo deux de rouge_ (or
-red), _medle bune_, and _porre_ (or purple) colour, price the yard two
-shillings. These gowns were for Piers Rider and John Bukles, clerks of
-the chamber.
-
-More, I read that in the year 1516, in the 7th of Henry VIII., it
-was agreed by a common council in the Guildhall that the sheriffs of
-London should (as they had been accustomed) give yearly rayed gowns
-to the recorder, chamberlain, common sergeant, and common clerk, the
-sword-bearer, common hunt, water-bailiff, common crier, like as to their
-own offices, etc.
-
-1525. More, in the 16th of Henry VIII., Sir William Bayly, then being
-mayor, made a request, for that clothes of ray (as he alleged) were evil
-wrought, his officers might be permitted (contrary to custom) for that
-year to wear gowns of one colour; to the which, in a common council,
-one answered and said, "Yea, it might be permitted," and no man said,
-"Nay," and so it passed. Thus much for party coloured and ray gowns have
-I read: but for benevolence to the mayor, I find that of later time that
-each man giving forty shillings towards his charges, received four yards
-of broad cloth to make him a gown, for Thomas White performed it in
-the 1st of Queen Mary; but Sir Thomas Lodge gave instead of four yards
-of broad cloth, three yards of satin to make them doublets, and since
-that the three yards of satin is turned into a silver spoon, and so it
-holdeth.
-
-The days of attendance that the fellowships do give to the mayor at his
-going to Paules were seven, as followeth:--
-
- 1. Alhallowen day.
- 2. Christmasse day.
- 3. St. Stephen's day.
- 4. St. John's day.
- 5. New Year's day.
- 6. Twelfth day.
- 7. Candlemasse day.
-
-The 23rd of Henry VIII., these companies had place at the mayor's feast
-in the Guildhall, in order as followeth; I speak by precedent, for I was
-never feast-follower:--
-
- 1. Mercers, the wardens, and seventeen persons, five messes.
- 2. Grocers, the wardens, and sixteen persons, four messes.
- 3. Drapers, the wardens, and twelve persons, four messes.
- 4. Fishmongers, the wardens, and twelve persons, four messes.
- 5. Goldsmiths, the wardens, and ten persons, three messes.
- 6. Skinners, the wardens, and eight persons, three messes.
- 7. Merchant-tailors, the wardens, and nine persons, three messes.
- 8. Vintners, the wardens, and six persons, two messes.
- 9. Ironmongers, the wardens, and four persons, four messes and a
- half.
- 10. Merchant-haberdashers, the wardens, and fourteen persons, four
- messes and a half.
- 11. Salters, the wardens, and eight persons, two messes and a half.
- 12. Dyers, the wardens, and six persons, two messes.
- 13. Leathersellers, the wardens, and eight persons, three messes.
- 14. Pewterers, the wardens, and five persons, two messes.
- 15. Cutlers, the wardens and five persons, two messes.
- 16. Armourers, the wardens and three persons, one mess.
- 17. Waxchandlers, the wardens and six persons, two messes.
- 18. Tallow-chandlers, the wardens and three persons, two messes.
- 19. Shiremen, the wardens and five persons, two messes.
- 20. Fullers, the wardens and nine persons, two messes.
- 21. Sadlers, the wardens and four persons, two messes.
- 22. Brewers, the wardens and twelve persons, four messes.
- 23. Scriveners, the wardens and six persons, two messes.
- 24. Butchers, the wardens and seven persons, three messes.
- 25. Bakers, the wardens and four persons, two messes.
- 26. Poulterers, the wardens and one person, one mess.
- 27. Stationers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 28. Inholders, the wardens and four persons, two messes.
- 29. Girdlers, the wardens and four persons, two messes.
- 30. Chirurgeons, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 31. Founders, the wardens and one person, one mess.
- 32. Barbers, the wardens and four persons, two messes.
- No Clothing. Upholders, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 34. Broiderers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 35. Bowyers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 36. Fletchers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- No Clothing. Turners, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 38. Cordwainers, the wardens and four persons, two messes.
- 39. Painters-stainers, the wardens and five persons, two messes.
- 40. Masons, the wardens and one person, one mess.
- 41. Plumbers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 42. Carpenters, the wardens and four persons, two messes.
- 43. Pouch-makers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 44. Joiners, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 45. Coopers, the wardens and one person, one mess.
- No Clothing. Glaziers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- No Clothing. Linendrapers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- No Clothing. Woodmongers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 49. Curriers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- No Clothing. Foystors, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- No Clothing. Grey Tanners, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 52. Tilers, the wardens and one person, one mess.
- 53. Weavers, the wardens and one person, one mess.
- 54. Blacksmiths, the wardens, and one mess.
- No Clothing. Lorimars, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 56. Spurriers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 57. Wiresellers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- No Clothing. Fruiterers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- No Clothing. Farriers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 60. Bladesmiths, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
-
-These companies severally, at sundry times, purchased the king's
-favour and license by his letters patents, to associate themselves
-in brotherhoods, with master and wardens for their government: many
-also have procured corporations, with privileges, etc.; but I read
-not of license by them procured for liveries to be worn, but at their
-governor's discretion to appoint, as occasion asketh, some time in
-triumphant manner, some time more mourning like, and such liveries have
-they taken upon them, as well before, as since they were by license
-associated into brotherhoods, or corporations. For the first of these
-companies that I read of to be a guild, brotherhood, or fraternity,
-in this city, were the weavers, whose guild was confirmed by Henry
-II. The next fraternity, which was of St. John Baptist, time out of
-mind, called of tailors and linen-armourers of London; I find that King
-Edward I., in the 28th of his reign, confirmed that guild by the name of
-tailors and linen-armourers, and gave to the brethren there of authority
-yearly to choose unto them a governor, or master, with wardens, etc. The
-other companies have since purchased license of societies, brotherhoods,
-or corporations, in the reigns of Edward III., Richard II., Henry IV.,
-Henry V., Henry VI., and Edward IV., etc.
-
-
-
-
-SOMEWHAT OF LIVERIES WORN BY CITIZENS OF LONDON, IN TIME OF TRIUMPHS AND
-OTHERWAYS
-
-
-1236. The 20th of Henry III., the mayor, aldermen, sheriffs, and
-citizens of London, rode out to meet the king and his new wife, Queen
-Elianor, daughter to Reymond Beringarius of Aragon, earl of Provence and
-Narbone. The citizens were clothed in long garments, embroidered about
-with gold, and silk in divers colours, their horses finely trapped, to
-the number of three hundred and sixty, every man bearing a golden or
-silver cup in his hand, the king's trumpets before them sounding, etc.,
-as ye may read in my _Annales_.
-
-1300. The 29th of Edward I., the said king took to wife Margaret, sister
-to Philip Le Beau, king of France; they were married at Canterbury. The
-queen was conveyed to London, against whom the citizens to the number of
-six hundred rode in one livery of red and white, with the cognizances of
-their mysteries embroidered upon their sleeves, they received her four
-miles out of London, and so conveyed her to Westminster.
-
-1415. The 3rd of Henry V., the said king arriving at Dover, the mayor of
-London with the aldermen and crafts-men riding in red, with hoods red
-and white, met with the king on the Blacke hith, coming from Eltham with
-his prisoners out of France.
-
-1432. The 10th of Henry VI., he being crowned in France, returning
-into England, came to Eltham towards London, and the mayor of London,
-John Welles, the aldermen, with the commonalty, rode against him on
-horseback, the mayor in crimson velvet, a great velvet hat furred,
-a girdle of gold about his middle, and a bawdrike of gold about his
-neck trilling down behind him, his three henxemen, on three great
-coursers following him, in one suit of red, all spangled in silver,
-then the aldermen in gowns of scarlet, with sanguine hoods, and all the
-commonality of the city clothed in white gowns, and scarlet hoods, with
-divers cognizances embroidered on their sleeves, etc.
-
-1485. The 1st of Henry VII., the mayor, aldermen, sheriffs, and
-commonality, all clothed in violet (as in a mourning colour), met the
-king at Shorditch, and conveyed him to Powles church, where he offered
-his banners.
-
-Thus much for liveries of citizens in ancient times, both in triumphs
-and otherwise, may suffice, whereby may be observed, that the coverture
-of men's heads was then hoods, for neither cap nor hat is spoken of,
-except that John Welles mayor of London to wear a hat in time of
-triumph, but differing from the hats lately taken in use, and now
-commonly worn for noblemen's liveries. I read that Thomas earl of
-Lancaster in the reign of Edward II. gave at Christmas in liveries, to
-such as served him, a hundred and fifty-nine broad cloaths, allowing to
-every garment furs to fur their hoods: more near our time, there yet
-remaineth the counterfeits and pictures of aldermen, and others that
-lived in the reigns of Henry VI. and Edward IV., namely alderman Darby
-dwelling in Fenchurch street, over against the parish church of St.
-Diones, left his picture, as of an alderman, in a gown of scarlet on
-his back, a hood on his head, etc., as is in that house (and elsewhere)
-to be seen: for a further monument of those late times, men may behold
-the glass windows of the mayor's court in the Guildhall above the
-stairs, the mayor is there pictured sitting in habit, party-coloured,
-and a hood on his head, his swordbearer before him with a hat or cap
-of maintenance: the common clerk, and other officers bare-headed,
-their hoods on their shoulders; and therefore I take it, that the use
-of square bonnets worn by noblemen, gentlemen, citizens, and others,
-took beginning in this realm by Henry VII. and in his time, and of
-further antiquity, I can see no counterfeit or other proof of use.
-Henry VIII. (towards his latter reign) wore a round flat cap of scarlet
-or of velvet, with a bruch or jewel, and a feather; divers gentlemen,
-courtiers, and others, did the like. The youthful citizens also took
-them to the new fashion of flat caps, knit of woollen yarn black, but so
-light, that they were obliged to tie them under their chins, for else
-the wind would be master over them. The use of these flat round caps so
-far increased (being of less price than the French bonnet) that in short
-time young aldermen took the wearing of them; Sir John White wore it in
-his mayoralty, and was the first that left example to his followers;
-but now the Spanish felt, or the like counterfeit, is most commonly of
-all men both spiritual and temporal taken to use, so that the French
-bonnet or square cap, and also the round or flat cap, have for the most
-part given place to the Spanish felt; but yet in London amongst the
-graver sort (I mean the liveries of companies), remaineth a memory of
-the hoods of old time worn by their predecessors: these hoods were worn,
-the roundlets upon their heads, the skirts to hang behind in their necks
-to keep them warm, the tippet to lie on their shoulder, or to wind about
-their necks, these hoods were of old time made in colours according to
-their gowns, which were of two colours, as red and blue, or red and
-purple, murrey, or as it pleased their masters and wardens to appoint
-to the companies; but now of late time, they have used their gowns to
-be all of one colour, and those of the saddest, but their hoods being
-made the one half of the same cloth their gowns be of, the other half
-remaineth red as of old time. And so I end, as wanting time to travel
-further in this work.
-
-Now since that I have given you an outward view of this city, it shall
-not be impertinent to let you take an insight also of the same, such
-as a Londoner born discoursed about twenty years gone, for answer (as
-it seemeth) to some objections that then were made against the growing
-greatness thereof. The author gave it me, and therefore, howsoever I
-conceal his name (which itself pretendeth not), I think I may without
-his offence impart it to others, that they may take pleasure in the
-reading, as I doubt not but he did in the writing. Long may they (that
-list) envy, and long may we and our posterity enjoy the good estate of
-this city.
-
-
-
-
-A DISCOURSE OF THE NAMES AND FIRST CAUSES OF THE INSTITUTION OF CITIES
-AND PEOPLED TOWNS AND OF THE COMMODITIES THAT DO GROW BY THE SAME; AND,
-NAMELY, OF THE CITY OF LONDON
-
- WRITTEN BY WAY OF AN APOLOGY (OR DEFENCE) AGAINST THE OPINION OF
- SOME MEN, WHICH THINK THAT THE GREATNESS OF THAT CITY STANDETH NOT
- WITH THE PROFIT AND SECURITY OF THIS REALM
-
-
-Cities and well-peopled places be called _Oppida_, in Latin; either _ab
-ope danda_, or _ab opibus_, or _ab opponendo se hostibus_. They be named
-also _Civitates a cöeundo_, and _urbes_, either of the word _urbare_,
-because the first inclosure of them was described with the draught of a
-plough, or else _ab orbe_, for the round compass that they at the first
-had.
-
-In the Greek a city is termed ~polis~, either of the word ~polus~,
-_multus_, or of ~poleinô poleneon~,[306] _id est_, _habitare_, _alere_,
-_gubernare_.
-
-In the Saxon (or old English) sometimes _Tun_, which we now call town,
-derived of the word _Tynan_, to inclose or tyne, as some yet speak.
-But forasmuch as that word was proper to every village and inclosed
-dwelling, therefore our ancestors called their walled towns _Burh_ or
-_Byrg_, and we now Bury and Borough, of the Greek word ~pyrgos~ (as I
-think), which signifieth a tower or a high building.
-
-The walls of these towns had their name of _vallum_, because at the
-first they were but of that earth which was cast out of the trench,
-or ditch, wherewith they were environed. But afterward, being made of
-matter more fit for defence, they were named _a muniendo moenia_. By
-the etymology of these names, it may appear that common weals, cities,
-and towns, were at the first invented, to the end that men might lead
-a civil life amongst themselves, and be saved harmless against their
-enemies; whereupon Plato saith, "_Civitates ab initio utilitatis causa
-constitutæ sunt_." Aristotle, 1. Politicorum, 2. saith, "_Civitas a
-natura profecta est: homo enim animal aptum est ad coetus, et proinde
-civitatis origo ad viuendum, institutio ad bene viuendum refertur._"
-And Cicero, _lib. primo de Inventione_, in the beginning, saith, "_Fuit
-quoddam tempus cum in agris homines passim bestiarum more vagabantur,
-etc. quo quidem tempore, quidam (magnus, viz. vir et sapiens) dispersos
-homines in agris, et tectis silvestribus abditos, ratione quadam
-compulit in unum locum, atque eos in unamquamq; rem induxit utilem et
-honestam. Urbibus vero constitutis fidem colere, et justitiam retinere
-discebant, et aliis parere sua voluntate consuescebant_," etc. The same
-man discourseth notably to the same effect in his Oration _Pro Sestio_,
-a little after the midst thereof, showing that in the life of men
-dispersed, _vis_, beareth all the sway; but in the civil life, _ars_ is
-better maintained, etc. This thing well saw King William the Conqueror,
-who in his laws, fol. 125, saith, "_Burgi et civitates fundata, et
-edificata sunt, ad tuitionem gentium et populorum Regni, et idcirco
-observari debent cum omni libertate, integritate et ratione_." And his
-predecessors, King Ethelstane and King Canutus, in their laws, fol. 62
-and 106, had commanded thus: "_Oppida instaurantur_," etc.
-
-Seeing, therefore, that as Cicero, 2. _Officior._ saith, "_Proxime et
-secundum Deos, homines hominibus maxime utiles esse possunt_;" and
-that men are congregated into cities and commonwealths for honesty
-and utility's sake, these shortly be the commodities that do come by
-cities, commonalties, and corporations. First, men by this nearness
-of conversation are withdrawn from barbarous feritie and force to a
-certain mildness of manners, and to humanity and justice; whereby they
-are contented to give and take right, to and from their equals and
-inferiors, and to hear and obey their heads and superiors. Also the
-doctrine of God is more fitly delivered, and the discipline thereof
-more aptly to be executed, in peopled towns than abroad, by reason of
-the facility of common and often assembling; and consequently such
-inhabitants be better managed in order, and better instructed in
-wisdom: whereof it came to pass, that at the first, they that excelled
-others this way, were called _astuti_, of the Greek word ~asty~, which
-signifieth a city, although the term be now declined to the worst
-part, and do betoken evil, even as _tyrannus_, _sophista_, and some
-such other originally good words are fallen; and hereof also good
-behaviour is yet called _urbanitas_, because it is rather found in
-cities than elsewhere. In some, by often hearing men be better persuaded
-in religion, and for that they live in the eyes of others, they be
-by example the more easily trained to justice, and by shamefastness
-restrained from injury.
-
-And whereas commonwealths and kingdoms cannot have, next after God, any
-surer foundation than the love and goodwill of one man towards another,
-that also is closely bred and maintained in cities, where men by mutual
-society and companying together, do grow to alliances, commonalties, and
-corporations.
-
-The liberal sciences and learnings of all sorts, which be _lumina
-reipublicæ_, do flourish only in peopled towns; without the which a
-realm is in no better case than a man that lacketh both his eyes.
-
-Manual arts, or handicrafts, as they have for the most part been
-invented in towns and cities, so they cannot anywhere else be either
-maintained or amended. The like is to be said of merchandise, under
-which name I comprehend all manner of buying, selling, bartering,
-exchanging, communicating of things that men need to and fro. Wealth and
-riches, which are truly called _subsidia belli, et ornamenta pacis_, are
-increased chiefly in towns and cities both to the prince and people.
-
-The necessity of the poor and needy is in such places both sooner to be
-espied, and hath means to be more charitably relieved.
-
-The places themselves be surer refuges in all extremities of foreign
-invasion, and the inhabitants be a ready hand and strength of men, with
-munition to oppress intestine sedition.
-
-Moreover, forasmuch as the force of the wars of our time consisteth
-chiefly in shot, all other soldiers being either horsemen or footmen,
-armed on land, or mariners at the sea, it seemeth to me that citizens
-and townsmen be as fit to be employed in any of these services, that on
-horseback only excepted, as the inhabitants that be drawn out of the
-country.
-
-Furthermore, even as these societies and assemblies of men in cities
-and great towns are a continual bridle against tyranny, which was the
-cause that Tarquin, Nero, Dionysius, and such others, have always sought
-to weaken them: so, being well tempered, they are a strong fort and
-bulwark, not only in the aristocracy, but also in the lawful kingdom or
-just royalty.
-
-At once the propagation of religion, the execution of good policy, the
-exercise of charity, and the defence of the country, is best performed
-by towns and cities; and this civil life approacheth nearest to the
-shape of that mystical body whereof Christ is the head, and men be the
-members; whereupon both at the first, that man of God Moses, in the
-commonwealth of the Israelites, and the governors of all countries, in
-all ages since, have continually maintained the same; and to change it
-were nothing else but to metamorphose the world, and to make wild beasts
-of reasonable men. To stand longer upon this it were, _in re non dubia,
-uti oratione non necessaria_; and therefore I will come to London.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[306] Sic in Stow; Strype corrects it into ~poleuô~.
-
-
-
-
-THE SINGULARITIES OF THE CITY OF LONDON
-
-
-Whatsoever is said of cities generally, maketh also for London
-specially; howbeit, these things are particularly for our purpose to be
-considered in it. The situation; the former estimation that it hath had;
-the service that it hath done; the present estate and government of it,
-and such benefits as do grow to the realm by the maintenance thereof.
-
-This realm hath only three principal rivers, whereon a royal city may
-well be situated: Trent, in the north, Severn in the south-west, and
-Thames in the south-east; of the which Thames, both for the straight
-course in length reacheth furthest into the belly of the land, and for
-the breadth and stillness of the water is most navigable up and down the
-stream; by reason whereof London, standing almost in the middle of that
-course, is more commodiously served with provision of necessaries than
-any town standing upon the other two rivers can be, and doth also more
-easily communicate to the rest of the realm the commodities of her own
-intercourse and traffic.
-
-This river openeth indifferently upon France and Flanders, our mightiest
-neighbours, to whose doings we ought to have a bent eye and special
-regard; and this city standeth thereon in such convenient distance
-from the sea, as it is not only near enough for intelligence of the
-affairs of those princes, and for the resistance of their attempts,
-but also sufficiently removed from the fear of any sudden dangers that
-may be offered by them; whereas for the prince of this realm to dwell
-upon Trent were to turn his back or blind side to his most dangerous
-borderers; and for him to rest and dwell upon Severn were to be shut up
-in a cumbersome corner, which openeth but upon Ireland only, a place of
-much less importance.
-
-Neither could London be pitched so commodiously upon any other part
-of the same river of Thames as where it now standeth; for if it were
-removed more to the west it should lose the benefit of the ebbing and
-flowing, and if it were seated more towards the east it should be nearer
-to danger of the enemy, and further both from the good air and from
-doing good to the inner parts of the realm; neither may I omit that none
-other place is so plentifully watered with springs as London is.
-
-And whereas, amongst other things, corn and cattle, hay and fuel, be of
-great necessity; of the which cattle may be driven from afar, and corn
-may easily be transported. But hay and fuel, being of greater bulk and
-burthen, must be at hand: only London, by the benefit of this situation
-and river, may be sufficiently served therewith. In which respect an
-alderman of London reasonably (as me thought) affirmed, that although
-London received great nourishment by the residence of the prince, the
-repair of the parliament and courts of justice, yet it stood principally
-by the advantage of the situation upon the river; for when, as on a
-time, it was told him by a courtier that Queen Mary, in her displeasure
-against London, had appointed to remove with the parliament and term to
-Oxford, this plain man demanded whether she meant also to divert the
-river of Thames from London, or no? and when the gentleman had answered
-"No," "Then," quoth the alderman, "by God's grace, we shall do well
-enough at London, whatsoever become of the term and parliament." I
-myself being then a young scholar at Oxford, did see great preparation
-made towards that term and parliament, and do well remember that the
-common opinion and voice was, that they were not holden there, because
-provision of hay could not be made in all the country to serve for ten
-whole days together, and yet is that quarter plentifully stored with hay
-for the proportion of the shire itself.
-
-For proof of the ancient estimation of London, I will not use the
-authority of the British history, nor of such as follow it (although
-some hold it credible enough that London was first _Trinobantum
-civitas_, or _Troja nova_, that famous city in our histories, and then
-Ludstoune, and by corruption London, as they report), because they be
-not of sufficient force to draw the gainsayers. Neither will I stand
-much upon that honourable testimony which Gervas. Tilburiens. giveth to
-London in his book, _De Otiis Imperialibus_, saying thus, concerning
-the blessing of God towards it:--"_In Urbe London. exceptione habet
-divulgatum id per omnes æquè gentes Lucani proverbium_:
-
- Invida fatorum series summisque negatum
- Stare diu.
-
-"_Nam ea annis 354 ante Romam condita nunquam amisit principatum, nec
-bello consumpta est._"
-
-But I will rather use the credit of one or two ancient foreign writers,
-and then descend to later histories. Cornel. Tacitus, lib. 4. Annal.,
-saith, "_Londinum copia negociatorum, et comeatu maxime celebris_," and
-Herodian, in the Life of Severus the emperor, saith, "_Londinum urbs
-magna et opulenta_." Beda, lib. Ecclesiastic. 10. chap. 29, showeth
-that Pope Gregory appointed two archbishops' sees in England, the one
-at London, the other at York. King Ethelstane, in his laws, appointing
-how many mint-masters should be in each city, allotteth eight to London,
-and not so many to any other city. The penner of those laws, that are
-said to be made by Edward the Confessor, and confirmed by William the
-Conqueror, saith, "_London est caput Regni, et Legum_." King Henry I.,
-in the third chapter of his Laws, commandeth that no citizen of London
-should be amerced above one hundred shillings for any pecuniary pain.
-The great charter of England, that Helena for which there was so long
-and so great war and contention, in the ninth chapter, saith, "_Civitas
-London. habeat omnes suas Libertates antiquas_," etc. About the time of
-King John London was reputed "_regni firmata Columna_," as Alexander
-Neckham writeth; and in the beginning of the reign of Richard II. it was
-called "_Camera regis_," as Thomas Walsingham reporteth. I pass over the
-recital of the Saxon charter of King William the Conqueror, the Latin
-charter of Henry I. and II., of Richard I., of John, and of Edward I.,
-all which gave unto the citizens of London great privileges, and of
-Edward III., who reciting all the grants of his predecessors, not only
-confirmed but also increased the same, and of the latter kings, who
-have likewise added many things thereunto. Only I wish to be noted by
-them, that during all this time, all those wise and politic princes have
-thought it fit, not only to maintain London in such plight as they found
-it, but also to adorn, increase, and amplify it with singular tokens
-of their liberal favour and good liking. And whether there be not now
-the same or greater causes to draw the like, or better estimation and
-cherishing, let any man be judge, that will take the pains to compare
-the present estate of London, yet still growing to better, with the
-former condition of the same.
-
-It were too much to recite particularly the martial services that this
-city hath done from time to time; neither do I think that they be all
-committed to writing; only for a taste, as it were, I will note these
-few following.
-
-Almost sixty years before the Conquest a huge army of the Danes (whereof
-King Sweyne was the leader) besieged King Etheldred in London (than the
-which, as the story saith, then he had none other refuge), but they were
-manfully repulsed, and a great number of them slain.
-
-After the death of this Sweyne, his son Canutus (afterward king of
-England) besieged London, both by land and water; but after much labour,
-finding it impregnable, he departed; and in the same year repairing his
-forces, he girded it with a new siege, in the which the citizens so
-defended themselves, and offended him, that in the end he went away with
-shame.
-
-In the dissension that arose between King Edward the Confessor and his
-father-in-law, Earl Goodwin (which was the mightiest subject within
-this land that ever I have read of), the earl with a great army came
-to London, and was for all that by the countenance of the citizens
-resisted, till such time as the nobility made reconciliation between
-them. About seventy years after the Conquest, Maude, the empress, made
-war upon King Stephen for the right of the crown, and had taken his
-person prisoner; but, by the strength and assistance of the Londoners
-and Kentishmen, Maude was put to flight at Winchester, and her brother
-Robert, then earl of Gloucester, was taken, in exchange for whom King
-Stephen was delivered: I dispute not whose right was better, but I
-avouch the service, seeing Stephen was in possession.
-
-The history of William Walworth, the mayor of London, is well known; by
-whose manhood and policy the person of King Richard II. was rescued,
-the city saved, Wat Tiler killed, and all his straglers discomfited; in
-reward of which service, the mayor and other aldermen were knighted.
-
-Jack Cade also having discomfited the king's army that was sent against
-him, came to London, and was there manfully and with long fight
-resisted, until that by the good policy of the citizens his company was
-dispersed.
-
-Finally, in the 10th year of the reign of King Edward IV., and not many
-days before the death of Henry VI., Thomas Nevill, commonly called the
-bastard of Fauconbridge, armed a great company against the king, and
-being denied passage through London, he assaulted it on divers parts;
-but he was repulsed by the citizens, and chased as far as Stratford,
-with the loss of a great many.
-
-Thus much of certain their principal and personal services in war
-only, for it were infinite to repeat the particular aids of men and
-money which London hath ministered; and I had rather to leave it to be
-conjectured at, by comparison to be made between it and other cities,
-whereof I will give you this one note for an example. In the 12th year
-of the reign of King Edward II., it was ordered by parliament that every
-city of the realm should make out soldiers against the Scots; at which
-time London was appointed to send two hundred men, and Canterbury, being
-then one of our best cities, forty, and no more: and this proportion
-of five to one is now in our age increased, at the least five to one,
-both in soldiers and subsidy. As for the other services that London hath
-done in times of peace, they are to be measured by consideration of the
-commodities, whereof I will speak anon. In the mean season, let the
-estate and government of this city be considered, to the end that it may
-appear that it standeth well with the policy of the realm.
-
-Cæsar, in his Commentaries, is witness, that in his time the cities
-of Britain had large territories annexed unto them, and were several
-estates of themselves, governed by particular kings, or potentates,
-as in Italy and Germany yet be; and that Mandubratius was king of the
-Trinobants, whose chief city London is taken to have been. And I find
-not that this government was altered either by Cæsar or his successors,
-notwithstanding that the country became tributary unto them: but that
-it continued until at length the Britons themselves reduced all their
-peoples into one monarchy; howbeit, that lasted not any long season,
-for upon Vortiger their king came the Saxons our ancestors, and they
-drave the Britons into Wales, Cornwall, and Bretagne in France, and
-in process of war divided the country amongst themselves into an
-heptarchy, or seven kingdoms; of the which one was called the kingdom
-of the East Saxons, which having in manner the same limits that the
-bishopric of London now enjoyeth, contained Essex, Middlesex, and a part
-of Hertfordshire, and so included London. Again, it appeareth, that
-in course of time, and about eight hundred years after Christ, Egbert
-(then king of the West Saxons), _ut pisces sæpe minutos magnus comest_,
-overcame the rest of the kings, and once more erected a monarchy; the
-which till the coming in of the Normans, and from thence even hitherto
-hath continued.
-
-Now I doubt not (whatsoever London was in the time of Cæsar), but
-that under the heptarchy and monarchy it hath been a subject, and no
-free city, though happily endowed with some large privileges, for
-King William the Conqueror found a portreeve there, whose name was
-Godfrey (by which name he greeteth him in his Saxon Charter), and his
-office was none other than the charge of a bailiff or reeve, as by the
-self-same name continuing yet in Gravesend, and certain other places,
-may well appear: but the Frenchmen, using their own language, called
-him sometimes a provost and sometime a bailiff: whatsoever his name and
-office were, he was _perpetuus magistratus_, given by the prince, and
-not chosen by the citizens, as it seemeth; for what time King Richard
-I. needed money towards his expedition in the Holy Land, they first
-purchased of him the liberty to choose yearly from amongst themselves
-two bailiffs; and King John, his successor, at their like suit, changed
-their bailiffs into a mayor and two sheriffs. To these Henry III. added
-aldermen, at the first eligible yearly, but afterward by King Edward
-III. made perpetual magistrates and justices of the peace within their
-wards, in which plight of government it presently standeth. This,
-shortly as I could, is the historical and outward estate of London; now
-come I to the inward pith and substance.
-
-The estate of this city is to be examined by the quantity and by the
-quality.
-
-The quantity therefore consisteth in the number of the citizens which
-is very great, and far exceedeth the proportion of Hippodamus, which
-appointed ten thousand, and of others which have set down other numbers,
-as meet stintes in their opinions to be well governed; but yet seeing
-both reason and experience have freed us from the law of any definite
-number, so that other things be observed, let that be admitted: neither
-is London, I fear me, so great as populous; for well saith one, "_Non
-idem est magna civitas et frequens, magna est enim quæ multos habet qui
-arma ferre possunt_:" whatsoever the number be, it breedeth no fear of
-sedition; forasmuch as the same consisteth not in the extremes, but in a
-very mediocrity of wealth and riches, as it shall better appear anon.
-
-And if the causes of English rebellions be searched out, they shall be
-found in effect to be these twain, ambition and covetousness; of which
-the first reigneth in the minds of high and noble personages, or of
-such others as seek to be gracious and popular, and have robbed the
-hearts of the multitude; whereas in London, if any where in the world,
-_honos vere onus est_, and every man rather shunneth than seeketh the
-mayoralty, which is the best mark amongst them; neither hath there been
-any strong faction, nor any man more popular than the rest, forasmuch
-as the government is by a pattern, as it were, and always the same, how
-often soever they change their magistrate. Covetousness, that other
-sire of sedition, possesseth the miserable and needy sort, and such as
-be naughty packs, unthrifts, which although it cannot be chosen, but
-that in a frequent city as London is, there shall be found many, yet
-bear they not any great sway, seeing the multitude and most part there
-is of a competent wealth, and earnestly bent to honest labour. I confess
-that London is a mighty arm and instrument to bring any great desire to
-effect, if it may be known to a man's devotion; whereof also there want
-not examples in the English history. But forasmuch as the same is, by
-the like reason, serviceable and meet to impeach any disloyal attempt,
-let it rather be well governed than evil liked therefore; for it shall
-appear anon, that as London hath adhered to some rebellions, so hath
-it resisted many, and was never the author of any one. The quality of
-this city consisteth either in the law and government thereof, or in the
-degrees and condition of the citizens or in their strength and riches.
-
-It is besides the purpose to dispute, whether the estate of the
-government here be a democracy or aristocracy; for whatever it be, being
-considered in itself, certain it is, that in respect of the whole realm,
-London is but a citizen and no city, a subject and no free estate, an
-obedienciary and no place endowed with any distinct or absolute power;
-for it is governed by the same law that the rest of the realm is, both
-in causes criminal and civil, a few customs only excepted, which also
-are to be adjudged or forejudged by the common law. And in the assembly
-of the estates of our realm (which we call parliament) they are but a
-member of the commonalty, and send two burgesses for their city, as
-every poor borough doth, and two knights for their county, as every
-other shire doth; and are as straitly bound by such laws as any part of
-the realm is, for if contribution in subsidy of money to the prince be
-decreed, the Londoners have none exemption; no, not so much as to assess
-themselves, for the prince doth appoint the commissioners.
-
-If soldiers must be mustered, Londoners have no law to keep themselves
-at home; if provision for the prince's household be to be made, their
-goods are not privileged. In sum, therefore, the government of London
-differeth not in substance, but in ceremony, from the rest of the
-realm, as, namely, in the names and choice of their officers, and in
-their guilds and fraternities, established for the maintenance of
-handicrafts and labourers, and for equity and good order to be kept in
-buying and selling. And yet in these also are they to be controlled by
-the general law; for by the statutes, 28 Edward III. chap. 10, and 1
-Henry IV. chap. 15, the points of their misgovernment are inquirable by
-the inhabitants of the foreign shires adjoining, and punishable by such
-justiciars as the prince shall thereunto depute: to conclude, therefore,
-the estate of London, for government, is so agreeable a symphony with
-the rest, that there is no fear of dangerous discord to ensue thereby.
-
-The multitude (or whole body) of this populous city is two ways to
-be considered, generally and specially: generally, they be natural
-subjects, a part of the commons of this realm, and are by birth
-for the most part a mixture of all countries of the same; by blood
-gentlemen, yeomen, and of the basest sort, without distinction, and by
-profession busy bees, and travailers for their living in the hive of
-this commonwealth; but specially considered, they consist of these three
-parts,--merchants, handicraftsmen, and labourers.
-
-Merchandise is also divided into these three sorts,--navigation, by the
-which merchandizes are brought, and carried in and out over the seas;
-invection, by the which commodities are gathered into the city, and
-dispersed from thence into the country by land and negotiation, which I
-may call the keeping of a retailing or standing shop. In common speech,
-they of the first sort be called merchants, and both the other retailers.
-
-Handicraftsmen be those which do exercise such arts as require both
-labour and cunning, as goldsmiths, tailors, and haberdashers, skinners,
-etc.
-
-Labourers and hirelings I call those _quorum operæ non artes emuntur_,
-as Tullie saith; of which sort be porters, carmen, watermen, etc.
-
-Again, these three sorts may be considered, either in respect of their
-wealth or number: in wealth, merchants and some of the chief retailers
-have the first place; the most part of retailers and all artificers the
-second or mean place; and hirelings the lowest room: but in number they
-of the middle place be first, and do far exceed both the rest; hirelings
-be next, and merchants be the last. Now, out of this, that the estate of
-London, in the persons of the citizens, is so friendly interlaced, and
-knit in league with the rest of the realm, not only at their beginning
-by birth and blood, as I have showed, but also very commonly at their
-ending by life and conversation, for that merchants and rich men (being
-satisfied with gain) do for the most part marry their children into the
-country, and convey themselves, after Cicero's counsel, "_Veluti ex
-portu in agros et possessiones_:" I do infer that there is not only
-no danger towards the common quiet thereby, but also great occasion
-and cause of good love and amity. Out of this, that they be generally
-bent to travel, and do fly poverty, "_Per mare, per saxa, per ignes_,"
-as the poet saith: I draw hope that they shall escape the note of many
-vices which idle people do fall into. And out of this, that they be
-a great multitude, and that yet the greatest part of them be neither
-too rich nor too poor, but do live in the mediocrity, I conclude with
-Aristotle, that the prince needeth not to fear sedition by them, for
-thus saith he: "_Magnæ urbes magis sunt a seditione liberæ, quod in eis
-dominetur mediocritas; nam in parvis nihil medium est, sunt enim omnes
-vel pauperes vel opulenti._" I am now to come to the strength and power
-of this city, which consisteth partly in the number of the citizens
-themselves, whereof I have spoken before, partly in their riches, and
-in their warlike furniture; for as touching the strength of the place
-itself, that is apparent to the eye, and therefore is not to be treated
-of.
-
-The wealth and warlike furniture of London is either public or private,
-and no doubt the common treasure cannot be much there, seeing that the
-revenue which they have hardly sufficeth to maintain their bridge and
-conduits, and to pay their officers and servants. Their toll doth not
-any more than pay their fee farm, that they pay to the prince. Their
-issues for default of appearances be never levied, and the profits of
-their courts of justice do go to particular men's hands. Arguments
-hereof be these two: one, that they can do nothing of extraordinary
-charge without a general contribution; another, that they have suffered
-such as have borne the chief office amongst them, and were become
-bankrupt, to depart the city without relief, which I think they neither
-would nor could have done, if the common treasure had sufficed to cover
-their shame; hereof therefore we need not be afraid. The public armour
-and munition of this city remaineth in the halls of the companies, as
-it doth throughout the whole realm, for a great part in the parish
-churches; neither is that kept together, but only for obedience to the
-law, which commandeth it, and therefore if that threaten danger to the
-estate, it may by another law be taken from them, and committed to a
-more safe armoury.
-
-The private riches of London resteth chiefly in the hands of the
-merchants and retailers, for artificers have not much to spare, and
-labourers have need that it were given unto them. Now how necessary
-and serviceable the estate of merchandise is to this realm, it may
-partly appear by the practice of that peaceable, politic, and rich
-prince, King Henry VII., of whom Polidore (writing his life) sayeth
-thus: "_Mercatores ille sæpenumero pecunia multa data gratuite juvabat,
-ut mercatura ars una omnium cunctis æque mortalibus tum commoda,
-tum necessaria, in suo regno copiosior esset_." But chiefly by the
-inestimable commodities that grow thereby: for who knoweth not that we
-have extreme need of many things, whereof foreign countries have great
-store, and that we may spare many things whereof they have need: or who
-is ignorant of this, that we have no mines of silver or gold within
-our realm, so that the increase of our coin and bullion cometh from
-elsewhere; and yet nevertheless we be both fed, clad, and otherwise
-served with foreign commodities and delights, as plentiful as with our
-domestical; which thing cometh to pass by the mean of merchandise only,
-which importeth necessaries from other countries, and exporteth the
-superfluities of our own.
-
-For seeing we have no way to increase our treasure by mines of gold or
-silver at home, and can have nothing without money or ware from other
-countries abroad, it followeth necessarily, that if we follow the
-counsel of that good old husband, Marcus Cato, saying, "_Oportet patrem
-familias vendacem esse, non emacem_," and do carry more commodities in
-value over the seas than we bring hither from thence, that then the
-realm shall receive that overplus in money; but if we bring from beyond
-the seas merchandise of more value than that which we do send over may
-countervail, then the realm payeth for that overplus in ready money,
-and consequently is a loser by that ill husbandry; and therefore in
-this part great and heedful regard must be had that symmetry and due
-proportion be kept, lest otherwise either the realm be defrauded of her
-treasure, or the subjects corrupted in vanity, by excessive importation
-of superfluous and needless merchandise, or else that we feel penury,
-even in our greatest plenty and store, by immoderate exportation of our
-own needful commodities.
-
-Other the benefits that merchandise bringeth shall hereafter appear
-in the general recital of the commodities that come by London; and
-therefore it resteth that I speak a word of retailers, and finally
-show that much good groweth by them both. The chief part of retailing
-is but a handmaid to merchandise, dispersing by piecemeal that which
-the merchant bringeth in gross; of which trade be mercers, vintners,
-haberdashers, ironmongers, milliners, and all such as sell wares growing
-or made beyond the seas; and therefore so long as merchandise itself
-shall be profitable, and such proportion kept as neither we lose our
-treasure thereby, nor be cloyed with unnecessary foreign wares, this
-kind of retailing is to be retained also.
-
-Now that merchants and retailers of London be very rich and great,
-it is so far from any harm, that it is a thing both praiseworthy and
-profitable; for "_Mercatura_ (saith Cicero), _si tenuis est, sordida
-putanda est; sin magna est et copiosa, non est vituperanda_." And truly
-merchants and retailers do not altogether _intus canere_, and profit
-themselves only, for the prince and realm both are enriched by their
-riches: the realm winneth treasure, if their trade be so moderated by
-authority that it break not proportion, and they besides bear a good
-fleece, which the prince may shear when he seeth good.
-
-But here, before I conclude this part, I have shortly to answer the
-accusation of those men, which charge London with the loss and decay
-of many (or most) of the ancient cities, corporate towns, and markets
-within this realm, by drawing from them to herself alone, say they, both
-all trade of traffic by sea, and the retailing of wares and exercise
-of manual arts also. Touching navigation, which I must confess is
-apparently decayed in many port towns, and flourisheth only or chiefly
-at London, I impute that partly to the fall of the Staple, the which
-being long since a great trade, and bestowed sometimes at one town and
-sometimes at another within the realm, did much enrich the place where
-it was, and being now not only diminished in force, but also translated
-over the seas, cannot but bring some decay with it, partly to the
-impairing of havens, which in many places have impoverished those towns,
-whose estate doth ebb and flow with them, and partly to the dissolution
-of religious houses, by whose wealth and haunt many of those places were
-chiefly fed and nourished. I mean not to rehearse particular examples of
-every sort, for the thing itself speaketh, and I haste to an end.
-
-As for retailers, therefore, and handicraftsmen, it is no marvel if they
-abandon country towns, and resort to London; for not only the court,
-which is now-a-days much greater and more gallant than in former times,
-and which was wont to be contented to remain with a small company,
-sometimes at an abbey or priory, sometimes at a bishop's house, and
-sometimes at some mean manor of the king's own, is now for the most part
-either abiding at London, or else so near unto it, that the provision
-of things most fit for it may easily be fetched from thence; but also by
-occasion thereof, the gentlemen of all shires do fly and flock to this
-city; the younger sort of them to see and show vanity, and the elder to
-save the cost and charge of hospitality and house-keeping.
-
-For hereby it cometh to pass, that the gentlemen being either for a
-good portion of the year out of the country, or playing the farmers,
-graziers, brewers, or such like, more than gentlemen were wont to do
-within the country, retailers and artificers, at the least of such
-things as pertain to the back or belly, do leave the country towns,
-where there is no vent, and do fly to London, where they be sure to
-find ready and quick market. And yet I wish, that even as many towns in
-the low countries of King Philip do stand, some by one handy art, and
-some by another; so also that it might be provided here that the making
-of some things might (by discreet dispensation) be allotted to some
-special towns, to the end, that although the daintiness of men cannot
-be restrained, which will needs seek those things at London, yet other
-places also might be relieved, at the least by the workmanship of them.
-
-Thus much then of the estate of London, in the government thereof, in
-the condition of the citizens, and in their power and riches. Now follow
-the enumeration of such benefits as redound to the prince and this realm
-by this city: in which doing I profess not to rehearse all, but only to
-recite and run over the chief and principal of them.
-
-Besides the commodities of the furtherance of religion and justice,
-the propagation of learning, the maintenance of arts, the increase of
-riches, and the defence of countries (all which are before showed to
-grow generally by cities, and be common to London with them), London
-bringeth singularly these good things following.
-
-By advantage of the situation it disperseth foreign wares (as the
-stomach doth meat) to all the members most commodiously.
-
-By the benefit of the river of Thames, and great trade of merchandise,
-it is the chief maker of mariners, and nurse of our navy; and ships (as
-men know) be the wooden walls for defence of our realm.
-
-It maintaineth in flourishing estate the countries of Norfolk, Suffolk,
-Essex, Kent, and Sussex, which as they lie in the face of our most
-puissant neighbour, so ought they above others to be conserved in the
-greatest strength and riches; and these, as it is well known, stand not
-so much by the benefit of their own soil, as by the neighbourhood and
-nearness which they have to London.
-
-It relieveth plentifully, and with good policy, not only her own poor
-people, a thing which scarcely any other town or shire doth, but also
-the poor that from each quarter of the realm do flock unto it, and it
-imparteth liberally to the necessity of the universities besides. It is
-an ornament to the realm by the beauty thereof, and a terror to other
-countries, by reason of the great wealth and frequency. It spreadeth the
-honour of our country far abroad by her long navigations, and maketh our
-power feared, even of barbarous princes. It only is stored with rich
-merchants, which sort only is tolerable; for beggarly merchants do bite
-too near, and will do more harm than good to the realm.
-
-It only of any place in this realm is able to furnish the sudden
-necessity with a strong army. It availeth the prince in tronage,
-poundage, and other her customs, much more than all the rest of the
-realm.
-
-It yieldeth a greater subsidy than any one part of the realm; I mean
-not for the proportion of the value of the goods only, but also for the
-faithful service there used, in making the assess, for no where else
-be men taxed so near to their just value as in London; yea, many are
-found there, that for their countenance and credit sake, refuse not to
-be rated above their ability, which thing never happeneth abroad in the
-country. I omit that in ancient time the inhabitants of London and other
-cities were accustomably taxed after the tenth of their goods, when the
-country was assessed at the fifteenth, and rated at the eighth; when the
-country was set at the twelfth, for that were to awake a sleeping dog;
-and I should be thought "_dicenda, tacenda, locutus_," as the poet said.
-
-It only doth and is able to make the prince a ready present or loan of
-money.
-
-It only is found fit and able to entertain strangers honourably, and to
-receive the prince of the realm worthily.
-
-Almighty God (_qui nisi custodiat civitatem, frustrà vigilat custos_)
-grant that her majesty evermore rightly esteem and rule this city; and
-he give grace, that the citizens may answer duty, as well towards God
-and her majesty, as towards this whole realm and country. Amen.
-
-
-
-
-AN APPENDIX, CONTAINING THE EXAMINATION OF SUCH CAUSES AS HAVE
-HERETOFORE MOVED THE PRINCES EITHER TO FINE AND RANSOM THE CITIZENS OF
-LONDON, OR TO SEIZE THE LIBERTIES OF THE CITY ITSELF.
-
-
-These all may be reduced to these few heads; for either the citizens
-have adhered, in aid or arms, to such as have warred upon the prince, or
-they have made tumult, and broken the common peace at home; or they have
-misbehaved themselves in point of government and justice; or finally,
-and to speak the plain truth, the princes have taken hold of small
-matters, and coined good sums of money out of them.
-
-To the first head I will refer whatsoever they have done, either in
-those wars that happened between King Stephen and Maude the empress,
-being competitors of the crown, or between King John and his nobles,
-assisting Lewis, the French king's son, when he invaded the realm; for
-it is apparent by all histories that the Londoners were not the movers
-of these wars, but were only used as instruments to maintain them. The
-like is to be said of all the offences that King Henry III., whose whole
-reign was a continual warfare, conceived against this city, concerning
-the bearing of armour against him; for the first part of his reign was
-spent in the continuation of those wars that his father had begun with
-Lewis; and the rest of his life he bestowed in that contention, which
-was commonly called the Barons' wars: in which tragedy London, as it
-could not be otherwise, had now and then a part, and had many a snub
-at the king's hand for it: but in the end, when he had triumphed over
-Simon Montford at Evesham, London felt it most tragical; for then he
-both seized their liberties and sucked themselves dry; and yet Edictum
-Kenilworth, made shortly after, hath an honourable testimony for London,
-saying, "_Te London laudamus_," etc. As for the other offences that
-he took against the Londoners, they pertain to the other parts of my
-division.
-
-Next after this, against whom the Londoners did put on arms, followeth
-King Edward II., who in the end was deprived of his kingdom, not by
-their means, but by a general defection both of his own wife and son,
-and almost of the whole nobility and realm besides. In which trouble,
-that furious assault and slaughter committed by them upon the bishop of
-Excester, then treasurer of the realm, is to be imputed partly to the
-sway of the time wherewith they were carried, and partly to a private
-displeasure which they had to the bishop.
-
-Finally cometh to hand King Richard II.; for these three only, in all
-the catalogue of our kings, have been heavy lords to London, who also
-had much contention with his nobility, and was in the end deposed. But
-whatsoever countenance and aid the city of London brought to the wars
-and uproars of that time, it is notoriously true that London never led
-the dance, but ever followed the pipe of the nobility. To close up this
-first part, therefore, I affirm, that in all the troublesome actions
-during the reign of these three kings, as also in all that heaving in
-and hurling out that afterward happened between King Henry VI. and King
-Edward IV., the city of London was many times a friend and fautor, but
-never the first motive or author of any intestine war or sedition.
-
-In the second room I place a couple of tumultuous affrays that chanced
-in the days of King Richard I.; the one upon the day of his coronation
-against the Jews, which, contrary to the king's own proclamation, would
-needs enter the church to see him sacred, and were therefore cruelly
-handled by the common people. The other was caused by William with the
-long beard, who after that he had inflamed the poor people against the
-richer sort, and was called to answer for his fault, took Bow church for
-sanctuary, and kept it, castle-like, till he was fired out.
-
-Here is place also for the stoning to death of a gentleman, servant
-to the half-brother of King Henry III., which had before provoked the
-citizens to fury by wounding divers of them without any cause, 1257;
-for the riotous fray between the servants of the goldsmiths and the
-tailors, 1268; for the hurly burly and bloodshed between the Londoners
-and the men of Westminster, moved by the young men upon an occasion of
-a wrestling on St. James' day, 1221; and made worse by one Constantine,
-an ancient citizen, for the brawl and business that arose about a
-baker's loaf at Salisbury place, 1391; for the which, and some other
-misdemeanours, King Richard II. was so incensed by evil counsel against
-the Londoners, that he determined to destroy them and raze their city:
-and for the fight that was between the citizens and sanctuary men of St.
-Martin's, 1454, under King Henry VI.: and finally, for the misrule on
-evil May-day 1519, and for such other like, if there have been any.
-
-To the third head may be referred the seizure of their liberties, for
-a false judgment given against a poor widow, called Margaret Viel,
-1246; the two several seizures in one year, 1258, for false packing in
-collections of money and other enormities; and finally the seizure made
-by King Edward I. for taking of bribes of the bakers, 1285. But all this
-security in seizing and resuming of the liberties, which was in old time
-the only ordinary punishment, was at length mitigated by King Edward
-III. and King Henry IV., in their statutes before remembered.
-
-In the last place stand those offences, which I repute rather taken
-than given, and do fall within the measure of the adage, "_Ut canem
-cædas, cito invenias baculum_:" for King John, in the 10th of his reign,
-deposed the bailiffs of London, because they had bought up the wheat in
-the market, so that there was not to serve his purveyors. King Henry
-III., his son, compelled the Londoners to pay him five thousand pounds,
-because they had lent to Lewis, the French king, the like sum, of a good
-mind to dispatch him out of their city and the realm, at such time as
-the protector and the whole nobility fell to composition with him for
-his departure. And the same king fined them at three thousand marks for
-the escape of a prisoner out of Newgate, of whom they took no charge;
-for he was a clerk, prisoner to the bishop of London, under the custody
-of his own servants; and as for the place, it was only borrowed of the
-Londoners to serve that turn. Hitherto of these things to this end, that
-whatsoever misdemeanour shall be objected out of history against London,
-the same may herein appear, both in its true place and proper colour.
-
-
-
-
-FITZSTEPHEN'S DESCRIPTION OF LONDON
-
-
-OF THE SITUATION OF THE SAME
-
-Amongst the noble and celebrated cities of the world, that of London,
-the capital of the kingdom of England, is one of the most renowned,
-possessing above all others abundant wealth, extensive commerce, great
-grandeur and magnificence. It is happy in the salubrity of its climate,
-in the profession of the Christian religion, in the strength of its
-fortresses, the nature of its situation, the honour of its citizens, and
-the chastity of its matrons; in its sports too it is most pleasant, and
-in the production of illustrious men most fortunate. All which things I
-wish separately to consider.
-
-
-OF THE MILDNESS OF THE CLIMATE
-
-There then
-
- "Men's minds are soft'ned by a temp'rate clime,"
-
-not so however that they are addicted to licentiousness, but so that
-they are not savage and brutal, but rather kind and generous.
-
-
-OF THE RELIGION
-
-There is in St. Paul's church an episcopal see: it was formerly
-metropolitan, and, it is thought, will be so again, should the citizens
-return to the island: unless perhaps the archiepiscopal title of St.
-Thomas, and his bodily presence there, should always retain that dignity
-at Canterbury, where it now is. But as St. Thomas has ennobled both
-these cities, London by his birth, and Canterbury by his death, each of
-them, with respect to the saint, has much to allege against the other,
-and with justice too. As regards divine worship, there are also in
-London and in the suburbs thirteen larger conventual churches, besides
-one hundred and thirty-six lesser parochial ones.
-
-
-OF THE STRENGTH OF THE CITY
-
-On the east stands the Palatine tower, a fortress of great size and
-strength, the court and walls of which are erected upon a very deep
-foundation, the mortar used in the building being tempered with the
-blood of beasts. On the west are two castles strongly fortified; the
-wall of the city is high and thick, with seven double gates, having on
-the north side towers placed at proper intervals. London formerly had
-walls and towers in like manner on the south, but that most excellent
-river the Thames, which abounds with fish, and in which the tide ebbs
-and flows, runs on that side, and has in a long space of time washed
-down, undermined, and subverted the walls in that part. On the west
-also, higher up on the bank of the river, the royal palace rears its
-head, an incomparable structure, furnished with a breastwork and
-bastions, situated in a populous suburb, at a distance of two miles from
-the city.
-
-
-OF THE GARDENS
-
-Adjoining to the houses on all sides lie the gardens of those citizens
-that dwell in the suburbs, which are well furnished with trees, spacious
-and beautiful.
-
-
-OF THE PASTURE AND TILLAGE LANDS
-
-On the north side too are fields for pasture, and a delightful plain of
-meadow land, interspersed with flowing streams, on which stand mills,
-whose clack is very pleasing to the ear. Close by lies an immense
-forest, in which are densely wooded thickets, the coverts of game,
-stags, fallow-deer, boars, and wild bulls. The tillage lands of the city
-are not barren gravelly soils, but like the fertile plains of Asia,
-which produce abundant crops, and fill the barns of their cultivators
-with
-
- "Ceres' plenteous sheaf."
-
-
-OF THE SPRINGS
-
-There are also round London, on the northern side, in the suburbs,
-excellent springs; the water of which is sweet, clear, and salubrious,
-
- "'Mid glistening pebbles gliding playfully:"
-
-amongst which, Holywell, Clerkenwell, and St. Clement's well, are of
-most note, and most frequently visited, as well by the scholars from the
-schools, as by the youth of the city when they go out to take the air in
-the summer evenings. The city is delightful indeed, when it has a good
-governor.
-
-
-OF THE HONOUR OF THE CITIZENS
-
-This city is ennobled by her men, graced by her arms, and peopled by a
-multitude of inhabitants; so that in the wars under King Stephen there
-went out to a muster, of armed horsemen, esteemed fit for war, twenty
-thousand, and of infantry sixty thousand. The citizens of London are
-respected and noted above all other citizens for the elegance of their
-manners, dress, table, and discourse.
-
-
-OF THE MATRONS
-
-The matrons of the city are perfect Sabines.
-
-
-OF THE SCHOOLS
-
-The three principal churches possess, by privilege and ancient dignity,
-celebrated schools; yet often, by the favour of some person of note,
-or of some learned men eminently distinguished for their philosophy,
-other schools are permitted upon sufferance. On festival days the
-masters assemble their pupils at those churches where the feast of the
-patron saint is solemnised; and there the scholars dispute, some in the
-demonstrative way, and others logically; some again recite enthymemes,
-while others use the more perfect syllogism. Some, to show their
-abilities, engage in such disputation as is practised among persons
-contending for victory alone; others dispute upon a truth, which is the
-grace of perfection. The sophisters, who argue upon feigned topics,
-are deemed clever according to their fluency of speech and command of
-language. Others endeavour to impose by false conclusions. Sometimes
-certain orators in their rhetorical harangues employ all the powers
-of persuasion, taking care to observe the precepts of the art, and to
-omit nothing apposite to the subject. The boys of the different schools
-wrangle with each other in verse, and contend about the principles of
-grammar or the rules of the perfect and future tenses. There are some
-who in epigrams, rhymes, and verses, use that trivial raillery so much
-practised amongst the ancients, freely attacking their companions with
-Fescennine licence, but suppressing the names, discharging their scoffs
-and sarcasms against them, touching with Socratic wit the failings of
-their schoolfellows, or perhaps of greater personages, or biting them
-more keenly with a Theonine tooth. The audience,
-
- "well disposed to laugh,
- With curling nose double the quivering peals."
-
-
-OF THE MANNER IN WHICH THE AFFAIRS OF THE CITY ARE DISPOSED
-
-The artizans of the several crafts, the vendors of the various
-commodities, and the labourers of every kind, have each their separate
-station, which they take every morning. There is also in London, on
-the bank of the river, amongst the wine-shops which are kept in ships
-and cellars, a public eating-house: there every day, according to the
-season, may be found viands of all kinds, roast, fried, and boiled, fish
-large and small, coarser meat for the poor, and more delicate for the
-rich, such as venison, fowls, and small birds. If friends, wearied with
-their journey, should unexpectedly come to a citizen's house, and, being
-hungry, should not like to wait till fresh meat be bought and cooked:
-
- "The canisters with bread are heap'd on high;
- The attendants water for their hands supply:"--DRYDEN.
-
-Meanwhile some run to the river side, and there every thing that they
-could wish for is instantly procured. However great the number of
-soldiers or strangers that enters or leaves the city at any hour of
-the day or night, they may turn in there if they please, and refresh
-themselves according to their inclination; so that the former have no
-occasion to fast too long, or the latter to leave the city without
-dining. Those who wish to indulge themselves would not desire a
-sturgeon, or the bird of Africa, or the godwit of Ionia, when the
-delicacies that are to be found there are set before them. This indeed
-is the public cookery, and is very convenient to the city, and a
-distinguishing mark of civilisation. Hence we read in Plato's Gorgias,
-"Juxta medicinam esse coquorum officium, simulantium et adulationem
-quartæ particulæ civilitatis." There is, without one of the gates,
-immediately in the suburb, a certain smooth field in name and in
-reality. There every Friday, unless it be one of the more solemn
-festivals, is a noted show of well-bred horses exposed for sale. The
-earls, barons, and knights, who are at the time resident in the city,
-as well as most of the citizens, flock thither either to look on or buy.
-It is pleasant to see the nags, with their sleek and shining coats,
-smoothly ambling along, raising and setting down alternately, as it
-were, their feet on either side: in one part are horses better adapted
-to esquires; these, whose pace is rougher but yet expeditious, lift up
-and set down, as it were, the two opposite fore and hind feet together;
-in another the young blood colts, not yet accustomed to the bridle,
-
- "Which upright walk on pasterns firm and straight,
- Their motions easy, prancing in their gait."--DRYDEN.
-
-in a third are the horses for burden, strong and stout-limbed; and in
-a fourth, the more valuable chargers, of an elegant shape and noble
-height, with nimbly moving ears, erect necks, and plump haunches. In
-the movements of these the purchasers observe first their easy pace,
-and then their gallop, which is when the fore-feet are raised from
-the ground and set down together, and the hind ones in like manner,
-alternately. When a race is to be run by such horses as these, and
-perhaps by others, which in like manner, according to their breed, are
-strong for carriage, and vigorous for the course, the people raise a
-shout, and order the common horses to be withdrawn to another part of
-the field. The jockeys, who are boys expert in the management of horses,
-which they regulate by means of curb-bridles, sometimes by threes, and
-sometimes by twos, according as the match is made, prepare themselves
-for the contest. Their chief aim is to prevent a competitor getting
-before them. The horses, too, after their manner, are eager for the
-race; their limbs tremble, and, impatient of delay, they cannot stand
-still; upon the signal being given, they stretch out their limbs, hurry
-over the course, and are borne along with unremitting speed. The riders,
-inspired with the love of praise and the hope of victory, clap spurs to
-their flying horses, lashing them with their whips, and inciting them by
-their shouts. You would think with Heraclitus, that all things were in
-motion, and that Zeno's opinion was altogether erroneous, when he said,
-that there was no such thing as motion, and that it was impossible to
-reach the goal. In another quarter, apart from the rest, stand the goods
-of the peasants, implements of husbandry, swine with their long sides,
-cows with distended udders,
-
- "Oxen of bulk immense, and woolly flocks."
-
-There, too, stand the mares fitted for the plough, the dray, and the
-cart, of which some are big with foal, others have their frolicsome
-colts running close by their sides. To this city, from every nation
-under heaven, merchants bring their commodities by sea,
-
- "Arabia's gold, Sabæa's spice and incense,
- Scythia's keen weapons, and the oil of palms
- From Babylon's rich soil, Nile's precious gems,
- Norway's warm peltries, Russia's costly sables,
- Sera's rich vestures, and the wines of Gaul,
- Hither are sent."
-
-According to the evidence of chroniclers London is more ancient than
-Rome: for, as both derive their origin from the same Trojan ancestors,
-this was founded by Brutus before that by Romulus and Remus. Hence
-it is that, even to this day, both cities use the same ancient laws
-and ordinances. This, like Rome, is divided into wards; it has annual
-sheriffs instead of consuls; it has an order of senators and inferior
-magistrates, and also sewers and aqueducts in its streets; each class
-of suits, whether of the deliberative, demonstrative, or judicial kind,
-has its appropriate place and proper court; on stated days it has its
-assemblies. I think that there is no city in which more approved customs
-are observed--in attending churches, honouring God's ordinances, keeping
-festivals, giving alms, receiving strangers, confirming espousals,
-contracting marriages, celebrating weddings, preparing entertainments,
-welcoming guests, and also in the arrangement of the funeral ceremonies
-and the burial of the dead. The only inconveniences of London are,
-the immoderate drinking of foolish persons, and the frequent fires.
-Moreover, almost all the bishops, abbots, and great men of England, are,
-in a manner, citizens and freemen of London; as they have magnificent
-houses there, to which they resort, spending large sums of money,
-whenever they are summoned thither to councils and assemblies by the
-king or their metropolitan, or are compelled to go there by their own
-business.
-
-
-OF THE SPORTS
-
-Let us now proceed to the sports of the city; since it is expedient
-that a city be not only an object of utility and importance, but also a
-source of pleasure and diversion. Hence even in the seals of the chief
-pontiffs, up to the time of Pope Leo, there was engraved on one side of
-the Bull the figure of St. Peter as a fisherman, and above him a key
-stretched out to him, as it were, from heaven by the hand of God, and
-around him this verse--
-
- "For me thou left'st thy ship, receive the key."
-
-On the obverse side was represented a city, with this inscription,
-GOLDEN ROME. It was also said in praise of Augustus Cæsar and the city
-of Rome,
-
- "All night it rains, the shows return with day,
- Cæsar, thou bear'st with Jove alternate sway."
-
-London, instead of theatrical shows and scenic entertainments, has
-dramatic performances of a more sacred kind, either representations of
-the miracles which holy confessors have wrought, or of the passions and
-sufferings in which the constancy of martyrs was signally displayed.
-Moreover, to begin with the sports of the boys (for we have all been
-boys), annually on the day which is called Shrovetide, the boys of the
-respective schools bring each a fighting cock to their master, and
-the whole of that forenoon is spent by the boys in seeing their cocks
-fight in the school-room. After dinner, all the young men of the city
-go out into the fields to play at the well-known game of foot-ball. The
-scholars belonging to the several schools have each their ball; and the
-city tradesmen, according to their respective crafts, have theirs. The
-more aged men, the fathers of the players, and the wealthy citizens,
-come on horseback to see the contests of the young men, with whom, after
-their manner, they participate, their natural heat seeming to be aroused
-by the sight of so much agility, and by their participation in the
-amusements of unrestrained youth. Every Sunday in Lent, after dinner, a
-company of young men enter the fields, mounted on warlike horses--
-
- "On coursers always foremost in the race;"
-
-of which
-
- "Each steed's well-train'd to gallop in a ring."
-
-The lay-sons of the citizens rush out of the gates in crowds, equipped
-with lances and shields, the younger sort with pikes from which the
-iron head has been taken off, and there they get up sham fights, and
-exercise themselves in military combat. When the king happens to be near
-the city, most of the courtiers attend, and the young men who form the
-households of the earls and barons, and have not yet attained the honour
-of knighthood, resort thither for the purpose of trying their skill. The
-hope of victory animates every one. The spirited horses neigh, their
-limbs tremble, they champ their bits, and, impatient of delay, cannot
-endure standing still. When at length
-
- "The charger's hoof seizes upon the course,"
-
-the young riders having been divided into companies, some pursue those
-that go before without being able to overtake them, whilst others throw
-their companions out of their course, and gallop beyond them. In the
-Easter holidays they play at a game resembling a naval engagement. A
-target is firmly fastened to the trunk of a tree which is fixed in the
-middle of the river, and in the prow of a boat driven along by oars and
-the current stands a young man who is to strike the target with his
-lance; if, in hitting it, he break his lance, and keep his position
-unmoved, he gains his point, and attains his desire: but if his lance
-be not shivered by the blow, he is tumbled into the river, and his boat
-passes by, driven along by its own motion. Two boats, however, are
-placed there, one on each side of the target, and in them a number of
-young men to take up the striker, when he first emerges from the stream,
-or when
-
- "A second time he rises from the wave."
-
-On the bridge, and in balconies on the banks of the river, stand the
-spectators,
-
- "well disposed to laugh."
-
-During the holydays in summer the young men exercise themselves in
-the sports of leaping, archery, wrestling, stone-throwing, slinging
-javelins beyond a mark, and also fighting with bucklers. Cytherea leads
-the dances of the maidens, who merrily trip along the ground beneath
-the uprisen moon. Almost on every holyday in winter, before dinner,
-foaming boars, and huge-tusked hogs, intended for bacon, fight for
-their lives, or fat bulls or immense boars are baited with dogs. When
-that great marsh which washes the walls of the city on the north side
-is frozen over, the young men go out in crowds to divert themselves
-upon the ice. Some, having increased their velocity by a run, placing
-their feet apart, and turning their bodies sideways, slide a great way:
-others make a seat of large pieces of ice like mill-stones, and a great
-number of them running before, and holding each other by the hand, draw
-one of their companions who is seated on the ice: if at any time they
-slip in moving so swiftly, all fall down headlong together. Others are
-more expert in their sports upon the ice; for fitting to, and binding
-under their feet the shinbones of some animal, and taking in their hands
-poles shod with iron, which at times they strike against the ice, they
-are carried along with as great rapidity as a bird flying or a bolt
-discharged from a cross-bow. Sometimes two of the skaters having placed
-themselves a great distance apart by mutual agreement, come together
-from opposite sides; they meet, raise their poles, and strike each
-other; either one or both of them fall, not without some bodily hurt:
-even after their fall they are carried along to a great distance from
-each other by the velocity of the motion; and whatever part of their
-heads comes in contact with the ice is laid bare to the very skull. Very
-frequently the leg or arm of the falling party, if he chance to light
-upon either of them, is broken. But youth is an age eager for glory and
-desirous of victory, and so young men engage in counterfeit battles,
-that they may conduct themselves more valiantly in real ones. Most of
-the citizens amuse themselves in sporting with merlins, hawks, and other
-birds of a like kind, and also with dogs that hunt in the woods. The
-citizens have the right of hunting in Middlesex, Hertfordshire, all
-the Chilterns, and Kent, as far as the river Cray. The Londoners, then
-called Trinovantes, repulsed Caius Julius Cæsar, a man who delighted to
-mark his path with blood. Whence Lucan says,
-
- "Britain he sought, but turn'd his back dismay'd."
-
-The city of London has produced some men, who have subdued many
-kingdoms, and even the Roman empire; and very many others, whose virtue
-has exalted them to the skies, as was promised to Brutus by the oracle
-of Apollo:
-
- "Brutus, there lies beyond the Gallic bounds
- An island which the western sea surrounds:
-
- * * * * *
-
- To reach this happy shore thy sails employ:
- There fate decrees to raise a second Troy,
- And found an empire in thy royal line
- Which time shall ne'er destroy, nor bounds confine."
-
-Since the planting of the Christian religion there, London has given
-birth to the noble emperor Constantine, who gave the city of Rome and
-all the insignia of the empire to God and St. Peter, and Pope Sylvester,
-whose stirrup he held, and chose rather to be called defender of the
-holy Roman church, than emperor: and that the peace of our lord the
-Pope might not, by reason of his presence, be disturbed by the turmoils
-consequent on secular business, he withdrew from the city which he had
-bestowed upon our lord the Pope, and built for himself the city of
-Byzantium. London also in modern times has produced illustrious and
-august princes, the empress Matilda, King Henry the Third, and St.
-Thomas, the archbishop and glorious martyr of Christ, than whom no man
-was more guileless or more devoted to all good men throughout the whole
-Roman world.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- Abchurch lane, 196
-
- Aeldgate, 29 ff.
-
- Aetheling street. _See_ Watheling street
-
- Alcestone, Manor of, 22
-
- Aldemarie church, 226
-
- Alder street, 30
-
- Aldersgate (Aeldresgate, Ealdersgate), 27, 33
-
- Aldersgate street, 272
-
- Aldersgate ward, 271
-
- Aldgate (Aeldgate), 27
-
- Aldgate ward, 125
-
- Alfred, King, 10
-
- Alhallowes, Bread Street, Church of, 309
-
- Allen, Sir John, 103
-
- Allhallowes, _ad foenum_, 210
-
- Allhallowes the Great, Grammar school at, 67, 175
-
- Allhallowes the Less, Church of, 97, 210
-
- Allhallowes the More, Church of, 210
-
- Allhallows, Barking, Church of, 119
-
- Allhallows, Church of (Stane church), 182
-
- Allhallows Grasse church, 181
-
- Allhallows, Honey lane, Church of, 243
-
- Allhallows-in-the-Wall, Church of, 145, 158
-
- Armourers' hall, 254
-
- Askew, Sir Christopher and Lady, 270
-
- Audley, Thomas, 81, 117
-
- Augustine Friars, Church of, 159, 160
-
- Augustine Papey, Church of, St., 132. _See_ Papey
-
- Austrie, Sir Raph, 222
-
- Ave Mary lane, 34, 280, 303
-
- Axe, The, 74
-
-
- Bacon house, 272
-
- Bakers' hall, 121
-
- Bakewell hall (Blakewell hall), 256 ff.
-
- Baldoke, Robert, 35
-
- Bamme, Adam, 99
-
- Barbers-Chirurgeons' hall, 282
-
- Barbican, Burhkenning, 64, 271
-
- Barnard's inn, 71
-
- Barnes, John, 98
-
- Basset family, The, 133
-
- Basset, Robert, 30
-
- Bassinges hall street, 248
-
- Bassings family, The, 257, 258
-
- Bassings hall ward, 255
-
- Battailes inn, Abbot of, 371
-
- Battle abbey, 22
-
- Baynard's castle, 56 ff., 325
-
- Beamore, Richard, 34
-
- Beare lane, 121
-
- Bear gardens, on Bank side, 87
-
- Becket, Thomas, 43, 83, 96
-
- Bedrisworth (Bury St. Edmonds), 32
-
- Belinsgate, 185
-
- Belinsgate (Belins gate), 17, 39, 41, 123. _See_ Billingsgate
-
- Belzettar's lane (Billitar lane), 126
-
- Benbrige's inn, 137
-
- Benet, Abbot of Wirrall, 9
-
- Benonye Mittun, 250
-
- Bermondes high street, 359
-
- Bethlehem hospital, 97
-
- Bevis markes, 133. _See_ also Buries markes
-
- Billingsgate ward, 185. _See_ Belinsgate
-
- Birchin lane, 278. _See_ Birchover lane
-
- Birchover lane, 75, 178, 182
-
- Bishopsgate, 27, 30, 31
-
- Bishopsgate ward, 148 ff.
-
- Bishops of London, List of, 424 ff.
-
- Blacke-friers stairs, 38
-
- Blacke Fryers, 63
-
- Blackesmiths' hall, 315
-
- Blackfriars church, 11
-
- Bladder street, 280
-
- Blanch Apleton, Manor called, 135
-
- Blethenhall (Bethnal-Bednal) green, 30
-
- Blossoms inn, 243
-
- Bollein, Godfrey, 101
-
- Boniface, 336
-
- Bordello, The, 360
-
- Bosse alley, 187
-
- Bourns serving the City, 12
-
- Bow lane, 240
-
- Bowyers' row, 75
-
- Boyers' hall, 268
-
- Bread street, 307
-
- Bread street ward, 307
-
- Brewers' hall, 266
-
- Bricklayers' hall, 125
-
- Bride lane, 351
-
- Bridewell, 64, 351 ff.
-
- Bridge gate, 40
-
- Bridgegate, 27
-
- Bridgehouse, The, 142
-
- Bridge ward within, 189 ff.
-
- Bridge ward without, 358 ff.
-
- Bridges of the city, 21
-
- Bridges over the town ditch, 26
-
- Broad street ward, 157
-
- Brode street, 15, 158
-
- Brooks serving the City, 12
-
- Browne, Stephen, 100
-
- Brune, Walter, 97
-
- Buckles bury (Bucklesberrie), 74, 205, 232
-
- Budge row, 74, 224
-
- Bulmer, Bevis, 323
-
- Burhkennings, watch-towers, 65, 66
-
- Buries markes, 124, 133. _See_ Bevis markes
-
- Bush lane (Carter lane), 207
-
- Butchers' alley, 279
-
- Butchers' hall, 283
-
- Buttolfe wharf, 23
-
- Buttolph's gate, 22, 40, 186
-
-
- Cade, Jack, 25, 121, 137, 237
-
- Caire-Lud, or Lud's town, 3
-
- Cambridge heath, 30
-
- Cambridge University, 66, 157, 347
-
- Campeius, Cardinal, 304
-
- Candlewick street, 74
-
- Candlewick street ward, 194 ff.
-
- Carpenter, Jenken, 35
-
- Carpenter, John, 99
-
- Carpenters' hall, 158
-
- Castle Baynard ward, 324 ff.
-
- Cavendish, John, 192
-
- Caxton, 421
-
- Cernet's Tower, 233
-
- Champneis, Sir John, 121
-
- Chancelar lane, 350
-
- Charterhouse lane, 386
-
- Chaucer, 130, 216, 334, 368
-
- Cheape, The, 34, 240 ff.
-
- Cheape ward, 231 ff.
-
- Cheape, West, 74
-
- Chequer alley, 208
-
- Chester's inn (Strand inn), 71
-
- Chichley, Robert, 100
-
- Chichley, William, 122
-
- Christ's hospital, 68, 286, 347
-
- Churchman, John, 98
-
- Clarkenwell (Clarkes' well), 16, 95
-
- Clarkenwell, Priory of, 388
-
- Clarkes' well, 12
-
- Clement's inn, 71
-
- Clement's well, 12, 16
-
- Clifford's inn, 71
-
- Clinke, The, 362
-
- Clopton, Hugh, 101
-
- Clothworkers' hall, 121
-
- Coke, Edward, 147
-
- Cold Harbrough, 211
-
- Coleman street, 248
-
- Coleman street ward, 248
-
- Colet, John (Collet), 68, 102, 294, 295
-
- Compter, The, 235, 265, 360
-
- Conduits, 12, 18, 171, 190
-
- Conyhope lane, 232
-
- Cooke's row, 73
-
- Cooks' hall, 276
-
- Coopers' hall, 259
-
- Copped hall (Skinners' hall), 206
-
- Cordwainers' hall, 314
-
- Cordwainer street ward, 224
-
- Cordwayner street, 74
-
- Cornehill, 74, 86
-
- Cornhill ward, 168
-
- Cornewallies, Mistress, 126
-
- Coursitors' office, 390
-
- Court of Arches, 227
-
- Courtein (theatre), The, 377
-
- Cowbridge, 26
-
- Creed lane, 280
-
- Cripplegate, 13, 32, 33
-
- Cripplesgate ward, 260 ff.
-
- Crockers lane, 353
-
- Cromwell, Thomas, 82, 161
-
- Crooked lane, 193
-
- Crosby place, 155
-
- Crosley, Sir John, 155
-
- Culver alley, 126
-
- Curriers' hall, 266
-
- Curriers' row, 158
-
- Customers' key, 41, 123
-
- Cutlers' hall, 219
-
-
- Danne, Margaret, 106
-
- Day, John, 33
-
- Distaffe lane. _See_ Mayden lane
-
- Ditch, The, without the wall of the city, 12, 19
-
- Dixie, Sir Wolston, 105
-
- Doctors' Commons, 328
-
- Dolphin, The, 148, 378
-
- Dowgate, 206
-
- Downe gate, 39
-
- Downegate ward, 206 ff.
-
- Drake, Sir Francis, 207
-
- Drapers' company, 11, 134 _n._
-
- Drapers' hall, 158, 162
-
- Drury lane, 399
-
- Ducke lane, 335
-
- Dyers' hall, 212
-
-
- Eastcheape, 74, 194, 195
-
- Eastfield, Wm., 100
-
- Eayre (Eyre), Simon, 69, 101, 139
-
- Ebgate, 39
-
- Ebgate lane, 40, 191
-
- Edington, William, Bishop of Winchester, 51
-
- Edredes hithe, 221. _See_ Queen's hithe
-
- Edward, Earl of Derby, 81
-
- Elbow lane, 207
-
- Eldenese lane, 306
-
- Elemosinary (Almonry, Ambry), Westminster, 421
-
- Elie's inn, Bishop of, 344, 345
-
- Elms, The, Smithfield, 46
-
- Elsing Spittle, 97
-
- Elsing, William, 97
-
- Embroiderers' hall, 281
-
- Erbar (Herber), The, 80, 205
-
- Ethelred, Earl of Mercia, 10
-
- Ethelwald, Bishop of Winchester, 82
-
- Exchange, The, 50
-
-
- Fabian, Robert, 101
-
- Fags' well, 12, 16
-
- Falconar, Thomas, 99
-
- Farringdon ward within, 277 ff.
-
- Farringdon ward without, 331 ff.
-
- Fauster's lane, 142
-
- Fenchurch street, 15, 133, 180 ff.
-
- Fensburie field, 95
-
- Fewter lane, 332, 348
-
- Ficquetes Croft, 357
-
- Filpot, John, 98
-
- Finkes lane, 158, 164
-
- Fish street hill, 190
-
- Fisher, Jasper, 149
-
- Fishmongers' hall, 191
-
- Fishmongers' hall (six), 192
-
- Fisher's folly, 149, 150, 378
-
- Fitz Alewine, Henry, 174
-
- Fitzmary, Simon, 97
-
- Fitzosbert, William, 46, 228
-
- Fitzstephens, William (William Stephanides), 1
-
- Fitzwalter, Robert, 58 ff.
-
- Fleet dike, 14
-
- Fleet (Fleete) bridge, 13, 26
-
- Fleet (gaol), The, 97
-
- Fleet street, 332, 349
-
- Flower de Luce inn, 371
-
- Foster, Agnes, 37, 106
-
- Foster, Stephen, 37
-
- Founders' hall, 254
-
- Foxley, William, 55
-
- Friday street, 288, 308
-
- Frosh wharf, 41
-
- Fruiterers' hall, 217
-
- Fuller, John, 105
-
- Furnival's inn, 71, 346
-
-
- Galley key, 121
-
- Galley Row, 122
-
- Garland, The, Little East Cheape, 189
-
- Gates in the wall of the City, 27
-
- Gayspurre lane, 260, 263
-
- Gennings, Stephen, 102, 131
-
- Gerrarde the Giant, 311
-
- Gibson, Avice, 106, 376
-
- _Gilda Teutonicorum_, 124
-
- Giltspur street, 332
-
- Girdlers' hall, 256
-
- Gisors hall, 222
-
- Golding lane, 270
-
- Goldsmiths' company, 12
-
- Goldsmiths' hall, 273
-
- Goldsmiths' row, 265, 308
-
- Goswel street, 30
-
- Governors of the City of London, 422
-
- Gower, John, 363
-
- Grantham's lane, 208, 214
-
- Gra street, 15
-
- Grasse church market, 191
-
- Grasse church street, 93
-
- Grasse street, 75, 142
-
- Gray's inn, 71
-
- Gray's inn lane, 389
-
- Gresham house, 159
-
- Gresham, Sir John, 103
-
- Gresham, Sir Thomas, 69, 104
-
- Grey Friars Church, 283
-
- Grocers' hall, 235
-
- Guildhall, The, 60 ff., 99, 243, 244
-
- Guildhalla Theutonicorum, 31, 208, 261
-
- Gundulph, Bishop of Rochester, 42
-
- Gutheron's (Guthurun's, Guthurons) lane, 49, 142, 281
-
-
- Haberdashers' hall, 260, 267
-
- Hall, Edward, 103
-
- Hampstead heath, 14
-
- Harper, William, 104
-
- Haunce merchants, 31, 208, 209
-
- Haydon, John, 104
-
- Herber (Erbar), The, 80, 205
-
- High Oldborne, 392
-
- High Oldborne hill, 16
-
- Hill, Sir Rowland, 103
-
- Hill, Thomas, 101
-
- Hils, Richard, 103
-
- Hinde, John, 99
-
- Hog (Hogge) lane, 116, 150
-
- Holy Trinity, Church of, 67, 315
-
- Holy well, 12
-
- Holywell, 17
-
- Horsedown, 359
-
- Horsemill, The, 139
-
- Horsepoole, Smithfield, 12, 17, 338
-
- Horseshew bridge over Walbrooke, 26
-
- Hosier lane, 74
-
- Hospitals, List of, 438 ff.
-
- Hound's ditch, 65, 116
-
- Houses of Students in the Common Law, 70 ff.
-
- Hoxton, 378
-
- Hubert of Burge, 47
-
- Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, 61
-
-
- Ilam, Thomas, 101, 237
-
- Ingulphus, Abbot of Crowland, 67
-
- Inner Temple, 71
-
- Innholders' hall, 207
-
- Ipres inn, 221
-
- Ipres, William of, 221
-
- Ironmongers' lane, 74, 232, 242
-
- Ivie lane, 280, 306
-
-
- Jesus' Commons, 207
-
- Jews' Garden, 270
-
- Joiners' hall, The, 208
-
- Jud, Sir Andrew, 103
-
-
- Keble, Henry, 102, 226
-
- King's Bench prison, 366
-
- King's Bench, The, 361
-
- King's College, Cambridge, 326
-
- Knesworth, Thomas, 156
-
- Knighten Guild, or Portsoken ward, 110 ff.
-
- Knightriders' street, 74, 214, 220, 315
-
- Knoles, Sir Robert, 98
-
- Knoles, Thomas, 99
-
-
- Lady Mary Magdalen, Chapel or college of, 244
-
- Lambe, William, 18, 104
-
- Lambert, William, 104
-
- Langborne ward, and Fennie About, 279
-
- Langborne water, 15
-
- Large, Robert, 100, 249
-
- Laxton, Sir William, 103, 227
-
- Lazar houses, 440, 441
-
- Leaden hall market, 168
-
- Leaden hall, The, 69, 101, 138 ff.
-
- Leaden porch, The, 138, 196
-
- Leathersellers' Company, 155
-
- Legat's inn, 62
-
- Liberties of the Duchy of Lancaster, 393
-
- Lichfield, William, 210
-
- Lidgate (monk of Bury), 195, 334
-
- Lime house (Lime host, Lime hurst, Lymehurst), 335, 375
-
- Lime street ward, 136
-
- Lincoln's inn, 71
-
- Lion Tower, The, 45
-
- Lion's inn, 71
-
- Lions, Richard, 210
-
- Lither lane, 332, 346
-
- Little Bayly, 332
-
- Little Britaine, 335
-
- Little St. Helen, 154
-
- Loder's well, 12, 16
-
- Lofken, John, 97
-
- Loke, The, 359, 372
-
- Lollesworth (Spittle field), 150, 152
-
- Lombard street, 74, 180
-
- Lomsbery, 400
-
- London bridge, 74, 21 ff.
-
- London stone, 22, 25, 201, 202
-
- London, various names for, 9
-
- London, Wall of, 7, 326
-
- Long lane, 338
-
- Long Southwark, 359
-
- Longshampe, William, 28, 43
-
- Lothbury (Lothberie or Loodberie) 75, 162, 248
-
- Love lane (once Lucas lane), 188
-
- Lovell, Sir Thos., 172
-
- Lowlardes' tower, 330
-
- Lud, King, 3
-
- Ludgate, 27, 28, 36
-
- Ludgate gaol, 18, 36, 37
-
- Lumbard street, 15
-
-
- Magdalen College, Cambridge, 117
-
- Malpas, Philip, 100, 137
-
- Mampudding, Mother, 124
-
- Marshalsey, The, 360, 366
-
- Mart lane, 120, 135. _See also_ Marke lane
-
- Masons' hall, 255
-
- Mauricius (Mauritius), 34, 290, 291
-
- May, Richard, 105
-
- Mayden lane, or Distar lane, 273, 307, 308
-
- Mayors of the City, 444 ff.
-
- Mercers' chapel, The, 241, 242
-
- Merchant Taylors' Grammar school, 68
-
- Merchant Tailors' hall, 163
-
- Mewse, The, 399
-
- Mewsgate, 17
-
- Middle Temple, 71
-
- Milborne, Sir John, 102, 134
-
- Milk street, 260, 264
-
- Mincheon lane, 120
-
- Minories, Abbey called the, 114
-
- Monkswell street, 261, 268, 283
-
- Monox, George, 102
-
- Moore ditch, The, 20
-
- Moorfield, 11, 380
-
- Moorgate, 27
-
- Moregate, Postern of, 31, 32
-
- Morris, Peter, 18, 169
-
- Mountfiquit, Tower of, 63
-
- Mountgodard street, 306
-
-
- Needlers' lane, 232, 233
-
- Nevill, Richard, Earl of Warwick, 81
-
- New inn, 71
-
- New street (Chancery lane), 350, 390
-
- New Temple, 354
-
- Newgate, 33
-
- Newgate gaol, 18, 34, 97
-
- Nicholas, Ambrose, 104
-
- Noble street, 271
-
- Norman, first canon regular in England, 127
-
- Northampton (or Combarton), John, 192, 193
-
- Northumberland house, 135, 276
-
-
- Offley, Sir Thomas, 104, 146
-
- Offrem, John, 35
-
- Old Bayly, 332
-
- Old Change, 50
-
- Old Exchange, 289
-
- Old Fish street, 289. 309
-
- Old Fish street hill, 317
-
- Old Jurie, 74, 135, 236
-
- Oldborne, 12
-
- Oldborne conduit, 332
-
- Oldbourne hill, 26
-
- Oldborne bridge, 13, 26
-
- Ormond place, 214, 221
-
- Our Lady of Rouncivall, Priory of Charing Cross, 67
-
- Our Lady of the Canons, Southwark, 24
-
- Our Lady of the Pew, Chapel of, 419
-
- Owens, gunfounders, 117
-
- Oxford University, 13, 66, 157, 165, 347
-
- Oyster gate, 40
-
-
- Paddington, 17
-
- Painted Tavern lane, 214
-
- Painterstainers' hall, 317
-
- Panyar alley, 306
-
- Papey, The, 132
-
- Pardon churchyard, 293, 384, 385
-
- Parish churches, List of, 434 ff.
-
- Paternoster lane, 217
-
- Pater noster row, 75, 302
-
- Patricksey (Batersey), 23
-
- Patten, Wm., 104
-
- Pattens' lane, 75
-
- Paul's chain, 325
-
- Paul's cross, 151, 296
-
- Paul's Head Tavern, 328
-
- Penticost lane, 279
-
- Percivall, Sir John, and the Lady Thomasine, 101
-
- Perillous pond, 17
-
- Peter, of Cole Church, 22
-
- Petty France, 148
-
- Petty Wales, 123
-
- Pewterers' hall, 180
-
- Physicians, College of, 69, 330
-
- Picard, Henry, 97
-
- Pie corner, 332, 333
-
- Plumbers' hall, 217
-
- Pools serving the City, 12
-
- Pope's head tavern, 279
-
- Porta Contractorum (Criplesgate), 32
-
- Porte pool, or Grayes inn lane, 389
-
- Portsoken ward, 28, 110
-
- Postern (gate), The, 27, 44
-
- Postern out of Christ's Hospital, 33
-
- Poultney, Sir John, 35, 97
-
- Poultry, 75, 167
-
- Powle's wharf, 39
-
- Powlet, William, Marquis of Winchester, 81
-
- Pudding lane (Rother lane), 189
-
- Puddle wharf, 38, 325
-
-
- Queene hithe ward, 314 ff.
-
- Queenhithe (Queen's hithe or Queen's bank), 25, 39, 185, 320 ff.
-
- Queen's wardrobe, 65, 218
-
-
- Radcliffe (Ratcliffe), 377
-
- Radclyffe, Free school at, 106
-
- Radwell, 12, 17
-
- Rahere, 333
-
- Rainwell, John, 100
-
- Ramsey, Mary, 106
-
- Randolph, Barnard, 104
-
- Rawson, Richard, 101
-
- Red Cross street, 64, 270
-
- Redman, Richard, Bishop of Ely, 81
-
- Rich, Richard, 101
-
- Richard de Berie, Bishop of Durham 83
-
- Richborough (Richborrow), 6
-
- Ripa Regina, 39. _See_ Queene hithe
-
- Rivers serving the city, 12
-
- Roe, Sir Thomas, 149
-
- Roo, Sir Thomas, 104, 135
-
- Roode lane (once St. Margaret Pattens), 187, 188
-
- Royal Exchange, The, 70, 104, 173, 180. _See_ Exchange
-
- Rudstone, Sir John, 278
-
- Rus, William, 176
-
- Russell, or Bedford house, 397
-
-
- Saddlers' hall, 281
-
- St. Alphage, Church of, 264
-
- St. Andrew, Church of, 347
-
- St. Andrew Hubbert, East Cheap, Church of, 188
-
- St. Andrew in the Wardrobe, Church of, 327
-
- St. Andrew, Oldborne, Grammar school, 67, 175
-
- St. Andrew Undershaft (St. Andrew the Apostle), Church of, 130
-
- St. Anne in the Willows, Church of, 274
-
- St. Anthonie Budgerow, Church of, 225
-
- St. Anthonie, Hospital of, 165
-
- St. Anthony's Grammar school, 67
-
- St. Augustine Papey, Church of, 132, 146. _See_ Papey
-
- St. Bartholomew, Church of, 166
-
- St. Bartholomew, Hospital of, 99, 285, 333
-
- St. Bartholomew's Priory, Smithfield, 67
-
- St. Benet Hude (or Hithe), Church of, 327
-
- St. Bennet (commonly called Fink), Church of, 164
-
- St. Buttolph, Church of, 115, 148, 186
-
- St. Christopher, Church of, 167
-
- St. Clements Danes, 397
-
- St. Dionys, Church of (Backe church), 180
-
- St. Dunstan's Grammar School, 67
-
- St. Dunstan's hill, 123
-
- St. Dunstan's in the West, Church of, 122, 349
-
- St. Edmond, king and martyr, Church of, 181
-
- St. Erkenwald's shrine in Powle's (Paul's) Church, 22
-
- St. Ethelburge Virgin, Church of, 154
-
- St. Faith under Paul's, Church of, 294
-
- St. Fauster's (St. Foster's) church, 281
-
- St. Gabriel Fen, Church of (Fan church), 180
-
- St. George, Buttolph lane, Church of, 189
-
- St. George, Southwark, Church of, 22
-
- St. Giles', Cripplesgate, 268
-
- St. Giles' Hospital, 97, 392
-
- St. Helen, Church of, 154
-
- St. James's park, 94, 402
-
- St. John Evangelist, Church of, 313
-
- St. John of Jerusalem, Priory of, 67, 181, 386
-
- St. John upon Walbrooke, 205
-
- St. John Zacharies Church, 271
-
- St. John's College, Oxford, 103
-
- St. Katherine, Church of, 129, 135
-
- St. Katherine's, Hospital of, 113
-
- St. Laurence, Jury, Church of, 246
-
- St. Laurence, Poultney, Church of, 97, 196, 200
-
- St. Leonard (Milke), Church of, 190
-
- St. Leonard, Shoreditch, Church of, 379
-
- St. Magnus, Church of, 190
-
- St. Margaret Moyses, Church of, 314
-
- St. Margaret (on the hill), 359
-
- St. Margaret's, Westminster, 406, 411
-
- St. Martin in the Vintry, Church of, 222
-
- St. Martin (Pomary), Church of, 242
-
- St. Martin Orgar, Church of, 200
-
- St. Martin Orgar lane, 200
-
- St. Martin Oteswich, 148
-
- St. Martin's le Grand, College of, 13, 32, 67, 275
-
- St. Marie Abchurch, 196
-
- St. Marie at the Axe, Church of, 145
-
- St. Marie Magdalen, Church of, 264
-
- St. Marie (on the hill), 187
-
- St. Marie Pellipar, 74, 145. _See also_ St. Marie at the Axe
-
- St. Mary Aldermanbury, Church of,262
-
- St. Mary of Bethlehem, Hospital of 97, 148, 377
-
- St. Mary Bothaw, 205
-
- St. Mary Bow, 227 ff.
-
- St. Mary de Monte Alto, Church of, 318
-
- St. Mary le Bow, Grammar school, 67
-
- St. Mary Magdalen, Chapel of, 153, 372
-
- St. Mary Overie, Southwark, Priory of, 67, 359, 362
-
- St. Mary Sommerset, 196, 319
-
- St. Mary Spittle, Hospital of, 31, 97 150
-
- St. Mary Stayning, Church of, 273
-
- St. Mary street, 132
-
- St. Mary Wool Church, 203
-
- St. Mary Woolnoth, Church of, 184, 279
-
- St. Michael, Crooked Lane, Church of, 98, 196
-
- St. Michael de Paternoster, Church of, 217
-
- St. Michael, Wood street, 266
-
- St. Michael th' Archangel, Church of, 175 ff.
-
- St. Michaell, Bassings hall, Church of, 259
-
- St. Mildred the Virgin, Church of, 310
-
- St. Nicholas Acon, Church of, 183
-
- St. Nicholas, Church of, 283
-
- St. Nicholas lane, 196
-
- St. Nicolas Cole Abbey, 316
-
- St. Olave, Church of, 120
-
- St. Olave Upwell, Church of, 252
-
- St. Pancrate, Church of, 232, 233
-
- St. Paul's, 34, 50, 62, 63, 89, 108, 291 ff.
-
- St. Paul's Churchyard, 75
-
- St. Paul's school, 67, 68, 102, 295
-
- St. Peter, at Westminster, Church of, 22
-
- St Peter, called _parva_, 319
-
- St. Peter the Poor, Church of, 158, 159
-
- St. Peter upon Cornhill, 174, 423
-
- St. Peter's upon Cornhill, Grammar school, 67, 175
-
- St. Peter's, Monastery at Westminster, 67
-
- St. Saviour, Monastery of, Bermondsey, Southwark, 67
-
- St. Sepulchers in the Bayly, Church of, 342
-
- St. Sithes, Church of, 225, 233
-
- St. Stephen upon Walbrooke, 15, 100, 203
-
- St. Stephen, Westminster, Chapel of, 66, 418
-
- St. Swithen, Church of, 201
-
- St. Swithen's lane, 200
-
- St. Thomas Apostle, Church of, 98, 220
-
- St. Thomas, Hospital of, 368, 369
-
- St. Thomas of Acon hospital, 241
-
- St. Thomas of Acons, Grammar school at, 67, 175
-
- Salisburie court, 353
-
- Salters' hall, 310
-
- Sanctuary, The, 94
-
- Sarasen's Head, 343
-
- Sargeants' inn, 354
-
- Savoy, The, 395 ff.
-
- Scalding alley (formerly Scalding house or Scalding wick), 158, 167
-
- Schools, and other houses of learning, 66 ff.
-
- Scrop's inn, 71
-
- Seacole lane, 332
-
- Sergeants' inn, 71
-
- Serne's Tower, 48, 66
-
- Sevenoke, William, 99
-
- Shaft alley, 130
-
- Shaw, Edmond, 33
-
- Shaw, Edward, 101
-
- Sheremoniers' lane (Sermon lane), 329
-
- Shoe lane, 332, 347
-
- Shoemakers' hall, 314
-
- Shoreditch (Sors ditch, Sewer's-ditch), 30, 378, 379
-
- Shorne, Benedict, 233
-
- Sidon lane (Sything lane), 120
-
- Single Woman's churchyard, The, 362
-
- Skinners' hall, 206
-
- Skinners' well, 12, 16, 86, 340
-
- Smart's key, 41
-
- Smithfield, East, 113
-
- Snow hill (Snor hill), 332, 343
-
- Somar's (Sommer's) key, 41, 186
-
- Somerset, Edward, Duke of, 82
-
- Somerset house, 173, 395
-
- Soper's lane, 74
-
- Sporiar lane, 121
-
- Sprinckle alley (Sugarloaf alley), 126
-
- Spurrier row, 303
-
- Standard in Cheape, The, 18, 237
-
- Staple inn, 71, 348
-
- Star chamber, 418
-
- Stationers' hall, 331
-
- Stayning lane, 272
-
- Steelyard, The, 208
-
- Stepney (Stebunheath), 90
-
- Stews, The, 360
-
- Stikoneth, 105. _See_ Stepney
-
- Stinking lane, 279, 283
-
- Stocke Fishmonger row, 191
-
- Stocks, The, 202
-
- Stocks market, The, 74, 97
-
- Stodie, John, 97
-
- Stokenewenton, Parish Church of, 104
-
- Strand street, 397
-
- Stratford at the Bow, 142
-
- Straw, Jack, 193
-
- Styleyard, The, 39
-
- Suburbs without the walls, The, 374 ff.
-
- Sweyn, 21
-
-
- Tabard, The, 367
-
- Tallow-chandlers' hall, 206
-
- Tasel close, 150
-
- Tate, John, 102, 166
-
- Temple bar, 71, 173
-
- Temple Church, 357
-
- Thames street, 74, 325 ff.
-
- Thames, The, 13
-
- Thavies inn, 71, 348
-
- Theatre, The, 377
-
- Theeves lane, 368
-
- Thieving lane, 405
-
- Thorne, Robert, 102
-
- Three Cranes' lane, 214
-
- Three needle street, 158
-
- Timber hithe, 323
-
- Tode well (Todwell), 12, 16
-
- Totehill, 421
-
- Tower ditch, The, 20
-
- Tower hill, 45, 114
-
- Tower of London, 42 ff., 54
-
- Tower Royall, 65, 214, 218, 219
-
- Tower street ward, 118
-
- Towers on London Bridge, 56
-
- Trinity lane, 317
-
- Trinobants, The, 4
-
- Troynovants, The, 4
-
- Tun, The, 97, 169, 170
-
- Turnagaine lane, 332
-
- Turnebase (Turnebasse) lane, 224
-
- Turnmill or Tremill brook, 14
-
- Tyborn, 76
-
- Tyler (Tighlar), Wat, 24, 65, 193, 197, 223
-
-
- Vintners' hall, The, 97
-
- Vintry ward, 213
-
-
- Wakering, Sir John, 333
-
- Walbrook ward, 200 ff.
-
- Walbrooke, 12, 108
-
- Walworth, William, 98, 193, 361
-
- Wall about the City of London, 7
-
- Wallice, Henry, 97
-
- Walter de Suffilde, Bishop of Norwich, 83
-
- Wards on the east side of Walbrooke, 109
-
- Wards on the west side of Walbrooke, 109
-
- Water-gates on the Thames, 38 ff.
-
- Watheling (Atheling or Noble) street, 34, 224, 307, 309
-
- Waxchandlers hall, 267
-
- Weavers' hall, 255
-
- Wells, John, 100, 245
-
- Wells river (Turnemill brook, Fleete dike), 12
-
- Wells serving the City, 12
-
- West Cheaping, 236
-
- Westminster Abbey, 406 ff.
-
- Westminster Hall, 412 ff.
-
- West, Nicholas, Bishop of Ely, 81
-
- Wey house, The, 418
-
- White Chappell, 116
-
- White Crosse street, 269
-
- White Friars' Church, 353
-
- White hall, 391
-
- White Lion Church, Southwarke, 360
-
- White Lion, The, 366
-
- White, Sir Thomas, 103
-
- White Tower, The, 42
-
- Whitechapel Church, 376
-
- Whitington, Richard, 217
-
- Whittington, William, 99
-
- William de Haverhull, 83
-
- Winchcombe, Oxfordshire, 13
-
- Winchelsey, Robt., Archbishop of Canterbury, 83
-
- Winchester's house, Bishop of, 362
-
- Windgoose lane, 210
-
- Wolfes gate, 39
-
- Wolsey, Thomas, Cardinal, 81, 128, 304
-
- Wood street, 260, 265
-
- Woodmongers' hall, 328
-
- Worcester house, 217
-
- Wrestlers, The, 136
-
-
-THE TEMPLE PRESS, PRINTERS, LETCHWORTH
-
-
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Note
-
-
-Superscript text is indicated with caret symbols, e.g. L^{TD}. Greek
-has been transliterated and is marked with ~swung dashes~.
-
-Footnote 51 is referenced twice in the text.
-
-Entries in the table of contents do not all match the headings in the
-text.
-
-
-The following printing errors have been corrected:
-
-p. x "to empty" changed to "to "empty"
-
-p. xviii "S. Androwes" changed to "S. Androwes."
-
-p. 13 (note) "1st." changed to "1st"
-
-p. 17 "Glibert" changed to "Gilbert"
-
-p. 46 "recepit" changed to "receipt"
-
-p. 72 "default, of" changed to "default, of"
-
-p. 76 (note) "Liber Constitutions. Liber Horme." changed to "Liber
-
-Constitutionis. Liber Horne."
-
-p. 91 "kept a" changed to "kept at"
-
-p. 92 (note) "Decretat," changed to "Decretal."
-
-p. 107 "First, Through" changed to "First, through"
-
-p. 113 (note) "Rech Altherthümer" changed to "Rechtsalterthümer"
-
-p. 136 (note) "10s." changed to "10_s._"
-
-p. 162 (note) "p. 141" changed to "p. 141."
-
-p. 173 "Enchange" changed to "Exchange"
-
-p. 174 "expect the steeple" changed to "except the steeple"
-
-p. 189 "s a principal" changed to "is a principal"
-
-p. 231 (note) "16s." changed to "16_s._"
-
-p. 231 (note) "p. 207" changed to "p. 207."
-
-p. 243 "so called." changed to "so called,"
-
-p. 260 "Kery lan" changed to "Kery lane"
-
-p. 264 "Rowlard" changed to "Rowland"
-
-p. 266 "ncroachments" changed to "encroachments"
-
-p. 269 "1546:" changed to "1546;"
-
-p. 287 (note) "Hountjoy" changed to "Mountjoy"
-
-p. 298 "buck,and" changed to "buck, and"
-
-p. 299 "chantry there," "chantry there;"
-
-p. 331 "low sheds" changed to "low sheds,"
-
-p. 355 "partiarch" changed to "patriarch"
-
-p. 364 "he dieu" changed to "de dieu"
-
-p. 376 "h ll" changed to "hill"
-
-p. 382 "this our city." changed to "this our city.""
-
-p. 390 (note) "inn." changed to "inn.""
-
-p. 392 "fair buildings." changed to "fair buildings.""
-
-p. 407 "Richard, Bishop" changed to "Richard, bishop"
-
-p. 407 "younds" changed to "pounds"
-
-p. 411 "by thi" changed to "by this"
-
-p. 442 "French and English" changed to "French and English."
-
-p. 448 "Richard Handle" changed to "Richard Hardle"
-
-p. 454 "Sr John Pultney" changed to "Sir John Pultney"
-
-p. 461 "Waltar Chartesey" changed to "Walter Chartesey"
-
-p. 473 "mayor Sir William" changed to "mayor, Sir William"
-
-p. 480 "aldermen Darby" changed to "alderman Darby"
-
-p. 482 "mænia" changed to "moenia"
-
-p. 483 "cætus" changed to "coetus"
-
-p. 487 typography of the paragraph beginning "Nam ea annis" was
-regularised.
-
-p. 493 "liberoe" changed to "liberæ"
-
-p. 500 "proper colour" changed to "proper colour."
-
-p. 511 "Bassett, Robert" changed to "Basset, Robert"
-
-p. 511 "Benbridge's inn" changed to "Benbrige's inn"
-
-p. 511 "Bollein Godfrey" changed to "Bollein, Godfrey"
-
-p. 512 "Chesters' inn" changed to "Chester's inn"
-
-p. 512 "Crosley place, 155" changed to "Crosby place, 155"
-
-p. 512 "Crosley, Sir John" changed to "Crosby, Sir John"
-
-p. 513 "Elies' inn" changed to "Elie's inn"
-
-p. 513 "Gutuhrons" changed to "Guthurons"
-
-p. 513 "Stephanides,)" changed to "Stephanides),"
-
-p. 513 "208 261" changed to "208, 261"
-
-p. 513 "243, 244," changed to "243, 244"
-
-p. 514 "Horsepool" changed to "Horsepoole"
-
-p. 514 "Lomsberry" changed to "Lomsbery"
-
-p. 515 "Church of 130" changed to "Church of, 130"
-
-p. 515 "Oldeborne bridge" changed to "Oldborne bridge"
-
-p. 517 "Single- Woman's" changed to "Single Woman's"
-
-p. 518 "Waxchandler's hall" changed to "Waxchandlers hall"
-
-p. 518 "Wolfesgate, 39" changed to "Wolfes gate, 39"
-
-p. 518 "Noble) street 34," changed to "Noble) street, 34,"
-
-
-Many instances of inconsistent punctuation have not been changed.
-
-The following possible printing errors have not been changed:
-
-p. xi his memory,
-
-p. 11 reparing
-
-p. 62 where thither
-
-p. 158 Three needle street
-
-p. 196 John Merston. knight
-
-p. 259 Ienet and Agnes
-
-p. 356 mother's-jewels
-
-p. 462 and 463 respectively: Godfrey Bolaine and Godfrey Boloine
-
-p. 466: Raphe Austrie and Raph Astrie
-
-p. 488 straglers
-
-p. 514 "_See also_ Marke lane" refers to a non-existent entry
-
-
-The book includes many inconsistent spellings, including:
-
-32d and 32nd
-
-Aeldresgate and Ældresgate
-
-Arcubus and Arches
-
-Bank's side and Bankside
-
-Bridwell and Bridewell
-
-clothworker and cloth-worker
-
-commonalty and commonality
-
-Cordewainers, Cordwainer and Cordwayner
-
-four-pence and four pence
-
-Howe, Howes and Howse
-
-Knight riders and Knightriders'
-
-Meduvanus and Meduvius
-
-Needlar's. Needelars and Needler's
-
-Sherington and Sherrington
-
-Surrey and Surry
-
-Totehil and Totehill
-
-Tunstal and Tunstall
-
-Turnebase and Turnebasse
-
-Walbrook and Walbrooke
-
-West Cheape and Westcheape
-
-Wokendon and Wokenden
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Survey of London, by John Stow
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+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 42959 ***</div>
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Survey of London, by John Stow
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: The Survey of London
-
-Author: John Stow
-
-Contributor: Henry B. Wheatley
-
-Release Date: June 16, 2013 [EBook #42959]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SURVEY OF LONDON ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Henry Flower and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- EVERYMAN'S LIBRARY
- EDITED BY ERNEST RHYS
-
- TRAVEL AND
- TOPOGRAPHY
-
- STOW'S SURVEY OF LONDON
- WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY
- HENRY B. WHEATLEY
-
-
-
-
-THE PUBLISHERS OF _EVERYMAN'S LIBRARY_ WILL BE PLEASED TO SEND FREELY
-TO ALL APPLICANTS A LIST OF THE PUBLISHED AND PROJECTED VOLUMES TO BE
-COMPRISED UNDER THE FOLLOWING THIRTEEN HEADINGS:
-
-
- TRAVEL SCIENCE FICTION
- THEOLOGY & PHILOSOPHY
- HISTORY CLASSICAL
- FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
- ESSAYS ORATORY
- POETRY & DRAMA
- BIOGRAPHY
- REFERENCE
- ROMANCE
-
-[Illustration]
-
-IN FOUR STYLES OF BINDING: CLOTH, FLAT BACK, COLOURED TOP; LEATHER,
-ROUND CORNERS, GILT TOP; LIBRARY BINDING IN CLOTH, & QUARTER PIGSKIN
-
-
-LONDON: J. M. DENT & SONS, LTD. NEW YORK: E. P. DUTTON & CO.
-
-[Illustration: TO THE WISE MAN ALL THE WORLD'S A SOIL
-
-BEN JONSON]
-
-
-
-
- THE SURVEY
- OF LONDON
- BY JOHN
- STOW _Citizen
- of London_
-
- [Illustration]
-
- LONDON PUBLISHED
- by J M DENT & SONS L^{TD}
- AND IN NEW YORK
- BY E P DUTTON & CO
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-
-Stow's _Survey of London_, from its first publication in 1598, has taken
-rank as the first authority on the history of London, but this very fame
-has been the cause of some injury to the unity of the work, owing to the
-additions of successive editors, whose words have often been quoted as
-if they were written by the original author, although often referring to
-occurrences long after Stow's death.
-
-What the reader of to-day wants, is the original work as it left
-the hands of the veteran antiquary, or as nearly as the change of
-spelling allows, because this gives him a vivid picture of Elizabethan
-London--the city in which Shakespeare lived and worked among a multitude
-of the men and women of those "spacious days," respecting whom we are
-all eager to learn something more. The _Survey_ is a masterpiece of
-topographical literature written by a Londoner of ripe experience, who
-was interested in everything that occurred around him.
-
-Stow founded his work upon documents of great value collected by
-himself, and also upon the splendid series of manuscripts belonging to
-the city of London, to which he had access as "fee'd chronicler" of the
-corporation.
-
-The great charm of the book to the general reader is to be found in
-the personal touches by which we are informed of changes and incidents
-which occurred in Stow's own experience. Of this special feature several
-instances have been singled out, such as the boy fetching milk from
-the farm attached to the abbey of the minoresses, for which he paid
-one halfpenny for three pints; and the staking out by the tyrannical
-Thomas Cromwell of part of the gardens of Stow's father and others
-in Throgmorton Street to be added to his own garden, which after his
-execution came into the possession of the Drapers' Company, and are now
-covered by Throgmorton Avenue. Stow, in his description of the monuments
-of St. Paul's, alluding to the burial places of Sir Philip Sidney, Sir
-Francis Walsingham and Sir Christopher Hatton, says of the latter
-"under a most sumptuous monument where merry poet writ thus--
-
- "Philip and Francis have no tombe,
- For great Christopher takes all the roome."
-
-Henry Holland, in his _Monumenta Sepulchralia Sancti Pauli_, 1614, tells
-us that there is "no doubt but the merry poet was the merry old man Stow
-himself."
-
-During the whole of his life Stow was indefatigable in his work, but
-he kept the best wine for the last. The first edition of the _Survey
-of London_ was published in 1598, when he was past seventy years of
-age, but there can be no doubt that the whole of his previous life
-was a preparation for his great work. He always lived in London, and
-he was interested in every particular connected with his native city.
-Nothing of value in its history ever escaped him, and what he did not
-personally know, he often obtained information of from older men than
-himself. Some of his informants could tell what their fathers saw, so
-that their reminiscences often take us back to a long past time. It is
-this mixture of the personal remembrances of old men with his own memory
-of what he had seen, and his careful examination of places himself, in
-corroboration of tradition, which give such special value to his book.
-
-Stow was always in search of information at first hand, and other
-authors were glad to avail themselves of his wide experience. Sir George
-Buck, when writing the _History of Richard III._, availed himself of
-Stow's information that he had talked to old men who remembered that
-maligned king as "a comely prince." Stow's arrangement of his materials
-is admirable, and many modern topographers might imitate him with
-advantage. He himself acknowledged that the model for his _Survey_ was
-his friend William Lambarde's excellent _Perambulation of Kent_, 1576.
-Some of his explanations of the names of places, being grounded on
-historical evidence, are often of great value, but others are little
-better than crude guesses. This is not to the discredit of an author
-writing in the sixteenth century, but some modern writers, who ought to
-have a better knowledge of the origin of place names, have been unwise
-enough to quote these as possible etymologies. Mr. C. L. Kingsford, in
-his excellent edition of the _Survey_, has corrected most of these from
-trustworthy old documents. Stow improved his book in the second edition,
-published in 1603, two years before his death, but he omitted some
-passages in the first edition which are of interest to us, and which are
-noted in this edition.
-
-Although it is chiefly the _Survey_ which keeps Stow's memory green in
-popular esteem, his other literary productions were highly appreciated
-by many distinguished contemporaries. He found a valuable patron in
-Archbishop Parker, for whom he edited some old chronicles. Among his
-many friends must be named Camden, Lambarde, Savile, Dr. Dee, Robert
-Glover, Somerset Herald, and Fleetwood the Recorder, who hung in his
-study a portrait of Stow inscribed, "Johannes Stowe, Antiquarius
-Angliae." The "antiquary" was very proud of this honour, and he told
-Massingham, who records the incident in his diary, that he thought
-himself "worthy of that title for his pains."
-
-Stow was born about the year 1525, and came of a good London stock, his
-grandfather and father were tallow chandlers, and supplied the church
-of St. Michael, Cornhill, with lamp oil and candles. Thomas Stow, the
-grandfather, died in 1527, and directed his body "to be buried in the
-little green churchyard of St. Michael, Cornhill, nigh the wall as may
-be by my father and mother."
-
-We have no particulars as to John Stow's schooling, and Mr. Kingsford
-points out that his remarks in the "chapter of Schools and other houses
-of Learning," respecting his seeing the scholars of divers grammar
-schools repair to the churchyard of St. Bartholomew, Smithfield, to a
-scholastic battle of disputation "hardly suggests that he took part in
-their exercises."
-
-The general opinion seems to be that he was self-taught, but it is
-strange that the son of a fairly well-to-do citizen should not have
-been a scholar at one of these free grammar schools. He did not follow
-his father's business as a tallow chandler, but set up for himself as
-a tailor, in a house by the well within Aldgate, over which in later
-times a structure was erected widely known as Aldgate pump. Tailors have
-very generally had to put up with threadbare jokes on their trade, and
-Stow was no exception to the rule. Aubrey reports that Sir Henry Spelman
-said to Sir William Dugdale, "We are beholding to Mr. Speed and Stow
-for _stitching_ up for us our English history," and Aubrey adds, "It
-seems they were both tailors." Stow was admitted to the freedom of the
-Merchant Taylors' Company, on 25th November 1547, but was never called
-to the livery or any office in the company. At the same time he seems
-to have been highly esteemed, and was helpful to the company. He became
-a pensioner about 1578, and received four pounds a year until mid-summer
-1600; this is sometimes called his "fee" and sometimes his "pension."
-At the latter date, when he had fallen upon evil days, his pension was
-increased to ten pounds a year. This information is given by Mr. C. M.
-Clode, under the heading of "the loving brother of this mysterie, John
-Stowe," in his _Memorials of the Fraternity_, 1875.
-
-Stow's first literary work is one that does him great credit, namely,
-the 1561 edition of Chaucer's works, and subsequently he helped his
-"loving friend" Speght with notes from "divers records and monuments,"
-which that friend used in his edition of Chaucer published in 1597. He
-then turned to the publication of the results of his historical studies.
-In 1565, he brought out _A Summarie of Englyshe Chronicles_, which was
-frequently reprinted, also _The Summarie_ abridged, first in 1566, and
-often reprinted. _The Chronicles of England_ were published in 1580 and
-not reprinted. _The Annals of England_ appeared first in 1592, other
-editions issued by Stow himself in 1601 and 1605. Editions continued by
-Edmond Howes were published in 1615 and 1631.
-
-The _Annals_ are much of a compilation, but Stow has made them
-interesting by the frequent insertion of his own opinions and remarks.
-The bibliography of these works is somewhat complicated, but Mr.
-Kingsford has set forth the dates and distinctive characters of the
-different books with much clearness.
-
-Stow early fell into a discord with the chronicler Grafton, and the two
-belaboured one another in print, sometimes having resort to bad puns.
-Grafton sneered at the "Memories of superstitious foundations, fables
-foolishly _stowed_ together," and Stow replied by alluding to "empty
-_townes_ and unfruitfull _grafts_ of Momus' offspring."
-
-Stow's life was a stormy one, and he had much to endure, both publicly
-and in his own family, but his friends helped him through many of his
-difficulties. His younger brother Thomas was ungrateful, and a thorn in
-his side for many years.
-
-In the early part of 1569 he was brought before the Lord Mayor for
-having in his possession a copy of the manifesto of the Spanish
-Ambassador on behalf of the Duke of Alva, but he seems to have been able
-to clear himself. The same matter was brought before the master and
-wardens of the Merchant Taylors' Company. Mr. Clode remarks respecting
-this occurrence: "It is curious to note from the depositions of the
-several examinants how very shy of knowing much about the matter they
-appear to have been. The knowledge or memory of the nine taylors
-examined was too frequently failing them to bring guilt home to any
-brother of the craft."
-
-The trouble about the Alva manifesto drew the attention of the Queen's
-Council to Stow's library, and the Bishop of London (Grindal) was
-directed to have his house searched, and in reply the Bishop enclosed
-to Cecil a catalogue of "Stowe the taylour his unlawfull bookes,"
-amongst these are "a great store of folishe fabulous bokes of old prynt
-as of Sir Degory, Sir Tryamore," etc., "old fantastical popish books
-printed in the old type." Thomas Stapleton's translation of Bede's
-_Ecclesiastical History_ is among the objectionable books. Nothing,
-however, came of all this pother.
-
-Stow appears to have been fairly well off for some years of his life,
-when he spent a considerable amount of money on the extensive collection
-of manuscripts which he gathered together. This library was well known
-to and much appreciated by his fellow antiquaries. Many of the important
-documents are now in the British Museum and other public libraries.
-
-He gave up his business in order to devote himself uninterruptedly to
-his antiquarian labours. Although these labours were much appreciated
-they were not profitable, and in consequence his means were very limited
-in his later years. His poverty was brought under the notice of James
-I., who acknowledged his claims, but instead of giving substantial aid
-the king granted letters patent, dated 8th March 1604, authorising John
-Stow and his deputies to collect money--the "voluntary contribution and
-kind gratuities" of the king's subjects. This authority brought little
-money to the chronicler's wasted coffers, and it was indeed a pitiful
-reward for the well-directed labours of a life-time.
-
-Stow did not long survive this remarkable instance of royal favour. He
-died on the 6th April 1605, and was buried in the Church of St. Andrew
-Undershaft, Leadenhall Street, where his widow erected a terra cotta
-monument to his memory, this, which shows the man as he lived, is one of
-the most interesting monuments in the city of a past London worthy.
-
-Edmond Howes, his literary executor, and continuator of his _Annals_,
-has left a vivid picture of the old chronicler, which completes this
-short notice of one of the most distinguished "Lovers of London."
-
-"He was tall of stature, lean of body and face, his eyes small and
-crystalline, of a pleasant and cheerful countenance; his sight and
-memory very good; very sober, mild, and courteous to any that required
-his instructions; and retained the true use of all his senses unto the
-day of his death, being of an excellent memory. He always protested
-never to have written anything either for malice, fear, or favour, nor
-to seek his own particular gain or vain-glory; and that his only pains
-and care was to write _truth_. He could never ride, but travelled on
-foot unto divers cathedral churches, and other chief places of the land
-to search records. He was very careless of scoffers, back-biters, and
-detractors. He lived peacefully, and died of the stone colic, being
-four-score years of age."
-
-Stow is greatly to be commended for printing as an appendix to his
-_Survey_, William Fitzstephen's _Descriptio Londoniae_, which originally
-formed an introduction to the same writer's _Life of Becket_. It is a
-remarkable relic, and unique in its interest as a vivid description
-of London in the twelfth century. The author is carried away by his
-enthusiasm, and probably exaggerates the beauties of the city. But he
-is not blind to evils, for he wisely says, "The city is delightful
-indeed, if it has a good governor," and we know that it did not always
-have that. The account of the sports of the citizens is particularly
-valuable, especially the early notice of the use of skates on the
-Moorfields during the winter time. We may be proud as Englishmen that
-no other city in Europe possesses so early a description of a mediaeval
-town. It should be noted incidentally that "King Henry the Third"
-mentioned at the close of Fitzstephen's account is not the king usually
-known by that name; but Henry the second son of Henry II. This prince
-was crowned during his father's life-time; but died in 1182, seven years
-before his father. Matthew Paris also speaks of him as Henry III.
-
-An enlarged edition of the _Survey_ was prepared by Anthony Munday after
-Stow's death, and published in 1618. In 1633, four months after Munday's
-death, another edition, in folio, appeared "completely finished by the
-study of A. M., H. D., and others." John Strype took the matter in hand
-in the next century and made a new book of the _Survey_ in two volumes,
-folio, 1720. The sixth edition, enlarged by John Strype, "brought down
-to the present time by careful hands," was published in the same form
-in 1754-5. Strype died in 1737. This edition of Stow is an excellent
-history of London, but most persons will agree with Thomas Hearne in
-his criticism, "Stow should have been simply reprinted as a venerable
-original, and the additions given in a different character."
-
-It was not until 1842 that Stow's edition of 1603 was reprinted, when
-it was edited by Mr. W. J. Thoms, founder and first editor of _Notes
-and Queries_. Mr. C. L. Kingsford produced a critical edition of Stow's
-second edition (1603) which is of great value. It was published by the
-Clarendon Press, Oxford, in 1908. The editor gives an account of Stow's
-collections and MSS., tracing their present location.
-
- HENRY B. WHEATLEY.
-
-
-
-
-BIBLIOGRAPHY
-
-
-Ed. Woorkes of Geffrey Chaucer, 1561; Summarie of Englyshe Chronicles,
-1565; other editions, 1566, 1570, 1574, 1575, 1590; The Summary
-abridged, 1566, 1567, 1573, 1584, 1587, 1598, 1604, 1607, 1611, 1618;
-ed. Matthew of Westminster's Flores Historiarum, 1567; ed. Matthew
-Paris's Chronicle, 1571; ed. Thos. Walsingham's Chronicle, 1574; The
-Chronicles of England, 1580; re-arranged as The Annales of England,
-1592; other editions, 1601, 1605; re-edited by Edmund Howse, 1615, 1631;
-The Successions of the History of England, 1638 (Lourdes); ed. second
-edition of Holinshed's Chronicle, 1585-1587; A Survey of London, 1598,
-1603; enlarged edition by Anthony Munday, 1618 and 1633; by J. Strype,
-1720, 1754; modernised by Wm. J. Thoms, 1842, 1876; by Henry Morley,
-1890, 1893 (with index), 1908; by C. L. Kingsford, 1908; Selections from
-A Survey of London, ed. by A. Barter, 1910.
-
-BIOGRAPHIES.--By Edmund Howe (in Annales of England), 1615; by J. Strype
-(in Survey of London), 1720; by Wm. J. Thoms (in Survey of London),
-1876; by C. M. Clode (in The Early History of the Guild of Merchant
-Taylors), 1888; by C. L. Kingsford (in Survey of London), 1908.
-
-
-
-
- NORDEN'S
- MAP OF LONDON
- 1593
-
-[Illustration: LONDON
-
-FOR LETTER AND FIGURE REFERENCES, SEE PAGE xviii.]
-
-
-
-
-REFERENCES TO THE MAP
-
-ON PAGES xvi AND xvii
-
-
- _a_ Bushops gate streete.
- _b_ Papie.
- _c_ Alhallowes in the wall.
- _d_ S. Taphyns.
- _e_ Syluer streete.
- _f_ Aldermanburye.
- _g_ Barbican.
- _h_ Aldersgate streete.
- _i_ Charterhowse.
- _k_ Holborne conduct.
- _l_ Chauncery lane
- _m_ Temple barr.
- _n_ Holbourn.
- _o_ Grayes Inn lane.
- _p_ S. Androwes.
- _q_ Newgate.
- _r_ S. Iones.
- _s_ S. Nic shambels.
- _t_ Cheap syde.
- _u_ Bucklers burye.
- _w_ Brode streete.
- _x_ The Stockes.
- _y_ The Exchannge.
- _z_ Cornehill.
-
- 2. Colman streete.
- 3. Bassings hall.
- 4. Honnsditche.
- 5. Leaden hall.
- 6. Gratious streete.
- 7. Heneage house.
- 8. Fancshurche.
- 9. Marke lane.
- 10. Minchyn lane.
- 11. Paules.
- 12. Eastcheape.
- 13. Fleetstreete.
- 14. Fetter lane.
- 15. S. Dunshous.
- 16. Themes streete.
- 17. Lodon Stone.
- 18. Olde Baylye.
- 19. Clerkenwell.
- 20. Winchester house.
- 21. Battle bridge.
- 22. Bermodsoy streete.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
- The Author to the Reader 1
- The Antiquity of London 3
- The Wall about the City of London 7
- Of the Ancient and Present Rivers, Brooks, Bourns, Pools, Wells,
- and Conduits of Fresh Water serving the City 12
- The Town Ditch without the Wall of the City 19
- Bridges of this City 21
- Gates in the Wall of this City 27
- Of Towers and Castles 42
- Of Schools and other Houses of Learning 66
- Houses of Students of the Common Law 70
- Of Orders and Customs of the Citizens 73
- Of Charitable Alms in Old Times given 82
- Sports and Pastimes of Old Time used in this City 84
- Watches in London 91
- Honour of Citizens, and Worthiness of Men in the same 96
- The City of London divided into Parts 107
- Portsoken Ward 110
- Tower Street Ward 118
- Aldgate Ward 125
- Lime Street Ward 136
- Bishopgate Ward 148
- Broad Street Ward 157
- Cornehill Ward 168
- Langborne Ward and Fennie About 179
- Billingsgate Ward 185
- Bridge Ward Within 189
- Candlewike Street Ward 194
- Walbrook Ward 200
- Downegate Ward 206
- Vintry Ward 213
- Cordwainer Street Ward 224
- Cheap Ward 231
- Coleman Street Ward 248
- Bassings hall Ward 255
- Cripplegate Ward 260
- Aldersgate Ward 271
- Faringdon Ward Infra, or Within 277
- Bread Street Ward 307
- Queen hithe Ward 314
- Castle Baynard Ward 325
- The Ward of Faringdon Extra, or Without 331
- Bridge Ward Without (the 26th in number), consisting of the
- Borough of Southwark, in the County of Surrey 358
- The Suburbs without the Walls of the City, briefly touched, as
- also without the Liberties, more at large described 374
- Liberties of the Duchy of Lancaster 393
- The City of Westminster, with the Antiquities, Bounds, and
- Liberties thereof 398
- Spiritual or Ecclesiastical Government 422
- Parish Churches 434
- Hospitals in this City and Suburbs 438
- Of Leprous People and Lazar Houses 440
- Temporal Government of this City 442
- Aldermen and Sheriffs of London 474
- Officers belonging to the Lord Mayor's House 474
- Sheriffs of London; their Officers 475
- Mayor and Sheriffs' Livery 475
- Companies of London placed at the Mayor's Feast 476
- Liveries worn by Citizens at Triumphs 479
- An Apology, or Defence, against the Opinion of some Men, which
- think that the Greatness of that City standeth not with the
- Profit and Security of this Realm 482
- The Singularities of the City of London 485
- An Appendix 498
- Fitzstephen's Description of London 501
- INDEX 511
-
-
-
-
- A
- SVRVAY OF
- LONDON.
-
-
- Conteyning the Originall, Antiquity,
- Increase, Moderne estate, and description of that
- City, written in the yeare 1598, by Iohn Stow
- Citizen of London.
-
- Since by the same Author increased,
- with diuers rare notes of Antiquity, and
- _published in the yeare_,
- 1603.
-
- _Also an Apologie (or defence) against the_
- opinion of some men, concerning that Citie,
- the greatnesse thereof.
-
- VVith an Appendix, contayning in Latine
- _Libellum de situ & nobilitate Londini_: Written by
- William Fitzstephen, in the raigne of
- Henry the second.
-
-
- Imprinted by Iohn Windet, Printer to the honorable
- Citie of London.
-
- 1603.
-
-
-
-
-TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE
-
-ROBERT LEE
-
-LORD MAYOR OF THE CITY OF LONDON
-
-TO THE COMMONALTY AND CITIZENS OF THE SAME
-
-JOHN STOW, CITIZEN, WISHETH LONG HEALTH AND FELICITY
-
-
-Since the first publishing of the perambulation of Kent by that learned
-gentleman, William Lambert, Esq., I have heard of sundry other able
-persons to have (according to the desire of that author) essayed to do
-somewhat for the particular shires and counties where they were born or
-dwelt; of which none that I know (saving John Norden, for the counties
-of Middlesex and Hertford) have vouchsafed their labour to the common
-good in that behalf. And, therefore, concurring with the first, in the
-same desire to have drawn together such special descriptions of each
-place, as might not only make up a whole body of the English chorography
-amongst ourselves, but also might give occasion and courage to M. Camden
-to increase and beautify his singular work of the whole, to the view of
-the learned that be abroad, I have attempted the discovery of London,
-my native soil and country, at the desire and persuasion of some of my
-good friends, as well because I have seen sundry antiquities myself
-touching that place, as also for that through search of records to other
-purposes, divers written helps are come to my hands, which few others
-have fortuned to meet withall; it is a service that most agreeth with
-my professed travels; it is a duty that I willingly owe to my native
-mother and country, and an office that of right I hold myself bound
-in love to bestow upon the politic body and members of the same. What
-London hath been of ancient time men may here see, as what it is now
-every man doth behold. I know that the argument, being of the chief and
-principal city of the land, required the pen of some excellent artisan,
-but fearing that none would attempt and finish it, as few have essayed
-any, I chose rather (amongst other my labours) to handle it after my
-plain manner, than to leave it unperformed. Touching the dedication, I
-am not doubtful where to seek my patron, since you be a politic estate
-of the city, as the walls and buildings be the material parts of the
-same. To you, therefore, do I address this my whole labour, as well that
-by your authority I may be protected, as warranted by your own skill and
-understanding of that which I have written. I confess that I lacked my
-desire to the accomplishment of some special parts,[1] which some other
-of better ability promised to perform; but as I then professed, have
-since out of mine old store-house added to this work many rare notes of
-antiquity, as may appear to the reader, which I do afford in all duty,
-and recommend to your view, my labours to your consideration, and myself
-to your service, during life, in this or any other.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[1] The Dedication of the first edition is precisely the same, except in
-the concluding paragraph, which there stands as follows:--
-
-"I confess that I lacked my desire to the accomplishment of some
-speciall partes: but I trust hereafter that shal be supplied, and I
-professe (if more touching this worke come unto me) to afforde it, in
-all dutie. In the meantime I recommend this to your view, my laboures
-to your consideration, and myself to your service (as I have professed
-during life) in this or any other."
-
-
-
-
-THE AUTHOR TO THE READER
-
-
-Because amongst others mine authors, I have oftentimes alleged
-Fitz-Stephens as one more choice than other, namely, for the ancient
-estate of this city, more than four hundred years since: and also the
-said author being rare, I have in this place thought good by impression
-to impart the same to my loving friends, the learned antiquaries, as the
-author wrote it in the Latin tongue; and first to note in effect what
-Master Bale, in commendation of the said author, writeth:
-
-"William Stephanides, or Fitzstephen, a monk of Canterbury, born of
-worshipful parents in the city of London, well brought up at the first
-under good masters, did more and more increase in honest conditions and
-learning; for ever in his young years there appeared in him a certain
-light of a gentleman-like disposition, which promised many good things,
-afterwards by him performed. Such time as other spent in brawls and idle
-talk, he employed in wholesome exercises for the honour of his country,
-following therein the example of Plato, and was very studious both in
-humanity and divinity."
-
-The city of London, his birth-place, the most noble of all other cities
-of this land, and the prince's seat, situated in the south part of this
-island, he loved above all the other, so that at length he wrote most
-elegantly in Latin of the site and rights of the same. Leland, in divers
-of his books, commendeth him for an excellent writer. He lived in the
-reign of King Stephen, wrote in the reign of Henry II., and deceased in
-the year of Christ 1191, in the reign of Richard I.
-
-
-
-
-THE SURVEY OF LONDON
-
-CONTAINING
-
-THE ORIGINAL, ANTIQUITY, INCREASE, MODERN ESTATE, AND DESCRIPTION OF
-THAT CITY
-
-
-As the Roman writers,[2] to glorify the city of Rome, derive the
-original thereof from gods and demi-gods, by the Trojan progeny, so
-Geoffrey of Monmouth, the Welsh historian, deduceth the foundation
-of this famous city of London, for the greater glory thereof, and
-emulation of Rome, from the very same original. For he reporteth that
-Brute, lineally descended from the demi-god AEneas, the son of Venus,
-daughter of Jupiter, about the year of the world 2855, and 1108 before
-the nativity of Christ, built this city near unto the river now called
-Thames, and named it Troynovant, or Trenovant. But herein, as Livy,
-the most famous historiographer of the Romans, writeth, antiquity is
-pardonable, and hath an especial privilege, by interlacing divine
-matters with human, to make the first foundation of cities more
-honourable, more sacred, and, as it were, of greater majesty.
-
-King Lud (as the aforesaid Geoffrey of Monmouth noteth) afterwards
-not only repaired this city, but also increased the same with fair
-buildings, towers, and walls, and after his own name called it
-Caire-Lud,[3] as Lud's town; and the strong gate which he built in the
-west part of the city he likewise, for his own honour, named Ludgate.
-
-This Lud had issue two sons, Androgeus and Theomantius, who being not
-of age to govern at the death of their father, their uncle Cassibelan
-took upon him the crown; about the eighth year of whose reign, Julius
-Caesar arrived in this land with a great power of Romans to conquer it;
-the manner of which conquest I will summarily set down out of his own
-Commentaries, which are of far better credit than the relations of
-Geoffrey Monmouth.
-
-The chief government of the Britons, and ordering of the wars, was then
-by common advice committed to Cassibelan, whose seigniory was separated
-from the cities towards the sea-coast by the river called Thames, about
-fourscore miles from the sea. This Cassibelan, in times past, had made
-continual war upon the cities adjoining; but the Britons being moved
-with the Roman invasion, had resolved in that necessity to make him
-their sovereign, and general of the wars (which continued hot between
-the Romans and them); but in the meanwhile the Troynovants, which was
-then the strongest city well near of all those countries (and out of
-which city a young gentleman, called Mandubrace, upon confidence of
-Caesar's help, came unto him into the mainland of Gallia, now called
-France, and thereby escaped death, which he should have suffered at
-Cassibelan's hand), sent their ambassadors to Caesar, promising to yield
-unto him, and to do what he should command them instantly, desiring him
-to protect Mandubrace from the furious tyranny of Cassibelan, and to
-send him into their city with authority to take the government thereof
-upon him. Caesar accepted the offer, and appointed them to give unto him
-forty hostages, and withal to find him grain for his army; and so sent
-he Mandubrace unto them.
-
-When others saw that Caesar had not only defended the Trinobants against
-Cassibelan, but had also saved them harmless from the pillage of his own
-soldiers, then did the Conimagues, Segontians, Ancalits, Bibrokes, and
-Cassians, likewise submit themselves unto him; and by them he learned
-that not far thence was Cassibelan's town, fortified with woods and
-marsh ground, into the which he had gathered a great number both of men
-and cattle.
-
-For the Britons call that a town (saith Caesar), when they have fortified
-a cumbersome wood with a ditch and rampart, and thither they resort to
-abide the approach of their enemies; to this place therefore marched
-Caesar with his legions; he found it excellently fortified, both of
-nature and by man's advice; nevertheless, he resolved to assault it in
-two several places at once, whereupon the Britons, being not able to
-endure the force of the Romans, fled out at another part, and left the
-town unto him: a great number of cattle he found there, and many of the
-Britons he slew, and others he took in the chase.
-
-Whilst these things were doing in these quarters, Cassibelan sent
-messengers into Kent, which lieth upon the sea, in which there reigned
-then four particular kings, named Cingetorex, Carvill, Taximagull, and
-Segonax, whom he commanded to raise all their forces, and suddenly to
-set upon and assault the Romans in their trenches by the sea-side; the
-which, when the Romans perceived, they sallied out upon them, slew a
-great sort of them, and taking Cingetorex their noble captain prisoner,
-retired themselves to their camp in good safety.
-
-When Cassibelan heard of this, and had formerly taken many other losses,
-and found his country sore wasted, and himself left almost alone by the
-defection of the other cities, he sent ambassadors by Comius of Arras
-to Caesar, to intreat with him concerning his own submission; the which
-Caesar did accept, and taking hostages, assessed the realm of Britain to
-a yearly tribute, to be paid to the people of Rome, giving strait charge
-to Cassibelan that he should not seek any revenge upon Mandubrace or the
-Trinobantes, and so withdrew his army to the sea again.
-
-Thus far out of Caesar's Commentaries concerning this history, which
-happened in the year before Christ's nativity 54. In all which process
-there is for this purpose to be noted, that Caesar nameth the city of
-Trinobantes, which hath a resemblance with Troynova, or Trinobantum,
-having no greater difference in the orthography than changing b into
-v, and yet maketh an error whereof I will not argue; only this I will
-note, that divers learned men do not think "_civitas Trinobantum_" to
-be well and truly translated, "the city of the Trinobantes;" but it
-should rather be the state, commonalty, or seigniory of the Trinobantes;
-for that Caesar in his Commentaries useth the word _civitas_, only
-for a people living under one and the selfsame prince and law; but
-certain it is that the cities of the Britons were in those days neither
-artificially built with houses, nor strongly walled with stone, but were
-only thick and cumbersome woods, plashed within and trenched about. And
-the like in effect do other the Roman and Greek authors directly affirm,
-as Strabo, Pomponius Mela, and Dion a senator of Rome, which flourished
-in the several reigns of the Roman emperors, Tiberius, Claudius,
-Domitian, and Severus; to wit, that before the arrival of the Romans the
-Britons had no towns, but called that a town which had a thick entangled
-wood, defended, as I said, with a ditch and bank, the like whereof,
-the Irishmen, our next neighbours, do at this day call Fastness.[4]
-But after that these hither parts of Britain were reduced into the
-form of a province by the Romans, who sowed the seeds of civility over
-all Europe; this city, whatsoever it was before, began to be renowned,
-and of fame. For Tacitus, who first of all authors nameth it Londinum,
-saith, that in the 62nd year after Christ, it was, albeit no colony
-of the Romans, yet most famous for the great multitude of merchants,
-provision, and intercourse. At which time, in that notable revolt of the
-Britons from Nero, in which 70,000 Romans and their confederates were
-slain, this city, with Verulam, near St. Albans, and Maldon in Essex,
-then all famous, were ransacked and spoiled. For Suetonius Paulinus,
-then lieutenant for the Romans in this isle, abandoned it, as not then
-fortified, and left it to the spoil.
-
-Shortly after, Julius Agricola, the Roman lieutenant, in the time
-of Domitian, was the first that by adhorting the Britons publicly,
-and helping them privately, won them to build houses for themselves,
-temples for the gods, and courts for justice, to bring up the noblemen's
-children in good letters and humanity, and to apparel themselves
-Roman-like, whereas before (for the most part) they went naked, painting
-their bodies, etc., as all the Roman writers have observed.
-
-True it is, I confess, that afterwards many cities and towns in
-Britain, under the government of the Romans, were walled with stone
-and baked bricks or tiles, as Richborrow or Ryptacester,[5] in
-the Isle of Thanet, until the channel altered his course, beside
-Sandwich in Kent; Verulamium,[6] beside St. Albans, in Hertfordshire;
-Cilcester[7] in Hampshire; Wroxcester[8] in Shropshire; Kencester[9]
-in Herefordshire, three miles from Hereford town; Ribcester,[10] seven
-miles above Preston, on the water of Rible; Aldburgh,[11] a mile from
-Boroughbridge, or Watling Street, on Ure river, and others; and no doubt
-but this city of London was also walled with stone, in the time of the
-Roman government here, but yet very lately, for it seemeth not to have
-been walled in the year of our Lord 296, because in that year, when
-Alectus the tyrant was slain in the field, the Franks easily entered
-London and had sacked the same, had not God, of his great favour, at the
-very instant, brought along the river of Thames, certain bands of Roman
-soldiers, who slew those Franks in every street of the city.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[2] "As Rome, the chiefe citie of the world, to glorifie it selfe, drew
-her originall from the gods, goddesses, and demy gods, by the Trojan
-progeny, so this famous citie of London for greater glorie, and in
-emulation of Rome, deriveth itselfe from the very same originall. For,
-as Jeffreye of Monmoth, the Welche historian, reporteth, Brute descended
-from the demy god Eneas, the sonne of Venus, daughter of Jupiter, aboute
-the yeare of the world 2855, the yeare before Christe's nativitie, 1108,
-builded a citie neare unto a river now called Thames, and named it
-Troynovant, or Trenovant."--_1st edition_, 1598.
-
-[3] _Cair Lundein_, in the list of ancient British cities, preserved in
-Nennius.
-
-[4] "The like whereof the Irishmen, our next neighbours, doe at this day
-call _paces_."--_1st edition_, p. 4.
-
-[5] Richborough, about one mile and a half from Sandwich, the _Rutupium_
-of the Romans, was a place of great importance until destroyed by the
-Danes in 1010.
-
-[6] On the banks of the river Verlam, opposite to St. Alban's, which is
-supposed to have arisen out of its ruin.
-
-[7] Silchester, in Hampshire, seven miles from Basingstoke; the _Caer
-Segont_ of the Britons, and _Segontium_ of the Romans, and _Silcester_
-of the Saxons. Leland states its walls to have been two miles in compass.
-
-[8] Wroxeter, five miles from Shrewsbury. Its walls are stated to have
-been three yards in thickness, and to have extended for a circumference
-of three miles.
-
-[9] Kenchester, three miles from Hereford, supposed to be the
-_Ariconium_ of the Romans.
-
-[10] Ribchester, six miles from Blackburn, in Lancashire, supposed to be
-the _Rego-dunum_ of the Romans.
-
-[11] Aldborough, in the West Riding of Yorkshire, the _Isurium
-Brigantium_ of the Romans.
-
-
-
-
-WALL ABOUT THE CITY OF LONDON
-
-
-In a few years after, as Simeon of Durham, an ancient writer, reporteth,
-Helen, the mother of Constantine the Great, was the first that inwalled
-this city, about the year of Christ 306; but however those walls of
-stone might have been built by Helen, yet the Britons, I know, had no
-skill of building with stone, as it may appear by that which followeth,
-about the year of Christ 399, when Arcadius and Honorius, the sons of
-Theodosius Magnus, governed the empire, the one in the east, the other
-in the west; for Honorius having received Britain, the city of Rome was
-invaded and destroyed by the Goths, after which time the Romans left
-to rule in Britain, as being employed in defence of their territories
-nearer home, whereupon the Britons not able to defend themselves against
-the invasions of their enemies, were many years together under the
-oppression of two most cruel nations, the Scots and Picts, and at the
-length were forced to send their ambassadors with letters and lamentable
-supplications to Rome, requiring aid and succour from thence, upon
-promise of their continual fealty, so that the Romans would rescue
-them out of the hands of their enemies. Hereupon the Romans sent unto
-them a legion of armed soldiers, which coming into this island, and
-encountering with the enemies, overthrew a great number of them, and
-drove the rest out of the frontiers of the country; and so setting
-the Britons at liberty, counselled them to make a wall, extending all
-along between the two seas, which might be of force to keep out their
-evil neighbours, and then returned home with great triumph. The Britons
-wanting masons built that wall, not of stone as they were advised, but
-made it of turf, and that so slender, that it served little or nothing
-at all for their defence, and the enemy perceiving that the Roman
-legion was returned home, forthwith arrived out of their boats, invaded
-the borders, overcame the country, and, as it were, bore down all that
-was before them.
-
-Whereupon ambassadors were eftsoon dispatched to Rome, lamentably
-beseeching that they would not suffer their miserable country to be
-utterly destroyed: then again another legion was sent, which coming upon
-a sudden, made a great slaughter of the enemy, and chased him home, even
-to his own country. These Romans at their departure, told the Britons
-plainly, that it was not for their ease or leisure to take upon them any
-more such long and laborious journeys for their defence, and therefore
-bade them practice the use of armour and weapons, and learn to withstand
-their enemies, whom nothing else did make so strong as their faint heart
-and cowardice; and for so much as they thought that it would be no small
-help and encouragement unto their tributary friends whom they were now
-forced to forsake,[12] they built for them a wall of hard stone from the
-west sea to the east sea, right between those two cities, which were
-there made to keep out the enemy, in the selfsame place where Severus
-before had cast his trench. The Britons also putting to their helping
-hands as labourers.
-
-This wall they built eight feet thick in breadth, and twelve feet in
-height, right, as it were by a line, from east to west, as the ruins
-thereof remaining in many places until this day do make to appear. Which
-work, thus perfected, they give the people strait charge to look well to
-themselves, they teach them to handle their weapons, and they instruct
-them in warlike feats. And lest by the sea-side southwards, where their
-ships lay at harbour, the enemy should come on land, they made up
-sundry bulwarks, each somewhat distant from the other, and so bid them
-farewell, as minding no more to return. This happened in the days of the
-Emperor Theodosius the younger, almost 500 years after the first arrival
-of the Romans here, about the year after Christ's incarnation 434.
-
-The Britons after this, continuing a lingering and doubtful war with
-the Scots and Picts, made choice of Vortigern to be their king and
-leader, which man (as saith Malmesbury[13]) was neither valorous of
-courage, nor wise of counsel, but wholly given over to the unlawful
-lusts of his flesh; the people likewise, in short time, being grown
-to some quietness, gave themselves to gluttony and drunkenness, pride,
-contention, envy, and such other vices, casting from them the yoke of
-Christ. In the mean season, a bitter plague fell among them, consuming
-in short time such a multitude that the quick were not sufficient to
-bury the dead; and yet the remnant remained so hardened in sin, that
-neither death of their friends, nor fear of their own danger, could cure
-the mortality of their souls, whereupon a greater stroke of vengeance
-ensued upon the whole sinful nation. For being now again infested with
-their old neighbours the Scots and Picts, they consult with their king
-Vortigern,[14] and send for the Saxons, who shortly after arrived here
-in Britain, where, saith Bede, they were received as friends; but as it
-proved, they minded to destroy the country as enemies; for after that
-they had driven out the Scots and Picts, they also drove the Britons,
-some over the seas, some into the waste mountains of Wales and Cornwall,
-and divided the country into divers kingdoms amongst themselves.
-
-These Saxons were likewise ignorant of building with stone until the
-year 680; for then it is affirmed that Benet, abbot of Wirrall,[15]
-master to the reverend Bede, first brought artificers of stone houses
-and glass windows into this island amongst the Saxons, arts before that
-time unto them unknown, and therefore used they but wooden buildings.
-And to this accordeth Policronicon, who says, "that then had ye wooden
-churches, nay wooden chalices and golden priests, but since golden
-chalices and wooden priests." And to knit up this argument, King Edgar
-in his charter to the abbey of Malmesbury, dated the year of Christ 974,
-hath words to this effect: "All the monasteries in my realm, to the
-outward sight, are nothing but worm-eaten and rotten timber and boards,
-and that worse is, within they are almost empty, and void of Divine
-service."
-
-Thus much be said for walling, not only in respect of this city, but
-generally also of the first within the realm. Now to return to our
-Trinobant (as Caesar hath it), the same is since by Tacitus, Ptolemaeus,
-and Antoninus, called Londinium, Longidinum; of Ammiamus, Lundinum,
-and Augusta, who calleth it an ancient city; of our Britons, Lundayne;
-of the old Saxons, Lundenceaster, Lundenbrig, Londennir; of strangers
-Londra and Londres; of the inhabitants, London; whereof you may read a
-more large and learned discourse, and how it took the name, in that
-work of my loving friend, Master Camden, now Clarencieux, which is
-called _Britannia_.
-
-This city of London having been destroyed and burnt by the Danes and
-other Pagan enemies, about the year of Christ 839, was by Alfred, king
-of the West Saxons, in the year 886, repaired, honourably restored, and
-made again habitable. Who also committed the custody thereof unto his
-son-in-law, Ethelred, Earl of Mercia, unto whom before he had given his
-daughter Ethelfled.
-
-And that this city was then strongly walled may appear by divers
-accidents, whereof William of Malmsbury hath, that about the year of
-Christ 994, the Londoners shut up their gates, and defended their king
-Ethelred within their walls against the Danes.
-
-In the year 1016,[16] Edmund Ironsides reigning over the West Saxons,
-Canute the Dane bringing his navy into the west part of the bridge, cast
-a trench about the city of London, and then attempted to have won it by
-assault, but the citizens repulsed him, and drove them from their walls.
-
-Also, in the year 1052, Earl Goodwin, with his navy, sailed up by the
-south end of the bridge, and so assailed the walls of this city.
-
-William Fitzstephen, in the reign of King Henry II., writing of the
-walls of this city, hath these words: "The wall is high and great, well
-towered on the north side, with due distances between the towers. On the
-south side also the city was walled and towered, but the fishful river
-of Thames, with his ebbing and flowing, hath long since subverted them."
-
-By the north side, he meaneth from the river of Thames in the east to
-the river of Thames in the west, for so stretched the wall in his time,
-and the city being far more in length from east to west than in breadth
-from south to north, and also narrower at both ends than in the midst,
-is therefore compassed with the wall on the land side, in form of a bow,
-except denting in betwixt Cripplegate and Aldersgate; but the wall on
-the south side, along by the river of Thames, was straight as the string
-of a bow, and all furnished with towers or bulwarks (as we now term
-them) in due distance every one from other, as witnesseth our author,
-and ourselves may behold from the land side. This may suffice for proof
-of a wall, and form thereof, about this city, and the same to have been
-of great antiquity as any other within this realm.
-
-And now touching the maintenance and reparing the said wall. I read,
-that in the year 1215, the 16th of King John,[17] the barons, entering
-the city by Aldgate, first took assurance of the citizens, then brake
-into the Jews' houses, searched their coffers to fill their own purses,
-and after with great diligence repaired the walls and gates of the
-city with stone taken from the Jews' broken houses. In the year 1257,
-Henry III. caused the walls of this city, which were sore decayed and
-destitute of towers, to be repaired in more seemly wise than before, at
-the common charges of the city. Also in the year 1282,[18] King Edward
-I. having granted to Robert Kilwarby, archbishop of Canterbury, license
-for the enlarging of the Blackfriars' church, to break and take down
-a part of the wall of the city, from Ludgate to the river of Thames;
-he also granted to Henry Wales, mayor, and the citizens of London, the
-favour to take, toward the making of the wall and enclosure of the city,
-certain customs or toll, as appeareth by his grant. This wall was then
-to be made from Ludgate west to Fleet bridge along behind the houses,
-and along by the water of the Fleet unto the river of Thames. Moreover,
-in the year 1310, Edward II. commanded the citizens to make up the
-wall already begun, and the tower at the end of the same wall, within
-the water of Thames near unto the Blackfriars, etc. 1328, the 2nd of
-Edward III., the walls of this city were repaired. It was also granted
-by King Richard II. in the tenth year of his reign, that a toll should
-be taken of the wares sold by land or by water for ten years, towards
-the repairing of the walls, and cleansing of the ditch about London.
-In the 17th of Edward IV. Ralph Joceline, mayor, caused part of the
-wall about the city of London to be repaired; to wit, betwixt Aldgate
-and Aldersgate. He also caused Moorfield to be searched for clay, and
-brick thereof to be made and burnt; he likewise caused chalk to be
-brought out of Kent, and to be burnt into lime in the same Moorfield,
-for more furtherance of the work. Then the Skinners to begin in the east
-made that part of the wall betwixt Aldgate and Bevis Marks, towards
-Bishopsgate, as may appear by their arms in three places fixed there:
-the mayor, with his company of the Drapers, made all that part betwixt
-Bishopsgate and Allhallows church, and from Allhallows towards the
-postern called Moorgate. A great part of the same wall was repaired by
-the executors of Sir John Crosby, late alderman, as may appear by his
-arms in two places there fixed: and other companies repaired the rest
-of the wall to the postern of Cripplegate. The Goldsmiths repaired from
-Cripplegate towards Aldersgate, and there the work ceased. The circuit
-of the wall of London on the land side, to wit, from the Tower of London
-in the east unto Aldgate, in 82 perches; from Aldgate to Bishopsgate, 86
-perches; from Bishopsgate in the north to the postern of Cripplegate,
-162 perches; from Cripplegate to Aldersgate, 75 perches; from Aldersgate
-to Newgate, 66 perches; from Newgate in the west to Ludgate, 42 perches;
-in all, 513 perches of assize. From Ludgate to the Fleet-dike west,
-about 60 perches; from Fleetbridge south to the river Thames, about 70
-perches; and so the total of these perches amounteth to 643, every perch
-consisting of five yards and a half, which do yield 3536 yards and a
-half, containing 10,608 feet, which make up two English miles and more
-by 608 feet.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[12] Whitchendus. Whittichind, a monk of Corvay, who died about the year
-1000, wrote a History of the Saxons down to 973, which was published at
-Basle by Hervagius in 1532.
-
-[13] Malmesbury, Bede.
-
-[14] Whitchendus, Bede.
-
-[15] Benedict, abbot of Wearmouth.
-
-[16] Asser, Marianus, Florentius.
-
-[17] Roger of Wendover, Matthew Paris, Ranul. Coggeshall.
-
-[18] Matthew Paris.
-
-
-
-
-OF ANCIENT AND PRESENT RIVERS, BROOKS, BOURNS, POOLS, WELLS, AND
-CONDUITS OF FRESH WATER, SERVING THE CITY, AS ALSO OF THE DITCH
-COMPASSING THE WALL OF THE SAME FOR DEFENCE THEREOF.
-
-
-Anciently, until the Conqueror's time, and two hundred years after, the
-city of London was watered, besides the famous river of Thames on the
-south part, with the river of Wells, as it was then called, on the west;
-with the water called Walbrooke running through the midst of the city in
-the river of Thames, serving the heart thereof; and with a fourth water
-or bourn, which ran within the city through Langborne ward, watering
-that part in the east. In the west suburbs was also another great water,
-called Oldborne, which had its fall into the river of Wells; then were
-there three principal fountains, or wells, in the other suburbs; to wit,
-Holy well, Clement's well, and Clarkes' well. Near unto this last-named
-fountain were divers other wells, to wit, Skinners' well, Fags' well,
-Tode well, Loder's well, and Radwell. All which said wells, having the
-fall of their overflowing in the aforesaid river, much increased the
-stream, and in that place gave it the name of Well. In West Smithfield
-there was a pool, in records called Horsepoole, and one other pool near
-unto the parish church of St. Giles without Cripplegate. Besides all
-which, they had in every street and lane of the city divers fair wells
-and fresh springs; and after this manner was this city then served with
-sweet and fresh waters, which being since decayed, other means have
-been sought to supply the want, as shall be shown. But first of the
-aforenamed rivers and other waters is to be said, as following:
-
-Thames, the most famous river of this island, beginneth a little above
-a village called Winchcombe, in Oxfordshire; and still increasing,
-passeth first by the University of Oxford, and so with a marvellous
-quiet course to London, and thence breaketh into the French ocean by
-main tides, which twice in twenty-four hours' space doth ebb and flow
-more than sixty miles in length, to the great commodity of travellers,
-by which all kind of merchandise be easily conveyed to London, the
-principal storehouse and staple of all commodities within this realm;
-so that, omitting to speak of great ships and other vessels of burthen,
-there pertaineth to the cities of London, Westminster, and borough of
-Southwark, above the number, as is supposed, of 2000 wherries and other
-small boats, whereby 3000 poor men, at the least, be set on work and
-maintained.
-
-That the river of Wells, in the west part of the city, was of old so
-called of the wells, it may be proved thus:--William the Conqueror in
-his charter to the college of St. Marten le Grand, in London, hath
-these words: "I do give and grant to the same church all the land and
-the moor without the postern, which is called Cripplegate, on either
-part of the postern; that is to say, from the north corner of the wall,
-as the river of the Wells, there near running, departeth the same moor
-from the wall, unto the running water which entereth the city."[19] This
-water hath long since been called the river of the Wels, which name of
-river continued; and it was so called in the reign of Edward I., as
-shall be shown, with also the decay of the said river. In a fair book of
-parliament records, now lately restored to the Tower, it appeareth[20]
-that a parliament being holden at Carlile in the year 1307, the 35th
-of Edward I., "Henry Lacy, earl of Lincoln, complained, that whereas
-in times past the course of water, running at London under Oldborne
-bridge and Fleete bridge into the Thames, had been of such breadth and
-depth, that ten or twelve ships navies at once, with merchandise, were
-wont to come to the foresaid bridge of Fleete, and some of them to
-Oldborne bridge: now the same course, by filth of the tanners and such
-others, was sore decayed; also by raising of wharfs; but especially,
-by a diversion of the water made by them of the new Temple, for their
-mills standing without Baynardes Castle, in the first year of King
-John,[21] and divers other impediments, so as the said ships could not
-enter as they were wont, and as they ought: wherefore he desired that
-the mayor of London with the sheriffs and other discreet aldermen, might
-be appointed to view the course of the said water; and that by the oaths
-of good men, all the aforesaid hindrances might be removed, and it to be
-made as it was wont of old. Whereupon Roger le Brabason, the constable
-of the Tower, with the mayor and sheriffs, were assigned to take with
-them honest and discreet men, and to make diligent search and enquiry
-how the said river was in old time, and that they leave nothing that
-may hurt or stop it, but keep it in the same state that it was wont to
-be." So far the record. Whereupon it followed that the said river was
-at that time cleansed, these mills removed, and other things done for
-the preservation of the course thereof, notwithstanding never brought to
-the old depth and breadth; whereupon the name of river ceased, and it
-was since called a brook, namely, Turnmill or Tremill brook, for that
-divers mills were erected upon it, as appeareth by a fair register-book,
-containing the foundation of the priory at Clarkenwell, and donation of
-the lands thereunto belonging, as also divers other records.
-
-This brook hath been divers times since cleansed, namely, and last of
-all to any effect, in the year 1502, the 17th of Henry VII., the whole
-course of Fleete dike, then so called, was scowered, I say, down to the
-Thames, so that boats with fish and fuel were rowed to Fleete bridge,
-and to Oldborne bridge, as they of old time had been accustomed, which
-was a great commodity to all the inhabitants in that part of the city.
-
-In the year 1589 was granted a fifteenth, by a common council of the
-city, for the cleansing of this brook or dike; the money amounting to a
-thousand marks, was collected, and it was undertaken, that by drawing
-divers springs about Hampstead heath into one head and course, both
-the city should be served of fresh water in all places of want; and
-also, that by such a follower, as men call it, the channel of this
-brook should be scowered into the river of Thames; but much money
-being therein spent, the effect failed, so that the brook, by means
-of continual encroachments upon the banks getting over the water, and
-casting of soilage into the stream, is now become worse cloyed and
-choken than ever it was before.
-
-The running water, so called by William the Conqueror in his said
-charter, which entereth the city, etc. (before there was any ditch)
-between Bishopsgate and the late made postern called Moorgate, entered
-the wall, and was truly of the wall called Walbrooke, not of Gualo, as
-some have far fetched: it ran through the city with divers windings from
-the north towards the south into the river of Thames, and had over the
-same divers bridges along the streets and lanes through which it passed.
-I have read in a book[22] entitled the Customs of London,[23] that the
-prior of the Holy Trinity within Aldgate ought to make over Walbrooke
-in the ward of Brod street, against the stone wall of the city, viz.,
-the same bridge that is next the Church of All Saints, at the wall.
-Also that the prior of the new hospital, St. Mary Spittle without
-Bishopsgate, ought to make the middle part of one other bridge next to
-the said bridge towards the north: and that in the twenty-eight year of
-Edward I. it was by inquisition found before the mayor of London, that
-the parish of St. Stephen upon Walbrooke ought of right to scour the
-course of the said brook, and therefore the sheriffs were commanded to
-distrain the said parishioners so to do, in the year 1300. The keepers
-of those bridges at that time were William Jordan and John de Bever.
-This water-course, having divers bridges, was afterwards vaulted over
-with brick, and paved level with the streets and lanes where through it
-passed; and since that, also houses have been built thereon, so that the
-course of Walbrooke is now hidden underground, and thereby hardly known.
-
-Langborne water, so called of the length thereof, was a great stream
-breaking out of the ground in Fenchurch street, which ran down with
-a swift course, west, through that street, athwart Gra street, and
-down Lumbard street, to the west end of St. Mary Wolnothes church, and
-then turning the course down Shareborne lane, so termed of sharing or
-dividing, it brake into divers rills or rillets to the river of Thames:
-of this bourn that ward took the name, and is till this day called
-Langborne ward. This bourn also is long since stopped up at the head,
-and the rest of the course filled up and paved over, so that no sign
-thereof remaineth more than the names aforesaid.
-
-Oldborne, or Hilborne, was the like water, breaking out about the place
-where now the bars do stand, and it ran down the whole street till
-Oldborne bridge, and into the river of the Wells, or Turnemill brook.
-This bourn was likewise long since stopped up at the head, and in other
-places where the same hath broken out, but yet till this day the said
-street is there called High Oldborne hill, and both the sides thereof,
-together with all the grounds adjoining, that lie betwixt it and the
-river of Thames, remain full of springs, so that water is there found at
-hand, and hard to be stopped in every house.
-
-There are (saith Fitzstephen) near London, on the north side, special
-wells in the suburbs, sweet, wholesome, and clear; amongst which Holy
-well, Clarkes' well, and Clement's well, are most famous, and frequented
-by scholars and youths of the city in summer evenings, when they walk
-forth to take the air.
-
-The first, to wit, Holy well, is much decayed and marred with filthiness
-purposely hid there, for the heightening of the ground for garden-plots.
-
-The fountain called St. Clement's well, north from the parish church of
-St. Clement's and near unto an inn of Chancerie called Clement's Inn, is
-fair curbed square with hard stone, kept clean for common use, and is
-always full.
-
-The third is called Clarkes' well, or Clarkenwell, and is curbed about
-square with hard stone, not far from the west end of Clarkenwell church,
-but close without the wall that incloseth it. The said church took the
-name of the well, and the well took the name of the parish clerks in
-London, who of old time were accustomed there yearly to assemble, and
-to play some large history of Holy Scripture.[24] And for example, of
-later time, to wit, in the year 1390, the 14th of Richard II., I read,
-the parish clerks of London, on the 18th of July, played interludes at
-Skinners' well, near unto Clarkes' well, which play continued three
-days together; the king, queen, and nobles being present. Also in the
-year 1409, the 10th of Henry IV., they played a play at the Skinners'
-well, which lasted eight days, and was of matter from the creation of
-the world. There were to see the same the most part of the nobles and
-gentles in England, etc.
-
-Other smaller wells were many near unto Clarkes' well, namely Skinners'
-well, so called for that the skinners of London held there certain plays
-yearly, played of Holy Scripture, etc. In place whereof the wrestlings
-have of later years been kept, and is in part continued at Bartholomew
-tide.
-
-Then there was Fagges well, near unto Smithfield by the Charterhouse,
-now lately damned up, Todwell, Loder's well, and Radwell, all decayed,
-and so filled up, that their places are hardly now discerned.
-
-Somewhat north from Holywell is one other well curved square with stone,
-and is called Dame Annis the clear, and not far from it, but somewhat
-west, is also one other clear water called Perillous pond, because
-divers youths, by swimming therein, have been drowned; and thus much be
-said for fountains and wells.
-
-Horsepoole, in West Smithfield, was some time a great water; and because
-the inhabitants in that part of the city did there water their horses,
-the same was in old records called Horsepoole; it is now much decayed,
-the springs being stopped up, and the land water falling into the small
-bottom, remaining inclosed with brick, is called Smithfield pond.[25]
-
-By St. Giles' churchyard was a large water called a Pool. I read in the
-year 1244 that Anne of Lodburie was drowned therein; this pool is now
-for the most part stopped up, but the spring is preserved, and was coped
-about with stone by the executors of Richard Whittington.
-
-The said river of the Wells, the running water of Walbrooke, the bourns
-aforenamed, and other the fresh waters that were in and about this city,
-being in process of time, by incroachment for buildings and heightenings
-of grounds, utterly decayed, and the number of citizens mightily
-increased, they were forced to seek sweet waters abroad; whereof some,
-at the request of King Henry III., in the twenty-first year of his
-reign,[26] were, for the profit of the city, and good of the whole
-realm, thither repairing, to wit, for the poor to drink, and the rich to
-dress their meat, granted to the citizens and their successors, by one
-Gilbert Sanforde, with liberty to convey water from the town of Teyborne
-by pipes of lead into their city.
-
-The first cistern of lead, castellated with stone in the city of London,
-was called the great Conduit in West Cheape, which was begun to be built
-in the year 1285, Henry Wales being then mayor. The water-course from
-Paddington to James head hath 510 rods; from James head on the hill to
-the Mewsgate, 102 rods; from the Mewsgate to the Cross in Cheape, 484
-rods.
-
-The tun upon Cornhill was cisterned in the year 1401; John Shadworth
-then being mayor.
-
-Bosses of water at Belinsgate, by Powle's wharf, and by St. Giles'
-church without Cripplegate, made about the year 1423.
-
-Water conveyed to the gaols of Newgate and Ludgate, 1432.
-
-Water was first procured to the Standard in West Cheape about the year
-1285, which Standard was again new built by the executors of John
-Welles, as shall be shown in another place. King Henry VI., in the year
-1442, granted to John Hatherley, mayor, license to take up two hundred
-fodders of lead for the building of conduits, of a common garnery, and
-of a new cross in West Cheape, for the honour of the city.
-
-The Conduit in West Cheape, by Powle's gate, was built about the year
-1442; one thousand marks were granted by common council for the building
-thereof, and repairing of the other conduits.
-
-The Conduit in Aldermanbury, and the Standard in Fleet street, were made
-and finished by the executors of Sir William Eastfield in the year 1471;
-a cistern was added to the Standard in Fleete street, and a cistern was
-made at Fleetbridge, and one other without Cripplegate, in the year 1478.
-
-Conduit in Gra street, in the year 1491.
-
-Conduit at Oldbourne cross about 1498; again new made by William Lambe
-1577.
-
-Little conduit by the Stockes market, about 1500.
-
-Conduit at Bishopsgate, about 1513.
-
-Conduit at London wall, about 1528.
-
-Conduit at Aldgate without, about 1535.
-
-Conduit in Lothbury, and in Coleman street, 1546.
-
-Conduit of Thames water at Dowgate, 1568.
-
-Thames water, conveyed into men's houses by pipes of lead from a most
-artificial forcier standing near unto London bridge, and made by Peter
-Moris, Dutchman, in the year 1582, for service of the city, on the east
-part thereof.
-
-Conduits of Thames water, by the parish churches of St. Mary Magdalen,
-and St. Nicolas Colde Abbey near unto old Fish street, in the year 1583.
-
-One other new forcier was made near to Broken wharfe, to convey Thames
-water into men's houses of West Cheape, about Powle's, Fleete street,
-etc., by an English gentleman named Bevis Bulmer, in the year 1594. Thus
-much for waters serving this city; first by rivers, brooks, bourns,
-fountains, pools, etc.; and since by conduits, partly made by good and
-charitable citizens, and otherwise by charges of the commonalty, as
-shall be shown in description of wards wherein they be placed. And now
-some benefactors to these conduits shall be remembered.
-
-In the year 1236 certain merchant strangers of cities beyond the seas,
-to wit, Amiens, Corby, and Nele, for privileges which they enjoyed in
-this city, gave one hundred pounds towards the charges of conveying
-water from the town of Teyborne. Robert Large, mayor, 1439, gave to the
-new water conduits then in hand forty marks, and towards the vaulting
-over of Walbrooke near to the parish church of St. Margaret in Lothbery,
-two hundred marks.
-
-Sir William Eastfield, mayor, 1438, conveyed water from Teyborne to
-Fleete street, to Aldermanbury, and from Highbury to Cripplegate.
-
-William Combes, sheriff, 1441, gave to the work of the conduits ten
-pounds.
-
-Richard Rawson, one of the sheriffs, 1476, gave twenty pounds.
-
-Robert Revell, one of the sheriffs, 1490, gave ten pounds.
-
-John Mathew, mayor, 1490, gave twenty pounds.
-
-William Bucke, tailor, in the year 1494, towards repairing of conduits,
-gave one hundred marks.
-
-Dame Thomason, widow, late wife to John Percivall Taylor, mayor, in the
-year 1498 gave toward the conduit in Oldbourne twenty marks.
-
-Richard Shore, one of the sheriffs, 1505, gave to the conduit in
-Oldbourne ten pounds.
-
-The Lady Ascue, widow of Sir Christopher Ascue, 1543, gave towards the
-conduits one hundred pounds.
-
-David Wodrooffe, sheriff, 1554, gave towards the conduit at Bishopsgate
-twenty pounds.
-
-Edward Jackman, one of the sheriffs, 1564, gave towards the conduits one
-hundred pounds.
-
-Barnard Randulph, common sergeant of the city, 1583, gave to the water
-conduits nine hundred pounds.[27]
-
-Thus much for the conduits of fresh water to this city.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[19] "This water hath been since that time called Turne mill brooke; yet
-then called the river of the Wells, which name of river," etc.,--_1st
-edition_, p. 11.
-
-[20] Parliament record.
-
-[21] Patent record.
-
-[22] "In an old writing book."--_1st edition_, p. 14.
-
-[23] Liber Custom.
-
-[24] This precise definition of the nature of the performances of the
-parish clerks, "some large hystorie of Holy Scripture," does not occur
-in the first edition of the _Survey_.
-
-[25] "Is but fowle, and is called Smithfield Pond."--_1st edition_, p.
-15.
-
-[26] Patent, 123.
-
-[27] In the first edition, Barnard Randulph's gift is stated to be L700
-only.
-
-
-
-
-THE TOWN DITCH WITHOUT THE WALL OF THE CITY
-
-
-The ditch, which partly now remaineth, and compassed the wall of the
-city, was begun to be made by the Londoners in the year 1211,[28] and
-was finished in the year 1213, the 15th of King John. This ditch being
-then made of 200 feet broad, caused no small hindrance to the canons of
-the Holy Trinity, whose church stood near unto Aldgate; for that the
-said ditch passed through their ground from the Tower of London unto
-Bishopsgate. This ditch, being originally made for the defence of the
-city, was also long together carefully cleansed and maintained, as need
-required; but now 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 built thereon; even to the very wall, and in many
-places upon both ditch and wall houses to be built; to what danger
-of the city, I leave to wiser consideration, and can but wish that
-reformation might be had.
-
-In the year of Christ 1354, the 28th of Edward III., the ditch of this
-city flowing over the bank into the Tower ditch, the king commanded
-the said ditch of the city to be cleansed, and so ordered, that the
-overflowing thereof should not force any filth into the Tower ditch.
-
-Anno 1379, John Philpot, mayor of London, caused this ditch to be
-cleansed, and every householder to pay five pence, which was for a day's
-work towards the charges thereof. Richard II., in the 10th of his reign,
-granted a toll to be taken of wares sold by water or by land, for ten
-years, towards repairing of the wall and cleansing of the ditch.
-
-Thomas Falconer, mayor, 1414, caused the ditch to be cleansed.
-
-Ralph Joceline, mayor, 1477, caused the whole ditch to be cast and
-cleansed, and so from time to time it was cleansed, and otherwise
-reformed, namely, in 1519, the 10th of Henry VIII., for cleansing and
-scowering the common ditch between Aldgate and the postern next the
-Tower ditch. The chief ditcher had by the day seven pence, the second
-ditcher six pence, the other ditchers five pence. And every vagabond
-(for so were they termed) one penny the day, meat and drink, at charges
-of the city. L95 3_s._ 4_d._
-
-In my remembrance also the same was cleansed, namely the Moore ditch,
-when Sir William Hollies was mayor, in the year 1540, and not long
-before, from the Tower of London to Aldgate.
-
-It was again cleansed in the year 1549, Henry Amcotes being mayor,
-at the charges of the companies. And again, 1569, the 11th of Queen
-Elizabeth, for cleansing the same ditch between Aldgate and the postern,
-and making a new sewer, and wharf of timber, from the head of the
-postern into the town ditch, L814 15_s._ 8_d._ Before the which time the
-said ditch lay open, without wall or pale, having therein great store of
-very good fish, of divers sorts, as many men yet living, who have taken
-and tasted them, can well witness; but now no such matter: the charge
-of cleansing is spared, and great profit made by letting out the banks,
-with the spoil of the whole ditch.
-
-I am not ignorant of two fifteenths granted by a common council in the
-year 1595, for the reformation of this ditch, and that a small portion
-thereof, to wit, betwixt Bishopsgate and the postern called Mooregate,
-was cleansed, and made somewhat broader; but filling again very fast,
-by reason of overraising the ground near adjoining, therefore never the
-better: and I will so leave it, for I cannot help it.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[28] Liber Dunstable. Liber Trinitat.
-
-
-
-
-BRIDGES OF THIS CITY
-
-
-The original foundation of London bridge, by report of Bartholomew
-Linsted, alias Fowle, last prior of St. Mary Overies church in
-Southwark, was this: A ferry being kept in place where now the bridge
-is built, at length the ferryman and his wife deceasing, left the same
-ferry to their only daughter, a maiden named Mary, which with the goods
-left by her parents, and also with the profits arising of the said
-ferry, built a house of Sisters, in place where now standeth the east
-part of St. Mary Overies church, above the choir, where she was buried,
-unto which house she gave the oversight and profits of the ferry; but
-afterwards the said house of Sisters being converted into a college of
-priests, the priests built the bridge (of timber) as all the other great
-bridges of this land were, and from time to time kept the same in good
-reparations, till at length, considering the great charges of repairing
-the same, there was, by aid of the citizens of London, and others, a
-bridge built with arches of stone, as shall be shown.
-
-But first of the timber bridge, the antiquity thereof being great, but
-uncertain; I remember to have read,[29] that in the year of Christ 994,
-Sweyn, king of Denmark, besieging the city of London, both by water
-and by land, the citizens manfully defended themselves, and their king
-Ethelred, so as part of their enemies were slain in battle, and part of
-them were drowned in the river of Thames, because in their hasty rage
-they took no heed of the bridge.
-
-Moreover, in the year 1016, Canute the Dane, with a great navy, came up
-to London, and on the south of the Thames caused a trench to be cast,
-through the which his ships were towed into the west side of the bridge,
-and then with a deep trench, and straight siege, he compassed the city
-round about.
-
-Also, in the year 1052, Earl Goodwin, with the like navy, taking
-his course up the river of Thames, and finding none that offered to
-resist on the bridge, he sailed up the south side of the said river.
-Furthermore, about the year 1067, William the Conqueror, in his charter
-to the church of St. Peter at Westminster, confirmed to the monks
-serving God there, a gate in London, then called Buttolph's gate, with a
-wharf which was at the head of London bridge.
-
-We read likewise, that in the year 1114, the 14th of Henry I., the river
-of Thames was so dried up, and such want of water there, that between
-the Tower of London and the bridge, and under the bridge, not only with
-horse, but also a great number of men, women, and children, did wade
-over on foot.[30]
-
-In the year 1122, the 22nd of Henry I., Thomas Arden gave the monks of
-Bermondsey the church of St. George, in Southward, and five shillings
-rent by the year, out of the land pertaining to London bridge.
-
-I also have seen a charter under seal to the effect following:--"Henry
-king of England, to Ralfe B. of Chichester, and all the ministers
-of Sussex, sendeth greeting, know ye, etc. I command by my kingly
-authority, that the manor called Alcestone, which my father gave, with
-other lands, to the abbey of Battle, be free and quiet from shires and
-hundreds, and all other customs of earthly servitude, as my father held
-the same, most freely and quietly, and namely, from the work of London
-bridge, and the work of the castle at Pevensey: and this I command upon
-my forfeiture. Witness, William de Pontlearche, at Byrry." The which
-charter, with the seal very fair, remaineth in the custody of Joseph
-Holland, gentleman.
-
-In the year 1136, the 1st of king Stephen,[31] a fire began in the
-house of one Ailewarde, near unto London stone, which consumed east to
-Aldgate, and west to St. Erkenwald's shrine, in Powle's church; the
-bridge of timber over the river of Thames was also burnt, etc., but
-afterwards again repaired. For Fitzstephen writes, that in the reign of
-King Stephen and of Henry II., when pastimes were showed on the river of
-Thames, men stood in great number on the bridge, wharfs, and houses, to
-behold.
-
-Now in the year 1163, the same bridge was not only repaired, but newly
-made of timber as before, by Peter of Cole church, priest and chaplain.
-
-Thus much for the old timber bridge, maintained partly by the proper
-lands thereof, partly by the liberality of divers persons, and partly
-by taxations in divers shires, have I proved for the space of 215 years
-before the bridge of stone was built.
-
-Now touching the foundation of the stone bridge, it followeth:--About
-the year 1176, the stone bridge over the river of Thames, at London,
-was begun to be founded by the aforesaid Peter of Cole church, near
-unto the bridge of timber, but somewhat more towards the west, for I
-read, that Buttolfe wharf was, in the Conqueror's time, at the head of
-London bridge.[32] The king assisted this work: a cardinal then being
-legate here; and Richard, archbishop of Canterbury, gave one thousand
-marks towards the foundation; the course of the river, for the time,
-was turned another way about, by a trench cast for that purpose,
-beginning, as is supposed, east about Radriffe, and ending in the west
-about Patricksey, now termed Batersey. This work; to wit, the arches,
-chapel and stone bridge, over the river of Thames at London, having been
-thirty-three years in building, was in the year 1209 finished by the
-worthy merchants of London, Serle Mercer, William Almaine, and Benedict
-Botewrite, principal masters of that work, for Peter of Cole church
-deceased four years before, and was buried in the chapel on the bridge,
-in the year 1205.[33]
-
-King John gave certain void places in London to build upon the profits
-thereof to remain towards the charges of building and repairing the
-same bridge: a mason being master workman of the bridge, builded from
-the foundation the large chapel on that bridge of his own charges,
-which chapel was then endowed for two priests, four clerks, etc.,
-besides chantries since founded for John Hatfield and other.[34] After
-the finishing of this chapel, which was the first building upon those
-arches, sundry houses at times were erected, and many charitable men
-gave lands, tenements, or sums of money, towards maintenance thereof,
-all which was sometimes noted and in a table fair written for posterity
-remaining in the chapel, until the same chapel was turned into a
-dwelling-house, and then removed to the bridge house, the effect of
-which table I was willing to have published in this book, if I could
-have obtained the sight thereof. But making the shorter work, I find by
-the account of William Mariner and Christopher Eliot, wardens of London
-bridge from Michaelmas, in the 22nd of Henry VII., unto Michaelmas
-next ensuing, by one whole year, that all the payments and allowances
-came to L815 17_s._ 2-1/4_d._, as there is shown by particulars, by
-which account then made, may be partly guessed the great charges and
-discharges of that bridge at this day, when things be stretched to so
-great a price. And now to actions on this bridge.
-
-The first action to be noted was lamentable; for within four[35] years
-after the finishing thereof, to wit, in the year 1212, on the l0th of
-July, at night,[36] the borough of Southwark, upon the south side the
-river of Thames, as also the church of our Lady of the Canons there,
-being on fire, and an exceeding great multitude of people passing the
-bridge, either to extinguish and quench it, or else to gaze at and
-behold it, suddenly the north part, by blowing of the south wind was
-also set on fire, and the people which were even now passing the bridge,
-perceiving the same, would have returned, but were stopped by fire; and
-it came to pass, that as they stayed or protracted time, the other end
-of the bridge also, namely, the south end, was fired, so that the people
-thronging themselves between the two fires, did nothing else but expect
-present death; then came there to aid them many ships and vessels, into
-the which the multitude so unadvisedly rushed, that the ships being
-drowned, they all perished.[37] It was said, that through the fire and
-shipwreck there were destroyed about three thousand persons, whose
-bodies were found in part, or half burnt, besides those that were wholly
-burnt to ashes, and could not be found.
-
-About the year 1282, through a great frost and deep snow, five arches of
-London bridge were borne down and carried away.
-
-In the year 1289, the bridge was so sore decayed for want of reparations
-that men were afraid to pass thereon, and a subsidy was granted towards
-the amendment thereof,[38] Sir John Britain being custos of London.
-1381, a great collection or gathering was made of all archbishops,
-bishops, and other ecclesiastical persons, for the reparations of London
-bridge. 1381, Wat Tyler, and other rebels of Kent, by this bridge
-entered the city, as ye may read in my _Summary_ and _Annals_.
-
-In the year 1395, on St. George's day, was a great justing on London
-bridge, betwixt David Earl of Crawford of Scotland, and the Lord Wells
-of England; in the which the Lord Wells was at the third course borne
-out of the saddle: which history proveth, that at that time the bridge
-being coped on either side, was not replenished with houses built
-thereupon, as it hath since been, and now is. The next year, on the
-13th of November, the young Queen Isabell, commonly called the little,
-for she was but eight years old, was conveyed from Kenington besides
-Lamhith, through Southwarke to the Tower of London, and such a multitude
-of people went out to see her, that on London bridge nine persons were
-crowded to death, of whom the prior of Tiptre, a place in Essex, was
-one, and a matron on Cornhill was another.
-
-The Tower on London bridge at the north end of the draw-bridge (for that
-bridge was then readily to be drawn up, as well to give passage for
-ships to Queenhithe, as for the resistance of any foreign force), was
-begun to be built in the year 1426, John Rainwell being mayor.
-
-Another tower there is on the said bridge over the gate at the south end
-towards Southwarke, whereof in another place shall be spoken.
-
-In the year 1450, Jack Cade, and other rebels of Kent, by this bridge
-entered the city: he struck his sword on London Stone, and said himself
-then to be lord of the city, but were by the citizens overcome on the
-same bridge, and put to flight, as in my _Annals_.
-
-In the year 1471, Thomas, the bastard Fawconbridge, besieged this
-bridge, burnt the gate, and all the houses to the draw-bridge, that time
-thirteen in number.
-
-In the year 1481, a house called the common siege on London bridge fell
-down into the Thames; through the fall whereof five men were drowned.
-
-In the year 1553, the 3rd of February, Sir Thomas Wyat, and the Kentish
-men, marched from Depeford towards London; after knowledge whereof,
-forthwith the draw-bridge was cut down, and the bridge gates shut.
-Wyat and his people entered Southwarke, where they lay till the 6th of
-February, but could get no entry of the city by the bridge, the same
-was then so well defended by the citizens, the Lord William Howard
-assisting, wherefore he removed towards Kingstone, etc., as in my
-_Annals_.
-
-To conclude of this bridge over the said river of Thames, I affirm, as
-in other my descriptions, that it is a work very rare, having with the
-draw-bridge twenty arches made of squared stone, of height sixty feet,
-and in breadth thirty feet, distant one from another twenty feet,
-compact and joined together with vaults and cellars; upon both sides
-be houses built, so that it seemeth rather a continual street than a
-bridge; for the fortifying whereof against the incessant assaults of the
-river, it hath overseers and officers, viz., wardens, as aforesaid, and
-others.
-
-Fleete bridge in the west without Ludgate, a bridge of stone, fair coped
-on either side with iron pikes; on the which, towards the south, be
-also certain lanthorns of stone, for lights to be placed in the winter
-evenings, for commodity of travellers. Under the bridge runneth a water,
-sometimes called, as I have said, the river of the Wels, since Turnemill
-brooke, now Fleete dike, because it runneth by the Fleete, and sometimes
-about the Fleete, so under Fleete bridge into the river of Thames. This
-bridge hath been far greater in times past, but lessened, as the water
-course hath been narrowed. It seemeth this last bridge to be made or
-repaired at the charges of John Wels, mayor, in the year 1431, for on
-the coping is engraven Wels embraced by angels, like as on the standard
-in Cheape, which he also built. Thus much of the bridge: for of the
-water course, and decay thereof, I have spoken in another place.
-
-Oldbourne bridge, over the said river of the Wels more towards the
-north, was so called, of a bourn that sometimes ran down Oldbourne hill
-into the said river. This bridge of stone, like as Fleet bridge from
-Ludgate west, serveth for passengers with carriage or otherwise, from
-Newgate toward the west and by north.
-
-Cowbridge, more north, over the same water by Cowbridge street or
-Cowlane: this bridge being lately decayed, another of timber is made
-somewhat more north, by Chick lane, etc.
-
-Bridges over the town ditch there are divers; to wit, without Aldgate,
-without Bishopsgate, the postern called Moorgate, the postern of
-Criplegate without Aldersgate, the postern of Christ's hospital,
-Newgate, and Ludgate; all these be over paved likewise, with stone level
-with the streets. But one other there is of timber over the river of
-Wels, or Fleet dike, between the precinct of the Black Friers, and the
-house of Bridewell.
-
-There have been of old time also, divers bridges in sundry places
-over the course of Walbrooke, as before I have partly noted, besides
-Horseshew bridge, by the church of St. John Baptist, now called St.
-John's upon Walbrooke. I read, that of old time every person having
-lands on either side of the said brook, should cleanse[39] the same, and
-repair the bridges so far as their lands extended. More, in the 11th of
-Edward III. the inhabitants upon the course of this brook were forced to
-pile and wall the sides thereof. Also, that in the 3rd of Henry V. this
-water-course had many bridges, since vaulted over with bricks, and the
-streets where through it passed so paved, that the same water-course is
-now hardly discerned. For order was taken in the 2nd of Edward IV., that
-such as had ground on either side of Walbrooke, should vault and pave it
-over, so far as his ground extended. And thus much for bridges in this
-city may suffice.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[29] Will. Malmsbury.
-
-[30] Liber Bermon.
-
-[31] Liber Trinitat
-
-[32] Liber Waverley.
-
-[33] "For Peter of Colechurch deceased foure years before this worke was
-finished, and was buried in the chappell builded on the same bridge, in
-the year 1205."--_1st edition_, p. 21.
-
-[34] "So that in the yeare 23 of Henrie the 6 there was 4 chaplens in
-the said chappell."--_1st edition_, p. 21.
-
-[35] "Within 3 yeres."--_1st edition._
-
-[36] "A marvellous terrible chance happened for the citie of London,
-upon the south side of the river of Thames."--_Ibid._
-
-[37] Liber Dunmow. Walter Covent. W. Packenton.
-
-[38] Patent of Edward II.
-
-[39] "Should vaulte, or bridge, and clense the same."--_1st edition_, p.
-24.
-
-
-
-
-GATES IN THE WALL OF THIS CITY
-
-
-Gates in the wall of this city of old time were four; to wit, Aeldgate
-for the east, Aldersgate for the north, Ludgate for the west, and the
-Bridgegate over the river of Thames for the south; but of later times,
-for the ease of citizens and passengers, divers other gates and posterns
-have been made, as shall be shown.
-
-In the reign of Henry II. (saith Fitzstephen) there were seven double
-gates in the wall of this city, but he nameth them not. It may therefore
-be supposed, he meant for the first, the gate next the Tower of
-London,[40] now commonly called the Postern, the next be Aeldgate, the
-third Bishopsgate, the fourth Ealdersgate, the fifth Newgate, the sixth
-Ludgate, the seventh Bridgegate. Since the which time hath been builded
-the postern called Moorgate, a postern from Christ's hospital towards
-St. Bartholomew's hospital in Smithfield, etc. Now of every of these
-gates and posterns in the wall, and also of certain water-gates on the
-river of Thames, severally somewhat may, and shall be noted, as I find
-authority, or reasonable conjecture to warrant me.
-
-For the first, now called the postern by the Tower of London, it showeth
-by that part which yet remaineth, to have been a fair and strong arched
-gate, partly built of hard stone of Kent, and partly of stone brought
-from Caen in Normandy, since the Conquest, and foundation of the high
-tower, and served for passengers on foot out of the east, from thence
-through the city to Ludgate in the west. The ruin and overthrow of this
-gate and postern began in the year 1190, the 2nd of Richard I., when
-William Longshampe, bishop of Ely, chancellor of England, caused a part
-of the city wall, to wit, from the said gate towards the river of Thames
-to the white tower, to be broken down, for the enlarging of the said
-tower, which he then compassed far wide about with a wall embattled,
-and is now the outer wall. He also caused a broad and deep ditch to
-be made without the same wall, intending to have derived the river of
-Thames with her tides to have flowed about it, which would not be. But
-the southside of this gate, being then by undermining at the foundation
-loosened, and greatly weakened; at length, to wit, after two hundred
-years and odd, the same fell down in the year 1440, the 18th of Henry
-VI., and was never since by the citizens re-edified.[41] Such was their
-negligence then, and hath bred some trouble to their successors, since
-they suffered a weak and wooden building to be there made, inhabited by
-persons of lewd life, oft times by inquest of Portsoken ward presented,
-but not reformed; whereas of former times the said postern was accounted
-of as other gates of the city, and was appointed to men of good credit.
-Amongst other, I have read, that in the 49th of Edward III., John Cobbe
-was admitted custos of the said postern, and all the habitation thereof,
-for term of his life, by William Walworth, then mayor of London, etc.
-More, that John Credy, Esq., in the 21st of Richard II., was admitted
-custos of the said postern and appurtenances by Richard Whittington,
-mayor, the aldermen, and commonalty, etc.
-
-
-AELDGATE
-
-The next gate in the east is called Aeldgate, of the antiquity or age
-thereof. This is one and the first of the four principal gates, and also
-one of the seven double gates, mentioned by Fitzstephen. It hath had two
-pair of gates, though now but one; the hooks remaineth yet. Also there
-hath been two portcloses; the one of them remaineth, the other wanteth,
-but the place of letting down is manifest. For antiquity of the gate: it
-appeareth by a charter of King Edgar to the knights of Knighten Guild,
-that in his days the said port was called Aeldgate, as ye may read in
-the ward of Portsoken. Also Matilda the queen, wife to Henry I., having
-founded the priory of the Holy Trinity within Aeldgate, gave unto the
-same church, to Norman the first prior, and the canons that devoutly
-serve God therein,[42] the port of Aeldgate, and the soke or franchises
-thereunto belonging, with all customs as free as she held the same; in
-the which charter she nameth the house Christ's church, and reporteth
-Aeldgate to be of his domain.
-
-More, I read[43] in the year 1215, that in the civil wars between King
-John and his barons, the Londoners assisting the barons' faction, who
-then besieged Northampton, and after came to Bedford castle, where they
-were well received by William Beauchampe, and captain of the same;
-having then also secret intelligence that they might enter the city of
-London if they would, they removed their camp to Ware, from thence in
-the night coming to London, they entered Aeldgate, and placing guardians
-or keepers of the gates, they disposed of all things in the city at
-their pleasure. They spoiled the friars' houses, and searched their
-coffers;[44] which being done, Robert Fitzwalter, Geffry Magnavile
-Earl of Essex, and the Earl of Glocester, chief leaders of the army,
-applied all diligence to repair the gates and walls of this city with
-the stones taken from the Jews' broken houses, namely, Aeldgate being
-then most ruinous (which had given them an easy entry), they repaired,
-or rather newly built, after the manner of the Normans, strongly arched
-with bulwarks of stone from Caen in Normandy, and small brick, called
-Flanders tile, was brought from thence, such as hath been here used
-since the Conquest, and not before.
-
-In the year 1471,[45] the 11th of Edward IV., Thomas, the bastard
-Fawconbridge, having assembled a riotous company of shipmen and other in
-Essex and Kent, came to London with a great navy of ships, near to the
-Tower; whereupon the mayor and aldermen, by consent of a common council,
-fortified all along the Thames side, from Baynard's castle to the Tower,
-with armed men, guns, and other instruments of war, to resist the
-invasion of the mariners, whereby the Thames side was safely preserved
-and kept by the aldermen and other citizens that assembled thither in
-great numbers. Whereupon the rebels, being denied passage through the
-city that way, set upon Aeldgate, Bishopsgate, Cripplegate, Aeldersgate,
-London bridge, and along the river of Thames, shooting arrows and guns
-into the city, fired the suburbs, and burnt more than threescore
-houses. And further, on Sunday the eleventh of May, five thousand of
-them assaulting Aeldgate, won the bulwarks, and entered the city; but
-the portclose being let down, such as had entered were slain, and Robert
-Basset, alderman of Aeldgate ward, with the recorder, commanded in the
-name of God to draw up the portclose; which being done, they issued out,
-and with sharp shot, and fierce fight, put their enemies back so far as
-St. Bottolph's church, by which time the Earl Rivers, and lieutenant
-of the Tower, was come with a fresh company, which joining together,
-discomfited the rebels, and put them to flight, whom the said Robert
-Basset, with the other citizens, chased to the Mile's End, and from
-thence, some to Popular, some to Stratford, slew many, and took many of
-them prisoners. In which space the Bastard having assayed other places
-upon the water side, and little prevailed, fled toward his ships. Thus
-much for Aeldgate.
-
-
-BISHOPSGATE
-
-The third, and next toward the north, is called Bishopsgate, for that,
-as it may be supposed, the same was first built by some Bishop of
-London, though now unknown when, or by whom; but true it is, that the
-first gate was first built for ease of passengers toward the east, and
-by north, as into Norfolk, Suffolk, Cambridgeshire, etc.; the travellers
-into which parts, before the building of this gate, were forced, passing
-out at Aeldgate, to go east till they came to the Mile's end, and then
-turning on the left hand to Blethenhall green[46] to Cambridge heath,
-and so north, or east, and by north, as their journey lay. If they took
-not this way, by the east out at Aeldgate, they must take their way by
-the north out at Aeldersgate, through Aeldersgate street and Goswel
-street towards Iseldon, and by a cross of stone on their right hand, set
-up for a mark by the north end of Golding lane, to turn eastward through
-a long street, until this day called Alder street, to another cross
-standing, where now a smith's forge is placed by Sewer's-ditch church,
-and then to turn again north towards Totenham, Endfield, Waltham, Ware,
-etc. The eldest note that I read of this Bishopsgate, is that William
-Blund, one of the sheriffs of London,[47] in the year 1210, sold to
-Serle Mercer, and William Almaine, procurators or wardens of London
-bridge, all his land, with the garden, in the parish of St. Buttolph
-without Bishopsgate, between the land of Richard Casiarin, towards the
-north, and the land of Robert Crispie towards the south, and the highway
-called Berewards lane on the east, etc.
-
-Next I read in a charter, dated the year 1235, that Walter Brune,
-citizen of London, and Rosia his wife, having founded the priory or new
-hospital of our blessed Lady, since called St. Mary Spittle without
-Bishopsgate, confirmed the same to the honour of God and our blessed
-Lady, for canons regular.
-
-Also in the year 1247, Simon Fitzmarie, one of the sheriffs of London,
-the 29th of Henry III., founded the hospital of St. Mary, called Bethlem
-without Bishopsgate. Thus much for the antiquity of this gate.[48]
-
-And now for repairing the same, I find that Henry III. confirmed to
-the merchants of the Haunce, that had a house in the city called
-Guildhalla Theutonicorum, certain liberties and privileges. Edward I.
-also confirmed the same; in the tenth year of whose reign it was found
-that the said merchants ought of right to repair the said gate called
-Bishopsgate; whereupon Gerard Marbod, alderman of the Haunce and other,
-then remaining in the city of London, for themselves, and all other
-merchants of the said Haunce, granted two hundred and ten marks sterling
-to the mayor and citizens; and covenanted that they and their successors
-should from time to time repair the same gate. This gate was again
-beautifully built in the year 1479, in the reign of Edward IV., by the
-said Haunce merchants.
-
-Moreover, about the year 1551, these Haunce merchants, having prepared
-stone for that purpose, caused a new gate to be framed, there to have
-been set up, but then their liberties, through suit of our English
-merchants, were seized into the king's hand; and so that work was
-stayed, and the old gate yet remaineth.
-
-
-POSTERN OF MOREGATE
-
-Touching the next postern, called Moregate, I find that Thomas Falconer,
-mayor, about the year 1415, the third of Henry V., caused the wall
-of the city to be broken near unto Coleman street, and there built a
-postern, now called Moregate, upon the moor side where was never gate
-before. This gate he made for ease of the citizens, that way to pass
-upon causeys into the field for their recreation: for the same field
-was at that time a parish. This postern was re-edified by William
-Hampton, fishmonger, mayor, in the year 1472. In the year also, 1511,
-the third of Henry VIII., Roger Acheley, mayor, caused dikes and bridges
-to be made, and the ground to be levelled, and made more commodious for
-passage, since which time the same hath been heightened. So much that
-the ditches and bridges are covered, and seemeth to me that if it be
-made level with the battlements of the city wall, yet will it be little
-the drier, such is the moorish nature of that ground.
-
-
-POSTERN OF CRIPPLEGATE
-
-The next is the postern of Cripplegate, so called long before the
-Conquest. For I read in the history of Edmond,[49] king of the East
-Angles, written by Abbo Floriacensis, and by Burchard, sometime
-secretary to Offa, king of Marcia, but since by John Lidgate, monk
-of Bury, that in the year 1010, the Danes spoiling the kingdom of
-the East Angles, Alwyne, bishop of Helmeham, caused the body of King
-Edmond the Martyr to be brought from Bedrisworth (now called Bury St.
-Edmondes), through the kingdom of the East Saxons, and so to London
-in at Cripplegate; a place, saith mine author, so called of cripples
-begging there: at which gate, it was said, the body entering, miracles
-were wrought, as some of the lame to go upright, praising God. The body
-of King Edmond rested for the space of three years in the parish church
-of St. Gregorie, near unto the cathedral church of St. Paul. Moreover,
-the charter of William the Conqueror, confirming the foundation of the
-college in London, called St. Martin the Great, hath these words:[50] "I
-do give and grant to the same church and canons, serving God therein,
-all the land and the moore without the postern, which is called
-Cripplegate, on either side the postern." More I read, that Alfune built
-the parish church of St. Giles, nigh a gate of the city, called Porta
-Contractorum, or Cripplesgate, about the year 1099.
-
-This postern was sometime a prison, whereunto such citizens and others,
-as were arrested for debt or common trespasses, were committed, as they
-be now, to the compters, which thing appeareth by a writ of Edward I.
-in these words: "_Rex vic. London. salutem: ex graui querela B. capt. &
-detent. in prisona nostra de Criples gate pro x. l. quas coram Radulpho
-de Sandwico tunc custod. ciuitatis nostrae London. & I. de Blackwell
-ciuis recognit. debit. etc._" This gate was new built by the brewers
-of London in the year 1244, as saith Fabian's manuscript. Edmond Shaw,
-goldsmith, mayor in the year 1483, at his decease appointed by his
-testament his executors, with the cost of four hundred marks, and the
-stuff of the old gate, called Cripplesgate, to build the same gate of
-new, which was performed and done in the year 1491.
-
-
-ALDERSGATE
-
-The next is AEldresgate, or Aldersgate,[51] so called not of Aldrich or
-of Elders, that is to say, ancient men, builders thereof; not of Eldarne
-trees, growing there more abundantly than in other places, as some have
-fabled,[51] but for the very antiquity of the gate itself, as being one
-of the first four gates of the city, and serving for the northern parts,
-as Aldegate for the east; which two gates, being both old gates, are for
-difference sake called, the one Ealdegate, and the other Aldersgate.
-This is the fourth principal gate, and hath at sundry times been
-increased with buildings, namely, on the south, or inner side, a great
-frame of timber hath been added and set up, containing divers large
-rooms and lodgings; also on the east side is the addition of one great
-building of timber, with one large floor, paved with stone or tile, and
-a well therein curbed with stone, of a great depth, and rising into the
-said room, two stories high from the ground; which well is the only
-peculiar note belonging to that gate, for I have not seen the like in
-all this city to be raised so high. John Day, stationer, a late famous
-printer of many good books, in our time dwelt in this gate, and built
-much upon the wall of the city towards the parish church of St. Anne.
-
-
-POSTERN OUT OF CHRIST'S HOSPITAL
-
-Then is there also a postern gate, made out of the wall on the north
-side of the late dissolved cloister of Friers minors, commonly of their
-habit called Grey friars, now Christ's church and hospital. This postern
-was made in the first year of Edward VI. to pass from the said hospital
-of Christ's church unto the hospital of St. Bartlemew in Smithfield.
-
-
-NEWGATE
-
-The next gate on the west, and by north, is termed Newgate, as latelier
-built than the rest, and is the fifth principal gate. This gate was
-first erected about the reign of Henry I. or of King Stephen, upon this
-occasion.[52] The cathedral church of St. Paul, being burnt about the
-year 1086, in the reign of William the Conqueror, Mauritius, then bishop
-of London, repaired not the old church, as some have supposed, but
-began the foundation of a new work, such as men then judged would never
-have been performed; it was to them so wonderful for height, length,
-and breadth, as also in respect it was raised upon arches or vaults, a
-kind of workmanship brought in by the Normans, and never known to the
-artificers of this land before that time, etc. After Mauritius, Richard
-Beamore did wonderfully advance the work of the said church, purchasing
-the large streets and lanes round about, wherein were wont to dwell many
-lay people, which grounds he began to compass about with a strong wall
-of stone and gates. By means of this increase of the church territory,
-but more by inclosing of ground for so large a cemetery or churchyard,
-the high and large street stretching from Aldegate in the east until
-Ludgate in the west, was in this place so crossed and stopped up, that
-the carriage through the city westward was forced to pass without the
-said churchyard wall on the north side, through Pater noster row; and
-then south, down Ave Mary lane, and again west, through Bowyer row to
-Ludgate; or else out of Cheepe, or Watheling street, to turn south,
-through the old Exchange; then west through Carter lane, again north
-by Creede lane, and then west to Ludgate: which passage, by reason of
-so often turning, was very cumbersome and dangerous both for horse and
-man; for remedy whereof a new gate was made, and so called, by which men
-and cattle, with all manner of carriages, might pass more directly (as
-afore) from Aldegate, through West Cheape by Paules, on the north side;
-through St. Nicholas shambles and Newgate market to Newgate, and from
-thence to any part westward over Oldborne bridge, or turning without
-the gate into Smithfielde, and through Iseldon to any part north and
-by west. This gate hath of long time been a gaol, or prison for felons
-and trespassers, as appeareth by records[53] in the reign of King John,
-and of other kings; amongst the which I find one testifying, that in
-the year 1218, the 3rd of King Henry III., the king writeth unto the
-sheriffs of London, commanding them to repair the gaol of Newgate for
-the safe keeping of his prisoners, promising that the charges laid out
-should be allowed unto them upon their account in the Exchequer.
-
-Moreover, in the year 1241, the Jews of Norwich were hanged for
-circumcising a Christian child; their house called the Thor was pulled
-down and destroyed; Aron, the son of Abraham, a Jew, at London, and
-the other Jews, were constrained to pay twenty thousand marks at two
-terms in the year, or else to be kept perpetual prisoners in Newgate of
-London, and in other prisons. In 1255, King Henry III. lodging in the
-tower of London, upon displeasure conceived towards the city of London,
-for the escape of John Offrem, a prisoner, being a clerk convict, out
-of Newgate, which had killed a prior that was of alliance to the king,
-as cousin to the queen: he sent for the mayor and sheriffs to come
-before him to answer the matter; the mayor laid the fault from him to
-the sheriffs, forasmuch as to them belonged the keeping of all prisoners
-within the city; and so the mayor returned home, but the sheriffs
-remained there prisoners by the space of a month and more; and yet they
-excused themselves, in that the fault chiefly rested in the bishop's
-officers; for whereas the prisoner was under custody, they at his
-request had granted license to imprison the offender within the gaol of
-Newgate, but so as the bishop's officers were charged to see him safely
-kept. The king, notwithstanding all this, demanded of the city three
-thousand marks for a fine.
-
-In the year 1326, Robert Baldoke, the king's chancellor, was put in
-Newgate, the 3rd of Edward III. In the year 1337, Sir John Poultney
-gave four marks by the year to the relief of prisoners in Newgate. In
-the year 1385, William Walworth gave somewhat to relieve the prisoners
-in Newgate, so have many others since. In the year 1414, the gaolers
-of Newgate and Ludgate died, and prisoners in Newgate to the number
-of sixty-four. In the year 1418, the parson of Wrotham, in Kent, was
-imprisoned in Newgate. In the year 1422, the first of Henry VI., license
-was granted to John Coventre, Jenken Carpenter, and William Grove,
-executors to Richard Whittington, to re-edify the gaol of Newgate, which
-they did with his goods.
-
-Thomas Knowles, grocer, sometime mayor of London, by license of Reynold,
-prior of St. Bartholomew's in Smithfield, and also of John Wakering,
-master of the hospital of St. Bartholomew, and his brethren, conveyed
-the waste of water at the cistern near to the common fountain and chapel
-of St. Nicholas (situate by the said hospital) to the gaols of Newgate,
-and Ludgate, for the relief of the prisoners. Tuesday next after Palm
-Sunday 1431, all the prisoners of Ludgate were removed into Newgate by
-Walter Chartesey, and Robert Large, sheriffs of London; and on the
-13th of April the same sheriffs (through the false suggestion of John
-Kingesell, jailor of Newgate) set from thence eighteen persons free
-men, and these were let to the compters, pinioned as if they had been
-felons; but on the sixteenth of June, Ludgate was again appointed for
-free men, prisoners for debt; and the same day the said free men entered
-by ordinance of the mayor, aldermen, and commons, and by them Henry
-Deane, tailor, was made keeper of Ludgate prison. In the year 1457, a
-great fray was in the north country between Sir Thomas Percie, Lord
-Egremond, and the Earl of Salisbury's sons, whereby many were maimed
-and slain; but, in the end, the Lord Egremond being taken, was by the
-king's counsel found in great default, and therefore condemned in great
-sums of money, to be paid to the Earl of Salisbury, and in the meantime
-committed to Newgate. Not long after, Sir Thomas Percie, Lord Egremond,
-and Sir Richard Percie his brother, being in Newgate, broke out of
-prison by night, and went to the king; the other prisoners took the
-leads of the gate, and defended it a long while against the sheriffs and
-all their officers, insomuch that they were forced to call more aid of
-the citizens, whereby they lastly subdued them, and laid them in irons:
-and this may suffice for Newgate.
-
-
-LUDGATE
-
-In the west is the next, and sixth principal gate, and is called
-Ludgate, as first built (saith Geoffrey Monmouth) by King Lud, a Briton,
-about the year before Christ's nativity, 66. Of which building, and also
-of the name, as Ludsgate, or Fludsgate, hath been of late some question
-among the learned; wherefore I overpass it, as not to my purpose, only
-referring the reader to that I have before written out of Caesar's
-Commentaries, and other Roman writers, concerning a town or city amongst
-the Britons. This gate I suppose to be one of the most ancient; and as
-Aldgate was built for the east, so was this Ludsgate for the west. I
-read,[54] as I told you, that in the year 1215, the 17th of King John,
-the barons of the realm, being in arms against the king, entered this
-city, and spoiled the Jews' houses; which being done, Robert Fitzwater
-and Geffrey de Magnavilla, Earl of Essex, and the Earl of Gloucester,
-chief leaders of the army, applied all diligence to repair the gates
-and walls of this city, with the stones of the Jews' broken houses,
-especially (as it seemeth) they then repaired, or rather new built
-Ludgate. For in the year 1586, when the same gate was taken down to
-be newly built, there was found couched within the wall thereof a
-stone taken from one of the Jews' houses, wherein was graven in Hebrew
-characters these words following: _Haec est statio Rabbi Mosis, filii
-insignis Rabbi Isaac_: which is to say, this is the station or ward
-of Rabbi Moyses, the son of the honourable Rabbi Isaac, and had been
-fixed upon the front of one of the Jews' houses, as a note or sign that
-such a one dwelt there. In the year 1260, this Ludgate was repaired,
-and beautified with images of Lud, and other kings, as appeareth by
-letters patent of license given to the citizens of London, to take up
-stone for that purpose, dated the 25th of Henry III. These images of
-kings in the reign of Edward VI. had their heads smitten off, and were
-otherwise defaced by[55] such as judged every image to be an idol; and
-in the reign of Queen Mary were repaired, as by setting new heads on
-their old bodies, etc. All which so remained until the year 1586, the
-28th of Queen Elizabeth, when the same gate being sore decayed, was
-clean taken down; the prisoners in the meantime remaining in the large
-south-east quadrant to the same gate adjoining; and the same year the
-whole gate was newly and beautifully built, with the images of Lud and
-others, as afore, on the east side, and the picture of her majesty Queen
-Elizabeth on the west side: all which was done at the common charges of
-the citizens, amounting to fifteen hundred pounds or more.
-
-This gate was made a free prison in the year 1378, the 1st of Richard
-II., Nicholas Brembar being mayor.[56] The same was confirmed in the
-year 1382, John Northampton being mayor, by a common council in the
-Guildhall; by which it was ordained that all freemen of this city
-should, for debt, trespasses, accounts, and contempts, be imprisoned
-in Ludgate, and for treasons, felonies, and other criminal offences,
-committed to Newgate, etc. In the year 1431, the 10th of King Henry VI.,
-John Wells being mayor, a court of common council established ordinances
-(as William Standon and Robert Chicheley, late mayors, before had done),
-touching the guard and government of Ludgate and other prisons.
-
-Also in the year 1463, the third of Edward IV., Mathew Philip, being
-mayor, in a common council, at the request of the well-disposed,
-blessed, and devout woman, Dame Agnes Forster, widow, late wife to
-Stephen Forster, fishmonger, sometime mayor, for the comfort and relief
-of all the poor prisoners, certain articles were established. Imprimis,
-that the new works then late edified by the same Dame Agnes, for the
-enlarging of the prison of Ludgate, from thenceforth should be had and
-taken as a part and parcel of the said prison of Ludgate; so that both
-the old and new work of Ludgate aforesaid be one prison, gaol keeping,
-and charge for evermore.
-
-The said quadrant, strongly built of stone by the beforenamed Stephen
-Forster, and Agnes his wife, containeth a large walking-place by ground
-of thirty-eight feet and a half in length, besides the thickness of the
-walls, which are at the least six foot, makes altogether forty-four
-feet and a half; the breadth within the walls is twenty-nine feet and a
-half, so that the thickness of the walls maketh it thirty five feet and
-a half in breadth. The like room it hath over it for lodgings, and over
-it again fair leads to walk upon, well embattled, all for fresh air and
-ease of prisoners, to the end they should have lodging and water free
-without charge, as by certain verses graven in copper, and fixed on the
-said quadrant, I have read in form following:--
-
- "Devout souls that pass this way,
- For Stephen Forster, late mayor, heartily pray;
- And Dame Agnes his spouse to God consecrate,
- That of pity this house made for Londoners in Ludgate.
- So that for lodging and water prisoners here nought pay,
- As their keepers shall all answer at dreadful doomsday."
-
-This place and one other of his arms, three broad arrow-heads, taken
-down with the old gate, I caused to be fixed over the entry of the said
-quadrant; but the verses being unhappily turned inward to the wall,
-procured the like in effect to be graven outward in prose, declaring him
-to be a fishmonger, because some upon a light occasion (as a maiden's
-head in a glass window) had fabled him to be a mercer, and to have
-begged there at Ludgate, etc. Thus much for Ludgate.
-
-Next this is there a breach in the wall of the city, and a bridge of
-timber over the Fleet dike, betwixt Fleetebridge and Thames, directly
-over against the house of Bridewel. Thus much for gates in the wall.
-
-Water-gates on the banks of the river Thames have been many, which being
-purchased by private men, are also put to private use, and the old names
-of them forgotten; but of such as remain, from the west towards the
-east, may be said as followeth:--
-
-The Blacke-friers stairs, a free landing-place.
-
-Then a water-gate at Puddle wharf, of one Puddle that kept a wharf on
-the west side thereof, and now of Puddle water, by means of many horses
-watered there.
-
-Then Powle's wharf, also a free landing-place with stairs, etc.
-
-Then Broken wharf, and other such like.
-
-But, Ripa Regina, the Queene's bank, or Queene hithe may well be
-accounted the very chief and principal water-gate of this city, being
-a common strand or landing-place, yet equal with, and of old time far
-exceeding, Belins gate, as shall be shown in the ward of Queene hithe.
-
-The next is Downe gate, so called of the sudden descending or down-going
-of that way from St. John's church upon Walbrooke unto the river of
-Thames, whereby the water in the channel there hath such a swift course,
-that in the year 1574, on the fourth of September, after a strong shower
-of rain, a lad, of the age of eighteen years, minding to have leapt over
-the channel, was taken by the feet, and borne down with the violence of
-that narrow stream, and carried toward the Thames with such a violent
-swiftness, as no man could rescue or stay him, till he came against
-a cart-wheel that stood in the water-gate, before which time he was
-drowned and stark dead.
-
-This was sometimes a large water-gate, frequented of ships and other
-vessels, like as the Queene hithe, and was a part thereof, as doth
-appear by an inquisition made in the 28th year of Henry III., wherein
-was found, that as well corn as fish, and all other things coming to the
-port of Downegate, were to be ordered after the customs of the Queene's
-hithe, for the king's use; as also that the corn arriving between the
-gate of the Guild hall of the merchants of Cullen (the Styleyard), which
-is east from Downegate, and the house then pertaining to the Archbishop
-of Canterbury, west from Baynarde's Castle, was to be measured by the
-measure, and measurer of the Queene's soke, or Queene hithe. I read
-also, in the 19th of Edward III., that customs were then to be paid for
-ships and other vessels resting at Downegate, as if they rode at Queene
-hithe, and as they now do at Belingsgate. And thus much for Downegate
-may suffice.
-
-The next was called Wolfes gate,[57] in the ropery in the parish of
-Allhallowes the Lesse, of later time called Wolfes lane, but now out of
-use; for the lower part was built on by the Earle of Shrewsburie, and
-the other part was stopped up and built on by the chamberlain of London.
-
-The next is Ebgate,[58] a water-gate, so called of old time, as
-appeareth by divers records of tenements near unto the same adjoining.
-It standeth near unto the church of St. Laurence Pountney, but is within
-the parish of St. Marten Ordegare. In place of this gate is now a narrow
-passage to the Thames, and is called Ebgate lane, but more commonly the
-Old Swan.
-
-Then is there a water-gate at the bridge foot, called Oyster gate, of
-oysters that were there of old time, commonly to be sold, and was the
-chiefest market for them and for other shell-fishes. There standeth now
-an engine or forcier, for the winding up of water to serve the city,
-whereof I have already spoken.
-
-
-BRIDGE GATE
-
-The next is the Bridge gate, so called of London Bridge, whereon it
-standeth. This was one of the four first and principal gates of the
-city, long before the Conquest, when there stood a bridge of timber,
-and is the seventh and last principal gate mentioned by W. Fitzstephen;
-which gate being new[59] made, when the bridge was built was built
-of stone, hath been oftentimes since repaired. This gate, with the
-tower upon it, in the year 1436 fell down, and two of the farthest
-arches southwards also fell therewith, and no man perished or was hurt
-therewith. To the repairing whereof, divers wealthy citizens gave large
-sums of money; namely, Robert Large, sometime mayor, one hundred marks;
-Stephen Forster, twenty pounds; Sir John Crosbye, alderman, one hundred
-pounds, etc. But in the year 1471,[60] the Kentish mariners, under the
-conduct of bastard Fauconbridge, burned the said gate and thirteen
-houses on the bridge, besides the Beer houses at St. Katherine's, and
-many others in the suburbs.
-
-The next is Buttolphe's gate, so called of the parish church of St.
-Buttolph, near adjoining. This gate was sometimes given or confirmed
-by William Conqueror to the monks of Westminster in these words: "W.
-rex Angliae, etc., William, king of England, sendeth greeting to the
-sheriffes, and all his ministers, as also to all his loving subjects,
-French and English, of London: Know ye that I have granted to God and
-St. Peter of Westminster, and to the abbot Vitalis, the gift which
-Almundus of the port of S. Buttolph gave them, when he was there made
-monke: that is to say, his Lords court with the houses, and one wharf,
-which is at the head of London bridge, and all other his lands which he
-had in the same city, in such sort as King Edward more beneficially and
-amply granted the same; and I will and command that they shall enjoy
-the same well and quietly and honourably, with sake and soke, etc."
-
-The next is Bellinsgate, used as an especial port, or harbour, for small
-ships and boats coming thereto, and is now[61] most frequented, the
-Queen's hithe being almost forsaken. How this gate took that name, or of
-what antiquity the same is, I must leave uncertain, as not having any
-ancient record thereof, more than that Geoffrey Monmouth writeth, that
-Belin, a king of the Britons, about four hundred years before Christ's
-nativity, built this gate, and named it Belin's gate, after his own
-calling; and that when he was dead, his body being burnt, the ashes, in
-a vessel of brass, were set upon a high pinnacle of stone over the same
-gate. But Caesar and other Roman writers affirm, of cities, walls, and
-gates, as ye have before heard; and therefore it seemeth to me not to be
-so ancient, but rather to have taken that name of some later owner of
-the place, happily named Beling, or Biling, as Somar's key, Smart's key,
-Frosh wharf, and others, thereby took their names of their owners. Of
-this gate more shall be said when we come to Belin's gate ward.
-
-Then have you a water-gate, on the west side of Wool wharf, or
-Customers' key,[62] which is commonly called the water-gate, at the
-south end of Water lane.
-
-One other water-gate there is by the bulwark of the Tower, and this is
-the last and farthest water-gate eastward, on the river of Thames, so
-far as the city of London extendeth within the walls; both which last
-named water-gates be within the Tower ward.
-
-Besides these common water-gates, were divers private wharfs and
-keys, all along from the east to the west of this city, on the bank
-of the river of Thames; merchants of all nations had landing-places,
-warehouses, cellars, and stowage of their goods and merchandises, as
-partly shall be touched in the wards adjoining to the said river. Now,
-for the ordering and keeping these gates of this city in the night time,
-it was appointed in the year of Christ 1258, by Henry III., the 42nd of
-his reign,[63] that the ports of England should be strongly kept, and
-that the gates of London should be new repaired, and diligently kept in
-the night, for fear of French deceits, whereof one writeth these verses:
-
- "Per noctem portae clauduntur Londoniarum,
- Moenia ne forte fraus frangat Francigenarum."
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[40] "Which then served as a posterne for passengers out of the east,
-from thence through Tower street, East cheape, and Candlewecke street
-to London Stone, the middle point of that highway, then through Budge
-row, Watheling street, and leaving Paul's church on the right hand,
-to Ludgate in the west; the next be Aldgate, Bishopsgate, Criplegate,
-Aldersgate, Ludgate, and the Bridgegate over the Thames. Since the which
-time hath been builded Newgate," etc.--_1st edition_, p. 25.
-
-[41] "Was never re-edified againe of stone, but an homely cottage, with
-a narrow passage made of timber, lath and loame, hath beene in place
-thereof set up, and so remaineth."--_1st edition_, p. 25.
-
-[42] Liber Trinitat.
-
-[43] Matthew Paris.
-
-[44] Radul. Coggeshall.
-
-[45] W. Donthorn.
-
-[46] "Now called Bednal Green."--_1st edition_, p. 26.
-
-[47] Liber Trinitat.
-
-[48] Liber Custom. London.
-
-[49] Abbo Floriacens, Burchardus.
-
-[50] Liber S. Bartilmew.
-
-[51] In a book, called _Beware of the Cat_.--_Stow._
-
-[52] "About the raigne of Henry II. or Richard I."--_1st edition_, p. 30.
-
-[53] Close roll.
-
-[54] Roger Wendover, Matthew Paris.
-
-[55] "By unadvised folkes"--_1st edition._
-
-[56] Record, Guildhall.
-
-[57] Liber Horne. Liber S. Alban.
-
-[58] Liber Trinitat. Liber S. Alban. Record, E. 3.
-
-[59] "Weakly made."--_1st edition_, p. 36.
-
-[60] W. Duntherne.
-
-[61] "The largest water-gate on the river of Thames, and therefore most
-frequented."--_1st edition_, p. 36.
-
-[62] "Which is now of late most beautifully enlarged and built."--_1st
-edition_, p. 37.
-
-[63] Matthew Paris.
-
-
-
-
-OF TOWERS AND CASTLES
-
-
-"The city of London (saith Fitzstephen) hath in the east a very great
-and a most strong palatine Tower, whose turrets and walls do rise from
-a deep foundation, the mortar thereof being tempered with the blood of
-beasts. In the west part are two most strong castles, etc." To begin
-therefore with the most famous Tower of London, situate in the east,
-near unto the river of Thames: it hath been the common opinion, and
-some have written (but of none assured ground), that Julius Caesar, the
-first conqueror of the Britons, was the original author and founder, as
-well thereof as also of many other towers, castles, and great buildings
-within this realm; but (as I have already before noted) Caesar remained
-not here so long, nor had he in his head any such matter, but only to
-dispatch a conquest of this barbarous country, and to proceed to greater
-matters. Neither do the Roman writers make mention of any such buildings
-created by him here; and therefore leaving this, and proceeding to
-more grounded authority, I find in a fair register-book, containing
-the acts of the Bishops of Rochester, set down by Edmond de Hadenham,
-that William I., surnamed Conqueror, built the Tower of London; to wit,
-the great white and square tower there, about the year of Christ 1078,
-appointing Gundulph, then Bishop of Rochester, to be principal surveyor
-and overseer of that work, who was for that time lodged in the house of
-Edmere, a burgess of London; the very words of which mine author are
-these: "_Gundulphus Episcopus mandato Willielmi Regis magni praefuit
-operi magnae Turris London. quo tempore hospitatus est apud quendam
-Edmerum Burgensem London. qui dedit unum_ were _Ecclesiae Rofen._"
-
-Ye have before heard that the wall of this city was all round about
-furnished with towers and bulwarks, in due distance every one from
-other; and also that the river Thames, with his ebbing and flowing, on
-the south side, had subverted the said wall and towers there. Wherefore
-King William, for defence of this city, in place most dangerous, and
-open to the enemy, having taken down the second bulwark in the east
-part of the wall from the Thames, built this tower, which was the great
-square tower, now called the White Tower, and hath been since at divers
-times enlarged with other buildings adjoining, as shall be shown. This
-tower was by tempest of wind[64] sore shaken in the year 1090, the 4th
-of William Rufus, and was again by the said Rufus and Henry I. repaired.
-They also caused a castle to be built under the said tower, namely, on
-the south side towards the Thames, and also incastellated the same round
-about.
-
-Henry Huntingdon, libro sexto, hath these words: "William Rufus
-challenged the investure of prelates; he pilled and shaved the people
-with tribute, especially to spend about the Tower of London, and the
-great hall at Westminster."
-
-Othowerus, Acolinillus, Otto, and Geffrey Magnaville, Earl of Essex,
-were four the first constables of this Tower of London, by succession;
-all which held by force a portion of land (that pertained to the priory
-of the Holy Trinitie within Aldgate); that is to say, East Smithfield,
-near unto the Tower, making thereof a vineyard,[65] and would not depart
-from it till the 2nd year of King Stephen, when the same was abridged
-and restored to the church. This said Geffrey Magnaville was Earl of
-Essex, constable of the Tower, sheriff of London, Middlesex, Essex, and
-Hertfordshire, as appeareth by a charter of Maud the empress, dated
-1141. He also fortified the Tower of London against King Stephen; but
-the king took him in his court at St. Albones, and would not deliver him
-till he had rendered the Tower of London, with the castles of Walden and
-Plashey in Essex. In the year 1153 the Tower of London and the castle
-of Windsor were by the king delivered to Richard de Lucie, to be safely
-kept. In the year 1155, Thomas Becket being chancellor to Henry II.,
-caused the Flemings to be banished out of England,[66] their castles
-lately built to be pulled down, and the Tower of London to be repaired.
-
-About the year 1190, the 2nd of Richard I., William Longshampe, Bishop
-of Elie, Chancellor of England, for cause of dissension betwixt him and
-Earl John, the king's brother that was rebel, inclosed the tower and
-castle of London, with an outward wall of stone embattled, and also
-caused a deep ditch to be cast about the same, thinking (as I have
-said before) to have environed it with the river of Thames. By the
-making of this inclosure and ditch in East Smithfield, the church of
-the Holy Trinitie in London lost half a mark rent by the year, and the
-mill was removed that belonged to the poor brethren of the hospital of
-St. Katherine,[67] and to the church of the Holy Trinitie aforesaid,
-which was no small loss and discommodity to either part; and the garden
-which the king had hired of the brethren for six marks the year, for
-the most part was wasted and marred by the ditch. Recompense was often
-promised, but never performed, until King Edward coming after, gave to
-the brethren five marks and a half for that part which the ditch had
-devoured, and the other part thereof without he yielded to them again,
-which they hold: and of the said rent of five marks and a half, they
-have a deed, by virtue whereof they are well paid to this day.
-
-It is also to be noted, and cannot be denied, but that the said
-inclosure and ditch took the like or greater quantity of ground from the
-city within the wall; namely, one of that part called the Tower Hill,
-besides breaking down of the city wall, from the White Tower to the
-first gate of the city, called the Postern; yet have I not read of any
-quarrel made by the citizens, or recompense demanded by them for that
-matter, because all was done for good of the city's defence thereof,
-and to their good likings. But Matthew Paris writeth, that in the year
-1239, King Henry III. fortified the Tower of London to another end;
-wherefore the citizens, fearing lest that were done to their detriment,
-complained, and the king answered, that he had not done it to their
-hurt, but (saith he) I will from henceforth do as my brother doth, in
-building and fortifying castles, who beareth the name to be wiser than
-I am. It followed in the next year, saith mine author, the said noble
-buildings of the stone gate and bulwark, which the king had caused to
-be made by the Tower of London, on the west side thereof, were shaken
-as it had been with an earthquake, and fell down, which the king again
-commanded to be built in better sort than before, which was done; and
-yet again, in the year 1247, the said wall and bulwarks that were newly
-built, wherein the king had bestowed more than twelve thousand marks,
-were irrecoverably thrown down, as afore; for the which chance the
-citizens of London were nothing sorry, for they were threatened that
-the said wall and bulwarks were built, to the end that if any of them
-would contend for the liberties of the city, they might be imprisoned;
-and that many might be laid in divers prisons, many lodgings were made
-that no one should speak with another: thus much Matthew Paris for
-this building. More of Henry III., his dealings against the citizens
-of London, we may read in the said author, in 1245, 1248, 1249, 1253,
-1255, 1256, etc. But, concerning the said wall and bulwark, the same
-was finished, though not in his time; for I read that Edward I., in
-the second of his reign, commanded the treasurer and chamberlain of
-the Exchequer to deliver out of his treasury unto Miles of Andwarp two
-hundred marks, of the fines taken out of divers merchants or usurers
-of London, for so be the words of the record, towards the work of the
-ditch then new made, about the said bulwark, now called the Lion Tower.
-I find also recorded, that Henry III., in the 46th of his reign, wrote
-to Edward of Westminster, commanding him that he should buy certain
-perie plants, and set the same in the place without his Tower of London,
-within the wall of the said city, which of late he had caused to be
-inclosed with a mud wall, as may appear by this that followeth: the
-mayor and commonalty of London were fined for throwing down the said
-earthen wall against the Tower of London, the 9th of Edward II. Edward
-IV. in place thereof built a wall of brick. But now for the Lion Tower
-and lions in England, the original, as I have read, was thus.
-
-Henry I. built his manor of Wodstock, with a park, which he walled about
-with stone, seven miles in compass, destroying for the same divers
-villages, churches, and chapels; and this was the first park in England.
-He placed therein, besides great store of deer, divers strange beasts to
-be kept and nourished, such as were brought to him from far countries,
-as lions, leopards, linces, porpentines,[68] and such other. More I
-read, that in the year 1235, Frederick the emperor sent to Henry III.
-three leopards, in token of his regal shield of arms, wherein three
-leopards were pictured; since the which time those lions and others have
-been kept in a part of this bulwark, now called the Lion Tower, and
-their keepers there lodged. King Edward II., in the 12th of his reign,
-commanded the sheriffs of London to pay to the keepers of the king's
-leopard in the Tower of London sixpence the day for the sustenance of
-the leopard, and three-halfpence a day for diet for the said keeper, out
-of the fee farm of the said city. More, in the 16th of Edward III., one
-lion, one lioness, one leopard, and two cat lions, in the said Tower,
-were committed to the custody of Robert, the son of John Bowre.
-
-Edward IV. fortified the Tower of London, and inclosed with brick, as
-is aforesaid, a certain piece of ground, taken out of the Tower Hill,
-west from the Lion Tower, now called the bulwark. His officers also, in
-the 5th of his reign, set upon the said hill both scaffold and gallows,
-for the execution of offenders; whereupon the mayor and his brethren
-complained to the king, and were answered that the same was not done in
-derogation of the city's liberties, and thereof caused proclamation to
-be made, etc., as shall be shown in Tower street.
-
-Richard III., repaired and built in this tower somewhat. Henry VIII.,
-in 1532, repaired the White Tower, and other parts thereof. In the year
-1548, the 2nd of Edward VI., on the 22nd of November, in the night, a
-Frenchman lodged in the round bulwark, betwixt the west gate and the
-postern, or drawbridge, called the warders' gate, by setting fire on a
-barrel of gunpowder, blew up the said bulwark, burnt himself, and no
-more persons. This bulwark, was forthwith again new built.
-
-And here, because I have by occasion spoken of the west gate of this
-tower the same, as the most principal, is used for the receipt and
-delivery of all kinds of carriages, without the which gate divers
-bulwarks and gates, towards the north, etc. Then near within this west
-gate, opening to the south, is a strong postern for passengers by the
-ward-house, over a drawbridge let down for that purpose. Next on the
-same south side, toward the east, is a large water-gate, for receipt
-of boats and small vessels, partly under a stone bridge from the river
-of Thames. Beyond it is a small postern, with a drawbridge, seldom let
-down but for the receipt of some great persons, prisoners. Then towards
-the east is a great and strong gate, commonly called the Iron gate, but
-not usually opened. And thus much for the foundation, building, and
-repairing of this tower, with the gates and posterns, may suffice. And
-now somewhat of accidents in the same shall be shown.
-
-In the year 1196, William Fitzosbert, a citizen of London, seditiously
-moving the common people to seek liberty, and not to be subject to
-the rich and more mighty, at length was taken and brought before the
-Archbishop of Canterbury in the Tower, where he was by the judges
-condemned, and by the heels drawn thence to the Elms in Smithfield, and
-there hanged.
-
-In 1214, King John[69] wrote to Geffrey Magnaville to deliver the Tower
-of London, with the prisoners, armour, and all other things found
-therein belonging to the king, to William, archdeacon of Huntingdon. In
-the year 1216, the 1st of Henry III., the said Tower was delivered to
-Lewis of France and the barons of England.[70]
-
-In the year 1206 pleas of the crown were pleaded in the Tower; likewise
-in the year 1220, and likewise in the year 1224, and again in the year
-1243, before William of Yorke, Richard Passelew, Henry Brahe, Jerome of
-Saxton, justices.
-
-In the year 1222, the citizens of London having made a tumult against
-the abbot of Westminster, Hubert of Burge, chief justice of England,
-came to the Tower of London, called before him the mayor and aldermen,
-of whom he inquired for the principal authors of that sedition; amongst
-whom one, named Constantine Fitz Aelulfe, avowed that he was the man,
-and had done much less than he ought to have done: whereupon the justice
-sent him with two other to Falks de Brent, who with armed men brought
-them to the gallows, where they were hanged.
-
-In the year 1244, Griffith, the eldest son of Leoline, Prince of Wales,
-being kept prisoner in the Tower, devised means of escape, and having
-in the night made of the hangings, sheets, etc., a long line, he put
-himself down from the top of the Tower, but in the sliding, the weight
-of his body, being a very big and a fat man, brake the rope, and he fell
-and brake his neck withall.
-
-In the year 1253, King Henry III. imprisoned the sheriffs of London
-in the Tower more than a month, for the escape of a prisoner out of
-Newgate, as you may read in the chapter of Gates.
-
-In the year 1260, King Henry, with his queen (for fear of the barons),
-were lodged in the Tower. The next year he sent for his lords, and held
-his parliament there.
-
-In the year 1263, when the queen would have removed from the Tower by
-water towards Windsor, sundry Londoners got them together to the bridge,
-under the which she was to pass, and not only cried out upon her with
-reproachful words, but also threw mire and stones at her, by which she
-was constrained to return for the time; but in the year 1265, the said
-citizens were fain to submit themselves to the king for it, and the
-mayor, aldermen, and sheriffs were sent to divers prisons, and a custos
-also was set over the city; to wit, Othon, constable of the Tower, etc.
-
-In the year 1282, Leoline, prince of Wales, being taken at Bewlth
-castle, Roger Lestrange cut off his head, which Sir Roger Mortimer
-caused to be crowned with ivy, and set it upon the Tower of London.
-
-In the year 1290, divers justices, as well of the bench as of the
-assizes, were sent prisoners to the Tower, which with great sums of
-money redeemed their liberty. Edward II., the 14th of his reign,
-appointed for prisoners in the Tower, a knight twopence the day, an
-esquire one penny the day, to serve for their diet.
-
-In the year 1320, the king's justices sat in the Tower, for trial of
-matters; whereupon John Gifors, late mayor of London, and many others,
-fled the city, for fear to be charged of things they had presumptuously
-done.
-
-In the year 1321, the Mortimers yielding themselves to the king, he sent
-them prisoners to the Tower, where they remained long, and were adjudged
-to be drawn and hanged. But at length Roger Mortimer, of Wigmore, by
-giving to his keepers a sleepy drink, escaped out of the Tower, and his
-uncle Roger, being still kept there, died about five years after.
-
-In the year 1326, the citizens of London won the Tower, wresting the
-keys out of the constable's hands, delivered all the prisoners, and kept
-both city and Tower to the use of Isabel the queen, and Edward her son.
-
-In the year 1330, Roger Mortimer, Earl of March, was taken and brought
-to the Tower, from whence he was brought to the Elms, and there hanged.
-
-In the year 1344, King Edward III., in the 18th of his reign, commanded
-florences of gold to be made and coined in the Tower; that is to say,
-a penny piece of the value of five shillings and eight pence, the
-halfpenny piece of the value of three shillings and four pence, and a
-farthing piece worth twenty pence; Percevall de Port of Lake being then
-master of the coin. And this is the first coining of gold in the Tower,
-whereof I have read, and also the first coinage of gold in England.
-I find also recorded, that the said king in the same year ordained
-his exchange of money to be kept in Serne's Tower, a part of the
-king's house in Bucklesbury. And here to digress a little (by occasion
-offered), I find that, in times before passed, all great sums were paid
-by weight of gold or silver, as so many pounds or marks of silver, or
-so many pounds or marks of gold, cut into blanks, and not stamped, as I
-could prove by many good authorities which I overpass. The smaller sums
-also were paid in starlings, which were pence so called, for other coins
-they had none. The antiquity of this starling penny usual in this realm
-is from the reign of Henry II., notwithstanding the Saxon coins before
-the Conquest were pence of fine silver the full weight, and somewhat
-better than the latter starlings, as I have tried by conference of the
-pence of Burghrede, king of Mercia, Aelfred, Edward, and Edelred, kings
-of the West Saxons, Plegmond, Archbishop of Canterbury, and others.
-William the Conqueror's penny also was fine silver of the weight of
-the easterling, and had on the one side stamped an armed head, with a
-beardless face,--for the Normans wore no beards,--with a sceptre in his
-hand. The inscription in the circumference was this: "Le Rei Wilam;"[71]
-on the other side, a cross double to the ring, between four rowals of
-six points.
-
-King Henry I. his penny was of the like weight, fineness, form of face,
-cross, etc.
-
-This Henry, in the 8th year of his reign, ordained the penny, which was
-round, so to be quartered by the cross, that they might easily be broken
-into halfpence and farthings.[72] In the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5th of
-King Richard I. his reign, and afterwards, I find commonly easterling
-money mentioned, and yet ofttimes the same is called argent, as afore,
-and not otherwise.
-
-The first great sum that I read of to be paid in easterlings was in the
-reign of Richard I., when Robert, Earl of Leicester, being prisoner
-in France, proffered for his ransom a thousand marks easterlings,
-notwithstanding the easterling pence were long before. The weight of the
-easterling penny may appear by divers statutes, namely, of weights and
-measures, made in the 51st of Henry III. in these words: "Thirty-two
-graines of wheat, drie and round, taken in the middest of the eare,
-shoulde be the weight of a starling penie, 20 of those pence should
-waye one ounce, 12 ounces a pound Troy." It followeth in the statute
-eight pound to make a gallon of wine, and eight gallons a bushel of
-London measure, etc. Notwithstanding which statute, I find, in the 8th
-of Edward I., Gregorie Rokesley, mayor of London, being chief master
-or minister of the Kinge's Exchange, or mintes, a new coin being then
-appointed, the pound of easterling money should contain as afore twelve
-ounces; to wit, fine silver, such as was then made into foil, and
-was commonly called silver of Guthurons lane,[73] eleven ounces, two
-easterlings, and one ferling or farthing, and the other seventeen pence
-ob. q.[74] to be alloy. Also, the pound of money ought to weigh twenty
-shillings and three pence by account; so that no pound ought to be
-over twenty shillings and three pence, nor less than twenty shillings
-and two pence by account; the ounce to weigh twenty pence, the penny
-weight twenty-four grains (which twenty-four by weight then appointed
-were as much as the former thirty-two grains of wheat), a penny force
-twenty-five grains and a half, the penny deble or feeble twenty-two
-grains and a half, etc.[75]
-
-Now for the penny easterling, how it took that name I think good briefly
-to touch. It hath been said, that Numa Pompilius, the second king of the
-Romans, commanded money first to be made, of whose name they were called
-_nummi_; and when copper pence, silver pence, and gold pence, were made,
-because every silver penny was worth ten copper pence, and every gold
-penny worth ten silver pence, the pence therefore were called in Latin,
-denarii, and oftentimes the pence are named of the matter and stuff of
-gold or silver. But the money of England was called of the workers and
-makers thereof; as the florin of gold is called of the Florentines, that
-were the workers thereof, and so the easterling pence took their name of
-the Easterlings which did first make this money in England, in the reign
-of Henry II.
-
-Thus have I set down according to my reading in antiquity of money
-matters, omitting the imaginations of late writers, of whom some have
-said easterling money to take that name of a star, stamped in the border
-or ring of the penny; other some of a bird called a star or starling
-stamped in the circumference; and other (more unlikely) of being coined
-at Strivelin or Starling, a town in Scotland, etc.
-
-Now concerning halfpence and farthings, the account of which is more
-subtle than the pence, I need not speak of them more than that they were
-only made in the Exchange at London, and nowhere else: first appointed
-to be made by Edward I. in the 8th of his reign; and also at the same
-time the said king coined some few groats of silver, but they were not
-usual. The king's Exchange as London was near unto the cathedral church
-of St. Paul, and is to this day commonly called the Old Change, but in
-evidences the Old Exchange.
-
-The king's exchanger in this place was to deliver out to every other
-exchanger throughout England, or other the king's dominions, their
-coining irons, that is to say, one standard or staple, and two trussels
-or puncheons; and when the same was spent and worn, to receive them
-with an account what sum had been coined, and also their pix or bore
-of assay, and deliver other irons new graven, etc. I find that in the
-9th of King John, there was besides the mint at London, other mints
-at Winchester, Excester, Chichester, Canterburie, Rochester, Ipswich,
-Norwich, Linne, Lincolne, York, Carleil, Northampton, Oxford, St.
-Edmondsbury, and Durham. The exchanger, examiner, and trier, buyeth the
-silver for coinage, answering for every hundred pounds of silver bought
-in bullion or otherwise, ninety-eight pounds fifteen shillings, for he
-taketh twenty-five shillings for coinage.
-
-King Edward I., in the 27th of his reign, held a parliament at
-Stebenheth, in the house of Henry Waleis, mayor of London, wherein
-amongst other things there handled, the transporting of sterling money
-was forbidden.
-
-In the year 1351, William Edington, bishop of Winchester, and treasurer
-of England, a wise man, but loving the king's commodity more than the
-wealth of the whole realm, and common people (saith mine author[76])
-caused a new coin, called a groat, and a half-groat, to be coined and
-stamped, the groat to be taken for four pence, and the half-groat for
-two pence, not containing in weight according to the pence called
-easterlings, but much less, to wit, by five shillings in the pound; by
-reason whereof, victuals and merchandises became the dearer through the
-whole realm. About the same time also, the old coin of gold was changed
-into a new; but the old florin or noble, then so called, was worth much
-above the taxed rate of the new, and therefore the merchants engrossed
-up the old, and conveyed them out of the realm, to the great loss of the
-kingdom. Wherefore a remedy was provided by changing of the stamp.
-
-In the year 1411, King Henry IV. caused a new coin of nobles to be made,
-of less value than the old by four pence in the noble, so that fifty
-nobles should be a pound troy weight.
-
-In the year 1421 was granted to Henry V. a fifteenth, to be paid at
-Candlemas and at Martinmas, of such money as was then current, gold or
-silver, not overmuch clipped or washed; to wit, that if the noble were
-worth five shillings and eight pence, then the king should take it for
-a full noble of six shillings and eight pence, and if it were less of
-value than five shillings and eight pence, then the person paying that
-gold to make it good to the value of five shillings and eight pence,
-the king always receiving it for a whole noble of six shillings and
-eight pence. And if the noble so paid be better than five shillings and
-eight pence, the king to pay again the surplusage that it was better
-than five shillings and eight pence. Also this year was such scarcity of
-white money, that though a noble were so good of gold and weight as six
-shillings and eight pence, men might get no white money for them.
-
-In the year 1465, King Edward IV. caused a new coin both of gold and
-silver to be made, whereby he gained much; for he made of an old noble
-a royal, which he commanded to go for ten shillings. Nevertheless,
-to the same royal was put eight pence of alloy, and so weighed the
-more, being smitten with a new stamp, to wit, a rose. He likewise made
-half-angels of five shillings, and farthings of two shillings and six
-pence, angelets of six shillings and eight pence, and half-angels of
-three shillings and four pence. He made silver money of three pence, a
-groat, and so of other coins after that rate, to the great harm of the
-commons. W. Lord Hastings, the king's chamberlain, being master of the
-king's mints, undertook to make the monies under form following, to
-wit,--of gold, a piece of eight shillings and four pence sterling, which
-should be called a noble of gold, of the which there should be fifty
-such pieces in the pound weight of the Tower; another piece of gold of
-four shillings and two pence sterling, and to be of them an hundred such
-pieces in the pound; and a third piece of gold, of two shillings and one
-penny sterling, two hundred such pieces in the pound; every pound weight
-of the Tower to be worth twenty pounds, sixteen shillings, and eight
-pence, the which should be twenty-three carats, three grains and a half
-fine, etc., and for silver thirty-seven shillings and six pence; the
-piece of four pence to be one hundred and twelve groats and two pence in
-the pound weight.
-
-In the year 1504, King Henry VII. appointed a new coin, to wit, a groat,
-and half-groat, which bare but half faces; the same time also was coined
-a groat, which was in value twelve pence, but of those but a few, after
-the rate of forty pence the ounce.
-
-In the year 1526, the 18th of Henry VIII., the angel noble being
-then the sixth part of an ounce troy, so that six angels were just
-an ounce, which was forty shillings sterling, and the angel was also
-worth two ounces of silver, so that six angels were worth twelve ounces
-of silver, which was forty shillings. A proclamation was made on the
-sixth of September, that the angel should go for seven shillings and
-four pence, the royal for eleven shillings, and the crown for four
-shillings and four-pence. And on the fifth of November following, again
-by proclamation, the angel was enhanced to seven shillings and sixpence,
-and so every ounce of gold to be forty-five shillings, and the ounce of
-silver at three shillings and nine pence in value.
-
-In the year 1544, the 35th of Henry VIII., on the 16th of May,
-proclamation was made for the enhancing of gold to forty-eight
-shillings, and silver to four shillings the ounce. Also the king caused
-to be coined base moneys, to wit, pieces of twelve pence, six pence,
-four pence, two pence, and a penny, in weight as the late sterling, in
-show good silver, but inwardly copper. These pieces had whole, or broad
-faces, and continued current after that rate till the 5th of Edward
-VI., when they were on the 9th of July called down, the shilling to
-nine pence, the groat to three pence, etc., and on the 17th of August
-from nine pence to six pence, etc. And on the 30th of October was
-published new coins of silver and gold to be made, a piece of silver
-five shillings sterling, a piece of two shillings and five pence, of
-twelve pence, of six pence, a penny with a double rose, half-penny a
-single rose, and a farthing with a portclose. Coins of fine gold: a
-whole sovereign of thirty shillings, an angel of ten shillings, an
-angelet of five shillings. Of crown gold: a sovereign twenty shillings,
-half-sovereign ten shillings, five shillings, two shillings and six
-pence, and base moneys to pass as before, which continued till the 2nd
-of Queen Elizabeth, then called to a lower rate, taken to the mint,
-and refined, the silver whereof being coined with a new stamp of her
-majesty, the dross was carried to foul highways, to heighten them. This
-base money, for the time, caused the old sterling moneys to be hoarded
-up, so that I have seen twenty-one shillings current given for one old
-angel to gild withal. Also rents of lands and tenements, with prices of
-victuals, were raised far beyond the former rates, hardly since to be
-brought down. Thus much for base moneys coined and current in England
-have I known. But for leather moneys, as many people have fondly talked,
-I find no such matter. I read,[77] that King John of France, being taken
-prisoner by Edward the Black Prince at the battle of Poictiers, paid
-a ransom of three millions of florences, whereby he brought the realm
-into such poverty, that many years after they used leather money, with a
-little stud or nail of silver in the middle thereof. Thus much for mint
-and coinage, by occasion of this Tower (under correction of others more
-skilful) may suffice. And now to other accidents there.
-
-In the year 1360, the peace between England and France being confirmed,
-King Edward came over into England, and straight to the Tower, to see
-the French king then prisoner there, whose ransom he assessed at three
-millions of florences, and so delivered him from prison, and brought him
-with honour to the sea.
-
-In the year 1381, the rebels of Kent drew out of the Tower (where the
-king was then lodged) Simon Sudberie, archbishop of Canterbury, lord
-chancellor, Robert Hales, prior of St. John's, and treasurer of England,
-William Appleton, friar, the king's confessor, and John Legg, a sergeant
-of the king's, and beheaded them on the Tower hill, etc.
-
-In the year 1387, King Richard held his feast of Christmas in the Tower.
-And in the year 1399, the same king was sent prisoner to the Tower.
-
-In the year 1414, Sir John Oldcastell brake out of the Tower. And the
-same year, a parliament being holden at Leycester, a porter of the Tower
-was drawn, hanged, and headed, whose head was sent up, and set over the
-Tower gate, for consenting to one Whitlooke, that brake out of the Tower.
-
-In the year 1419, Friar Randulph was sent to the Tower, and was there
-slain by the parson of St. Peter's in the Tower.
-
-In the year 1428, there came to London, a lewd fellow, feigning himself
-to be sent from the Emperor to the young King Henry VI., calling himself
-Baron of Blakamoore, and that he should be the principal physician
-in this kingdom; but his subtlety being known, he was apprehended,
-condemned, drawn, hanged, headed, and quartered, his head set on the
-Tower of London, and his quarters on four gates of the city.
-
-In the year 1458, in Whitsun week, the Duke of Somerset, with Anthonie
-Rivers, and other four, kept jousts before the queen in the Tower of
-London, against three esquires of the queen's, and others.
-
-In the year 1465, King Henry VI. was brought prisoner to the Tower,
-where he remained long.
-
-In the year 1470, the Tower was yielded to Sir Richard Lee, mayor of
-London, and his brethren the aldermen, who forthwith entered the same,
-delivered King Henry of his imprisonment, and lodged him in the king's
-lodging there; but the next year he was again sent thither prisoner, and
-there murdered.
-
-In the year 1478, George Duke of Clarence was drowned with malmsey in
-the Tower; and within five years after King Edward V., with his brother,
-were said to be murdered there.
-
-In the year 1485, John Earl of Oxford was made constable of the Tower,
-and had custody of the lions granted him.[78]
-
-In the year 1501, in the month of May, was a royal tourney of lords and
-knights in the Tower of London before the king.
-
-In the year 1502, Queen Elizabeth, wife to Henry VII., died of
-childbirth in the Tower.
-
-In the year 1512, the chapel in the high White Tower was burnt. In the
-year 1536 Queen Anne Bullein was beheaded in the Tower. 1541, Lady
-Katherine Howard, wife to King Henry VIII., was also beheaded there.
-
-In the year 1546, the 27th of April, being Tuesday in Easter week,
-William Foxley, potmaker for the Mint in the Tower of London, fell
-asleep, and so continued sleeping, and could not be wakened with
-pricking, cramping, or otherwise, burning whatsoever, until the first
-day of the term, which was full fourteen days and fifteen nights, or
-more, for that Easter term beginneth not before seventeen days after
-Easter. The cause of his thus sleeping could not be known, though the
-same was diligently searched after by the king's physicians, and other
-learned men; yea, the king himself examining the said William Foxley,
-who was in all points found at his awakening to be as if he had slept
-but one night. And he lived more than forty years after in the said
-Tower, to wit, until the year of Christ 1587, and then deceased on
-Wednesday in Easter week.
-
-Thus much for these accidents: and now to conclude thereof in summary.
-This Tower is a citadel to defend or command the city; a royal palace
-for assemblies or treaties; a prison of state for the most dangerous
-offenders; the only place of coinage for all England at this time; the
-armoury for warlike provision; the treasury of the ornaments and jewels
-of the crown; and general conserver of the most records of the king's
-courts of justice at Westminster.
-
-
-TOWER ON LONDON BRIDGE
-
-The next tower on the river of Thames is on London bridge, at the north
-end of the drawbridge. This tower was newly begun to be built in the
-year 1426. John Reynwell, mayor of London, laid one of the first corner
-stones in the foundation of this work, the other three were laid by
-the sheriffs and bridge masters; upon every of these four stones was
-engraven in fair roman letters the name of "Ihesus." And these stones I
-have seen laid in the bridge storehouse since they were taken up, when
-that tower was of late newly made of timber. This gate and tower was at
-the first strongly built up of stone, and so continued until the year
-1577, in the month of April, when the same stone arched gate and tower
-being decayed, was begun to be taken down, and then were the heads of
-the traitors removed thence, and set on the tower over the gate at the
-bridge-foot towards Southwark. This said tower being taken down, a new
-foundation was drawn, and Sir John Langley, lord mayor, laid the first
-stone in the presence of the sheriffs and bridge masters, on the 28th of
-August; and in the month of September, in the year 1579, the same tower
-was finished--a beautiful and chargeable piece of work, all above the
-bridge being of timber.
-
-
-TOWER ON THE SOUTH OF LONDON BRIDGE
-
-Another tower there is on London bridge, to wit, over the gate at the
-south end of the same bridge towards Southwark. This gate, with the
-tower thereupon, and two arches of the bridge, fell down, and no man
-perished by the fall thereof, in the year 1436;[79] towards the new
-building whereof divers charitable citizens gave large sums of money;
-which gate, being then again newly built, was, with seventeen houses
-more on the bridge, in the year 1471, burnt by the mariners and sailors
-of Kent, Bastard Fauconbridge being their captain.
-
-
-BAYNARD'S CASTLE
-
-In the west of this city (saith Fitzstephen) are two most strong
-castles, etc. Also Gervasius Tilbury,[80] in the reign of Henry II.,
-writing of these castles, hath to this effect:--"Two castels," saith
-he, "are built with walles and rampires, whereof one is, in right of
-possession, Baynardes; the other the Barons of Mountfichet." The first
-of these castles, banking on the river Thames, was called Baynard's
-Castle, of Baynard a nobleman, that came in with the Conqueror, and
-then built it, and deceased in the reign of William Rufus; after whose
-decease Geffrey Baynard succeeded, and then William Baynard, in the
-year 1111, who by forfeiture for felony, lost his barony of Little
-Dunmow, and King Henry gave it wholly to Robert, the son of Richard,
-the son of Gilbard of Clare, and to his heirs, together with the honour
-of Baynard's Castle. This Robert married Maude de Sent Licio, lady
-of Bradham, and deceased 1134; was buried at St. Needes by Gilbert of
-Clare, his father. Walter his son succeeded him; he took to wife Matilde
-de Bocham, and after her decease, Matilde, the daughter and co-heir
-of Richard de Lucy, on whom he begat Robert and other: he deceased in
-the year 1198, and was buried at Dunmow; after whom succeeded Robert
-Fitzwater, a valiant knight.
-
-About the year 1213 there arose a great discord between King John
-and his barons, because Matilda, surnamed the Fair, daughter to the
-said Robert Fitzwater, whom the king unlawfully loved, but could not
-obtain her, nor her father would consent thereunto, whereupon, and for
-other like causes, ensued war through the whole realm. The barons were
-received into London, where they greatly endamaged the king; but in the
-end the king did not only therefore banish the said Fitzwater, amongst
-other, out of the realm, but also caused his castle called Baynard, and
-other his houses, to be spoiled; which thing being done, a messenger
-being sent unto Matilda the Fair about the king's suit, whereunto she
-would not consent, she was poisoned;[81] Robert Fitzwater, and other,
-being then passed into France, and some into Scotland, etc.[82]
-
-It happened in the year 1214, King John being then in France with a
-great army, that a truce was taken betwixt the two kings of England
-and France for the term of five years; and a river, or arm of the sea,
-being then between either host, there was a knight in the English host,
-that cried to them of the other side, willing some one of their knights
-to come and joust a course or twain with him; whereupon, without stay,
-Robert Fitzwater, being on the French part, made himself ready, ferried
-over, and got on horseback, without any man to help him, and showed
-himself ready to the face of his challenger, whom at the first course
-he struck so hard with his great spear, that horse and man fell to
-the ground; and when his spear was broken he went back to the King of
-France; which when the king had seen, "By God's tooth," quoth he (after
-his usual oath), "he were a king indeed that had such a knight." The
-friends of Robert, hearing these words, kneeled down, and said:--"O
-king, he is your knight; it is Robert Fitzwater." And thereupon, the
-next day he was sent for, and restored to the king's favour; by which
-means peace was concluded, and he received his livings, and had license
-to repair his castle of Baynard, and other castles.
-
-The year 1216, the 1st of Henry III., the castle of Hartford being
-delivered to Lewis the French prince, and the barons of England, Robert
-Fitzwater requiring to have the same, because the keeping thereof did
-by ancient right and title pertain to him, was answered by Lewis, "that
-Englishmen were not worthy to have such holds in keeping, because they
-did betray their own lord," etc. This Robert deceased in the year 1234,
-and was buried at Dunmow, and Walter his son that succeeded him. 1258,
-his barony of Baynard, was in the ward of King Henry, in the nonage
-of Robert Fitzwater. This Robert took to his second wife, AElianor,
-daughter and heir to the Earl of Ferrars, in the year 1289; and in
-the year 1303, on the 12th of March, before John Blondon, mayor of
-London, he acknowledged his service to the same city, and sware upon
-the Evangelists, that he would be true to the liberties thereof, and
-maintain the same to his power, and the counsel of the same to keep, etc.
-
-
-THE RIGHTS THAT BELONGED TO ROBERT FITZWALTER CHASTALIAN OF LONDON, LORD
-OF WODEHAM, WERE THESE:--
-
-The said Robert, and his heirs, ought to be, and are chief bannerers
-of London, in fee of the chastilarie, which he and his ancestors had
-by Castle Baynard, in the said city. In time of war the said Robert,
-and his heirs, ought to serve the city in manner as followeth: that is,
-The said Robert ought to come, he being the twentieth man of arms on
-horseback, covered with cloth, or armour, unto the great west door of
-St. Paul, with his banner displayed before him of his arms; and when he
-is come to the said door, mounted and apparelled, as before is said, the
-mayor with his aldermen and sheriffs armed in their arms, shall come out
-of the said church of St. Paul, unto the said door, with a banner in his
-hand, all on foot, which banner shall be gules, with the image of St.
-Paul, gold, the face, hands, feet, and sword, of silver; and as soon as
-the said Robert shall see the mayor, aldermen, and sheriffs, come on
-foot out of the church, armed with such a banner, he shall alight from
-his horse, and salute the mayor, and say to him,--"Sir mayor, I am come
-to do my service, which I owe to the city." And the mayor and aldermen
-shall answer,--"We give to you, as our bannerer of fee in this city,
-this banner of this city to bear, and govern to the honour and profit
-of the city to our power." And the said Robert and his heirs shall
-receive the banner in his hands, and shall go on foot out of the gate
-with the banner in his hands; and the mayor, aldermen, and sheriffs,
-shall follow to the door, and shall bring a horse to the said Robert
-worth twenty pounds, which horse shall be saddled with a saddle of the
-arms of the said Robert, and shall be covered with sandals of the said
-arms. Also they shall present to him twenty pounds sterling money, and
-deliver it to the chamberlain of the said Robert for his expenses that
-day. Then the said Robert shall mount upon the horse which the mayor
-presented to him, with the banner in his hand, and as soon as he is up,
-he shall say to the mayor, that he cause a marshal to be chosen for the
-host, one of the city; which marshal being chosen, the said Robert shall
-command the mayor and burgesses of the city to warn the commoners to
-assemble together, and they shall all go under the banner of St. Paul,
-and the said Robert shall bear it himself unto Aldgate, and there the
-said Robert and mayor shall deliver the said banner of St. Paul from
-thence, to whom they shall assent or think good. And if they must make
-any issue forth of the city, then the said Robert ought to choose two
-forth of every ward, the most sage personages, to foresee to the safe
-keeping of the city after they be gone forth. And this counsel shall be
-taken in the priory of the Trinity near unto Aldgate. And before every
-town or castle which the host of London besiege, if the siege continue a
-whole year, the said Robert shall have for every siege of the commonalty
-of London an hundred shillings for his travail, and no more. These
-be the rights that the said Robert hath in the time of war.--Rights
-belonging to Robert Fitzwalter, and to his heirs in the city of London,
-in the time of peace, are these: that is to say, the said Robert hath
-a soken or ward in the city, that is, a wall of the canonry of St.
-Paul, as a man goeth down the street before the brewhouse of St. Paul
-unto the Thames, and so to the side of the mill, which is in the water
-that cometh down from the Fleet bridge, and goeth so by London walls,
-betwixt the Friers preachers and Ludgate, and so returneth back by the
-house of the said Friars unto the said wall of the said canonry of St.
-Paul, that is, all the parish of St. Andrew, which is in the gift of his
-ancestors by the said seigniority. And so the said Robert hath appendant
-unto the said soken all these things under-written,--that he ought to
-have a soke man, and to place what sokeman he will, so he be of the
-sokemanry, or the same ward; and if any of the sokemanry be impleaded in
-the Guildhall, of any thing that toucheth not the body of the mayor that
-for the time is, or that toucheth the body of no sheriff, it is not
-lawful for the sokeman of the sokemanry of the said Robert Fitzwalter
-to demand a court of the said Robert, and the mayor, and his citizens
-of London, ought to grant him to have a court, and in his court he
-ought to bring his judgments, as it is assented and agreed upon in this
-Guildhall, that shall be given them. If any, therefore, be taken in his
-sokenly, he ought to have his stocks and imprisonment in his soken; and
-he shall be brought from thence to the Guildhall before the mayor, and
-there they shall provide him his judgment that ought to be given of him;
-but his judgment shall not be published till he come into the court of
-the said Robert, and in his liberty. And the judgment shall be such,
-that if he have deserved death by treason, he to be tied to a post in
-the Thames at a good wharf where boats are fastened, two ebbings and
-two flowings of the water. And if he be condemned for a common thief,
-he ought to be led to the Elms, and there suffer his judgment as other
-thieves. And so the said Robert and his heirs hath honour that he
-holdeth a great franchise within the city, that the mayor of the city
-and citizens are bound to do him of right, that is to say, that when the
-mayor will hold a great council, he ought to call the said Robert, and
-his heirs, to be with him in council of the city, and the said Robert
-ought to be sworn to be of council with the city against all people,
-saving the king and his heirs. And when the said Robert cometh to the
-hustings in the Guildhall of the city, the mayor, or his lieutenant,
-ought to rise against him, and set him down near unto him; and so long
-as he is in the Guildhall, all the judgment ought to be given by his
-mouth, according to the record of the recorders of the said Guildhall;
-and so many waifes as come so long as he is there, he ought to give
-them to the bailiffs of the town, or to whom he will, by the counsel of
-the mayor of the city. These be the franchises that belonged to Robert
-Fitzwalter in London, in time of peace; which for the antiquity thereof
-I have noted out of an old record.
-
-This Robert deceased in the year 1305, leaving issue Walter Fitzrobert,
-who had issue Robert Fitzwalter, unto whom, in the year 1320, the
-citizens of London acknowledged the right which they ought to him and
-his heirs for the Castle Baynard; he deceased 1325; unto whom succeeded
-Robert Fitzrobert, Fitzwalter, etc. More of the Lord Fitzwalter may
-ye read in my Annals in 51st of Edward III. But how this honour of
-Baynard's castle, with the appurtenances, fell from the possession of
-the Fitzwalters, I have not read; only I find, that in the year 1428,
-the 7th of Henry VI., a great fire was at Baynard's castle, and that
-same Humfrey, Duke of Gloucester, built it of new. By his death and
-attainder, in the year 1446, it came to the hands of Henry VI., and
-from him to Richard, Duke of York, of whom we read, that in the year
-1457 he lodged there, as in his own house. In the year 1460, the 28th
-of February, the Earls of March and of Warwick, with a great power of
-men, but few of name, entered the city of London, where they were of the
-citizens joyously received; and upon the 3rd of March, being Sunday,
-the said earl caused to be mustered his people in St. John's field;
-whereunto that host was showed and proclaimed certain articles and
-points wherein King Henry, as they said, had offended; and thereupon,
-it was demanded of the said people, whether the said Henry was worthy
-to reign as king any longer or not: whereunto the people cried Nay.
-Then it was asked of them, whether they would have the Earl of March
-for their king; and they cried, Yea, Yea. Whereupon, certain captains
-were appointed to bear report thereof unto the said Earl of March, then
-being lodged at his castle of Baynard. Whereof when the earl was by them
-advertised, he thanked God, and them for their election; notwithstanding
-he showed some countenance of insufficiency in him to occupy so great a
-charge, till by exhortation of the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Bishop
-of Excester, and certain noblemen, he granted to their petition; and
-on the next morrow at Paul's he went on procession, offered, and had
-_Te Deum_ sung. Then was he with great royalty conveyed to Westminster,
-and there, in the great hall, set in the king's seat, with St. Edward's
-sceptre in his hand.
-
-Edward IV. being dead, leaving his eldest son Edward, and his second son
-Richard, both infants, Richard, Duke of Glocester,[83] being elected by
-the nobles and commons in the Guildhall of London, took on him the title
-of the realm and kingdom, as imposed upon him in this Baynard's castle,
-as ye may read penned by Sir Thomas More, and set down in my Annals.
-
-Henry VII., about the year 1501, the 16th of his reign, repaired, or
-rather new built this house, not embattled, or so strongly fortified
-castle like, but far more beautiful and commodious for the entertainment
-of any prince or great estate. In the 17th of his reign, he, with his
-queen were lodged there, and came from thence to Powles church, where
-they made their offering, dined in the bishop's palace, and so returned.
-The 18th of his reign he was lodged there, and the ambassadors from the
-king of the Romans, where thither brought to his presence, and from
-thence the king came to Powles, and was there sworn to the king of the
-Romans, as the said king had sworn to him.
-
-The 20th of the said king, he with his knights of the order, all in
-their habits of the Garter, rode from the Tower of London, through the
-city, unto the cathedral church of St. Paul's, and there heard evensong,
-and from thence they rode to Baynard's castle, where the king lodged;
-and on the next morrow, in the same habit they rode from thence again
-to the said church of St. Paul's, went on procession, heard the divine
-service, offered, and returned. The same year the king of Castile was
-lodged there.
-
-In the year 1553, the 19th of July, the council, partly moved with the
-right of the Lady Mary's cause, partly considering that the most of
-the realm were wholly bent on her side, changing their mind from Lady
-Jane, lately proclaimed queen, assembled themselves at this Baynard's
-castle, where they communed with the Earl of Pembroke, and the Earl of
-Shrewsbury, and Sir John Mason, clerk of the council, sent for the lord
-mayor, and then riding into Cheap to the cross, where Garter King at
-Arms, trumpet being sounded, proclaimed the Lady Mary, daughter of King
-Henry VIII., and Queen Katherine, queen of England, etc.
-
-This castle now belongeth to the Earl of Pembroke.[84]
-
-Next adjoining to this castle was sometime a tower, the name whereof I
-have not read; but that the same was built by Edward II. is manifest by
-this that followeth. King Edward III., in the second year of his reign,
-gave unto William de Ros, of Hamolake, in Yorkshire, a tower upon the
-water of Thames, by the castle of Baynard in the city of London, which
-tower his father had built; he gave the said tower and appurtenances to
-the said William Hamolake, and his heirs, for a rose yearly, to be paid
-for all service due, etc. This tower, as seemeth to me, was since called
-Legat's inn, the 7th of Edward IV.
-
-
-TOWER OF MOUNTFIQUIT
-
-The next tower or castle, banking also on the river of Thames, was, as
-is afore showed, called Mountfiquit's castle, of a nobleman, Baron of
-Mountfiquit, the first builder thereof, who came in with William the
-Conqueror, and was since named Le Sir Mountfiquit. This castle he built
-in a place not far distant from Baynard's, towards the west. The same
-William Mountfiquit lived in the reign of Henry I., and was witness to
-a charter then granted to the city for the sheriffs of London. Richard
-Mountfiquit lived in King John's time; and in the year 1213, was by the
-same king banished the realm into France, when peradventure King John
-caused his castle of Mountfiquit, amongst other castles of the barons,
-to be overthrown; the which after his return, might be by him again
-re-edified; for the total destruction thereof was about the year 1276,
-when Robert Kilwarby, archbishop of Canterbury, began the foundation of
-the Fryers Preachers church there, commonly called the Blacke Fryers, as
-appeareth by a charter the 4th of Edward I., wherein is declared that
-Gregorie de Rocksley, mayor of London, and the barons of the same city,
-granted and gave unto the said Archbishop Robert, two lanes or ways next
-the street of Baynard's castle, and the tower of Mountfiquit, to be
-applied for the enlargement of the said church and place.
-
-One other tower there was also situate on the river of Thames near unto
-the said Blacke Fryers church, on the west part thereof built at the
-citizens' charges, but by license and commandment of Edward I. and of
-Edward II., as appeareth by their grants; which tower was then finished,
-and so stood for the space of three hundred years, and was at the last
-taken down by the commandment of John Shaw, mayor of London, in the year
-1502.
-
-Another tower, or castle, also was there in the west part of the city
-pertaining to the king. For I read, that in the year 1087, the 20th
-of William I., the city of London, with the church of St. Paul, being
-burned, Mauritius, then bishop of London, afterward began the foundation
-of a new church, whereunto King William, saith mine author, gave the
-choice stones of this castle standing near to the bank of the river of
-Thames, at the west end of the city. After this Mauritius, Richard his
-successor purchased the streets about Paul's church,[85] compassing the
-same with a wall of stone and gates. King Henry I. gave to this Richard
-so much of the moat or wall of the castle, on the Thames side to the
-south, as should be needful to make the said wall of the churchyard, and
-so much more as should suffice to make a way without the wall on the
-north side, etc.
-
-This tower or castle thus destroyed, stood, as it may seem, where now
-standeth the house called Bridewell. For notwithstanding the destruction
-of the said castle or tower, the house remained large, so that the kings
-of this realm long after were lodged there, and kept their courts; for
-until the 9th year of Henry III. the courts of law and justice were
-kept in the king's house, wheresoever he was lodged, and not elsewhere.
-And that the kings have been lodged, and kept their law courts in this
-place, I could show you many authors of record, but for plain proof
-this one may suffice. "_Haec est finalis concordia, facta in Curia
-Domini regis apud Sanct. Bridgid. London. a die Sancti Michaelis in
-15 dies, Anno regni regis Johannis 7. coram G. Fil. Petri. Eustachio
-de Fauconberg, Johanne de Gestlinge, Osbart filio Hervey, Walter De
-Crisping Justiciar. et aliis baronibus Domini regis._"[86] More, as
-Matthew Paris hath, about the year 1210, King John, in the 12th of his
-reign, summoned a parliament at St. Bride's in London, where he exacted
-of the clergy and religious persons the sum of one hundred thousand
-pounds; and besides all this, the white monks were compelled to cancel
-their privileges, and to pay forty thousand pounds to the king, etc.
-This house of St. Bride's of latter time being left, and not used by the
-kings, fell to ruin, insomuch that the very platform thereof remained
-for great part waste, and, as it were, but a laystall of filth and
-rubbish; only a fair well remained there. A great part of this house,
-namely, on the west, as hath been said, was given to the Bishop of
-Salisbury; the other part towards the east remaining waste until King
-Henry VIII. built a stately and beautiful house thereupon, giving it to
-name Bridewell, of the parish and well there. This house he purposely
-built for the entertainment of the Emperor Charles V., who in the year
-1522 came into this city, as I have showed in my Summary, Annals, and
-large Chronicles.
-
-On the north-west side of the city, near unto Redcross street, there
-was a tower, commonly called Barbican, or Burhkenning; for that the
-same being placed on a high ground, and also built of some good height,
-was in old time as a watch-tower for the city, from whence a man might
-behold and view the whole city towards the south, and also into Kent,
-Sussex, and Surrey, and likewise every other way, east, north, or west.
-
-Some other Burhkennings, or watch-towers, there were of old time in and
-about the city, all which were repaired, yea, and others new built, by
-Gilbart de Clare, Earl of Glocester, in the reign of King Henry III.,
-when the barons were in arms, and held the city against the king; but
-the barons being reconciled to his favour in the year 1267, he caused
-all their burhkennings, watch-towers, and bulwarks, made and repaired
-by the said earl, to be plucked down, and the ditches to be filled
-up, so that nought of them might be seen to remain; and then was this
-burhkenning, amongst the rest, overthrown and destroyed; and although
-the ditch near thereunto, called Hound's ditch, was stopped up, yet the
-street of long time after was called Hound's ditch; and of late time
-more commonly called Barbican. The plot or seat of this burhkenning, or
-watch-tower, King Edward III., in the year 1336, and the 10th of his
-reign, gave unto Robert Ufford, Earl of Suffolk, by the name of his
-manor of Base court, in the parish of St. Giles without Cripplegate, of
-London, commonly called the Barbican.
-
-Tower Royal was of old time the king's house. King Stephen was there
-lodged; but sithence called the Queen's Wardrobe. The princess, mother
-to King Richard II. in the 4th of his reign was lodged there; being
-forced to fly from the Tower of London when the rebels possessed it. But
-on the 15th of June (saith Froissart), Wat Tyler being slain, the king
-went to this lady princess his mother, then lodged in the Tower Royal,
-called the Queen's Wardrobe, where she had tarried two days and two
-nights; which tower (saith the record of Edward III., the 36th year[87])
-was in the parish of St. Michel de Paternoster, etc. In the year 1386,
-King Richard, with Queen Anne his wife, kept their Christmas at Eltham,
-whither came to him Lion, king of Ermony,[88] under pretence to reform
-peace betwixt the kings of England and France; but what his coming
-profited he only understood; for besides innumerable gifts that he
-received of the king and his nobles, the king lying then in this Tower
-Royal, at the Queen's Wardrobe in London, granted to him a charter of a
-thousand pounds by year during his life. He was, as he affirmed, chased
-out of his kingdom by the Tartarians. More concerning this tower shall
-you read when you come to Vintry Ward, in which it standeth.
-
-Sernes tower in Bucklesberie, was sometime the king's house. Edward
-III., in the 18th of his reign, appointed his exchange of moneys therein
-to be kept; and in the 32d, he gave the same tower to his free chapel of
-St. Stephen at Westminster.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[64] W. Malmesbury, Matthew Paris, John London.
-
-[65] Ex charta.
-
-[66] Roger Wendover, John Bever.
-
-[67] "St. Katherine's mill stood where now is the Iron Gate of the
-Tower."--_Stow._
-
-[68] Lynxes, porcupines.
-
-[69] Patent, the 15th of King John.
-
-[70] Matthew Paris.
-
-[71] W. Malmsbury.
-
-[72] Roger Hoveden.
-
-[73] Guthuron's lane, now Gutter lane, leading out of Cheapside, was a
-small lane, formerly tenanted by goldsmiths; the person who gave his
-name to the lane, was evidently of Saxon or Danish origin.
-
-[74] That is, seventeen pence halfpenny farthing to be alloy.
-
-[75] By the terms _force_ and _deble_, it is presumed the maximum and
-minimum weights are intended.
-
-[76] Thomas Walsingham.
-
-[77] Philip Comines.
-
-[78] Patent, 1st of Henry VII.
-
-[79] W. Dunthorne.
-
-[80] Fitzstephen, Gerv. Tilbury.
-
-[81] "Virginitie defended with the losse of worldly goods, and life of
-the bodie, for life of the soule."--_Stow._
-
-[82] Liber Dunmow.
-
-[83] Stow in his first edition says, "there practised for the crown ...;"
-and the admirable scene in _Richard the Third_ (act III., sc. 7), in
-which Gloucester is by Buckingham, the mayor, and citizens of London,
-"enforced to a world of cares," is laid by Shakspeare with great
-historic truth in "the court of Baynard's castle."
-
-[84] It was destroyed in the Great Fire, before which time it had become
-the residences of the Earls of Shrewsbury.
-
-[85] Vita Arkenwald.
-
-[86] Liber Burton, super Trent.
-
-[87] Liber Sanct. Mariae Eborum.
-
-[88] Armenia. Ermony, from the Old French "Ermenie." See Roquefort's
-_Glossaire_, s. v.
-
-Chaucer, too, in his _Monke's Tale_, line 14,343, etc., says:--
-
- "Ne dorste never be so corageous
- Ne non _Ermin_, ne non Egiptien,
- Ne Surrien, ne non Arabien."
-
-
-
-
-OF SCHOOLS AND OTHER HOUSES OF LEARNING
-
-
-"In the reign of King Stephen and of Henry II.," saith Fitzstephen,
-"there were in London three principal churches, which had famous
-schools, either by privilege and ancient dignity, or by favour of some
-particular persons, as of doctors which were accounted notable and
-renowned for knowledge in philosophy. And there were other inferior
-schools also. Upon festival days the masters made solemn meetings in the
-churches, where their scholars disputed logically and demonstratively;
-some bringing enthimems, other perfect syllogisms; some disputed for
-shew, other to trace out the truth; cunning sophisters were thought
-brave scholars when they flowed with words; others used fallacies;
-rhetoricians spake aptly to persuade, observing the precepts of art,
-and omitting nothing that might serve their purpose: the boys of
-diverse schools did cap or pot verses, and contended of the principles
-of grammar; there were some which on the other side with epigrams and
-rymes, nipping and quipping their fellowes, and the faults of others,
-though suppressing their names, moved thereby much laughter among their
-auditors." Hitherto Fitzstephen, for schools and scholars, and for their
-exercises in the city in his days; sithence the which time, as to me it
-seemeth, by the increase of colleges and students in the universities
-of Oxford and Cambridge, the frequenting of schools, and exercises of
-scholars in the city, as had been accustomed, hath much decreased.
-
-The three principal churches which had these famous schools by
-privileges, must needs be the cathedral church of St. Paul for one;
-seeing that by a general council, holden in the year of Christ 1176,
-at Rome, in the patriarchy of Laterane, it was decreed, that every
-cathedral church should have his schoolmaster to teach poor scholars,
-and others as had been accustomed, and that no man should take any
-reward for license to teach. The second, as most ancient, may seem
-to have been the monastery of St. Peter's at Westminster, whereof
-Ingulphus, Abbot of Crowland, in the reign of William the Conqueror,
-writeth thus:--"I, Ingulphus, an humble servant of God, born of
-English parents, in the most beautiful city of London, for to attain
-to learning, was first put to Westminster, and after to study of
-Oxford," etc. And writing in praise of Queen Edgitha, wife to Edward
-the Confessor: "I have seen her," saith he, "often when being a boy, I
-came to see my father dwelling in the king's court, and often coming
-from school, when I met her, she would oppose me, touching my learning
-and lesson; and falling from grammar to logic, wherein she had some
-knowledge, she would subtilly conclude an argument with me, and by her
-handmaiden give me three or four pieces of money, and send me unto the
-palace where I should receive some victuals, and then be dismissed."
-
-The third school seemeth to have been in the monastery of St. Saviour,
-at Bermondsey in Southwark; for other priories, as of St. John by
-Smithfield, St. Bartholomew in Smithfield, St. Mary Overie in Southwark,
-and that of the Holy Trinity by Aldgate, were all of later foundation,
-and the friaries, colleges, and hospitals, in this city, were raised
-since them in the reigns of Henry III., Edward I., II., and III., etc.
-All which houses had their schools, though not so famous as these first
-named.
-
-But touching schools more lately advanced in this city, I read, that
-King Henry V., having suppressed the priories aliens, whereof some were
-about London; namely, one hospital, called Our Lady of Rouncivall,
-by Charing Cross; one other hospital in Oldborne; one other without
-Cripplegate; and the fourth without Aldersgate; besides other that are
-now worn out of memory, and whereof there is no monument remaining more
-than Rouncivall, converted to a brotherhood, which continued till the
-reign of Henry VIII. or Edward VI. This, I say, and other their schools
-being broken up and ceased, King Henry VI., in the 24th of his reign,
-by patent, appointed, that there should be in London grammar schools,
-besides St. Paul's, at St. Martin's le Grand, St. Mary le Bow in Cheap,
-St. Dunstan's in the west, and St. Anthony's. And in the next year, to
-wit, 1447, the said king ordained by parliament that four other grammar
-schools should be erected, to wit, in the parishes of St. Andrew in
-Oldborne, Allhallowes the Great in Thames street, St. Peter's upon
-Cornhill, and in the hospital of St. Thomas of Acons in West Cheap;
-since the which time as divers schools, by suppressing of religious
-houses, whereof they were members, in the reign of Henry VIII., have
-been decayed, so again have some others been newly erected, and founded
-for them; as namely Paul's school, in place of an old ruined house, was
-built in most ample manner, and largely endowed, in the year 1512, by
-John Collet, Doctor of Divinity, Dean of Paul's, for one hundred and
-fifty-three poor men's children, for which there was ordained a master,
-surmaster, or usher, and a chaplain. Again, in the year 1553, after
-the erection of Christ's hospital, in the late dissolved house of the
-Gray Friars, a great number of poor children being taken in, a school
-was also ordained there at the citizen's charges. Also, in the year
-1561, the Merchant Taylors of London founded one notable free grammar
-school, in the parish of St. Laurence Poultney by Candleweeke street,
-Richard Hils, late master of that company, having given five hundred
-pounds towards the purchase of a house, called the Mannor of the Rose,
-sometime the Duke of Buckingham's, wherein the school is kept. As for
-the meeting of the schoolmasters on festival days, at festival churches,
-and the disputing of their scholars logically, etc., whereof I have
-before spoken, the same was long since discontinued; but the arguing of
-the schoolboys about the principles of grammar hath been continued even
-till our time; for I myself, in my youth, have yearly seen, on the eve
-of St. Bartholomew the Apostle, the scholars of divers grammar schools
-repair unto the churchyard of St. Bartholomew, the priory in Smithfield,
-where upon a bank boarded about under a tree, some one scholar hath
-stepped up, and there hath opposed and answered, till he were by some
-better scholar overcome and put down; and then the overcomer taking
-the place, did like as the first; and in the end the best opposers
-and answerers had rewards, which I observed not but it made both good
-schoolmasters, and also good scholars, diligently against such times to
-prepare themselves for the obtaining of this garland. I remember there
-repaired to these exercises, amongst others, the masters and scholars of
-the free schools of St. Paul's in London, of St. Peter's at Westminster,
-of St. Thomas Acon's hospital, and of St. Anthonie's hospital; whereof
-the last-named commonly presented the best scholars, and had the prize
-in those days.
-
-This priory of St. Bartholomew being surrendered to Henry VIII., those
-disputations of scholars in that place surceased; and was again, only
-for a year or twain, in the reign of Edward VI., revived in the cloister
-of Christ's hospital, where the best scholars, then still of St.
-Anthonie's school,[89] were rewarded with bows and arrows of silver,
-given to them by Sir Martin Bowes, goldsmith. Nevertheless, however the
-encouragement failed, the scholars of Paul's, meeting with them of St.
-Anthonie's, would call them Anthonie pigs, and they again would call the
-other pigeons of Paul's, because many pigeons were bred in St. Paul's
-church, and St. Anthonie was always figured with a pig following him;
-and mindful of the former usage, did for a long season disorderly in
-the open street provoke one another with, _Salve tu quoque, placet tibi
-mecum disputare? Placet._ And so proceeding from this to questions in
-grammar, they usually fell from words to blows with their satchels full
-of books, many times in great heaps, that they troubled the streets and
-passengers; so that finally they were restrained with the decay of St.
-Anthonie's school. Out of this school have sprung divers famous persons,
-whereof although time hath buried the names of many, yet in mine own
-remembrance may be numbered these following:--Sir Thomas More, knight,
-lord chancellor of England, Dr. Nicholas Heath, sometime Bishop of
-Rochester, after of Worcester, and lastly Archbishop of York and Lord
-Chancellor of England; Doctor John Whitgift, Bishop of Worcester, and
-after Archbishop of Canterbury, etc.
-
-Of later time, in the year of Christ 1582, there was founded a public
-lecture in chirurgerie, to be read in the College of Physicians in
-Knight riders street, to begin in the year 1584, on the sixth of May,
-and so to be continued for ever, twice every week, on Wednesday and
-Friday, by the honourable Baron, John Lord Lombley, and the learned
-Richard Caldwell, doctor in physic, the reader whereof to be Richard
-Forster, doctor of physic, during his life.
-
-Furthermore, about the same time there was also begun a mathematical
-lecture, to be read in a fair old chapel, built by Simon Eayre, within
-the Leaden hall; whereof a learned citizen born, named Thomas Hood, was
-the first reader. But this chapel, and other parts of that hall, being
-employed for stowage of goods taken out of a great Spanish caracke, the
-said lecture ceased any more to be read, and was then in the year 1588
-read in the house of master Thomas Smith in Grasse street, etc.
-
-Last of all, Sir Thomas Gresham, knight, agent to the queen's highness,
-by his last will and testament made in the year 1579, gave the Royal
-Exchange, and all the buildings thereunto appertaining; that is to
-say, the one moiety to the mayor and commonalty of London and their
-successors, upon trust that they perform as shall be declared; and the
-other moiety to the mercers in like confidence. The mayor and commonalty
-are to find four to read lectures of divinity, astronomy, music, and
-geometry, within his dwelling-house in Bishopsgate street, and to bestow
-the sum of two hundred pounds; to wit, fifty pounds the piece, etc.
-The mercers likewise are to find three readers, that is, in civil law,
-physic, and rhetoric, within the same dwelling-house, the sum of one
-hundred and fifty pounds; to every reader, fifty pounds, etc.: which
-gift hath been since that time confirmed by parliament, to take effect
-and begin after the decease of the Lady Anne Gresham, which happened
-in the year 1596, and so to continue for ever. Whereupon the lecturers
-were accordingly chosen and appointed to have begun their readings
-in the month of June, 1597; whose names were, Anthony Wootton, for
-divinity; Doctor Mathew Guin, for physic; Doctor Henry Mountlow, for
-the civil law; Doctor John Bull, for music; Beerewood, for astronomy;
-Henry Brigges, for geometry; and Caleb Willis, for rhetoric. These
-lectures are read daily, Sundays excepted, in the term times, by every
-one upon his day, in the morning betwixt nine and ten, in Latin; in
-the afternoon, betwixt two and three, in English; save that Dr. Bull
-is dispensed with to read the music lecture in English only upon two
-several days, Thursday and Saturday, in the afternoons, betwixt three
-and four of the clock.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[89] "Howsoever the same be now fallen, both in number and
-estimation."--_1st edition_, p. 56.
-
-
-
-
-HOUSES OF STUDENTS IN THE COMMON LAW
-
-
-But besides all this, there is in and about this city a whole
-university, as it were, of students, practicers or pleaders, and judges
-of the laws of this realm, not living of common stipends, as in other
-universities it is for the most part done, but of their own private
-maintenance, as being altogether fed either by their places or practice,
-or otherwise by their proper revenue, or exhibition of parents and
-friends; for that the younger sort are either gentlemen or the sons of
-gentlemen, or of other most wealthy persons. Of these houses there be at
-this day fourteen in all; whereof nine do stand within the liberties of
-this city, and five in the suburbs thereof; to wit:
-
-
-_Within the liberties_
-
-Serjeants' inn in Fleet Street, Serjeants' inn in Chancery lane; for
-judges and sergeants only.
-
-The Inner temple, the Middle temple, in Fleet street; houses of court.
-
-Clifford's inn in Fleet street, Thavies inn in Oldborne, Furnival's inn
-in Oldborne, Barnard's inn in Oldborne, Staple inn in Oldborne; houses
-of Chancery.
-
-
-_Without the liberties_
-
-Gray's inn in Oldborne, Lincoln's inn in Chancery lane by the old
-Temple;[90] houses of court.
-
-Clement's inn, New inn, Lion's inn; houses of Chancery, without Temple
-bar, in the liberty of Westminster.
-
-There was sometime an inn of sergeants in Oldborne, as you may read of
-Scrop's inn over against St. Andrew's church.
-
-There was also one other inn of Chancery, called Chester's inn, for the
-nearness of the Bishop of Chester's house, but more commonly termed
-Strand inn, for that it stood in Strand street, and near unto Strand
-bridge without Temple bar, in the liberty of the duchy of Lancaster.
-This inn of Chancery, with other houses near adjoining, were pulled
-down in the reign of Edward VI. by Edward Duke of Sommerset, who in
-place thereof raised that large and beautiful house, but yet unfinished,
-called Sommerset house.
-
-There was moreover, in the reign of King Henry I., a tenth house of
-Chancery, mentioned by Justice Fortescue in his book of the laws of
-England, but where it stood, or when it was abandoned, I cannot find,
-and therefore I will leave it, and return to the rest.
-
-The houses of court be replenished partly with young students, and
-partly with graduates and practisers of the law; but the inns of
-Chancery, being, as it were, provinces, severally subjected to the inns
-of court, be chiefly furnished with officers, attorneys, solicitors, and
-clerks, that follow the courts of the King's Bench or Common Pleas; and
-yet there want not some other being young students, that come thither
-sometimes from one of the Universities, and sometimes immediately from
-grammar schools; and these having spent some time in studying upon
-the first elements and grounds of the law, and having performed the
-exercise of their own houses (called Boltas Mootes,[91] and putting of
-cases), they proceed to be admitted, and become students in some of
-these four houses or inns of court, where continuing by the space of
-seven years or thereabouts, they frequent readings, meetings, boltings,
-and other learned exercises, whereby growing ripe in the knowledge of
-the laws, and approved withal to be of honest conversation, they are
-either, by the general consent of the benchers or readers, being of
-the most ancient, grave, and judicial men of every inn of the court,
-or by the special privilege of the present reader there, selected and
-called to the degree of utter barristers, and so enabled to be common
-counsellors, and to practice the law, both in their chambers and at the
-bars.
-
-Of these, after that they be called to a further step of preferment,
-called the Bench, there are twain every year chosen among the benchers
-of every inn of court to be readers there, who do make their readings at
-two times in the year also; that is, one in Lent, and the other at the
-beginning of August.
-
-And for the help of young students in every of the inns of Chancery,
-they do likewise choose out of every one inn of court a reader, being
-no bencher, but an utter barrister there, of ten or twelve years'
-continuance, and of good profit in study. Now, from these of the said
-degree of counsellors, or utter barristers, having continued therein the
-space of fourteen or fifteen years at the least, the chiefest and best
-learned are by the benchers elected to increase the number, as I said,
-of the bench amongst them; and so in their time do become first single,
-and then double, readers to the students of those houses of court;
-after which last reading they be named apprentices at the law, and, in
-default of a sufficient number of sergeants at law, these are, at the
-pleasure of the prince, to be advanced to the places of sergeants; out
-of which number of sergeants also the void places of judges are likewise
-ordinarily filled; albeit, now and then some be advanced, by the special
-favour of the prince, to the estate, dignity, and place, both of
-sergeant and judge, as it were in one instant. But from thenceforth they
-hold not any room in those inns of court, being translated to one of the
-said two inns, called Sergeante's inns, where none but the sergeants and
-judges do converse.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[90] "In Oldborne."--_1st edition._
-
-[91] Cowell, in his _Law Dictionary_, says, "Bolting is a term of art
-used in Gray's Inn, and applied to the bolting or arguing of _moot_
-cases." He endeavours to show that the bolting of cases is analogous
-to the _boulting_ or sifting of meal through a bag. All readers of
-Shakspeare must be familiar with the use of the word in the latter sense.
-
-
-
-
-OF ORDERS AND CUSTOMS
-
-
-Of orders and customs in this city of old time, Fitzstephen saith as
-followeth: "Men of all trades, sellers of all sorts of wares, labourers
-in every work, every morning are in their distinct and several places:
-furthermore, in London, upon the river side, between the wine in ships
-and the wine to be sold in taverns, is a common cookery, or cooks' row;
-there daily, for the season of the year, men might have meat, roast,
-sod, or fried; fish, flesh, fowls, fit for rich and poor. If any come
-suddenly to any citizen from afar, weary, and not willing to tarry till
-the meat be bought and dressed, while the servant bringeth water for his
-master's hands, and fetcheth bread, he shall have immediately from the
-river's side all viands whatsoever he desireth: what multitude soever,
-either of soldiers or strangers, do come to the city, whatsoever hour,
-day or night, according to their pleasures may refresh themselves; and
-they which delight in delicateness may be satisfied with as delicate
-dishes there as may be found elsewhere. And this Cooke's row is very
-necessary to the city; and, according to Plato in Gorgius, next to
-physic, is the office of cooks, as part of a city.
-
-"Without one of the gates is a plain field, both in name and deed,
-where every Friday, unless it be a solemn bidden holy day, is a notable
-show of horses to be sold; earls, barons, knights, and citizens repair
-thither to see or to buy; there may you of pleasure see amblers pacing
-it delicately; there may you see trotters fit for men of arms, sitting
-more hardly; there may you have notable young horses, not yet broken;
-there may you have strong steeds, well limbed geldings, whom the buyers
-do specially regard for pace and swiftness; the boys which ride these
-horses, sometimes two, sometimes three, do run races for wagers, with
-a desire of praise, or hope of victory. In another part of that field
-are to be sold all implements of husbandry, as also fat swine, milch
-kine, sheep, and oxen; there stand also mares and horses fit for ploughs
-and teams, with their young colts by them. At this city, merchant
-strangers of all nations had their keys and wharfs; the Arabians sent
-gold; the Sabians spice and frankincense; the Scythian armour, Babylon
-oil, Indian purple garments, Egypt precious stones, Norway and Russia
-ambergreece and sables, and the Frenchmen wine. According to the truth
-of Chronicles, this city is ancienter than Rome, built of the ancient
-Troyans and of Brute, before that was built by Romulus and Rhemus; and
-therefore useth the ancient customs of Rome. This city, even as Rome,
-is divided into wards; it hath yearly sheriffs instead of consuls; it
-hath the dignity of senators in aldermen. It hath under officers, common
-sewers, and conduits in streets; according to the quality of causes,
-it hath general courts and assembles upon appointed days. I do not
-think that there is any city wherein are better customs, in frequenting
-the churches, in serving God, in keeping holy days, in giving alms,
-in entertaining strangers, in solemnising marriages, in furnishing
-banquets, celebrating funerals, and burying dead bodies.
-
-"The only plagues of London are immoderate quaffing among the foolish
-sort, and often casualties by fire. Most part of the bishops, abbots,
-and great lords of the land have houses there, whereunto they resort,
-and bestow much when they are called to parliament by the king, or to
-council by their metropolitan, or otherwise by their private business."
-
-Thus far Fitzstephen, of the estate of things in his time, whereunto may
-be added the present, by conference whereof the alteration will easily
-appear.
-
-Men of trades and sellers of wares in this city have oftentimes since
-changed their places, as they have found their best advantage. For
-whereas mercers and haberdashers used to keep their shops in West
-Cheape,[92] of later time they held them on London Bridge, where partly
-they yet remain. The goldsmiths of Gutheron's lane and Old Exchange
-are now for the most part removed into the south side of West Cheape,
-the peperers and grocers of Soper's lane are now in Bucklesberrie, and
-other places dispersed. The drapers of Lombard street and of Cornehill
-are seated in Candlewick street and Watheling street; the skinners from
-St. Marie Pellipers, or at the Axe, into Budge row and Walbrooke; the
-stock fishmongers in Thames street; wet fishmongers in Knightriders
-street and Bridge street; the ironmongers, of Ironmongers' lane and Old
-Jurie, into Thames street; the vintners from the Vinetree into divers
-places. But the brewers for the more part remain near to the friendly
-water of Thames; the butchers in Eastcheape, St. Nicholas shambles,
-and the Stockes market; the hosiers of old time in Hosier lane, near
-unto Smithfield, are since removed into Cordwayner street, the upper
-part thereof by Bow church, and last of all into Birchoveris lane by
-Cornehill; the shoe-makers and curriers of Cordwayner street removed
-the one to St. Martin's le Grand, the other to London wall near unto
-Mooregate; the founders remain by themselves in Lothberie; cooks,[93]
-or pastelars, for the more part in Thames street, the other dispersed
-into divers parts; poulters of late removed out of the Poultrie, betwixt
-the Stockes and the great Conduit in Cheape, into Grasse street and St.
-Nicholas shambles; bowyers, from Bowyers' row by Ludgate into divers
-places, and almost worn out with the fletchers; pater noster makers of
-old time, or bead-makers, and text-writers, are gone out of Pater noster
-row, and are called stationers of Paule's churchyard;[94] patten-makers,
-of St. Margaret, Pattens' lane, clean worn out; labourers every work-day
-are to be found in Cheape, about Soper's land end; horse-coursers and
-sellers of oxen, sheep, swine, and such like, remain in their old market
-of Smithfield, etc.
-
-That merchants of all nations had their keys and wharfs at this city,
-whereunto they brought their merchandises before and in the reign of
-Henry II., mine author wrote of his own knowledge to be true, though for
-the antiquity of the city he took the common opinion. Also that this
-city was in his time and afore divided into wards, had yearly sheriffs,
-aldermen, general courts, and assemblies, and such like notes by him set
-down, in commendation of the citizens; whereof there is no question,
-he wrote likewise of his own experience, as being born and brought up
-amongst them.
-
-And to confirm his opinion, concerning merchandises then hither
-transported, whereof happily may be some argument, Thomas Clifford[95]
-(before Fitzstephen's time), writing of Edward the Confessor, saith
-to this effect: "King Edward, intending to make his sepulchre at
-Westminster; for that it was near to the famous city of London, and
-the river of Thames, that brought in all kind of merchandises from all
-parts of the world, etc." And William of Malmesbury, that lived in
-the reign of William I. and II., Henry I., and King Stephen, calleth
-this a noble city, full of wealthy citizens, frequented with the trade
-of merchandises from all parts of the world. Also I read, in divers
-records, that of old time no woad was stowed or harboured in this city,
-but all was presently sold in the ships, except by license purchased
-of the sheriffs, till of more later time; to wit, in the year 1236,
-Andrew Bokerell, being mayor, by assent of the principal citizens, the
-merchants of Amiens, Nele, and Corby, purchased letters insealed with
-the common seal of the city, that they when they come might harbour
-their woads, and therefore should give the mayor every year fifty
-marks sterling; and the same year they gave one hundred pounds towards
-the conveying of water from Tyborn to this city. Also the merchants
-of Normandie made fine for license to harbour their woads till it was
-otherwise provided, in the year 1263, Thomas Fitz Thomas being mayor,
-etc., which proveth that then as afore, they were here amongst other
-nations privileged.
-
-It followeth in Fitzstephen, that the plagues of London in that time
-were immoderate quaffing among fools, and often casualties by fire. For
-the first--to wit, of quaffing--it continueth as afore, or rather is
-mightily increased, though greatly qualified among the poorer sort, not
-of any holy abstinence, but of mere necessity, ale and beer being small,
-and wines in price above their reach. As for prevention of casualties
-by fire, the houses in this city being then built all of timber, and
-covered with thatch of straw or reed, it was long since thought good
-policy in our forefathers wisely to provide, namely, in the year of
-Christ 1189, the first of Richard I., Henry Fitzalwine[96] being then
-mayor, that all men in this city should build their houses of stone up
-to a certain height, and to cover them with slate or baked tile; since
-which time, thanks be given to God, there hath not happened the like
-often consuming fires in this city as afore.
-
-But now in our time, instead of these enormities, others are come
-in place no less meet to be reformed; namely, purprestures, or
-encroachments on the highways, lanes, and common grounds, in and
-about this city; whereof a learned gentleman and grave citizen[97]
-hath not many years since written and exhibited a book to the mayor
-and commonalty; which book, whether the same have been by them read
-and diligently considered upon, I know not, but sure I am nothing is
-reformed since concerning this matter.
-
-Then the number of cars, drays, carts, and coaches, more than hath
-been accustomed, the streets and lanes being straitened, must needs be
-dangerous, as daily experience proveth.
-
-The coachman rides behind the horse tails, lasheth them, and looketh not
-behind him; the drayman sitteth and sleepeth on his dray, and letteth
-his horse lead him home. I know that, by the good laws and customs of
-this city,[98] shodde carts[99] are forbidden to enter the same, except
-upon reasonable cause, as service of the prince, or such like, they be
-tolerated. Also that the fore horse of every carriage should be lead by
-hand; but these good orders are not observed. Of old time coaches were
-not known in this island, but chariots or whirlicotes, then so called,
-and they only used of princes or great estates, such as had their
-footmen about them; and for example to note, I read that Richard II.,
-being threatened by the rebels of Kent, rode from the Tower of London to
-the Myles end, and with him his mother, because she was sick and weak,
-in a whirlicote, the Earls of Buckingham, Kent, Warwicke, and Oxford,
-Sir Thomas Percie, Sir Robert Knowles, the Mayor of London, Sir Aubery
-de Vere, that bare the king's sword, with other knights and esquires
-attending on horseback. But in the next year, the said King Richard took
-to wife Anne, daughter to the King of Bohemia, that first brought hither
-the riding upon side-saddles; and so was the riding in wherlicoates and
-chariots forsaken, except at coronations and such like spectacles; but
-now of late years the use of coaches, brought out of Germany, is taken
-up, and made so common, as there is neither distinction of time nor
-difference of persons observed; for the world runs on wheels with many
-whose parents were glad to go on foot.
-
-Last of all, mine author in this chapter hath these words:[100] "Most
-part of the bishops, abbots, and great lords of the land, as if they
-were citizens and freemen of London, had many fair houses to resort
-unto, and many rich and wealthy gentlemen spent their money there." And
-in another place he hath these words: "Every Sunday in Lent a fresh
-company of young men comes into the fields on horseback, and the best
-horsemen conducteth the rest; then march forth the citizens' sons,
-and other young men, with disarmed lances and shields, and practise
-feats of war; many courtiers likewise and attendants of noblemen repair
-to this exercise, and whilst the hope of victory doth inflame their
-minds, they do show good proof how serviceable they would be in martial
-affairs, etc." Again he saith: "This city, in the troublesome time
-of King Stephen, showed at a muster twenty thousand armed horsemen
-and forty thousand footmen, serviceable for the wars, etc." All which
-sayings of the said author, well considered, do plainly prove that in
-those days the inhabitants and repairers to this city, of what estate
-soever, spiritual or temporal, having houses here, lived together in
-good amity with the citizens, every man observing the customs and orders
-of the city, and those to be contributary to charges here, rather than
-in any part of the land wheresoever. This city, being the heart of the
-realm, the king's chamber and prince's seat, whereunto they made repair,
-and showed their forces, both of horses and of men, which caused in
-troublesome time, as of King Stephen, the musters of this city to be so
-great in number.
-
-And here, to touch somewhat of greater families and households kept in
-former times by noblemen, and great estates of this realm, according
-to their honours or dignities,[101] I have seen an account made by H.
-Leicester, cofferer to Thomas Earl of Lancaster, for one whole year's
-expenses in the Earl's house, from the day next after Michaelmas, in
-the seventh year of Edward II., until Michaelmass in the eight year
-of the same king, amounting to the sum of L7957 13_s._ 4-1/2_d._ as
-followeth:[102]
-
-To wit, in the pantry, buttery, and kitchen, L3405, etc.: for one
-hundred and eighty-four tons, one pipe of red or claret wine, and one
-ton of white wine bought for the house, L104 17_s._ 6_d._
-
-For grocery ware, L180 17_s._
-
-For six barrels of sturgeon, L19.
-
-For six thousand eight hundred stock-fishes, so called for dried fishes
-of all sorts, as lings, habardines, and other, L41 6_s._ 7_d._
-
-For one thousand seven hundred and fourteen pounds of waxe, with
-vermelion and turpentine to make red waxe, L314 7_s._ 4-1/4_d._
-
-For two thousand three hundred and nineteen pounds of tallow candles for
-the household, and one thousand eight hundred and seventy of lights for
-Paris candles, called perchers, L31 14_s._ 3_d._
-
-Expenses on the earl's great horses, and the keeper's wages, L486 4_s._
-3-1/4_d._
-
-Linen cloth for the earl and his chaplains, and for the pantry, L43
-17_s._
-
-For one hundred and twenty-nine dozen of parchment, with ink, L4 8_s._
-3-1/4_d._
-
-Sum, L5230 17_s._ 7-1/4_d._
-
-Item, for two cloths of scarlet for the earl against Christmass, one
-cloth of russet for the Bishop of Angew, seventy cloths of blue for the
-knights (as they were then termed), fifteen cloths of medley for the
-lords' clerks, twenty-eight cloths for the esquires, fifteen cloths for
-officers, nineteen cloths for grooms, five cloths for archers, four
-cloths for minstrels and carpenters, with the sharing and carriage for
-the earl's liveries at Christmasse, L460 15_s._
-
-Item, for seven furs of variable miniver (or powdered ermine), seven
-hoods of purple, three hundred and ninety-five furs of budge for the
-liveries of barons, knights, and clerks, one hundred and twenty-three
-furs of lamb for esquires, bought at Christmas, L147 17_s._ 8_d._
-
-Item, sixty-five cloths, saffron colour, for the barons and knights in
-summer, twelve red cloths, mixed, for clerks, twenty-six cloths, ray,
-for esquires, one cloth, ray, for officers' coats in summer, and four
-cloths, ray, for carpets in the hall, for L345 13_s._ 8_d._
-
-Item, one hundred pieces of green silk for the knights, fourteen budge
-furs for surcoats, thirteen hoods of budge for clerks, and seventy-five
-furs of lambs for the lord's liveries in summer, with canvas and cords
-to truss them, L72 19_s._
-
-Item, saddles for the lord's liveries in summer, L51 6_s._ 8_d._
-
-Item, one saddle for the earl of the prince's arms, 40_s._
-
-Sum, L1079 18_s._ 3_d._
-
-Item, for things bought, whereof cannot be read in my note, L241 14_s._
-1-1/4_d._
-
-For horses lost in service of the earl, L8 6_s._ 8_d._
-
-Fees paid to earls, barons, knights, and esquires, L623 15_s._ 5_d._
-
-In gifts to knights of France, the Queen of England's nurses, to the
-Countess of Warren, esquires, minstrels, messengers, and riders, L92
-14_s._
-
-Item, one hundred and sixty-eight yards of russet cloth,[103] and
-twenty-four coats for poor men, with money given to the poor on Maundy
-Thursday, L8 16_s._ 7_d._
-
-Item, twenty-four silver dishes, so many saucers and so many cups for
-the buttery, one pair of pater nosters, and one silver coffin, bought
-this year, L103 5_s._ 6_d._
-
-To divers messengers about the earl's business, L34 19_s._ 8_d._
-
-In the earl's chamber, L5.
-
-To divers men for the earl's old debts, L88 16_s._ 0-3/4_d._
-
-Sum, L1207 7_s._ 11-3/4_d._
-
-The expences of the countess at Pickering for the time of this account,
-as in the pantry, buttery, kitchen, and other places, concerning these
-offices, L285 13_s._ 0-1/2_d._
-
-In wine, wax, spices, cloths, furs, and other things for the countess'
-wardrobe, L154 7_s._ 4-1/2_d._
-
-Sum, L439 8_s._ 6-1/4_d._
-
-Sum total of the whole expenses, L7957 13_s._ 4-1/2_d._
-
-Thus much for this Earl of Lancaster.
-
-More I read, that in the 14th of the same Edward II., Hugh Spencer the
-elder (condemned by the commonalty) was banished the realm; at which
-time it was found by inquisition that the said Spencer had in sundry
-shires, fifty-nine manors: he had twenty-eight thousand sheep, one
-thousand oxen and steers, one thousand two hundred kine, with their
-calves, forty mares with their colts, one hundred and sixty drawing
-horses, two thousand hogs, three hundred bullocks, forty tuns of wine,
-six hundred bacons, eighty carcases of Martilmasse beef, six hundred
-muttons in larder, ten tuns of cider; his armour, plate, jewels, and
-ready money, better than L10,000, thirty-six sacks of wool, and a
-library of books. Thus much the record, which provision for household
-showeth a great family there to be kept.
-
-Nearer to our time, I read,[104] in the 36th of Henry VI., that the
-greater estates of the realm being called up to London,
-
-The Earl of Salisbury came with five hundred men on horseback, and was
-lodged in the Herber.
-
-Richard, Duke of York, with four hundred men, lodged at Baynard's
-castle.
-
-The Dukes of Excester and Sommerset, with eight hundred men.
-
-The Earl of Northumberland, the Lord Egremont, and the Lord Clifford,
-with fifteen hundred men.
-
-Richard Nevill, Earl of Warwick, with six hundred men, all in red
-jackets, embroidered with ragged staves before and behind, and was
-lodged in Warwicke lane; in whose house there was oftentimes six oxen
-eaten at a breakfast, and every tavern was full of his meat; for he that
-had any acquaintance in that house, might have there so much of sodden
-and roast meat as he could prick and carry upon a long dagger.
-
-Richard Redman, Bishop of Ely, 1500, the 17th of Henry VII.,[105]
-besides his great family, housekeeping, alms dish, and relief to the
-poor, wheresoever he was lodged. In his travelling, when at his coming
-or going to or from any town, the bells being rung, all the poor would
-come together, to whom he gave every one six pence at the least.
-
-And now to note of our own time somewhat. Omitting in this place Thomas
-Wolsey, Archbishop of Yorke, and cardinal, I refer the reader to my
-_Annals_, where I have set down the order of his house and household,
-passing all other subjects of his time. His servants, daily attending
-in his house, were near about four hundred, omitting his servants'
-servants, which were many.
-
-Nicholas West, Bishop of Ely, in the year 1532, kept continually in his
-house an hundred servants, giving to the one half of them 53_s._ 4_d._
-the piece yearly; to the other half each 40_s._ the piece; to every one
-for his winter gown four yards of broad cloth, and for his summer coat
-three yards and a half: he daily gave at his gates, besides bread and
-drink, warm meat to two hundred poor people.
-
-The housekeeping of Edward, late Earl of Derby, is not to be forgotten,
-who had two hundred and twenty men in check roll: his feeding aged
-persons twice every day, sixty and odd, besides all comers, thrice a
-week, appointed for his dealing days, and every Good Friday two thousand
-seven hundred, with meat, drink, and money.
-
-Thomas Audley, lord chancellor, his family of gentlemen before him, in
-coats garded with velvet, and chains of gold; his yeomen after him in
-the same livery, not garded.
-
-William Powlet, lord great master, Marquis of Winchester, kept the like
-number of gentlemen and yeomen in a livery[106] of Reading tawny, and
-great relief at his gate.
-
-Thomas Lord Cromwell, Earl of Essex, kept the like or greater number in
-a livery of grey marble; the gentlemen garded with velvet, the yeomen
-with the same cloth, yet their skirts large enough for their friends to
-sit upon them.
-
-Edward, Duke of Sommerset, was not inferior in keeping a number of tall
-and comely gentlemen and yeomen, though his house was then in building,
-and most of his men were lodged abroad.
-
-The late Earl of Oxford, father to him that now liveth, hath been noted
-within these forty years to have ridden into this city, and so to his
-house by London stone, with eighty gentlemen in a livery of Reading
-tawny, and chains of gold about their necks, before him, and one hundred
-tall yeomen, in the like livery, to follow him without chains, but
-all having his cognisance of the blue boar embroidered on their left
-shoulder.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[92] Thus Lydgate, in his ballad of _London Lackpenny_:
-
- "Then to the Chepe I began me drawne,
- Where much people I saw for to stande:
- One offered me velvet, sylke and lawne,
- An other he taketh me by the hande,
- 'Here is Pary's thred the fynest in the lande,'" etc.
-
-[93] The cooks in Lydgate's time, as we learn from the same ballad,
-resided chiefly in Eastcheap:
-
- "Then I hyed me into East Chepe;
- One cryes ribbs of befe, and many a pye:
- Pewter pottes they clattered on a heape;
- There was harpe, pype and mynstrelsye," etc.
-
-[94] "Pater noster beade-makers and text-writers are gone out of
-Paternoster rowe into stationers of Paule's churchyard."--_1st edition_,
-p. 63.
-
-[95] Thomas Clifford.
-
-[96] Liber Constitutionis. Liber Horne. Liber Clerkenwell.
-
-[97] W. Patten.
-
-[98] Liber S. Mariae Eborum.
-
-[99] Carts shod or bound with iron. _Carrectae ferro ligatae_ are
-mentioned in the Liber Garderobae, Edw. I.
-
-[100] W. Fitzstephen.
-
-[101] There are few documents calculated to throw greater light upon the
-social and domestic life of our ancestors than their Household Books.
-Stow has here set an example, which has of late years been followed to
-a great extent. The Liber Garderobae, Edw. I., published by the Society
-of Antiquaries in 1787--_The Northumberland Household Book_--_The
-Privy Purse Expences of Henry VIII._--_The Privy Purse Expences of the
-Princess Mary_, etc.; and lastly, the handsome volume, printed for the
-Roxburgh Club by Beriah Botfield, Esq., M.P., containing the _Household
-Book of the Countess of Leicester, wife of Simon de Montford_, and
-that of Sir John Howard, afterwards Duke of Norfolk, in the reign of
-Richard III., afford views of ancient manners and illustrations of
-olden customs, which would be sought for in vain in works of a graver
-character.
-
-[102] Record of Pontefract, as I could obtain of M. Cudnor.--_Stow._
-
-[103] Northern russet, half a yard and half a quarter broad, I have
-seen sold for four pence the yard, and was good cloth of a mingled
-colour.--_Stow._
-
-[104] Rob. Fabian, manuscript.
-
-[105] Liber Ely.
-
-
-
-
-OF CHARITABLE ALMS IN OLD TIMES GIVEN
-
-
-These, as all other of their times, gave great relief to the poor. I
-myself, in that declining time of charity, have oft seen at the Lord
-Cromwell's gate in London more than two hundred persons served twice
-every day with bread, meat, and drink sufficient; for he observed that
-ancient and charitable custom, as all prelates, noblemen, or men of
-honour and worship, his predecessors, had done before him; whereof
-somewhat to note for example, Venerable Bede writeth, that prelates of
-his time having peradventure but wooden churches, had notwithstanding on
-their board at their meals one alms dish, into the which was carved some
-good portion of meat out of every other dish brought to their table; all
-which was given to the poor, besides the fragments left, in so much as
-in a hard time, a poor prelate wanting victuals, hath caused his alms
-dish, being silver, to be divided among the poor, therewith to shift as
-they could, till God should send them better store.
-
-Such a prelate was Ethelwald, Bishop of Winchester, in the reign of King
-Edgar, about the year of Christ 963: he in a great famine sold away
-all the sacred vessels of his church for to relieve the almost starved
-people, saying that there was no reason that the senseless temples of
-God should abound in riches, and lively temples of the Holy Ghost to
-lack it.
-
-Walter de Suffilde, Bishop of Norwich, was of the like mind; about
-the year 1245, in a time of great dearth, he sold all his plate, and
-distributed it to the poor every pennyworth.
-
-Robert Winchelsey, Archbishop of Canterbury, about the year 1293,
-besides the daily fragments of his house, gave every Friday and Sunday,
-unto every beggar that came to his gate, a loaf of bread sufficient
-for that day, and there more usually, every such alms day, in time of
-dearth, to the number of five thousand, and otherwise four thousand, at
-the least; more, he used every great festival day to give one hundred
-and fifty pence to so many poor people, to send daily meat, bread, and
-drink, to such as by age or sickness were not able to fetch his alms,
-and to send meat, money, and apparel to such as he thought needed it.
-
-I read,[107] in 1171, that Henry II., after his return into England,
-did penance for the slaughter of Thomas Becket, of whom (a sore dearth
-increasing) ten thousand persons, from the first of April, till new corn
-was inned, were daily fed and sustained.
-
-More, I find recorded,[108] that in the year 1236, the 20th of Henry
-III., William de Haverhull, the king's treasurer, was commanded, that
-upon the day of the Circumcision of our Lord, six thousand poor people
-should be fed at Westminster, for the state of the king, queen, and
-their children. The like commandment the said King Henry gave to Hugh
-Gifford and William Browne, that upon Friday next after the Epiphany,
-they should cause to be fed in the great hall at Windsore, at a good
-fire, all the poor and needy children that could be found, and the
-king's children being weighed and measured, their weight and measure to
-be distributed for their good estates. These few examples for charity of
-kings may suffice.
-
-I read, in the reign of Edward III., that Richard de Berie, Bishop of
-Durham, did weekly bestow for the relief of the poor eight quarters of
-wheat made into bread, besides his alms dish, fragments of his house,
-and great sums of money given to the poor when he journeyed. And that
-these alms dishes were as well used at the tables of noblemen as of the
-prelates, one note may suffice in this place.
-
-I read, in the year 1452, that Richard, Duke of York, then claiming
-the crown, the Lord Rivers should have passed the sea about the king's
-business, but staying at Plimmoth till his money was spent, and then
-sending for more, the Duke of Sommerset sent him the image of St. George
-in silver and gold, to be sold, with the alms dish of the Duke of
-Glocester, which was also of great price, for coin had they none.
-
-To end of orders and customs in this city, also of great families kept
-by honourable persons thither repairing, and of charitable alms of
-old times given, I say, for conclusion, that all noble persons, and
-other of honour and worship, in former times lodging in this city, or
-liberties thereof, did without grudging bear their parts in charges with
-the citizens, according to their estimated estates, as I have before
-said, and could prove by examples; but let men call to mind Sir Thomas
-Cromwel, then lord privy seal and vicar-general, lying in the city of
-London; he bare his charges to the great muster there in A.D. 1539; he
-sent his men in great number to the Miles end, and after them their
-armour in cars, with their coats of white cloth, the arms of this city;
-to wit, a red cross, and a sword, on the breast and back; which armour
-and coats they ware amongst the citizens, without any difference, and
-marched through the city to Westminster.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[106] Every livery coat had three yards of broad cloth.--_Stow._
-
-[107] Pater de Ioham.
-
-[108] Record of the Tower.
-
-
-
-
-SPORTS AND PASTIMES OF OLD TIME USED IN THIS CITY
-
-
-"Let us now," saith Fitzstephen, "come to the sports and pastimes,
-seeing it is fit that a city should not only be commodious and serious,
-but also merry and sportful; whereupon in the seals of the popes, until
-the time of Pope Leo, on the one side was St. Peter fishing, with a key
-over him, reached as it were by the hand of God out of heaven, and about
-it this verse:
-
- 'Tu pro me navem liquisti, suscipe clavem.'
-
-And on the other side was a city, and this inscription on it: '_Aurea
-Roma_.' Likewise to the praise of Augustus Caesar and the city, in
-respect of the shows and sports, was written:
-
- 'Nocte pluit tota, redeunt spectacula mane,' etc.
-
- 'All night it raines, and shews at morrow tide returne again,
- And Caesar with almighty Jove hath matcht an equal raign.'
-
-"But London, for the shows upon theatres, and comical pastimes, hath
-holy plays, representations of miracles, which holy confessors have
-wrought, or representations of torments wherein the constancy of martyrs
-appeared. Every year also at Shrove Tuesday, that we may begin with
-children's sports, seeing we all have been children, the school-boys
-do bring cocks of the game to their master, and all the forenoon they
-delight themselves in cock-fighting: after dinner, all the youths go
-into the fields to play at the ball.
-
-"The scholars of every school have their ball, or baston, in their
-hands; the ancient and wealthy men of the city come forth on horseback
-to see the sport of the young men, and to take part of the pleasure in
-beholding their agility. Every Friday in Lent a fresh company of young
-men comes into the field on horseback, and the best horseman conducteth
-the rest. Then march forth the citizens' sons, and other young men,
-with disarmed lances and shields, and there they practice feats of war.
-Many courtiers likewise, when the king lieth near, and attendants of
-noblemen, do repair to these exercises; and while the hope of victory
-doth inflame their minds, do show good proof how serviceable they would
-be in martial affairs.
-
-"In Easter holidays they fight battles on the water; a shield is hung
-upon a pole, fixed in the midst of the stream, a boat is prepared
-without oars, to be carried by violence of the water, and in the fore
-part thereof standeth a young man, ready to give charge upon the shield
-with his lance; if so be he breaketh his lance against the shield, and
-doth not fall, he is thought to have performed a worthy deed; if so be,
-without breaking his lance, he runneth strongly against the shield,
-down he falleth into the water, for the boat is violently forced with
-the tide; but on each side of the shield ride two boats, furnished with
-young men, which recover him that falleth as soon as they may. Upon the
-bridge, wharfs, and houses, by the river's side, stand great numbers to
-see and laugh thereat.
-
-"In the holidays all the summer the youths are exercised in leaping,
-dancing, shooting, wrestling, casting the stone, and practising their
-shields; the maidens trip in their timbrels, and dance as long as they
-can well see. In winter, every holiday before dinner, the boars prepared
-for brawn are set to fight, or else bulls and bears are baited.
-
-"When the great fen, or moor, which watereth the walls of the city on
-the north side, is frozen, many young men play upon the ice; some,
-striding as wide as they may, do slide swiftly; others make themselves
-seats of ice, as great as millstones; one sits down, many hand in hand
-do draw him, and one slipping on a sudden, all fall together; some tie
-bones to their feet and under their heels; and shoving themselves by a
-little picked staff, do slide as swiftly as a bird flieth in the air,
-or an arrow out of a cross-bow. Sometime two run together with poles,
-and hitting one the other, either one or both do fall, not without
-hurt; some break their arms, some their legs, but youth desirous of
-glory in this sort exerciseth itself against the time of war. Many of
-the citizens do delight themselves in hawks and hounds; for they have
-liberty of hunting in Middlesex, Hartfordshire, all Chiltron, and in
-Kent to the water of Cray." Thus far Fitzstephen of sports.
-
-These, or the like exercises, have been continued till our time,
-namely, in stage plays, whereof ye may read in anno 1391, a play by
-the parish clerks of London at the Skinner's well besides Smithfield,
-which continued three days together, the king, queen, and nobles of the
-realm being present. And of another, in the year 1409, which lasted
-eight days, and was of matter from the creation of the world, whereat
-was present most part of the nobility and gentry of England. Of late
-time, in place of those stage plays, hath been used comedies, tragedies,
-interludes, and histories, both true and feigned; for the acting whereof
-certain public places[109] have been erected. Also cocks of the game are
-yet cherished by divers men for their pleasures, much money being laid
-on their heads, when they fight in pits, whereof some be costly made
-for that purpose. The ball is used by noblemen and gentlemen in tennis
-courts, and by people of meaner sort in the open fields and streets.
-
-The marching forth of citizens' sons, and other young men on horseback,
-with disarmed lances and shields, there to practise feats of war, man
-against man, hath long since been left off, but in their stead they
-have used on horseback to run at a dead mark, called a quinten; for
-note whereof I read,[110] that in the year of Christ 1253, the 38th of
-Henry III., the youthful citizens, for an exercise of their activity,
-set forth a game to run at the quinten; and whoever did best should
-have a peacock, which they had prepared as a prize. Certain of the
-king's servants, because the court lay then at Westminster came, as it
-were, in spite of the citizens, to that game, and giving reproachful
-names to the Londoners, which for the dignity of the city, and ancient
-privilege which they ought to have enjoyed, were called barons, the
-said Londoners, not able to bear so to be misused, fell upon the king's
-servants, and beat them shrewdly, so that upon complaint to the king he
-fined the citizens to pay a thousand marks. This exercise of running at
-the quinten was practised by the youthful citizens as well in summer as
-in winter, namely, in the feast of Christmas, I have seen a quinten set
-upon Cornehill, by the Leaden hall, where the attendants on the lords of
-merry disports have run, and made great pastime; for he that hit not
-the broad end of the quinten was of all men laughed to scorn, and he
-that hit it full, if he rid not the faster, had a sound blow in his neck
-with a bag full of sand hung on the other end. I have also in the summer
-season seen some upon the river of Thames rowed in wherries, with staves
-in their hands, flat at the fore end, running one against another, and
-for the most part, one or both overthrown, and well ducked.
-
-On the holy days in summer the youths of this city have in the field
-exercised themselves in leaping, dancing, shooting, wrestling, casting
-of the stone or ball, etc.
-
-And for defence and use of the weapon, there is a special profession of
-men that teach it. Ye may read in mine _Annals_ how that in the year
-1222 the citizens kept games of defence, and wrestlings, near unto the
-hospital of St. Giles in the field, where they challenged, and had the
-mastery of the men in the suburbs, and other commoners, etc. Also, in
-the year 1453, of a tumult made against the mayor at the wrestling
-besides Clearke's well, etc. Which is sufficient to prove that of old
-time the exercising of wrestling, and such like, hath been much more
-used than of later years. The youths of this city also have used on holy
-days after evening prayer, at their masters' doors, to exercise their
-wasters and bucklers; and the maidens, one of them playing on a timbrel,
-in sight of their masters and dames, to dance for garlands hung athwart
-the streets; which open pastimes in my youth being now suppressed,
-worse practices within doors are to be feared. As for the baiting of
-bulls and bears, they are to this day much frequented, namely, in Bear
-gardens,[111] on the Bank's side, wherein be prepared scaffolds for
-beholders to stand upon. Sliding upon the ice is now but children's
-play; but in hawking and hunting many grave citizens at this present
-have great delight, and do rather want leisure than goodwill to follow
-it.
-
-Of triumphant shows made by the citizens of London, ye may read,[112] in
-the year 1236, the 20th of Henry III., Andrew Bockwell then being mayor,
-how Helianor, daughter to Reymond, Earl of Provance, riding through the
-city towards Westminster, there to be crowned queen of England, the city
-was adorned with silks, and in the night with lamps, cressets, and other
-lights without number, besides many pageants and strange devices there
-presented; the citizens also rode to meet the king and queen, clothed in
-long garments embroidered about with gold, and silks of divers colours,
-their horses gallantly trapped to the number of three hundred and sixty,
-every man bearing a cup of gold or silver in his hand, and the king's
-trumpeters sounding before them. These citizens did minister wine, as
-bottelers, which is their service, at their coronation. More, in the
-year 1293, for victory obtained by Edward I. against the Scots, every
-citizen, according to their several trade, made their several show, but
-especially the fishmongers, which in a solemn procession passed through
-the city, having, amongst other pageants and shows, four sturgeons gilt,
-carried on four horses; then four salmons of silver on four horses; and
-after them six and forty armed knights riding on horses, made like luces
-of the sea; and then one representing St. Magnus, because it was upon
-St. Magnus' day, with a thousand horsemen, etc.
-
-One other show, in the year 1377, made by the citizens for disport of
-the young prince, Richard, son to the Black Prince, in the feast of
-Christmas, in this manner:--On the Sunday before Candlemas, in the
-night, one hundred and thirty citizens, disguised, and well horsed,
-in a mummery, with sound of trumpets, sackbuts, cornets, shalmes,
-and other minstrels, and innumerable torch lights of wax, rode from
-Newgate, through Cheape, over the bridge, through Southwarke, and so to
-Kennington beside Lambhith, where the young prince remained with his
-mother and the Duke of Lancaster his uncle, the Earls of Cambridge,
-Hertford, Warwicke, and Suffolke, with divers other lords. In the first
-rank did ride forty-eight in the likeness and habit of esquires, two
-and two together, clothed in red coats and gowns of say or sandal, with
-comely visors on their faces; after them came riding forty-eight knights
-in the same livery of colour and stuff; then followed one richly arrayed
-like an emperor; and after him some distance, one stately attired like
-a pope, whom followed twenty-four cardinals, and after them eight or
-ten with black visors, not amiable, as if they had been legates from
-some foreign princes. These maskers, after they had entered Kennington,
-alighted from their horses, and entered the hall on foot; which done,
-the prince, his mother, and the lords, came out of the chamber into the
-hall, whom the said mummers did salute, showing by a pair of dice upon
-the table their desire to play with the prince, which they so handled
-that the prince did always win when he cast them. Then the mummers set
-to the prince three jewels, one after another, which were a bowl of
-gold, a cup of gold, and a ring of gold, which the prince won at three
-casts. Then they set to the prince's mother, the duke, the earls, and
-other lords, to every one a ring of gold, which they did also win. After
-which they were feasted, and the music sounded, the prince and lords
-danced on the one part with the mummers, which did also dance; which
-jollity being ended, they were again made to drink, and then departed in
-order as they came.
-
-The like was in Henry IV., in the 2nd of his reign, he then keeping his
-Christmas at Eltham, twelve aldermen of London and their sons rode in a
-mumming, and had great thanks.
-
-Thus much for sportful shows in triumphs may suffice. Now for sports and
-pastimes yearly used.
-
-First, in the feast of Christmas, there was in the king's house,
-wheresoever he was lodged, a lord of misrule, or master of merry
-disports,[113] and the like had ye in the house of every nobleman of
-honour or good worship, were he spiritual or temporal. Amongst the which
-the mayor of London, and either of the sheriffs, had their several lords
-of misrule, ever contending, without quarrel or offence, who should make
-the rarest pastimes to delight the beholders. These lords beginning
-their rule on Alhollon eve, continued the same till the morrow after the
-Feast of the Purification, commonly called Candlemas day. In all which
-space there were fine and subtle disguisings, masks, and mummeries, with
-playing at cards for counters, nails, and points, in every house, more
-for pastime than for gain.
-
-Against the feast of Christmas every man's house, as also the parish
-churches, were decked with holm, ivy, bays, and whatsoever the season
-of the year afforded to be green. The conduits and standards in the
-streets were likewise garnished; amongst the which I read, in the year
-1444, that by tempest of thunder and lightning, on the 1st of February,
-at night, Powle's steeple was fired, but with great labour quenched; and
-towards the morning of Candlemas day, at the Leaden hall in Cornhill,
-a standard of tree being set up in midst of the pavement, fast in the
-ground, nailed full of holm and ivy, for disport of Christmas to the
-people, was torn up, and cast down by the malignant spirit (as was
-thought), and the stones of the pavement all about were cast in the
-streets, and into divers houses, so that the people were sore aghast of
-the great tempests.
-
-In the week before Easter had ye great shows made for the fetching in
-of a twisted tree, or with, as they termed it, out of the woods into the
-king's house; and the like into every man's house of honour or worship.
-
-In the month of May, namely, on May-day in the morning, every man,
-except impediment, would walk into the sweet meadows and green woods,
-there to rejoice their spirits with the beauty and savour of sweet
-flowers, and with the harmony of birds, praising God in their kind; and
-for example hereof, Edward Hall hath noted, that King Henry VIII., as
-in the 3rd of his reign, and divers other years, so namely, in the 7th
-of his reign, on May-day in the morning, with Queen Katherine his wife,
-accompanied with many lords and ladies, rode a-maying from Greenwitch
-to the high ground of Shooter's hill, where, as they passed by the way,
-they espied a company of tall yeomen, clothed all in green, with green
-hoods, and bows and arrows, to the number of two hundred; one being
-their chieftain, was called Robin Hoode, who required the king and his
-company to stay and see his men shoot; whereunto the king granting,
-Robin Hoode whistled, and all the two hundred archers shot off, loosing
-all at once; and when he whistled again they likewise shot again; their
-arrows whistled by craft of the head, so that the noise was strange
-and loud, which greatly delighted the king, queen, and their company.
-Moreover, this Robin Hoode desired the king and queen, with their
-retinue, to enter the green wood, where, in harbours made of boughs, and
-decked with flowers, they were set and served plentifully with venison
-and wine by Robin Hoode and his men, to their great contentment, and had
-other pageants and pastimes, as ye may read in my said author.
-
-I find also, that in the month of May, the citizens of London of all
-estates, lightly in every parish, or sometimes two or three parishes
-joining together, had their several mayings, and did fetch in May-poles,
-with divers warlike shows, with good archers, morris dancers, and other
-devices, for pastime all the day long; and toward the evening they had
-stage plays, and bonfires in the streets. Of these mayings we read,
-in the reign of Henry VI., that the aldermen and sheriffs of London,
-being on May-day at the Bishop of London's wood, in the parish of
-Stebunheath,[114] and having there a worshipful dinner for themselves
-and other commoners, Lydgate the poet, that was a monk of Bury, sent to
-them, by a pursuivant, a joyful commendation of that season, containing
-sixteen staves of metre royal, beginning thus:--
-
- "Mightie Flora! goddess of fresh flowers,--
- Which clothed hath the soyle in lustie greene,
- Made buds spring, with her sweete showers,
- By the influence of the sunne shine.
- To doe pleasance of intent full cleane,
- Unto the States which now sit here,
- Hath Vere downe sent her owne daughter deare.
-
- Making the vertue, that dared in the roote,
- Called of clarkes the vertue vegitable,
- For to transcend, most holsome and most soote,
- Into the crop, this season so agreeable,
- The bawmy liquor is so commendable,
- That it rejoyceth with his fresh moysture,
- Man, beast, and fowle, and every creature," etc.
-
-These great Mayings and May-games, made by the governors and masters
-of this city, with the triumphant setting up of the great shaft (a
-principal May-pole in Cornehill, before the parish church of St.
-Andrew), therefore called Undershaft, by means of an insurrection of
-youths against aliens on May-day, 1517, the 9th of Henry VIII., have
-not been so freely used as afore, and therefore I leave them, and will
-somewhat touch of watches, as also of shows in the night.[115]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[109] "As the Theater, the Curtine," etc.--_1st edition._
-
-[110] Matthew Paris.
-
-[111] The Bear garden on the Bankside is not mentioned in the first
-edition.
-
-[112] Matthew Paris.
-
-[113] In the edition of Brand's _Popular Antiquities_, edited by Sir
-Henry Ellis, vol. i. 272-278, will be found a very large and curious
-collection of materials illustrative of this ancient custom.
-
-[114] Stepney.
-
-
-
-
-OF WATCHES IN THIS CITY, AND OTHER MATTERS COMMANDED, AND THE CAUSE WHY
-
-
-William Conqueror commanded that in every town and village, a bell
-should be nightly rung at eight o'clock, and that all people should then
-put out their fire and candle, and take their rest; which order was
-observed through this realm during his reign, and the reign of William
-Rufus. But Henry I., restoring to his subjects the use of fire and
-lights, as afore; it followeth, by reason of wars within the realm, that
-many men also gave themselves to robbery and murders in the night; for
-example whereof in this city Roger Hoveden writeth thus:--"In the year
-1175, council was kept at Nottingham; in time of which council a brother
-of the Earl Ferrers being in the night privily slain at London, and
-thrown out of his inn into the dirty street, when the king understood
-thereof, he swore that he would be avenged on the citizens. For it was
-then (saith mine author) a common practice in the city, that a hundred
-or more in a company, young and old, would make nightly invasions upon
-houses of the wealthy, to the intent to rob them; and if they found any
-man stirring in the city within the night that were not of their crew,
-they would presently murder him, insomuch that when night was come no
-man durst adventure to walk in the streets. When this had continued
-long, it fortuned that as a crew of young and wealthy citizens,
-assembling together in the night, assaulted a stone house of a certain
-rich man, and breaking through the wall, the good man of that house,
-having prepared himself with others in a corner, when he perceived one
-of the thieves named Andrew Bucquint to lead the way, with a burning
-brand in the one hand, and a pot of coals in the other, which he essayed
-to kindle with the brand, he flew upon him, and smote off his right
-hand, and then with a loud voice cried 'Thieves!' at the hearing whereof
-the thieves took their flight, all saving he that had lost his hand,
-whom the good man in the next morning delivered to Richard de Lucie,
-the king's justice. This thief, upon warrant of his life, appeached his
-confederates, of whom many were taken, and many were fled. Among the
-rest that were apprehended, a certain citizen of great countenance,
-credit, and wealth, named John Senex,[116] who forasmuch as he could not
-acquit himself by the water dome, as that law was then, he offered to
-the king five hundred pounds of silver for his life; but forasmuch as
-he was condemned by judgment of the water, the king would not take the
-offer, but commanded him to be hanged on the gallows, which was done,
-and then the city became more quiet for a long time after." But for a
-full remedy of enormities in the night I read, that in the year 1253,
-Henry III. commanded watches in the cities and borough towns to be kept,
-for the better observing of peace and quietness amongst his people.
-
-And further, by the advice of them of Savoy, he ordained, that if any
-man chanced to be robbed, or by any means damnified by any thief or
-robber, he to whom the charge of keeping that country, city, or borough,
-chiefly appertained, where the robbery was done, should competently
-restore the loss. And this was after the use of Savoy, but yet thought
-more hard to be observed here than in those parts; and, therefore,
-leaving those laborious watches, I will speak of our pleasures and
-pastimes in watching by night.
-
-In the months of June and July, on the vigils of festival days, and on
-the same festival days in the evenings after the sun setting, there were
-usually made bonfires in the streets, every man bestowing wood or labour
-towards them; the wealthier sort also, before their doors near to the
-said bonfires, would set out tables on the vigils, furnished with sweet
-bread and good drink, and on the festival days with meats and drinks
-plentifully, whereunto they would invite their neighbours and passengers
-also to sit and be merry with them in great familiarity, praising God
-for his benefits bestowed on them. These were called bonfires as well
-of good amity amongst neighbours that being before at controversy, were
-there, by the labour of others, reconciled, and made of bitter enemies
-loving friends; and also for the virtue that a great fire hath to purge
-the infection of the air. On the vigil of St. John the Baptist, and on
-St. Peter and Paul the apostles, every man's door being shadowed with
-green birch, long fennel, St. John's wort, orpin, white lilies, and
-such like, garnished upon with garlands of beautiful flowers, had also
-lamps of glass, with oil burning in them all the night; some hung out
-branches of iron curiously wrought, containing hundreds of lamps alight
-at once, which made a goodly show, namely in New Fish street, Thames
-street, etc. Then had ye besides the standing watches all in bright
-harness, in every ward and street of this city and suburbs, a marching
-watch, that passed through the principal streets thereof, to wit, from
-the little conduit by Paule's gate to West Cheape, by the stocks through
-Cornhill, by Leaden hall to Aldgate, then back down Fenchurch street, by
-Grasse church, about Grasse church conduit, and up Grasse church street
-into Cornhill, and through it into West Cheape again. The whole way for
-this marching watch extendeth to three thousand two hundred tailor's
-yards of assize; for the furniture whereof with lights, there were
-appointed seven hundred cressets, five hundred of them being found by
-the companies, the other two hundred by the chamber of London. Besides
-the which lights every constable in London, in number more than two
-hundred and forty,[117] had his cresset: the charge of every cresset
-was in light two shillings and four pence, and every cresset had two
-men, one to bear or hold it, another to bear a bag with light, and to
-serve it, so that the poor men pertaining to the cressets, taking wages,
-besides that every one had a straw hat, with a badge painted, and his
-breakfast in the mornings amounted in number to almost two thousand.
-The marching watch contained in number about two thousand men, part of
-them being old soldiers of skill, to be captains, lieutenants,
-serjeants, corporals, etc., wiflers, drummers, and fifes, standard and
-ensign bearers, sword players, trumpeters on horseback, demilances on
-great horses, gunners with hand guns, or half hakes, archers in coats
-of white fustian, signed on the breast and back with the arms of the
-city, their bows bent in their hands, with sheaves of arrows by their
-sides, pike-men in bright corslets, burganets, etc., halberds, the like
-bill-men in almaine rivets, and apernes of mail in great number; there
-were also divers pageants, morris dancers, constables, the one-half,
-which was one hundred and twenty, on St. John's eve, the other half
-on St. Peter's eve, in bright harness, some overgilt, and every one a
-jornet[118] of scarlet thereupon, and a chain of gold, his henchman
-following him, his minstrels before him, and his cresset light passing
-by him, the waits of the city, the mayor's officers for his guard before
-him, all in a livery of worsted, or say jackets party-coloured, the
-mayor himself well mounted on horseback, the swordbearer before him in
-fair armour well mounted also, the mayor's footmen, and the like torch
-bearers about him, henchmen twain upon great stirring horses, following
-him. The sheriffs' watches came one after the other in like order, but
-not so large in number as the mayor's; for where the mayor had besides
-his giant three pageants, each of the sheriffs had besides their giants
-but two pageants, each their morris dance, and one henchman, their
-officers in jackets of worsted or say, party-coloured, differing from
-the mayor's, and each from other, but having harnessed men a great many,
-etc.
-
-This midsummer watch was thus accustomed yearly, time out of mind, until
-the year 1539, the 31st of Henry VIII., in which year, on the 8th of
-May, a great muster was made by the citizens at the Mile's end, all
-in bright harness, with coats of white silk, or cloth and chains of
-gold, in three great battles, to the number of fifteen thousand, which
-passed through London to Westminster, and so through the Sanctuary, and
-round about the park of St. James, and returned home through Oldborne.
-King Henry, then considering the great charges of the citizens for the
-furniture of this unusual muster, forbad the marching watch provided for
-at Midsummer for that year, which being once laid down, was not raised
-again till the year 1548, the 2nd of Edward VI., Sir John Gresham then
-being mayor, who caused the marching watch, both on the eve of St.
-John the Baptist and of St. Peter the Apostle, to be revived and set
-forth in as comely order as it hath been accustomed, which watch was
-also beautified by the number of more than three hundred demilances and
-light horsemen, prepared by the citizens to be sent into Scotland for
-the rescue of the town of Hadington, and others kept by the Englishmen.
-Since this mayor's time, the like marching watch in this city hath not
-been used, though some attempts have been made thereunto; as in the year
-1585, a book was drawn by a grave citizen,[119] and by him dedicated to
-Sir Thomas Pullison, then lord mayor, and his brethren the aldermen,
-containing the manner and order of a marching watch in the city upon the
-evens accustomed; in commendation whereof, namely, in times of peace
-to be used, he hath words to this effect: "The artificers of sundry
-sorts were thereby well set a-work, none but rich men charged, poor men
-helped, old soldiers, trumpeters, drummers, fifes, and ensign-bearers,
-with such like men, meet for princes' service, kept in ure, wherein the
-safety and defence of every common weal consisteth. Armour and weapon
-being yearly occupied in this wise, the citizens had of their own
-readily prepared for any need; whereas by intermission hereof, armourers
-are out of work, soldiers out of pay, weapons overgrown with foulness,
-few or none good being provided," etc.
-
-In the month of August, about the feast of St. Bartholomew the Apostle,
-before the Lord Mayor, aldermen, and sheriffs of London, placed in a
-large tent near unto Clarkenwell, of old time, were divers days spent
-in the pastime of wrestling, where the officers of the city, namely,
-the sheriffs, sergeants, and yeomen, the porters of the king's beam or
-weigh-house, now no such men, and other of the city, were challengers
-of all men in the suburbs, to wrestle for games appointed, and on other
-days, before the said mayor, aldermen, and sheriffs, in Fensburie
-field, to shoot the standard, broad arrow, and flight, for games; but
-now of late years the wrestling is only practised on Bartholomew's day
-in the afternoon, and the shooting some three or four days after, in
-one afternoon, and no more. What should I speak of the ancient daily
-exercises in the long bow by citizens of this city, now almost clean
-left off and forsaken?--I overpass it; for by the mean of closing in the
-common grounds, our archers, for want of room to shoot abroad, creep
-into bowling alleys, and ordinary dicing houses, nearer home, where
-they have room enough to hazard their money at unlawful games; and there
-I leave them to take their pleasures.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[115] A paper by Mr. Saunders, in Knight's _London_, i. 169, entitled,
-"The Old Spring Time in London," forms a very agreeable commentary on
-this section of our author's work.
-
-[116] Rich thieves most worthy to be hanged. The judgment of fire and
-water, called _ordalii_, was condemned by Pope Innocent III. 1203.
-Decretal. lib. 5.--_Stow._
-
-[117] More than two hundred and forty constables in London, the one half
-of them each night went in the marching watch, the other half kept their
-standing watch in every street and lane.--_Stow._
-
-[118] A large coat or cloak, from the French "journade."--See
-Roquefort's _Glossaire_, s. v.
-
-[119] John Mountgomery.
-
-
-
-
-HONOUR OF CITIZENS, AND WORTHINESS OF MEN IN THE SAME
-
-
-"This city," saith Fitzstephen, "is glorious in manhood: furnished with
-munitions, populous with inhabitants; insomuch, that in the troublesome
-time of King Stephen, it hath showed at a muster twenty thousand armed
-horsemen, and threescore thousand footmen, serviceable for the wars.
-Moreover (saith he), the citizens of London, wheresoever they become,
-are notable before all other citizens in civility of manners, attire,
-table, and talk. The matrons of this city are the very modest Sabine
-ladies of Italy. The Londoners, sometime called Trinobantes, repelled
-Caesar, which always made his passage by shedding blood; whereupon Lucan
-sung:
-
- 'Territa quaesitis ostendit terga Britannis.'
-
-"The city of London hath bred some which have subdued many kingdoms,
-and also the Roman empire. It hath also brought forth many others, whom
-virtue and valour hath highly advanced; according to Apollo, in his
-Oracle to Brute, '_Sub occasu solis_,' etc. In the time of Christianity,
-it brought forth that noble emperor, Constantine, which gave the city of
-Rome and all the imperial ensigns to God, St. Peter, and Pope Silvester;
-choosing rather to be called a defender of the church than an emperor;
-and, lest peace might be violated, and their eyes troubled by his
-presence, he retired from Rome, and built the city of Constantinople.
-London also in late time hath brought forth famous kings: Maude the
-empress, King Henry, son to Henry II., and Thomas the Archbishop," etc.
-
-This Thomas, surnamed Becket, born in London, brought up in the priory
-of Marton, student at Paris, became the sheriff's clerk of London for
-a time, then parson of St. Mary hill, had a prebend at London, another
-at Lincoln, studied the law at Bononie, etc., was made Chancellor of
-England, and Archbishop of Canterbury, etc. Unto this might be added
-innumerable persons of honour, wisdom, and virtue, born in London; but
-of actions done by worthy citizens I will only note a few, and so to
-other matters.
-
-The citizens of London, time out of mind, founded an hospital of St.
-James in the fields for leprous women of their city.
-
-In the year 1197, Walter Brune, a citizen of London, and Rosia, his
-wife, founded the hospital of our Lady, called Domus Dei, or St. Marie
-Spittle, without Bishopsgate of London; a house of such relief to the
-needy, that there was found standing at the surrender thereof nine score
-beds, well furnished for receipt of poor people.
-
-In the year 1216, the Londoners sending out a navy, took ninety-five
-ships of pirates and sea-robbers; besides innumerable others that they
-drowned, which had robbed on the river of Thames.
-
-In the year 1247, Simon Fitzmary, one of the sheriffs of London, founded
-the hospital of St. Mary called Bethlem, and without Bishopsgate.
-
-In the year 1283, Henry Wallice, then mayor, built the Tun upon
-Cornhill, to be a prison for night-walkers, and a market-house called
-the Stocks, both for fish and flesh, standing in the midst of the city.
-He also built divers houses on the west and north side of Paule's
-churchyard; the profits of all which buildings are to the maintenance of
-London Bridge.
-
-In the year 1332, William Elsing, mercer of London, founded Elsing
-Spittle within Cripplegate, for sustentation of an hundred poor blind
-men, and became himself the first prior of that hospital.
-
-Sir John Poultney, draper, four times mayor, in 1337 built a fair chapel
-in Paule's church, wherein he was buried. He founded a college in the
-parish church of St. Laurence, called Poultney: he built the parish
-church called Little Alhallowes, in Thames street; the Carmelite friars
-church in Coventry: he gave relief to prisoners in Newgate and in the
-Fleet, and ten shillings a-year to St. Giles' hospital by Oldborne for
-ever, and other legacies long to rehearse.
-
-John Stodie, vintner, mayor 1358, gave to the vintners all the quadrant
-wherein the Vintners' hall now standeth, with all the tenements round
-about, from Stadies lane, wherein is founded thirteen alms houses for so
-many poor people, etc.
-
-Henry Picard, vintner, mayor 1357, in the year 1363, did in one day
-sumptuously feast Edward III., king of England, John, king of France,
-David, king of Scots, the king of Cyprus, then all in England, Edward,
-prince of Wales, with many other noblemen, and after kept his hall
-for all comers that were willing to play at dice and hazard. The Lady
-Margaret, his wife, kept her chamber to the same effect, etc.
-
-John Lofken, fishmonger, four times mayor, 1367, built an hospital
-called Magdalen's, in Kingstone upon Thames; gave thereunto nine
-tenements, ten shops, one mill, one hundred and twenty-five acres of
-land, ten acres of meadow, one hundred and twenty acres of pasture,
-etc.; more, in London, he built the fair parish church of St. Michael in
-Crooked lane, and was there buried.
-
-John Barnes, mayor 1371, gave a chest with three locks, and one thousand
-marks therein, to be lent to young men upon sufficient pawn, and for
-the use thereof, to say _De profundis_, or _Pater noster_, and no more:
-he also was a great builder of St. Thomas Apostle's parish church, as
-appeareth by his arms there, both in stone and glass.
-
-In the year 1378, John Filpot, sometime mayor, hired with his own
-money one thousand soldiers, and defended the realm from incursions
-of the enemy, so that in small time his hired men took John Mercer,
-a sea-rover, with all his ships, which he before had taken from
-Scarborrow, and fifteen Spanish ships, laden with great riches.
-
-In the year 1380, Thomas of Woodstocke, Thomas Percie, Hugh Calverley,
-Robert Knoles, and others, being sent with a great power to aid the
-duke of Brytaine, the said John Filpot hired ships for them of his
-own charges, and released the armour, which the soldiers had pawned
-for their battles, more than a thousand in number. "This most noble
-citizen," saith Thomas Walsingham, "that had travailed for the commodity
-of the whole realm, more than all other of his time, had often relieved
-the king by lending him great sums of money and otherwise, deceased in
-A.D. 1384, after that he had assured lands to the city for the relief of
-thirteen poor people for ever."
-
-In the year 1381, William Walworth, then mayor, a most provident,
-valiant, and learned citizen, did by his arrest of Wat Tyler (a
-presumptuous rebel, upon whom no man durst lay hands), deliver the king
-and kingdom from the danger of most wicked traitors, and was for his
-service knighted in the field.
-
-Nicholas Brembar, John Filpot, Robert Laund, Nicholas Twiford, and Adam
-Francis, aldermen, were then for their service likewise knighted; and
-Sir Robert Knoles, for assisting of the mayor, was made free of this
-city.
-
-This Sir Robert Knoles, thus worthily infranchised a citizen, founded a
-college with an hospital at Pontefract: he also built the great stone
-bridge at Rochester, over the river of Medway, etc.
-
-John Churchman, grocer, one of the sheriffs, 1386, for the quiet
-of merchants, built a certain house upon Wool wharf, in Tower ward,
-to serve for tronage or weighing of wools, and for the customer,
-comptroller, clerks, and other officers to sit, etc.
-
-Adam Bamme, goldsmith, mayor 1391, in a great dearth, procured corn
-from parts beyond the seas, to be brought hither in such abundance as
-sufficed to serve the city, and the countries near adjoining; to the
-furtherance of which good work he took out of the orphans' chest in the
-Guildhall two thousand marks to buy the said corn, and each alderman
-laid out twenty pounds to the like purpose.
-
-Thomas Knoles, grocer, mayor 1400, with his brethren the aldermen, began
-to new build the Guildhall in London, and instead of an old little
-cottage in Aldermanberie street, made a fair and goodly house, more
-near unto St. Laurence church in the Jurie: he re-edified St. Anthony's
-church, and gave to the grocers his house near unto the same, for relief
-of the poor for ever. More, he caused sweet water to be conveyed to the
-gates of Newgate and Ludgate, for relief of the prisoners there.
-
-John Hinde, draper, mayor 1405, newly built his parish church of St.
-Swithen by London stone: his monument is defaced, save only his arms in
-the glass windows.
-
-Thomas Falconar, mercer, mayor 1414, lent to King Henry VI., towards
-maintenance of his wars in France, ten thousand marks upon jewels. More,
-he made the postern called Mooregate, caused the ditches of the city to
-be cleansed, and did many other things for good of the same city.
-
-William Sevenoke, grocer, mayor 1419, founded in the town of Sevenoke,
-in Kent, a free school for poor men's children, and thirteen alms
-houses: his testament saith, twenty poor men and women.
-
-Richard Whittington, mercer, three times mayor, in the year 1421 began
-the library of the grey friars in London, to the charge of four hundred
-pounds: his executors with his goods founded and built Whittington
-college, with alms houses for thirteen poor men, and divinity lectures
-to be read there for ever. They repaired St. Bartholomew's hospital in
-Smithfield; they bare some charges to the glazing and paving of the
-Guildhall; they bare half the charges of building the library there, and
-they built the west gate of London, of old time called Newgate, etc.
-
-John Carpenter, town-clerk of London, in the reign of Henry V., caused
-with great expense to be curiously painted upon board, about the north
-cloister of Paule's, a monument of Death leading all estates, with
-the speeches of Death, and answer of every state. This cloister was
-pulled down 1549. He also gave tenements to the city, for the finding
-and bringing up of four poor men's children with meat, drink, apparel,
-learning at the schools in the universities, etc., until they be
-preferred, and then other in their places for ever.
-
-Robert Chichley, grocer, mayor 1422, appointed by his testament, that on
-his minde day, a competent dinner should be ordained for two thousand
-four hundred poor men, householders of this city, and every man to have
-two pence in money. More, he gave one large plot of ground, thereupon to
-build the new parish church of St. Stephen, near unto Walbrooke, etc.
-
-John Rainwell, fishmonger, mayor 1427, gave tenements to discharge
-certain wards of London of fifteenths and other payments.
-
-John Wells, grocer, mayor, 1433, a great builder of the chapel or
-college of the Guildhall, and was there buried. He caused fresh water to
-be conveyed from Tyborne to the standard in West Cheape for service of
-the city.
-
-William Eastfield, mercer, 1438, appointed his executors of his goods
-to convey sweet water from Tyborne, and to build a fair conduit by
-Aldermanberie church, which they performed, as also made a standard in
-Fleet street by Shew lane end; they also conveyed water to Cripples
-gate, etc.
-
-Stephen Browne, grocer, mayor 1439, sent into Prussia, causing corn to
-be brought from thence;[120] whereby he brought down the price of wheat
-from three shillings the bushel to less than half that money.
-
-Philip Malpas, one of the sheriffs 1440, gave by his testament one
-hundred and twenty-five pounds, to relieve poor prisoners, and every
-year for five years, four hundred shirts and smocks, forty pairs of
-sheets, and one hundred and fifty gowns of frieze, to the poor; to
-five hundred poor people in London six shillings and eight pence;
-to poor maids' marriages one hundred marks; to highways one hundred
-marks; twenty marks the year to a graduate to preach; twenty pounds to
-preachers at the Spittle the three Easter holidays, etc.
-
-Robert Large, mercer, mayor 1440, gave to his parish-church of St. Olave
-in Surry two hundred pounds; to St. Margaret's in Lothberie twenty-five
-pounds; to the poor twenty pounds; to London bridge one hundred marks;
-towards the vaulting over the water-course of Walbrooke two hundred
-marks; to poor maids' marriages one hundred marks; to poor householders
-one hundred pounds, etc.
-
-Richard Rich, mercer, one of the sheriffs 1442, founded alms houses at
-Hodsdon in Hertfordshire.
-
-Simon Eyre, draper, mayor 1346, built the Leaden hall for a common
-garner of corn for the use of this city, and left five thousand marks to
-charitable uses.
-
-Godfrey Bollein, mayor of London, 1458, by his testament, gave liberally
-to the prisons, hospitals, and lazar houses, besides a thousand
-pounds to poor householders in London, and two hundred pounds to poor
-householders in Norfolke.[121]
-
-Richard Rawson, one of the sheriffs 1477, gave by testament large
-legacies to the prisoners, hospitals, lazar houses, to other poor, to
-highways, to the water-conduits, besides to poor maids' marriages three
-hundred and forty pounds, and his executors to build a large house in
-the churchyard of St. Marie Spittle, wherein the mayor and his brethren
-do use to sit and hear the sermons in the Easter holidays.
-
-Thomas Ilam, one of the sheriffs 1480, newly built the great conduit in
-Cheape, of his own charges.
-
-Edward Shaw, goldsmith, mayor 1483, caused the Cripplegate of London to
-be newly built of his goods, etc.
-
-Thomas Hill, grocer, mayor 1485, caused of his goods the conduit of
-Grasse street to be built.
-
-Hugh Clopton, mercer, during his life a bachelor, mayor 1492, built the
-great stone-arched bridge at Stratford upon Avon in Warwickshire, and
-did many other things of great charity, as in my _Summary_.
-
-Robert Fabian, alderman, and one of the sheriffs, 1494, gathered out
-of divers good authors, as well Latin as French, a large Chronicle of
-England and of France, which he published in English, to his great
-charges, for the honour of this city, and common utility of the whole
-realm.
-
-Sir John Percivall, merchant-taylor, mayor 1498, founded a
-grammar-school at Macklefield in Cheshire, where he was born; he endowed
-the same school with sufficient lands for the finding of a priest master
-there, to teach freely all children thither sent, without exception.
-
-The Lady Thomasine his wife founded the like free school, together with
-fair lodgings for the schoolmasters, scholars, and other, and added
-twenty pounds of yearly revenue for supporting the charges, at St. Mary
-Wike in Devonshire, where she was born.
-
-Stephen Gennings, merchant-taylor, mayor 1509, founded a fair
-grammar-school at Ulfrimhampton[122] in Staffordshire, left good lands,
-and also built a great part of his parish church, called St. Andrew's
-Undershaft, in London.
-
-Henry Keble, grocer, mayor 1511, in his life a great benefactor to the
-new building of old Mary church, and by his testament gave a thousand
-pounds towards the finishing thereof; he gave to highways two hundred
-pounds; to poor maids' marriages one hundred marks; to poor husbandmen
-in Oxford and Warwick shires one hundred and forty ploughshares, and one
-hundred and forty coulters of iron; and in London, to seven almsmen six
-pence the week for ever.
-
-John Collet, a citizen of London by birth and dignity, dean of
-Paule's, doctor of divinity, erected and built one free school in
-Paule's churchyard, 1512, for three hundred and fifty-three poor men's
-children to be taught free in the same school, appointing a master, a
-surmaster, and a chaplain, with sufficient stipends to endure for ever,
-and committed the oversight thereof to the mercers in London, because
-himself was son to Henry Collet, mercer, mayor of London, and endowed
-the mercers with lands to the yearly value of one hundred and twenty
-pounds or better.
-
-John Tate, brewer, then a mercer, mayor 1514, caused his brewhouse,
-called the Swan, near adjoining to the hospital of St. Anthonie in
-London, to be taken down for the enlarging of the said church, then
-newly built, a great part of his charge. This was a goodly foundation,
-with alms houses, free school, etc.
-
-George Monox, draper, mayor 1515, re-edified the decayed parish church
-of Waltonstow, or Walthamstow, in Essex; he founded there a free school,
-and alms houses for thirteen alms people, made a causeway of timber over
-the marshes from Walthamstow to Lock bridge, etc.
-
-Sir John Milborne, draper, mayor 1522, built alms houses, fourteen in
-number, by the Crossed Friers church in London, there to be placed
-fourteen poor people; and left to the Drapers certain messuages,
-tenements, and garden plots, in the parish of St. Olave in Hart street,
-for the performance of stipends to the said alms people, and other uses.
-Look more in Ealdgate ward.
-
-Robert Thorne, merchant-taylor, deceased a bachelor in the year 1532,
-gave by his testament to charitable actions more than four thousand four
-hundred and forty pounds, and legacies to his poor kindred more five
-thousand one hundred and forty-two pounds, besides his debts forgiven,
-etc.
-
-Sir John Allen, mercer, mayor of London, and of council to King Henry
-VIII., deceased 1544, buried in St. Thomas of Acres in a fair chapel
-by him built. He gave to the city of London a rich collar of gold to
-be worn by the mayor, which was first worn by Sir W. Laxton. He gave
-five hundred marks to be a stock for sea-coal; his lands purchased of
-the king, the rent thereof to be distributed to the poor in the wards
-of London for ever. He gave besides to the prisons, hospitals, lazar
-houses, and all other poor in the city, or two miles without, very
-liberally, and long to be recited.
-
-Sir William Laxton, grocer, mayor 1545, founded a fair free school at
-Owndale in Northamptonshire, with six alms houses for the poor.
-
-Sir John Gresham, mercer, mayor 1548, founded a free school at Holt, a
-market-town in Norfolk.
-
-Sir Rowland Hill, mercer, mayor 1550, caused to be made divers causeways
-both for horse and man; he made four bridges, two of stone, containing
-eighteen arches in them both; he built one notable free school at
-Drayton in Shropshire; he gave to Christ's hospital in London five
-hundred pounds, etc.
-
-Sir Andrew Jud, skinner, mayor 1551, erected one notable free school at
-Tunbridge in Kent, and alms houses nigh St. Helen's church in London,
-and left to the Skinners lands to the value of sixty pounds three
-shillings and eight pence the year; for the which they be bound to pay
-twenty pounds to the schoolmaster, eight pounds to the usher, yearly,
-for ever, and four-shillings the week to the six alms people, and
-twenty-five shillings and four pence the year in coals for ever.
-
-Sir Thomas White, merchant-taylor, mayor 1554, founded St. John's
-college, Oxford, and gave great sums of money to divers towns in England
-for relief of the poor, as in my _Summary_.
-
-Edward Hall, gentleman, of Gray's inn, a citizen by birth and office, as
-common sergeant of London, and one of the judges in the Sheriffs' court;
-he wrote and published a famous and eloquent chronicle, entitled, "The
-Uniting of the Two noble Families, Lancaster and Yorke."
-
-Richard Hils, merchant-taylor, 1560, gave five hundred pounds towards
-the purchase of a house called the manor of the Rose, wherein the
-merchant-taylors founded their free school in London; he also gave
-to the said merchant-taylors one plot of ground, with certain small
-cottages on the Tower hill, where he built fair alms houses for fourteen
-sole women.
-
-About the same time William Lambert, Esq., born in London, a justice
-of the peace in Kent, founded a college for the poor which he named of
-Queen Elizabeth, in East Greenwich.
-
-William Harper, merchant-taylor, mayor 1562, founded a free school in
-the town of Bedford, where he was born, and also buried.
-
-Sir Thomas Gresham, mercer, 1566, built the Royal Exchange in London,
-and by his testament left his dwelling house in Bishopsgate street to
-be a place for readings, allowing large stipends to the readers, and
-certain alms houses for the poor.
-
-William Patten, gentleman, a citizen by birth, a customer of London
-outward, justice of peace in Middlesex, the parish church of
-Stokenewenton being ruinous, he repaired, or rather new built.
-
-Sir Thomas Roo, merchant-taylor, mayor 1568, gave to the
-merchant-taylors lands or tenements, out of them to be given to ten poor
-men, cloth-workers, carpenters, tilers, plasterers, and armourers, forty
-pounds yearly, namely, four pounds to each, also one hundred pounds to
-be lent to eight poor men; besides he enclosed with a wall of brick
-nigh one acre of ground, pertaining to the hospital of Bethlem, to be a
-burial for the dead.
-
-Ambrose Nicholas, salter, mayor 1576, founded twelve alms houses in
-Monke's well street, near unto Creple's gate, wherein he placed twelve
-poor people, having each of them seven pence the week, and once every
-year five sacks of coals, and one quarter of a hundred faggots, all of
-his gift for ever.
-
-William Lambe, gentleman and clothworker, in the year 1577, built a
-water-conduit at Oldborne cross to his charges of fifteen hundred
-pounds, and did many other charitable acts, as in my _Summary_.
-
-Sir T. Offley, merchant-taylor, mayor, deceased 1580, appointed by his
-testament the one half of all his goods, and two hundred pounds deducted
-out of the other half given to his son Henry, to be given and bestowed
-in deeds of charity by his executors, according to his confidence and
-trust in them.
-
-John Haydon, sheriff 1583, gave large legacies, more than three thousand
-pounds, for the relief of the poor, as in my _Summary_.
-
-Barnard Randolph, common sergeant of London 1583, gave and delivered
-with his own hand, nine hundred pounds towards the building of
-water-conduits, which was performed. More, by testament he gave one
-thousand pounds to be employed in charitable actions; but that money
-being in hold fast hands, I have not heard how it was bestowed, more
-than of other good men's testaments--to be performed.
-
-Sir Wolston Dixie, skinner, mayor 1586, founded a free school at
-Bosworth, and endowed it with twenty pounds land by year.
-
-Richard May, merchant-taylor, gave three hundred pounds toward the new
-building of Blackwell hall in London, a market-place for woollen cloths.
-
-John Fuller, Esq., one of the judges in the sheriffs' court of London,
-by his testament, dated 1592, appointed his wife, her heirs and
-assigns, after his decease, to erect one alms house in the parish of
-Stikoneth,[123] for twelve poor single men, aged fifty years or upwards,
-and one other alms house in Shoreditch, for twelve poor aged widow women
-of like age, she to endow them with one hundred pounds the year, to
-wit, fifty pounds to each for ever, out of his lands in Lincolne shire,
-assured ever unto certain fiefs in trust, by a deed of feoffment. Item:
-more, he gave his messuages, lands, and tenements, lying in the parishes
-of St. Benet and St. Peter, by Powle's wharf in London, to feoffees
-in trust, yearly for ever, to disburse all the issues and profits of
-the said lands and tenements, to the relieving and discharge of poor
-prisoners in the Hole, or two penny wards in the two compters in London,
-in equal portions to each compter, so that the prisoners exceed not the
-sum of twenty-six shillings and eight pence for every one prisoner at
-any one time.
-
-Thus much for famous citizens have I noted their charitable actions,
-for the most part done by them in their lifetime. The residue left in
-trust to their executors, I have known some of them hardly (or never)
-performed; wherefore I wish men to make their own hands their executors,
-and their eyes their overseers, not forgetting the old proverb:--
-
- "Women be forgetfull, children be unkind,
- Executors be covetous, and take what they find.
- If any body aske where the dead's goods became,
- They answere, So God me help, and holy dome, he died a poore man."
-
-One worthy citizen merchant-taylor, having many years considered this
-proverb foregoing, hath therefore established to twelve poor aged men,
-merchant-taylors, six pounds two shillings to each yearly for ever. He
-hath also given them gowns of good broad cloth, lined thoroughly with
-bays, and are to receive every three years' end the like new gowns for
-ever.
-
-And now of some women, citizens' wives, deserving memory, for example to
-posterity shall be noted.
-
-Dame Agnes Foster, widow, sometime wife to Stephen Foster, fishmonger,
-mayor 1455, having enlarged the prison of Ludgate in 1463, procured in a
-common council of this city, certain articles to be established for the
-ease, comfort, and relief of poor prisoners there, as in the chapter of
-gates I have set down.
-
-Avise Gibson, wife unto Nicholas Gibson, grocer, one of the sheriffs
-1539, by license of her husband, founded a free school at Radclyffe,
-near unto London, appointing to the same, for the instruction of sixty
-poor men's children, a schoolmaster and usher with fifty pounds; she
-also built alms houses for fourteen poor aged persons, each of them to
-receive quarterly six shillings and eight pence the piece for ever; the
-government of which free school and alms houses she left in confidence
-to the Coopers in London. This virtuous gentlewoman was after joined in
-marriage with Sir Anthony Knevet, knight, and so called the Lady Knevet;
-a fair painted table of her picture was placed in the chapel which she
-had built there, but of late removed thence, by the like reason as the
-Grocer's arms fixed on the outer wall of the schoolhouse are pulled
-down, and the Coopers set in place.[124]
-
-Margaret Danne, widow to William Danne, ironmonger, one of the sheriffs
-of London, gave by her testament to the ironmongers, two thousand
-pounds, to be lent to young men of that company, paying after the rate
-of five pounds in the year for every hundred; which one hundred pounds
-so rising yearly, to be employed on charitable actions, as she then
-appointed, but not performed in more than thirty years after.
-
-Dame Mary Ramsey, wife to Sir Thomas Ramsey, mayor about the year 1577,
-being seised of lands in fee simple of her inheritance to the yearly
-value of two hundred and forty-three pounds, by his consent gave the
-same to Christ's hospital in London towards the relief of poor children
-there, and other ways, as in my _Summary_ and _Abridgment_ I have
-long since expressed; which gift she in her widowhood confirmed and
-augmented, as is showed by monuments in Christ's hospital erected.
-
-Thus much for the worthiness of citizens in this city, touching whom
-John Lidgate, a monk of Bury, in the reign of Henry VI., made (amongst
-other) these verses following:--
-
- "Of seaven things I prayse this citty.
- Of true meaning and faithful observance;
- Of righteousnes, truth, and equity;
- Of stablenes aye kept in legiance;
- And for of vertue thou hast suffisance,
- In this lond here, and other londs all,
- The kinges chamber of custome, men thee call."
-
-Having thus in generality handled the original, the walls, gates,
-ditches, and fresh waters, the bridges, towers, and castles, the
-schools of learning and house of law, the orders and customs, sports
-and pastimes, watchings and martial exercises, and lastly the honour
-and worthiness of the citizens, I am now to set down the distribution
-of this city into parts; and more especially to declare the antiquities
-noteworthy in every of the same; and how both the whole and parts have
-been from time to time ruled and governed.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[120] "To London in greater quantitie."--_1st edition_, p. 80.
-
-[121] "In the yeare 1471, John Stockton, mayor, and eleven aldermen
-of London, with the recorder, were all made knightes in the fielde by
-Edward IV., for their good service done to him."--_1st edition_, p. 81.
-
-[122] Wolverhampton.
-
-[123] Stepney.
-
-[124] "Cursed is hee that removeth his neighbors mark, have I
-read."--_Stow._
-
-
-
-
-THE CITY DIVIDED INTO PARTS
-
-
-The ancient division of this city was into wards or aldermanries. And
-therefore I will begin at the east, and so proceed through the high and
-most principal street of the city to the west, after this manner.
-
-First, through Aldgate street to the west corner of St. Andrewe's
-church, called Undershaft, on the right hand, and Lyme street corner on
-the left; all which is of Aldgate ward; from thence through Cornhill
-street to the west corner of Leaden hall; all which is of Lyme street
-ward. From thence, leaving the street that leadeth to Bishopsgate on the
-right hand, and the way that leadeth into Grasse street on the left,
-still through Cornhill street, by the conduit to the west corner against
-the Stocks; all which is in Cornhill ward. Then by the said Stocks (a
-market-place both of fish and flesh standing in the midst of the city)
-through the Poultry (a street so called) to the great conduit in West
-Cheape, and so through Cheape to the standard, which is of Cheape ward,
-except on the south side from Bow-lane to the said standard, which is
-of Cordwayner street ward. Then by the standard to the great cross,
-which is in Cripplegate ward on the north side, and in Bred street ward
-on the south side. And to the little conduit by Paule's gate, from
-whence of old time the said high street stretched straight to Ludgate,
-all in the ward of Faringdon within, then divided truly from east to
-west, but since by means of the burning of Paule's church, which was
-in the reign of William I., Mauricius, then bishop of London, laid the
-foundation of a new church, so far in largeness exceeding the old, that
-the way towards Ludgate was thereby greatly straitened, as before I have
-discoursed.
-
-Now from the north to the south this city was of old time divided, not
-by a large highway or street, as from east to west, but by a fair brook
-of sweet water, which came from out the north fields through the wall,
-and midst of the city, into the river of Thames; which division is
-till this day constantly and without change maintained. This water was
-called (as I have said) Walbrooke, not Galus brook of a Roman captain
-slain by Asclepiodatus, and thrown therein, as some have fabled, but of
-running through, and from the wall of this city; the course whereof,
-to prosecute it particularly, was and is from the said wall to St.
-Margaret's church in Lothberrie; from thence beneath the lower part
-of the Grocers' hall, about the east part of their kitchen, under St.
-Mildred's church, somewhat west from the said Stockes' market; from
-thence through Buckles berry, by one great house built of stone and
-timber called the Old Barge, because barges out of the river of Thames
-were rowed up so far into this brook, on the backside of the houses in
-Walbrooke street (which street taketh the name of the said brook) by the
-west end of St. John's church upon Walbrooke, under Horseshew bridge,
-by the west side of Tallowchandler's hall, and of the Skinner's hall,
-and so behind the other houses to Elbow lane, and by a part thereof down
-Greenewitch lane, into the river of Thames.
-
-This is the course of Walbrooke, which was of old time bridged over in
-divers places, for passage of horses and men, as need required; but
-since, by means of encroachment on the banks thereof, the channel being
-greatly straitened, and other noyances done thereunto, at length the
-same by common consent was arched over with brick, and paved with stone,
-equal with the ground, where through it passed, and is now in most
-places built upon, that no man may by the eye discern it, and therefore
-the trace thereof is hardly known to the common people.
-
-This city was divided from east to west, and from north to south. I am
-further to show how the same was of old time broken into divers parts
-called wards, whereof Fitzstephen, more than four hundred years since,
-writeth thus:--"This city, (saith he) even as Rome, is divided into
-wards; it hath yearly sheriffs instead of consuls. It hath the dignity
-of senators in aldermen," etc. The number of these wards in London
-was, both before and in the reign of Henry III., twenty-four in all;
-whereof thirteen lay on the east side of the said Walbrooke, and eleven
-on the west. Notwithstanding these eleven grew much more large than
-those of the east; and therefore in the year of Christ 1393, in the
-17th of Richard II., Faringdon ward, which was then one entire ward,
-but mightily increased of buildings without the gates, was by act of
-parliament appointed to be divided into twain, and to have two aldermen,
-to wit, Faringdon within, and Faringdon without, which made up the
-number of twelve wards on the west side of Walbrooke, and so the whole
-number of twenty-five on both sides. Moreover, in the year 1550, the
-mayor, commonalty, and citizens of London, purchasing the liberties of
-the borough of Southwark, appointed the same to be a ward of London, and
-so became the number of thirteen wards on the east, twelve on the west,
-and one south of the river Thames, in the said borough of Southwark, in
-the county of Surrey, which in all arise to the number of twenty-six
-wards, and twenty-six aldermen of London.
-
-Wards on the east part of Walbrooke are these:--
-
- 1 Portsoken ward without the walls.
-
- 2 Tower street ward.
-
- 3 Ealdegate ward.
-
- 4 Lime street ward.
-
- 5 Bishopsgate ward, within the walls and without.
-
- 6 Brod street ward.
-
- 7 Cornehil ward.
-
- 8 Langbourne ward.
-
- 9 Billingsgate ward.
-
- 10 Bridge ward within.
-
- 11 Candlewick street ward.
-
- 12 Walbrooke ward.
-
- 13 Downgate ward.
-
-Wards on the west side of Walbrooke are these:
-
- 14 Vintry ward.
-
- 15 Cordwainer street ward.
-
- 16 Cheape ward.
-
- 17 Colman street warde.
-
- 18 Basinghall warde.
-
- 19 Cripplegate ward, within and without.
-
- 20 Aldersgate ward, within and without.
-
- 21 Farringdon ward within.
-
- 22 Bread street ward.
-
- 23 Queenhithe ward.
-
- 24 Castle Baynard ward.
-
- 25 Farringdon ward without the walls.
-
-One ward south the river Thames, in the borough of Southwark, by the
-name of
-
- 26 Bridge ward without.
-
-
-
-
-OF PORTSOKEN WARD, THE FIRST IN THE EAST PART
-
-
-Seeing that of every of these wards I have to say somewhat, I will begin
-with Portsoken ward without Aldgate.
-
-This Portsoken, which soundeth[125] the franchise at the gate, was
-sometime a guild, and had beginning in the days of King Edgar, more
-than six hundred years since.[126] There were thirteen knights or
-soldiers, well-beloved to the king and realm, for service by them done,
-which requested to have a certain portion of land on the east part of
-the city, left desolate and forsaken by the inhabitants, by reason of
-too much servitude. They besought the king to have this land, with the
-liberty of a guild for ever. The king granted to their request, with
-conditions following: that is, that each of them should victoriously
-accomplish three combats, one above the ground, one under ground,
-and the third in the water; and after this, at a certain day in East
-Smithfield, they should run with spears against all comers; all which
-was gloriously performed; and the same day the king named it Knighten
-Guild, and so bounded it, from Aldgate to the place where the bars now
-are, toward the east, on both the sides of the street, and extended
-it towards Bishopsgate in the north, unto the house then of William
-Presbiter, after of Giffrey Tanner, and then of the heirs of Colver,
-after that of John Easeby, but since of the Lord Bourchier, etc. And
-again towards the south unto the river of Thames, and so far into the
-water, as a horseman, entering the same, may ride at a low water, and
-throw his spear; so that all East Smithfield, with the right part of the
-street that goeth to Dodding pond into the Thames, and also the hospital
-of St. Katherin's, with the mills that were founded in King Stephen's
-days, and the outward stone wall, and the new ditch of the Tower, are
-of the said fee and liberty; for the said wall and ditch of the Tower
-were made in the time of King Richard, when he was in the Holy Land, by
-William Longshampe, Bishop of Ely, as before I have noted unto you.
-
-These knights had as then none other charter by all the days of Edgar,
-Ethelred, and Cnutus, until the time of Edward the Confessor, whom the
-heirs of those knights humbly besought to confirm their liberties;
-whereunto he graciously granting,[127] gave them a deed thereof, as
-appeareth in the book of the late house of the Holy Trinity. The said
-charter is fair written in the Saxon letter and tongue. After this,
-King William, the son of William the Conqueror, made a confirmation of
-the same liberties, unto the heirs of those knights, in these words:
-"William, king of England, to Maurice Bishop, and Godffrey de Magum,
-and Richard de Parre, and to his faithfull people of London, greeting:
-Know ye me to have granted to the men of Knighten Guilde, the guilde
-that belonged to them, and the land that belonged thereunto, with all
-customes, as they had the same in the time of King Edward, and my
-father. Witnesse, Hugh de Buche, at Rething."
-
-After him, King Henry I. confirmed the same by his charter to the like
-effect, the recital whereof I pretermit for brevity. After which time,
-the church of the Holy Trinity, within Aldgate of London, being founded
-by Queen Matilda, wife to the said Henry, the multitude of brethren,
-praising God day and night therein, in short time so increased, that all
-the city was delighted in the beholding of them; insomuch, that in the
-year 1115, certain burgesses of London, of the progeny of those noble
-English knights; to wit, Radulphus Fitalgod, Wilmarde le Deucreshe,
-Orgar le Prude, Edward Hupcornehill, Blackstanus, and Alwine his
-kinsman, and Robert his brother, the sons of Leafstanus the goldsmith,
-Wiso his son, Hugh Fitzvulgar, Algare Secusme, coming together into the
-chapter-house of the said church of the Holy Trinity, gave to the same
-church and canons serving God therein, all the lands and soke called in
-English Knighten Guilde, which lieth to the wall of the city, without
-the same gate, and stretcheth to the river of Thames; they gave it, I
-say, taking upon them the brotherhood and participation of the benefits
-of that house, by the hands of Prior Norman. And the better to confirm
-this their grant, they offered upon the altar there the charter of
-Edward, together with the other charters which they had thereof; and
-afterward they did put the foresaid prior in seisine thereof, by the
-church of St. Buttolphe's, which is built thereon, and is the head
-of that land. These things were thus done before Bernard, prior of
-Dunstable, John, prior of Derland, Geffrey Clinton, chamberlain, and
-many other clerks and laymen, French and English. Orgar le Prude (one
-of their company) was sent to King Henry, beseeching him to confirm
-their gift, which the king gladly granted by his deed: "Henrie, king of
-England, to Richard Bishop of London, to the shireffes and provost, and
-to all his barons and faithfull people, French and English, of London
-and Middlesex, greeting: Know ye mee to have graunted and confirmed to
-the church and canons of the Holy Trinitie of London, the soke of the
-English Knighten Guilde, and the land which pertaineth thereunto, and
-the church of St. Buttolph, as the men of the same guilde have given and
-granted unto them: and I will and straightly commaund, that they may
-hold the same well and honourably and freely, with sacke and soke, toll
-and thea, infangthefe, and all customs belonging to it, as the men of
-the same Guild in best sort had the same in the time of K. Edward, and
-as King William, my father and brother, did grant it to them by their
-writs. Witnesse, A. the queene, Geffrey the chauncellor, Geoffrey of
-Clinton, and William of Clinton, at Woodstocke." All these prescribed
-writings (saith my book), which sometime belonged to the priory of the
-Holy Trinity, are registered in the end of the Book of Remembrances,
-in the Guildhall of London, marked with the letter C, folio 134. The
-king sent also his sheriffs, to wit, Aubrey de Vere, and Roger, nephew
-to Hubert, which upon his behalf should invest this church with the
-possessions thereof, which the said sheriffs accomplished coming upon
-the ground; Andrew Buchevite, and the forenamed witnesses, and other,
-standing by; notwithstanding, Othowerus Acolivillus, Otto, and Geffrey,
-Earl of Essex, constables of the Tower by succession, withheld by force
-a portion of the said land, as I have before delivered.
-
-The prior and canons of the Holy Trinity, being thus seised of the said
-land and soke of Knighten Guilde, a part of the suburb without the wall
-(but within the liberties of the city), the same prior was, for him and
-his successors, admitted as one of the aldermen of London, to govern
-the same land and soke: according to the customs of the city, he did
-sit in court, and rode with the mayor and his brethren the aldermen, as
-one of them, in scarlet or other livery as they used, until the year
-1531, at the which time the said priory, by the last prior there, was
-surrendered to King Henry VIII., in the 23rd of his reign, who gave this
-priory to Sir Thomas Audley, knight, lord chancellor of England, and he
-pulled down the church; since the which dissolution of that house, the
-said ward of Portsoken hath been governed by a temporal man, one of the
-aldermen of London, elected by the citizens, as the aldermen of other
-wards. Thus much for the out-bounds of Knighten guilde, or Portsoken
-ward, and for the antiquity and government thereof.
-
-Now, of the parts therein, this is specially to be noted. First,
-the east part of the Tower standeth there, then an hospital of St.
-Katherine's, founded by Matilda the queen, wife to King Stephen, by
-license of the priory and convent of the Holy Trinity in London, on
-whose grounds he founded it. Helianor the queen, wife to King Edward
-I., a second foundress, appointed there to be a master, three brethren
-chaplains, and three sisters, ten poor women, and six poor clerks; she
-gave to them the manor of Carlton in Wiltshire, and Upchurch in Kent,
-etc. Queen Philippa, wife to King Edward III., 1351, founded a chantry
-there, and gave to that hospital ten pounds land by year; it was of late
-time called a free chapel, a college, and an hospital for poor sisters.
-The choir, which of late years was not much inferior to that of Paules,
-was dissolved by Dr. Wilson, a late master there, the brethren and
-sisters remaining: this house was valued at L315 14_s._ 2_d._, being
-now of late years inclosed about, or pestered with small tenements and
-homely cottages, having inhabitants, English and strangers, more in
-number than in some city in England. There lie buried in this church the
-countess of Huntingdon, countess of the March in her time, 1429; John
-Holland, Duke of Exeter and Earl of Huntingdon, 1447, and his two wives,
-in a fair tomb on the north side the choir; Thomas Walsingham, esquire,
-and Thomas Ballarde, esquire, by him, 1465; Thomas Flemming, knight,
-1466, etc.[128]
-
-On the east and by north of the Tower, lieth East Smithfield and Tower
-hill, two plots of ground so called, without the wall of the city; and
-east from them both was sometime a monastery, called New Abbey, founded
-by King Edward III. in the year 1359, upon occasion as followeth:
-
-In the year 1348, the 23rd of Edward III., the first great pestilence
-in his time began, and increased so sore, that for want of room in
-churchyards to bury the dead of the city and of the suburbs, one John
-Corey, clerk, procured of Nicholas, prior of the Holy Trinity within
-Aldgate, one toft[129] of ground near unto East Smithfield, for the
-burial of them that died, with condition that it might be called the
-churchyard of the Holy Trinity; which ground he caused, by the aid of
-divers devout citizens, to be inclosed with a wall of stone. Robert
-Elsing, son of William Elsing, gave five pounds thereunto; and the same
-was dedicated by Ralph Stratford, Bishop of London, where innumerable
-bodies of the dead were afterwards buried, and a chapel built in the
-same place to the honour of God: to the which King Edward setting his
-eye (having before, in a tempest on the sea, and peril of drowning,
-made a vow to build a monastery to the honour of God, and our lady of
-grace, if God would grant him grace to come safe to land), built there
-a monastery, placing an abbot, and monks of the Cistercian, or White
-order. The bounds of this plot of ground, together with a decree for
-tithes thereof, are expressed in the charter, the effect whereof I
-have set down in another place, and have to show. This house, at the
-late general suppression, was valued at L546 0_s._ 10_d._ yearly; it
-was surrendered in the year 1539, the 30th of Henry VIII.; since the
-which time, the said monastery being clean pulled down by Sir Arthur
-Darcie, knight, and others, of late time in place thereof is built a
-large storehouse for victuals; and convenient ovens are built there, for
-baking of biscuits to serve her majesty's ships. The grounds adjoining,
-belonging to the said abbey, are employed in building of small tenements.
-
-For Tower hill, as the same is greatly diminished by building of
-tenements and garden-plots, etc. So it is of late, to wit, in the year
-of Christ 1593, on the north side thereof, and at the west end of Hog
-street, beautified by certain fair alms houses, strongly built of brick
-and timber, and covered with slate for the poor, by the merchant-tailors
-of London, in place of some small cottages given to them by Richard
-Hils, sometime a master of that company, one thousand loads of timber
-for that use, being also given by Anthonie Radcliffe, of the same
-society, alderman. In these alms houses, fourteen charitable brethren
-of the said merchant-tailors yet living, have placed fourteen poor
-sole women, which receive each of them of their founder sixteen pence,
-or better, weekly, besides L8 15_s._ yearly, paid out of the common
-treasury of the same corporation for fuel.
-
-From the west part of this Tower hill, towards Aldgate, being a long
-continual street, amongst other smaller buildings in that row, there
-was sometime an abbey of nuns of the order of St. Clare, called the
-Minories, founded by Edmond, Earl of Lancaster, Leycester, and Darbie,
-brother to King Edward III., in the year 1293; the length of which abbey
-contained fifteen perches and seven feet, near unto the king's street or
-highway, etc., as appeareth by a deed, dated 1303.
-
-A plague of pestilence being in this city, in the year 1515, there died
-in this house of nuns professed to the number of twenty-seven, besides
-other lay people, servants in their house. This house was valued to
-dispend L418 8_s._ 5_d._ yearly, and was surrendered by Dame Elizabeth
-Salvage, the last abbess there, unto King Henry VIII. in the 30th of his
-reign, the year of Christ 1539.
-
-In place of this house of nuns is now built divers fair and large
-storehouses for armour and habiliments of war, with divers workhouses,
-serving to the same purpose: there is a small parish church for
-inhabitants of the close, called St. Trinities.
-
-Near adjoining to this abbey, on the south side thereof, was sometime
-a farm belonging to the said nunnery; at the which farm I myself in my
-youth have fetched many a halfpenny worth of milk, and never had less
-than three ale pints for a halfpenny in the summer, nor less than one
-ale quart for a halfpenny in the winter, always hot from the kine, as
-the same was milked and strained. One Trolop, and afterwards Goodman,
-were the farmers there, and had thirty or forty kine to the pail.
-Goodman's son being heir to his father's purchase, let out the ground
-first for grazing of horses, and then for garden-plots, and lived like a
-gentleman thereby.
-
-On the other side of that street lieth the ditch without the walls of
-the city, which of old time was used to be open, always from time to
-time cleansed from filth and mud, as need required; of great breadth,
-and so deep, that divers, watering horses where they thought it
-shallowest, were drowned, both horse and man. But now of later time the
-same ditch is inclosed, and the banks thereof let out for garden-plots,
-carpenters' yards, bowling allies, and divers houses thereon built,
-whereby the city wall is hidden, the ditch filled up, a small channel
-left, and that very shallow.
-
-From Aldgate, east, lieth a large street and highway, sometime
-replenished with few, but fair and comely buildings; on the north side
-whereof, the first was the parish church of St. Buttolph, in a large
-cemetery or churchyard. This church hath been lately new built at the
-special charges of the priors of the Holy Trinity; patrons thereof, as
-it appeareth by the arms of that house, engraven on the stone work.
-The parishioners of this parish being of late years mightily increased,
-the church is pestered with lofts and seats for them. Monuments in this
-church are few: Henry Jorden founded a chauntry there; John Romany
-Ollarie, and Agnes his wife, were buried there about 1408; Richard
-Chester, alderman, one of the sheriffs, 1484; Thomas Lord Darcie of
-the north, knight of the garter, beheaded 1537; Sir Nicholas Carew, of
-Bedington, in Surrey, knight of the garter, beheaded 1538; Sir Arthur
-Darcie, youngest son to Thomas Lord Darcie, deceased at the new abbey on
-the Tower hill, was buried there. East from this parish church, there
-were certain fair inns for receipt of travellers repairing to the city,
-up towards Hog lane end, somewhat within the bars, a mark showing how
-far the liberties of the city do extend.
-
-This Hog lane stretcheth north toward St. Mary Spitle without
-Bishopsgate, and within these forty years[130] had on both sides fair
-hedge rows of elm trees, with bridges and easy stiles to pass over into
-the pleasant fields, very commodious for citizens therein to walk,
-shoot, and otherwise to recreate and refresh their dull spirits in
-the sweet and wholesome air, which is now within a few years made a
-continual building throughout, of garden-houses and small cottages; and
-the fields on either sides be turned into garden-plots, tenter yards,
-bowling alleys, and such like, from Houndes ditch in the west, as far as
-White Chappell, and further towards the east.
-
-On the south side of the highway from Aldgate were some few tenements,
-thinly scattered here and there, with many void spaces between them,
-up to the Bars; but now that street is not only fully replenished with
-buildings outward, and also pestered with divers alleys, on either side
-to the bars, but to White Chappell and beyond. Among the which late
-buildings, one memorable for the commodity of that east part of this
-city is a fair water conduit, hard without the gate; at the building
-whereof in the year 1535, Sir John Allen being mayor, two-fifteens were
-granted by the citizens for the making and laying of pipes, to convey
-water from Hackney to that place; and so that work was finished.
-
-From Aldgate, north-west to Bishopsgate, lieth the ditch of the city
-called Houndes ditch; for that in old time, when the same lay open, much
-filth (conveyed forth of the city), especially dead dogs, were there
-laid or cast; wherefore of latter time a mud wall was made, inclosing
-the ditch, to keep out the laying of such filth as had been accustomed.
-Over against this mud wall, on the other side of the street, was a fair
-field, sometime belonging to the priory of the Trinity, and since by Sir
-Thomas Audley given to Magdalen college in Cambridge: this field (as all
-other about the city) was inclosed, reserving open passage thereinto,
-for such as were disposed. Towards the street were some small cottages,
-of two stories high, and little garden-plots backward, for poor bed-rid
-people, for in that street dwelt none other, built by some prior of the
-Holy Trinity, to whom that ground belonged.
-
-In my youth, I remember, devout people, as well men as women of this
-city, were accustomed oftentimes, especially on Fridays, weekly to walk
-that way purposely there to bestow their charitable alms; every poor man
-or woman lying in their bed within their window, which was towards the
-street, open so low that every man might see them, a clean linen cloth
-lying in their window, and a pair of beads, to show that there lay a
-bed-rid body, unable but to pray only. This street was first paved in
-the year 1503.
-
-About the latter reign of Henry VIII., three brethren that were
-gunfounders, surnamed Owens, got ground there to build upon, and to
-inclose for casting of brass ordinance. These occupied a good part of
-the street on the field side, and in a short time divers others also
-built there, so that the poor bed-rid people were worn out, and, in
-place of their homely cottages, such houses built as do rather want
-room than rent; which houses be for the most part possessed by brokers,
-sellers of old apparel, and such like. The residue of the field was for
-the most part made into a garden by a gardener named Cawsway, one that
-served the markets with herbs and roots; and in the last year of King
-Edward VI. the same was parcelled into gardens wherein are now many fair
-houses of pleasure built.
-
-On the ditch side of this street the mud wall is also by little and
-little all taken down, the bank of the ditch being raised, made level
-ground, and turned into garden-plots and carpenters' yards, and many
-large houses are there built; the filth of which houses, as also the
-earth cast out of their vaults, is turned into the ditch, by which means
-the ditch is filled up, and both the ditch and wall so hidden that they
-cannot be seen of the passers by. This Portsoken ward hath an alderman
-and his deputy, common councillors six, constables four, scavengers
-four, for the wardemote inquest eighteen, and a beadle. To the fifteen
-it is cessed at four pounds ten shillings.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[125] "As much as"--_1st edition_, p. 85.
-
-[126] Liber Trinitat.
-
-[127] Liber Trinitat.
-
-[128] The further history of this establishment will be found in
-Nichols' _History of the Hospital and Collegiate Church of St.
-Katherine, near the Tower of London_.
-
-[129] The Danish _toft_, Swedish _tomt_, properly signifies the ground
-upon which a house stands. See Grimm's _Deutsche Rechtsalterthuemer_, s.
-539.
-
-[130] "These fortie-four yeares last."--_1st edition_, p. 92.
-
-
-
-
-TOWER STREET WARD
-
-
-The first ward in the east part of this city within the wall is called
-Tower street ward, and extendeth along the river of Thames from the
-said Tower in the east almost to Belinsgate in the west. One half of
-the Tower, the ditch on the west side, and bulwarks adjoining, do stand
-within that part where the wall of the city of old time went straight
-from the postern gate south to the river of Thames, before that the
-Tower was built. From and without the Tower ditch, west and by north,
-is the said Tower hill, sometime a large plot of ground, now greatly
-straitened by incroachments (unlawfully made and suffered) for gardens
-and houses; some on the bank of the Tower ditch, whereby the Tower ditch
-is marred, but more near unto the wall of the city from the postern
-north, till over against the principal fore-gate of the Lord Lumley's
-house, etc.; but the Tower ward goeth no further that way.
-
-Upon this hill is always readily prepared, at the charges of the city, a
-large scaffold and gallows of timber, for the execution of such traitors
-or transgressors as are delivered out of the Tower, or otherwise, to the
-sheriffs of London by writ, there to be executed. I read, that in the
-fifth of King Edward IV.[131] a scaffold and gallows was there set up
-by other the king's officers, and not of the city's charges, whereupon
-the mayor and his brethren complained, but were answered by the king
-that the Tower hill was of the liberty of the city; and whatsoever was
-done in that point was not in derogation of the city's liberties, and
-therefore commanded proclamation[132] to be made, as well within the
-city as in the suburbs, as followeth: "Forasmuch as, the seventh day of
-this present month of November, gallows were erect and set up besides
-our Tower of London, within the liberties and franchises of our city of
-London, in derogation and prejudice of the liberties and franchises of
-this city, the king our sovereign lord would it be certainly understood
-that the erection and setting up of the said gallows was not done by
-his commandment; wherefore the king our sovereign lord willeth that the
-erection and setting up the said gallows be not any precedent or example
-thereby hereafter to be taken, in hurt, prejudice, or derogation of the
-franchises, liberties, and privileges of the said city, which he at all
-times hath had, and hath in his benevolence, tender favour, and good
-grace, etc. Apud Westminst. 9 die Novemb. anno regni nostri quinto."
-On the north side of this hill is the said Lord Lumley's house, and on
-the west side divers houses lately built, and other incroachments along
-south to Chick lane,[133] on the east of Barking church, at the end
-whereof you have Tower street stretching from the Tower hill, west to
-St. Margaret Patten's church parsonage.
-
-Now therefore, to begin at the east end of the street, on the north side
-thereof, is the fair parish church called Allhallows Barking, which
-standeth in a large, but sometime far larger, cemetery or churchyard; on
-the north side whereof was sometime built a fair chapel, founded by King
-Richard I.; some have written that his heart was buried there under the
-high altar. This chapel was confirmed and augmented by King Edward I.
-Edward IV. gave license to his cousin John, Earl of Worcester, to found
-there a brotherhood for a master and brethren; and he gave to the custos
-of that fraternity, which was Sir John Scot, knight, Thomas Colte,
-John Tate, and John Croke, the priory of Totingbecke, and advowson
-of the parish church of Streatham, in the county of Surrey, with all
-the members and appurtenances, and a part of the priory of Okeborn in
-Wiltshire, both priors aliens, and appointed it to be called the king's
-chapel or chantry, _In capella Beatae Mariae de Barking_. King Richard
-III. new built and founded therein a college of priests, etc. Hamond de
-Lega was buried in that chapel. Robert Tate, mayor of London, 1488,[134]
-and other, were there buried. This chapel and college were suppressed
-and pulled down in the year 1548, the 2nd of King Edward VI. The ground
-was employed as a garden-plot during the reigns of King Edward, Queen
-Mary, and part of Queen Elizabeth, till at length a large strong frame
-of timber and brick was set thereon, and employed as a store-house of
-merchants' goods brought from the sea by Sir William Winter, etc.
-
-Monuments in the parish church of Allhallows Barking, not defaced, are
-these:--Sir Thomas Studinham, of Norwich diocess, knight, 1469; Thomas
-Gilbart, draper and merchant of the staple, 1483; John Bolt, merchant
-of the staple, 1459; Sir John Stile, knight, draper, 1500. William
-Thinne, esq., one of the clerks of the Green cloth, and master of the
-household to King Henry VIII., 1546; Humfrey Monmouth, draper, one of
-the sheriffs, 1535; Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey, beheaded 1546; Sir
-Richard Devereux, son and heir to the Lord Ferrers of Chartley; Richard
-Browne, esq. 1546; Philip Dennis, esq. 1556; Andrew Evenger, salter;
-William Robinson, mercer, alderman, 1552; William Armorer, cloth-worker,
-esquire, governor of the pages of honour, or master of the heance men,
-servant to Henry VIII., Edward VI., and Queen Mary, buried 1560. Besides
-which there be divers tombs without inscription. John Crolys and Thomas
-Pike, citizens of London, founded a chantry there 1388.
-
-By the west end of this parish church and chapel, lieth Sidon lane,
-now corruptly called Sything lane, from Tower street up north to
-Hart street. In this Sidon lane divers fair and large houses are
-built, namely, one by Sir John Allen, sometime mayor of London, and
-of council unto King Henry VIII.; Sir Francis Walsingham, knight,
-principal secretary to the queen's majesty that now is, was lodged
-there, and so was the Earl of Essex, etc. At the north-west corner of
-this lane standeth a proper parish church of St. Olave, which church,
-together with some houses adjoining, as also others over against it
-in Hart street, are of the said Tower street ward. Monuments in this
-parish church of St. Olave be these:--Richard Cely and Robert Cely,
-fellmongers, principal builders and benefactors of this church; Dame
-Johan, wife to Sir John Zouch, 1439; John Clarenciaulx, king of arms,
-1427; Thomas Sawle; Sir Richard Haddon, mercer, mayor 1512; Thomas
-Burnell, mercer, 1548; Thomas Morley, gentleman, 1566; Sir John
-Radcliffe, knight, 1568; and Dame Anne his wife, 1585; Chapone, a
-Florentine gentleman, 1582; Sir Hamond Vaughan, knight; George Stoddard,
-merchant; etc.
-
-Then have ye out of Tower street, also on the north side, one other
-lane, called Marte lane, which runneth up towards the north, and is
-for the most part of this Tower street ward; which lane is about the
-third quarter thereof divided from Aldgate ward, by a chain to be drawn
-athwart the said lane, above the west end of Hart street. Cokedon hall,
-sometime at the south-west end of Marte lane, I read of.[135]
-
-A third lane out of Tower street, on the north side, is called Mincheon
-lane, so called of tenements there sometime pertaining to the Minchuns
-or nuns of St. Helen's in Bishopsgate street. This lane is all of the
-said ward, except the corner house towards Fenchurch street. In this
-lane of old time dwelt divers strangers born of Genoa and those parts;
-these were commonly called galley men, as men that came up in the
-galleys brought up wines and other merchandises, which they landed in
-Thames street, at a place called Galley key; they had a certain coin
-of silver amongst themselves, which were halfpence of Genoa, and were
-called Galley halfpence; these halfpence were forbidden in the 13th of
-Henry IV., and again by parliament in the 4th of Henry V. It was, that
-if any person bring into this realm halfpence, suskinges, or dodkins, he
-should be punished as a thief; and he that taketh or payeth such money
-shall leese a hundred shillings, whereof the king shall have the one
-half, and he that will sue the other half. Notwithstanding, in my youth,
-I have seen them pass current, but with some difficulty, for that the
-English halfpence were then, though not so broad, somewhat thicker and
-stronger.
-
-The Clothworkers' hall is in this lane. Then at the west end of Tower
-street have ye a little turning towards the north to a fair house
-sometime belonging to one named Griste, for he dwelt there in the year
-1449. And Jack Cade, captain of the rebels in Kent, being by him in this
-his house feasted, when he had dined, like an unkind guest, robbed him
-of all that was there to be found worth the carriage. Next to this is
-one other fair house, sometime built by Angell Dune, grocer, alderman of
-London, since possessed by Sir John Champneis, alderman, and mayor of
-London. He built in this house a high tower of brick, the first that I
-ever heard of in any private man's house, to overlook his neighbours in
-this city. But this delight of his eye was punished with blindness some
-years before his death. Since that time. Sir Percevall Hart, a jolly
-courtier, and knight-harbinger to the queen, was lodged there, etc.
-From this house, somewhat west, is the parish church of St. Margaret's
-Pattens; to the which church and house, on the north side, and as far
-over against on the south, stretcheth the farthest west part of this
-ward.
-
-And, therefore, to begin again at the east end of Tower street, on
-the south side, have ye Beare lane, wherein are many fair houses, and
-runneth down to Thames street. The next is Sporiar lane, of old time
-so called, but since and of later time named Water lane, because it
-runneth down to the water gate by the Custom house in Thames street.
-Then is there Hart lane for Harpe lane, which likewise runneth down
-into Thames street. In this Hart lane is the Bakers' hall, sometime the
-dwelling-house of John Chichley, chamberlain of London, who was son
-to William Chichley, alderman of London, brother to William Chichley,
-archdeacon of Canterburie, nephew to Robert Chichley, mayor of London,
-and to Henry Chichley, archbishop of Canterburie. This John Chichley,
-saith John Leland, had twenty-four children. Sir Thomas Kirrioll, of
-Kent, after he had been long prisoner in France, married Elizabeth, one
-of the daughters of this Chichley, by whom he had this Chichley's house.
-This Elizabeth was secondly married to Sir Ralfe Ashton, knight-marshal,
-and thirdly, to Sir John Burchier, uncle to the late Burchier, Earl of
-Essex, but she never had child. Edward Poynings made part with Burchier
-and Elizabeth, to have Ostenhanger in Kent, after their death, and
-entered into it, they living.
-
-In Tower street, between Hart lane and Church lane, was a quadrant
-called Galley row, because galley men dwelt there. Then have ye two
-lanes out of Tower street, both called Church lanes, because one runneth
-down by the east end of St. Dunstan's church, and the other by the west
-end of the same; out of the west lane turneth another lane west towards
-St. Marie Hill, and is called Fowle lane, which is for the most part in
-Tower street ward.
-
-This church of St. Dunstone is called, in the east, for difference from
-one other of the same name in the west; it is a fair and large church
-of an ancient building, and within a large churchyard; it hath a great
-parish of many rich merchants, and other occupiers of divers trades,
-namely salters and ironmongers.
-
-The monuments in that church be these:--In the choir, John Kenington,
-parson, there buried 1374; William Islip, parson, 1382; John Kryoll,
-esq., brother to Thomas Kryoll, 1400; Nicholas Bond, Thomas Barry,
-merchant, 1445; Robert Shelly, esq., 1420; Robert Pepper, grocer, 1445;
-John Norwich, grocer, 1390; Alice Brome, wife to John Coventry, sometime
-mayor of London, 1433; William Isaack, draper, alderman, 1508; Edward
-Skales, merchant, 1521; John Ricroft, esq., sergeant of the larder to
-Henry VII. and Henry VIII., 1532; Edwaters, esq., sergeant-at-arms,
-1558; Sir Bartholomew James, draper, mayor 1479, buried under a fair
-monument with his lady; Ralfe Greenway, grocer, alderman, put under the
-stone of Robert Pepper, 1559; Thomas Bledlow, one of the sheriffs 1472;
-James Bacon, fishmonger, sheriff, 1573; Sir Richard Champion, draper,
-mayor 1568; Henry Herdson, skinner, alderman, 1555; Sir James Garnado,
-knight; William Hariot, draper, mayor 1481, buried in a fair chapel by
-him built, 1517; John Tate, son to Sir John Tate, in the same chapel in
-the north wall; Sir Christopher Draper, ironmonger, mayor 1566, buried
-1580. And many other worshipful personages besides, whose monuments are
-altogether defaced.
-
-Now for the two Church lanes, they meeting on the south side of this
-church and church yard, do join in one, and running down to the Thames
-street, the same is called St. Dunstan's hill, at the lower end whereof
-the said Thames street towards the west on both sides almost to Belin's
-gate, but towards the east up to the water gate, by the bulwark of the
-Tower, is all of Tower street ward. In this street, on the Thames side,
-are divers large landing-places called wharfs or keys, for craneage up
-of wares and merchandise, as also for shipping of wares from thence to
-be transported. These wharfs and keys commonly bear the names of their
-owners, and are therefore changeable. I read, in the 26th of Henry VI.,
-that in the parish of St. Dunstone in the east, a tenement, called
-Passeke's wharf, and another called Horner's key, in Thames street,
-were granted to William Harindon, esq. I read also, that in the 6th of
-Richard II., John Churchman, grocer, for the quiet of merchants, did
-newly build a certain house upon the key, called Wool wharf, in the
-Tower street ward, in the parish of Allhallows Barking, betwixt the
-tenement of Paule Salisberrie on the east part, and the lane called the
-water gate on the west, to serve for tronage, or weighing of wools in
-the port of London; whereupon the king granted that during the life of
-the said John, the aforesaid tronage should be held and kept in the said
-house, with easements there for the balances and weights, and a counting
-place for the customer, controllers, clerks, and other officers of the
-said tronage, together with ingress and egress to and from the same,
-even as was had in other places, where the said tronage was wont to be
-kept, and that the king should pay yearly to the said John during his
-life forty shillings at the terms of St. Michael and Easter, by even
-portions, by the hands of his customer, without any other payment to the
-said John, as in the indenture thereof more at large appeareth.
-
-Near unto this Customer's key towards the east, is the said water gate,
-and west from it Porter's key, then Galley key, where the gallies were
-used to unlade and land their merchandises and wares; and that part of
-Thames street was therefore of some called Galley row, but more commonly
-Petty Wales.
-
-On the north side, as well as on the south of this Thames street, are
-many fair houses large for stowage, built for merchants; but towards
-the east end thereof, namely, over against Galley key, Wool key, and the
-Custom house, there have been of old time some large buildings of stone,
-the ruins whereof do yet remain, but the first builders and owners of
-them are worn out of memory, wherefore the common people affirm Julius
-Caesar to be the builder thereof, as also of the Tower itself. But
-thereof I have spoken already. Some are of another opinion, and that a
-more likely, that this great stone building was sometime the lodging
-appointed for the princes of Wales, when they repaired to this city, and
-that, therefore, the street in that part is called Petty Wales, which
-name remaineth there most commonly until this day, even as where the
-kings of Scotland were used to be lodged betwixt Charing cross and White
-hall, it is likewise called Scotland, and where the earls of Britons
-were lodged without Aldersgate, the street is called Britain street, etc.
-
-The said building might of old time pertain to the princes of Wales, as
-is aforesaid, but is since turned to other use.
-
-It is before noted of Galley key, that the galleys of Italie, and
-other parts, did there discharge their wines and merchandises brought
-to this city. It is like, therefore, that the merchants and owners
-procured the place to build upon for their lodgings and storehouses, as
-the merchants of the Haunce of Almaine were licensed to have a house,
-called _Gilda Teutonicorum_, the Guild hall of the Germans. Also the
-merchants of Burdeaux were licensed to build at the Vintry, strongly
-with stone, as may be yet seen, and seemeth old, though often repaired;
-much more cause have these buildings in Petty Wales, though as lately
-built, and partly of the like stone brought from Caen in Normandie, to
-seem old, which for many years, to wit, since the galleys left their
-course of landing there,[136] hath fallen to ruin, and been let out for
-stabling of horses, to tipplers of beer, and such like; amongst others,
-one Mother Mampudding (as they termed her) for many years kept this
-house, or a great part thereof, for victualling; and it seemeth that
-the builders of the hall of this house were shipwrights, and not house
-carpenters; for the frame thereof (being but low) is raised of certain
-principal posts of main timber, fixed deep in the ground, without any
-groundsell, boarded close round about on the inside, having none other
-wall from the ground to the roof, those boards not exceeding the length
-of a clap board, about an inch thick, every board ledging over other as
-in a ship or galley, nailed with ship nails called rough and clench,
-to wit, rough nails with broad round heads, and clenched on the other
-side with square plates of iron. The roof of this hall is also wrought
-of the like board, and nailed with rough and clench, and seemeth as it
-were a galley, the keel turned upwards; and I observed that no worm or
-rottenness is seen to have entered either board or timber of that hall,
-and therefore, in mine opinion, of no great antiquity.[137]
-
-I read, in 44th of Edward III., that a hospital in the parish of Barking
-church was founded by Robert Denton, chaplain, for the sustentation
-of poor priests, and other both men and women, that were sick of the
-frenzy, there to remain till they were perfectly whole, and restored
-to good memory. Also I read, that in the 6th of Henry V. there was in
-the Tower ward a messuage, or great house, called Cobham's inn; and in
-the 37th of Henry VI, a messuage in Thames street pertaining to Richard
-Longvile, etc. Some of the ruins before spoken of may seem to be of the
-foresaid hospital, belonging peradventure to some prior alien, and so
-suppressed among the rest in the reign of Edward III. or Henry V., who
-suppressed them all. Thus much for the bounds and antiquities of this
-ward, wherein is noted the Tower of London, three parish churches, the
-custom house, and two halls of companies, to wit, the clothworkers and
-the bakers. This ward hath an alderman, his deputy, common councillors
-eight, constables thirteen, scavengers twelve, wardmote men thirteen,
-and a beadle; it is taxed to the fifteenth at six and twenty pounds.[138]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[131] Liber l. folio 40.
-
-[132] Proclamation. W. Dunthorn.
-
-[133] "And to Berewardes lane."--_1st edition_, p. 95.
-
-[134] "When he deceased, 1501."--_Ibid._
-
-[135] "Woodroffe lane towardes the Tower in this parish."--_1st edition_
-p. 97.
-
-[136] "No gallies landed here in memorie of men living."--_Stow._
-
-[137] "But I leave every man to his own judgment, and pass to other
-matters."--_1st edition_, p. 101.
-
-[138] "It is taxed to the fifteene at forty-six pounds, and accounted in
-the Exchequer at forty-five pounds ten shillings."--_1st edition_, p.
-102.
-
-
-
-
-ALDGATE WARD
-
-
-The second ward within the wall, on the east part, is called Aldgate
-ward, as taking name of the same gate. The principal street of this ward
-beginneth at Aldgate, stretching west to sometime a fair well, where
-now a pump is placed; from thence the way being divided into twain, the
-first and principal street is called Aldgate street, runneth on the
-south side to Lime street corner, and half that street down on the left
-hand is also of that ward. In the mid way on that south side, betwixt
-Aldgate and Lime street, is Hart horn alley, a way that goeth through
-into Fenchurch street over against Northumberland house. Then have ye
-the Bricklayers' hall, and another alley called Sprinckle alley, now
-named Sugarloafe alley, of the like sign. Then is there a fair house,
-with divers tenements near adjoining, sometimes belonging to a late
-dissolved priory, since possessed by Mistress Cornewallies, widow, and
-her heirs, by gift of Henry VIII., in reward of fine puddings (as it
-was commonly said) by her made, wherewith she had presented him. Such
-was the princely liberality of those times. Of later time Sir Nicholas
-Throgmorton, knight, was lodged there. Then, somewhat more west is
-Belzettar's lane, so called of the first builder and owner thereof, now
-corruptly called Billitar lane. Betwixt this Belzettar lane and Lime
-street was of later time a frame of three fair houses, set up in the
-year 1590, in place where before was a large garden plot, enclosed from
-the high street with a brick wall, which wall being taken down, and the
-ground dug deep for cellarage, there was found right under the said
-brick wall another wall of stone, with a gate arched of stone, and gates
-of timber to be closed in the midst towards the street; the timber of
-the gates was consumed, but the hinges of iron still remained on their
-staples on both the sides. Moreover, in that wall were square windows,
-with bars of iron on either side of the gate. This wall was under ground
-about two fathoms deep, as I then esteemed it, and seemeth to be the
-ruins of some houses burned in the reign of King Stephen, when the fire
-began in the house of one Alewarde, near London stone, and consumed east
-to Aldgate, whereby it appeareth how greatly the ground of this city
-hath been in that place raised.
-
-On the north side this principal street stretcheth to the west corner of
-St. Andrewe's church, and then the ward turneth towards the north by St.
-Marie street, on the east side to St. Augustine's church in the wall,
-and so by Buries markes again, or about by the wall to Aldgate.
-
-The second way from Aldgate, more towards the south, from the pump
-aforesaid, is called Fenchurch street, and is of Aldgate ward till
-ye come to Culver alley, on the west side of Ironmongers hall, where
-sometime was a lane which went out of Fenchurch street to the middest of
-Lime street, but this lane was stopped up for suspicion of thieves that
-lurked there by night. Again to Aldgate out of the principal street,
-even by the gate and wall of the city, runneth a lane south to Crowched
-Friers, and then Woodroffe lane to the Tower hill, and out of this lane
-west a street called Hart street, which of that ward stretched to Sydon
-lane by St. Olave's church. One other lane more west from Aldgate goeth
-by Northumberland house toward the Crossed Friers; then have ye on the
-same side the north end of Mart lane and Blanch Apleton, where that ward
-endeth.
-
-Thus much for the bounds; now for monuments, or places most ancient and
-notable.
-
-I am first to begin with the late dissolved priory of the Holy Trinity,
-called Christ's church, on the right hand within Aldgate. This priory
-was founded by Matilda, queen, wife to Henry I., in the same place where
-Siredus sometime began to erect a church in honour of the Cross and of
-St. Marie Magdalen, of which the Dean and Chapter of Waltham were wont
-to receive thirty shillings. The queen was to acquit her church thereof,
-and in exchange gave unto them a mill. King Henry confirmed her gift.
-This church was given to Norman, first canon regular in all England.
-The said queen also gave unto the same church, and those that served
-God therein, the plot of Aldgate, and the soke thereunto belonging,
-with all customs so free as she had held the same, and twenty-five
-pound blankes, which she had of the city of Excester, as appeareth by
-her deed, wherein she nameth the house Christ's church, and reporteth
-Aldgate to be of her domains, which she granteth with two parts of
-the rent of the city of Excester. Norman took upon him to be prior of
-Christ's church, in the year of Christ 1108, in the parishes of St. Mary
-Magdalen, St. Michael, St. Katherine, and the Blessed Trinity, which
-now was made but one parish of the Holy Trinity, and was in old time of
-the Holy Cross or Holy Rood parish. The priory was built on a piece of
-ground in the parish of St. Katherine towards Aldgate, which lieth in
-length betwixt the King's street, by the which men go towards Aldgate,
-near to the chapel of St. Michael towards the north, and containeth in
-length eighty-three ells, half, quarter, and half-quarter of the king's
-iron eln, and lieth in breadth, etc. The soke and ward of Aldgate was
-then bounded as I have before showed. The queen was a means also that
-the land and English Knighten Guild was given unto the prior Norman:
-the honourable man, Geffrey de Glinton, was a great helper therein, and
-obtained that the canons might enclose the way betwixt their church
-and the wall of the city, etc. This priory, in process of time, became
-a very fair and large church, rich in lands and ornaments, and passed
-all the priories in the city of London or shire of Middlesex; the prior
-whereof was an alderman of London, to wit, of Portsoken ward.
-
-I read, that Eustacius, the eighth prior, about the year 1264, because
-he would not deal with temporal matters, instituted Theobald Fitz
-Ivonis, alderman of Portsoken ward under him, and that William Rising,
-prior of Christ's church, was sworn alderman of the said Portsoken ward
-in the 1st of Richard II. These priors have sitten and ridden amongst
-the aldermen of London, in livery like unto them, saving that his
-habit was in shape of a spiritual person, as I myself have seen in my
-childhood; at which time the prior kept a most bountiful house of meat
-and drink, both for rich and poor, as well within the house as at the
-gates, to all comers, according to their estates.
-
-These were the monuments in this church:--Sir Robert Turke, and Dame
-Alice his wife; John Tirell, esquire; Simon Kempe, esquire; James
-Manthorpe, esquire; John Ascue, esquire; Thomas Fauset, of Scalset,
-esquire; John Kempe, gentleman; Robert Chirwide, esquire; Sir John
-Heningham, and Dame Isabel his wife; Dame Agnes, wife first to Sir
-William Bardolph, and then to Sir Thomas Mortimer; John Ashfield,
-esquire; Sir John Dedham, knight; Sir Ambrose Charcam; Joan, wife to
-Thomas Nuck, gentleman; John Husse, esquire; John Beringham, esquire;
-Thomas Goodwine, esquire; Ralph Walles, esquire; Dame Margaret, daughter
-to Sir Ralph Chevie, wife to Sir John Barkeley, to Sir Thomas Barnes,
-and to Sir W. Bursire; William Roofe; Simon Francis; John Breton,
-esquire; Helling, esquire; John Malwen and his wife; Anthonie Wels, son
-to John Wels; Nicholas de Avesey, and Margarie his wife; Anthonie, son
-to John Milles; Baldwine, son to King Stephen, and Mathilde, daughter
-to King Stephen, wife to the Earl of Meulan; Henry Fitzalwine, mayor of
-London, 1213; Geffrey Mandevile, 1215; and many other. But to conclude
-of this priory: King Henry VIII., minding to reward Sir Thomas Audley,
-speaker of the parliament against Cardinal Wolsey, as ye may read in
-Hall, sent for the prior, commending him for his hospitality, promised
-him preferment, as a man worthy of a far greater dignity, which promise
-surely he performed, and compounded with him, though in what sort I
-never heard, so that the prior surrendered all that priory, with the
-appurtenances, to the king, in the month of July, in the year 1531, the
-23rd of the said king's reign. The canons were sent to other houses of
-the same order, and the priory, with the appurtenances, King Henry gave
-to Sir Thomas Audley, newly knighted, and after made lord chancellor.
-
-Sir Thomas Audley offered the great church of this priory, with a ring
-of nine bells well tuned (whereof four the greatest were since sold
-to the parish of Stebunhith, and the five lesser to the parish of St.
-Stephen in Coleman street) to the parishioners of St. Katherine Christ
-church, in exchange for their small parish church, minding to have
-pulled it down, and to have built there towards the street; but the
-parishioners having doubts in their heads of after-claps, refused the
-offer. Then was the priory church and steeple proffered to whomsoever
-would take it down, and carry it from the ground, but no man would
-undertake the offer; whereupon Sir Thomas Audley was fain to be at more
-charges than could be made of the stones, timber, lead, iron, etc. For
-the workmen, with great labour, beginning at the top, loosed stone from
-stone, and threw them down, whereby the most part of them were broken,
-and few remained whole; and those were sold very cheap, for all the
-buildings then made about the city were of brick and timber. At that
-time any man in the city might have a cart-load of hard stone for paving
-brought to his door for six pence or seven pence, with the carriage. The
-said Thomas Lord Audley built and dwelt on this priory during his life,
-and died there in the year 1544; since the which time the said priory
-came by marriage of the Lord Audley's daughter and heir unto Thomas,
-late Duke of Norfolk, and was then called the Duke's place.
-
-The parish church of St. Katherine standeth in the cemetery of the
-late dissolved priory of the Holy Trinity, and is therefore called St.
-Katherine Christ church. This church seemeth to be very old; since the
-building whereof the high street hath been so often raised by pavements,
-that now men are fain to descend into the said church by divers steps,
-seven in number. But the steeple, or bell-tower thereof, hath been
-lately built, to wit, about the year 1504; for Sir John Percivall,
-merchant-tailor, then deceasing, gave money towards the building
-thereof. There be the monuments of Sir Thomas Fleming, knight of Rowles,
-in Essex, and Margaret his wife, 1464; Roger Marshall, esquire; Jane
-Horne, wife to Roger Marshall; William Multon, alias Burdeaux, herald;
-John Goad, esquire, and Joan his wife; Beatrix, daughter to William
-Browne; Thomas Multon, esquire, son to Burdeaux, herald; John Chitcroft,
-esquire; John Wakefielde, esquire; William Criswicke; Anne and Sewch,
-daughters to Ralph Shirley, esquire; Sir John Rainsford, knight of
-Essex; Sir Nicholas Throkmorton, chief butler of England, one of the
-chamberlains of the exchequer, ambassador, etc., 1570, and other.
-
-At the north-west corner of this ward, in the said high street,
-standeth the fair and beautiful parish church of St. Andrew the Apostle;
-with an addition, to be known from other churches of that name, of the
-knape or undershaft; and so called St. Andrew Undershaft, because that
-of old time, every year on May-day in the morning, it was used, that
-an high or long shaft or May-pole, was set up there, in the midst of
-the street, before the south side of the said church; which shaft when
-it was set on end and fixed in the ground, was higher than the church
-steeple. Geffrey Chaucer, writing of a vain boaster, hath these words,
-meaning of the said shaft:
-
- "Right well aloft, and high ye beare your heade,
- The weather cocke, with flying, as ye would kill,
- When ye be stuffed, bet of wine, then brede,
- Then looke ye, when your wombe doth fill,
- As ye would beare the great shaft of Cornehill,
- Lord, so merrily crowdeth then your croke,
- That all the streete may heare your body cloke."
-
-This shaft was not raised at any time since evil May-day (so called of
-an insurrection made by apprentices and other young persons against
-aliens in the year 1517); but the said shaft was laid along over the
-doors, and under the pentises of one row of houses and alley gate,
-called of the shaft Shaft alley (being of the possessions of Rochester
-bridge), in the ward of Lime street. It was there, I say, hung on iron
-hooks many years, till the third of King Edward VI., that one Sir
-Stephen, curate of St. Katherine Christ's church, preaching at Paules
-cross, said there that this shaft was made an idol, by naming the church
-of St. Andrew with the addition of "under that shaft:" he persuaded
-therefore that the names of churches might be altered; also that the
-names of days in the week might be changed; the fish days to be kept
-any days except Friday and Saturday, and the Lent any time, save only
-betwixt Shrovetide and Easter. I have oft times seen this man, forsaking
-the pulpit of his said parish church, preach out of a high elm-tree[139]
-in the midst of the churchyard, and then entering the church, forsaking
-the altar, to have sung his high mass in English upon a tomb of the dead
-towards the north. I heard his sermon at Paules cross, and I saw the
-effect that followed; for in the afternoon of that present Sunday, the
-neighbours and tenants to the said bridge, over whose doors the said
-shaft had lain, after they had well dined, to make themselves strong,
-gathered more help, and with great labour raising the shaft from the
-hooks, whereon it had rested two-and-thirty years, they sawed it in
-pieces, every man taking for his share so much as had lain over his door
-and stall, the length of his house; and they of the alley divided among
-them so much as had lain over their alley gate. Thus was this idol (as
-he[140] termed it) mangled, and after burned.
-
-Soon after was there a commotion of the commons in Norfolk, Suffolk,
-Essex, and other shires; by means whereof, straight orders being taken
-for the suppression of rumours, divers persons were apprehended and
-executed by martial law; amongst the which the bailiff of Romfort, in
-Essex, was one, a man very well beloved: he was early in the morning
-of Mary Magdalen's day, then kept holiday, brought by the sheriffs of
-London and the knight-marshal to the well within Aldgate, there to be
-executed upon a gibbet set up that morning, where, being on the ladder,
-he had words to this effect: "Good people, I am come hither to die, but
-know not for what offence, except for words by me spoken yesternight to
-Sir Stephen, curate and preacher of this parish, which were these: He
-asked me, 'What news in the country?' I answered, 'Heavy news.' 'Why?'
-quoth he. 'It is said,' quoth I, 'that many men be up in Essex, but,
-thanks be to God, all is in good quiet about us:' and this was all, as
-God be my judge," etc. Upon these words of the prisoner, Sir Stephen,
-to avoid reproach of the people, left the city, and was never heard of
-since amongst them to my knowledge. I heard the words of the prisoner,
-for he was executed upon the pavement of my door where I then kept
-house. Thus much by digression: now again to the parish church of St.
-Andrew Undershaft, for it still retaineth the name, which hath been new
-built by the parishioners there since the year 1520; every man putting
-to his helping hand, some with their purses, other with their bodies.
-Steven Gennings, merchant-tailor, sometime mayor of London, caused at
-his charges to be built[141] the whole north side of the great middle
-aisle, both of the body and choir, as appeareth by his arms over every
-pillar graven, and also the north isle, which he roofed with timber and
-sealed; also the whole south side of the church was glazed, and the pews
-in the south chapel made of his costs, as appeareth in every window,
-and upon the said pews. He deceased in the year 1524, and was buried in
-the Grey friars church. John Kerkbie, merchant-tailor, sometime one of
-the sheriffs, John Garlande, merchant-tailor, and Nicholas Levison,
-mercer, executor to Garlande, were great benefactors to this work; which
-was finished to the glazing in the year 1529, and fully finished 1532.
-Buried in this church:[142] Philip Malpas, one of the sheriffs, 1439;
-Sir Robert Dennie, knight, and after him Thomas Dennie, his son, in the
-year 1421; Thomas Stokes, gentleman, grocer, 1496. In the new church:
-John Nichell, merchant-tailor, 1537; William Draper, esquire, 1537;
-Isabell and Margaret, his wives; Nicholas Levison, mercer, one of the
-sheriffs, 1534; John Gerrarde, woolman, merchant of the staple, 1456;
-Henry Man, doctor of divinity, bishop of Man, 1550; Stephen Kyrton,
-merchant-tailor, alderman, 1553; David Woodroffe, haberdasher, one of
-the sheriffs, 1554; Stephen Woodroffe, his son, gave one hundred pounds
-in money, for the which the poor of that parish receive two shillings in
-bread weekly for ever; Sir Thomas Offley, merchant-tailor, mayor, 1556;
-he bequeathed the one half of all his goods to charitable actions, but
-the parish received little benefit thereby; Thomas Starkey, skinner, one
-of the sheriffs, 1578; Hugh Offley, leatherseller, one of the sheriffs,
-1588; William Hanbury, baker.
-
-Now down St. Mary street, by the west end of the church towards the
-north, stand divers fair houses for merchants and other; namely, one
-fair great house, built by Sir William Pickering the father, possessed
-by Sir William his son, and since by Sir Edward Wootton of Kent. North
-from this place is the Fletchers' hall, and so down to the corner of
-that street, over against London wall, and against eastwards to a fair
-house lately new built, partly by Master Robert Beale, one of the clerks
-of the council.
-
-Then come you to the Papey, a proper house, wherein sometime was kept a
-fraternity or brotherhood of St. Charity and St. John Evangelist, called
-the Papey, for poor impotent priests (for in some language priests are
-called papes), founded in the year 1430 by William Oliver, William
-Barnabie, and John Stafford, chaplains or chantry priests in London,
-for a master, two wardens, etc., chaplains, chantry priests, conducts,
-and other brethren and sisters, that should be admitted into the church
-of St. Augustine Papey in the wall. The brethren of this house becoming
-lame, or otherwise into great poverty, were here relieved, as to have
-chambers, with certain allowance of bread, drink, and coal, and one
-old man and his wife to see them served and to keep the house clean.
-This brotherhood, among others, was suppressed in the reign of Edward
-VI.; since the which time in this house hath been lodged Master Moris
-of Essex; Sir Francis Walsingham, principal secretary to her majesty;
-Master Barret of Essex, etc.
-
-Then next is one great house, large of rooms, fair courts, and
-garden-plots; sometimes pertaining to the Bassets, since that to the
-abbots of Bury in Suffolk, and therefore called Buries markes, corruptly
-Bevis markes, and since the dissolution of the abbey of Bury, to Thomas
-Henage the father, and to Sir Thomas his son. Then next unto it is the
-before-spoken priory of the Holy Trinity; to wit, the west and north
-part thereof, which stretcheth up to Aldgate, where we first began.
-
-Now in the second way from Aldgate, more toward the south from the
-well or pump aforesaid, lieth Fenne church street; on the right hand
-whereof, somewhat west from the south end of Belzetter's lane is the
-Ironmongers' hall; which company was incorporated in the 3rd of Edward
-IV. Richard Fleming was their first master; Nicholas Marshall and
-Richard Cox were custos, or wardens. And on the left hand, or south
-side, even by the gate and wall of the city, runneth down a lane to the
-Tower hill; the south part whereof is called Woodroffe lane, and out of
-this lane toward the west a street called Hart street. In this street,
-at the south-east corner thereof, sometime stood one house of Crouched
-(or crossed) friars, founded by Ralph Hosiar and William Sabernes about
-the year 1298. Stephen, the tenth prior of the Holy Trinity, in London
-granted there tenements for 13_s._ 8_d._ by the year unto the said
-Ralph Hosiar and William Sabernes, who afterwards became friars of St.
-Crosse; Adam was the first prior of that house. These friars founded
-their house in place of certain tenements purchased of Richard Wimbush,
-the twelfth prior of the Holy Trinity, in the year 1319, which was
-confirmed by Edward III. the 17th of his reign, valued at L52 13_s._
-4_d._, surrendered the twelfth of November, the 30th of Henry VIII. In
-this house was buried Master John Tirres; Nicholas, the son of William
-Kyriell, esquire; Sir Thomas Mellington, baron of Wemesse, and Dame
-Elizabeth his wife, daughter and heir of William Botelar, baron of Wome;
-Robert Mellington, esquire, and Elizabeth his wife, daughter to Ferreis
-of Ousley; Henry Lovell, son to William Lord Lovell; Dame Isabel, wife
-to William Edwarde, mayor of London, 1471; William Narborough, and Dame
-Elizabeth his wife; William Narborough, and Dame Beatrix his wife;
-William Brosked, esquire; William Bowes; Lionel Mollington, esquire,
-son of Robert Mollington; Nicholas Couderow, and Elizabeth his wife;
-Sir John Stratford, knight; Sir Thomas Asseldy, knight, clerk of the
-crown, sub-marshal of England, and justice of the shire of Middlesex;
-John Rest, grocer, mayor of London, 1516; Sir John Skevington, knight,
-merchant-tailor, sheriff, 1520; Sir John Milborne, draper, mayor in
-the year 1520, was buried there, but removed since to St. Edmondes in
-Lombard street; Sir Rice Grifith, beheaded on the Tower hill, 1531.
-
-In place of this church is now a carpenters' yard, a tennis court, and
-such like; the friars' hall was made a glass-house, or house wherein
-was made glass of divers sorts to drink in; which house in the year
-1575, on the 4th of September, burst out into a terrible fire, where
-being practised all means possible to quench, notwithstanding as the
-same house in a small time before had consumed a great quantity of wood
-by making of glasses, now itself having within it about forty thousand
-billets of wood, was all consumed to the stone walls, which nevertheless
-greatly hindered the fire from spreading any further.
-
-Adjoining unto this friars' church, by the east end thereof in Woodroffe
-lane towards the Tower hill, are certain proper alms houses, fourteen in
-number, built of brick and timber, founded by Sir John Milborne, draper,
-sometime mayor, 1521, wherein he placed thirteen aged poor men and their
-wives, if they have wives: these have their dwellings rent free, and
-2_s._ 4_d._ the piece, the first day of every month, for ever. One also
-is to have his house over the gate, and 4_s._ every month: more, he
-appointed every Sunday for ever, thirteen penny loaves of white bread,
-to be given in the parish church of St. Edmonde in Lombard street, to
-thirteen poor people of that parish; and the like thirteen loaves to be
-given in the parish church of St. Michael upon Cornhill, and in either
-parish every year one load of chare coal, of thirty sacks in the load;
-and this gift to be continued for ever: for performance whereof, by the
-master and wardens of the drapers in London, he assured unto them and
-their successors twenty-three messuages and tenements, and eighteen
-garden-plots, in the parish of St. Olave in Hart street; with proviso,
-that if they perform not those points[143] above-mentioned, the said
-tenements and gardens to remain to the mayor and commonalty of the city
-of London.
-
-Next to these alms houses is the Lord Lumley's house, built in the time
-of King Henry VIII. by Sir Thomas Wiat the father, upon one plot of
-ground of late pertaining to the foresaid Crossed friars, where part of
-their house stood: and this is the farthest part of Aldgate ward towards
-the south, and joineth to the Tower hill. The other side of that line,
-over against the Lord Lumley's house, on the wall side of the city, is
-now for the most part (or altogether) built even to Aldgate.
-
-Then have you on the south side of Fenchurch street, over against the
-well or pump, amongst other fair and large built houses, one that
-sometime belonged to the prior of Monte Joves, or Monastery Cornute,
-a cell to Monte Joves beyond the seas, in Essex: it was the prior's
-inn, when he repaired to this city. Then a lane that leadeth down by
-Northumberland house towards the Crossed friars, as is afore showed.
-
-This Northumberland house, in the parish of St. Katherine Colman,
-belonged to Henry Percie, Earl of Northumberland, in the 33rd of Henry
-VI., but of late being left by the earls, the gardens thereof were made
-into bowling alleys, and other parts into dicing houses, common to all
-comers for their money, there to bowle and hazard; but now of late so
-many bowling alleys, and other houses for unlawful gaming, hath been
-raised in other parts of the city and suburbs, that this their ancient
-and only patron of misrule, is left and forsaken of her gamesters, and
-therefore turned into a number of great rents, small cottages, for
-strangers and others.
-
-At the east end of this lane, in the way from Aldgate toward the Crossed
-friars, of old time were certain tenements called the poor Jurie, of
-Jews dwelling there.
-
-Next unto this Northumberland house is the parish church of St.
-Katherine, called Coleman; which addition of Coleman was taken of a
-great haw-yard, or garden, of old time called Coleman haw, in the parish
-of the Trinity, now called Christ's church, and in the parish of St.
-Katherine and All Saints called Coleman church.
-
-Then have you Blanch Apleton; whereof I read, in the 13th of Edward I.,
-that a lane behind the said Blanch Apleton was granted by the king to
-be inclosed and shut up. This Blanch Apleton was a manor belonging to
-Sir Thomas Roos of Hamelake, knight, the 7th of Richard II., standing at
-the north-east corner of Mart lane, so called of a privilege sometime
-enjoined to keep a mart there, long since discontinued, and therefore
-forgotten, so as nothing remaineth for memory but the name of Mart
-lane, and that corruptly termed Marke lane. I read that, in the third
-of Edward IV., all basket-makers, wire-drawers, and other foreigners,
-were permitted to have shops in this manor of Blanch Apleton, and not
-elsewhere, within this city or suburbs thereof; and this also being
-the farthest west part of this ward on that south side, I leave it,
-with three parish churches, St Katherine Christ church, St. Andrew
-Undershaft, and St. Katherine Colemans; and three halls of companies,
-the Bricklayers' hall, the Fletchers' hall, and the Ironmongers' hall.
-It hath an alderman, his deputy, common councillors six, constables six,
-scavengers nine, wardmote men for inquest eighteen, and a beadle. It is
-taxed to the fifteen in London at five pounds.[144]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[139] "The said elm-tree, his preaching place, is lately taken
-down."--_Stow._
-
-[140] "As he, poore man, tearmed it."--_1st edition_, p. 108.
-
-[141] "The one halfe, to wit."--_1st edition_, p. 109.
-
-[142] "The monuments of the dead, buried in this church, are
-these."--_1st edition_, p. 109.
-
-[143] "These poyntes not performed. The Drapers have unlawfully solde
-these tenements and garden plots, and the poore be wronged."--_Stow._
-
-
-
-
-LIME STREET WARD
-
-
-The next is Lime street ward, and taketh the name of Lime street of
-making or selling of lime there (as is supposed); the east side of this
-Lime street, from the north corner thereof to the midst, is of Aldgate
-ward, as is aforesaid; the west side, for the most part from the said
-north corner, southward, is of this Lime street ward; the south end on
-both sides is of Langborne ward; the body of this Lime street ward is
-of the high street called Cornehill street, which stretcheth from Lime
-street on the south side to the west corner of Leaden hall, and on the
-north side from the south-west corner of St. Mary street to another
-corner over against Leaden hall. Now for St. Mary street; the west side
-thereof is of this Lime street ward, and also the street which runneth
-by the north end of this St. Mary street, on both sides, from thence
-west to an house called the Wrestlers, a sign so called, almost to
-Bishopsgate. And these are the bounds of this small ward.
-
-Monuments, or places notable, in this ward be these:--In Lime street
-are divers fair houses for merchants and others; there was sometime a
-mansion-house of the kings, called the King's Artirce, whereof I find
-record in the 14th of Edward I., but now grown out of knowledge. I read
-also of another great house in the west side of Lime street, having a
-chapel on the south and a garden on the west, then belonging to the
-Lord Nevill, which garden is now called the Green yard of the Leaden
-hall. This house, in the 9th of Richard II., pertained to Sir Simon
-Burley, and Sir John Burley his brother; and of late the said house
-was taken down, and the forefront thereof new built of timber by Hugh
-Offley, alderman. At the north-west corner of Lime street was of old
-time one great messuage called Benbrige's inn; Ralph Holland, draper,
-about the year 1452 gave it to John Gill, master, and to the wardens and
-fraternity of tailors and linen-armourers of St. John Baptist in London,
-and to their successors for ever. They did set up in place thereof a
-fair large frame of timber, containing in the high street one great
-house, and before it to the corner of Lime street three other tenements,
-the corner house being the largest, and then down Lime street divers
-proper tenements; all which the merchant-tailors, in the reign of Edward
-VI., sold to Stephen Kirton, merchant-tailor and alderman: he gave, with
-his daughter Grisild, to Nicholas Woodroffe the said great house, with
-two tenements before it, in lieu of a hundred pounds, and made it up in
-money L366 13_s._ 4_d._ This worshipful man, and the gentlewoman his
-widow after him, kept those houses down Lime street in good reparations,
-never put out but one tenant, took no fines, nor raised rents of them,
-which was ten shillings the piece yearly: but whether that favour did
-overlive her funeral, the tenants now can best declare the contrary.
-
-Next unto this, on the high street, was the Lord Sowche's messuage or
-tenement, and other; in place whereof, Richard Wethell, merchant-tailor,
-built a fair house, with a high tower, the second in number, and first
-of timber, that ever I learnt to have been built to overlook neighbours
-in this city.
-
-This Richard, then a young man, became in a short time so tormented with
-gouts in his joints, of the hands and legs, that he could neither feed
-himself nor go further than he was led; much less was he able to climb
-and take the pleasure of the height of his tower. Then is there another
-fair house, built by Stephen Kirton, alderman; Alderman Lee doth now
-possess it, and again new buildeth it.
-
-Then is there a fair house of old time called the Green gate; by which
-name one Michael Pistoy Lumbard held it, with a tenement and nine shops
-in the reign of Richard II., who in the 15th of his reign gave it to
-Roger Crophull, and Thomas Bromeflet, esquires, by the name of the Green
-gate, in the parish of St. Andrew upon Cornhill, in Lime street ward;
-since the which time Philip Malpas, sometime alderman, and one of the
-sheriffs, dwelt therein, and was there robbed and spoiled of his goods
-to a great value by Jack Cade, and other rebels, in the year 1449.
-
-Afterwards, in the reign of Henry VII., it was seized into the
-king's hands, and then granted, first, unto John Alston, after that
-unto William de la Rivers, and since by Henry VIII. to John Mutas, a
-Picarde or Frenchman, who dwelt there, and harboured in his house many
-Frenchmen, that kalendred wolsteds, and did other things contrary to
-the franchises of the citizens; wherefore on evil May-day, which was in
-the year 1517, the apprentices and other spoiled his house; and if they
-could have found Mutas, they would have stricken off his head. Sir Peter
-Mutas, son to the said John Mutas, sold this house to David Woodroffe,
-alderman, whose son, Sir Nicholas Woodroffe, alderman, sold it over to
-John Moore, alderman, that now possesseth it.
-
-Next is a house called the Leaden porch, lately divided into two
-tenements; whereof one is a tavern, and then one other house for a
-merchant, likewise called the Leaden porch, but now turned to a cook's
-house. Next is a fair house and a large, wherein divers mayoralties have
-been kept, whereof twain in my remembrance; to wit, Sir William Bowyar
-and Sir Henry Huberthorne.
-
-The next is Leaden hall, of which I read, that in the year 1309 it
-belonged to Sir Hugh Nevill, knight, and that the Lady Alice his
-widow made a feoffment thereof, by the name of Leaden hall, with the
-advowsons of the church of St. Peter upon Cornhill, and other churches,
-to Richard, Earl of Arundell and Surrey, 1362. More, in the year 1380,
-Alice Nevill, widow to Sir John Nevill, knight, of Essex, confirmed to
-Thomas Gogshall and others the said manor of Leaden hall, the advowsons,
-etc. In the year 1384, Humfrey de Bohun, Earl of Hereford, had the said
-manor. And in the year 1408, Robert Rikeden, of Essex, and Margaret his
-wife, confirmed to Richard Whittington, and other citizens of London,
-the said manor of Leaden hall, with the appurtenances, the advowsons of
-St. Peter's church, St. Margaret's Pattens, etc. And in the year 1411,
-the said Whittington and other confirmed the same to the mayor and
-commonalty of London, whereby it came to the possession of the city.
-Then in the year 1443, the 21st of Henry VI., John Hatherley, mayor,
-purchased license of the said king to take up two hundred fother of
-lead, for the building of water conduits, a common granary, and the
-cross in West Cheape, more richly, for the honour of the city. In the
-year next following, the parson and parish of St. Dunston, in the east
-of London, seeing the famous and mighty man (for the words be in the
-grant, _cum nobilis et potens vir_), Simon Eyre, citizen of London,
-among other his works of piety, effectually determined to erect and
-build a certain granary upon the soil of the same city at Leaden hall,
-of his own charges, for the common utility of the said city, to the
-amplifying and enlarging of the said granary, granted to Henry Frowicke,
-then mayor, the aldermen and commonalty, and their successors for
-ever, all their tenements, with the appurtenances, sometime called the
-Horsemill, in Grasse street, for the annual rent of four pounds, etc.
-Also, certain evidences of an alley and tenements pertaining to the
-Horsemill adjoining to the said Leaden hall in Grasse street, given
-by William Kingstone, fishmonger, unto the parish church of St. Peter
-upon Cornehill, do specify the said granary to be built by the said
-honourable and famous merchant, Simon Eyre, sometime an upholsterer,
-and then a draper, in the year 1419. He built it of squared stone, in
-form as now it showeth, with a fair and large chapel in the east side of
-the quadrant, over the porch of which he caused to be written, _Dextra
-Domini exaltavit me_ (The Lord's right hand exalted me). Within the said
-church, on the north wall, was written. _Honorandus famosus mercator
-Simon Eyre hujus operis_, etc. In English thus:--"The honourable and
-famous merchant, Simon Eyre, founder of this work, once mayor of this
-city, citizen and draper of the same, departed out of this life, the
-18th day of September, the year from the Incarnation of Christ 1459,
-and the 38th year of the reign of King Henry VI." He was buried in
-the parish church of St. Mary Woolnoth, in Lombard street: he gave by
-his testament, which I have read, to be distributed to all prisons in
-London, or within a mile of that city, somewhat to relieve them. More,
-he gave two thousand marks, upon a condition, which not performed, was
-then to be distributed to maids' marriages, and other deeds of charity;
-he also gave three thousand marks to the drapers, upon condition they
-should, within one year after his decease, establish perpetually a
-master or warden, five secular priests, six clerks, and two choristers,
-to sing daily Divine service by note for ever, in his chapel of the
-Leaden hall; also,[145] one master, with an usher, for grammar, one
-master for writing, and the third for song, with housing there newly
-built for them for ever; the master to have for his salary ten pounds,
-and every other priest eight pounds, every other clerk five pounds six
-shillings and eight pence, and every other chorister five marks; and
-if the drapers refused this to do, within one year after his decease,
-then the three thousand marks to remain to the prior and convent of
-Christ's church in London, with condition to establish, as is aforesaid,
-within two years after his decease; and if they refused, then the three
-thousand marks to be disposed by his executors, as they best could
-devise, in works of charity. Thus much for his testament, not performed
-by establishing of Divine service in his chapel, or free schools for
-scholars; neither how the stock of three thousand marks, or rather five
-thousand marks, was employed by his executors, could I ever learn. He
-left issue, Thomas, who had issue, Thomas, etc. True it is, that in
-one year, 1464, the 3rd of Edward IV., it was agreed by the mayor,
-aldermen, and commonalty of London, that notwithstanding the king's
-letters patent, lately before granted unto them, touching the tronage or
-weighing of wares to be holden at the Leaden hall, yet suit should be
-made to the king for new letters patent to be granted to the mayor of
-the staple for the tronage of wools to be holden there, and order to be
-taken by the discretion of Thomas Cooke, then mayor, the counsel of the
-city, Geffrey Filding, then mayor of the staple at Westminster, and of
-the king's council, what should be paid to the mayor and aldermen of the
-city, for the laying and housing of the wools there, that so they might
-be brought forth and weighed, etc.
-
-Touching the chapel there, I find, that in the year 1466, by license
-obtained of King Edward IV., in the 6th of his reign, a fraternity of
-the Trinity, of sixty priests, besides other brethren and sisters, in
-the same chapel, was founded by William Rouse, John Risbie, and Thomas
-Ashby priests, some of the which sixty priests, every market-day in
-the forenoon, did celebrate Divine service there to such market-people
-as repaired to prayer; and once every year they met all together and
-had solemn service, with procession of the brethren and sisters. This
-foundation was in the year 1512, by a common council, confirmed to the
-sixty Trinity priests, and to their successors, at the will of the mayor
-and commonalty.
-
-In the year 1484, a great fire happened upon this Leaden hall, by what
-casualty I know not, but much housing was there destroyed, with all the
-stocks for guns, and other provision belonging to the city, which was a
-great loss, and no less charge to be repaired by them.
-
-In the year 1503, the 18th of Henry VII., a request was made by the
-commons of the city, concerning the usage of the said Leaden hall, in
-form as followeth:--"Please it, the lord mayor, and common council, to
-enact, that all Frenchmen bringing canvass, linen cloth, and other
-wares to be sold, and all foreigners bringing wolsteds, sayes, staimus,
-coverings, nails, iron work, or any other wares, and also all manner
-of foreigners bringing lead to the city to be sold, shall bring all
-such their wares aforesaid to the open market of the Leaden hall, there
-and no where else to be sold and uttered, like as of old time it hath
-been used, upon pain of forfeiture of all the said wares showed or
-sold in any other place than aforesaid; the show of the said wares to
-be made three days in the week, that is to say, Monday, Tuesday, and
-Wednesday; it is also thought reasonable that the common beam be kept
-from henceforth in the Leaden hall, and the farmer to pay therefore
-reasonable rent to the chamber; for better it is that the chamber have
-advantage thereby than a foreign person; and also the said Leaden hall,
-which is more chargeable now by half than profitable, shall better bear
-out the charges thereof; also the common beam for wool at Leaden hall,
-may yearly pay a rent to the chamber of London, toward supportation
-and charges of the same place; for reason it is, that a common office,
-occupied upon a common ground, bear a charge to the use of the
-commonalty; also, that foreigners bringing wools, felts, or any other
-merchandises or wares to Leaden hall, to be kept there for the sale and
-market, may pay more largely for the keeping of their goods than free
-men." Thus much for the request of the commons at this time.
-
-Now to set down some proof that the said hall hath been employed and
-used as a granary for corn and grain (as the same was first appointed),
-leaving all former examples, this one may suffice: Roger Achley, mayor
-of London in the year 1512, the 3rd of Henry VIII., when the said mayor
-entered the mayoralty, there was not found one hundred quarters of wheat
-in all the garners of the city, either within the liberties, or near
-adjoining; through the which scarcity, when the carts of Stratford came
-laden with bread to the city (as they had been accustomed) there was
-such press about them, that one man was ready to destroy another, in
-striving to be served for their money. But this scarcity did not last
-long; for the mayor in short time made such provision of wheat, that the
-bakers, both of London and Stratford, were weary of taking it up, and
-were forced to take up much more than they would, and for the rest the
-mayor laid out the money, and stored it up in Leaden hall, and other
-garners of the city. This mayor also kept the market so well, that he
-would be at the Leaden hall by four o'clock in the summer's mornings;
-and from thence he went to other markets, to the great comfort of the
-citizens.
-
-I read also that in the year 1528, the 20th of Henry VIII., surveyors
-were appointed to view the garners of the city, namely, the Bridgehouse
-and the Leaden hall, how they were stored of grain for the service of
-the city. And because I have here before spoken of the bread carts
-coming from Stratford at the Bow, ye shall understand that of old time
-the bakers of bread at Stratford were allowed to bring daily (except the
-Sabbath and principal feasts) divers long carts laden with bread, the
-same being two ounces in the penny wheat loaf heavier than the penny
-wheat loaf baked in the city, the same to be sold in Cheape, three or
-four carts standing there, between Gutheron's lane and Fauster's lane
-end, one cart on Cornhill, by the conduit, and one other in Grasse
-street. And I have read, that in the 4th year of Edward II., Richard
-Reffeham being mayor, a baker named John of Stratforde, for making bread
-less than the assize, was with a fool's hood on his head, and loaves
-of bread about his neck, drawn on a hurdle through the streets of this
-city. Moreover, in the 44th of Edward III., John Chichester being mayor
-of London, I read in the _Visions of Pierce Plowman_, a book so called,
-as followeth:
-
- "At Londone, I leve,
- Liketh wel my wafres;
- And louren whan thei lakken hem.
- It is noght longe y passed,
- There was a careful commune,
- Whan no cart com to towne
- With breed fro Stratforde;
- Tho gonnen beggaris wepe,
- And werkmen were agast a lite;
- This wole be thought longe.
- In the date of oure Drighte,
- In a drye Aprill,
- A thousand and thre hundred
- Twies twenty and ten,
- My wafres there were gesene
- Whan Chichestre was maire."[146]
-
-I read also in the 20th of Henry VIII., Sir James Spencer being mayor,
-six bakers of Stratford were amerced in the Guildhall of London, for
-baking under the size appointed. These bakers of Stratford left serving
-of this city, I know not upon what occasion, about thirty years since.
-
-In the year 1519 a petition was exhibited by the commons to the common
-council, and was by them allowed, concerning the Leaden hall, how they
-would have it used, viz. "Meekly beseeching, showeth unto your good
-lordship and masterships, divers citizens of this city, which under
-correction think, that the great place called the Leaden hall should,
-nor ought not to be letten to farm to any person or persons, and in
-especial to any fellowship or company incorporate, to have and hold the
-same hall for term of years, for such inconveniences as thereby may
-ensue, and come to the hurt of the common weal of the said city in time
-to come, as somewhat more largely may appear in the articles following.
-
-"First, If any assembly or hasty gathering of the commons of the said
-city, for suppressing or subduing of misruled people within the said
-city, hereafter shall happen to be called or commanded by the mayor,
-aldermen, and other governors and councillors of the said city for the
-time being, there is none so convenient, meet, and necessary a place,
-to assemble them in, within the said city, as the said Leaden hall,
-both for largeness of room, and their sure defence in time of their
-counselling together about the premises. Also, in that place hath been
-used the artillery, guns, and other armours of the said city, to be
-safely kept in a readiness for the safeguard, wealth, and defence of
-the said city, to be had and occupied at times when need required. As
-also the store of timber for the necessary reparations of the tenements
-belonging to the chamber of the said city, there commonly hath been
-kept. Item, If any triumph or nobleness were to be done, or shown by
-the commonalty of the city, for the honour of our sovereign lord the
-king and realm, and for the worship of the said city, the said Leaden
-hall is most meet and convenient place to prepare and order the said
-triumph therein, and from thence to issue forth to the places therefore
-appointed. Item, at any largess or dole of any money made unto the poor
-people of this city, it hath been used to be done and given in the said
-Leaden hall, for that the said place is most meet therefore. Item, the
-honourable father, that was maker of the said hall, had a special will,
-intent, and mind, that (as it is commonly said) the market men and
-women that came to the city with victuals and other things, should have
-their free standing within the said Leaden hall in wet weather, to keep
-themselves and their wares dry, and thereby to encourage them, and all
-other, to have the better will and desire the more plenteously to resort
-to the said city, to victual the same. And if the said hall should be
-letten to farm, the will of the said honourable father should never be
-fulfilled nor take effect. Item, if the said place, which is the chief
-fortress, and most necessary place within all the city, for the tuition
-and safeguard of the same, should be letten to farm out of the hands
-of the chief heads of the same city, and especially to another body
-politic, it might at length by likelihood be occasion of discord and
-debate between the said bodies politic, which God defend.
-
-"For these and many other great and reasonable causes, which hereafter
-shall be showed to this honourable court, your said beseechers think it
-much necessary that the said hall be still in the hands of this city,
-and to be surely kept by sad and discreet officers, in such wise, that
-it may alway be ready to be used and occupied for the common weal of the
-said city when need shall require, and in no wise to be letten to any
-body politic."
-
-Thus much for the petition.
-
-About the year 1534, great means were made about the Leaden hall to have
-the same made a burse, for the assembly of merchants, as they had been
-accustomed in Lombard street; many common councils were called to that
-end: but in the year 1535, John Champneys being mayor, it was fully
-concluded that the burse should remain in Lombard street as afore, and
-Leaden hall no more to be spoken of concerning that matter.
-
-The use of Leaden hall in my youth was thus:,--In a part of the north
-quadrant, on the east side of the north gate, were the common beams for
-weighing of wool and other wares, as had been accustomed; on the west
-side the gate were the scales to weight meal; the other three sides were
-reserved for the most part to the making and resting of the pageants
-showed at Midsummer in the watch; the remnant of the sides and quadrant
-was employed for the stowage of wool sacks, but not closed up; the lofts
-above were partly used by the painters in working for the decking of
-pageants and other devices, for beautifying of the watch and watchmen;
-the residue of the lofts were letten out to merchants, the wool winders
-and packers therein to wind and pack their wools. And thus much for
-Leaden hall may suffice.
-
-Now on the north of Lime street ward in the high street are divers fair
-houses for merchants, and proper tenements for artificers, with an alley
-also called Shaft alley, of the shaft or May-pole sometime resting over
-the gate thereof, as I have declared in Aldgate ward. In the year 1576,
-partly at the charges of the parish of St. Andrew, and partly at the
-charges of the chamber of London, a water-pump was raised in Lime street
-ward, near unto Lime street corner; for the placing of the which pump,
-having broken up the ground, they were forced to dig more than two
-fathom deep[147] before they came to any main ground, where they found a
-hearth made of Britain, or rather Roman tile[148] every tile half a yard
-square, and about two inches thick; they found coal lying there also
-(for that lying whole will never consume); then digging one fathom into
-the main, they found water sufficient, made their prall, and set up the
-pump; which pump, with oft repairing and great charges to the parish,
-continued not four-and-twenty years, but being rotted, was taken up and
-a new set in place in the year 1600. Thus much for the high street.
-
-In St. Marie street had ye of old time a parish church of St. Marie
-the Virgin, St. Ursula, and the eleven thousand Virgins, which church
-was commonly called St. Marie at the Axe, of the sign of an axe, over
-against the east end thereof, or St. Marie Pellipar, of a plot of ground
-lying on the north side thereof, pertaining to the Skinners in London.
-This parish, about the year 1565, was united to the parish church of St.
-Andrew Undershaft, and so was St. Mary at the Axe suppressed and letten
-out to be a warehouse for a merchant. Against the east end of this
-church was sometime a fair wall, now turned to a pump. Also against the
-north end of this St. Mary street, was sometime one other parish church
-of St. Augustine, called St. Augustine in the Wall, for that it stood
-adjoining to the wall of the city, and otherwise called St. Augustin's
-Papey, or the poor, as I have read in the reign of Edward III. About
-the year 1430, in the reign of Henry VI., the same church was allowed
-to the brethren of the Papey, the house of poor priests, whereof I have
-spoken in Aldgate ward. The parishioners of this church were appointed
-to the parish church of Allhallows in the wall, which is in Broad street
-ward, this brotherhood called Papey, being suppressed, the church of St
-Augustin was pulled down, and in place thereof one Grey an apothecary
-built a stable, hay-loft, etc. It is now a dwelling-house.[149] Those
-two parish churches, both lying in the ward of Lime street, being thus
-suppressed, there is not any one parish church or place for Divine
-service in that ward, but the inhabitants thereof repair to St. Peter
-in Cornhill ward, St. Andrew in Aldgate ward, Alhallows in the wall in
-Broad street ward, and some to St. Denis in Langborne ward.
-
-Now because of late there hath been some question, to what ward this
-church of St. Augustine Papey should of right belong, for the same hath
-been challenged by them of Aldgate ward, and without reason taken into
-Bishopsgate ward from Lime street ward, I am somewhat to touch it. About
-thirty years since the chamber of London granted a lease of ground, in
-these words: "lying near London wall in the ward of Lime street, from
-the west of the said church or chapel of St. Augustine Papey towards
-Bishopsgate," etc. On the which plot of ground the lease built three
-fair tenements, and placed tenants there; these were charged to bear
-scot and lot, and some of them to bear office in Lime street ward; all
-which they did willingly without grudging. And when any suspected or
-disordered persons were by the landlord placed there, the officers of
-Lime street ward fetched them out of their houses, committed them to
-ward, procured their due punishments, and banished them from thence;
-whereby in short time that place was reformed, and brought into good
-order; which thing being noted by them of Aldgate ward, they moved their
-alderman, Sir Thomas Offley, to call in those houses to be of his ward;
-but I myself showing a fair ledger book, sometimes pertaining to the
-late dissolved priory of the Holy Trinity whithin Aldgate, wherein were
-set down the just bounds of Aldgate ward, before Sir Thomas Offley, Sir
-Rowland Heyward, the common council, and wardmote inquest of the same
-Lime street ward, Sir Thomas Offley gave over his challenge, and so
-that matter rested in good quiet until the year 1579, that Sir Richard
-Pype being mayor, and alderman of Bishopsgate ward, challenged those
-houses to be of his ward, whereunto (without reason showed) Sir Rowland
-Heyward yielded. And thus is that side of the street, from the north
-corner of St. Mary street almost to Bishopsgate, wherein is one plot
-of ground, letten by the chamberlain of London to the parish of St.
-Martin's Oteswich, to be a churchyard or burying place for the dead of
-that parish, etc., unjustly drawn and withholden from the ward of Lime
-street. Divers other proofs I could set down, but this one following
-may suffice.--The mayor and aldermen of London made a grant to the
-fraternity of Papie in these words: "Be it remembered, that where now
-of late the master and wardens of the fraternity of the Papie have made
-a brick wall, closing in the chapel of St. Augustine called Papie
-chapel, situate in the parish of All Saints in the Wall, in the ward of
-Lime street, of the city of London; from the south-east corner of the
-which brick wall is a scutcheon of twenty-one feet of assize from the
-said corner eastward. And from the same scutcheon there to a messuage
-of fifty-five feet and a half westward, the said scutcheon breaketh
-out of line right southward betwixt the measures aforesaid three feet
-and five inches of assize, upon the common ground of the said city
-aforesaid, Ralph Verney, mayor, and the aldermen of the same city, the
-22nd day of October, the 6th year of Edward IV., granted to John Hod,
-priest, and to Master John Bolte, and Thomas Pachet, priests, wardens
-of the fraternity of Papie aforesaid, and to their successors for ever,
-etc., yielding four pence sterling yearly at Michaelmas." And this is,
-saith my book,[150] enrolled in the Guild hall of London; which is a
-sufficient proof the same plot of ground to be of Lime street ward, and
-never otherwise accounted or challenged.
-
-On the south side of this street, stretching west from St. Mary street
-towards Bishopsgate street, there was of old time one large messuage
-built of stone and timber, in the parish of St. Augustine in the Wall,
-now the parish of Allhallows in the same wall, belonging to the Earl of
-Oxford, for Richard de Vere, Earl of Oxford, possessed it in the 4th of
-Henry V.; but in process of time the lands of the earl fell to females,
-amongst the which, one being married to Wingfielde of Suffolke, this
-house with the appurtenances fell to his lot, and was by his heir, Sir
-Robert Wingfield, sold to Master Edward Coke, at this time the queen's
-attorney-general. This house being greatly ruinated of late time, for
-the most part hath been letten out to poulterers, for stabling of horses
-and stowage of poultry, but now lately new built into a number of small
-tenements, letten out to strangers, and other mean people.
-
-One note more of this ward, and so an end. I find of record, that in
-the year 1371, the 45th of Edward III., a great subsidy of one hundred
-thousand pounds was granted towards the king's wars in France, whereof
-the clergy paid fifty thousand pounds, and the laity fifty thousand
-pounds, to be levied to thirty-nine shires of England, containing
-parishes eight thousand six hundred, of every parish five pounds sixteen
-shillings, the greater to help the lesser. This city, as one of the
-shires, then containing twenty-four wards, and in them one hundred and
-ten parishes, was therefore assessed to six hundred and thirty-five
-pounds twelve shillings, whereof Lime street ward did bear thirty-four
-shillings and no more, so small a ward it was, and so accounted, as
-having no one whole parish therein, but small portions only of two
-parishes in that ward. This ward hath an alderman, his deputy, common
-councillors four, constables four, scavengers two, wardmote inquest
-sixteen, and a beadle; and is taxed to the fifteenth at one pound
-nineteen shillings and two pence three farthings.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[144] "It is taxed to the fifteene in London at 46 _li._, and accounted
-in the Exchequer to L45 10_s._"--_1st edition_, p. 113.
-
-[145] "Three schoolemaisters, with an usher, to wit."--_1st edition_, p.
-118.
-
-[146] This passage is printed very incorrectly, and as prose, by Stow,
-who makes the date "twice thirty and ten," _i.e._ 1370 (which is
-certainly the date of Chichester's mayoralty), instead of "twice twenty
-and ten," _i.e._ 1350, which is the reading of the MSS. and of the two
-early printed editions.
-
-[147] "Cornhill street, in some place raysed two fadome higher than of
-olde time, as appeared by buildings found so deepe."--_Stow._
-
-[148] "As they call it."--_1st edition_, p. 123.
-
-[149] "Reserving the churchyard for a garden plot."--_1st edition_, p.
-124.
-
-[150] Liber Papie.
-
-
-
-
-BISHOPSGATE WARD
-
-
-The next is Bishopsgate ward; whereof a part is without the gate and of
-the suburbs, from the bars by St. Mary Spittle to Bishopsgate, and a
-part of Houndsditch; almost half thereof, also without the wall, is of
-the same ward. Then within the gate is Bishopsgate street, so called of
-the gate, to a pump, where sometimes was a fair well, with two buckets,
-by the east end of the parish church of St. Martin Oteswich, and then
-winding by the west corner of Leaden hall down Grass street to the
-corner over against Grass church; and this is the bounds of that ward.
-
-Monuments most to be noted are these: The parish church of St. Buttolph
-without Bishopsgate, in a fair churchyard, adjoining to the town ditch,
-upon the very bank thereof, but of old time inclosed with a comely wall
-of brick, lately repaired by Sir William Allen, mayor, in the year
-1571, because he was born in that parish, where also he was buried. An
-anchoress received 40_s._ the year of the sheriffs of London.
-
-Now without this churchyard wall is a causeye, leading to a quadrant,
-called Petty France, of Frenchmen dwelling there, and to other
-dwelling-houses, lately built on the bank of the said ditch by some
-citizens of London, that more regarded their own private gain than the
-common good of the city; for by means of this causeye raised on the
-bank, and soilage of houses, with other filthiness cast into the ditch,
-the same is now forced to a narrow channel, and almost filled up with
-unsavoury things, to the danger of impoisoning the whole city.
-
-Next unto the parish church of St. Buttolph is a fair inn for receipt of
-travellers; then an hospital of St. Mary of Bethelem, founded by Simon
-Fitz Mary, one of the sheriffs of London, in the year 1246: he founded
-it to have been a priory of canons, with brethren and sisters; and King
-Edward III. granted a protection, which I have seen, for the brethren,
-_Miliciae beatae Mariae de Bethlem_, within the city of London, the 14th
-year of his reign. It was an hospital for distracted people: Stephen
-Geninges, merchant-tailor, gave L40 towards purchase of the patronage by
-his testament, 1523; the mayor and commonalty purchased the patronage
-thereof, with all the lands and tenements thereunto belonging, in the
-year 1546: the same year King Henry VIII. gave this hospital unto the
-city; the church and chapel whereof were taken down in the reign of
-Queen Elizabeth, and houses built there by the governors of Christ's
-hospital in London. In this place people that be distraight in wits
-are, by the suit of their friends, received and kept as afore, but not
-without charges to their bringers in. In the year 1569, Sir Thomas Roe,
-merchant-tailor, mayor, caused to be inclosed with a wall of brick
-about one acre of ground, being part of the said hospital of Bethelem;
-to wit, on the west, on the bank of Deep Ditch, so called, parting the
-said hospital of Bethelem from the More field: this he did for burial
-and ease of such parishes in London as wanted ground convenient within
-their parishes. The lady his wife was there buried (by whose persuasion
-he inclosed it), but himself, born in London, was buried in the parish
-church of Hackney.
-
-From this hospital northward, upon the street's side, many houses have
-been built with alleys backward, of late time too much pestered with
-people (a great cause of infection) up to the bars.
-
-The other side of this high street from Bishopsgate and Hounds ditch,
-the first building a large inn for receipt of travellers, and is called
-the Dolphin, of such a sign. In the year 1513, Margaret Ricroft, widow,
-gave this house, with the gardens and appurtenances, unto William Gam,
-R. Clye, their wives, her daughters, and to their heirs, with condition
-they yearly do give to the warden or governors of the Grey friers church
-within Newgate forty shillings, to find a student of divinity in the
-University for ever. Then is there a fair house, of late built by John
-Powlet. Next to that, a far more large and beautiful house, with gardens
-of pleasure, bowling alleys, and such like, built by Jasper Fisher, free
-of the goldsmiths, late one of the six clerks of the chauncerie and a
-justice of the peace. It hath since for a time been the Earl of Oxford's
-place. The queen's majesty Elizabeth hath lodged there. It now belongeth
-to Sir Roger Manars.[151] This house, being so large and sumptuously
-built by a man of no greater calling, possessions, or wealth (for he was
-indebted to many) was mockingly called Fisher's folly, and a rhythm was
-made of it, and other the like, in this manner:
-
- "Kirkebyes Castell, and Fishers Follie,
- Spinilas pleasure, and Megses glorie."
-
-And so of other like buildings about the city by citizens, men have not
-letted to speak their pleasure.
-
-From Fisher's Folly up to the west end of Berward's lane, of old time
-so called, but now Hogge lane, because it meeteth with Hogge lane,
-which cometh from the bars without Aldgate, as is afore showed, is a
-continual building of tenements, with alleys of cottages, pestered,
-etc. Then is there a large close, called Tasel close, sometime for that
-there were tassels planted for the use of cloth-workers, since letten
-to the cross-bow makers, wherein they used to shoot for games at the
-popinjay: now the same being inclosed with a brick wall, serveth to be
-an artillery yard, whereunto the gunners of the Tower do weekly repair,
-namely, every Thursday; and there levelling certain brass pieces of
-great artillery against a butt of earth, made for that purpose, they
-discharge them for their exercise.
-
-Then have you the late dissolved priory and hospital,[152] commonly
-called St. Mary Spittle, founded by Walter Brune and Rosia his wife,
-for canons regular. Walter, archdeacon of London, laid the first
-stone in the year 1197, William, of St. Mary church, then bishop of
-London, dedicated to the honour of Jesus Christ and his mother, the
-perpetual Virgin Mary, by the name of _Domus Dei_, and _Beatae Mariae_,
-extra Bishopsgate, in the parish of St. Buttolph; the bounds whereof,
-as appeareth by composition betwixt the parson and prior of the
-said hospital concerning tithes, beginneth at Berward's lane toward
-the south, and extendeth in breadth to the parish of St. Leonard of
-Shoreditch towards the north; and in length, from the King's street
-on the west to the bishop of London's field, called Lollesworth, on
-the east. The prior of this St. Mary Spittle, for the emortising
-and propriation of Bikenacar, in Essex, to his said house of St.
-Mary Spittle, gave to Henry VII. L400 in the 22nd of his reign. This
-hospital, surrendered to Henry VIII., was valued to dispend L478;
-wherein was found, besides ornaments of the church, and other goods
-pertaining to the hospital, one hundred and eighty beds, well furnished,
-for receipt of the poor; for it was an hospital of great relief. Sir
-Henry Plesington, knight, was buried there 1452.
-
-In place of this hospital, and near adjoining, are now many fair houses
-built for receipt and lodging of worshipful persons. A part of the large
-churchyard pertaining to this hospital, and severed from the rest with a
-brick wall, yet remaineth as of old time, with a pulpit cross therein,
-somewhat like to that in Paules churchyard. And against the said pulpit
-on the south side, before the charnel and chapel of St. Edmond the
-Bishop and Mary Magdalen, which chapel was founded about the year 1391
-by William Eneshan, citizen and paperer of London, who was there buried,
-remaineth also one fair built house, of two stories in height, for the
-mayor and other honourable persons, with the aldermen and sheriffs to
-sit in, there to hear the sermons preached in the Easter holidays. In
-the loft over them stood the bishop of London, and other prelates; now
-the ladies and aldermen's wives do there stand at a fair window, or sit
-at their pleasure. And here is to be noted, that, time out of mind, it
-hath been a laudable custom, that on Good Friday, in the afternoon, some
-especial learned man, by appointment of the prelates, hath preached a
-sermon at Paules cross, treating of Christ's Passion; and upon the three
-next Easter holidays, Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, the like learned
-men, by the like appointment, have used to preach on the forenoons at
-the said Spittle, to persuade the article of Christ's Resurrection;
-and then on Low Sunday, one other learned man at Paules cross, to
-make rehearsal of those four former sermons, either commending or
-reproving them, as to him by judgment of the learned divines was thought
-convenient. And that done, he was to make a sermon of his own study,
-which in all were five sermons in one. At these sermons, so severally
-preached, the mayor, with his brethren the aldermen, were accustomed
-to be present in their violets at Paules on Good Friday, and in their
-scarlets at the Spittle in the holidays, except Wednesday in violet, and
-the mayor with his brethren on Low Sunday in scarlet, at Paules cross,
-continued until this day.
-
-Touching the antiquity of this custom, I find, that in the year 1398,
-King Richard having procured from Rome confirmation of such statutes
-and ordinances as were made in the parliament, begun at Westminster and
-ended at Shrewsbury, he caused the same confirmation to be read and
-pronounced at Paules cross, and at St. Mary Spittle, in the sermons
-before all the people. Philip Malpas, one of the sheriffs in the year
-1439, gave twenty shillings by the year to the three preachers at the
-Spittle. Stephen Forster, mayor in the year 1454, gave forty pounds
-to the preachers at Paules cross and Spittle. I find also that the
-aforesaid house, wherein the mayor and aldermen do sit at the Spittle,
-was built for that purpose of the goods and by the executors of Richard
-Lawson, alderman, and Isabell his wife, in the year 1488. In the year
-1594, this pulpit being old was taken down, and a new set up; the
-preacher's face turned towards the south, which was before toward the
-west; also a large house, on the east side of the said pulpit, was then
-built for the governors and children of Christ's hospital to sit in, and
-this was done of the goods of William Elkens, alderman, late deceased;
-but within the first year the same house decaying, and like to have
-fallen, was again with great cost repaired at the city's charge.
-
-On the east side of this churchyard lieth a large field, of old time
-called Lolesworth, now Spittle field; which about the year 1576 was
-broken up for clay to make brick; in the digging whereof many earthen
-pots, called _urnae_, were found full of ashes, and burnt bones of men,
-to wit, of the Romans that inhabited here; for it was the custom of the
-Romans to burn their dead, to put their ashes in an urn, and then bury
-the same, with certain ceremonies, in some field appointed for that
-purpose near unto their city. Every of these pots had in them with the
-ashes of the dead one piece of copper money, with the inscription of the
-emperor then reigning: some of them were of Claudius, some of Vespasian,
-some of Nero, of Anthoninus Pius, of Trajanus, and others. Besides those
-urns, many other pots were there found, made of a white earth with
-long necks and handles, like to our stone jugs: these were empty, but
-seemed to be buried full of some liquid matter long since consumed and
-soked through; for there were found divers phials and other fashioned
-glasses, some most cunningly wrought, such as I have not seen the like,
-and some of crystal; all which had water in them, nothing differing in
-clearness, taste, or savour from common spring water, whatsoever it was
-at the first: some of these glasses had oil in them very thick, and
-earthy in savour; some were supposed to have balm in them, but had lost
-the virtue; many of those pots and glasses were broken in cutting of
-the clay, so that few were taken up whole. There were also found divers
-dishes and cups of a fine red-coloured earth, which showed outwardly
-such a shining smoothness as if they had been of coral; those had in the
-bottoms Roman letters printed: there were also lamps of white earth and
-red, artificially wrought with divers antiques about them, some three
-or four images made of white earth, about a span long each of them: one
-I remember was of Pallas, the rest I have forgotten. I myself have
-reserved, among divers of those antiquities there, one urn, with the
-ashes and bones, and one pot of white earth very small, not exceeding
-the quantity of a quarter of a wine pint, made in shape of a hare
-squatted upon her legs, and between her ears is the mouth of the pot.
-There hath also been found in the same field divers coffins of stone,
-containing the bones of men: these I suppose to be the burials of some
-especial persons in time of the Britons or Saxons, after that the Romans
-had left to govern here. Moreover, there were also found the skulls and
-bones of men without coffins, or rather whose coffins (being of great
-timber) were consumed. Divers great nails of iron were there found,
-such as are used in the wheels of shod carts, being each of them as big
-as a man's finger, and a quarter of a yard long, the heads two inches
-over; those nails were more wondered at than the rest of things there
-found, and many opinions of men were there uttered of them; namely,
-that the men there buried were murdered by driving those nails into
-their heads; a thing unlikely, for a smaller nail would more aptly serve
-to so bad a purpose, and a more secret place would likely be employed
-for their burial. But to set down what I have observed concerning this
-matter, I there beheld the bones of a man lying (as I noted), the head
-north, the feet south, and round about him, as thwart his head, along
-both his sides, and thwart his feet, such nails were found, wherefore I
-conceived them to be the nails of his coffin, which had been a trough
-cut out of some great tree, and the same covered with a plank, of a
-great thickness, fastened with such nails; and therefore I caused some
-of the nails to be reached up to me, and found under the broad heads of
-them the old wood, skant turned into earth, but still retaining both
-the grain and proper colour: of these nails, with the wood under the
-head thereof, I reserved one, as also the nether jaw-bone of the man,
-the teeth being great, sound, and fast fixed, which, among other many
-monuments there found, I have yet to show; but the nail lying dry, is
-by scaling greatly wasted. And thus much for this part of Bishopsgate
-ward, without the gate; for I have in another place spoken of the gate,
-and therefore I am to speak of that other part of this ward which lieth
-within the gate.
-
-And first to begin on the left hand of Bishopsgate street, from the gate
-you have certain tenements of old time pertaining to a brotherhood of
-St. Nicholas, granted to the parish clerks of London, for two chaplains,
-to be kept in the chapel of St. Mary Magdalen, near unto the Guildhall
-of London, in the 27th of Henry VI. The first of these houses towards
-the north, and against the wall of the city, was sometime a large inn
-or court called the Wrestlers, of such a sign, and the last in the high
-street towards the south was sometime also a fair inn called the Angel,
-of such a sign. Among these said tenements was on the same street side
-a fair entry, or court, to the common hall of the said parish clerks,
-with proper alms houses, seven in number, adjoining, for poor parish
-clerks, and their wives and their widows, such as were in great years
-not able to labour. One of these, by the said brotherhood of parish
-clerks, was allowed sixteen pence the week; the other six had each of
-them nine pence the week, according to the patent thereof granted. This
-brotherhood, amongst other, being suppressed, in the reign of Edward
-VI. the said hall, with the other buildings there, was given to Sir
-Robert Chester, a knight of Cambridgeshire; against whom the parish
-clerks commencing suit, in the reign of Queen Mary, and being like to
-have prevailed, the said Sir Robert Chester pulled down the hall, sold
-the timber, stone, and lead, and thereupon the suit was ended. The alms
-houses remain in the queen's hands, and people are there placed, such as
-can make best friends; some of them, taking the pension appointed, have
-let forth their houses for great rent, giving occasion to the parson of
-the parish to challenge tithes of the poor, etc.
-
-Next unto this is the small parish church of St. Ethelburge Virgin,
-and from thence some small distance is a large court called Little St.
-Helen's, because it pertained to the nuns of St. Helen's, and was their
-house: there are seven alms rooms or houses for the poor, belonging to
-the company of Leathersellers. Then, somewhat more west, is another
-court with a winding lane, which cometh out against the west end of
-St. Andrew Undershaft church. In this court standeth the church of St.
-Helen, sometime a priory of black nuns, and in the same a parish church
-of St. Helen.
-
-This priory was founded before the reign of Henry III. William Basing,
-dean of Paules, was the first founder, and was there buried; and William
-Basing, one of the sheriffs of London, in the 2nd year of Edward II. was
-holden also to be a founder, or rather a helper there. This priory being
-valued at L314 2_s._ 6_d._ was surrendered the 25th of November, the
-30th of Henry VIII.; the whole church, the partition betwixt the nuns'
-church and parish church being taken down, remaineth now to the parish,
-and is a fair parish church, but wanteth such a steeple as Sir Thomas
-Gresham promised to have built, in recompense of ground in their church
-filled up with his monument. The nuns' hall, and other houses thereunto
-appertaining, was since purchased by the company of the Leathersellers,
-and is their common hall; which company was incorporate in the 21st year
-of Richard II.
-
-In the church of St. Helen have you these monuments of the dead:--Thomas
-Langton, chaplain, buried in the choir 1350; Adam Frances, mayor, 1354;
-Elizabeth Vennar, wife to William Vennar, alderman, one of the sheriffs
-of London, 1401; Joan, daughter to Henry Seamer, wife to Richard, son
-and heir to Robert Lord Poynings, died a virgin 1420; John Swinflat,
-1420; Nicholas Marshall, ironmonger, alderman, 1474; Sir John Crosby,
-alderman, 1475, and Ann his wife; Thomas Williams, gentleman, 1495;
-Joan Cocken, wife to John Cocken, esquire, 1509; Marie Orrell, wife
-to Sir Lewes Orrell, knight; Henry Sommer, and Katherine his wife;
-Walter Huntington, esquire; John Langthorpe, esquire, 1510; John Gower,
-steward of St. Helen's, 1512; Robert Rochester, esquire, sergeant of the
-pantry to Henry VIII.; Sir William Sanctlo, and Sir William Sanctlo,
-father and son; Eleanor, daughter to Sir Thomas Butler; Lord Sudley;
-John Southworth; Nicholas Harpsfield, esquire; Thomas Sanderford,
-or Sommerford, alderman; Alexander Cheyney; Walter Dawbeney; George
-Fastolph, son to Hugh Fastolph; Robert Liade; Thomas Benolt, alias
-Clarenciaulx, king at arms, 1534; William Hollis, mayor, 1540; John
-Fauconbridge, esquire, 1545; Hacket, gentleman of the king's chapel;
-Sir Andrew Jud, mayor, 1551; Sir William Pickering, and Sir William
-Pickering, father and son; William Bond, alderman, 1567; Sir Thomas
-Gresham, mercer, 1579; William Skegges, sergeant poulter; Richard
-Gresham, son to Sir Thomas Gresham, 1564.
-
-Then have you one great house called Crosby place, because the same
-was built by Sir John Crosby, grocer and woolman, in place of certain
-tenements, with their appurtenances, letten to him by Alice Ashfed,
-prioress of St. Helen's, and the convent for ninety-nine years, from the
-year 1466 unto the year 1565, for the annual rent of L11 6_s._ 8_d._
-This house he built of stone and timber, very large and beautiful, and
-the highest at that time in London. He was one of the sheriffs, and an
-alderman in the year 1470, knighted by Edward IV. in the year 1471, and
-deceased in the year 1475; so short a time enjoyed he that his large and
-sumptuous building; he was buried in St. Helen's, the parish church; a
-fair monument of him and his lady is raised there. He gave towards the
-reforming of that church five hundred marks, which was bestowed with
-the better, as appeareth by his arms, both in the stone work, roof of
-timber, and glazing. I hold it a fable said of him to be named Crosbie,
-of being found by a cross, for I have read of other to have that name
-of Crosbie before him; namely, in the year 1406, the 7th of Henry IV.,
-the said king gave to his servant John Crosbie the wardship of Joan,
-daughter and sole heir to John Jordaine, fishmonger, etc. This Crosbie
-might be the father or grandfather to Sir John Crosbie.
-
-Richard, Duke of Gloucester, and lord protector, afterward king, by
-the name of Richard III., was lodged in this house; since the which
-time, among other, Anthonie Bonvice, a rich merchant of Italy, dwelt
-there; after him, Germain Cioll, then William Bond, alderman, increased
-this house in height, with building of a turret on the top thereof: he
-deceased in the year 1576, and was buried in St. Helen's church. Divers
-ambassadors have been lodged there; namely, in the year 1586, Henry
-Ramelius, chancellor of Denmark, ambassador unto the queen's majesty
-of England from Frederick II., the king of Denmark; an ambassador of
-France, etc. Sir John Spencer, alderman, lately purchased this house,
-made great reparations, kept his mayoralty there, and since built a most
-large warehouse near thereunto.
-
-From this Crosbie place up to Leaden hall corner, and so down Grass
-street, amongst other tenements, are divers fair and large built houses
-for merchants, and such like.
-
-Now for the other side of this ward, namely, the right hand, hard by
-within the gate, is one fair water conduit, which Thomas Knesworth,
-mayor, in the year 1505, founded: he gave L60, the rest was furnished
-at the common charges of the city. This conduit hath since been taken
-down and new built. David Woodrooffe, alderman, gave L20 towards the
-conveyance of more water thereunto. From this conduit have you, amongst
-many fair tenements, divers fair inns, large for receipt of travellers,
-and some houses for men of worship; namely, one most spacious of all
-other thereabout, built of brick and timber by Sir Thomas Gresham,
-knight, who deceased in the year 1579, and was buried in St. Helen's
-church, under a fair monument, by him prepared in his life: he appointed
-by his testament this house to be made a college of readers, as before
-is said in the chapter of schools and houses of learning.
-
-Somewhat west from this house is one other very fair house, wherein
-Sir William Hollies kept his mayoralty, and was buried in the parish
-church of St. Helen. Sir Andrew Jud also kept his mayoralty there, and
-was buried at St. Helen's: he built alms houses for six poor alms people
-near to the said parish church, and gave lands to the Skinners, out of
-the which they are to give 4_s._ every week to the six poor alms people,
-8_d._ the piece, and 25_s._ 4_d._ the year, in coals amongst them for
-ever.
-
-Alice Smith, of London, widow, late wife of Thomas Smith, of the same
-city, esquire, and customer of the port of London, in her last will
-and testament, bequeathed lands to the value of L15 by the year for
-ever, to the company of Skinners, for the augmenting of the pensions
-of certain poor, inhabiting in eight alms houses, erected by Sir
-Andrew Jud, knight, her father, in the parish of Great St. Helen's, in
-Bishopsgate street, in London. She hath also given in her said last will
-and testament, in other charitable uses, as to the hospitals and to the
-poor of other parishes and good preachers, the sum of L300. As also to
-the poor scholars in the two universities of Oxford and Cambridge the
-sum of L200; of which, her last will and testament, she made her sons,
-Thomas Smith, late sheriff of London, and Richard and Robert Smith,
-her executors, who have performed the same according to her godly and
-charitable mind.
-
-Then in the very west corner, over against the east end of St. Martin's
-Oteswich (from whence the street windeth towards the south), you had of
-old time a fair well, with two buckets, so fastened that the drawing up
-of the one let down the other; but now of late that well is turned into
-a pump.
-
-From this to the corner over against the Leaden hall, and so down Grasse
-street, are many fair houses for merchants and artificers, and many fair
-inns for travellers, even to the corner where that ward endeth, over
-against Grasse street. And thus much for this Bishopsgate ward shall
-suffice; which hath an alderman, two deputies, one without the gate,
-another within, common councillors six, constables seven, scavengers
-seven, for wardmote inquest thirteen, and a beadle: it is taxed to the
-fifteen at L13.[153]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[151] "To Master Cornewallos."--_1st edition_, p. 128.
-
-[152] "Of our blessed lady."--_1st edition_, p. 129.
-
-[153] "At twenty-two pounds in London, and in the Exchequer twenty-one
-pounds ten shillings."--_1st edition_, p. 136.
-
-
-
-
-BROAD STREET WARD
-
-
-The next is Brode street ward, which beginneth within Bishopsgate,
-from the water conduit westward on both sides of the street, by
-Allhallows church, to an iron grate on the channel which runneth into
-the water-course of Walbrooke, before you come to the postern called
-Mooregate; and this is the farthest west part of that ward.
-
-Then have you Brode street, whereof the ward taketh name, which
-stretcheth out of the former street from the east corner of Allhallows
-churchyard, somewhat south to the parish church of St. Peter the Poor
-on both sides, and then by the south gate of the Augustine friars west,
-down Throkmorton street by the Drapers' hall into Lothburie, to another
-grate of iron over the channel there, whereby the water runneth into
-the course of Walbrook, under the east end of St. Margaret's church,
-certain posts of timber are there set up; and this is also the farthest
-west part of this ward, in the said street. Out of the which street
-runneth up Bartholomew lane south to the north side of the Exchange;
-then more east, out of the former street from over against the Friars
-Augustine's church south gate, runneth up another part of Brode street
-south to a pump over against St. Bennet's church. Then have you one
-other street called Three needle street, beginning at the west, with
-two buckets, by St. Martin's Oteswich church wall. This street runneth
-down on both sides to Finkes lane, and half way up that lane to a gate
-of a merchant's house on the west side, but not so far on the east; then
-the foresaid street, from this Finkes lane, runneth down by the Royal
-Exchange to the Stocks, and to a place formerly called Scalding house,
-or Scalding wick, but now Scalding alley; by the west side whereof,
-under the parish church of St. Mildred, runneth the course of Walbrooke;
-and these be the bounds of this ward.
-
-Special monuments therein are these:--First, the parish church of
-Allhallows in the wall, so called of standing close to the wall of the
-city, in which have been buried Thomas Durrem, esquire, and Margaret his
-wife; Robert Beele, esquire, 1601. On the other side of that street,
-amongst many proper houses possessed for the most part by curriers, is
-the Carpenters' hall, which company was incorporated in the 17th year of
-King Edward IV.
-
-Then east from the Currier's row is a long and high wall of stone,
-inclosing the north side of a large garden adjoining to as large an
-house, built in the reign of King Henry VIII. and of Edward VI. by Sir
-William Powlet, lord treasurer of England. Through this garden, which
-of old time consisted of divers parts, now united, was sometimes a
-fair footway, leading by the west end of the Augustine friars church
-straight north, and opened somewhat west from Allhallows church against
-London wall towards Moregate; which footway had gates at either end,
-locked up every night; but now the same way being taken into those
-gardens, the gates are closed up with stone, whereby the people are
-forced to go about by St. Peter's church, and the east end of the said
-Friars church, and all the said great place and garden of Sir William
-Powlet to London wall, and so to Moregate.
-
-This great house, adjoining to the garden aforesaid, stretcheth to the
-north corner of Brode street, and then turneth up Brode street all that
-side to and beyond the east end of the said Friars church. It was built
-by the said lord treasurer in place of Augustine friars house, cloister,
-and gardens, etc. The Friars church he pulled not down, but the west
-end thereof, inclosed from the steeple and choir, was in the year 1550
-granted to the Dutch nation in London, to be their preaching place: the
-other part, namely, the steeple, choir, and side aisles to the choir
-adjoining, he reserved to household uses, as for stowage of corn, coal,
-and other things; his son and heir, Marquis of Winchester, sold the
-monuments of noblemen there buried in great number, the paving-stone
-and whatsoever (which cost many thousands), for one hundred pounds,
-and in place thereof made fair stabling for horses. He caused the lead
-to be taken from the roofs, and laid tile in place whereof; which
-exchange proved not so profitable as he looked for, but rather to his
-disadvantage.
-
-On the east side of this Brode street, amongst other buildings, on the
-back part of Gresham house, which is in Bishopsgate street, he placed
-eight proper alms houses, built of brick and timber by Sir Thomas
-Gresham, knight, for eight alms men, which he now there placed rent
-free, and receive each of them by his gift L6 13_s._ 4_d._ yearly for
-ever.
-
-Next unto Pawlet house is the parish church of St. Peter the Poor, so
-called for a difference from other of that name, sometime peradventure a
-poor parish, but at this present there be many fair houses, possessed by
-rich merchants and other. Buried in this church: Richard Fitzwilliams,
-merchant-tailor, 1520; Sir William Roch, mayor, 1540; Martin Calthrope,
-mayor, 1588.
-
-Then next have you the Augustine Friars church and churchyard; the
-entering thereunto by a south gate to the west porch, a large church,
-having a most fine spired steeple, small, high, and straight, I have not
-seen the like: founded by Humfrey Bohun, Earl of Hereford and Essex,
-in the year 1253. Reginald Cobham gave his messuage in London to the
-enlarging thereof, in the year 1344. Humfrey Bohun, Earl of Hereford
-and Essex, re-edified this church in the year 1354, whose body was
-there buried in the choir. The small spired steeple of this church was
-overthrown by a tempest of wind in the year 1362, but was raised of
-new, as now it standeth, to the beautifying of the city. This house was
-valued at L57, and was surrendered the 12th of November, the 30th of
-Henry VIII.
-
-There lie buried in this Friars church, amongst others, Edward, first
-son to Joan, mother to King Richard II.; Guy de Mericke, Earl of St.
-Paule; Lucie, Countess of Kent, and one of the heirs of Barnabie Lord
-of Millaine, with an epitaph; Dame Ide, wife to Sir Thomas West; Dame
-Margaret West; Stephen Lindericle, esquire; Sir Humfrey Bohun, Earl of
-Hereford and Essex, Lord of Brekenake;[154] Richard, the great Earl of
-Arundell, Surrey, and Warren, beheaded, 1397; Sir Edward Arundell, and
-Dame Elizabeth his wife; Sir Francis Atcourt,[155] Earl of Pembrooke,
-which married Alice, sister to the Earl of Oxford; Dame Lucie Knowles,
-of Kent; Sir Peter Garinsers, of France; the Lord John Vere, Earl of
-Oxford, beheaded on the Tower hill 1463; Aubrey de Vere, son and heir
-to the Earl of Oxford; Sir Thomas Tudnam, knight; William Bourser; Lord
-Fitz Warren; Sir Thomas de la Lande, knight; Dame Joan Norris, the Lady
-of Bedforde; Anne, daughter to John Viscount Welles; Walter Nevell,
-esquire; Sir John Manners, knight; the wife of Sir David Cradocke,
-knight; the mother to the Lord Spencer's wife; Sir Bartlemew Rodlegate;
-John, son to Sir John Wingfield; Sir Walter Mewes; Robert Newenton,
-esquire; Philip Spencer, son to Sir Hugh Spencer; Dame Isabell, daughter
-to Sir Hugh; the Lord Barons slain at Barnet field, buried there 1471.
-In the body of the church: Dame Julian, wife to Sir Richard Lacie;
-Sir Thomas Courtney, son to the Earl of Devonshire, and by him, his
-sister, wedded to Cheverstone; the daughter of the Lord Beaumont; two
-sons of Sir Thomas Morley, to wit, William and Ralph; Sir William
-Talmage, knight; Nicholas Blondell, esquire; Sir Richard Chamberlaine;
-John Halton, gentleman; Sir John Gifford, knight; Thomas Manningham,
-esquire; Sir William Kenude, knight; Sir William, son to Sir Thomas
-Terill; John Surell, gentleman. In the east wing: Margaret Barentin,
-gentlewoman; John Spicer, esquire, and Letis his wife; John le Percers,
-esquire; Roger Chibary, esquire; Peter Morens, esquire; Thomas, son to
-Sir William Beckland; James Cuthing, esquire; John Chorner, esquire;
-William Kenley, esquire; Margery, wife to Thomas Band, and daughter
-to John Hutch; the Lord William, Marquis of Barkeley and Earl of
-Nottingham, and Dame Joan his wife. In the west wing: Sir John Tirrill,
-and Dame Katherine his wife; Sir Walter of Powle, knight; Sir John
-Blanckwell, and his wife Dame Jane Sayne, daughter to Sir John Lee; Sir
-John Dawbeney, son and heir to Sir Giles Dawbeney; William, son to Sir
-Roger Scroope; Dame Joan Dawbeney, wife to Sir William Dawbeney; Thomas
-Charles, esquire; Sir John Dawbeney, knight, and his son Robert; Sir
-James Bell, knight; Sir Oliver Manny, knight; Henry Deskie, esquire; Sir
-Diones Mordaske; Sir Bernard Rolingcort; Sir Peter Kayor; Sir William
-Tirell; Sir William, his brother knights; William Collingborne, esquire,
-beheaded 1484; Sir Roger Clifford, knight; Sir Thomas Coke, mayor in
-the year 1462; William Edward, mayor, 1471; Sir James Tirell, Sir
-John Windany, knights, beheaded 1502; Sir John Dawtrie, knight, 1519;
-Dame Margaret Rede, 1510; Edward, Duke of Buckingham, beheaded 1521;
-Gwiskard, Earl of Huntington.
-
-On the south side, and at the west end of this church, many fair houses
-are built; namely, in Throgmorton street, one very large and spacious,
-built in the place of old and small tenements by Thomas Cromwell, master
-of the king's jewel-house, after that master of the rolls, then Lord
-Cromwell, knight, lord privy seal, vicar-general, Earl of Essex, high
-chamberlain of England, etc. This house being finished, and having
-some reasonable plot of ground left for a garden, he caused the pales
-of the gardens adjoining to the north part thereof on a sudden to be
-taken down; twenty-two feet to be measured forth right into the north
-of every man's ground; a line there to be drawn, a trench to be cast,
-a foundation laid, and a high brick wall to be built. My father had a
-garden there, and a house standing close to his south pale; this house
-they loosed from the ground, and bare upon rollers into my father's
-garden twenty-two feet, ere my father heard thereof; no warning was
-given him, nor other answer, when he spake to the surveyors of that
-work, but that their master Sir Thomas commanded them so to do; no man
-durst go to argue the matter, but each man lost his land, and my father
-paid his whole rent, which was 6_s._ 6_d._ the year, for that half
-which was left. Thus much of mine own knowledge have I thought good to
-note, that the sudden rising of some men causeth them[156] to forget
-themselves.
-
-The company of the Drapers in London bought this house, and now the
-same is their common hall. This company obtained of King Henry VI., in
-the 17th of his reign, to be incorporate: John Gidney was chosen to be
-their first master, and the four wardens were, J. Wotton, J. Darbie,
-Robert Breton, and T. Cooke. The arms granted to the said company by
-Sir William Bridges, knight, first garter king at arms, in blason, are
-thus: Three sunbeams issuing out of three clouds of flame, crowned with
-three crowns imperial of gold, upon a shield azure. From this hall, on
-the same side down to the grates and course of Walbrook, have ye divers
-fair houses for merchants and other; from the which grates back again
-on the other side in Lethbury, so called in record of Edward III., the
-38th year, and now corruptly called Lothbury, are candlestick founders
-placed, till ye come to Bartholomew lane, so called of St. Bartholomew's
-church, at the south-east corner thereof. In this lane also are divers
-fair built houses on both sides, and so likewise have ye in the other
-street, which stretcheth from the Friars Augustine's south gate to the
-corner over against St. Bennet's church. In this street, amongst other
-fair buildings, the most ancient was of old time a house pertaining to
-the abbot of St. Albans; John Catcher, alderman, now dwelleth there;
-then is the free school pertaining to the late dissolved hospital of
-St. Anthony, whereof more shall be shown in another place, and so up to
-Threeneedle street. On the south part of which street, beginning at the
-east, by the well with two buckets, now turned to a pump, is the parish
-church of St. Martin called Oteswich, of Martin de Oteswich, Nicholas
-de Oteswich, William Oteswich, and John Oteswich, founders thereof.
-There be monuments in this church of William Constantine, alderman,
-and Emme his wife; Katherine, wife to Benedick Augustine; Sir William
-Drifield, knight; John Oteswich, and his wife, under a fair monument
-on the south side; John Churchman, one of the sheriffs, in the year
-1385; Richard Naylor, tailor, alderman, 1483; James Falleron; John
-Melchborne; Thomas Hey, and Hellis his wife; William Clitherow, and
-Margaret his wife; Oliver and William, sons to John Woodroffe, esquire;
-Hugh Pemberton, tailor, alderman, 1500, and Katherine his wife; Matthew
-Pemberton, merchant-tailor, about 1514: he gave L50 to the repairing
-of St. Lawrence chapel. The aforesaid John Churchman, for William and
-John Oteswich, by license of Henry IV., the 6th of his reign, gave the
-advowson or patronage of this church, four messuages, and seventeen
-shops, with the appurtenances in the parish of St. Martin's Oteswich,
-etc., to the master and wardens of tailors and linen-armourers, keepers
-of the guild and fraternity of St. John Baptist in London, and to their
-successors, in perpetual alms, to be employed on the poor brethren and
-sisters; whereupon, adjoining unto the west end of this parish church,
-the said master and wardens built about a proper quadrant or squared
-court, seven alms houses, wherein they placed seven alms men of that
-company, and their wives (if they had wives); each of these seven of
-old time had 13_d._ the week, but now of later time their stipend by
-the said master and wardens hath been augmented to the sum of 26_s._
-the quarter, which is L5 4_s._ the year to each of them, besides coals;
-more, to each of them 20_s._ the year, by gift of Walter Fish, sometime
-master of that company, and tailor to her majesty.
-
-Some small distance from thence is the Merchant-tailors'-hall,
-pertaining to the guild and fraternity of St. John Baptist, time out of
-mind called of tailors and linen-armourers of London; for I find that
-Edward I., in the 28th of his reign, confirmed this guild by the name
-of Tailors and Linen-armourers, and also gave to the brethren thereof
-authority every year at Midsummer to hold a feast, and to choose unto
-them a governor, or master, with wardens; whereupon the same year, 1300,
-on the feast day of the nativity of St. John Baptist, they chose Henry
-de Ryall to be their pilgrim for the master of this mystery (as one that
-travelled for the whole company was then so called) until the 11th of
-Richard II.; and the four wardens were then called purveyors of alms
-(now called quarterage) of the said fraternity. This merchant-tailors'
-hall, sometime pertaining to a worshipful gentleman named Edmond Creping
-(Dominus Creping after some record), he in the year of Christ 1331, the
-first of Edward III., for a certain sum of money to him paid, made his
-grant thereof by the name of his principal messuage in the wards of
-Cornehill and Brode street, which Sir Oliver Ingham, knight, did then
-hold, to John of Yakley, the king's pavilion maker. This was called the
-new hall, or tailors' inn, for a difference from their old hall, which
-was about the back side of the Red Lion in Basing lane, and in the ward
-of Cordwayner street.
-
-The 21st of Edward IV., Thomas Holme, _alias_ Clarenciaulx king
-of arms for the south part of England, granted by his patents to
-the said fraternity and guild of St. John Baptist, of tailors and
-linen-armourers, to bear in a field silver, a pavilion between two
-mantels imperial purple garnished with gold, in a chief azure and holy
-Lamb, set within a sun, the crest upon the helm, a pavilion purple
-garnished with gold, etc. After this King Henry VII. being himself a
-brother of this fraternity or guild of St. John Baptist, of tailors or
-linen-armourers (as divers other his predecessors kings before him had
-been, to wit, Richard III., Edward IV., Henry V., Henry IV., and Richard
-II.); and for that divers of that fraternity had, time out of mind, been
-great merchants, and had frequented all sorts of merchandises into most
-parts of the world, to the honour of the king's realm, and to the great
-profit of his subjects, and of his progenitors; and the men of the said
-mystery, during the time aforesaid, had exercised the buying and selling
-of all wares and merchandises, especially of woollen cloth, as well in
-gross, as by retail, throughout all this realm of England, and chiefly
-within the said city; therefore he, of his especial grace, did change,
-transfer, and translate the guild aforesaid, and did incorporate them
-into the name of the Master and Wardens of the Merchant-tailors of the
-fraternity of St. John Baptist, in the city of London.
-
-Some distance west from this the Merchant-tailors' hall is Finke's lane,
-so called of Robert Finke, and Robert Finke his son, James Finke, and
-Rosamond Finke. Robert Finke the elder new built the parish church of
-St. Bennet, commonly called Fink, of the founder; his tenements were
-both of St. Bennet's parish and St. Martin's Oteswich parish. The one
-half of this Finke lane is of Brode street ward, to wit, on the west
-side up to the great and principal house wherein the said Finke dwelt;
-but on the other side, namely the east, not so much towards Cornhill.
-Then without this lane in the aforesaid Threeneedle street is the
-said parish church of St. Bennet, a proper church, in which are these
-monuments of the dead:--Robert Simson, and Elizabeth his wife; Roger
-Strange, esquire; Trerisse; William Coolby; John Frey; Thomas Briar,
-plumber, 1410, etc.
-
-Some distance west is the Royal Exchange, whereof more shall be spoken
-in the ward of Cornhill, and so down to the little conduit, called the
-pissing conduit, by the Stockes market, and this is the south side of
-Threeneedle street.
-
-On the north side of this street, from over against the east corner
-of St. Martin's Oteswich church, have ye divers fair and large houses
-till ye come to the hospital of St. Anthonie, sometime a cell to St.
-Anthonie's of Vienna. For I read that King Henry III. granted to the
-brotherhood of St. Anthonie of Vienna, a place amongst the Jews, which
-was sometime their synagogue, and had been built by them about the
-year 1231; but the Christians obtained of the king that it should be
-dedicated to our Blessed Lady; and since a hospital being there built,
-was called St. Anthonie's in London; it was founded in the parish of St.
-Bennet Finke, for a master, two priests, one schoolmaster, and twelve
-poor men: after which foundation, amongst other things, was given to
-this hospital, one messuage and garden, whereon was built the fair large
-free school, and one other parcel of ground, containing thirty-seven
-feet in length, and eighteen feet in breadth, whereon was built the
-alms houses of hard stone and timber, in the reign of Henry VI., which
-said Henry VI., in the 20th of his reign, gave unto John Carpenter,
-D.D., master of St. Anthonie's hospital, and to his brethren and their
-successors for ever, his manor of Ponington, with the appurtenances,
-with certain pensions and portions of Milburne, Burnworth, Charlton,
-and Up Wimborne, in the county of Southampton, towards the maintenance
-of five scholars in the university of Oxford, to be brought up in the
-faculty of arts, after the rate of ten pence the week for every scholar,
-so that the said scholars shall be first instructed in the rudiments of
-grammar at the college of Eaton, founded by the said king.
-
-In the year 1474, Edward IV. granted to William Say, B.D., master of the
-said hospital, to have priests, clerks, scholars, poor men, and brethren
-of the same, clerks, or laymen, choristers, proctors, messengers,
-servants in household, and other things whatsoever, like as the prior
-and convent of St. Anthonie's of Vienna, etc. He also annexed, united,
-and appropriated the said hospital unto the collegiate church of St.
-George in Windsor.
-
-The proctors of this house were to collect the benevolence of charitable
-persons towards the building and supporting thereof. And amongst other
-things observed in my youth, I remember that the officers charged with
-oversight of the markets in this city, did divers times take from
-the market people, pigs starved, or otherwise unwholesome for man's
-sustenance; these they slit in the ear. One of the proctors for St.
-Anthonie's tied a bell about the neck, and let it feed on the dunghills;
-no man would hurt or take them up, but if any gave to them bread, or
-other feeding, such would they know, watch for, and daily follow,
-whining till they had somewhat given them; whereupon was raised a
-proverb, "Such an one will follow such an one, and whine as it were an
-Anthonie pig;" but if such a pig grew to be fat, and came to good liking
-(as oft times they did), then the proctor would take him up to the use
-of the hospital.
-
-In the year 1499, Sir John Tate, sometime ale-brewer, when a mercer,
-caused his brewhouse, called the Swan, near adjoining to the said free
-chapel, college, or hospital of St. Anthonie, to be taken down for the
-enlarging of the church, which was then new built, toward the building
-whereof the said Tate gave great sums of money, and finished in the
-year 1501. Sir John Tate deceased 1514, and was there buried under a
-fair monument by him prepared. Dr. Tayler, master of the rolls, and
-other.[157]
-
-Walter Champion, draper, one of the sheriffs of London 1529, was buried
-there, and gave to the beadman twenty pounds. The lands by year of this
-hospital were valued in the 37th year of Henry VIII. to be fifty-five
-pounds six shillings and eight pence.
-
-One Johnson (a schoolmaster of the famous free-school there) became a
-prebend of Windsor, and then by little and little followed the spoil
-of this hospital. He first dissolved the choir, conveyed the plate and
-ornaments, then the bells, and lastly put out the alms men from their
-houses, appointing them portions of twelve pence the week to each (but
-now I hear of no such matter performed), their houses with other be
-letten out for rent, and the church is a preaching place for the French
-nation.
-
-This school was commended in the reign of Henry VI., and sithence
-commended above other, but now decayed, and come to nothing, by taking
-that from it what thereunto belonged.
-
-Next is the parish church of St. Bartholomew, at the end of Bartholomew
-lane. Thomas Pike, alderman, with the assistance of Nicholas Yoo, one
-of the sheriffs of London, about the year 1438, new built this church.
-Sir John Fray, knight, was buried there, Margery his daughter and
-heir, wife to Sir John Lepington, knight, founded there a chantry the
-21st of Edward IV. Alderban, a Gascoyne, was buried there; Sir Will.
-Capel, mayor 1509, added unto this church a proper chapel on the south
-side thereof, and was buried there; Sir Giles Cappell was also buried
-there; James Wilford, tailor, one of the sheriffs 1499, appointed by
-his testament a doctor of divinity, every Good Friday for ever, to
-preach there a sermon of Christ's Passion, from six of the clock till
-eight before noon, in the said church. John Wilford, merchant-tailor,
-alderman, 1544; Sir James Wilford, 1550; Sir George Barne, mayor 1552;
-John Dent; Miles Coverdale, Bishop of Excester; Thomas Dancer, and Anne
-his wife.
-
-Then lower down towards the Stocks' market is the parish church of
-St. Christopher, but re-edified of new; for Richard Shore, one of the
-sheriffs 1506, gave money towards the building of the steeple. There lie
-buried Richard Sherington, 1392, who gave lands to that church; the Lady
-Margaret Norford, 1406; John Clavering, 1421, who gave lands thereunto;
-John Godnay, draper, mayor 1427. This Godnay, in the year 1444, wedded
-the widow of Robert Large, late mayor, which widow had taken the mantle
-and ring, and the vow to live chaste to God during the term of her
-life, for the breach whereof, the marriage done, they were troubled
-by the church, and put to penance, both he and she. William Hampton,
-mayor 1472, was a great benefactor, and glazed some of the church
-windows; Sir William Martin, mayor 1492; Roger Achley, mayor 1511,
-he dwelt in Cornehill ward, in a house belonging to Cobham college,
-rented by the year at twenty-six shillings and eight pence; Robert
-Thorne, merchant-tailor, a bachelor, 1532--he gave by his testament in
-charity more than four thousand four hundred and forty-five pounds; John
-Norryholme; Ralph Batte; Alice Percivall; Jane Drew; William Borresbie;
-John Broke; Richard Sutton; William Batte; James Well; Henry Beacher,
-alderman, 1570.
-
-West from this church have ye Scalding alley, of old time called
-Scalding house, or Scalding wike, because that ground for the most part
-was then employed by poulterers that dwelt in the high street from the
-Stocks' market to the great conduit. Their poultry, which they sold at
-their stalls, were scalded there. The street doth yet bear the name of
-the Poultry, and the poulterers are but lately departed from thence into
-other streets, as into Grasse street, and the ends of St. Nicholas flesh
-shambles. This Scalding wike is the farthest west part of Brode street
-ward, and is by the water called Walbrook parted from Cheap ward. This
-Brode street ward hath an alderman, with his deputy, common councillors
-ten, constables ten, scavengers eight, wardmote inquest thirteen, and
-a beadle. It is taxed to the fifteenth in London at seven-and-twenty
-pounds, and accounted in the Exchequer after twenty-five pounds.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[154] "Pembroke."--_1st edition_, p. 136.
-
-[155] "Courtney."--_1st edition_, _ibid._
-
-[156] "In some matters."--_1st edition_, p. 141.
-
-[157] "This goodly foundation having a free schoole and almes houses
-for poore men (builded of hard stone) adjoyning to the west end of the
-church, was of olde time confirmed by Henry the Sixt, in the year 1447.
-The outward work of this new church was finished in the year 1501, the
-said John Tate deceased about the year 1514, and was there buried in a
-monument by him prepared, as appeareth by an indenture tripartite made
-between the said John Tate, the Deane of Windsor, and William Milbourn,
-chamberlaine."--_1st edition_, p. 145.
-
-
-
-
-CORNEHILL WARD
-
-
-The next ward to the south is Cornehill ward, so called of a corn
-market, time out of mind there holden, and is a part of the principal
-high street, beginning at the west end of Leaden hall, stretching down
-west on both the sides by the south end of Finks lane on the right hand,
-and by the north end of Birchovers lane; on the left part of which
-lanes, to wit, to the middle of them, is of this ward, and so down to
-the Stockes market; and this is the bounds.
-
-The upper or east part of this ward, and also a part of Lime street
-ward, hath been (as I said) a market place, especially for corn, and
-since for all kind of victuals, as is partly showed in Lime street
-ward; yet it appeareth of record, that in the year 1522, the rippers
-of Rie and other places, sold their fresh fish in Leaden hall market
-upon Cornehill, but foreign butchers were not admitted there to sell
-flesh till the year 1533; and it was enacted, that butchers should
-sell[158], their beef not above a halfpenny the pound, and mutton a
-halfpenny half-farthing; which act being devised for the great commodity
-of the realm (as it was then thought) hath since proved far otherwise;
-for before that time a fat ox was sold in London for six-and-twenty
-shillings and eight pence at the most, a fat wether for three shillings
-and four pence, a fat calf the like price, a fat lamb for twelve pence,
-pieces of beef weighing two pounds and a half at the least, yea three
-pounds or better, for a penny, on every butcher's stall in this city,
-and of those pieces of beef thirteen or fourteen for twelve pence, fat
-mutton for eight pence the quarter, and one hundred weight of beef for
-four shillings and eight pence, at the dearest. What the price is now I
-need not to set down; many men thought the same act to rise in price,
-by mean that graziers knew or supposed what weight every their beasts
-contained, and so raising their price thereafter, the butcher could
-be no gainer, but by likewise raising his price.[159] The number of
-butchers then in the city and suburbs was accounted six score, of which
-every one killed six oxen a piece weekly, which is in forty-six weeks
-thirty-three thousand one hundred and twenty oxen, or seven hundred and
-twenty oxen weekly. The foreign butchers for a long time stood in the
-high street of Lime Street ward on the north side, twice every week,
-namely, Wednesday and Saturday, and were some gain to the tenants before
-whose doors they stood, and into whose houses they set their blocks and
-stalls; but that advantage being espied, they were taken into Leaden
-hall, there to pay for their standing to the chamber of London. Thus
-much for the market upon Cornhill.
-
-The chief ornaments on Cornhill ward are these: first, at the east
-end thereof, in the middle of the high street, and at the parting
-of four ways, have ye a water standard, placed in the year 1582, in
-manner following. A certain German, named Peter Morris, having made an
-artificial forcier for that purpose, conveyed Thames water in pipes of
-lead over the steeple of St. Magnus church, at the north end of London
-Bridge, and from thence into divers men's houses in Thames street, New
-Fish street, and Grasse street, up to the north-west corner of Leaden
-hall, the highest ground of all the city, where the waste of the main
-pipe rising into this standard, provided at the charges of the city,
-with four spouts did at every tide run (according to covenant) four
-ways, plentifully serving to the commodity of the inhabitants near
-adjoining in their houses, and also cleansed the channels of the street
-towards Bishopsgate, Aldgate, the bridge, and the Stockes' market. But
-now no such matter, through whose default I know not.[160]
-
-Then have ye a fair conduit of sweet water, castellated in the middest
-of that ward and street. This conduit was first built of stone in
-the year 1282, by Henry Walles, mayor of London, to be a prison for
-night-walkers, and other suspicious persons, and was called the Tun
-upon Cornehill, because the same was built somewhat in fashion of a tun
-standing on the one end.
-
-To this prison the night watches of this city committed not only night
-walkers, but also other persons, as well spiritual as temporal, whom
-they suspected of incontinence, and punished them according to the
-customs of this city; but complaint thereof being made, about the year
-of Christ 1297, King Edward I. writeth to his citizens thus:--
-
-"Edward, by the grace of God, etc. Whereas Richard Gravesend, bishop of
-London, hath showed unto us, that by the Great Charter of England, the
-Church hath a privilege, that no clerk should be imprisoned by a lay
-man without our command, and breach of peace, which notwithstanding
-some citizens of London, upon mere spite, do enter in their watches into
-clerks' chambers, and like felons carry them to the Tun, which Henry le
-Walleys, sometime mayor, built for night walkers; wherefore we will that
-this our commandment be proclaimed in full hustings, and that no watch
-hereafter enter into any clerk's chamber, under the forfeit of twenty
-pounds. Dated at Carlisle the 18th of March, the 25th of our reign."
-
-More, I read about the year of Christ 1299, the 27th of Edward I.,
-certain principal citizens of London, to wit, T. Romane, Richard
-Gloucester, Nicholas Faringdon, Adam Helingburie, T. Saly, John
-Dunstable, Richard Ashwy, John Wade, and William Stortford, brake up
-this prison called the Tun, and took out certain prisoners, for which
-they were sharply punished by long imprisonment and great fines. It cost
-the citizens (as some have written) more than twenty thousand marks,
-which they were amerced in, before William le March, treasurer of the
-king's exchequer, to purchase the king's favour, and confirmation of
-their liberties.
-
-Also, that in the year 1383, the 7th of Richard II., the citizens of
-London, taking upon them the rights that belonged to their bishops,
-first imprisoned such women as were taken in fornication or adultery in
-the said Tun, and after bringing them forth to the sight of the world,
-they caused their heads to be shaven, after the manner of thieves, whom
-they named appellators, and so to be led about the city, in sight of
-all the inhabitants, with trumpets and pipes sounding before them, that
-their persons might be the more largely known. Neither did they spare
-such kind of men a whit the more, but used them as hardly, saying, they
-abhorred not only the negligence of their prelates, but also detested
-their avarice, that studying for money, omitted the punishment limited
-by law, and permitted those that were found guilty to live favourably
-in their sin. Wherefore, they would themselves, they said, purge their
-city from such filthiness, lest, through God's vengeance, either the
-pestilence or sword should happen to them, or that the earth should
-swallow them.
-
-Last of all to be noted, I read in the charge of the wardmote inquest
-in every ward of the city, these words:--"If there be any priest in
-service within the ward, which before time hath been set in the Tun in
-Cornhill for his dishonesty, and hath forsworn the city, all such shall
-be presented."
-
-Thus much for the Tun in Cornhill have I read. Now for the punishments
-of priests in my youth: one note and no more. John Atwod, draper,
-dwelling in the parish of St. Michael upon Cornehill, directly against
-the church, having a proper woman to his wife, such an one as seemed the
-holiest among a thousand, had also a lusty chantry priest, of the said
-parish church, repairing to his house; with the which priest the said
-Atwod would sometimes after supper play a game at tables for a pint of
-ale: it chanced on a time, having haste of work, and his game proving
-long, he left his wife to play it out, and went down to his shop, but
-returning to fetch a pressing iron, he found such play to his misliking,
-that he forced the priest to jump out at a window over the penthouse
-into the street, and so to run to his lodging in the churchyard. Atwod
-and his wife were soon reconciled, so that he would not suffer her to
-be called in question; but the priest being apprehended and committed,
-I saw his punishment to be thus:--He was on three market days conveyed
-through the high street and markets of the city with a paper on his
-head, wherein was written his trespass. The first day he rode in a
-carry, the second on a horse, his face to the horse tail, the third led
-betwixt twain, and every day rung with basons, and proclamations made
-of his fact at every turning of the street, as also before John Atwod's
-stall, and the church door of his service, where he lost his chantry of
-twenty nobles the year, and was banished the city for ever.
-
-By the west side of the foresaid prison, then called the Tun, was a
-fair well of spring water, curbed round with hard stone; but in the
-year 1401, the said prison house, called the Tun, was made a cistern
-for sweet water, conveyed by pipes of lead from Tiborne, and was from
-thenceforth called the Conduit upon Cornhill. Then was the well planked
-over, and a strong prison made of timber called a cage, with a pair
-of stocks therein set upon it, and this was for night walkers. On the
-top of which cage was placed a pillory, for the punishment of bakers
-offending in the assize of bread, for millers stealing of corn at the
-mill, for bawds, scolds, and other offenders. As in the year 1468,
-the 7th of Edward IV., divers persons being common jurors, such as at
-assizes were forsworn for rewards, or favour of parties, were judged to
-ride from Newgate to the pillory in Cornhill, with mitres of paper on
-their heads, there to stand, and from thence again to Newgate, and this
-judgment was given by the mayor of London. In the year 1509, the 1st of
-Henry VIII., Darby, Smith, and Simson, ringleaders of false inquests in
-London, rode about the city with their faces to the horse tails, and
-papers on their heads, and were set on the pillory in Cornhill, and
-after brought again to Newgate, where they died for very shame, saith
-Robert Fabian. A ringleader of inquests,[161] as I take it, is he that
-making a gainful occupation thereof, will appear on Nisi-priuses, or he
-be warned, or procure himself to be warned, to come on by a tales. He
-will also procure himself to be foreman when he can, and take upon him
-to overrule the rest to his opinion; such an one shall be laboured by
-plaintiffs and defendants, not without promise of rewards, and therefore
-to be suspected of a bad conscience. I would wish a more careful choice
-of jurors to be had; for I have known a man carted, rung with basons,
-and banished out of Bishopsgate ward, and afterward in Aldgate ward
-admitted to be a constable, a grand juryman, and foreman of the wardmote
-inquest: what I know of the like, or worse men, proffered to the like
-offices, I forbear to write, but wish to be reformed.
-
-The foresaid conduit upon Cornhill, was in the year 1475 enlarged by
-Robert Drope, draper, mayor, that then dwelt in that ward; he increased
-the cistern of this conduit with an east end of stone, and castellated
-in comely manner.
-
-In the year 1546, Sir Martin Bowes, mayor, dwelling in Lombard street,
-and having his back gate opening into Cornehill against the said
-conduit, minded to have enlarged the cistern thereof with a west end,
-like as Robert Drope before had done towards the east; view and measure
-of the plot was taken for this work; but the pillory and cage being
-removed, they found the ground planked, and the well aforesaid worn out
-of memory, which well they revived and restored to use--it is since made
-a pump; they set the pillory somewhat west from the well; and so this
-work ceased.
-
-On the north side of the street, from the east unto the west, have ye
-divers fair houses for merchants and other, amongst the which one large
-house is called the Wey house, where merchandises brought from beyond
-the seas are to be weighed at the king's beam. This house hath a master,
-and under him four master porters, with porters under them: they have a
-strong cart, and four great horses, to draw and carry the wares from the
-merchants' houses to the beam and back again. Sir Thomas Lovell, knight,
-built this house, with a fair front of tenements towards the street; all
-which he gave to the Grocers of London, himself being free of the city,
-and a brother of that company.
-
-Then have ye the said Finke's lane, the south end of which lane on both
-sides is in Cornehill ward.
-
-Then next is the Royal Exchange, erected in the year 1566, after this
-order, namely, certain houses upon Cornehill, and the like upon the
-back thereof, in the ward of Brode street, with three alleys, the
-first called Swan alley, opening into Cornehill, the second New alley,
-passing throughout of Cornehill into Brode street ward, over against
-St. Bartholomew lane, the third St. Christopher's alley, opening into
-Brode street ward, and into St. Christopher's parish, containing in all
-fourscore households, were first purchased by the citizens of London,
-for more than three thousand five hundred and thirty-two pounds, and
-were sold for four hundred and seventy-eight pounds, to such persons as
-should take them down and carry them thence; also the ground or plot was
-made plain at the charges of the city; and then possession thereof was
-by certain aldermen, in name of the whole citizens, given to Sir Thomas
-Gresham, knight, agent to the queen's highness, thereupon to build a
-burse, or place for merchants to assemble, at his own proper charges.
-And he, on the 7th of June, laying the first stone of the foundation,
-being brick, accompanied with some aldermen, every of them laid a piece
-of gold, which the workmen took up, and forthwith followed upon the same
-with such diligence, that by the month of November, in the year 1567,
-the same was covered with slate, and shortly after fully finished.
-
-In the year 1570, on the 23rd of January, the queen's majesty, attended
-with her nobility, came from her house at the Strand, called Somerset
-house, and entered the city by Temple Bar, through Fleet street, Cheape,
-and so by the north side of the burse, through Threeneedle street, to
-Sir Thomas Gresham's in Bishopsgate street, where she dined. After
-dinner her majesty returning through Cornehill, entered the burse on the
-south side; and after that she had viewed every part thereof above the
-ground, especially the pawn, which was richly furnished with all sorts
-of the finest wares in the city, she caused the same burse by an herald
-and trumpet to be proclaimed the Royal Exchange, and so to be called
-from thenceforth, and not otherwise.
-
-Next adjoining this Royal Exchange remaineth one part of a large stone
-house, and is now called the Castle of such a sign; at a tavern door
-there is a passage through out of Cornehill into Threeneedle street;
-the other part of the said stone house was taken down for enlarging
-the Royal Exchange: this stone house was said of some to have been a
-church, whereof it had no proportion, of others a Jew's house, as though
-none but Jews had dwelt in stone houses; but that opinion is without
-warrant, for besides the strong building of stone houses against the
-invasion of thieves in the night, when no watches were kept, in the 1st
-year of Richard I., to prevent the casualties of fire, which often had
-happened in the city, when the houses were built of timber, and covered
-with reed or straw, Henry Fitz Alewine being mayor, it was decreed,
-that from henceforth no man should build within the city but of stone,
-until a certain height, and to cover the same building with slate or
-burnt tile; and this was the very cause of such stone buildings, whereof
-many have remained till our time, that for winning of ground they have
-been taken down, and in place of some one of them being low, as but
-two stories above the ground, many houses of four or five stories high
-are placed. From this stone house down to the Stocks are divers large
-houses, especially for height, for merchants and artificers.
-
-On the south side of this high street is the parish church of St. Peter
-upon Cornehill, which seemeth to be of an ancient building, but not
-so ancient as fame reporteth, for it hath been lately repaired, if
-not all new built, except the steeple, which is ancient. The roof of
-this church, and glazing, were finished in the reign of Edward IV., as
-appeareth by arms of noblemen and aldermen of London then living. There
-remaineth in this church a table whereon it is written, I know not by
-what authority, but of a late hand, that King Lucius founded the same
-church to be an archbishop's see metropolitan,[162] and chief church of
-his kingdom, and that it so endured the space of four hundred years,
-unto the coming of Augustin the monk.
-
-Joceline of Furness writeth, that Thean, the first archbishop of London,
-in the reign of Lucius, built the said church by the aid of Ciran, chief
-butler to King Lucius; and also that Eluanus, the second archbishop,
-built a library to the same adjoining, and converted many of the Druids,
-learned men in the Pagan law, to Christianity. True it is, that a
-library there was pertaining to this parish church of old time, built
-of stone, and of late repaired with brick by the executors of Sir John
-Crosby, alderman, as his arms on the south end doth witness.
-
-This library hath been of late time, to wit, within these fifty years,
-well furnished of books; John Leyland viewed and commended them; but
-now those books be gone, and the place is occupied by a schoolmaster
-and his usher, over a number of scholars learning their grammar rules,
-etc. Notwithstanding, before that time a grammar school had been kept in
-this parish, as appeareth in the year 1425, I read, that John Whitby was
-rector, and John Steward schoolmaster there; and in the 25th of Henry
-VI., it was enacted by parliament, that four grammar schools in London
-should be maintained, namely, in the parishes of Allhallows, in Thames
-street, St. Andrew in Oldbourne, St. Peter's upon Cornehill, and St.
-Thomas of Acars.
-
-Monuments of the dead in this church defaced: I read, that Hugh Waltham,
-Nicholas Pricot, mercer, alderman, Richard Manhall, 1503; William
-Kingston, fishmonger, gave his tenements called the Horse mill in
-Grasse street to this church, and was there buried about the year 1298;
-John Unisburgh, poulterer, 1410; John Law. Also Peter Mason, tailor,
-gave to this church seven pounds sterling yearly for ever, out of his
-tenements in Colechurch parish, and deceased about the year 1416. John
-Foxton founded a chantry there. A brotherhood of St. Peter was in this
-church established by Henry IV., the 4th of his reign. William Brampton
-and William Askham, fishmongers and aldermen, were chief procurers
-thereof, for the fishmongers of late buried there; Sir William Bowyer,
-mayor 1543; Sir Henry Huberthorn, mayor 1546; Sir Christopher Morice,
-master-gunner of England to King Henry VIII.; Edward Elrington, esquire,
-chief-butler to Edward VI.; Thomas Gardener, grocer; and Justice Smith,
-and other.
-
-Then have ye the parish church of St. Michael th' Archangel; for the
-antiquity whereof I find that Alnothus the priest gave it to the abbot
-and convent of Covesham, Reynold abbot, and the convent there did
-grant the same to Sperling the priest, in all measures as he and his
-predecessors before had held it; to the which Sperling also they granted
-all their lands which they there had, except certain lands which Orgar
-le Prowde had held of them, and paid two shilling yearly; for the which
-grant the said Sperling should yearly pay one mark of rent to the said
-abbot of Covesham, and find him and his lodging, salt, water, and fire,
-when he came to London. This was granted 1133, about the 34th of Henry
-I. Thus much for antiquity; of later time I find, that Elizabeth Peake,
-widow, gave the patronage or gift of this benefice to the Drapers in
-London; she lieth buried in the belfry, 1518: her monument yet remaineth.
-
-This hath been a fair and beautiful church, but of late years, since
-the surrender of their lands to Edward VI., greatly blemished by the
-building of lower tenements on the north side thereof towards the high
-street, in place of a green churchyard, whereby the church is darkened,
-and other ways annoyed. The fair new steeple, or bell tower of this
-church, was begun to be built in the year 1421, which being finished,
-and a fair ring of five bells therein placed, a sixth bell[163] was
-added, and given by John Whitwell, Isabel his wife, and William Rus,
-alderman, and goldsmith, about the year 1430, which bell, named "Rus,"
-nightly at eight of the clock, and otherwise for knells, and in peals,
-rung by one man, for the space of one hundred and sixty years, of late
-overhauled by four or five at once, hath been thrice broken, and new
-cast within the space of ten years, to the charges of that parish more
-than one hundred marks.
-
-And here a note of this steeple: as I have oft heard my father report,
-upon St. James' night, certain men in the loft next under the bells,
-ringing of a peal, a tempest of lightning and thunder did arise, an
-ugly shapen sight appeared to them, coming in at the south window, and
-lighted on the north, for fear whereof they all fell down, and lay as
-dead for the time, letting the bells ring and cease of their own accord;
-when the ringers came to themselves, they found certain stones of the
-north window to be razed and scratched, as if they had been so much
-butter, printed with a lion's claw; the same stones were fastened there
-again, and so remain till this day. I have seen them oft, and have put
-a feather or small stick into the holes where the claws had entered
-three or four inches deep. At the same time certain main timber posts at
-Queene Hith were scratched and cleft from the top to the bottom; and the
-pulpit cross in Powle's churchyard was likewise scratched, cleft, and
-overturned. One of the ringers lived in my youth, whom I have oft heard
-to verify the same to be true.
-
-But to return. William Rus was a special benefactor to this church;
-his arms yet remain in the windows. William Comerton, Symon Smith,
-Walter Belingham, were buried there, and founded chantries there;
-John Grace, 1439; Robert Drope, mayor, buried on the north side of
-the choir, under a fair tomb of grey marble, 1485, he gave to poor
-maids' marriages of that parish twenty pounds, to poor of that ward ten
-pounds, shirts and smocks three hundred, and gowns of broad cloth one
-hundred, etc.[164] Jane his wife, matching with Edward Gray, Viscount
-Lisle, was buried by her first husband, 1500; she gave ninety pounds
-in money to the beautifying of that church, and her great messuage,
-with the appurtenance, which was by her executors, W. Caple and other,
-1517, the 9th of Henry VIII., assured to John Wardroper, parson, T.
-Clearke, W. Dixson, and John Murdon, wardens of the said church, and
-their successors for ever, they do keep yearly for her an obite, or
-anniversary, to be spent on the poor, and otherwise, in all three
-pounds, the rest of the profits to be employed in reparation of the
-church. In the 34th year of Henry VIII., Edward Stephan, parson, T.
-Spencer, P. Guntar, and G. Grouch, churchwardens, granted to T. Lodge a
-lease for sixty years of the said great messuage, with the appurtenance,
-which were called the Lady Lisle's lands, for the rent of eight pounds
-thirteen shillings and four pence the year. The parishioners since gave
-it up as chantry land, and wronged themselves. Also the said Robert
-Drope, and Lady Lisle, notwithstanding their liberality to that church
-and parish, their tomb is pulled down, no monument remaineth of them.
-Peter Hawton, late alderman, is laid in their vault, 1596. Robert
-Fabian, alderman, that wrote and published a Chronicle of England and of
-France, was buried there 1511, with this epitaph:--
-
- "Like as the day his course doth consume,
- And the new morrow springeth againe as fast,
- So man and woman, by Nature's custome,
- This life to pass, at last in earth are cast,
- In joy and sorrow, which here their time do wast,
- Never in one state, but in course transitory,
- So full of change is of this world the glory."
-
-His monument is gone. Richard Garnam, 1527, buried there; Edmond Trindle
-and Robert Smith;[165] William Dickson and Margaret his wife,[166]
-buried in the cloister under a fair tomb now defaced; Thomas Stow, my
-grandfather, about the year 1526, and Thomas Stow, my father, 1559;
-John Tolus, alderman, 1548, he gave to John Willowby, parson of that
-church, to Thomas Lodge, G. Hind, P. Bolde, churchwardens, and to
-their successors, towards the reparation of that church, and relief of
-the poor for ever, his tenement with the appurtenances in the parish
-of St. Michael, which he had lately purchased of Alvery Randalph, of
-Badlesmeere in Kent; but the parish never had the gift, nor heard
-thereof by the space of forty years after; such was the conscience of G.
-Barne and other the executors, to conceal it to themselves; and such is
-the negligence of the parishioners, that being informed thereof, make no
-claim thereunto. Philip Gonter, that was alderman for a time, and gave
-four hundred pounds to be discharged thereof, was buried in the cloister
-about the year 1582, and Anne his wife, etc. Thomas Houghton, father to
-the said Peter Houghton, Francis Beneson, and William Towersan.
-
-This parish church hath on the south side thereof a proper cloister,
-and a fair churchyard, with a pulpit cross, not much unlike to that in
-Paule's churchyard. Sir John Rudstone, mayor, caused the same pulpit
-cross in his lifetime to be built, the churchyard to be enlarged, by
-ground purchased of the next parish, and also proper houses to be
-raised for lodging of choir men, such as at that time were assistants
-to divine service, then daily sung by note in that church. The said
-John Rudstone deceased 1531, and was buried in a vault under the pulpit
-cross; he appointed sermons to be preached there, not now performed;
-his tomb before the pulpit cross is taken thence, with the tomb of
-Richard Yaxley, Doctor of Physic to King Henry VIII. and other. The
-choir of that church dissolved, the lodgings of choir men were by the
-grave fathers of that time charitably appointed for receipt of ancient
-decayed parishioners, namely, widows, such as were not able to bear the
-charge of greater rents abroad, which blessed work of harbouring the
-harbourless is promised to be rewarded in the kingdom of heaven.
-
-Then have ye Birchover lane, so called of Birchover, the first builder
-and owner thereof, now corruptly called Birchin lane, the north half
-whereof is of the said Cornehill ward; the other part is of Langborne
-ward.
-
-This lane, and the high street near adjoining, hath been inhabited for
-the most part with wealthy drapers, from Birchover's lane, on that side
-the street down to the stocks, in the reign of Henry VI., had ye for the
-most part dwelling Fripperers or Upholders, that sold old apparel and
-household stuff.
-
-I have read of a countryman, that then having lost his hood in
-Westminster hall, found the same in Cornehill hanged out to be sold,
-which he challenged, but was forced to buy, or go without it, for their
-stall, they said, was their market. At that time also the wine drawer of
-the Pope's head tavern (standing without the door in the high street)
-took the same man by the sleeve, and said, "Sir, will you drink a pint
-of wine?" whereunto he answered, "A penny spend I may;" and so drank his
-pint, for bread nothing did he pay, for that was allowed free.[167]
-
-This Pope's head tavern, with other houses adjoining, strongly built
-of stone, hath of old time been all in one, pertaining to some great
-estate, or rather to the king of this realm, as may be supposed, both by
-the largeness thereof, and by the arms, to wit, three leopards passant,
-gardant, which were the whole arms of England before the reign of Edward
-III., that quartered them with the arms of France, three fleur-de-lis.
-
-These arms of England, supported between two angels, are fair and
-largely graven in stone on the fore front towards the high street, over
-the door or stall of one great house, lately for many years possessed by
-Mr. Philip Gunter. The Pope's head tavern is on the back part thereof
-towards the south, as also one other house called the stone house in
-Lombard street. Some say this was King John's house, which might so be;
-for I find in a written copy of Matthew Paris' History, that in the
-year 1232, Henry III. sent Hubert de Burgh, Earl of Kent, to Cornehill
-in London, there to answer all matters objected against him, where he
-wisely acquitted himself. The Pope's head tavern hath a footway through
-from Cornehill into Lombard street. And down lower on the high street of
-Cornehill, is there one other way through by the Cardinal's hat tavern
-into Lombard street. And so let this suffice for Cornhill ward. In which
-be governors:--an alderman, his deputy, common councillors four or six,
-constables four, scavengers four, wardmote inquest sixteen and a beadle.
-It is charged to the fifteen at sixteen pounds.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[158] "Their beef and mutton by weight, to wit."--_1st edition_, p. 148.
-
-[159] "But the true cause of enhanceing the prices both of those and
-other victuals are not to be disputed here."--_1st edition_, p. 148.
-
-[160] It would seem, from the addition of these words, which are not in
-the first edition, that this conduit ceased so to run between the years
-1598 and 1603.
-
-[161] "Ringleaders of inquests will proffer their service, and bend
-every way for gain. Careful choice of jurors is to be had; a man
-detected, and that had sworn foolishly against his brother, is not
-to be admitted a common juror; neither butcher nor surgeon is to be
-admitted."--_Stow._
-
-[162] "Archbishops of London hard to be proved, and therefore not be
-affirmed."--_Stow._
-
-[163] "This was accounted the best ring of six belles, to bee rung by
-six men, that was in England, for harmonye, sweetness of sound, and
-tune."--_Stow._
-
-[164] "To the poor at his burial sixteen pounds, to prisons, hospitals,
-and lazar houses, liberally; he also gave his house in Cornehill
-to be sold, and the price thereof to be spent on the amendment of
-highways."--_1st edition_, p. 153.
-
-[165] "My godfathers."--_1st edition_, p. 153.
-
-[166] "My godmother."--_Ibid._
-
-[167] "Wine one pint for a pennie, and bread to drink it was given free
-in every tavern."--_Stow._
-
-
-
-
-LANGBORNE WARD, AND FENNIE ABOUT
-
-
-Langborne ward, so called of a long bourne of sweet water, which of old
-time breaking out into Fenchurch street, ran down the same street and
-Lombard street to the west end of St. Mary Woolnoth's church, where
-turning south, and breaking into small shares, rills, or streams, it
-left the name of Share borne lane, or South borne lane (as I have read),
-because it ran south to the river of Thames. This ward beginneth at the
-west end of Aldgate ward in Fenne church street, by the Ironmongers'
-hall, which is on the north side of that street, at a place called
-Culver alley, where sometime was a lane, through the which men went
-into Lime street, but that being long since stopped up for suspicion of
-thieves that lurked there by night, as is shown in Lime street ward,
-there is now this said alley, a tennis-court, etc.
-
-Fenne church street took that name of a fenny or moorish ground, so made
-by means of this borne which passed through it, and therefore until this
-day in the Guildhall of this city, that ward is called by the name of
-Langborne and Fennie about, and not otherwise; yet others be of opinion
-that it took that name of _Foenum_, that is, hay sold there, as Grasse
-street took the name of grass, or herbs, there sold.
-
-In the midst of this street standeth a small parish church called St.
-Gabriel Fen church, corruptly Fan church.
-
-Helming Legget, esquire, by license of Edward III., in the 49th of
-his reign, gave one tenement, with a curtelage thereto belonging,
-and a garden, with an entry thereto leading, unto Sir John Hariot,
-parson of Fenchurch, and to his successors for ever; the house to be a
-parsonage-house, the garden to be a churchyard, or burying-place for the
-parish.
-
-Then have ye Lombard street, so called of the Longobards, and other
-merchants, strangers of divers nations assembling there twice every
-day, of what original or continuance I have not read of record, more
-than that Edward II., in the 12th of his reign, confirmed a messuage,
-sometime belonging to Robert Turke, abutting on Lombard street toward
-the south, and toward Cornehill on the north, for the merchants of
-Florence, which proveth that street to have had the name of Lombard
-street before the reign of Edward II. The meeting of which merchants and
-others there continued until the 22nd of December, in the year 1568; on
-the which day the said merchants began to make their meetings at the
-burse, a place then new built for that purpose in the ward of Cornhill,
-and was since by her majesty, Queen Elizabeth, named the Royal Exchange.
-
-On the north side of this ward is Lime street, one half whereof on both
-the sides is of this Langborne ward, and therein on the west side is the
-Pewterers' hall, which company were admitted to be a brotherhood in the
-13th of Edward IV.
-
-At the south-west corner of Lime street standeth a fair parish church
-of St. Dionys called Backe church, lately new built in the reign of
-Henry VI. John Bugge, esquire, was a great benefactor to that work, as
-appeareth by his arms, three water budgets, and his crest, a Morian's
-head, graven in the stone-work of the choir, the upper end on the north
-side, where he was buried. Also John Darby, alderman, added thereunto
-a fair aisle, or chapel, on the south side, and was there buried about
-the year 1466. He gave (besides sundry ornaments) his dwelling-house and
-others unto the said church. The Lady Wich, widow to Hugh Wich, sometime
-mayor of London, was there buried, and gave lands for sermons, etc.
-John Master, gentleman, was by his children buried there 1444; Thomas
-Britaine; Henry Travers, of Maidstone, in Kent, merchant, 1501; John
-Bond, about 1504; Robert Paget, merchant-tailor, one of the sheriffs,
-1536; Sir Thomas Curteis, pewterer, then fishmonger, mayor, 1557; Sir
-James Harvie, ironmonger, mayor, 1581; William Peterson, esquire;
-William Sherington; Sir Edward Osborne, clothworker, mayor, etc.
-
-Then by the four corners (so called of Fenchurch street in the east,
-Bridge street on the south, Grasse street on the north, and Lombard
-street on the west), in Lombard street is one fair parish church
-called Allhallows Grasse church, in Lombard street; I do so read it
-in evidences of record, for that the grass market went down that way,
-when that street was far broader than now it is, being straitened by
-incroachments.
-
-This church was lately new built. John Warner, armourer, and then
-grocer, sheriff 1494, built the south aisle; his son, Robert Warner,
-esquire, finished it in the year 1516. The pewterers were benefactors
-towards the north aisle, etc. The steeple, or bell tower, thereof was
-finished in the year 1544, about the 36th of Henry VIII. The fair stone
-porch of this church was brought from the late dissolved priory of St.
-John of Jerusalem by Smithfield, so was the frame for their bells, but
-the bells being bought, were never brought thither, by reason that one
-old Warner, draper, of that parish deceasing, his son Marke Warner would
-not perform what his father had begun, and appointed, so that fair
-steeple hath but one bell, as friars were wont to use. The monuments of
-this church be these. The said Warners, and John Walden, draper.
-
-Next is a common hostelry for travellers, called the George, of such a
-sign. This is said to have pertained to the Earl Ferrers, and was his
-London lodging in Lombard street, and that in the year 1175, a brother
-of the said earl, being there privily slain in the night, was there
-thrown down into the dirty street, as I have afore shown in the chapter
-of night watches.
-
-Next to this is the parish church of St. Edmond, the king and martyr, in
-Lombard street, by the south corner of Birchover lane. This church is
-also called St. Edmond Grasse church, because the said grass market came
-down so low. The monuments in this church are these: Sir John Milborne,
-draper, mayor, deceased, 1535, buried there by Dame Joan and Dame
-Margaret his wives, under a tomb of touch; Humfrey Heyford, goldsmith,
-mayor 1477; Sir William Chester, draper, mayor 1560, with his wives,
-amongst his predecessors; Sir George Barne, mayor 1586; Matilde at Vine
-founded a chantry there, etc.
-
-From this church down Lombard street, by Birchover's lane (the one half
-of which lane is of this ward), and so down, be divers fair houses,
-namely, one with a very fair fore front towards the street, built by
-Sir Martin Bowes, goldsmith, since mayor of London, and then one other,
-sometime belonging to William de la Pole, knight banneret, and yet the
-king's merchant,[168] in the 14th of Edward III., and after him to
-Michael de la Pole, Earl of Suffolk, in the 14th of Richard II., and was
-his merchant's house, and so down towards the Stocks market, lacking but
-some three houses thereof.
-
-The south side of this ward beginneth in the east, at the chain to be
-drawn athwart Mart lane up into Fenchurch street, and so west by the
-north end of Minchen lane to St. Margaret Patten's street, or Roode
-lane, and down that street to the midway towards St. Margaret's church;
-then by Philpot lane (so called of Sir John Philpot that dwelt there,
-and was owner thereof), and down that lane some six or eight houses on
-each side, is all of this ward.
-
-Then by Grasse church corner into Lombard street to St. Clement's lane,
-and down the same to St. Clement's church; then down St. Nicholas lane,
-and down the same to St. Nicholas church, and the same church is of this
-ward. Then to Abchurch church lane, and down some small portion thereof;
-then down Sherborne lane, a part thereof, and a part of Bearebinder
-lane, be of this ward; and then down Lombard street to the sign of the
-Angel, almost to the corner over against the Stocks market.
-
-On the south side of this ward, somewhat within Mart lane, have you the
-parish church of Allhallows, commonly called Stane church (as may be
-supposed), for a difference from other churches of that name in this
-city, which of old time were built of timber, and since were built of
-stone. In this church have been divers fair monuments of the dead,
-namely, of John Costin, girdler, a great benefactor: he deceased 1244.
-His name remaineth painted in the church roof; if it had been set in
-brass, it would have been fetched down.[169] He gave out of certain
-tenements to the poor of that parish a hundred quarters of charcoals
-yearly for ever. Sir Robert Test, knight of the holy sepulchre, and
-Dame Joan his wife, about 1486; Robert Stone; Sir John Steward, and
-Dame Alice his wife;[170] John Bostocke, esquire; Christopher Holt,
-Sir Richard Tate, knight, ambassador to King Henry VIII. buried there
-1554. His monument remaineth yet; the rest being all pulled down, and
-swept out of the church, the churchwardens were forced to make a large
-account; 12_s._ that year for brooms, besides the carriage away of
-stone and brass of their own charge. And here I am to note, that being
-informed of the Writhsleys to be buried there, I have since found them
-and other to be buried at St. Giles without Cripplegate, where I mind to
-leave them.
-
-By this church sometime passed a lane, called Cradock's lane, from
-Mart lane, winding by the north side of the said church into Fenchurch
-street, the which lane being straitened by incroachments, is now called
-Church alley.
-
-Then is the parish church of St. Nicholas Acon, or Hacon (for so have
-I read it in records), in Lombard street. Sir John Bridges, draper,
-mayor, 1520, newly repaired this church, and embattled it, and was there
-buried. Francis Boyer, grocer, one of the sheriffs, was buried there
-1580, with other of the Boyers: so was Julian, wife to John Lambart,
-alderman.[171]
-
-Then is there in the high street a proper parish church of St. Mary
-Woolnoth, of the Nativity, the reason of which name I have not yet
-learnt. This church is lately new built. Sir Hugh Brice, goldsmith,
-mayor in the first year of Henry VII., keeper of the king's exchange
-at London, and one of the governors of the king's mint in the Tower of
-London, under William Lord Hastings, the 5th of Edward IV., deceased
-1496. He built in this church a chapel called the Charnell, as also part
-of the body of the church and of the steeple, and gave money toward
-the finishing thereof, besides the stone which he had prepared: he
-was buried in the body of the church. Guy Brice, or Boys, was buried
-there. Dame Joan, wife to Sir William Peach;[172] Thomas Nocket,
-draper, 1396: he founded a chantry there. Simon Eyre, 1459: he gave the
-tavern called the Cardinal's Hat, in Lombard street, with a tenement
-annexed on the east part of the tavern, and a mansion behind the east
-tenement, together with an alley from Lombard street to Cornhill,
-with the appurtenances, all which were by him new built, toward a
-brotherhood of our Lady in St. Mary Woolnoth's church. John Moager,
-pewterer, and Emme his wife, in St. John's chapel; Sir John Percivall,
-merchant-tailor, mayor, about 1504; Thomas Roch, and Andrew Michael,
-vintners, and Joan their wife; William Hilton, merchant-tailor, and
-tailor to King Henry VIII., was buried there 1519, under the chapel of
-St. George, which chapel was built by George Lufken, sometime tailor to
-the prince; Robert Amades, goldsmith, master of the king's jewels; Sir
-Martin Bowes, mayor, buried about 1569: he gave lands for the discharge
-of that Langborn ward, of all fifteens to be granted to the king by
-parliament; George Hasken, Sir Thomas Ramsey, late mayor, etc. Thus
-have ye seven parishes in this ward, one hall of a company, divers fair
-houses for merchants, and other monuments none. It hath an alderman, his
-deputy, common councillors eight, constables fifteen, scavengers nine,
-men of the wardmote inquest seventeen, and a beadle. It is taxed to the
-fifteen,[173] in the exchequer, at L20 9_s._ 8_d._
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[168] "Noblemen of this realm of old time, as also of late years, have
-dealt in merchandises."--_Stow._
-
-[169] "If it had been in brasse, it would not have remained there so
-long."--_1st edition_, p. 159.
-
-[170] In the first edition, p. 159, the following passage is here
-inserted:--
-
-"Alice, William, and John, wife and sons to Thomas Clarell; Agnes,
-daughter to Thomas Niter, gent.; William Atwell; Felix, daughter to
-Sir Thomas Gisers, and wife to Travers Thomas Mason, esquire; Edmond
-Wartar, esquire; Joan, wife to John Chamberlaine, esquire, daughter to
-Roger Lewkner, esquire; William Frier; John Hamburger, esquire; Hugh
-Moresby; Gilbert Prince, alderman; Oliver Chorley, gentleman; Sir John
-Writh, or Writhesley, _alias_ Garter principal king at arms, sometime
-laid under a fair tomb in the choir, now broken down and gone; Joan,
-wife to Thomas Writhesley, son to Sir John Writhesley, Garter, daughter
-and heir to William Hall, esquire; John Writhesley the younger, son
-to Sir John Writhesley, and Alienor, Eleanor, second wife to John
-Writhesley, daughter and heir to Thomas Arnalde, and Agnes his wife;
-John Writhesley, son of Thomas; Agnes Arnold, first married to William
-Writhesley, daughter of Richard Warmeforde; Barbara Hungerford, daughter
-to Sir John Writhesley, wife to Anthony Hungerford, son to Sir Thomas
-Hungerford, of Denmampney, in the county of Gloucester."
-
-The cause for the omission of these names is explained at the close of
-the paragraph in the text; which is however so indistinctly expressed,
-that its meaning could not very well be ascertained except by a
-reference to what was originally written.
-
-[171] "Mother of William Lambert, yet living."--_1st edition_, p. 160.
-
-[172] "Hugh Acton, tailor."--_Ibid._
-
-[173] "In London at twenty-one pound."--_Ibid._
-
-
-
-
-BILLINGSGATE WARD
-
-
-Billingsgate ward beginneth at the west end of Tower street ward in
-Thames street, about Smart's key, and runneth down along that street
-on the south side to St. Magnus church at the bridge foot, and on the
-north side of the said Thames street, from over against Smart's key,
-till over against the north-west corner of St. Magnus church aforesaid,
-on this north side of Thames street, is St. Marie hill lane, up to St.
-Margaret's church, and then part of St. Margaret Patten's street, at the
-end of St. Marie hill lane. Next out of Thames street is Lucas lane, and
-then Buttolph lane, and at the north end thereof Philpot lane; then is
-Rother lane, of old time so called, and thwart the same lane is Little
-Eastcheape; and these be the bounds of Billingsgate ward.
-
-Touching the principal ornaments within this ward. On the south side
-of Thames street, beginning at the east end thereof, there is first
-the said Smart's key, so called of one Smart sometime owner thereof;
-the next is Belinsgate, whereof the whole ward taketh name; the which
-(leaving out of the fable, thereof feigning it to be built by King
-Beline, a Briton, long before the incarnation of Christ), is at this
-present a large water-gate, port, or harborough, for ships and boats,
-commonly arriving there with fish, both fresh and salt, shell-fishes,
-salt, oranges, onions, and other fruits and roots, wheat, rye, and grain
-of divers sorts, for service of the city and the parts of this realm
-adjoining. This gate is now more frequented than of old time, when
-the Queen's hithe was used, as being appointed by the kings of this
-realm, to be the special or only port for taking up of all such kind of
-merchandises brought to this city by strangers and foreigners, and the
-drawbridge of timber at London bridge was then to be raised or drawn up
-for passage of ships with tops thither.
-
-Touching the ancient customs of Belinsgate in the reign of Edward III.,
-every great ship landing there paid for standage two-pence, every
-little ship with orelockes a penny, the lesser boat called a Battle a
-halfpenny; of two quarters of corn measured the king was to have one
-farthing, of a combe of corn a penny, of every weight going out of the
-city a halfpenny, of two quarters of sea coal measured a farthing, and
-of every tun of ale going out of England beyond the seas, by merchant
-strangers, four-pence, of every thousand herrings a farthing, except
-franchises, etc.
-
-Next to this is Sommer's key, which likewise took that name of one
-Sommer dwelling there, as did Lion key of one Lion, owner thereof, and
-since of the sign of a Lion.
-
-Then is there a fair wharf, or key, called Buttolph's gate, by that
-name so called in the times of William the Conqueror, and of Edward the
-Confessor, as I have shown already in the description of the gates.
-
-Next is the parish church of St. Buttolphs, a proper church, and hath
-had many fair monuments therein, now defaced and gone: notwithstanding I
-find, by testimonies abroad, that these were buried there; to wit, Roger
-Coggar, 1384; Andrew Pikeman, and Joan his wife, 1391; Nicholas James,
-ironmonger, one of the sheriffs, 1423; William Rainwell, fishmonger,
-and John Rainwell, his son, fishmonger, mayor 1426, and deceasing 1445,
-buried there with this epitaph:
-
- "Citizens of London, call to your remembrance,
- The famous John Rainwell, sometime your Maior.
- Of the staple of Callis, so was his chance.
- Here lieth now his corps; his soule bright and faire,
- Is taken to heaven's blisse, thereof is no dispaire.
- His acts beare witnes, by matters of recorde,
- How charitable he was, and of what accorde,
- No man hath beene so beneficiall as hee,
- Unto the Citie in giving liberallie," etc.
-
-He gave a stone house to be a revestrie to that church for ever; more,
-he gave lands and tenements to the use of the commonalty, that the
-mayor and chamberlain should satisfy unto the discharge of all persons
-inhabiting the wards of Belinsgate, Downegate, and Aldgate, as oft as it
-shall happen any fifteen, by parliament of the king to be granted, also
-to the Exchequer, in discharge of the sheriffs, ten pounds yearly, which
-the sheriffs used to pay for the farm of Southwark, so that all men of
-the realm, coming or passing with carriage, should be free quitted and
-discharged of all toll and other payments, aforetime claimed by the
-sheriffs. Further, that the mayor and chamberlain shall pay yearly to
-the sheriffs eight pounds, so that the said sheriffs take no manner of
-toll or money of any person of this realm for their goods, merchandises,
-victuals, and carriages, for their passages at the great gate of the
-bridge of the city, nor at the gate called the Drawbridge, etc. The
-overplus of money coming of the said lands and tenements, divided into
-even portions; the one part to be employed to instore the granaries of
-the city with wheat for the release of the poor commonalty, and the
-other moiety to clear and cleanse the shelves, and other stoppages of
-the river of Thames, etc.
-
-Stephen Forstar, fishmonger, mayor in the year 1454, and Dame Agnes his
-wife, lie buried there. William Bacon, haberdasher, one of the sheriffs
-1480, was there buried, besides many other persons of good worship,
-whose monuments are all destroyed by bad and greedy men of spoil.
-
-This parish of St. Buttolph is no great thing, notwithstanding divers
-strangers are there harboured, as may appear by a presentment, not many
-years since made of strangers, inhabitants in the ward of Billingsgate,
-in these words: "In Billingsgate ward were one and fifty households of
-strangers, whereof thirty of these households inhabited in the parish
-of St. Buttolph, in the chief and principal houses, where they give
-twenty pounds the year for a house lately letten for four marks; the
-nearer they dwell to the water-side the more they give for houses, and
-within thirty years before there was not in the whole ward above three
-Netherlanders; at which time there was within the said parish levied,
-for the help of the poor, seven and twenty pounds by the year; but since
-they came so plentifully thither, there cannot be gathered above eleven
-pounds, for the stranger will not contribute to such charges as other
-citizens do." Thus much for that south side of this ward.
-
-On the north side is Bosse alley, so called of a boss of spring water
-continually running, which standeth by Billingsgate against this alley,
-and was sometime made by the executors of Richard Whittington.
-
-Then is St. Marie hill lane, which runneth up north from Billingsgate
-to the end of St. Margaret Pattens, commonly called Roode lane, and the
-greatest half of that lane is also of Belinsgate ward. In this St. Marie
-hill lane is the fair parish church of St. Marie, called on the hill,
-because of the ascent from Billingsgate.
-
-This church hath been lately built, as may appear by this that
-followeth. Richard Hackney, one of the sheriff's in the year 1322, and
-Alice his wife, were there buried, as Robert Fabian writeth, saying
-thus:--"In the year 1497, in the month of April, as labourers digged for
-the foundation of a wall, within the church of St. Marie hill, near unto
-Belinsgate, they found a coffin of rotten timber, and therein the corpse
-of a woman whole of skin, and of bones undissevered, and the joints of
-her arms pliable, without breaking of the skin, upon whose sepulchre
-this was engraven:--'Here lieth the bodies of Richard Hackney,
-fishmonger, and Alice his wife.'"[174] The which Richard was sheriff
-in the 15th of Edward II. Her body was kept above ground three or four
-days without nuisance, but then it waxed unsavoury, and so was again
-buried. John Mordand, stock-fishmonger, was buried there, 1387; Nicholas
-Exton, fishmonger, mayor 1387; William Cambridge, mayor, 1420; Richard
-Goslin, sheriff, 1422; William Philip, sergeant-at-arms, 1473; Robert
-Reuell, one of the sheriffs 1490, gave liberally toward the new building
-of this church and steeple, and was there buried; William Remington,
-mayor, 1500; Sir Thomas Blanke, mayor, 1582; William Holstocke, esquire,
-comptroller of the king's ships; Sir Cuthbert Buckle, mayor, 1594.
-
-This lane on both sides is furnished with many fair houses for
-merchants; and hath at the north end thereof one other lane, called
-St. Margaret Pattens, because of old time pattens were there usually
-made and sold; but of latter time this is called Roode lane, of a roode
-there placed in the churchyard of St. Margaret, whilst the old church
-was taken down, and again newly built; during which time the oblations
-made to this rood were employed towards building of the church; but in
-the year 1538, about the 23rd of May, in the morning, the said rood was
-found to have been in the night preceding, by people unknown, broken
-all to pieces, together with the tabernacle wherein it had been placed.
-Also, on the 27th of the same month, in the same parish, amongst the
-basket makers, a great and sudden fire happened in the night season,
-which within the space of three hours consumed more than a dozen houses,
-and nine persons were burnt to death there: and thus ceased that work of
-this church, being at that time nigh finished to the steeple.
-
-The lane on both sides beyond the same church to the midway towards
-Fenchurch street, is of Bellinsgate ward.
-
-Then again out of Thames street, by the west end of St. Mary hill
-church, runneth up one other lane, of old time called Roape lane, since
-called Lucas lane, of one Lucas, owner of some part thereof, and now
-corruptly called Love lane; it runneth up by the east end of a parish
-church of St. Andrew Hubbert, or St. Andrew in East Cheap. This church,
-and all the whole lane called Lucas lane, is of this Belinsgate ward.
-
-Then have ye one other lane out of Thames street, called Buttolph lane,
-because it riseth over against the parish church of St. Buttolph, and
-runneth up north by the east end of St. George's church to the west end
-of St. Andrew's church, and to the south end of Philpot lane.
-
-This parish church of St. George in Buttolph lane is small, but the
-monuments for two hundred years past are well preserved from spoil,
-whereof one is of Adam Bamme, mayor 1397; Richard Bamme, esquire,
-his son, of Gillingham in Kent, 1452; John Walton, gentleman, 1401;
-Marpor, a gentleman, 1400; John St. John, merchant of Levant, and Agnes
-his wife, 1400; Hugh Spencer, esquire, 1424; William Combes, stock
-fishmonger, one of the sheriffs 1452, who gave forty pounds towards the
-works of that church; John Stokar, draper, one of the sheriffs, 1477;
-Richard Dryland, esquire, and Katherine his wife, daughter of Morrice
-Brune, knight, of Southuckenton in Essex, steward of household to
-Humfrey Duke of Glocester, 1487; Nicholas Patrich, one of the sheriffs,
-1519. In the churchyard: William Forman, mayor, 1538; James Mumford,
-esquire, surgeon to King Henry VIII., buried 1544; Thomas Gayle,
-haberdasher, 1340; Nicholas Wilford, merchant-tailor, and Elizabeth his
-wife, about the year 1551; Edward Heyward, 1573, etc. Roger Delakere
-founded a chantry there.
-
-Then have ye one other lane called Rother lane, or Red Rose lane,
-of such a sign there, now commonly called Pudding lane, because the
-butchers of Eastcheap have their scalding house for hogs there, and
-their puddings, with other filth of beasts, are voided down that way to
-their dung boats on the Thames.
-
-This lane stretcheth from Thames street to Little East Cheape,
-chiefly inhabited by basket-makers, turners, and butchers, and is all
-of Billinsgate ward. The Garland in Little East Cheape, sometime a
-brewhouse, with a garden on the back side, adjoining to the garden of
-Sir John Philpot, was the chief house in this East Cheape; it is now
-divided into sundry small tenements, etc.
-
-This ward hath an alderman, and his deputy, common councillors,
-constables eleven, scavengers six, for the wardmote inquest fourteen,
-and a beadle; it is taxed to the fifteen in London at thirty-two pounds,
-and in the Exchequer at thirty-one pounds ten shillings.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[174] "Alice Hackney found uncorrupted more than one hundred and seventy
-yeres after she was buried."--_Stow._
-
-
-
-
-BRIDGE WARD WITHIN
-
-
-Bridge ward within, so called of London bridge, which bridge is a
-principal part of that ward, and beginneth at the stulpes on the south
-end by Southwark, runneth along the bridge, and north up Bridge street,
-commonly called (of the fish market) New Fish street, from Fish street
-hill, up Grasse street, to the north corner of Grasse church; all the
-bridge is replenished on both the sides with large, fair, and beautiful
-buildings, inhabitants for the most part rich merchants, and other
-wealthy citizens, mercers, and haberdashers.
-
-In New Fish street be fishmongers and fair taverns on Fish street hill
-and Grasse street, men of divers trades, grocers and haberdashers.
-
-In Grasse street have ye one fair conduit of sweet water castellated
-with crest and vent, made by the appointment of Thomas Hill, mayor,
-1484, who gave by his testament one hundred marks towards the conveyance
-of water to this place. It was begun by his executors in the year 1491,
-and finished of his goods whatsoever it cost.
-
-On the east side of this bridge ward have ye the fair parish church
-of St. Magnus; in the which church have been buried many men of good
-worship, whose monuments are now for the most part utterly defaced.
-I find John Blund, mayor, 1307; Henry Yeuele, freemason to Edward
-III., Richard II., and Henry IV., who deceased 1400; his monument
-yet remaineth; William Brampton; John Michell, mayor, 1436; John
-French, baker, yeoman of the crown to Henry VII., 1510; Robert Clarke,
-fishmonger, 1521; Richard Turke, one of the sheriffs, 1549; William
-Steede, alderman; Richard Morgan, knight, chief justice of the common
-pleas, 1556; Mauritius Griffeth, Bishop of Rochester, 1559; Robert
-Blanch, girdler, 1567; Robert Belgrave, girdler; William Brame, John
-Couper, fishmonger, alderman, who was put by his turn of mayoralty
-1584; Sir William Garrard, haberdasher, mayor 1555; a grave, wise, and
-discreet citizen, equal with the best and inferior to none of our time,
-deceased 1571 in the parish of St. Christopher, but was buried in this
-church of St. Magnus as in the parish where he was born; a fair monument
-is there raised on him; Robert Harding, salter, one of the sheriffs,
-1568; Simon Low, merchant-tailor, esquire, etc.
-
-Then is the parish church of St. Margaret on Fish street hill, a proper
-church, but monuments it hath none: a footway passeth by the south side
-of this church from Fish street hill unto Rother lane.
-
-Up higher on this hill is the parish church of St. Leonard, Milke
-church, so termed of one William Melker, an especial builder thereof,
-but commonly called St. Leonard's in East Cheape, because it standeth at
-East Cheape corner. Monuments there be of the Doggets, namely, Walter
-Dogget, vintner, one of the sheriffs, 1380; John Dogget, vintner, and
-Alice his wife, about 1456; this John Dogget gave lands to that church;
-William Dogget, etc.
-
-This church, and from thence into Little East Cheape to the east end of
-the said church, is of the Bridge ward.
-
-Then higher in Grasse street is the parish church of St. Bennet, called
-Grasse church, of the herb-market there kept: this church also is of
-the Bridge ward, and the farthest north end thereof. Some monuments
-remain there undefaced, as of John Harding, salter, 1576; John Sturgeon,
-haberdasher, chamberlain of London; Philip Cushen, Florentine, a famous
-merchant, 1600.
-
-The customs of Grass church market, in the reign of Edward III., as
-I have read in a book of customs, were these: Every foreign cart
-laden with corn or malt, coming thither to be sold, was to pay one
-halfpenny, every foreign cart bringing cheese two-pence, every cart of
-corn and cheese together (if the cheese be more worth than the corn)
-two-pence, and if the corn be more worth than the cheese, it was to pay
-a halfpenny; of two horses laden with corn or malt the bailiff had one
-farthing; the cart of the franchise of the Temple and of St. Martin le
-Grand paid a farthing; the cart of the hospital of St. John of Jerusalem
-paid nothing for their proper goods, and if the corn were brought by
-merchants to sell again, the load paid a halfpenny, etc.
-
-On the west side of this ward, at the north end of London bridge, is a
-part of Thames street, which is also of this ward, to wit, so much as
-of old time was called Stocke Fishmonger row, of the stock fishmongers
-dwelling there, down west to a watergate, of old time called Ebgate,
-since Ebgate lane, and now the Old Swan, which is a common stair on the
-Thames, but the passage is very narrow by means of encroachments. On the
-south side of Thames street, about the midway betwixt the bridge foot
-and Ebgate lane, standeth the Fishmongers' hall, and divers other fair
-houses for merchants.
-
-These fishmongers were sometimes of two several companies, to wit,
-Stock-fishmongers and Salt-fishmongers, of whose antiquity I read, that
-by the name of fishmongers of London, they were, for forestalling,
-etc., contrary to the laws and constitutions of the city, fined to the
-king at five hundred marks, the 18th of King Edward I. More, that the
-said fishmongers, hearing of the great victory obtained by the same
-king against the Scots, in the 26th of his reign, made a triumphant
-and solemn show through the city, with divers pageants, and more than
-one thousand horsemen, etc., as in the chapter of sports and pastimes.
-These two companies of stock-fishmongers and salt-fishmongers of old
-time had their several halls; to wit, in Thames street twain, in New
-Fish street twain, and in Old Fish street twain: in each place one for
-either company, in all six several halls, the company was so great, as I
-have read, and can prove by records. These fishmongers having been jolly
-citizens, and six mayors of their company in the space of twenty-four
-years; to wit, Walter Turke, 1350; John Lofkin, 1359; John Wroth, 1361;
-John Pechie, 1362; Simon Morden, 1369; and William Walworth, 1374. It
-followed that in the year 1382, through the counsel of John Northampton,
-draper, then being mayor, William Essex, John More, mercer, and Richard
-Northburie, the said fishmongers were greatly troubled, hindered of
-their liberties, and almost destroyed by congregations made against
-them, so that in a parliament at London the controversy depending
-between the mayor and aldermen of London, and the fishmongers there,
-Nicholas Exton, speaker for the fishmongers, prayeth the king to receive
-him and his company into his protection, for fear of corporal hurt:
-whereupon it was commanded, either part to keep the peace, on pain
-of losing all they had; hereupon, a fishmonger, starting up, replied
-that the complaint brought against them by the movers, etc., was but
-matter of malice, for that the fishmongers, in the reign of Edward
-III., being chief officers of the city, had for their misdemeanors then
-done, committed the chief exhibitors of those petitions to prison. In
-this parliament the fishmongers, by the king's charter patents, were
-restored to their liberties; notwithstanding in the year next following,
-to wit, 1383, John Cavendish, fishmonger, craveth the peace against the
-chancellor of England, which was granted, and he put in sureties the
-Earls of Stafford and Salisburie. Cavendish challengeth the chancellor
-for taking of a bribe of ten pounds for favour of his case, which the
-chancellor by oath upon the sacrament avoideth. In further trial it
-was found that the chancellor's man, without his master's privity, had
-taken it; whereupon Cavendish was adjudged to prison, and to pay the
-chancellor one thousand marks for slandering him.
-
-After this, many of the nobles assembled at Reading to suppress the
-seditious stirs of the said John Northampton, or Combarton, late
-mayor, that had attempted great and heinous enterprises, of the which
-he was convicted; and when he stood mute, nor would utter one word, it
-was decreed that he should be committed to perpetual prison, his goods
-confiscate to the king's use, and that he should not come within one
-hundred miles of London during his life. He was therefore sent to the
-castle of Tintegall in the confines of Cornewall, and in the mean space
-the king's servants spoiled his goods. John More, Richard Northbery,
-and other, were likewise there convicted, and condemned to perpetual
-prison, and their goods confiscate, for certain congregations by them
-made against the fishmongers in the city of London, as is aforesaid;
-but they obtained and had the king's pardon, in the 14th of his reign,
-as appeareth of record; and thus were all these troubles quieted. Those
-stock-fishmongers and salt-fishmongers were united in the year 1536, the
-28th of Henry VIII.; their hall to be but one, in the house given unto
-them by Sir John Cornwall, Lord Fanhope, and of Ampthull, in the parish
-of St. Michael in Crooked lane, in the reign of Henry VI. Thus much
-have I thought good to note of the fishmongers, men ignorant of their
-antiquities, not able to show a reason why or when they were joined in
-amity with the goldsmiths, do give part of their arms, etc. Neither,
-to say aught of Sir William Walworth,[175] the glory of their company,
-more than that he slew Jack Straw, which is a mere fable, for the said
-Straw was after overthrowing of the rebels, taken, and by judgment of
-the mayor beheaded; whose confession at the gallows is extant in my
-_Annals_, where also is set down the most valiant and praiseworthy act
-of William Walworth against the principal rebel Waltar Tighlar. As in
-reproof of Walworth's monument in St. Michael's church, I have declared,
-and wished to be reformed there, as in other places.
-
-On that south side of Thames street have ye Drinkwater wharf and Fish
-wharf, in the parish of St. Magnus. On the north side of Thames street
-is St. Martin's lane; a part of which lane is also of this ward, to wit,
-on the one side to a well of water, and on the other side as far up
-as against the said well. Then is St. Michael's lane, part whereof is
-also of this ward up to a well there, etc. Then at the upper end of New
-Fish street is a lane turning towards St. Michael's lane, and is called
-Crooked lane, of the crooked windings thereof.
-
-Above this lane's end, upon Fish street hill, is one great house, for
-the most part built of stone, which pertained sometime to Edward the
-Black Prince, son to Edward III., who was in his lifetime lodged there.
-It is now altered to a common hostelry, having the Black Bell for a sign.
-
-Above this house, at the top of Fish street hill, is a turning into
-Great Eastcheape, and so to the corner of Lombard street, over against
-the north-west corner of Grasse church; and these be the whole bounds of
-this Bridge ward within: the which hath an alderman and his deputy, for
-the common council sixteen, constables fifteen, scavengers six, for the
-wardmote inquest sixteen, and a beadle. It is taxed to the fifteen in
-London at forty-seven pounds.[176]
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[175] "W. Walworth slandered by a fable of Jack Straw."--_Stow._
-
-
-
-
-CANDLEWICK STREET WARD
-
-
-Candlewick street, or Candlewright street ward, beginneth at the
-east end of Great Eastcheape; it passeth west through Eastcheape to
-Candlewright street, and through the same, down to the north end of
-Suffolk lane on the south side, and down that lane by the west end of
-St. Laurence churchyard, which is the farthest west part of that ward.
-The street of Great Eastcheape is so called of the market there kept in
-the east part of the city, as Westcheape is a market so called of being
-in the west.
-
-This Eastcheape is now a flesh market of butchers there dwelling on
-both sides of the street: it had sometime also cooks mixed amongst the
-butchers, and such other as sold victuals ready dressed of all sorts.
-For of old time, when friends did meet, and were disposed to be merry,
-they went not to dine and sup in taverns, but to the cooks, where they
-called for meat what they liked, which they always found ready dressed
-at a reasonable rate, as I have before showed.
-
-In the year 1410, the 11th of Henry IV., upon the even of St. John
-Baptist, the king's sons,[177] Thomas and John, being in Eastcheape at
-supper (or rather at breakfast, for it was after the watch was broken
-up, betwixt two and three of the clock after midnight), a great debate
-happened between their men and other of the court, which lasted one
-hour, till the mayor and sheriffs with other citizens, appeased the
-same; for the which afterwards the said mayor, aldermen, and sheriffs
-were called to answer before the king, his sons, and divers lords,
-being highly moved against the city. At which time, William Gascoyne,
-chief justice, required the mayor and aldermen, for the citizens, to put
-them in the king's grace; whereunto they answered, that they had not
-offended, but (according to the law) had done their best in stinting
-debate and maintaining of the peace; upon which answer the king remitted
-all his ire, and dismissed them. And to prove this Eastcheape to be a
-place replenished with cooks, it may appear by a song called London
-Lickepennie, made by Lidgate, a monk of Berrie, in the reign of Henry
-V., in the person of a countryman coming to London, and travelling
-through the same. In Westcheape (saith the song) he was called on to
-buy fine lawn, Paris thread, cotton umble, and other linen clothes,
-and such like (he speaketh of no silks),[178] in Cornhill, to buy old
-apparel[179] and household stuff, where he was forced to buy his own
-hood, which he had lost in Westminster hall: in Candlewright street
-drapers proffered him cheap cloth, in Eastcheape the cooks cried hot
-ribs of beef roasted, pies well baked, and other victuals: there was
-clattering of pewter-pots, harp, pipe, and sawtry, yea by cock, nay by
-cock, for greater oaths were spared: some sang of Jenken, and Julian,
-etc.; all which melody liked well the passenger, but he wanted money to
-abide by it, and therefore gat him into Gravesend barge, and home into
-Kent.
-
-Candlewright (so called in old records of the Guildhall, of St. Marie
-Overies, and other), or Candlewick street, took that name (as may be
-supposed) either of chandlers, or makers of candles, both of wax and
-tallow; for candlewright is a maker of candles, or of wick, which is
-the cotton or yarn thereof; or otherwise wike,[180] which is the place
-where they used to work them, as Scalding wike by the Stocks market was
-called of the poulterers scalding and dressing their poultry there;
-and in divers countries, dairy houses, or cottages, wherein they make
-butter and cheese, are usually called wicks. There dwelt also of old
-time divers weavers of woollen clothes, brought in by Edward III. For
-I read, that in the 44th of his reign, the weavers, brought out of
-Flanders, were appointed their meetings to be in the churchyard of St.
-Laurence Poultney, and the weavers of Brabant in the churchyard of St.
-Mary Sommerset. There were then in this city weavers of divers sorts; to
-wit, of drapery, or tapery, and napery. These weavers of Candlewright
-street being in short time worn out, their place is now possessed by
-rich drapers, sellers of woollen cloth, etc.
-
-On the north side of this ward, at the west end of Eastcheape, have ye
-St. Clement's lane; a part whereof on both sides is of Candlewick street
-ward, to wit, somewhat north beyond the parish church of St. Clement in
-Eastcheape. This is a small church, void of monuments, other than of
-Francis Barnam, alderman, who deceased 1575, and of Benedicke Barnam,
-his son, alderman also, 1598. William Chartney and William Overie
-founded a chantry there.
-
-Next is St. Nicholas lane, for the most part on both sides of this ward,
-almost to St. Nicholas church. Then is Abchurch lane, which is on both
-the sides almost wholly of this ward, the parish church there (called
-of St. Marie Abchurch, Apechurch, or Upchurch, as I have read it),
-standeth somewhat near unto the south end thereof, on a rising ground:
-it is a fair church. Simon de Winchcomb founded a chantry there the
-19th of Richard II.; John Littleton founded another, and Thomas Hondon
-another; and hath the monuments of J. Long, esquire, of Bedfordshire,
-1442; William Wikenson, alderman, 1519; William Jawdrell, tailor, 1440;
-Sir James Hawes, mayor 1574; Sir John Branch, mayor 1580; John Miners;
-William Kettle, etc.
-
-On the south side of this ward, beginning again at the east, is St.
-Michael's lane, which lane is almost wholly of this ward, on both sides
-down towards Thames street, to a well or pump there. On the east side of
-this lane is Crooked lane aforesaid, by St. Michael's church, towards
-New Fish street. One the most ancient house in this lane is called the
-Leaden porch, and belonged sometime to Sir John Merston. knight, the 1st
-of Edward IV. It is now called the Swan in Crooked lane, possessed of
-strangers, and selling of Rhenish wine. The parish church of this St.
-Michael's was sometime but a small and homely thing, standing upon part
-of that ground wherein now standeth the parsonage-house; and the ground
-there about was a filthy plot, by reason of the butchers in Eastcheape,
-who made the same their laystall. William de Burgo gave two messuages to
-that church in Candlewick street, 1317. John Lofkin, stock-fishmonger,
-four times mayor, built in the same ground this fair church of St.
-Michael, and was buried there in the choir, under a fair tomb, with
-the images of him and his wife, in alabaster. The said church hath
-been since increased with a new choir, and side chapels by Sir William
-Walworth, stock-fishmonger, mayor, sometime servant to the said John
-Lofkin: also the tomb of Lofkin was removed, and a flat stone of grey
-marble garnished with plates of copper laid on him, as it yet remaineth
-in the body of the church. This William Walworth is reported to have
-slain Jack Straw,[181] but Jack Straw being afterward taken, was first
-adjudged by the said mayor, and then executed by the loss of his head in
-Smithfield.
-
-True it is that this William Walworth, being a man wise, learned, and
-of an incomparable manhood,[182] arrested Wat Tyler, a presumptuous
-rebel, upon whom no man durst lay hand, whereby he delivered the king
-and kingdom from most wicked tyranny of traitors. The mayor arrested him
-on the head with a sound blow, whereupon Wat Tyler, furiously struck
-the mayor with his dagger, but hurt him not, by reason he was well
-armed. The mayor, having received his stroke, drew his basiliard, and
-grievously wounded Wat in the neck, and withal gave him a great blow on
-the head; in the which conflict, an esquire of the king's house, called
-John Cavendish, drew his sword, and wounded Wat twice or thrice even to
-the death; and Wat, spurring his horse, cried to the commons to revenge
-him: the horse bare him about eighty feet from the place, and there
-he fell down half dead; and by and by they which attended on the king
-environed him about, so as he was not seen of his company: many of them
-thrust him in divers places of his body, and drew him into the hospital
-of St. Bartholomew, from whence again the mayor caused him to be drawn
-into Smithfield, and there to be beheaded. In reward of this service
-(the people being dispersed) the king commanded the mayor to put a
-bascinet on his head; and the mayor requesting why he should do so, the
-king answered, he being much bound unto him, would make him knight: the
-mayor answered, that he was neither worthy nor able to take such estate
-upon him, for he was but a merchant, and had to live by his merchandise
-only; notwithstanding, the king bade him to put on his bascinet, and
-then with a sword in both his hands he strongly stroke him on the neck,
-as the manner was then; and the same day he made three other citizens
-knights for his sake in the same place; to wit, John Philpot, Nicholas
-Brember, and Robert Launde, alderman. The king gave to the mayor one
-hundred pounds land by year, and to each of the other forty pounds land
-yearly, to them and their heirs for ever.
-
-After this, in the same year, the said Sir William Walworth, founded in
-the said parish church of St. Michael a college of a master and nine
-priests, or chaplains, and deceased 1385, was there buried in the north
-chapel by the choir; but his monument being amongst other by bad people
-defaced in the reign of Edward VI., and again since renewed by the
-fishmongers, for lack of knowledge of what before had been written in
-his epitaph, they followed a fabulous book, and wrote Jack Straw instead
-of Wat Tilar, a great error meet to be reformed there and elsewhere; and
-therefore have I the more at large discoursed of this matter.
-
-It hath also been, and is now grown to a common opinion, that in reward
-of this service done by the said William Walworth against the rebel,
-King Richard added to the arms of this city (which was argent, a plain
-cross gules) a sword or dagger (for so they term it), whereof I have
-read no such record, but to the contrary. I find that in the 4th year of
-Richard II.,[183] in a full assembly made in the upper chamber of the
-Guildhall, summoned by this William Walworth, then mayor, as well of
-aldermen as of the common council, in every ward, for certain affairs
-concerning the king, it was there by common consent agreed and ordained,
-that the old seal of the office of the mayoralty of the city being very
-small, old, unapt, and uncomely for the honour of the city, should be
-broken, and one other new should be had, which the said mayor commanded
-to be made artificially, and honourable for the exercise of the said
-office thereafter, in place of the other; in which new seal, besides
-the images of Peter and Paul, which of old were rudely engraven, there
-should be under the feet of the said images a shield of the arms of the
-said city, perfectly graved,[184] with two lions supporting the same,
-with two sergeants of arms; another part, one, and two tabernacles, in
-which above should stand two angels; between whom, above the said images
-of Peter and Paul, shall be set the glorious Virgin. This being done,
-the old seal of the office was delivered to Richard Odiham, chamberlain,
-who brake it, and in place thereof was delivered the new seal to the
-said mayor, to use in his office of mayoralty, as occasion should
-require. This new seal seemeth to be made before William Walworth was
-knighted, for he is not here entitled Sir, as afterwards he was; and
-certain it is that the same new seal then made is now in use, and none
-other in that office of the mayoralty; which may suffice to answer the
-former fable, without showing of any evidence sealed with the old seal,
-which was the cross and sword of St. Paul, and not the dagger of William
-Walworth.
-
-Now of other monuments in that church. Simon Mordon, mayor 1368, was
-buried there; John Olney, mayor 1446; Robert March, stock-fishmonger,
-gave two pieces of ground to be a churchyard; John Radwell,
-stock-fishmonger, buried 1415; George Gowre, esquire, son to
-Edward Gowre, stock-fishmonger, esquire, 1470; Alexander Purpoynt,
-stock-fishmonger, 1373; Andrew Burel, gentleman of Gray's-inn, 1487;
-John Shrow, stock-fishmonger, 1487, with this epitaph:
-
- "Farewell, my friends, the tide abideth no man,
- I am departed hence, and so shall ye.
- But in this passage the best song that I can,
- Is _requiem aeternam_, now Jesus grant it me,
- When I have ended all mine adversitie,
- Grant me in Paradise to have a mansion,
- That sheddest thy blood for my redemption."
-
-John Finkell, one of the sheriffs 1487, was knighted, and gave forty
-pounds to this church, the one half for his monument. John Pattesley,
-mayor 1441; Thomas Ewen, grocer, bare half the charges in building of
-the steeple, and was buried 1501; William Combes, gentleman, of Stoke,
-by Guilford in Surrey, 1502; Sir John Brudge, mayor 1530, gave fifty
-pounds for a house called the College in Crooked lane; he lieth buried
-in St. Nicholas Hacon. Waltar Faireford; Robert Barre; Alexander Heyban;
-John Motte; John Gramstone; John Brampton; John Wood, stock-fishmonger,
-1531; Sir Henry Amcots, mayor 1548, etc. Hard by this St. Michael's
-church, on the south side thereof, in the year 1560, on the fifth
-of July, through the shooting of a gun, which brake in the house of
-one Adrian Arten, a Dutchman, and set fire on a firkin and barrel of
-gunpowder, four houses were blown up, and divers other sore shattered;
-eleven men and women were slain, and sixteen so hurt and bruised, that
-they hardly escaped with life.
-
-West from this St. Michael's lane is St. Martin Orgar lane, by
-Candlewick street, which lane is on both sides down to a well,
-replenished with fair and large houses for merchants, and it is of
-this ward; one of which houses was sometime called Beachamp's inn, as
-pertaining unto them of that family. Thomas Arundel, archbishop of
-Canterbury, commonly for his time was lodged there.
-
-The parish church of St. Martin Orgar is a small thing. William Crowmer,
-mayor, built a proper chapel on the south side thereof, and was buried
-there 1533; John Mathew, mayor 1490; Sir William Huet, mayor 1559, with
-his lady and daughter, wife to Sir Edward Osburne; Ralph Tabinham,
-alderman; Alice, wife to Thomas Winslow; Thorudon; Benedicke Reding;
-Thomas Harding; James Smith; Richard Gainford, esquire; John Bold, etc.
-
-Then is there one other lane called St. Laurence, of the parish church
-there. This lane, down to the south side of the churchyard, is of
-Candlewick street ward. The parish church of St. Laurence was increased
-with a chapel of Jesus by Thomas Cole, for a master and chaplain; the
-which chapel and parish church was made a college of Jesus and of Corpus
-Christi, for a master and seven chaplains, by John Poultney, mayor, and
-was confirmed by Edward III., the 20th of his reign: of him was this
-church called St. Laurence Poultney, in Candlewick street; which college
-was valued at L79 17_s._ 11_d._, and was surrendered in the reign of
-Edward VI. Robert Ratcliffe, Earl of Essex, and Henry Ratcliffe, Earl
-of Sussex, was buried there; Alderman Beswicke was buried there; John
-Oliffe, alderman, Robert Browne, and others. Thus much for this ward,
-and the antiquities thereof. It hath now an alderman, his deputy, common
-councillors eight, constables eight, scavengers six, wardmote inquest
-men twelve, and a beadle. It is taxed to the fifteen at sixteen pounds.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[176] "In London at fifty pounds, and in the Exchequer at forty-nine
-pounds ten shillings."--_1st edition_, p. 169.
-
-[177] "The king's sons beaten to Eastcheape; there was no tavern then in
-Eastcheape."--_Stow._
-
-[178] "In Westcheape linen cloth sold, but no silks spoken of."--_Stow._
-
-[179] "Fripparia, upholders upon Cornhill, sellers of old apparel and
-household stuff in Eastcheape."--_Stow._
-
-The following is the stanza alluded to by Stow (see Lydgate's _Minor
-Poems_).
-
- "Then into Corn hyl anon I rode,
- Where was much stolen gere amonge;
- I saw where honge myne owne hoode,
- That I had lost amonge the thronge:
- To by my own hoode I thought it wronge;
- I knew it well as I did my crede,
- But for lack of money I could not spede."
-
-
-[180] "Wike is a working place."--_Stow._
-
-[181] "In Smithfield, and there to have been knighted by the king, but
-that is not true."--_1st edition_, p. 172.
-
-[182] "Fable of William Walworth and Jack Straw reproved. Praise of W.
-Walworth for his manhood in arresting of Wat Tyler. The mayor was well
-armed, and had on his head a basonet."--_Stow._
-
-[183] Dunthorne.
-
-[184] "The armies of this citty were not altered, but remayne as afore;
-to witte, argent, a playne crosse gules, a sword of S. Paul in the first
-quarter, and no dagger of W. Walworth, as is fabuled."--_Stow._
-
-
-
-
-WALBROOK WARD
-
-
-Walbrook ward beginneth at the west end of Candlewick street ward. It
-runneth down Candlewick street west towards Budge row. It hath on the
-north side thereof St. Swithen's lane, so called of St. Swithen, a
-parish church by London stone. This lane is replenished on both the
-sides with fair built houses, and is wholly of Walbrook ward.
-
-The said parish church of St. Swithen standeth at the south-west corner
-of this lane. License was procured to new build and increase the said
-church and steeple in the year 1420. Sir John Hend, draper, mayor,
-was an especial benefactor thereunto, as appeareth by his arms in the
-glass windows, even in the tops of them, which is in a field silver, a
-chief azure, a lion passant silver, a cheveron azure, three escalops
-silver: he lieth buried in the body of this church, with a fair stone
-laid on him, but the plates and inscriptions are defaced. Roger Depham,
-alderman, Thomas Aylesbourgh, William Neve, and Matilda Caxton, founded
-chantries, and were buried there; John Butler, draper, one of the
-sheriffs, 1420; Ralph Jecoline, mayor, a benefactor, buried in a fair
-tomb; William White, draper, one of the sheriffs, 1482, and other.
-
-On the north side of this church and churchyard is one fair and large
-built house, sometime pertaining to the prior of Tortington in Sussex,
-since to the earls of Oxford, and now to Sir John Hart, alderman; which
-house hath a fair garden belonging thereunto, lying on the west side
-thereof. On the back side of two other fair houses in Walbrook, in the
-reign of Henry VII., Sir Richard Empson, knight, chancellor of the duchy
-of Lancaster, dwelt in the one of them, and Edmond Dudley, esquire, in
-the other; either of them had a door of intercourse into this garden,
-wherein they met and consulted of matters at their pleasures. In this
-Oxford place Sir Ambrose Nicholas kept his mayoralty, and since him the
-said Sir John Hart.
-
-On the south side of this high street, near unto the channel, is pitched
-upright a great stone called London stone, fixed in the ground very
-deep, fastened with bars of iron, and otherwise so strongly set, that if
-carts do run against it through negligence, the wheels be broken, and
-the stone itself unshaken.
-
-The cause why this stone was set there, the time when, or other memory
-hereof, is none, but that the same hath long continued there is
-manifest, namely, since (or rather before) the Conquest; for in the end
-of a fair written Gospel book given to Christ's church in Canterburie,
-by Ethelstane, King of the West Saxons, I find noted of lands[185] or
-rents in London belonging to the said church, whereof one parcel is
-described to lie near unto London stone. Of later time we read, that in
-the year of Christ 1135, the 1st of King Stephen, a fire, which began
-in the house of one Ailward, near unto London stone, consumed all east
-to Aldgate, in the which fire the priory of the Holy Trinitie was burnt,
-and west to St. Erkenwald's shrine in Paule's church. And these be the
-eldest notes that I read thereof.
-
-Some have said this stone to be set as a mark in the middle of the city
-within the walls; but in truth it standeth far nearer unto the river
-of Thames than to the wall of the city; some others have said the same
-to be set for the tendering and making of payment by debtors to their
-creditors at their appointed days and times, till of later time payments
-were more usually made at the font in Pont's church, and now most
-commonly at the Royal Exchange; some again have imagined the same to be
-set up by one John or Thomas Londonstone dwelling there against; but
-more likely it is, that such men have taken name of the stone than the
-stone of them, as did John at Noke, Thomas at Stile, William at Wall, or
-at Well, etc.
-
-Down west from this parish church, and from London stone, have ye
-Walbrooke corner; from whence runneth up a street, north to the Stocks,
-called Walbrook, because it standeth on the east side of the same brook,
-by the bank thereof, and the whole ward taketh the name of that street.
-On the east side of this street, and at the north corner thereof, is
-the Stocks market, which had this beginning. About the year of Christ
-1282, Henry Wales, mayor, caused divers houses in this city to be built
-towards the maintenance of London bridge, namely, one void place near
-unto the parish church called Woole church, on the north side thereof,
-where sometime (the way being very large and broad) had stood a pair of
-stocks for punishment of offenders; this building took name of these
-stocks, and was appointed by him to be a market place for fish and flesh
-in the midst of the city. Other houses he built in other places, as by
-the patent of Edward I. it doth appear, dated the 10th of his reign.
-After this, in the year 1322, the 17th of Edward II., a decree was
-made by Hamond Chickwell, mayor, that none should sell fish or flesh
-out of the markets appointed, to wit, Bridge street, East Cheape, Old
-Fish street, St. Nicholas' shambles, and the said Stocks, upon pain to
-forfeit such fish or flesh as were sold, for the first time, and the
-second time to lose their freedom; which act was made by commandment
-of the king under his letters patent, dated at the Tower the 17th of
-his reign, and then was this stocks let to farm for L46 13_s._ 4_d._ by
-year. This Stocks market was again begun to be built in the year 1410,
-in the 11th of Henry IV., and was finished in the year next following.
-In the year 1507, the same was rented L56 19_s._ 10_d._ And in the year
-1543, John Cotes being mayor, there were in this Stocks market for
-fishmongers twenty-five boards or stalls, rented yearly to L34 13_s._
-4_d._, there were for butchers eighteen boards or stalls, rented at L41
-16_s._ 4_d._, and there were also chambers above, sixteen, rented at L5
-13_s._ 4_d._, in all L82 3_s._
-
-Next unto this Stocks is the parish church of St. Mary Wool church, so
-called of a beam placed in the churchyard, which was thereof called
-Wool church haw, of the tronage, or weighing of wool there used; and to
-verify this, I find amongst the customs of London, written in French in
-the reign of Edward II., a chapter intituled _Les Customes de Wolchurch
-Haw_, wherein is set down what was there to be paid for every parcel of
-wool weighed. This tronage or weighing of wool, till the 6th of Richard
-II., was there continued; John Churchman then built the Customhouse
-upon Wool key, to serve for the said tronage, as is before showed in
-Tower street ward. This church is reasonable fair and large, and was
-lately new built by license granted in the 20th of Henry VI., with
-condition to be built fifteen foot from the Stocks market, for sparing
-of light to the same Stocks. The parson of this church is to have four
-marks the year for tithe of the said Stocks, paid him by the masters
-of the Bridge house, by special decree made the 2nd of Henry VII. John
-Winyar, grocer, mayor 1504, was a great helper to the building of this
-church, and was there buried 1505; he gave unto it by his testament two
-large basons of silver, and twenty pounds in money. Also Richard Shore,
-draper, one of the sheriffs 1505, was a great benefactor in his life,
-and by his testament gave twenty pounds to make a porch at the west
-end thereof, and was there buried; Richard Hatfield of Steplemorden in
-Cambridgeshire, lieth entombed there, 1467; Edward Deoly, esquire, 1467.
-John Handford, grocer, made the font of that church, very curiously
-wrought, painted, and gilded, and was there buried; John Archer,
-fishmonger, 1487; Anne Cawode founded a chantry there, etc.
-
-From the Stocks' market and this parish church east up into Lombard
-street, some four or five houses on a side, and also on the south side
-of Wool church, have ye Bearbinder lane, a part whereof is of this
-Walbrooke ward; then lower down in the street called Walbrooke, is one
-other fair church of St. Stephen, lately built on the east side thereof,
-for the old church stood on the west side, in place where now standeth
-the parsonage house, and therefore so much nearer the brook, even on
-the bank. Robert Chichley, mayor in the year 1428, the 6th of Henry
-VI., gave to this parish of St. Stephen one plot of ground, containing
-two hundred and eight feet and a half in length, and sixty-six feet in
-breadth, thereupon to build their new church, and for their churchyard;
-and in the 7th of Henry VI. the said Robert, one of the founders, laid
-the first stone for himself, the second for William Stoddon, mayor, with
-whose goods the ground that the church standeth on, and the housing,
-with the ground of the churchyard, was bought by the said Chichley for
-two hundred marks from the Grocers, which had been letten before for
-six-and-twenty marks the year; Robert Whittingham, draper, laid the
-third stone, Henry Barton then mayor, etc. The said Chichley gave more,
-one hundred pounds to the said work, and bare the charges of all the
-timber work on the procession way, and laid the lead upon it of his
-own cost; he also gave all the timber for the roofing of the two side
-aisles, and paid for the carriage thereof. This church was finished in
-the year 1439; the breadth thereof is sixty-seven feet, and length one
-hundred and twenty-five feet, the churchyard ninety feet in length, and
-thirty-seven in breadth and more. Robert Whittingham (made Knight of the
-Bath), in the year 1432, purchased the patronage of this church from
-John Duke of Bedford, uncle to Henry VI., and Edward IV., in the 2nd of
-his reign, gave it to Richard Lee, then mayor. There be monuments in
-this church of Thomas Southwell, first parson of this new church, who
-lieth in the choir; John Dunstable, master of astronomy and music, in
-the year 1453; Sir Richard Lee, mayor, who gave the said parsonage to
-the Grocers; Rowland Hill, mayor 1549; Sir Thomas Pope, first treasurer
-of the augmentations, with his wife Dame Margaret; Sir John Cootes,
-mayor 1542; Sir John Yorke, knight, merchant-tailor, 1549; Edward
-Jackman, sheriff 1564; Richard Achley, grocer; Dr. Owyn, physician to
-King Henry VIII.; John Kirby, grocer, 1578; and others.
-
-Lower down from this parish church be divers fair houses, namely, one
-wherein of late Sir Richard Baker, a knight of Kent, was lodged, and
-wherein dwelt Master Thomas Gore, a merchant famous for hospitality.
-On the west side of this Walbrooke street, over against the Stocks'
-market, is a part of the high street called the Poultrie, on the south
-side west till over against St. Mildrede's church, and the Skalding wike
-is of this ward. Then down again Walbrooke street some small distance,
-is Buckles bury, a street so called of Buckle, that sometime was owner
-thereof, part of which street on both sides, three or four houses,
-to the course of the brook, is of this ward, and so down Walbrooke
-street to the south corner; from thence west down Budge row some small
-distance, to an alley, and through that alley south by the west end of
-St. John's church upon Walbrooke, by the south side and east end of the
-same again to Walbrooke corner.
-
-This parish church is called St. John upon Walbrooke, because the west
-end thereof is on the very bank of Walbrooke, by Horseshew bridge, in
-Horseshew bridge street. This church was also lately new built; for
-about the year 1412, license was granted by the mayor and commonalty to
-the parson and parish, for enlarging thereof, with a piece of ground on
-the north part of the choir, twenty-one feet in length, seventeen feet
-and three inches in breadth, and on the south side of the choir one
-foot of the common soil. There be no monuments in this church of any
-account, only I have learned, William Cobarton, skinner, who gave lands
-to that church, was there buried 1410, and John Stone, tailor, one of
-the sheriffs 1464, was likewise buried there.
-
-On the south side of Walbrooke ward, from Candlewicke street, in the
-mid way betwixt London stone and Walbrooke corner, is a little lane
-with a turnpike in the midst thereof, and in the same a proper parish
-church, called St. Mary Bothaw, or Boatehaw by the Erber; this church
-being near unto the Downegate on the river of Thames, hath the addition
-of Boathaw or Boat haw, of near adjoining to a haw or yard, wherein of
-old time boats were made, and landed from Downegate to be mended, as may
-be supposed, for other reason I find none why it should be so called.
-Within this church, and the small cloister adjoining, divers noblemen
-and persons of worship have been buried, as appeareth by arms in the
-windows, the defaced tombs, and print of plates torn up and carried
-away: there remain only of John West, esquire, buried in the year 1408;
-Thomas Huytley, esquire, 1539, but his monument is defaced since;
-Lancelot Bathurst, etc.
-
-The Erbar is an ancient place so called, but not of Walbrooke ward, and
-therefore out of that lane to Walbrooke corner, and then down till over
-against the south corner of St. John's church upon Walbrooke. And this
-is all that I can say of Walbrooke ward. It hath an alderman, and his
-deputy, common councillors eleven, constables nine, scavengers six, for
-the wardmote inquest thirteen, and a beadle. It is taxed to the fifteen
-in London to L33 5_s._[186]
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[185] Liber Trinitate.
-
-
-
-
-DOWNEGATE WARD
-
-
-Downegate ward beginneth at the south end of Walbrooke ward over against
-the east corner of St. John's church upon Walbrooke, and descendeth on
-both the sides to Downegate on the Thames, and is so called of that down
-going or descending thereunto; and of this Downgate the ward taketh
-name. This ward turneth into Thames street westward, some ten houses on
-a side to the course of Walbrooke, but east in Thames street on both
-sides to Ebgate lane, or Old Swan, the land side whereof hath many lanes
-turning up, as shall be shown when I come to them.
-
-But first to begin with the high street called Dowgate; at the upper
-end thereof is a fair conduit of Thames water, castellated, and made in
-the year 1568, at charges of the citizens, and is called the conduit
-upon Downegate. The descent of this street is such, that in the year
-1574, on the 4th of September, in the afternoon, there fell a storm of
-rain, where through the channels suddenly arose, and ran with such a
-swift course towards the common shores, that a lad of eighteen years
-old, minding to have leapt over the channel near unto the said conduit,
-was taken with the stream, and carried from thence towards the Thames
-with such a violence, that no man with staves or otherwise could stay
-him, till he came against a cart wheel that stood in the said watergate,
-before which time he was drowned, and stark dead.
-
-On the west side of this street is the Tallow-chandlers' hall, a proper
-house, which company was incorporated in the 2nd year of Edward IV.
-
-Somewhat lower standeth the Skinners' hall, a fair house, which was
-sometime called Copped hall, by Downegate, in the parish of St. John
-upon Walbrooke. In the 19th year of Edward II., Ralph Cobham possessed
-it with five shops, etc.
-
-This company of Skinners in London were incorporate by Edward III. in
-the 1st of his reign; they had two brotherhoods of Corpus Christi,
-viz. one at St. Mary Spittle, the other at St. Mary Bethlem without
-Bishopsgate. Richard II., in the 18th of his reign, granted them to make
-their two brotherhoods one, by the name of the fraternity of Corpus
-Christi. Of Skinners, divers royal persons were named to be founders
-and brethren of this fraternity, to wit, kings six, dukes nine, earls
-two, lords one. Kings, Edward III., Richard II., Henry IV., Henry V.,
-Henry VI., and Edward IV. This fraternity had also once every year, on
-Corpus Christi day afternoon, a procession passed through the principal
-streets of the city, wherein was borne more than one hundred torches
-of wax (costly garnished) burning light, and above two hundred clerks
-and priests, in surplices and copes, singing. After the which were
-the sheriffs' servants, the clerks of the compters, chaplains for the
-sheriffs, the mayor's sergeants, the counsel of the city, the mayor and
-aldermen in scarlet, and then the Skinners in their best liveries. Thus
-much to stop the tongues of unthankful men, such as used to ask, Why
-have ye not noted this, or that? and give no thanks for what is done.
-
-Then lower down was a challenge of priests, called Jesus' Commons, a
-house well furnished with brass, pewter, napery, plate, etc., besides a
-fair library well stored with books, all which of old time was given to
-a number of priests that should keep commons there, and as one left his
-place, by death or otherwise, another should be admitted into his room,
-but this order within this thirty years being discontinued, the said
-house was dissolved and turned to tenements.
-
-Down lower have ye Elbow lane; and at the corner thereof was one
-great stone house, called Olde hall; it is now taken down, and divers
-fair houses of timber placed there. This was sometime pertaining to
-William de Pont le Arch, and by him given to the priory of St. Mary
-Overy in Southwark, in the reign of Henry I. In this Elbow lane is
-the Innholders' hall, and other fair houses; this lane runneth west,
-and suddenly turneth south into Thames street, and therefore of that
-bending is called Elbow lane. On the east side of this Downegate street
-is the great old house before spoken of, called the Erber, near to
-the church of St. Mary Bothaw; Geffrey Scroope held it by the gift of
-Edward III., in the 14th of his reign; it belonged since to John Nevell,
-Lord of Rabie, then to Richard Nevell, Earl of Warwick; Nevell, Earl
-of Salisburie, was lodged there 1457; then it came to George Duke of
-Clarence, and his heirs male, by the gift of Edward IV., in the 14th of
-his reign. It was lately new built by Sir Thomas Pullison, mayor, and
-was afterward inhabited by Sir Francis Drake, that famous mariner. Next
-to this great house is a lane turning to Bush lane (of old time called
-Carter lane, of carts and carmen having stables there), and now called
-Chequer lane, or Chequer alley, of an inn called the Chequer.
-
-In Thames street, on the Thames side, west from Downegate, is Greenewich
-lane, of old time so called, and now Frier lane, of such a sign there
-set up. In this lane is the Joiners' hall, and other fair houses.
-
-Then is Grantham's lane, so called of John Grantham, sometime mayor, and
-owner thereof, whose house was very large and strong, built of stone, as
-appeareth by gates arched, yet remaining. Ralph Dodmer, first a brewer,
-then a mercer, mayor 1529, dwelt there, and kept his mayoralty in that
-house; it is now a brewhouse as it was afore.
-
-Then is Dowgate, whereof is spoken in another place. East from this
-Dowgate is Cosin lane, named of William Cosin that dwelt there in the
-4th of Richard II., as divers his predecessors, father, grandfather,
-etc. had done before him. William Cosin was one of the sheriffs in the
-year 1306. That house standeth at the south end of the lane, having an
-old and artificial conveyance of Thames water into it, and is now a
-dyehouse called Lambard's messuage. Adjoining to that house there was
-lately erected an engine to convey Thames water unto Downegate conduit
-aforesaid.
-
-Next to this lane, on the east, is the Steelyard, as they term it, a
-place for merchants of Almaine, that used to bring hither as well wheat,
-rye, and other grain, as cables, ropes, masts, pitch, tar, flax, hemp,
-linen cloth, wainscots, wax, steel, and other profitable merchandises.
-Unto these merchants, in the year 1259, Henry III., at the request of
-his brother Richard, Earl of Cornewell, king of Almaine, granted that
-all and singular the merchants, having a house in the city of London,
-commonly called _Guilda Aula Theutonicorum_, should be maintained
-and upholden through the whole realm, by all such freedoms, and free
-usages, or liberties, as by the king and his noble progenitors' time
-they had and enjoyed, etc. Edward I. renewed and confirmed that charter
-of liberties granted by his father. And in the 10th year of the same
-Edward, Henry Wales being mayor, a great controversy did arise between
-the said mayor, and the merchants of the Haunce of Almaine, about the
-reparations of Bishopsgate, then likely to fall, for that the said
-merchants enjoyed divers privileges in respect of maintaining the said
-gate, which they now denied to repair; for the appeasing of which
-controversy the king sent his writ to the treasurer and barons of his
-Exchequer, commanding that they should make inquisition thereof; before
-whom the merchants being called, when they were not able to discharge
-themselves, sith they enjoyed the liberties to them granted for the
-same, a precept was sent to the mayor and sheriffs to distrain the
-said merchants to make reparations, namely, Gerard Marbod, alderman of
-the Haunce, Ralph de Cussarde, a citizen of Colen, Ludero de Denevar,
-a burgess of Trivar, John of Aras, a burgess of Trivon, Bartram of
-Hamburdge, Godestalke of Hundondale, a burgess of Trivon, John de Dele,
-a burgess of Munstar, then remaining in the said city of London, for
-themselves and all other merchants of the Haunce, and so they granted
-two hundred and ten marks sterling to the mayor and citizens, and
-undertook that they and their successors should from time to time repair
-the said gate, and bear the third part of the charges in money and men
-to defend it when need were. And for this agreement the said mayor and
-citizens granted to the said merchants their liberties, which till of
-late they have enjoyed, as namely, amongst other, that they might lay
-up their grain which they brought into this realm in inns, and sell it
-in their garners, by the space of forty days after they had laid it
-up, except by the mayor and citizens they were expressly forbidden,
-because of dearth, or other reasonable occasions. Also they might have
-their aldermen as they had been accustomed, foreseeing always that he
-were of the city, and presented to the mayor and aldermen of the city,
-so oft as any should be chosen, and should take an oath before them to
-maintain justice in their courts, and to behave themselves in their
-office according to law, and as it stood with the customs of the city.
-Thus much for their privileges; whereby it appeareth that they were
-great merchants of corn brought out of the east parts hither, insomuch
-that the occupiers of husbandry in this land were inforced to complain
-of them for bringing in such abundance when the corn of this realm was
-at such an easy price; whereupon it was ordained by parliament, that no
-person should bring into any part of this realm, by way of merchandise,
-wheat, rye, or barley, growing out of the said realm, when the quarter
-of wheat exceed not the price of 6_s._ 8_d._, rye 4_s._ the quarter, and
-barley 3_s._ the quarter, upon forfeiture the one half to the king, the
-other half to the seizor thereof. These merchants of Haunce had their
-Guildhall in Thames street in place aforesaid by the said Cosin lane.
-Their hall is large built of stone, with three arched gates towards the
-street, the middlemost whereof is far bigger than the other, and is
-seldom opened, the other two be mured up; the same is now called the
-old hall.
-
-Of later time, to wit, in the 6th of Richard II., they hired one house
-next adjoining to their old hall, which sometime belonged to Richard
-Lions, a famous lapidary, one of the sheriffs of London in the 49th of
-Edward III., and in the 4th of Richard II., by the rebels of Kent, drawn
-out of that house and beheaded in West Cheap. This also was a great
-house with a large wharf on the Thames, and the way thereunto was called
-Windgoose, or Wildgoose lane, which is now called Windgoose alley,
-for that the same alley is for the most part built on by the stilyard
-merchants.
-
-The abbot of St. Alban's had a messuage here with a key, given to him
-in the 34th of Henry VI. Then is one other great house, which sometime
-pertained to John Rainwell, stockfish-monger, mayor, and it was by
-him given to the mayor and commonalty, to the end that the profits
-thereof should be disposed in deeds of piety; which house, in the
-15th of Edward IV., was confirmed unto the said merchants, in manner
-following, namely:--"It is ordayned by our soveraigne lord and his
-parliament, that the said marchants of Almaine, being of the companie
-called the _Guildhall Teutonicorum_ (or the Flemish gild), that now be,
-or hereafter shall be, shall have, hold, and enjoy, to them and their
-successors for ever, the said place called the Steel house, yeelding to
-the said mayor and communaltie an annuall rent of L70 3_s._ 4_d._ etc."
-
-In the year 1551, and the 5th of Edward VI., through complaint of the
-English merchants, the liberty of the steelyard merchants was seized
-into the king's hands, and so it resteth.
-
-Then is Church lane, at the west end of Alhallowes church, called
-Alhallowes the More in Thames street, for a difference from Alhallowes
-the Less in the same street; it is also called Alhallowes _ad foenum_ in
-the Ropery, because hay sold near thereunto at Hay wharf, and ropes of
-old time made and sold in the high street. This is a fair church, with
-a large cloister on the south side thereof about their churchyard, but
-foully defaced and ruinated.
-
-The church also hath had many fair monuments, but now defaced. There
-remaineth in the choir some plates on grave stones--namely, of William
-Lichfield, D.D., who deceased the year 1447: he was a great student,
-and compiled many books, both moral and divine, in prose and in verse,
-namely, one intituled _The Complaint of God unto Sinful Man_. He made
-in his time three thousand and eighty-three sermons, as appeared by
-his own handwriting, and were found when he was dead. One other plate
-there is of John Brickles, draper, who deceased in the year 1451; he was
-a great benefactor to that church, and gave by his testament certain
-tenements to the relief of the poor, etc. Nicholas Loven and William
-Peston founded chantries there.
-
-At the east end of this church goeth down a lane called Hay wharf lane,
-now lately a great brewhouse, built there by one Pot; Henry Campion,
-esquire, a beer-brewer, used it, and Abraham his son now possesseth it.
-Then was there one other lane, sometime called Woolfe's gate, now out of
-use; for the lower part thereof upon the bank of Thames is built by the
-late Earl of Shrewsburie, and the other end is built on and stopped up
-by the chamberlain of London. John Butler, draper, one of the sheriffs
-in the year 1420, dwelt there; he appointed his house to be sold, and
-the price thereof to be given to the poor: it was of Alhallowes parish
-the less. Then is there the said parish church of Alhallowes called the
-Less, and by some Alhallowes on the Cellars, for it standeth on vaults;
-it is said to be built by Sir John Poultney, sometime mayor. The steeple
-and choir of this church standeth on an arched gate, being the entry
-to a great house called Cold Harbrough. The choir of late being fallen
-down, is now again at length, in the year 1594, by the parishioners new
-built. Touching this Cold Harbrough, I find, that in the 13th of Edward
-II., Sir John Abel, knight, demised or let unto Henry Stow, draper, all
-that his capital messuage called the Cold Harbrough, in the parish of
-All Saints _ad foenum_, and all the appurtenances within the gate, with
-the key which Robert Hartford, citizen, son to William Hartford, had,
-and ought; and the foresaid Robert paid for it the rent of thirty-three
-shillings the year. This Robert Hartford being owner thereof, as also
-of other lands in Surrey, deceasing without issue male, left two
-daughters his coheirs, to wit, Idonia, married to Sir Ralph Bigot, and
-Maude, married to Sir Stephen Cosenton, knights, between whom the said
-house and lands were parted. After the which, John Bigot, son to the
-said Sir Ralph, and Sir John Cosenton, did sell their moieties of Cold
-Harbrough unto John Poultney, son of Adam Poultney, the 8th of Edward
-III. This Sir John Poultney dwelling in this house, and being four times
-mayor, the said house took the name of Poultney's inn. Notwithstanding
-this, Sir John Poultney, the 21st of Edward III., by his charter, gave
-and confirmed to Humfrey de Bohun, Earl of Hereford and Essex, his
-whole tenement called Cold Harbrough, with all the tenements and key
-adjoining, and appurtenances, sometime pertaining to Robert de Hereford,
-on the way called Hay wharf lane, etc., for one rose at Midsummer, to
-him and to his heirs for all services, if the same were demanded. This
-Sir John Poultney, deceased 1349, and left issue, by Margaret his wife,
-William Poultney, who died without issue, and Margaret his mother was
-married to Sir Nicholas Lovel, knight, etc. Philip S. Cleare gave two
-messuages pertaining to this Cold Harbrough in the Roperie, towards the
-enlarging of the parish church and churchyard of All Saints, called the
-Less, in the 20th of Richard II.
-
-In the year 1397, the 21st of Richard II., John Holland, Earl of
-Huntingdon, was lodged there, and Richard II., his brother dined with
-him: it was then counted a right fair and stately house; but in the next
-year following I find that Edmond, Earl of Cambridge, was there lodged,
-notwithstanding the said house still retained the name of Poultney's
-inn, in the reign of Henry VI., the 26th of his reign. It belonged since
-to H. Holland, Duke of Excester, and he was lodged there in the year
-1472. In the year 1485, Richard III., by his letters patent, granted and
-gave to John Writh, alias Garter, principal king of arms of Englishmen,
-and to the rest of the king's heralds and pursuivants of arms, all that
-messuage, with the appurtenances, called Cold Harbrough, in the parish
-of All Saints the Little in London, and their successors for ever. Dated
-at Westminster the 2nd of March, _anno regni primo_, without fine or
-fee. How the said heralds departed therewith I have not read; but in the
-reign of Henry VIII. the Bishop of Durham's house near Charing cross,
-being taken into the king's hand, Cuthbert Tunstal, Bishop of Durham,
-was lodged in this Cold Harbrough; since the which time it hath belonged
-to the Earls of Shrewsburie, by composition (as is supposed) from the
-said Cuthbert Tunstall. The last deceased earl took it down, and in
-place thereof built a great number of small tenements, now letten out
-for great rents to people of all sorts.
-
-Then is the Dyers' hall, which company was made a brotherhood or guild,
-in the 4th of Henry VI., and appointed to consist of a guardian or
-warden, and a commonalty, the 12th of Edward IV. Then be there divers
-large brewhouses and others, till you come to Ebgate lane, where that
-ward endeth in the east. On the north side of Thames street be divers
-lanes also; the first is at the south end of Elbow lane, before spoken
-of, west from Downegate, over against Greenwich lane: then be divers
-fair houses for merchants and others all along that side. The next lane
-east from Downegate is called Bush lane, which turneth up to Candlewicke
-street, and is of Downegate ward. Next is Suffolke lane, likewise
-turning up to Candlewicke street. In this lane is one notable grammar
-school, founded in the year 1561 by the master, wardens, and assistants
-of the Merchant-Tailors, in the parish of St. Laurence Poultney; Richard
-Hilles, sometime master of that company, having before given L500
-towards the purchase of a house, called the manor of the Rose, sometime
-belonging to the Duke of Buckingham, wherein the said school is kept.
-Then is there one other lane which turneth up to St. Laurence hill, and
-to the south-west corner of St. Laurence churchyard; then one other
-lane called Poultney lane, that goeth up of this ward to the south-east
-corner of St. Laurence churchyard, and so down again, and to the west
-corner of St. Martin Orgar lane, and over against Ebgate lane; and this
-is all of Downgate ward, the thirteenth in number lying east from the
-water-course of Walbrook, and hath not any one house on the west side
-of the said brook. It hath an alderman, his deputy, common councillors
-nine, constables eight, scavengers five, for the wardmote inquest
-fourteen, and a beadle. It is taxed to the fifteen eight-and-twenty
-pounds.[187]
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[186] "In London to forty pound, and in the Exchequer to thirty-nine
-pound."--_1st edition_, p. 181.
-
-
-
-
-WARDS ON THE WEST SIDE OF WALBROOKE, AND FIRST OF VINTRY WARD
-
-
-Now I am to speak of the other wards, twelve in number, all lying on
-the west side of the course of Walbrooke. And first of Vintry ward, so
-called of vintners, and of the vintry, a part of the bank of the river
-of Thames, where the merchants of Burdeaux craned their wines out of
-lighters and other vessels, and there landed and made sale of them
-within forty days after, until the 28th of Edward I., at which time
-the said merchants complained that they could not sell their wines,
-paying poundage, neither hire houses or cellars to lay them in; and it
-was redressed by virtue of the king's writ, directed to the mayor and
-sheriffs of London, dated at Carlaveroke, or Carlisle, since the which
-time many fair and large houses, with vaults and cellars for stowage of
-wines, and lodging of the Burdeaux merchants have been built in place
-where before time were cooks' houses; for Fitzstephen, in the reign
-of Henry II., writeth, that upon the river's side, between the wine
-in ships, and the wine to be sold in taverns, was a common cookery
-or cooks' row, etc., as in another place I have set down; whereby it
-appeareth, that in those days (and till of late time) every man lived by
-his professed trade, not any one interrupting another: the cooks dressed
-meat, and sold no wine, and the taverner sold wine, but dressed no meat
-for sale, etc.
-
-This ward beginneth in the east at the west end of Downegate ward, as
-the water-course of Walbrooke parteth them, to wit, at Grantham's lane,
-on the Thames side, and at Elbow lane on the land side; it runneth
-along in Thames street west some three houses beyond the Old Swanne, a
-brewhouse, and on the land side some three houses west beyond St. James'
-at Garlicke Hith. In breadth this ward stretcheth from the Vintry, north
-to the wall of the west gate of the Tower Royall; the other north part
-is of Cordwayner street ward. Out of this Royal street, by the south
-gate of Tower Royall, runneth a small street east to St. John's upon
-Walbrooke, which street is called Horshew bridge, of such a bridge
-sometime over the brook there, which is now vaulted over. Then from the
-said south gate west, runneth one other street, called Knightriders'
-street, by St. Thomas Apostle's church on the north side, and Wringwren
-lane by the said church, at the west end thereof, and to the east end
-of the Trinitie church in the said Knightriders' street, where this
-ward endeth on that south side the street; but on the north side it
-runneth no further than the corner against the new built tavern and
-other houses, in a plot of ground where sometime stood Ormond place;
-yet have ye one other lane lower down in Royall street, stretching from
-over against St. Michael's church, to, and by the north side of St.
-James' church by Garlicke Hith; this is called Kerion lane. And thus
-much for the bounds of Vintry ward. Now, on the Thames' side, west from
-Grantham's lane, have ye Herber lane, or Brikels' lane, so called of
-John Brikels, sometime owner thereof.
-
-Then is Simpson's lane, of one Simpson, or Emperor's head lane, of such
-a sign. Then the Three Cranes' lane, so called not only of a sign of
-three cranes at a tavern door, but rather of three strong cranes of
-timber placed on the Vintry wharf by the Thames side, to crane up wines
-there, as is afore showed. This lane was of old time, to wit, the 9th of
-Richard II., called The Painted Tavern lane, of the tavern being painted.
-
-Then next over against St. Martin's church, is a large house built of
-stone and timber, with vaults for the stowage of wines, and is called
-the Vintry. There dwelt John Gisers, vintner, mayor of London, and
-constable of the Tower, and then was Henry Picard, vintner, mayor.
-In this house Henry Picard feasted four kings in one day (as in my
-_Summary_ I have showed). Then next is Vanner's lane, so called of one
-Vanner that was owner thereof; it is now called Church lane, of the
-coming up from the wharf to St. Martin's church. Next is Brode lane,
-for that the same is broader for the passage of carts from the Vintrie
-wharf, than be the other lanes. At the north-west corner of this lane is
-the Parish Clerks' hall, lately by them purchased, since they lost their
-old hall in Bishopsgate street. Next is Spittle lane, of old time so
-called, since Stodie's lane, of the owner thereof named Stodie. Sir John
-Stodie, vintner, mayor in the year 1357, gave it with all the quadrant
-wherein Vintners' hall now standeth, with the tenements round about unto
-the Vintners; the Vintners built for themselves a fair hall, and also
-thirteen alms houses there for thirteen poor people, which are kept of
-charity rent free.
-
-The Vintners in London were of old time called Merchant-vintners of
-Gascoyne; and so I read them in the records of Edward II., the 11th
-year, and Edward III., the 9th year: they were as well Englishmen as
-strangers born beyond the seas, but then subjects to the kings of
-England, great Burdeaux merchants of Gascoyne and French wines, divers
-of them were mayors of this city, namely John Adrian, vintner, Reginold
-at conduit, John Oxenford, Hen. Picard, that feasted the kings of
-England, France, Scotland, and Cypres, John Stodie, that gave Stodie's
-lane to the Vintners; which four last named were mayors in the reign of
-Edward III.; and yet Gascoyne wines were then to be sold at London not
-above four pence, nor Rhenish wine above six pence the gallon. I read of
-sweet wines, that in the 50th of Edward III., John Peachie, fishmonger,
-was accused, for that he procured a license for the only sale of them
-in London; which notwithstanding he justified by law, he was imprisoned
-and fined. More, I read, that in the 6th of Henry VI., the Lombards
-corrupting their sweet wines, when knowledge thereof came to John
-Rainwell, mayor of London, he in divers places of the city commanded the
-heads of the butts and other vessels in the open streets to be broken,
-to the number of one hundred and fifty, so that the liquor running
-forth, passed through the city like a stream of rain water, in the sight
-of all the people, from whence there issued a most loathsome savour.
-
-I read, in the reign of Henry VII., that no sweet wines were brought
-into this realm but Malmesies by the Longabards, paying to the king
-for his license six shillings and eight pence of every butt, besides
-twelve pence for bottle large. I remember within this fifty-four years
-Malmsey not to be sold more than one penny halfpenny the pint. For proof
-whereof, it appeareth in the church book of St. Andrew Undershafte, that
-in the year 1547 I. G. and S. K., then churchwardens, for eighty pints
-of Malmsey spent in the church, after one penny halfpenny the pint, paid
-at the year's end for the same ten shillings. More, I remember that no
-sacks were sold but Rumney, and that for medicine more than for drink,
-but now many kinds of sacks are known and used. And so much for wines.
-
-For the Vintry, to end therewith, I read, that in the reign of Henry
-IV., the young prince Henry, Thomas Duke of Clarence, John Duke of
-Bedford, and Humfrey Duke of Glocester, the king's sons, being at supper
-among the merchants of London in the Vintry, in the house of Lewes John,
-Henry Scogan sent to them a ballad beginning thus:--
-
- "My noble sonnes and eke my lords deare,
- I your father, called unworthily,
- Send unto you this ballad following here,
- Written with mine own hand full rudely,
- Although it be that I not reverently
- Have written to your estates, I you pray
- Mine uncunning, taketh benignely,
- For God's sake, and hearken what I say."
-
-Then follow in like metre twenty-three staves, containing a persuasion
-from losing of time follily in lust and vice, but to spend the same
-in virtue and godliness, as ye may read in Geffrey Chawcer's works
-lately printed. The successors of those vintners and wine-drawers, that
-retailed by the gallons, pottle, quart, and pint, were all incorporated
-by the name of Wine-tunners[188] in the reign of Edward III., and
-confirmed in the 15th of Henry VI.
-
-Next is Palmer's lane, now called Anchor lane; the Plumbers have their
-hall there, but are tenants to the Vintners. Then is Worcester house,
-sometime belonging to the Earls of Worcester, now divided into many
-tenements; the Fruiterers have their hall there. Then is the Old Swan, a
-great brewhouse. And this is all on the Thames' side that I can note in
-this ward.
-
-On the land side is the Royall street and Paternoster lane, I think
-of old time called Arches; for I read that Robert de Suffolke gave to
-Walter Darford his tenement with the appurtenance in the lane called Les
-Arches, in the parish of St. Michael de Paternoster church, between the
-wall of the field called Winchester field on the east, and the same lane
-on the West, etc. More, I read of a stone house called Sto da de Winton
-juxta Stenden bridge, which in that lane was over Walbrooke water.
-
-Then is the fair parish church of St. Michael called Paternoster church
-in the Royall. This church was new built, and made a college of St.
-Spirit and St. Mary, founded by Richard Whitington, mercer, four times
-mayor, for a master, four fellows--masters of art, clerks, conducts,
-chorists, etc., and an alms house called God's house, or hospital, for
-thirteen poor men, one of them to be tutor, and to have sixteen pence
-the week; the other twelve, each of them to have fourteen pence the
-week for ever, with other necessary provisions, a hutch with three
-locks, a common seal, etc. These were bound to pray for the good estate
-of Richard Whitington and Alice his wife, their founders, and for
-Sir William Whitington, knight, and Dame Joan his wife, and for Hugh
-Fitzwaren, and Dame Molde his wife, the fathers and mothers of the
-said Richard Whitington and Alice his wife, for King Richard II., and
-Thomas of Woodstocke, Duke of Glocester, special lords and promoters of
-the said Richard Whitington, etc. The license for this foundation was
-granted by King Henry IV., the 11th of his reign, and in the 12th of the
-same king's reign, the mayor and commonalty of London granted to Richard
-Whitington a vacant piece of ground, thereon to build his college in
-the Royall, all which was confirmed by Henry VI., the 3rd of his reign,
-to John Coventrie, Jenkin Carpenter, and William Grove, executors to
-Richard Whitington. This foundation was again confirmed by parliament,
-the 10th of Henry VI., and was suppressed by the statute of Edward VI.
-
-The alms houses, with the poor men, do remain, and are paid by the
-Mercers. This Richard Whitington was in this church three times buried:
-first by his executors under a fair monument; then in the reign of
-Edward VI., the parson of that church, thinking some great riches (as
-he said) to be buried with him, caused his monument to be broken, his
-body to be spoiled of his leaden sheet, and again the second time to
-be buried; and in the reign of Queen Mary the parishioners were forced
-to take him up, to lap him in lead as afore, to bury him the third
-time, and to place his monument, or the like, over him again, which
-remaineth, and so he resteth. Thomas Windford, alderman, was buried in
-this church 1448; Arnold Macknam, vintner, a merchant of Burdeaux, 1457;
-Sir Heere Tanke, or Hartancleux, knight of the garter, born in Almayne,
-a noble warrior in Henry V. and Henry VI. days; Sir Edmond Mulshew,
-knight, near to Thomas Cokham, recorder of London; the Lady Kyme; Sir
-William Oldhall, knight, 1460; William Barnocke; Sir John Yong, grocer,
-mayor 1466; Agnes, daughter to Sir John Yong, first married to Robert
-Sherington, after to Robert Mulleneux, then to William Cheyney, esquire;
-John Having, gentleman; William Roswell, esquire; William Postar, clerk
-of the crown, 1520; Sir William Bayly, draper, mayor 1533, with Dame
-Katherine his wife, leaving sixteen children; John Haydon, mercer,
-sheriff 1582, who gave legacies to the thirteen alms men, and otherwise,
-for a lecture.
-
-At the upper end of this street is the Tower Royall, whereof that street
-taketh name. This Tower and great place was so called of pertaining to
-the kings of this realm, but by whom the same was first built, or of
-what antiquity continued, I have not read more than that in the reign
-of Edward I., the 2nd, 4th, and 7th years, it was the tenement of Symon
-Beawmes; also, that in the 36th of Edward III., the same was called the
-Royall, in the parish of St. Michael de Paternoster, and that in the
-43rd of his reign, he gave it by the name of his inn, called the Royall,
-in the city of London, in value twenty pounds by year, unto his college
-of St. Stephen at Westminster; notwithstanding, in the reign of Richard
-II. it was called the Queen's Wardrobe, as appeareth by this that
-followeth:--King Richard having in Smithfield overcome and dispersed his
-rebels, he, his lords, and all his company, entered the city of London,
-with great joy, and went to the lady princess his mother, who was then
-lodged in the Tower Royall, called the Queen's Wardrobe, where she had
-remained three days and two nights, right sore abashed; but when she
-saw the king her son she was greatly rejoiced, and said, "Ah, son! what
-great sorrow have I suffered for you this day!" The king answered and
-said, "Certainly, madam, I know it well; but now rejoice, and thank
-God, for I have this day recovered mine heritage, and the realm of
-England, which I had near hand lost."
-
-This tower seemeth to have been at that time of good defence; for when
-the rebels had beset the Tower of London, and got possession thereof,
-taking from thence whom they listed, as in my _Annals_ I have shown, the
-princess being forced to fly, came to this Tower Royal, where she was
-lodged, and remained safe, as ye have heard; and it may be also supposed
-that the king himself was at that time lodged there. I read, that in the
-year 1386, Lyon King of Armonie, being chased out of his realm by the
-Tartarians, received innumerable gifts of the king and of his nobles,
-the king then lying in the Royall, where he also granted to the said
-king of Armonie, a charter of a thousand pounds by year during his
-life. This for proof may suffice that kings of England have been lodged
-in this tower, though the same of later time have been neglected, and
-turned into stabling for the king's horses, and now letten out to divers
-men, and divided into tenements.
-
-In Horsebridge street is the Cutlars' hall. Richard de Wilehale, 1295,
-confirmed to Paul Butelar this house and edifices in the parish of St.
-Michael Paternoster church and St. John's upon Walbrooke, which sometime
-Lawrens Gisors and his son Peter Gisors did possess, and afterward
-Hugonis de Hingham, and lieth between the tenement of the said Richard
-towards the south, and the lane called Horseshew bridge towards the
-north, and between the way called Paternoster church on the west,
-and the course of Walbrooke on the east, paying yearly one clove of
-Gereflowers at Easter, and to the prior and convent of St. Mary Overy
-six shillings. This house sometime belonged to Simon Dolesly, grocer,
-mayor 1359. They of this company were of old time divided into three
-arts or sorts of workmen: to wit, the first were smiths, forgers of
-blades, and therefore called bladers, and divers of them proved wealthy
-men, as namely, Walter Nele, blader, one of the sheriffs the 12th of
-Edward III., deceased 1352, and buried in St. James' Garlicke Hith; he
-left lands to the mending of high ways about London, betwixt Newgate
-and Wicombe, Aldgate and Chelmesford, Bishopsgate and Ware, Southwark
-and Rochester, etc. The second were makers of hafts, and otherwise
-garnishers of blades. The third sort were sheathmakers, for swords,
-daggers, and knives. In the 10th of Henry IV. certain ordinances were
-made betwixt the bladers and the other cutlers; and in the 4th of
-Henry VI. they were all three companies drawn into one fraternity or
-brotherhood by the name of Cutlers.
-
-Then is Knightriders' street, so called (as is supposed) of knights well
-armed and mounted at the Tower Royall, riding from thence through that
-street west to Creed lane, and so out at Ludgate towards Smithfield,
-when they were there to tourney, joust, or otherwise to show activities
-before the king and states of the realm.
-
-In this street is the parish church of St. Thomas Apostle, by Wringwren
-lane, a proper church, but monuments of antiquity be there none, except
-some arms in the windows, as also in the stone work, which some suppose
-to be of John Barns, mercer, mayor of London in the year 1371, a great
-builder thereof; H. Causton, merchant, was a benefactor, and had a
-chantry there about 1396; T. Roman, mayor 1310, had also a chantry there
-1319; Fitzwilliams, also a benefactor, had a chantry there. More, Sir
-William Littlesbery, _alias_ Horne (for King Edward IV. so named him,
-because he was a most excellent blower in a horn); he was a Salter
-and merchant of the staple, mayor of London in the year 1487, and was
-buried in this church, having appointed by his testament the bells to
-be changed for four new bells of good tune and sound, but that was not
-performed; he gave five hundred marks to the repairing of highways
-betwixt London and Cambridge; his dwelling-house, with a garden and
-appurtenances in the said parish to be sold, and bestowed in charitable
-actions, as his executors would answer before God; his house, called the
-George, in Bred street, he gave to the Salters, they to find a priest in
-the said church, to have L6 13_s._ 4_d._ the year, to every preacher at
-Paul's cross and at the Spittle four pence for ever; to the prisoners
-of Newgate, Ludgate, Marshalsey, and King's Bench, in victuals, ten
-shillings at Christmas, and ten shillings at Easter for ever; which
-legacies are not performed. William Shipton, William Champneis, and
-John de Burford, had chantries there; John Martin, butcher, one of the
-sheriffs, was buried there 1533; etc. Then west from the said church,
-on the same side, was one great messuage, sometime called Ipres inn, of
-William Ipres, a Fleming, the first builder thereof. This William was
-called out of Flanders, with a number of Flemings, to the aid of King
-Stephen against Maude the empress, in the year 1138, and grew in favour
-with the said king for his services, so far that he built this his house
-near Tower Royall, in the which tower it seemeth the king was then
-lodged, as in the heart of the city, for his more safety.
-
-Robert, Earl of Gloucester, brother to the empress, being taken, was
-committed to the custody of this William, to be kept in the castle
-of Rochester, till King Stephen was also taken, and then the one was
-delivered in exchange for the other, and both set free. This William of
-Ipres gave Edredes hithe, now called the Queen's hithe, to the prior and
-canons of the Holy Trinity in London: he founded the abbey of Boxley
-in Kent, etc. In the first of Henry II., the said William, with all
-the other Flemings, fearing the indignation of the new king, departed
-the land; but it seemeth that the said William was shortly called back
-again, and restored both to the king's favour and to his old possessions
-here, so that the name and family continued long after in this realm, as
-may appear by this which followeth.
-
-In the year 1377, the 51st of Edward III., the citizens of London,
-minding to have destroyed John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, and Henry
-Percie, marshal (for cause shown in my _Annals_), sought up and down,
-and could not find them, for they were that day to dine with John of
-Ipres at his inn, which the Londoners wist not of, but thought the duke
-and marshal had been at the Savoy, and therefore posted thither; but one
-of the duke's knights seeing these things, came in great haste to the
-place where the duke was, and after that he had knocked and could not be
-let in, he said to Haveland the porter, "If thou love my lord and thy
-life, open the gate;" with which words he gat entry, and with great fear
-he tells the duke, that without the gate were infinite numbers of armed
-men, and unless he took great heed that day would be his last; with
-which words the duke leapt so hastily from his oisters, that he hurt
-both his legs against the form: wine was offered, but he could not drink
-for haste, and so fled with his fellow Henry Percie out at a back gate,
-and entering the Thames, never stayed rowing until they came to a house
-near the manor of Kennington, where at that time the princess lay with
-Richard the young prince, before whom he made his complaint, etc.
-
-On the other side, I read of a messuage called Ringed hall. King Henry
-VIII., the 32nd of his reign, gave the same, with four tenements
-adjoining, unto Morgan Philip, _alias_ Wolfe, in the parish of St.
-Thomas Apostles, in London, etc.
-
-Over against Ipres inn, in Knight riders street, at the corner towards
-St. James at Garlicke hithe, was sometime a great house built of stone
-and called Ormond place, for that it sometimes belonged to the Earls of
-Ormond. King Edward IV., in the 5th of his reign, gave to Elizabeth his
-wife the manor of Greenwich, with the tower and park, in the county
-of Kent. He also gave this tenement called Ormond place, with all the
-appurtenances to the same, situate in the parish of St. Trinitie in
-Knight riders street, in London. This house is now lately taken down,
-and divers fair tenements are built there, the corner house whereof
-is a tavern. Then lower down in Royall street is Kerion lane, of one
-Kerion sometime dwelling there. In this lane be divers fair houses for
-merchants, and amongst others is the Glaziers' hall.
-
-At the south corner of Royall street is the fair parish church of St.
-Martin called in the Vintry, sometime called St. Martin de Beremand
-church. This church was new built about the year 1399 by the executors
-of Mathew Columbars a stranger born, a Burdeaux merchant of Gascoyne and
-French wines; his arms remain yet in the east window, and are between
-a cheveron, three columbins. There lie buried in this church--Sir John
-Gisors, mayor 1311; Henry Gisors, his son, 1343, and John Gisors, his
-brother, 1350; he gave to his son Thomas his great mansion-house called
-Gisors hall, in the parish of St. Mildred, in Bread street. This Thomas
-had issue, John and Thomas; John made a feoffment, and sold Gisors hall
-and other his lands in London, about the year 1386; Thomas deceased
-1395. Henry Vennar; Bartholomew de la Vauch; Thomas Cornwalles, one
-of the sheriffs 1384; John Cornwalles, esquire, 1436; John Mustrell,
-vintner, 1424; William Hodson; William Castleton; John Gray; Robert
-Dalusse, barber, in the reign of Edward IV., with this epitaph:
-
- "As flowers in the field thus passeth life,
- Naked, then clothed, feeble in the end,
- It sheweth by Robert Dalusse, and Alison his wife,
- Christ them save from the power of the fiend."
-
-Sir Raph Austrie, fishmonger, new roofed this church with timber,
-covered it with lead, and beautifully glazed it: he deceased 1494, and
-was there buried with his two wives; Raph Austrie, his son, gentleman;
-William Austrie, and other of that name; Bartrand, wife to Grimond
-Descure, esquire, a Gascoyne and merchant of wines, 1494; Thomas Batson;
-Alice Fowler, daughter and heir to John Howton, wife to John Hulton;
-James Bartlet, and Alice his wife; William Fennor; Roger Cotton;
-Robert Stocker; John Pemberton; Philip de Plasse; John Stapleton; John
-Mortimer; William Lee; William Hamsteed; William Stoksbie, and Gilbert
-March, had chantries there.
-
-Then is the parish church of St. James, called at Garlick hithe, or
-Garlicke hive; for that of old time, on the bank of the river of Thames,
-near to this church, garlick was usually sold. This is a proper church,
-whereof Richard Rothing, one of the sheriffs 1326, is said to be the new
-builder, and lieth buried in the same: so was Waltar Nele, blader, one
-of the sheriffs 1337; John of Oxenford, vintner, mayor 1341. I read, in
-the 1st of Edward III., that this John of Oxenford gave to the priory
-of the Holy Trinity in London two tofts of land, one mill, fifty acres
-of land, two acres of wood, with the appurtenances, in Kentish town, in
-value 20_s._ 3_d._ by year. Richard Goodcheape, John de Cressingham,
-and John Whitthorne, and before them, Galfrid Moncley, 1281, founded a
-chantry there.
-
-Monuments remaining there: Robert Gabeter, esquire, mayor of
-Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 1310; John Gisors; William Tiligham; John Stanley;
-Lord Strange, eldest son of the Earl of Derby, 1503; Nicholas Statham;
-Robert de Luton, 1361; Richard Lions, a famous merchant of wines, and
-a lapidary, sometime one of the sheriffs, beheaded in Cheape by Wat
-Tyler and other rebels in the year 1381; his picture on his gravestone,
-very fair and large, is with his hair rounded by his ears, and curled;
-a little beard forked; a gown, girt to him down to his feet, of
-branched damask, wrought with the likeness of flowers; a large purse
-on his right side, hanging in a belt from his left shoulder; a plain
-hood about his neck covering his shoulders, and hanging back behind
-him. Sir John Wrotch, fishmonger, mayor 1361, deceased 1407; Thomas
-Stonarde, of Oxfordshire; John Bromer, fishmonger, alderman 1474; the
-Lady Stanley, mother to the Lord Strange; the Countess of Huntingdon;
-the Lady Harbert; Sir George Stanley; Gilbert Bovet, 1398; a Countess
-of Worcester, and one of her children; William More, vintner, mayor
-1395; William Venor, grocer, mayor 1389; Robert Chichley, mayor 1421;
-James Spencer, vintner, mayor 1543; Richard Plat, brewer, founded a free
-school there 1601.
-
-And thus an end of Vintry ward, which hath an alderman, with a deputy,
-common councillors nine, constables nine, scavengers four, wardmote
-inquest fourteen, and a beadle. It is taxed to the fifteen[189] at L6
-13_s._ 4_d._
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[187] "In London at thirty-six pound, and in the Exchequer at
-thirty-four pound ten shillings."--_1st edition_, p. 189.
-
-[188] "Having thus much, not without travail and some charges, noted for
-the antiquitie of the Vintners, about two years since or more I repayred
-to the common-hall of that company, and there showed and read it in
-a court of assistance, requiring them, as being one of the principal
-companies in the citie (of whom I meant therefore to write the more at
-large) that if they knew any more which might sound to their worship or
-commendation, at their leisure to send it me, and I would joyne it to
-my former collection; at which time I was answered by some that tooke
-upon them the speech, that they were none of the principall, but of
-the inferior companies; and so willing me to leave them, I departed,
-and never since heard from them, which hath somewhat discouraged me
-any farther to travail amongst the companies to learne ought at their
-handes."--_1st edition_, p. 192.
-
-His comment (in a side note) is equally worth preserving: "The readiest
-to speake not alwaies the wisest men."
-
-[189] "In London at six and thirty pounds, and in the Exchequer at
-thirty-five pounds five shillings."--_1st edition_, p. 195.
-
-
-
-
-CORDWAINER STREET WARD
-
-
-The next is Cordwainer street ward, taking that name of cordwainers, or
-shoemakers, curriers, and workers of leather, dwelling there; for it
-appeareth in the records of Henry VI., the 9th of his reign, that an
-order was taken then for cordwainers and curriers in Corney street and
-Sopars lane.
-
-This ward beginneth in the east, on the west side of Walbrook, and
-turneth west through Budge row (a street so called of the Budge furre,
-and of skinners dwelling there), then up by St. Anthony's church through
-Aetheling (or Noble street), as Leland termeth it, commonly called
-Wathling street, to the Red Lion, a place so called of a great lion
-of timber placed there at a gate, entering a large court, wherein are
-divers fair and large shops, well furnished with broad cloths and other
-draperies of all sorts, to be sold: and this is the farthest west part
-of this ward.
-
-On the south side of this street from Budge row lieth a lane turning
-down by the west gate of the Tower Royal, and to the south end of the
-stone wall beyond the said gate is of this ward, and is accounted a part
-of the Royal street: against this west gate of the Tower Royal is one
-other lane that runneth west to Cordwainer street, and this is called
-Turnebase lane; on the south side whereof is a piece of Wringwren lane,
-to the north-west corner of St. Thomas Church the Apostle. Then again,
-out of the high street called Wathling, is one other street, which
-runneth thwart the same; and this is Cordwainer street, whereof the
-whole ward taketh name. This street beginneth by West Cheape, and St.
-Mary Bow church is the head thereof on the west side, and it runneth
-down south through that part which of later time was called Hosier
-lane, now Bow lane, and then by the west end of Aldmary church to the
-new built houses, in place of Ormond house, and so to Garlicke hill,
-or hithe, to St. James' church. The upper part of this street towards
-Cheape was called Hosier lane, of hosiers dwelling there in place of
-shoemakers; but now those hosiers being worn out by men of other trades
-(as the hosiers had worn out the shoemakers), the same is called Bow
-lane of Bow church. On the west side of Cordewainers street is Basing
-lane, right over against Turnebasse lane. This Basing lane west to the
-back gate of the Red Lion, in Wathling street, is of this Cordwainers
-street ward.
-
-Now again, on the north side of the high street in Budge row, by the
-east end of St. Anthonie's church, have ye St. Sithes lane, so called of
-St. Sithes church (which standeth against the north end of that lane),
-and this is wholly of Cordwainers street ward: also the south side of
-Needlers lane, which reacheth from the north end of St. Sithes lane west
-to Sopar's lane; then west from St. Anthonies church is the south end
-of Sopar's lane, which lane took that name, not of soap-making, as some
-have supposed, but of Alen le Sopar, in the 9th of Edward II. I have not
-read or heard of soap-making in this city till within this fourscore
-years; that John Lame, dwelling in Grasse street, set up a boiling-house
-for this city, of former time, was served of white soap in hard cakes
-(called Castell soap, and other), from beyond the seas, and of grey
-soap,[190] speckled with white, very sweet and good, from Bristow, sold
-here for a penny the pound, and never above a penny farthing, and black
-soap for a halfpenny the pound. Then in Bow lane (as they now call it)
-is Goose lane, by Bow church. William Essex, mercer, had tenements there
-in the 26th of Edward III.
-
-Then from the south end of Bow lane, by Wathling street, till over
-against the Red Lion: and these be the bounds of Cordwainer street ward.
-
-Touching monuments therein, first you have the fair parish church of
-St. Anthonies in Budge row, on the north side thereof. This church
-was lately re-edified by Thomas Knowles, grocer, mayor, and by Thomas
-Knowles, his son, both buried there, with epitaphs, of the father thus:
-
- "Here lieth graven vnder this stone,
- Thomas Knowles, both flesh and bone;
- Grocer and alderman, yeares fortie,
- Shiriffe, and twice maior truly.
- And for he should not lie alone,
- Here lieth with him his good wife Joan.
- They were togither sixtie yeare,
- And ninteene children they had in feere," etc.
-
-Thomas Holland, mercer, was there buried 1456; Thomas Windent, mercer,
-alderman, and Katherine his wife; Thomas Hind, mercer, 1528; he was a
-benefactor to this church, to Aldermarie church, and to Bow; Hugh Acton,
-merchant-tailor, buried 1520; he gave thirty-six pounds to the repairing
-of the steeple of this church. Simon Street, grocer, lieth in the
-church wall toward the south; his arms be three colts, and his epitaph
-thus:
-
- "Such as I am, such shall you be,
- Grocer of London sometime was I,
- The king's wayer more then yeares twentie,
- Simon Streete called in my place,
- And good fellowship faine would trace;
- Therefore in heaven, everlasting life,
- Jesu send me, and Agnes my wife:
- Kerlie Merlie, my words were tho,
- And _Deo gratias_ I coupled thereto:
- I passed to God in the yeare of grace,
- A thousand foure hundred it was," etc.
-
-William Dauntsey, mercer, one of the sheriffs, buried 1542. Henry
-Collet, mercer, mayor, a great benefactor to this church; the pictures
-of him, his wife, ten sons, and ten daughters, remain in the glass
-window on the north side of the church; but the said Henry Collet
-was buried at Stebunhith. Henry Halton, grocer, one of the sheriffs,
-deceased 1415; Thomas Spight, merchant-tailor, 1533; and Roger Martin,
-mercer, mayor, deceased 1573. John Grantham and Nicholas Bull had
-chantries there.
-
-Next on the south side of Budge row, by the west corner thereof, and
-on the east side of Cordwainer street, is one other fair church called
-Aldemarie church, because the same was very old, and elder than any
-church of St. Marie in the city, till of late years the foundation of a
-very fair new church was laid there by Henry Keble, grocer, mayor, who
-deceased 1518, and was there buried in a vault by him prepared, with a
-fair monument raised over him on the north side the choir, now destroyed
-and gone: he gave by his testament one thousand pounds towards the
-building up of that church, and yet not permitted a resting-place for
-his bones there. Thomas Roman, mayor 1310, had a chantry there. Richard
-Chawcer,[191] vintner, gave to that church his tenement and tavern,
-with the appurtenance, in the Royal street, the corner of Kerion lane,
-and was there buried 1348. John Briton; Ralph Holland, draper, one of
-the sheriffs, deceased 1452; William Taylor, grocer, mayor, deceased
-1483: he discharged that ward of fifteens to be paid by the poor. Thomas
-Hinde, mercer, buried in St. Anthonies, gave ten fodder of lead to the
-covering of the middle aisle of this Aldemarie church. Charles Blunt,
-Lord Montjoy, was buried there about the year 1545; he made or glazed
-the east window, as appeareth by his arms: his epitaph, made by him in
-his lifetime, thus:
-
- "Willingly have I fought, and willingly have I found
- The fatall end that wrought thither as dutie bound:
- Discharged I am of that I ought to my country by honest wound,
- My soule departed Christ hath bought, the end of man is ground."
-
-Sir William Laxton, grocer, mayor, deceased 1556, and Thomas Lodge,
-grocer, mayor 1583, were buried in the vault of Henry Keble, whose bones
-were unkindly cast out, and his monument pulled down;[192] in place
-whereof monuments are set up of the later buried. William Blunt, Lord
-Mountjoy, buried there 1594, etc.
-
-At the upper end of Hosier lane, toward Westcheape, is the fair parish
-church of St. Mary Bow. This church, in the reign of William Conqueror,
-being the first in this city built on arches of stone, was therefore
-called New Marie church, of St. Marie de Arcubus,[193] or Le Bow, in
-West Cheaping; as Stratford bridge being the first built (by Matilde the
-queen, wife to Henry I.) with arches of stone, was called Stratford le
-Bow; which names to the said church and bridge remaineth till this day.
-The court of the Arches is kept in this church, and taketh name of the
-place, not the place of the court; but of what antiquity or continuation
-that court hath there continued I cannot learn.
-
-This church is of Cordwainer street ward, and for divers accidents
-happening there, hath been made more famous than any other parish church
-of the whole city or suburbs. First, we read, that in the year 1090, and
-the 3rd of William Rufus, by tempest of wind, the roof of the church of
-St. Marie Bow, in Cheape, was overturned, wherewith some persons were
-slain, and four of the rafters, of twenty-six feet in length, with such
-violence were pitched in the ground of the high street, that scantly
-four feet of them remained above ground, which were fain to be cut even
-with the ground, because they could not be plucked out (for the city of
-London was not then paved, and a marish ground).
-
-In the year 1196, William Fitz Osbert, a seditious tailor, took the
-steeple of Bow, and fortified it with munitions and victuals, but it
-was assaulted, and William with his accomplices were taken, though not
-without bloodshed, for he was forced by fire and smoke to forsake the
-church; and then, by the judges condemned, he was by the heels drawn
-to the Elms in Smithfield, and there hanged with nine of his fellows;
-where, because his favourers came not to deliver him, he forsook Mary's
-son (as he termed Christ our Saviour), and called upon the devil to help
-and deliver him. Such was the end of this deceiver, a man of an evil
-life, a secret murderer, a filthy fornicator, a pollutor of concubines,
-and (amongst other his detestable facts) a false accuser of his elder
-brother,[194] who had in his youth brought him up in learning, and done
-many things for his preferment.
-
-In the year 1271, a great part of the steeple of Bow fell down, and
-slew many people, men and women. In the year 1284, the 13th of Edward
-I., Laurence Ducket, goldsmith, having grievously wounded one Ralph
-Crepin in Westcheape, fled into Bow church; into the which in the night
-time entered certain evil persons, friends unto the said Ralph, and
-slew the said Laurence lying in the steeple, and then hanged him up,
-placing him so by the window as if he had hanged himself, and so was it
-found by inquisition; for the which fact Laurence Ducket, being drawn
-by the feet, was buried in a ditch without the city; but shortly after,
-by relation of a boy, who lay with the said Laurence at the time of
-his death, and had hid him there for fear, the truth of the matter was
-disclosed; for the which cause, Jordan Goodcheape, Ralph Crepin, Gilbert
-Clarke, and Geffrey Clarke, were attainted; a certain woman named Alice,
-that was chief causer of the said mischief, was burnt, and to the number
-of sixteen men were drawn and hanged, besides others that being richer,
-after long imprisonment, were hanged by the purse.
-
-The church was interdicted, the doors and windows were stopped up with
-thorns, but Laurence was taken up, and honestly buried in the churchyard.
-
-The parish church of St. Mary Bow, by mean of incroachment and building
-of houses, wanting room in their churchyard for burial of the dead, John
-Rotham, or Rodham, citizen and tailor, by his testament, dated the year
-1465, gave to the parson and churchwardens a certain garden in Hosier
-lane to be a churchyard, which so continued near a hundred years; but
-now is built on, and is a private man's house. The old steeple of this
-church was by little and little re-edified, and new built up, at the
-least so much as was fallen down, many men giving sums of money to the
-furtherance thereof; so that at length, to wit, in the year 1469, it
-was ordained by a common council that the Bow bell should be nightly
-rung at nine of the clock. Shortly after, John Donne, mercer, by his
-testament, dated 1472, according to the trust of Reginald Longdon, gave
-to the parson and churchwardens of St. Mary Bow two tenements, with the
-appurtenances, since made into one, in Hosier lane, then so called, to
-the maintenance of Bow bell, the same to be rung as aforesaid, and other
-things to be observed, as by the will appeareth.
-
-This bell being usually rung somewhat late, as seemed to the young men
-'prentices, and other in Cheape, they made and set up a rhyme against
-the clerk, as followeth:
-
- "Clarke of the Bow bell with the yellow lockes,
- For thy late ringing thy head shall have knocks."
-
-Whereunto the clerk replying, wrote,
-
- "Children of Cheape, hold you all still,
- For you shall have the Bow bell rung at your will."
-
-Robert Harding, goldsmith, one of the sheriffs 1478, gave to the new
-work of that steeple forty pounds; John Haw, mercer, ten pounds; Doctor
-Allen, four pounds; Thomas Baldry, four pounds, and other gave other
-sums, so that the said work of the steeple was finished in the year
-1512. The arches or bowes thereupon, with the lanthorns, five in number,
-to wit, one at each corner, and one on the top in the middle upon
-the arches, were also afterward finished of stone, brought from Caen
-in Normandy, delivered at the Customers key for 4_s._ 8_d._ the ton;
-William Copland, tailor, the king's merchant, and Andrew Fuller, mercer,
-being churchwardens 1515 and 1516. It is said that this Copland gave the
-great bell, which made the fifth in the ring, to be rung nightly at nine
-of the clock. This bell was first rung as a knell at the burial of the
-same Copland. It appeareth that the lanthorns on the top of this steeple
-were meant to have been glazed, and lights in them placed nightly in
-the winter, whereby travellers to the city might have the better sight
-thereof, and not to miss of their ways.
-
-In this parish also was a grammar school, by commandment of King Henry
-VI., which school was of old time kept in a house for that purpose
-prepared in the churchyard; but that school being decayed, as others
-about this city, the school-house was let out for rent, in the reign of
-Henry VIII., for four shillings the year, a cellar for two shillings the
-year, and two vaults under the church for fifteen shillings both.
-
-The monuments in this church be these; namely, of Sir John Coventrie,
-mercer, mayor 1425; Richard Lambert, alderman; Nicholas Alwine, mercer,
-mayor 1499; Robert Harding, goldsmith, one of the sheriffs 1478; John
-Loke, one of the sheriffs 1461; Edward Bankes, alderman, haberdasher,
-1566; John Warde; William Pierson, scrivener and attorney in the Common
-Pleas. In a proper chapel on the south side the church standeth a tomb,
-elevated and arched.[195] Ade de Buke, hatter, glazed the chapel and
-most part of the church, and was there buried. All other monuments be
-defaced. Hawley and Southam had chantries there.
-
-Without the north side of this church of St. Mary Bow, towards West
-Cheape, standeth one fair building of stone, called in record Seldam,
-a shed, which greatly darkeneth the said church; for by means thereof
-all the windows and doors on that side are stopped up. King Edward III.
-upon occasion, as shall be shown in the ward of Cheape, caused this sild
-or shed to be made, and to be strongly built of stone, for himself, the
-queen, and other estates to stand in, there to behold the joustings and
-other shows at their pleasures. And this house for a long time after
-served to that use, namely, in the reign of Edward III. and Richard II.;
-but in the year 1410, Henry IV., in the 12th of his reign, confirmed the
-said shed or building to Stephen Spilman, William Marchford, and John
-Whateley, mercers, by the name of one New Seldam, shed, or building,
-with shops, cellars, and edifices whatsoever appertaining, called
-Crounsilde, or Tamersilde,[196] situate in the mercery in West Cheape,
-and in the parish of St. Mary de Arcubus in London, etc. Notwithstanding
-which grant, the kings of England, and other great estates, as well
-of foreign countries, repairing to this realm, as inhabitants of the
-same, have usually repaired to this place, therein to behold the shows
-of this city passing through West Cheape, namely, the great watches
-accustomed in the night, on the even of St. John Baptist, and St. Peter
-at Midsummer, the examples whereof were over long to recite, wherefore
-let it suffice briefly to touch one. In the year 1510, on St. John's
-even, at night, King Henry VIII. came to this place, then called the
-King's Head in Cheape, in the livery of a yeoman of the guard, with an
-halbert on his shoulder (and there beholding the watch) departed privily
-when the watch was done, and was not known to any but to whom it pleased
-him; but on St. Peter's night next following, he and the queen came
-royally riding to the said place, and there with their nobles beheld the
-watch of the city, and returned in the morning.
-
-This church of St. Mary, with the said shed of stone, all the housing
-in or about Bow church yard, and without on that side the high street
-of Cheape to the Standard, be of Cordewainer street ward. These houses
-were of old time but sheds; for I read of no housing otherwise on that
-side the street, but of divers sheds from Sopar's lane to the Standard,
-etc. Amongst other, I read of three shops or sheds by Sopar's lane,
-pertaining to the priory of the Holy Trinity within Aldgate; the one
-was let out for twenty-eight shillings, one other for twenty shillings,
-and the third for twelve shillings, by the year. Moreover, that Richard
-Goodchepe, mercer, and Margery his wife, son to Jordaine Goodchepe, did
-let to John Dalinges the younger, mercer, their shed and chamber in West
-Cheape, in the parish of St. Mary de Arches for three shillings and four
-pence by the year. Also the men of Bread street ward contended with
-the men of Cordwayner street ward for a seld or shed opposite to the
-Standard, on the south side, and it was found to be of Cordwayner street
-ward; W. Waldorne being then mayor, the 1st of Henry VI. Thus much for
-Cordwainer street ward; which hath an alderman, his deputy, common
-councillors eight, constables eight, scavengers eight, wardmote inquest
-men fourteen, and a beadle. It standeth taxed to the fifteen in London
-at L52 16_s._, in the Exchequer at L52 6_s._[197]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[190] "Gray sope made in London dearer than bought from
-Bristol."--_Stow._
-
-[191] "Richard Chaucer, father to Geffrey Chaucer, the poet, as may be
-supposed."--_Stow._
-
-[192] "Sir William Laxton, grocer, mayor, deceased 1556, was buried in
-the vault prepared by Henry Keble, principall founder of that church,
-for himself, but now his bones are unkindly cast out, his monuments
-pulled downe, and the bodies of the said Sir William Laxton, and of Sir
-Thomas Lodge, grocer, mayor, are laid in place, with monuments over them
-for the time, till an other give money for their place, and then away
-with them."--_1st edition_, p. 199.
-
-[193] "Called _de Arcubus_ of the stone arches or bowes on the top of
-the steeple or bell tower thereof, which arching was as well on the old
-steeple as on the new, for no other part of the church seemeth to have
-been arched at any time; yet hath the said church never been knowne by
-any other name than St. Mary Bow, or le Bow; neither is that church so
-called of the court there kept, but the said court taketh name of the
-place wherein it is kept, and is called the Court of Arches."--_1st
-edition_, p. 203.
-
-[194] "A false accuser of his elder brother, in the end was
-hanged."--_Stow._
-
-In his first edition, p. 203, this note is continued as follows: "God
-amend, or shortly send such an end to such false brethren."
-
-[195] "Of some unknowne founder."--_1st edition_, p. 205.
-
-[196] "And in the 8th of the same Henry called Tamarsilde."--_1st
-edition_, p. 206.
-
-[197] "In London at L72 16_s._, in the Exchequer at L72."--_1st
-edition_, p. 207.
-
-
-
-
-CHEAPE WARD
-
-
-Next adjoining is Cheape ward, and taketh name of the market there kept,
-called West Cheping. This ward also beginneth in the east, on the course
-of Walbrooke in Buckles bury, and runneth up on both the sides to the
-great conduit in Cheape. Also on the south side of Buckles bury, a lane
-turning up by St. Sithes church, and by St. Pancrates church, through
-Needler's lane, on the north side thereof, and then through a piece of
-Sopar's lane, on both sides up to Cheape, be all of Cheape ward.
-
-Then to begin again in the east upon the said course of Walbrooke,
-is St. Mildred's church in the Poultrie, on the north side, and over
-against the said church gate, on the south, to pass up all that high
-street called the Poultrie, to the great conduit in Cheape, and then
-Cheape itself, which beginneth by the east end of the said conduit, and
-stretcheth up to the north-east corner of Bow lane on the south side,
-and to the Standard on the north side; and thus far to the west is of
-Cheape ward.
-
-On the south side of this high street is no lane turning south out of
-this ward, more than some portion of Sopar's lane, whereof I have before
-written. But on the north side of this high street is Conyhope lane,
-about one quarter of Old Jury lane on the west side, and on the east
-side almost as much, to the sign of the Angel. Then is Ironmonger's
-lane, all wholly on both sides, and from the north end thereof through
-Catton street, west to the north end of St. Lawrence lane, and some four
-houses west beyond the same on that side, and over against Ironmonger's
-lane end on the north side of Catton street up by the Guildhall and St.
-Lawrence church in the Jurie, is altogether of Cheape ward. Then again
-in Cheape, more towards the west, is of St. Lawrence lane before named,
-which is all wholly of this ward. And last of all is Hony lane, and up
-to the Standard on the north side of Cheape. And so stand the bounds of
-Cheape ward.
-
-Now for antiquities there. First is Buckles bury, so called of a manor
-and tenements pertaining to one Buckle, who there dwelt and kept his
-courts. This manor is supposed to be the great stone building, yet in
-part remaining on the south side of the street, which of late time hath
-been called the Old Barge, of such a sign hanged out near the gate
-thereof. This manor or great house hath of long time been divided and
-letten out into many tenements; and it hath been a common speech, that
-when Walbrooke did lie open, barges were rowed out of the Thames, or
-towed up so far, and therefore the place hath ever since been called the
-Old Barge.
-
-Also on the north side of this street, directly over against the said
-Buckles bury, was one ancient and strong tower of stone, the which
-tower King Edward III., in the 18th of his reign, by the name of the
-king's house, called Cornette stoure in London, did appoint to be his
-Exchange of money there to be kept. In the 29th he granted it to Frydus
-Guynysane and Landus Bardoile, merchants of Luke, for twenty pounds the
-year. And in the 32nd he gave the same tower to his college or free
-chapel of St. Stephen at Westminster, by the name of Cernet's Tower at
-Buckles bury in London. This tower of late years was taken down by one
-Buckle, a grocer, meaning in place thereof to have set up and built a
-goodly frame of timber; but the said Buckle greedily labouring to pull
-down the old tower, a part thereof fell upon him, which so sore bruised
-him that his life was thereby shortened, and another that married his
-widow set up the new prepared frame of timber, and finished the work.
-
-This whole street called Buckles bury on both the sides throughout is
-possessed of grocers and apothecaries towards the west end thereof: on
-the south side breaketh out one other short lane, called in records
-Peneritch street; it reacheth but to St. Sythe's lane, and St. Sythe's
-church is the farthest part thereof, for by the west end of the said
-church beginneth Needlar's lane, which reacheth to Sopar's lane, as is
-aforesaid. This small parish church of St. Sith hath also an addition of
-Bennet shorne (or Shrog or Shorehog), for by all these names have I read
-it, but the most ancient is Shorne, wherefore it seemeth to take that
-name of one Benedict Shorne, sometime a citizen and stock-fishmonger of
-London, a new builder, repairer, or benefactor thereof, in the reign
-of Edward II., so that Shorne is but corruptly called Shrog, and more
-corruptly Shorehog.
-
-There lie buried in this church, John Froysh, mercer, mayor 1394; John
-Rochford and Robert Rochford; John Hold, alderman: Henry Froweke,
-mercer, mayor 1435; Edward Warrington; John Morrice; John Huntley;
-Richard Lincoln, fellmonger, 1546; Sir Ralph Warren, mercer, mayor
-1553; Sir John Lion, grocer, mayor 1554: these two last have monuments,
-the rest are all defaced. Edward Hall, gentleman of Greyes inn, common
-sergeant of this city, and then under-sheriff of the same; he wrote the
-large chronicles from Richard II. till the end of Henry VIII., and was
-buried in this church.
-
-Then in Needelars lane have ye the parish church of St. Pancrate, a
-proper small church, but divers rich parishioners therein, and hath had
-of old time many liberal benefactors, but of late such as (not regarding
-the order taken by her majesty), the least bell in their church being
-broken, have rather sold the same[198] for half the value than put the
-parish to charge with new casting; late experience hath proved this to
-be true, besides the spoil of monuments there. In this church are buried
-Sir Aker; John Aker; John Barens, mercer, mayor 1370; John Beston and
-his wife; Robert Rayland; John Hamber; John Gage; John Rowley; John
-Lambe; John Hadley, grocer, mayor 1379; Richard Gardener, mercer, mayor
-1478; John Stockton, mercer, mayor 1470; John Dane, mercer; John Parker;
-Robert Marshall, alderman, 1439; Robert Corcheforde; Robert Hatfielde;
-and Robert Hatfield; Nicholas Wilfilde, and Thomas his son; the
-monuments of all which be defaced and gone. There do remain of Robert
-Burley, 1360; Richard Wilson, 1525; Robert Packenton, mercer, slain with
-a gun shot at him in a morning,[199] as he was going to morrow mass
-from his house in Cheape to St. Thomas of Acars, in the year 1536; the
-murderer was never discovered, but by his own confession made when he
-came to the gallows at Banbury to be hanged for felony; T. Wardbury,
-haberdasher, 1545; James Huish, grocer, 1590; Ambrose Smith, etc. Then
-is a part of Soper's lane turning up to Cheape.
-
-By the assent of Stephen Abunden, mayor, the Pepperers in Soper's lane
-were admitted to sell all such spices and other wares as grocers now use
-to sell, retaining the old name of pepperers in Soper's lane, till at
-length, in the reign of Henry VI., the same Soper's lane was inhabited
-by cordwainers and curriers, after that the pepperers or grocers had
-seated themselves in a more open street, to wit, in Buckles bury, where
-they yet remain. Thus much for the south wing of Cheape ward.
-
-Now to begin again on the bank of the said Walbrooke, at the east end
-of the high street called the Poultrie, on the north side thereof, is
-the proper parish church of St. Mildred, which church was new built upon
-Walbrooke in the year 1457. John Saxton their parson gave thirty-two
-pounds towards the building of the new choir, which now standeth upon
-the course of Walbrooke. Lovell and Puery, and Richard Keston, have
-their arms in the east window as benefactors. The roofing of that
-church is garnished with the arms of Thomas Archehull, one of the
-churchwardens in the year 1455, who was there buried; Thomas Morsted,
-esquire, and chirurgeon to King Henry IV., V., and VI., one of the
-sheriff's of London in the year 1436, gave unto this church a parcel
-of ground, containing in length from the course of Walbrooke toward the
-west forty-five feet, and in breadth from the church toward the north
-thirty-five feet, being within the gate called Scalding wike, in the
-said parish, to make a churchyard wherein to bury their dead. Richard
-Shore, draper, one of the sheriffs 1505, gave fifteen pounds for making
-a porch to this church. Salomon Lanuare had a chantry there in the 14th
-of Edward II. Hugh Game had one other. Buried here, as appeareth by
-monuments, John Hildye, poulter, 1416; John Kendall, 1468; John Garland,
-1476; Robert Bois, 1485, and Simon Lee, poulters, 1487; Thomas Lee of
-Essex, gentleman: William Hallingridge; Christopher Feliocke, 1494;
-Robert Draiton, skinner, 1484; John Christopherson, doctor of physic,
-1524; William Turner, skinner, 1536; Blase White, grocer, 1558; Thomas
-Hobson, haberdasher, 1559; William Hobson, haberdasher, 1581; Thomas
-Tusser, 1580, with this epitaph:--
-
- "Here Thomas Tusser, clad in earth, doth lie,
- That sometime made the Poyntes of Husbandrie;
- By him then learne thou maist, here learne we must,
- When all is done we sleepe and turne to dust,
- And yet through Christ to heaven we hope to go,
- Who reades his bookes shall find his faith was so."
-
-On the north side of the churchyard remain two tombs of marble, but not
-known of whom, or otherwise than by tradition it is said, they were of
-Thomas Monshampe and William, brothers, about 1547, etc.
-
-Some four houses west from this parish church of St. Mildred is a prison
-house pertaining to one of the sheriffs of London, and is called the
-Compter in the Poultrie. This hath been there kept and continued time
-out of mind, for I have not read of the original thereof. West from
-this compter was a proper chapel, called of Corpus Christi, and St.
-Mary, at Conyhope lane end, in the parish of St. Mildred, founded by one
-named Ion. Irunnes, a citizen of London, in the reign of Edward III.,
-in which chapel was a guild or fraternity, that might dispend in lands
-better than twenty pounds by year: it was suppressed by Henry VIII., and
-purchased by one Thomas Hobson, haberdasher; he turned this chapel into
-a fair warehouse and shops towards the street, with lodgings over them.
-
-Then is Conyhope lane, of old time so called of such a sign of three
-conies hanging over a poulterer's stall at the lane's end. Within this
-lane standeth the Grocers' hall, which company being of old time called
-Pepperers, were first incorporated by the name of Grocers in the year
-1345, at which time they elected for custos, or guardian, of their
-fraternity, Richard Oswin and Laurence Haliwell, and twenty brethren
-were then taken in to be of their society. In the year 1411, the custos,
-or guardian, and the brethren of this company, purchased of the Lord Ro.
-Fitzwaters one plot of ground, with the building thereupon, in the said
-Conyhope lane, for three hundred and twenty marks, and then laid the
-foundation of their new common hall.
-
-About the year 1429, the Grocers had license to purchase five hundred
-marks land, since the which time, near adjoining unto the Grocers'
-hall, the said company had built seven proper houses for seven aged
-poor alms people. Thomas Knowles, grocer, mayor, gave his tenement in
-St. Anthonie's churchyard to the Grocers, towards the relief of the
-poor brethren in that company. Also H. Keeble, grocer, mayor, gave to
-the seven alms people six pence the piece weekly forever; which pension
-is now increased by the masters, to some of them two shillings the
-piece weekly, and to some of them less, etc. Henry Adie, grocer, 1563,
-gave one thousand marks to the Grocers to purchase lands. And Sir John
-Pechie, knight banneret, free of that company, gave them five hundred
-pounds to certain uses; he built alms houses at Ludingstone in Kent, and
-was there buried.
-
-West from this Conyhope lane is the Old Jurie, whereof some portion is
-of Cheape ward, as afore is showed: at the south end of this lane is the
-parish church of St. Mary Colechurch, named of one Cole that built it;
-this church is built upon a wall above ground, so that men are forced
-to go to ascend up thereunto by certain steps. I find no monuments of
-this church, more than that Henry IV. granted license to William Marshal
-and others, to found a brotherhood of St. Katherine therein, because
-Thomas Becket, and St. Edmond, the archbishop, were baptized there.
-More, I read of Bordhangly lane, to be in that parish. And thus much for
-the north side of the Poultrie. The south side of the said Poultrie,
-beginning on the bank of the said brook over against the parish church
-of St. Mildred, passing up to the great conduit, hath divers fair
-houses, which were sometimes inhabited by poulters, but now by grocers,
-haberdashers, and upholsters.
-
-At the west end of this Poultrie, and also of Buckles bury, beginneth
-the large street of West Cheaping, a market place so called, which
-street stretcheth west till ye come to the little conduit by Paul's
-gate, but not all of Chepe ward. In the east part of this street
-standeth the great conduit of sweet water, conveyed by pipes of
-lead under ground from Paddington[200] for the service of this city,
-castellated with stone, and cisterned in lead, about the year 1285, and
-again new built and enlarged by Thomas Ilam, one of the sheriffs 1479.
-
-About the midst of this street is the Standard in Cheape, of what
-antiquity the first foundation I have not read. But Henry VI. by
-his patent dated at Windsor the 21st of his reign, which patent was
-confirmed by parliament 1442, granted license to Thomas Knolles, John
-Chichle, and other, executors to John Wels, grocer, sometime mayor
-of London, with his goods to make new the highway which leadeth from
-the city of London towards the palace of Westminster, before and nigh
-the manor of Savoy, parcel of the Duchy of Lancaster, a way then very
-ruinous, and the pavement broken, to the hurt and mischief of the
-subjects, which old pavement then remaining in that way within the
-length of five hundred feet, and all the breadth of the same before and
-nigh the site of the manor aforesaid, they to break up, and with stone,
-gravel, and other stuff, one other good and sufficient way there to make
-for the commodity of the subjects.
-
-And further, that the Standard in Cheape, where divers executions of the
-law before time had been performed, which Standard at the present was
-very ruinous with age, in which there was a conduit, should be taken
-down, and another competent standard of stone, together with a conduit
-in the same of new, strongly to be built, for the commodity and honour
-of the city, with the goods of the said testator, without interruption,
-etc.
-
-Of executions at the Standard in Cheape, we read, that in the year
-1293 three men had their right hands smitten off there, for rescuing
-of a prisoner arrested by an officer of the city. In the year 1326,
-the burgesses of London caused Walter Stapleton, Bishop of Excester,
-treasurer to Edward II., and other, to be beheaded at the standard in
-Cheape (but this was by Paul's gate); in the year 1351, the 26th of
-Edward III., two fishmongers were beheaded at the standard in Cheape,
-but I read not of their offence; 1381, Wat Tyler beheaded Richard Lions
-and other there. In the year 1399, Henry IV. caused the blanch charters
-made by Richard II. to be burnt there. In the year 1450, Jack Cade,
-captain of the Kentish rebels, beheaded the Lord Say there. In the
-year 1461, John Davy had his hand stricken off there, because he had
-stricken a man before the judges at Westminster, etc.
-
-Then next is a great cross in West Cheape, which cross was there erected
-in the year 1290 by Edward I. upon occasion thus:--Queen Elianor his
-wife died at Hardeby (a town near unto the city of Lincoln), her body
-was brought from thence to Westminster; and the king, in memory of her,
-caused in every place where her body rested in the way, a stately cross
-of stone to be erected, with the queen's image and arms upon it, as at
-Grantham, Woborne, Northampton, Stony Stratford, Dunstable, St. Albones,
-Waltham, West Cheape, and at Charing, from whence she was conveyed to
-Westminster, and there buried.
-
-This cross in West Cheape being like to those other which remain to
-this day, and being by length of time decayed, John Hatherly, mayor
-of London, procured, in the year 1441, license of King Henry VI. to
-re-edify the same in more beautiful manner for the honour of the city,
-and had license also to take up two hundred fodder of lead for the
-building thereof of certain conduits, and a common garnery. This cross
-was then curiously wrought at the charges of divers citizens: John
-Fisher, mercer, gave six hundred marks toward it; the same was begun to
-be set up 1484, and finished 1486, the 2nd of Henry VII. It was new gilt
-over in the year 1522, against the coming of Charles V., emperor; in
-the year 1553, against the coronation of Queen Anne;[201] new burnished
-against the coronation of Edward VI.; and again new gilt 1554, against
-the coming in of King Philip; since the which time the said cross having
-been presented by divers juries (or inquests of wardmote) to stand in
-the high way to the let of carriages (as they alleged), but could not
-have it removed, it followed that in the year 1581, the 21st of June,
-in the night, the lowest images round about the said cross (being of
-Christ's resurrection, of the Virgin Mary, King Edward the Confessor,
-and such like) were broken and defaced, proclamation was made, that
-who so would bewray the doers, should have forty crowns, but nothing
-came to light; the image of the Blessed Virgin, at that time robbed of
-her Son, and her arms broken, by which she stayed him on her knees;
-her whole body also was haled with ropes, and left likely to fall,
-but in the year 1595 was again fastened and repaired; and in the year
-next following a new misshapen son, as born out of time, all naked, was
-laid in her arms, the other images remaining broke as afore. But on the
-east side of the same cross, the steps taken thence, under the image
-of Christ's resurrection defaced, was then set up a curiously wrought
-tabernacle of grey marble, and in the same an image alabaster of Diana,
-and water conveyed from the Thames prilling from her naked breast for a
-time, but now decayed.
-
-In the year 1599, the timber of the cross at the top being rotted
-within the lead, the arms thereof bending, were feared to have fallen
-to the harming of some people, and therefore the whole body of the
-cross was scaffolded about, and the top thereof taken down, meaning
-in place thereof to have set up a piramis; but some of her majesty's
-honourable councillors directed their letters to Sir Nicholas Mosley,
-then mayor, by her highness' express commandment concerning the cross,
-forthwith to be repaired, and placed again as it formerly stood, etc.;
-notwithstanding the said cross stood headless more than a year after:
-whereupon the said councillors, in greater number, meaning not any
-longer to permit the continuance of such a contempt, wrote to William
-Rider, then mayor, requiring him, by virtue of her highness' said former
-direction and commandment, that without any further delay to accomplish
-the same her majesty's most princely care therein, respecting especially
-the antiquity and continuance of that monument, an ancient ensign of
-Christianity, etc. Dated the 24th of December, 1600. After this a cross
-of timber was framed, set up, covered with lead, and gilded, the body of
-the cross downward cleansed of dust, the scaffold carried thence. About
-twelve nights following, the image of Our Lady was again defaced, by
-plucking off her crown, and almost her head, taking from her her naked
-child, and stabbing her in the breast, etc. Thus much for the cross in
-West Cheape.
-
-Then at the west end of West Cheape street, was sometime a cross of
-stone, called the Old Cross. Raph Higden, in his _Policronicon_, saith,
-that Waltar Stapleton, Bishop of Excester, treasurer to Edward II., was
-by the burgesses of London beheaded at this cross called the Standard,
-without the north door of St. Paul's church; and so is it noted in other
-writers that then lived. This old cross stood and remained at the east
-end of the parish church called St. Michael in the corner by Paule's
-gate, near to the north end of the old Exchange, till the year 1390, the
-13th of Richard II., in place of which old cross then taken down, the
-said church of St. Michael was enlarged, and also a fair water conduit
-built about the 9th of Henry VI.
-
-In the reign of Edward III. divers joustings were made in this street,
-betwixt Sopar's lane and the great cross, namely, one in the year 1331,
-the 21st of September, as I find noted by divers writers of that time.
-In the middle of the city of London (say they), in a street called
-Cheape, the stone pavement being covered with sand, that the horses
-might not slide when they strongly set their feet to the ground, the
-king held a tournament three days together, with the nobility, valiant
-men of the realm, and other some strange knights. And to the end the
-beholders might with the better ease see the same, there was a wooden
-scaffold erected across the street, like unto a tower, wherein Queen
-Philippa, and many other ladies, richly attired, and assembled from
-all parts of the realm, did stand to behold the jousts; but the higher
-frame, in which the ladies were placed, brake in sunder, whereby they
-were with some shame forced to fall down, by reason whereof the knights,
-and such as were underneath, were grievously hurt; wherefore the queen
-took great care to save the carpenters from punishment, and through her
-prayers (which she made upon her knees) pacified the king and council,
-and thereby purchased great love of the people. After which time the
-king caused a shed to be strongly made of stone, for himself, the queen,
-and other estates to stand on, and there to behold the joustings, and
-other shows, at their pleasure, by the church of St. Mary Bow, as is
-showed in Cordwainer street ward. Thus much for the high street of
-Cheape.
-
-Now let us return to the south side of Cheape ward. From the great
-conduit west be many fair and large houses, for the most part possessed
-of mercers up to the corner of Cordwainer street, corruptly called
-Bow lane, which houses in former times were but sheds or shops, with
-solers[202] over them, as of late one of them remained at Sopar's lane
-end, wherein a woman sold seeds, roots, and herbs; but those sheds or
-shops, by encroachments on the high street, are now largely built on
-both sides outward, and also upward, some three, four, or five stories
-high.
-
-Now of the north side of Cheape street and ward, beginning at the great
-conduit, and by St. Mary Cole church, where we left. Next thereunto
-westward is the Mercers' chapel, sometime an hospital, intituled of
-St. Thomas of Acon, or Acars, for a master and brethren, "_Militia
-hospitalis_," etc., saith the record of Edward III., the 14th year; it
-was founded by Thomas Fitzthebald de Heili, and Agnes his wife, sister
-to Thomas Becket, in the reign of Henry II.; they gave to the master
-and brethren the lands, with the appurtenances that sometimes were
-Gilbart Becket's, father to the said Thomas, in the which he was born,
-there to make a church. There was a charnel, and a chapel over it, of
-St. Nicholas and St. Stephen. This hospital was valued to dispend L277
-3_s._ 4_d._, surrendered the 30th of Henry VIII.: the 21st of October,
-and was since purchased by the Mercers, by means of Sir Richard Gresham,
-and was again set open on the eve of St. Michael, 1541, the 33rd of
-Henry VIII.: it is now called the Mercers' chapel; therein is kept a
-free grammar school, as of old time had been accustomed, commanded by
-parliament.[203] Here be many monuments remaining, but more have been
-defaced:--James Butler, Earl of Ormond, and Dame Joan his countess,
-1428; John Norton, esquire; Stephen Cavendish, draper, mayor 1362;
-Thomas Cavendish; William Cavendish; Thomas Ganon, called Pike, one
-of the sheriffs 1410; Hungate, of Yorkshire; Ambrose Cresacre; John
-Chester, draper; John Trusbut, mercer, 1437; Tho. Norland, sheriff 1483;
-Sir Edmond Sha, goldsmith, mayor 1482; Sir Thomas Hill, mayor 1485;
-Thomas Ilam, sheriff 1479;[204] Lancelot Laken, esquire; Raph Tilney,
-sheriff 1488; Garth, esquire; John Rich; Thomas Butler, Earl of Ormond,
-1515; Sir W. Butler, grocer, mayor 1515; W. Browne, mercer, mayor 1513;
-John Loke, 1519;[205] Sir T. Baldry, mercer, mayor 1523; Sir W. Locke,
-mercer, sheriff 1548; Sir John Allen, mercer, mayor 1525, deceased 1544;
-Sir Thomas Leigh, mercer, mayor 1558; Sir Richard Malory, mercer, mayor
-1564; Humf. Baskervile, mercer, sheriff 1561; Sir G. Bond, mayor 1587;
-etc.
-
-Before this hospital, towards the street, was built a fair and beautiful
-chapel, arched over with stone, and thereupon the Mercers' hall, a most
-curious piece of work; Sir John Allen, mercer, being founder of that
-chapel, was there buried; but since his tomb is removed thence into the
-body of the hospital church, and his chapel, divided into shops, is
-letten out for rent.
-
-These Mercers were enabled to be a company, and to purchase lands to
-the value of twenty pounds the year, the 17th of Richard II.; they
-had three messuages and shops in the parish of St. Martin Oteswitch,
-in the ward of Bishopsgate, for the sustentation of the poor, and a
-chantry of the 22nd of Richard II. Henry IV., in the 12th of his reign,
-confirmed to Stephen Spilman, W. Marchford, and John Whatile, mercers,
-by the name of one new seldam, shed, or building, with shops, cellars,
-and edifices whatsoever appertaining called Crownsild, situate in the
-Mercery in West Cheape, in the parish of St. Mary de Arcubus in London,
-etc., to be holden in burgage, as all the city of London is, and which
-were worth by year in all issues, according to the true value of them,
-L7 13_s._ 4_d._, as found by inquisition before T. Knolles, mayor, and
-escheator in the said city. Henry VI., in the 3rd of his reign, at the
-request of John Coventrie, John Carpenter, and William Grove, granted
-to the Mercers to have a chaplain and a brotherhood, for relief of such
-of their company as came to decay by misfortune on the sea. In the year
-1536, on St. Peter's night, King Henry VIII. and Queen Jane his wife,
-stood in this Mercers' hall, then new built, and beheld the marching
-watch of this city most bravely set out, Sir John Allen, mercer, one of
-the king's council, being mayor.
-
-Next beyond the Mercers' chapel, and their hall, is Ironmonger lane, so
-called of ironmongers dwelling there, whereof I read, in the reign of
-Edward I., etc. In this lane is the small parish church of St. Martin
-called Pomary, upon what occasion I certainly know not. It is supposed
-to be of apples growing where houses are now lately built; for myself
-have seen large void places there. Monuments in that church none to be
-accounted of.
-
-Farther west is St. Laurence lane, so called of St. Laurence church,
-which standeth directly over against the north end thereof. Antiquities
-in this lane I find none other, than that among many fair houses, there
-is one large inn for receipt of travellers called Blossoms inn, but
-corruptly Bosoms inn, and hath to sign St. Laurence the Deacon, in a
-border of blossoms or flowers.
-
-Then near to the Standard in Cheape is Honey lane, so called, not of
-sweetness thereof, being very narrow, and somewhat dark, but rather of
-often washing and sweeping, to keep it clean. In this lane is the small
-parish church called Alhallows in Honey lane; there be no monuments in
-this church worth the noting. I find that John Norman, draper, mayor
-1453, was buried there; he gave to the Drapers his tenements on the
-north side the said church, they to allow for the beam light and lamp,
-13_s._ 4_d._ yearly from this lane to the Standard. And thus much for
-Cheape ward in the high street of Cheape, for it stretcheth no farther.
-
-Now for the north wing of Cheape ward have ye Catte street, corruptly
-called Catteten street, which beginneth at the north end of Ironmonger
-lane, and runneth to the west end of St. Lawrence church, as is afore
-showed.
-
-On the north side of the street is the Guildhall, wherein the courts
-for the city be kept, namely, 1. The court of common council; 2. The
-court of the lord mayor and his brethren the aldermen; 3. The court
-of hustings; 4. The court of orphans; 5. The court of the sheriff; 6.
-The court of the wardmote; 7. The court of hallmote; 8. The court of
-requests, commonly called the court of conscience; 9. The chamberlain's
-court for apprentices, and making them free. This Guildhall, saith
-Robert Fabian, was begun to be built new in the year 1411, the 12th of
-Henry IV., by Thomas Knoles, then mayor, and his brethren the aldermen:
-the same was made, of a little cottage, a large and great house, as
-now it standeth; towards the charges whereof the companies gave large
-benevolences; also offences of men were pardoned for sums of money
-towards this work, extraordinary fees were raised, fines, amercements,
-and other things employed during seven years, with a continuation
-thereof three years more, all to be employed to this building.
-
-The 1st year of Henry VI., John Coventrie and John Carpenter, executors
-to Richard Whitington, gave towards the paving of this great hall twenty
-pounds, and the next year fifteen pounds more, to the said pavement,
-with hard stone of Purbeck; they also glazed some windows thereof,
-and of the mayor's court; on every which windows the arms of Richard
-Whitington are placed. The foundation of the mayor's court was laid in
-the 3rd year of the reign of Henry VI., and of the porch on the south
-side of the mayor's court, in the 4th of the said king. Then was built
-the mayor's chamber, and the council chamber, with other rooms above the
-stairs; last of all a stately porch entering the great hall was erected,
-the front thereof towards the south being beautified with images of
-stone, such as is showed by these verses following, made about some
-thirty years since by William Elderton, at that time an attorney in the
-sheriffs' courts there:--
-
- "Though most of the images be pulled down,
- And none be thought remayne in towne,
- I am sure there be in London yet,
- Seven images in such and in such a place;
- And few or none I think will hit,
- Yet every day they show their face,
- And thousands see them every year,
- But few I thinke can tell me where,
- Where Jesu Christ aloft doth stand:
- Law and Learning on eyther hand,
- Discipline in the Devil's necke,
- And hard by her are three direct,
- There Justice, Fortitude, and Temperance stand,
- Where find ye the like in all this land?"
-
-Divers aldermen glazed the great hall and other courts, as appeareth
-by their arms in each window. William Hariot, draper, mayor 1481, gave
-forty pounds to the making of two loovers in the said Guildhall, and
-towards the glazing thereof. The kitchens and other houses of office
-adjoining to this Guildhall, were built of later time, to wit, about
-the year 1501, by procurement of Sir John Sha, goldsmith, mayor (who
-was the first that kept his feast there); towards the charges of
-which work the mayor had of the fellowships of the city, by their own
-agreement, certain sums of money, as of the Mercers forty pounds, the
-Grocers twenty pounds, the Drapers thirty pounds, and so of the other
-fellowships through the city, as they were of power. Also widows and
-other well-disposed persons gave certain sums of money, as the Lady
-Hill ten pounds, the Lady Austrie ten pounds, and so of many other,
-till the work was finished, since the which time the mayor's feasts
-have been yearly kept there, which before time had been kept in the
-Tailors' hall, and in the Grocers' hall. Nicholas Alwyn, grocer, mayor
-1499, deceased 1505, gave by his testament for a hanging of tapestry,
-to serve for principal days in the Guildhall, L73 6_s._ 8_d._ How this
-gift was performed I have not heard, for executors of our time having no
-conscience (I speak of my own knowledge) prove more testaments than they
-perform.
-
-Now for the chapel or college of our Lady Mary Magdalen, and of All
-Saints, by the Guildhall, called London college, I read that the same
-was built about the year 1299, and that Peter Fanelore, Adam Frauncis,
-and Henry Frowike, citizens, gave one messuage, with the appurtenances,
-in the parish of St. Fawstar, to William Brampton, custos of the
-chantry, by them founded in the said chapel with four chaplains, and one
-other house in the parish of St. Giles without Cripplegate, in the 27th
-of Edward III., was given to them. Moreover, I find that Richard II., in
-the 20th of his reign, granted to Stephen Spilman, mercer, license to
-give one messuage, three shops, and one garden, with the appurtenances,
-being in the parish of St. Andrew Hubbard, to the custos and chaplains
-of the said chapel, and to their successors, for their better relief and
-maintenance for ever.
-
-King Henry VI., in the 8th of his reign, gave license to John Barnard,
-custos, and the chaplains, to build of new the said chapel or college of
-Guildhall: and the same Henry VI., in the 27th of his reign, granted to
-the parish clerks in London a guild of St. Nicholas, for two chaplains
-by them to be kept in the said chapel of St. Mary Magdalen, near unto
-the Guildhall, and to keep seven alms people. Henry Barton, skinner,
-mayor, founded a chaplaincy there; Roger Depham, mercer, and Sir William
-Langford, knight, had also chaplaincies there. This chapel or college
-had a custos, seven chaplains, three clerks, and four choristers.
-
-Monuments there have been sundry, as appeareth by the tombs of marble
-yet remaining, seven in number, but all defaced. The uppermost in the
-choir, on the south side thereof, above the revestry door, was the tomb
-of John Wells, grocer, mayor 1451. The likeness of Wells are graven
-on the tomb on the revestry door, and other places on that side the
-choir. Also in the glass window over this tomb, and in the east window,
-is the likeness of Wells, with hands elevated out of the same Wells,
-holding scrolls, wherein is written "Mercy!"--the writing in the east
-window being broken, yet remaineth Wells. I found his arms also in the
-south glass window; all which do show that the east end and south side
-the choir of this chapel, and the revestry, were by him both built
-and glazed. On the north side the choir the tomb of Thomas Knesworth,
-fishmonger, mayor 1505, who deceased 1515, was defaced, and within these
-forty-four years again renewed by the Fishmongers. Two other tombs lower
-there are; the one of a draper, the other of a haberdasher, their names
-not known. Richard Stomine is written in the window by the haberdasher.
-Under flat stones do lie divers custos of the chapel, chaplains and
-officers to the chamber. Amongst others, John Clipstone, priest,
-sometime custos of the library of the Guildhall, 1457; another of Edmond
-Alison, priest, one of the custos of the library, 1510, etc. Sir John
-Langley, goldsmith, mayor 1576, lieth buried in the vault, under the
-tomb of John Wells before-named. This chapel, or college, valued to
-dispend L15 8_s._ 9_d._ by the year, was surrendered amongst other: the
-chapel remaineth to the mayor and commonalty, wherein they have service
-weekly, as also at the election of the mayor, and at the mayor's feast,
-etc.
-
-Adjoining to this chapel, on the south side, was sometime a fair and
-large library, furnished with books, pertaining to the Guildhall and
-college. These books, as it is said, were in the reign of Edward VI.
-sent for by Edward, Duke of Somerset, lord protector, with promise to
-be restored: men laded from thence three carries with them, but they
-were never returned. This library was built by the executors of Richard
-Whittington, and by William Burie: the arms of Whittington are placed on
-the one side in the stone work, and two letters, to wit, W. and B., for
-William Bury, on the other side: it is now lofted through, and made a
-storehouse for clothes.
-
-South-west from this Guildhall is the fair parish church of St.
-Laurence, called in the Jury, because of old time[206] many Jews
-inhabited thereabout. This church is fair and large, and hath some
-monuments, as shall be shown. I myself, more than seventy years
-since,[207] have seen in this church the shank-bone of a man (as it
-is taken), and also a tooth,[208] of a very great bigness, hanged up
-for show in chains of iron, upon a pillar of stone; the tooth (being
-about the bigness of a man's fist) is long since conveyed from thence:
-the thigh, or shank-bone, of twenty-five inches in length by the rule,
-remaineth yet fastened to a post of timber, and is not so much to be
-noted for the length as for the thickness, hardness, and strength
-thereof; for when it was hanged on the stone pillar it fretted with
-moving the said pillar, and was not itself fretted, nor, as seemeth,
-is not yet lightened by remaining dry; but where or when this bone was
-first found or discovered I have not heard, and therefore, rejecting
-the fables of some late writers, I overpass them. Walter Blundell
-had a chantry there, the 14th of Edward II. There lie buried in this
-church--Elizabeth, wife to John Fortescue; Katherine Stoketon; John
-Stratton; Philip Albert; John Fleming; Philip Agmondesham; William
-Skywith; John Norlong; John Baker; Thomas Alleyne; William Barton,
-mercer, 1410; William Melrith, mercer, one of the sheriffs, 1425; Simon
-Bartlet, mercer, 1428; Walter Chartsey, draper, one of the sheriffs
-1430; Richard Rich, esquire, of London, the father, and Richard Rich,
-his son, mercer, one of the sheriffs 1442, deceased 1469, with this
-epitaph:
-
- "Respice quod opus est praesentis temporis aeuum,
- Omne quod est, nihil est praeter amare Deum."
-
-This Richard was father to John, buried in St. Thomas Acars, which
-John was father to Thomas, father to Richard Lord Ritch, etc.; John
-Pickering, honourable for service of his prince and for the English
-merchants beyond the seas, who deceased 1448; Godfrey Bollen, mercer,
-mayor 1457; Thomas Bollen, his son, esquire, of Norfolk, 1471; John
-Atkenson, gentleman; Dame Mary St. Maure; John Waltham; Roger Bonifant;
-John Chayhee; John Abbot; Geffrey Filding, mayor 1452, and Angell his
-wife; Simon Benington, draper, and Joan his wife; John Marshal, mercer,
-mayor 1493; William Purchat, mayor 1498; Thomas Burgoyne, gentleman,
-mercer, 1517; the wife of a master of defence, servant to the Princess
-of Wales, Duchess of Cornwall, and Countess of Chester;[209] Sir Richard
-Gresham, mayor 1537; Sir Michell Dormer, mayor 1541; Robert Charsey, one
-of the sheriffs 1548; Sir William Row, ironmonger, mayor 1593; Samuel
-Thornhill, 1397. Thus much for Cheape ward, which hath an alderman,
-his deputy, common councillors eleven, constables eleven, scavengers
-nine, for the wardmote inquest twelve, and a beadle. It is taxed to the
-fifteen at L72 16_s._, and in the Exchequer at L52 11_s._[210]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[198] "Justices charged to punish such as sel bels from their churches,
-Elizabeth 14."--_Stow._
-
-[199] "The 13th of November."--_1st edition_, p. 210.
-
-[200] "This conduite was the first sweete water that was conveyed
-by pipes of lead under ground to this place in the citie from
-Paddington."--_1st edition_, p. 210.
-
-[201] This is obviously an error. It occurs in the first edition, is
-repeated in that of 1603, and by Anthony Munday, in his edition of 1618.
-Strype (vol. i. book iii. p. 35), endeavours to correct it, by reading
-"Mary," who was crowned in 1553, instead of Anne. The error, however, is
-in the date, which should be 1533, the year of Anne Boleyn's coronation,
-as we learn from the description of that ceremony given by Stow in his
-_Annals_, "that she went forward by the crosse which was _newly gilt_."
-
-[202] _Soler_ is described by Tyrwhitt, in his edition of Chaucer's
-_Canterbury Tales_, as originally signifying an open gallery or balcony
-at the top of the house, though latterly used for any upper room, loft,
-or garret. Tyrwhitt refers in his Glossary, to the _Cook's Tale of
-Gamelyn_, for an authority for the use of the word in the latter sense--
-
- "He fleigh up until alofte,
- And shet the dore fast.
-
- * * * * *
-
- And saugh where he looked out
- At a _solere_ window."
-
-The German _Soeller_ is used by Luther in his magnificent translation
-of the Bible in both senses:--"Peter went up upon the house-top to
-pray"--"_Stieg Petrus hinauf auf den SOeLLER zu beten._" Acts x. 9. "And
-when they were come in, they went up into an upper room"--"_Und als sie
-hinein kamen, stiegen sie auf den SOeLLER._" Acts i. 13.
-
-[203] "There is also a preaching in the Italian tongue to the Italians
-and others on the Sondaies."--_1st edition_, p. 214.
-
-[204] "Henry Frowicke."--_Ibid._
-
-[205] "Locke his armes in the windowes."--_Stow._
-
-[206] Because "of old time, since the raigne of William the Conqueror
-(that first brought Jewes from Roan into this realme), many Jewes
-inhabited thereabouts, until that in the year 1290, the 18th of Edw. I.,
-they were wholly and for ever by the said king banished this realme,
-having of their owne goodes to beare their charges, till they were out
-of dominions. The number of the Jewes at that time banished were 15,060
-persons, whose houses being sold, the king made of them a mightie masse
-of money."--_1st edition_, p. 219.
-
-[207] "Sixty years since."--_Ibid._
-
-[208] "The tooth of some monstrous fish, as I take it. A shank-bone,
-of twenty-five inches long, of a man, as is said, but might be of an
-oliphant."--_Stow._
-
-[209] "A Countess of Cornwall and Chester, but her name and time is not
-apparent."--_1st edition_, p. 220.
-
-[210] "In the Exchequer at seventy-two pound."--_Ibid._
-
-
-
-
-COLEMAN STREET WARD
-
-
-Next to Cheape ward, on the north side thereof, is Coleman street ward,
-and beginneth also in the east, on the course of Walbrook in Lothbury,
-and runneth west on the south side to the end of Ironmongers' lane, and
-on the north side to the west corner of Bassinges hall street.
-
-On the south side of Lothbury is the street called the Old Jury; the one
-half, and better on both sides, towards Cheape, is of this ward. On the
-north side lieth Coleman street, whereof the ward taketh name, wholly
-on both sides north to London wall, and from that north end along by
-the wall, and Moregate east, to the course of Walbrook; and again from
-Coleman street west to the iron grates: and these be the bounds of this
-ward.
-
-Antiquities to be noted therein are these: First, the street of
-Lothberie, Lathberie, or Loadberie (for by all these names have I read
-it), took the name (as it seemeth) of berie, or court of old time there
-kept, but by whom is grown out of memory. This street is possessed for
-the most part by founders, that cast candlesticks, chafing-dishes, spice
-mortars, and such like copper or laton works, and do afterward turn them
-with the foot, and not with the wheel, to make them smooth and bright
-with turning and scrating (as some do term it), making a loathsome noise
-to the by-passers that have not been used to the like, and therefore by
-them disdainfully called Lothberie.
-
-On the south side of this street, amongst the founders, be some fair
-houses and large for merchants, namely, one that of old time was the
-Jews' synagogue, which was defaced by the citizens of London, after
-that they had slain seven hundred Jews, and spoiled the residue of
-their goods, in the year 1262, the 47th of Henry III. And not long
-after, in the year 1291, King Edward I. banished the remnant of the
-Jews out of England, as is afore showed. The said synagogue being so
-suppressed, certain friars got possession thereof; "for in the year
-1257," saith Mathew Paris, "there were seen in London a new order of
-friars, called _De Poenitentia Jesu_, or _Fratres de Sacca_, because
-they were apparelled in sackcloth, who had their house in London, near
-unto Aldersgate without the gate, and had license of Henry III., in the
-54th of his reign, to remove from thence to any other place; and in the
-56th he gave unto them this Jews' synagogue; after which time, Elianor
-the queen, wife to Edward I., took into her protection, and warranted
-unto the prior and brethren _De Penitentia Jesu Christi_ of London,
-the said land and building in Colechurch street, in the parish of St.
-Olave in the Jury, and St. Margaret in Lothbery, by her granted, with
-consent of Stephen de Fulbourne, under-warden of the Bridge-house, and
-other brethren of that house, for sixty marks of silver, which they had
-received of the said prior and brethren of repentance, to the building
-of the said bridge." This order of friars gathered many good scholars,
-and multiplied in number exceedingly, until the council at Lyons, by
-the which it was decreed, that from that time forth there should be no
-more orders of begging friars permitted, but only the four orders; to
-wit, the Dominicke, or preachers, the Minorites, or grey friars, the
-Carmelites, or white friars, and the Augustines: and so from that time
-the begging friars deceased, and fell to nothing.
-
-Now it followed, that in the year 1305, Robert Fitzwalter requested
-and obtained of the said King Edward I., that the same friars of the
-Sacke might assign to the said Robert their chapel or church, of old
-time called the Synagogue of the Jews, near adjoining to the then
-mansion place of the same Robert, which was in place where now standeth
-the Grocers' hall; and the said Synagogue was at the north corner of
-the Old Jury. Robert Large, mercer, mayor in the year 1439, kept his
-mayoralty in this house, and dwelt there until his dying day. This
-house standeth, and is of two parishes, as opening into Lothberie, of
-St. Margaret's parish, and opening into the Old Jury of St. Olave's
-parish. The said Robert Large gave liberally to both these parishes, but
-was buried at St. Olave's. Hugh Clopton, mercer, mayor 1492, dwelt in
-this house, and kept his mayoralty there: it is now a tavern, and hath
-to sign a windmill. And thus much for this house, sometime the Jews'
-synagogue, since a house of friars, then a nobleman's house, after that
-a merchant's house, wherein mayoralties have been kept, and now a wine
-tavern.
-
-Then is the Old Jurie, a street so called of Jews sometime dwelling
-there, and near adjoining, in the parishes of St. Olave, St. Michael
-Basings hall, St. Martin Ironmonger lane, St. Lawrence, called the Jury,
-and so west to Wood street. William, Duke of Normandy, first brought
-them from Rouen to inhabit here.
-
-William Rufus favoured them so far, that he sware by Luke's face, his
-common oath, if they could overcome the Christians, he would be one of
-their sect.
-
-Henry II. grievously punished them for corrupting his coin.
-
-Richard I. forbad Jews and women to be present at his coronation, for
-fear of enchantments; for breaking of which commandment many Jews
-were slain, who being assembled to present the king with some gift,
-one of them was stricken by a Christian, which some unruly people
-perceiving, fell upon them, beat them to their houses, and burnt them
-therein, or slew them at their coming out. Also the Jews at Norwich,
-St. Edmondsbury, Lincoln, Stamford, and Lynne, were robbed and spoiled;
-and at York, to the number of five hundred, besides women and children,
-entered a tower of the castle, proffered money to be in surety of their
-lives, but the Christians would not take it, whereupon they cut the
-throats of their wives and children, and cast them over the walls on the
-Christians' heads, and then entering the king's lodging, they burnt both
-the house and themselves.
-
-King John, in the 11th of his reign, commanded all the Jews, both men
-and women, to be imprisoned and grievously punished, because he would
-have all their money: some of them gave all they had, and promised more,
-to escape so many kinds of torments, for every one of them had one of
-their eyes at the least plucked out; amongst whom there was one, which
-being tormented many ways, would not ransom himself, till the king had
-caused every day one of his great teeth to be plucked out by the space
-of seven days, and then gave the king ten thousand marks of silver, to
-the end they should pull out no more: the said king at that time spoiled
-the Jews of sixty-six thousand marks.
-
-The 17th of this king, the barons brake into the Jews' houses, rifled
-their coffers, and with the stone of their houses repaired the gates and
-walls of London.
-
-King Henry III., in the 11th of his reign, granted to Semayne, or
-Balaster, the house of Benonye Mittun the Jew, in the parish of St.
-Michael Bassinghaughe, in which the said Benonye dwelt, with the fourth
-part of all his land, in that parish which William Elie held of the fee
-of Hugh Nevell, and all the land in Coleman street belonging to the said
-Benonye, and the fourth part of the land in the parish of St. Lawrence,
-which was the fee of T. Buckerell, and were escheated to the king for
-the murder which the said Benonye committed in the city of London, to
-hold to the said Semaine, and his heirs, of the king, paying at Easter
-a pair of gilt spurs, and to do the service thereof due unto the lord's
-court. In like manner, and for like services, the king granted to Guso
-for his homage the other part of the lands of the said Bononye in St.
-Michael's parish, which lands that Paynter held, and was the king's
-escheat, and the lands of the said Bononye in the said parish, which
-Waltar Turnar held, and fifteen feet of land, which Hugh Harman held,
-with fifteen iron ells of land, and half in the front of Ironmonger
-lane, in the parish of St. Martin, which were the said Bononies of the
-fee of the hospital of St. Giles, and which Adam the smith held, with
-two stone-houses, which were Moses', the Jew of Canterbury, in the
-parish of St. Olave, and which are of the fee of Arnold le Reus, and are
-the king's escheats as before said.
-
-The 16th of the said Henry, the Jews in London built a synagogue, but
-the king commanded it should be dedicated to our Blessed Lady, and
-after gave it to the brethren of St. Anthonie of Vienna, and so was it
-called St. Anthonie's hospital: this Henry founded a church and house
-for converted Jews in New street, by the Temple, whereby it came to
-pass that in short time there was gathered a great number of converts.
-The 20th of this Henry, seven Jews were brought from Norwich, which
-had stolen a christened child, had circumcised, and minded to have
-crucified him at Easter, wherefore their bodies and goods were at the
-king's pleasure: the 26th, the Jews were constrained to pay to the king
-twenty thousand marks, at two terms in the year, or else to be kept
-in perpetual prison: the 35th, he taketh inestimable sums of money of
-all rich men, namely, of Aaron, a Jew, born at York, fourteen thousand
-marks for himself and ten thousand marks for the queen; and before he
-had taken of the same Jew as much as in all amounted to thirty thousand
-marks of silver, and two hundred marks of gold to the queen: in the
-40th, were brought up to Westminster two hundred and two Jews from
-Lincoln, for crucifying of a child named Hugh; eighteen of them were
-hanged: the 43rd, a Jew at Tewkesbery fell into a privy on the Saturday,
-and would not that day be taken out for reverence of his Sabbath;
-wherefore Richard Clare, Earl of Gloucester, kept him there till Monday,
-that he was dead: the 47th, the barons slew the Jews at London seven
-hundred; the rest were spoiled, and their synagogue defaced, because one
-Jew would have forced a Christian to have paid more than two pence for
-the loan of twenty shillings a week.
-
-The 3rd of Edward I., in a parliament at London, usury was forbidden
-to the Jews; and that all usurers might be known, the king commanded
-that every usurer should wear a table on his breast, the breadth of a
-paveline, or else to avoid the realm. The 6th of the said King Edward
-a reformation was made for clipping of the king's coin, for which
-offence two hundred and sixty-seven Jews were drawn and hanged; three
-were English Christians, and other were English Jews: the same year the
-Jews crucified a child at Northampton, for the which fact many Jews at
-London were drawn at horse-tails and hanged. The 11th of Edward I., John
-Perkham, Archbishop of Canterbury, commanded the Bishop of London to
-destroy all the Jews' synagogues in his diocese. The 16th of the said
-Edward, all the Jews in England were in one day apprehended by precept
-from the king, but they redeemed themselves for twelve thousand pounds
-of silver; notwithstanding, in the 19th of his reign, he banished them
-all out of England, giving them only to bear their charge, till they
-were out of his realm: the number of Jews then expulsed were fifteen
-thousand and sixty persons. The king made a mighty mass of money of
-their houses, which he sold, and yet the commons of England had granted
-and gave him a fifteenth of all their goods to banish them: and thus
-much for the Jews.
-
-In this said street, called the Old Jury, is a proper parish church
-of St. Olave Upwell, so called in record, 1320. John Brian, parson of
-St. Olave Upwell, in the Jury, founded there a chantry, and gave two
-messuages to that parish, the 16th of Edward II., and was by the said
-king confirmed. In this church,[211] to the commendation of the parsons
-and parishioners, the monuments of the dead remain less defaced than in
-many other: first, of William Dikman, fereno or ironmonger, one of the
-sheriffs of London 1367; Robert Haveloke, ironmonger, 1390; John Organ,
-mercer, one of the sheriffs 1385; John Forest, vicar of St. Olave's, and
-of St. Stephen, at that time as a chapel annexed to St. Olave, 1399;
-H. Friole, tailor, 1400; T. Morsted, esquire, chirurgeon to Henry IV.,
-V., and VI., one of the sheriffs, 1436: he built a fair new aisle to
-the enlargement of this church, on the north side thereof, wherein he
-lieth buried, 1450; Adam Breakspeare, chaplain, 1411; William Kerkbie,
-mercer, 1465; Robert Large, mercer, mayor 1440; he gave to that church
-two hundred pounds; John Belwine, founder, 1467; Gabriel Rave, fuller,
-1511; Wentworth, esquire, 1510; Thomas Michell, ironmonger, 1527;
-Giles Dewes, servant to Henry VII. and to Henry VIII., clerk of their
-libraries, and schoolmaster for the French tongue to Prince Arthur and
-to the Lady Mary, 1535; Richard Chamberlaine, ironmonger, one of the
-sheriffs, 1562; Edmond Burlacy, mercer, 1583; John Brian, etc.
-
-From this parish church of St. Olave, to the north end of the Old Jewry,
-and from thence west to the north end of Ironmongers' lane, and from
-the said corner into Ironmongers' lane, almost to the parish church of
-St. Martin, was of old time one large building of stone, very ancient,
-made in place of Jews' houses, but of what antiquity, or by whom the
-same was built, or for what use, I have not learnt, more than that King
-Henry VI., in the 16th of his reign, gave the office of being porter or
-keeper thereof unto John Stent for term of his life, by the name of his
-principal palace in the Old Jury: this was in my youth called the old
-Wardrobe, but of later time the outward stone wall hath been by little
-and little taken down, and divers fair houses built thereupon, even
-round about.
-
-Now for the north side of this Lothburie, beginning again at the east
-end thereof, upon the water-course of Walbrooke, have ye a proper parish
-church called St. Margaret, which seemeth to be newly re-edified and
-built about the year 1440; for Robert Large gave to the choir of that
-church one hundred shillings and twenty pounds for ornaments; more, to
-the vaulting over the water-course of Walbrook by the said church, for
-the enlarging thereof two hundred marks.
-
-There be monuments in this church,--of Reginald Coleman, son to Robert
-Coleman, buried there 1483: this said Robert Coleman may be supposed
-the first builder or owner of Coleman street, and that St. Stephen's
-church, then built in Coleman street, was but a chapel belonging to the
-parish church of St. Olave in the Jury; for we read (as afore) that John
-Forest, vicar of St. Olave's, and of the chapel annexed of St. Stephen,
-deceased in the year 1399.[212] Hugh Clopton, mercer, mayor, deceased
-1496; John Dimocke, Anselme Becker, John Julian, and William Ilford,
-chantries there; Sir Brian Tewke, knight, treasurer of the chamber to
-King Henry VIII., and Dame Grisilde his wife, that deceased after him,
-were there buried 1536; John Fetiplace, draper, esquire, 1464, and Joan
-his wife; Sir Hugh Witch, mercer, mayor, son to Richard Witch, entombed
-there 1466: he gave to his third wife three thousand pounds, and to
-maids' marriages five hundred marks; Sir John Leigh, 1564, with this
-epitaph:
-
- "No wealth, no prayse, no bright renowne, no skill,
- No force, no fame, no princes loue, no toyle,
- Though forraigne land by trauell search ye will,
- No faithfull seruice of the country soyle,
- Can life prolong one minute of an houre,
- But death at length will execute his power;
- For Sir John Leigh to sundry countries knowne,
- A worthy knight well of his prince esteemde,
- By seeing much, to great experience growne,
- Though safe on seas, though sure on land he seemde,
- Yet here he lyes too soone by death opprest,
- His fame yet liues, his soule in heauen doth rest."
-
-By the west end of this parish church have ye a fair water conduit,
-built at the charges of the city in the year 1546. Sir Martin Bowes
-being mayor, two fifteens were levied of the citizens toward the charges
-thereof. This water is conveyed in great abundance from divers springs
-lying betwixt Hoxton and Iseldon.
-
-Next is the Founders' hall, a proper house, and so to the south-west
-corner of Bassinges hall street, have ye fair and large houses for
-merchants; namely, the corner house at the end of Bassinges hall street;
-an old piece of work, built of stone, sometime belonging to a certain
-Jew named Mansere, the son of Aaron, the son of Coke the Jew, the 7th
-of Edward I.; since to Rahere de Sopar's lane, then to Simon Francis.
-Thomas Bradbery, mercer, kept his mayoralty there; deceased 1509. Part
-of this house hath been lately employed as a market-house for the sale
-of woollen bays, watmols, flannels, and such like. Alderman Bennet now
-possesseth it.
-
-On this north side against the Old Jury is Coleman street, so called of
-Coleman, the first builder and owner thereof; as also of Colechurch,
-or Coleman church, against the great conduit in Cheape. This is a fair
-and large street, on both sides built with divers fair houses, besides
-alleys, with small tenements in great number. On the east side of this
-street, almost at the north end thereof, is the Armourers' hall, which
-company of armourers were made a fraternity or guild of St George, with
-a chantry in the chapel of St. Thomas in Paule's church, in the 1st of
-Henry VI. Also on the same side is King's alley and Love lane, both
-containing many tenements; and on the west side, towards the south end,
-is the parish church of St. Stephen, wherein the monuments are defaced:
-notwithstanding, I find that William Crayhag founded a chantry there in
-the reign of Edward II., and was buried there:[213] also John Essex,
-the 35th of Edward III.; Adam Goodman, the 37th of Edward III.; William
-King, draper, sometime owner of King's alley, the 18th of Richard II.;
-John Stokeling, the 10th of Henry VI.; John Arnold, leather-seller, the
-17th of Henry VI.; Thomas Bradberie, mercer, mayor, the 1st of Henry
-VIII.; his tomb remaineth on the north side the choir; Richard Hamney,
-1418; Kirnigham, 1468; Sir John Garme; Richard Colsel; Edmond Harbeke,
-currier; all these were benefactors, and buried there. This church was
-sometime a synagogue of the Jews, then a parish church, then a chapel
-to St. Olave's in the Jury, until the 7th of Edward IV., and was then
-incorporated a parish church.
-
-By the east end of this church is placed a cock of sweet water, taken of
-the main pipe that goeth into Lothberie. Also in London wall, directly
-against the north end of Coleman street, is a conduit of water, made
-at the charges of Thomas Exmew, goldsmith, mayor 1517. And let here
-be the end of this ward, which hath an alderman, his deputy, common
-councillors four, constables four, scavengers four, of the wardmote
-inquest thirteen, and a beadle. It is taxed to the fifteen at L15 16_s._
-9_d._[214]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[211] "A well was under the east end of this church, late turned to a
-pumpe, but decayed."--_Stow._
-
-[212] "This may be some argument which I overpasse."--_1st edition_, p.
-223.
-
-
-
-
-BASSINGS HALL WARD
-
-
-The next adjoining to Coleman street, on the west side thereof, is
-Bassings hall ward, a small thing, and consisteth of one street called
-Bassings hall street, of Bassings hall, the most principal house whereof
-the ward taketh name. It beginneth in the south by the late spoken
-market-house called the Bay hall, which is the last house of Coleman
-street ward. This street runneth from thence north down to London wall,
-and some little distance, both east and west, against the said hall; and
-this is the bound of Bassings hall ward.
-
-Monuments on the east side thereof, amongst divers fair houses for
-merchants, have ye three halls of companies; namely, the Masons'
-hall for the first, but of what antiquity that company is I have not
-read. The next is the Weavers' hall, which company hath been of great
-antiquity in this city, as appeareth by a charter of Henry II., in these
-words, _Rex omnibus ad quos_, etc., to be Englished thus:--"Henrie,
-king of England, duke of Normandie, and of Guian, Earl of Anjou, to
-the bishop, justices, shiriffes, barons, ministers, and all his true
-lieges of London, sendeth greeting: Know ye that we have granted to the
-weavers in London their guild, with all the freedomes and customes that
-they had in the time of King Henrie my grandfather, so that none but
-they intermit within the citie of their craft but he be of their guild,
-neither in Southwark, or other places pertaining to London, otherwise
-than it was done in the time of King Henrie my grandfather; wherefore
-I will and straightly commaund that over all lawfully they may treate,
-and have all aforesaid, as well in peace, free, worshipfull, and wholy,
-as they had it, freer, better, worshipfullier, and wholier, than in
-the time of King Henrie my grandfather, so that they yeeld yearely
-to mee two markes of gold at the feast of St. Michaell; and I forbid
-that any man to them do any unright, or disseise, upon paine of ten
-pound. Witnes, Thomas of Canterburie, Warwicke fili Gar, Chamberlaine
-at Winchester."[215] Also I read, that the same Henry II., in the 31st
-of his reign, made a confirmation to the weavers that had a guild or
-fraternity in London, wherein it appeareth that the said weavers made
-woollen cloth, and that they had the correction thereof; but amongst
-other articles in that patent, it was decreed, that if any man made
-cloth of Spanish wool, mixed with English wool, the portgrave, or
-principal magistrate of London, ought to burn it, etc.
-
-Moreover, in the year 1197,[216] King Richard I., at the instance of
-Hubert, Archbishop of Canterbury, and Justicier of England, ordained
-that the woollen cloths in every part of this realm should be in breadth
-two yards within the lists, and as good in the midst as in the sides,
-etc. King Henry III. granted that they should not be vexed, for the
-burels, or cloth listed, according to the constitution made for breadth
-of cloth the 9th of his reign, etc. Richard II., in the 3rd of his
-reign, granted an order of agreement between the weavers of London,
-Englishmen, and aliens, or strangers born, brought in by Edward III.
-
-Lower down is the Girdlers'[217] hall, and this is all touching the east
-side of this ward.
-
-On the west side, almost at the south end thereof, is Bakewell hall,
-corruptly called Blackewall hall: concerning the original whereof I
-have heard divers opinions, which I overpass as fables without colour
-of truth; for though the same seemed a building of great antiquity,
-yet in mine opinion the foundation thereof was first laid since the
-conquest of William, Duke of Normandie; for the same was built upon
-vaults of stone, which stone was brought from Caen in Normandie, the
-like of that of Paule's church, built by Mauritius and his successors,
-bishops of London; but that this house hath been a temple or Jewish
-synagogue (as some have fantasied) I allow not, seeing that it had no
-such form of roundness, or other likeness, neither had it the form of a
-church, for the assembly of Christians, which are built east and west,
-but contrariwise the same was built north and south, and in form of a
-nobleman's house; and therefore the best opinion in my judgment is,
-that it was of old time belonging to the family of the Bassings, which
-was in this realm a name of great antiquity and renown, and that it
-bare also the name of that family, and was called therefore Bassings
-haugh, or hall; whereunto I am the rather induced, for that the arms of
-that family were of old time so abundantly placed in sundry parts of
-that house, even in the stone-work, but more especially on the walls
-of the hall, which carried a continual painting of them on every side,
-so close together as one escutcheon could be placed by another, which
-I myself have often seen and noted before the old building was taken
-down: these arms were a gyronny of twelve points, gold and azure. Of the
-Bassinges therefore, builders of this house and owners of the ground
-near adjoining, that ward taketh the name, as Coleman street ward of
-Coleman, and Faringden ward of William and Nicholas Faringden, men that
-were principal owners of those places.
-
-And of old time the most noble persons that inhabited this city were
-appointed to be principal magistrates there, as was Godfrey de Magun (or
-Magnavile), portgrave, or sheriff, in the reign of William Conqueror,
-and of William Rufus; Hugh de Buch, in the reign of Henry I.; Auberie de
-Vere, Earl of Oxford; after him, Gilbert Becket, in the reign of King
-Stephen; after that, Godfrey de Magnavile, the son of William, the son
-of Godfrey de Magnavile, Earls of Essex, were portgraves or sheriffs of
-London and Middlesex. In the reign of Henry II., Peter Fitzwalter; after
-him, John Fitznigel, etc.; so likewise in the reign of King John, the
-16th of his reign, a time of great troubles, in the year 1214, Salomon
-Bassing and Hugh Bassing, barons of this realm, as may be supposed, were
-sheriffs; and the said Salomon Bassing was mayor in the year 1216,
-which was the 1st of Henry III. Also Adam Bassing, son to Salomon (as it
-seemeth), was one of the sheriffs in the year 1243, the 28th of Henry
-III.
-
-Unto this Adam de Bassing King Henry III., in the 31st of his reign,
-gave and confirmed certain messuages in Aldermanbury, and in Milke
-street (places not far from Bassinges hall), the advowson of the church
-at Bassinges hall, with sundry liberties and privileges.
-
-This man was afterwards mayor in the year 1251, the 36th of Henry III.;
-moreover, Thomas Bassing was one of the sheriffs 1269; Robert Bassing,
-sheriff, 1279; and William Bassing was sheriff 1308, etc.; for more of
-the Bassings in this city I need not note, only I read of this family
-of Bassinges in Cambridgeshire,[218] called Bassing at the bourn, and
-more shortly Bassing bourn, and gave arms, as is afore showed, and was
-painted about this old hall. But this family is worn out, and hath left
-the name to the place where they dwelt. Thus much for this Bassings hall.
-
-Now how Blakewell hall took that name is another question; for which
-I read that Thomas Bakewell dwelt in this house in the 36th of Edward
-III.; and that in the 20th of Richard II., the said king, for the sum
-of fifty pounds, which the mayor and commonalty had paid into the
-hanaper, granted licence so much as was in him to John Frosh, William
-Parker, and Stephen Spilman (citizens and mercers), that they, the said
-messuage called Bakewell hall, and one garden, with the appurtenances,
-in the parish of St. Michael of Bassings haugh, and of St. Laurence
-in the Jurie of London, and one messuage, two shops, and one garden,
-in the said parish of St. Michael, which they held of the king in
-burghage, might give and assign to the mayor and commonalty for ever.
-This Bakewell hall, thus established, hath been long since employed as a
-weekly market-place for all sorts of woollen cloths, broad and narrow,
-brought from all parts of this realm, there to be sold. In the 21st of
-Richard II., R. Whittington, mayor, and in the 22nd, Drengh Barringtine
-being mayor, it was decreed that no foreigner or stranger should sell
-any woollen cloth but in the Bakewell hall, upon pain of forfeiture
-thereof.
-
-This house of late years growing ruinous, and in danger of falling,
-Richard May, merchant-tailor, at his decease gave towards the new
-building of the outward part thereof three hundred pounds, upon
-condition that the same should be performed within three years after
-his decease; whereupon the old Bakewell hall was taken down, and in the
-month of February next following, the foundation of a new, strong, and
-beautiful storehouse being laid, the work thereof was so diligently
-applied, that within the space of ten months after, to the charges of
-two thousand five hundred pounds, the same was finished in the year 1588.
-
-Next beyond this house be placed divers fair houses for merchants and
-others, till ye come to the back gate of Guildhall, which gate and part
-of the building within the same is of this ward. Some small distance
-beyond this gate the coopers have their common hall. Then is the parish
-church of St. Michaell, called St. Michaell at Bassings hall, a proper
-church lately re-edified or new built, whereto John Barton, mercer, and
-Agnes his wife, were great benefactors, as appeareth by his mark placed
-throughout the whole roof of the choir and middle aisle of the church:
-he deceased in the year 1460, and was buried in the choir, with this
-epitaph:
-
- "John Barton lyeth vnder here,
- Sometimes of London, citizen and mercer,
- And Ienet his wife, with their progenie,
- Beene turned to earth as ye may see:
- Friends free what so ye bee,
- Pray for vs we you pray,
- As you see vs in this degree,
- So shall you be another day."
-
-Frances Cooke, John Martin, Edward Bromflit, esquire, of Warwickshire,
-1460; Richard Barnes, Sir Roger Roe, Roger Velden, 1479; Sir James
-Yarford, mercer, mayor, deceased 1526, buried under a fair tomb with
-his lady in a special chapel by him built on the north side of the
-choir; Sir John Gresham, mercer, mayor, deceased 1554; Sir John Ailife,
-chirurgeon, then a grocer, one of the sheriffs 1548; Nicholas Bakhurst,
-one of the sheriffs 1577; Wolston Dixi, skinner, mayor, 1585, etc.
-Thus have you noted one parish church of St. Michaell, Bakewell hall,
-a market-place for woollen cloths; the Masons' hall, Weavers' hall,
-Cordellers' hall, and Coopers' hall. And thus I end this ward, which
-hath an alderman, his deputy, for common council four, constables two,
-scavengers two, for the wardmote inquest seventeen, and a beadle. It
-is taxed to the fifteen in London at seven pounds, and likewise in the
-Exchequer at seven pounds.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[213] "There is one tomb on the south side the quire, but without
-inscription."--_1st edition_, p. 225.
-
-[214] "It is taxed to the fifteen in London at nineteen pound, and in
-the Exchequer at nineteen pound"--_Ibid._
-
-[215] Patent.
-
-[216] Matthew Paris.
-
-[217] The Girdlers were incorporated by letters patent of 27th Henry
-VI. 6th Aug. 1449, which were confirmed by Elizabeth in 1568, when the
-pinners and wire-drawers were incorporated with them. Strype says they
-seem to have been a fraternity of St. Lawrence, because of the three
-gridirons their arms; but those north country readers, who know what a
-_girdle iron_ is, will probably agree with me in thinking the gridirons
-or girdle irons are borne with reference to the name of the company.
-
-[218] "Only I read of a branch of this family of Bassinges to have
-spread itself into Cambridgeshire, near unto a water or bourne, and was
-therefore, for a difference from other of that name, called Bassing
-at the bourn, and more shortly Bassing borne. But this family is also
-worne out, and hath left the name to the place where they dwell."--_1st
-edition_, p. 228.
-
-
-
-
-CRIPPLESGATE WARD
-
-
-The next ward is called of Cripplesgate, and consisteth of divers
-streets and lanes, lying as well without the gate and wall of the city
-as within: first within the wall, on the east part thereof, towards the
-north, it runneth to the west side of Bassings hall ward, and towards
-the south it joineth to the ward of Cheape. It beginneth at the west
-end of St. Laurence church in the Jurie, on the north side, and runneth
-west to a pump, where sometime was a well with two buckets, at the
-south corner of Aldermanburie street; which street runneth down north
-to Gayspurre lane, and so to London wall, which street and lane are
-wholly on both sides of this ward, and so be some few houses on both
-the sides from Gayspurre lane, by and against the wall of the city,
-east to the grates made for the water-course of the channels, and west
-to Cripplesgate. Now on the south side, from over against the west end
-of St. Laurence church to the pump, and then by Milke street south unto
-Cheape, which Milke street is wholly on both the sides of Cripplegate
-ward, as also without the south end of Milke street, a part of West
-Cheape, to wit, from the Standard to the Cross, is all of Cripplegate
-ward. Then down Great Wood street, which is wholly of this ward on both
-the sides thereof; so is Little Wood street, which runneth down to
-Cripplegate.
-
-Out of this Wood street be divers lanes; namely, on the east side is
-Lad lane, which runneth east to Milke street corner; down lower in Wood
-street is Love lane, which lieth by the south side of St. Alban's church
-in Wood street, and runneth down to the Conduit in Aldermanburie street.
-Lower down in Wood street is Addle street, out of the which runneth
-Phillip lane down to London wall. These be the lanes on the east side.
-
-On the west side of Wood street is Huggen lane, by the south side of St.
-Michael's church, and goeth through to Guthuruns lane. Then lower is
-Maiden lane, which runneth west to the north end of Gutherons lane, and
-up the said lane on the east side thereof, till against Kery lane, and
-back again: then the said Maiden lane, on the north side, goeth up to
-Staining lane, and up a part thereof, on the east side, to the farthest
-north part of Haberdashers' hall, and back again to Wood street; and
-there lower down to Silver street, which is of this ward, till ye come
-to the east end of St. Olave's church, on the south side, and to Munkes
-well street on the north side; then down the said Munkes well street on
-the east side thereof, and so to Cripplegate, do make the bounds of this
-ward within the walls.
-
-Without Cripplegate, Fore street runneth thwart before the gate, from
-against the north side of St. Giles church, along to More lane end,
-and to a Postern lane end, that runneth betwixt the town ditch on the
-south, and certain gardens on the north, almost to Moregate; at the
-east of which lane is a pot-maker's house, which house, with all other
-the gardens, houses, and alleys, on that side the Morefields, till ye
-come to a bridge and cow-house near unto Fensburie court, is all of
-Cripplegate ward; then to turn back again through the said Postern lane
-to More lane, which More lane, with all the alleys and buildings there,
-is of this ward; after that is Grub street, more than half thereof to
-the straitening of the street; next is Whitecrosse street, up to the end
-of Bech lane, and then Redcrosse street wholly, with a part of Golding
-lane, even to the posts there placed, as a bounder.
-
-Then is Bech lane before spoken of, on the east side of the Red Crosse
-and the Barbican street, more than half thereof toward Aldersgate
-street; and so have you all the bounds of Cripplegate ward without the
-walls.
-
-Now for antiquities and ornaments in this ward to be noted: I find
-first, at the meeting of the corners of the Old Jurie, Milke street,
-Lad lane, and Aldermanburie, there was of old time a fair well with two
-buckets, of late years converted to a pump. How Aldermanbury street
-took that name many fables have been bruited, all which I overpass as
-not worthy the counting; but to be short, I say, this street took the
-name of Alderman's burie (which is to say a court), there kept in their
-bery, or court, but now called the Guildhall; which hall of old time
-stood on the east side of the same street, not far from the west end of
-Guildhall, now used. Touching the antiquity of this old Alderman's burie
-or court, I have not read other than that Richard Renery, one of the
-sheriffs of London in the 1st of Richard I., which was in the year of
-Christ 1189, gave to the church of St. Mary at Osney, by Oxford, certain
-ground and rents in Aldermanbery of London, as appeareth by the register
-of that church, as is also entered into the hoistinges of the Guildhall
-in London. This old bery court or hall continued, and the courts of the
-mayor and aldermen were continually holden there, until the new bery
-court, or Guildhall that now is, was built and finished; which hall was
-first begun to be founded in the year 1411, and was not fully finished
-in twenty years after. I myself have seen the ruins of the old court
-hall in Aldermanbery street, which of late hath been employed as a
-carpenter's yard, etc.
-
-In this Aldermanbery street be divers fair houses on both the sides,
-meet for merchants or men of worship, and in the midst thereof is a fair
-conduit, made at the charges of William Eastfield, sometime mayor, who
-took order as well for water to be conveyed from Teyborne, and for the
-building of this Conduit, not far distant from his dwelling-house, as
-also for a Standard of sweet water, to be erected in Fleet street, all
-which was done by his executors, as in another place I have showed.
-
-Then is the parish church of St. Mary Aldermanbury, a fair church,
-with a churchyard, and cloister adjoining; in the which cloister is
-hanged and fastened a shank-bone of a man (as is said), very great,
-and larger by three inches and a half than that which hangeth in St.
-Lawrence church in the Jury, for it is in length twenty-eight inches
-and a half of assise, but not so hard and steele-like as the other,
-for the same is light, and somewhat pory and spongy. This bone is said
-to be found amongst the bones of men removed from the charnel-house of
-Powles, or rather from the cloister of Powles church; of both which
-reports I doubt, for that the late Reyne Wolfe, stationer (who paid for
-the carriage of those bones from the charnel to the Morefields), told
-me of some thousands of carrie loads and more to be conveyed, whereof
-he wondered, but never told me of any such bone in either place to be
-found; neither would the same have been easily gotten from him if he
-had heard thereof, except he had reserved the like for himself, being
-the greatest preserver of antiquities in those parts for his time.[219]
-True it is, that this bone (from whence soever it came) being of a man
-(as the form showeth), must needs be monstrous, and more than after the
-proportion of five shank-bones of any man now living amongst us.
-
-There lie buried in this church--Simon Winchcombe, esquire, 1391; Robert
-Combarton, 1422; John Wheatley, mercer, 1428; Sir William Estfild,
-knight of the bath, mayor 1438, a great benefactor to that church, under
-a fair monument: he also built their steeple, changed their old bells
-into five tuneable bells, and gave one hundred pounds to other works of
-that church. Moreover, he caused the Conduit in Aldermanbury, which he
-had begun, to be performed at his charges, and water to be conveyed by
-pipes of lead from Tyborne to Fleet street, as I have said: and also
-from High Berie to the parish of St. Giles without Cripplegate, where
-the inhabitants of those parts incastellated the same in sufficient
-cisterns. John Midleton, mercer, mayor 1472; John Tomes, draper, 1486;
-William Bucke, tailor, 1501; Sir William Browne, mayor 1507; Dame
-Margaret Jeninges, wife to Stephen Jeninges, mayor 1515; a widow named
-Starkey, sometime wife to Modie; Raffe Woodcock, grocer, one of the
-sheriffs 1586; Dame Mary Gresham, wife to Sir John Gresham, 1538; Thomas
-Godfrey, remembrancer of the office of the first fruits, 1577.
-
-Beneath this church have ye Gay spur lane, which runneth down to London
-wall, as is afore showed. In this lane, at the north end thereof, was
-of old time a house of nuns; which house being in great decay, William
-Elsing, mercer, in the year of Christ 1329, the 3rd of Edward III.,
-began in place thereof the foundation of an hospital for sustentation
-of one hundred blind men; towards the erection whereof he gave his
-two houses in the parishes of St. Alphage, and our Blessed Lady in
-Aldermanbury, near Cripplegate.[220] This house was after called a
-priory, or hospital, of St. Mary the Virgin, founded in the year 1332 by
-W. Elsing, for canons regular; the which William became the first prior
-there. Robert Elsing, son to the said William, gave to the hospital
-twelve pounds by the year, for the finding of three priests: he also
-gave one hundred shillings towards the inclosing of the new churchyard
-without Aldgate, and one hundred shillings to the inclosing of the new
-churchyard without Aldersgate; to Thomas Elsing, his son, eighty pounds,
-the rest of his goods to be sold and given to the poor. This house,
-valued L193 15_s._ 5_d._, was surrendered the eleventh of May, the 22nd
-of Henry VIII.
-
-The monuments that were in this church defaced:--Thomas Cheney, son to
-William Cheney; Thomas, John, and William Cheney; John Northampton,
-draper, mayor 1381; Edmond Hungerford; Henry Frowike; Joan, daughter to
-Sir William Cheney, wife to William Stoke; Robert Eldarbroke, esquire,
-1460; Dame Joan Ratcliffe; William Fowler; William Kingstone; Thomas
-Swineley, and Helen his wife, etc. The principal aisle of this church
-towards the north was pulled down, and a frame of four houses set up
-in place: the other part, from the steeple upward, was converted into
-a parish church of St. Alphage; and the parish church which stood
-near unto the wall of the city by Cripplesgate was pulled down, the
-plot thereof made a carpenter's yard, with saw-pits. The hospital
-itself, the prior and canons' house, with other lodgings, were made a
-dwelling-house; the churchyard is a garden plot, and a fair gallery on
-the cloister; the lodgings for the poor are translated into stabling for
-horses.
-
-In the year 1541, Sir John Williams, master of the king's jewels,
-dwelling in this house on Christmas even at night, about seven of the
-clock, a great fire began in the gallery thereof, which burned so sore,
-that the flame firing the whole house, and consuming it, was seen all
-the city over, and was hardly quenched, whereby many of the king's
-jewels were burnt, and more embezzled (as was said).[221] Sir Rowland
-Heyward, mayor, dwelt in this Spittle, and was buried there 1593;
-Richard Lee, _alias_ Clarenciaux king of arms, 1597.
-
-Now to return to Milk street, so called of milk sold there,[222] there
-be many fair houses for wealthy merchants and other; amongst the which
-I read, that Gregory Rokesley, chief assay master of the king's mints,
-and mayor of London in the year 1275, dwelt in this Milk street, in a
-house belonging to the priory of Lewes in Sussex, whereof he was tenant
-at will, paying twenty shillings by the year, without[223] other charge:
-such were the rents of those times.
-
-In this Milke street is a small parish church of St. Marie Magdalen,
-which hath of late years been repaired. William Browne, mayor 1513, gave
-to this church forty pounds, and was buried there; Thomas Exmew, mayor
-1528, gave forty pounds, and was buried there; so was John Milford, one
-of the sheriffs, 1375; John Olney, mayor 1475; Richard Rawson, one of
-the sheriffs 1476; Henry Kelsey; Sir John Browne, mayor 1497; Thomas
-Muschampe, one of the sheriffs 1463; Sir William Cantilo, knight,
-mercer, 1462; Henry Cantlow, mercer, merchant of the Staple, who built
-a chapel, and was buried there 1495; John West, alderman, 1517; John
-Machell, alderman, 1558; Thomas Skinner, clothworker, mayor 1596.
-
-Then next is Wood street, by what reason so called I know not. True it
-is, that of old time, according to a decree made in the reign of Richard
-I., the houses in London were built of stone for defence of fire; which
-kind of building was used for two hundred years or more, but of later
-time for the winning of ground taken down, and houses of timber set up
-in place. It seemeth therefore that this street hath been of the latter
-building, all of timber (for not one house of stone hath been known
-there), and therefore called Wood street; otherwise it might take the
-name of some builder or owner thereof.
-
-Thomas Wood, one of the sheriffs in the year 1491, dwelt there; he was
-an especial benefactor towards the building of St. Peter's church at
-Wood street end; he also built the beautiful front of houses in Cheape
-over against Wood street end, which is called Goldsmiths' row, garnished
-with the likeness of woodmen; his predecessors might be the first
-builders, owners, and namers of this street after their own name.
-
-On the east side of this street is one of the prison houses pertaining
-to the sheriffs of London, and is called the Compter in Wood street,
-which was prepared to be a prison house in the year 1555; and on the eve
-of St. Michael the Archangel, the prisoners that lay in the Compter in
-Bread street were removed to this Compter in Wood street. Beneath this
-Compter is Lad lane, or Ladle lane, for so I find it of record in the
-parish of St. Michaell Wood street; and beneath that is Love lane, so
-called of wantons.
-
-By this lane is the parish church of St. Alban, which hath the monuments
-of Sir Richard Illingworth, baron of the exchequer; Thomas Chatworth,
-grocer, mayor 1443; John Woodcocke, mayor 1405; John Collet, and Alice
-his wife; Ralph Thomas; Ralph and Richard, sons of Ralph Illingworth,
-which was son to Sir Richard Illingworth, baron of the exchequer;
-Thomas, son of Sir Thomas Fitzwilliams; Thomas Halton, mercer, mayor
-1450; Thomas Ostrich, haberdasher, 1483; Richard Swetenham, esquire; and
-William Dunthorne, town-clerk of London, with this epitaph:
-
- "_Foelix prima dies postquam mortalibus aevi
- Cesserit, hic morbus subit, atque repente senectus
- Tum mors, qua nostrum Dunthorn cecidisse Wilelmum.
- Haud cuiquam latuisse reor, dignissimus (inquam),
- Artibus hic Doctor, nec non celeberrimus hujus,
- Clericus Urbis erat, primus, nullique secundus,
- Moribus, ingenio, studio, nil dixeris illi,
- Quin dederit natura boni, pius ipse modestus,
- Longanimus, solers, patiens, super omnia gratus,
- Quique sub immensas curas variosque labores,
- Anxius atteritur vitae, dum carpserit auras,
- Hoc tetro in tumulo, compostus pace quiescit._"
-
-Simon Morsted; Thomas Pikehurst, esquire; Richard Take; Robert
-Ashcombe; Thomas Lovet, esquire, sheriff of Northamptonshire 1491; John
-Spare; Katheren, daughter to Sir Thomas Mirley, knight;[224] William
-Linchdale, mercer, 1392; John Penie, mercer, 1450; John Thomas, mercer,
-1485; Christopher Hawse, mercer, one of the sheriffs 1503; William
-Skarborough, vintner; Simon de Berching; Sir John Cheke, knight,
-schoolmaster to King Edward VI., deceased 1557; do lie here.
-
-Then is Adle street, the reason of which name I know not, for at this
-present it is replenished with fair buildings on both sides; amongst
-the which there was sometime the Pinners' hall, but that company being
-decayed, it is now the Plaisterers' hall.
-
-Not far from thence is the Brewers' hall, a fair house, which company of
-Brewers was incorporated by King Henry VI., in the 16th of his reign,
-confirmed by the name of St. Mary and St. Thomas the Martyr, the 19th of
-Edward IV.
-
-From the West end of this Adle street, Little Wood street runneth down
-to Cripplesgate: and somewhat east from the Sun tavern, against the wall
-of the city, is the Curriers' hall.
-
-Now, on the west side of Wood street, have ye Huggen lane, so called of
-one Hugan that of old time dwelt there: he was called Hugan in the lane,
-as I have read in the 34th of Edward I. This lane runneth down by the
-south side of St. Michael's church in Wood street, and so growing very
-narrow by means of late encroachments to Guthuron's lane.
-
-The parish church of St. Michael in Wood street is a proper thing, and
-lately well repaired. John Ive, parson of this church, John Forster,
-goldsmith, and Peter Fikelden, tailor, gave two messuages, and two
-shops, with solars, cellars, and other edifices, in the same parish and
-street, and in Ladle lane, to the reparations of the church, chancel,
-and other works of charity, the 16th of Richard II.
-
-The monuments here be of William Bambrough, the son of Henry Bambrough
-of Skardborough, 1392; William Turner, waxchandler, 1400; John Peke,
-goldsmith, 1441; William Taverner, girdler, 1454; William Mancer,
-ironmonger, 1465; John Nash, 1466, with an epitaph; John Allen,
-timbermonger, 1441; Robert Draper, 1500; John Lamberde, draper,
-alderman, one of the sheriffs of London, who deceased 1554, and was
-father to[225] William Lambarde, esquire, well known by sundry learned
-books that he hath published; John Medley, chamberlain of London; John
-Marsh, esquire, mercer, and common sergeant of London, etc. There is
-also (but without any outward monument) the head of James, the fourth
-king of Scots of that name, slain at Flodden field, and buried here by
-this occasion: After the battle the body of the said king being found,
-was enclosed in lead, and conveyed from thence to London, and so to the
-monastery of Shene in Surrey, where it remained for a time, in what
-order I am not certain; but since the dissolution of that house, in the
-reign of Edward VI., Henry Grey, Duke of Suffolk, being lodged, and
-keeping house there, I have been shown the same body so lapped in lead,
-close to the head and body, thrown into a waste room amongst the old
-timber, lead, and other rubble. Since the which time workmen there, for
-their foolish pleasure, hewed off his head; and Launcelot Young,[226]
-master glazier to her majesty, feeling a sweet savour to come from
-thence, and seeing the same dried from all moisture, and yet the form
-remaining, with the hair of the head, and beard red, brought it to
-London to his house in Wood street, where for a time he kept it for the
-sweetness, but in the end caused the sexton of that church to bury it
-amongst other bones taken out of their charnel, etc.
-
-I read in divers records of a house in Wood street, then called Black
-hall, but no man at this day can tell thereof.
-
-On the north side of this St. Michael's church is Mayden lane, now so
-called, but of old time Ingene lane, or Ing lane. In this lane the
-Waxchandlers have their common hall, on the south side thereof; and
-the Haberdashers have their like hall on the north side, at Stayning
-lane end. This company of the Haberdashers, or Hurrers, of old time so
-called, were incorporated a brotherhood of St. Katherine, the 26th of
-Henry VI., and so confirmed by Henry VII., the 17th of his reign, the
-Cappers and Hat merchants, or Hurrers, being one company of Haberdashers.
-
-Down lower in Wood street is Silver street (I think of silversmiths
-dwelling there), in which be divers fair houses.
-
-And on the north side thereof is Monkeswell street, so called of a well
-at the north end thereof, where the Abbot of Garendon had a house, or
-cell, called St. James in the wall by Cripplesgate, and certain monks of
-their house were the chaplains there, wherefore the well (belonging to
-that cell, or hermitage) was called Monks' well, and the street, of the
-well, Monkswell street.
-
-The east side of this street, down against London wall, and the south
-side thereof to Cripplesgate, be of Cripplesgate ward, as is afore
-shown. In this street, by the corner of Monkswell street, is the
-Bowyers' hall. On the east side of Monkswell street be proper alms
-houses, twelve in number founded by Sir Ambrose Nicholas, salter, mayor
-1575, wherein be placed twelve poor and aged people rent free, having
-each of them seven pence the week, and once the year, each of them five
-sacks of charcoal, and one quarter of a hundred fagots, of his gift, for
-ever.
-
-Then, in Little Wood street be seven proper chambers in an alley on the
-west side, founded for seven poor people therein to dwell rent free, by
-Henry Barton, skinner, mayor 1416. Thus much for the monuments of this
-ward within the walls.
-
-Now, without the postern of Cripplesgate, first is the parish church
-of St. Giles, a very fair and large church, lately repaired, after
-that the same was burnt in the year 1545, the 37th of Henry VIII., by
-which mischance the monuments of the dead in this church are very few:
-notwithstanding I have read of these following:--Alice, William, and
-John, wife and sons to T. Clarell; Agnes, daughter to Thomas Niter,
-gentleman; William Atwell; Felix, daughter to Sir Thomas Gisors, and
-wife to Thomas Travars; Thomas Mason, esquire; Edmond Wartar, esquire;
-Joan, wife to John Chamberlaine, esquire, daughter to Roger Lewkner;
-William Fryer; John Hamberger, esquire; Hugh Moresbye; Gilbert Prince,
-alderman; Oliver Cherley, gentleman; Sir John Wright or Writhesley,
-_alias_ Garter king-at-arms; Joan, wife to Thomas Writhesley, Garter,
-daughter and heir to William Hal, esquire; John Writhesley, the younger,
-son to Sir John Writhesley and Alianor; Alianor, second wife to John
-Writhesley, daughter and heir to Thomas Arnold, sister and heir to
-Richard Arnold, esquire; John, her son and heir; Margaret, with her
-daughter; John Brigget; Thomas Ruston, gentleman; John Talbot, esquire,
-and Katheren his wife; Thomas Warfle, and Isabel his wife; Thomas
-Lucie, gentleman, 1447; Ralph Rochford, knight, 1409; Edmond Watar,
-esquire; Elizabeth, wife to Richard Barnes, sister and heir to Richard
-Malgrave, esquire, of Essex; Richard Gowre, and John Gowre, esquires;
-John Baronie, of Millain, 1546; Sir Henry Grey, knight, son and heir to
-George Grey, Earl of Kent, 1562; Reginald Grey, Earl of Kent; Richard
-Choppin, tallowchandler, one of the sheriffs 1530; John Hamber, esquire,
-1573; Thomas Hanley, _alias_ Clarenciaux king-at-arms; Thomas Busby,
-cooper, who gave the Queen's Head tavern to the relief of the poor in
-the parish, 1575; John Whelar, goldsmith, 1575; Richard Bolene, 1563;
-William Bolene, 1575; W. Bolene, physician, 1587; Robert Crowley, vicar
-there--all these four under one old stone in the choir; the learned John
-Foxe, writer of the _Acts and Monuments of the English Church_, 1587;
-the skilful Robert Glover, _alias_ Sommerset herald, 1588.
-
-There was in this church of old time a fraternity, or brotherhood, of
-Our Blessed Lady, or Corpus Christi, and St. Giles, founded by John
-Belancer, in the reign of Edward III., the 35th year of his reign.
-
-Some small distance from the east end of this church is a water conduit,
-brought in pipes of lead from Highbery, by John Middleton, one of the
-executors to Sir William Eastfield, and of his goods; the inhabitants
-adjoining castellated it of their own cost and charges about the year
-1483.
-
-There was also a bosse of clear water in the wall of the churchyard,
-made at the charges of Richard Whitington, sometimes mayor, and was like
-to that of Bilinsgate: of late the same was turned into an evil pump,
-and so is clean decayed.
-
-There was also a fair pool of clear water near unto the parsonage, on
-the west side thereof, which was filled up in the reign of Henry VI.,
-the spring was coped in, and arched over with hard stone, and stairs of
-stone to go down to the spring on the bank of the town ditch: and this
-was also done of the goods, and by the executors of Richard Whitington.
-
-In White Crosse street King Henry V. built one fair house, and founded
-there a brotherhood of St. Giles, to be kept, which house had sometime
-been an hospital of the French order, by the name of St. Giles
-without Cripplesgate, in the reign of Edward I., the king having the
-jurisdiction, and appointing a custos thereof for the precinct of the
-parish of St. Giles, etc. patent Richard II., the 15th year; which
-hospital being suppressed, the lands were given to the brotherhood for
-the relief of the poor.
-
-One alley of divers tenements over against the north wall of St. Giles'
-churchyard, was appointed to be alms houses for the poor, wherein they
-dwelt rent free, and otherwise were relieved; but the said brotherhood
-was suppressed by Henry VIII.; since which time Sir John Gresham, mayor,
-purchased the lands, and gave part thereof to the maintenance of a free
-school which he had founded at Holt, a market town in Norfolk.
-
-In Red Cross street, on the west side from St. Giles' churchyard up to
-the said cross, be many fair houses built outward, with divers alleys
-turning into a large plot of ground, called the Jews' Garden, as being
-the only place appointed them in England, wherein to bury their dead,
-till the year 1177, the 24th of Henry II., that it was permitted to
-them (after long suit to the king and parliament at Oxford) to have a
-special place assigned them in every quarter where they dwelt. This
-plot of ground remained to the said Jews till the time of their final
-banishment out of England, and is now turned into fair garden plots and
-summer-houses for pleasure.
-
-On the east side of this Red Cross street be also divers fair houses,
-up to the cross. And there is Beech lane, peradventure so called of
-Nicholas de la Beech, lieutenant of the Tower of London, put out of that
-office in the 13th of Edward III. This lane stretcheth from the Red
-Cross street to White Cross street, replenished, not with beech trees,
-but with beautiful houses of stone, brick, and timber. Amongst the which
-was of old time a great house, pertaining to the Abbot of Ramsey, for
-his lodging when he repaired to the city: it is now called Drewry house,
-of Sir Drewe Drewrie, a worshipful owner thereof.
-
-On the north side of this Beech lane, towards White Cross street, the
-Drapers of London have lately built eight alms houses of brick and
-timber, for eight poor widows of their own company, whom they have
-placed there rent free, according to the gift of Lady Askew, widow to
-Sir Christopher Askew, sometime draper, and mayor 1533.
-
-Then in Golding lane, Richard Gallard of Islington, esquire, citizen
-and painter-stainer of London, founded thirteen alms houses for so many
-poor people placed in them rent free; he gave to the poor of the same
-alms houses two pence the piece weekly, and a load of charcoal amongst
-them yearly for ever: he left fair lands about Islington to maintain
-his foundation. Thomas Hayes, sometime chamberlain of London, in the
-latter time of Henry VIII., married Elizabeth, his daughter and heir;
-which Hayes and Elizabeth had a daughter named Elizabeth, married to
-John Ironmonger, of London, mercer, who now hath the order of the alms
-people.
-
-On the west side of the Red Cross is a street, called the Barbican,
-because sometime there stood, on the north side thereof, a burgh-kenin,
-or watch-tower, of the city, called in some language a barbican, as a
-bikening is called a beacon; this burgh-kenning, by the name of the
-Manor of Base court, was given by Edward III. to Robert Ufford, Earl
-of Suffolk, and was lately appertaining to Peregrine Bartie, Lord
-Willoughby of Ersby.
-
-Next adjoining to this is one other great house, called Garter house,
-sometime built by Sir Thomas Writhe, or Writhesley, knight, _alias_
-Garter principal king-of-arms, second son of Sir John Writhe, knight,
-_alias_ Garter, and was uncle to the first Thomas, Earl of Southampton,
-knight of the Garter, and chancellor of England; he built this house,
-and in the top thereof a chapel, which is dedicated by the name of St.
-Trinitatis in Alto.
-
-Thus much for that part of Cripplegate ward without the wall, whereof
-more shall be spoken in the suburb of that part. This ward hath an
-alderman, and his deputy, within the gate, common council eight,
-constables nine, scavengers twelve, for wardmote inquest fifteen, and
-a beadle. Without the gate it hath also a deputy, common council two,
-constables four, scavengers four, wardmote inquest seventeen, and a
-beadle. It is taxed in London to the fifteen at forty pound.[227]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[219] "Reyne Wolf, a grave antiquary, collected the great chronicles,
-increased and published by his executors, under the name of Ralph
-Holonshead."--_Stow._
-
-The first edition of Holinshed's _Chronicles of England, Scotland,
-and Ireland_, was printed for John Harrison the elder in 1577. From
-Holinshed's dedicatory epistle to Lord Burleigh, it would seem that
-Reginald Wolfe projected and even executed the greater part of the
-work, it having "pleased God to call him to his mercie after xxv.
-years travail spent therein." Wolfe, in fact, intended to make these
-Chronicles the foundation of "_An Universall Cosmographie of the Whole
-World_."
-
-[220] "Obtaining first the king's licence of mortmain under the great
-seal of England."--_1st edition_, p. 234.
-
-[221] "The Lord William of Thame was buried in this church, and so was
-his successor in that house, Sir Rowland Heyward."--_1st edition_, p.
-235.
-
-[222] "As is supposed."--_Ibid._
-
-[223] "Without being bounden to reparations or other charge."--_Ibid._
-
-[224] "John Collet."--_1st edition_, p. 257.
-
-[225] "My loving friend."--_1st edition_, p. 238.
-
-[226] "At this present."--_Ibid._
-
-
-
-
-ALDERSGATE WARD
-
-
-The next is Aldersgate ward, taking name of that north gate of the city.
-This ward also consisteth of divers streets and lanes, lying as well
-within the gate and wall as without. And first to speak of that part
-within the gate, thus it is.
-
-The east part thereof joineth unto the west part of Cripplegate ward
-in Engain lane, or Maiden lane. It beginneth on the north side of that
-lane, at Stayning lane end, and runneth up from the Haberdashers' hall
-to St. Mary Staining church, and by the church, east, winding almost to
-Wood street; and west through Oate lane, and then by the south side of
-Bacon house in Noble street, back again by Lilipot lane, which is also
-of that ward, to Maiden lane, and so on that north side west to St. John
-Zacharies church, and to Foster lane.
-
-Now on the south side of Engain or Maiden lane is the west side of
-Guthuruns lane to Kery lane, and Kery lane itself (which is of this
-ward), and back again into Engain lane, by the north side of the
-Goldsmiths' hall to Foster lane: and this is the east wing of this ward.
-Then is Foster lane almost wholly of this ward, beginneth in the south
-toward Cheap, on the east side by the north side of St. Foster's church,
-and runneth down north-west by the west end of Engain lane, by Lilipot
-lane and Oate lane to Noble street, and through that by Shelly house (of
-old time so called, as belonging to the Shelleys); Sir Thomas Shelley,
-knight, was owner thereof in the 1st of Henry IV. It is now called Bacon
-house, because the same was new built by Sir Nicholas Bacon, lord keeper
-of the great seal. Down on that side, by Sergeant Fleetwood's house,
-recorder of London, who also new built it, to St. Olave's church in
-Silver street, which is by the north-west end of this Noble street.
-
-Then again in Foster lane this ward beginneth on the west side thereof,
-over against the south-west corner of St. Foster's church, and runneth
-down by St. Leonard's church, by Pope lane end, and by St. Ann's lane
-end, which lane is also of this ward, north to the stone wall by the
-wall of the city, over against Bacon house, which stone wall, and so
-down north to Cripplegate on that side, is of Faringdon ward.
-
-Then have ye the main street of this ward, which is called St. Martin's
-lane, including St. Martin, on the east side thereof, and so down on
-both the sides to Aldersgate. And these be the bounds of this ward
-within the wall and gate.
-
-Without the gate the main street called Aldersgate street runneth up
-north on the east side to the west end of Howndes ditch, or Barbican
-street; a part of which street is also of this ward. And on the west
-side to Long lane, a part whereof is likewise of this ward. Beyond the
-which Aldersgate street is Goswell street up to the bars.
-
-And on this west side of Aldersgate street, by St. Buttolph's church
-is Briton street, which runneth west to a pump, and then north to the
-gate which entereth the churchyard, sometime pertaining to the priory
-of St. Bartholomew on the east side; and on the west side towards St.
-Bartholomew's Spittle, to a pair of posts there fixed. And these be the
-bounds of this Aldersgate ward without.
-
-The antiquities be these, first in Stayning lane, of old time so called,
-as may be supposed, of painter-stainers dwelling there.
-
-On the east side thereof, adjoining to the Haberdashers' hall, be ten
-alms houses, pertaining to the Haberdashers, wherein be placed ten alms
-people of that company, every of them having eight pence the piece every
-Friday for ever, by the gift of Thomas Huntlow, haberdasher, one of the
-sheriffs in the year 1539. More, Sir George Baron gave them ten pounds
-by the year for ever.
-
-Then is the small parish church of St. Mary, called Stayning, because it
-standeth at the north end of Stayning lane. In the which church, being
-but newly built, there remains no monument worth the noting.
-
-Then is Engain lane, or Mayden lane, and at the north-west corner
-thereof the parish church of St. John Zachary; a fair church, with the
-monuments well preserved, of Thomas Lichfield, who founded a chantry
-there in the 14th of Edward II.; of Sir Nicholas Twiford, goldsmith,
-mayor 1388, and Dame Margery his wife, of whose goods the church was
-made and new built, with a tomb for them, and others of their race,
-1390; Drugo Barentine, mayor 1398; he gave fair lands to the Goldsmiths;
-he dwelt right against the Goldsmiths' hall; between the which hall and
-his dwelling house he built a gallery thwarting the street, whereby
-he might go from one to the other; he was buried in this church, and
-Christian his wife, 1427; John Adis, goldsmith, 1400, and Margaret his
-wife; John Francis, goldsmith, mayor 1400, and Elizabeth his wife,
-1450; I. Sutton, goldsmith, one of the sheriffs 1413; Bartholomew
-Seman, goldbeater, master of the king's mints within the Tower of
-London and the town of Calice, 1430;[228], John Hewet, esquire, 1500;
-William Breakespere, goldsmith, 1461; Christopher Eliot, goldsmith,
-1505; Bartholomew Reade, goldsmith, mayor 1502, was buried in the
-Charterhouse, and gave to this, his parish church, one hundred pounds;
-his wife was buried here with a fair monument, her picture in habit of a
-widow; Thomas Keyton Lorimar, 1522; William Potken, esquire, 1537; John
-Cornish, with an epitaph, 1470; Robert Fenruther, goldsmith, one of the
-sheriffs in the year 1512.
-
-On the east side of this Foster lane, at Engain lane end, is the
-Goldsmiths' hall, a proper house, but not large; and, therefore, to say
-that Bartholomew Read, goldsmith, mayor in the year 1502, kept such a
-feast in this hall, as some have fabuled,[229] is far incredible, and
-altogether impossible, considering the smallness of the hall, and number
-of the guests, which, as they say, were more than a hundred persons of
-great estate. For the messes and dishes of meats to them served, the
-paled park in the same hall furnished with fruitful trees, beasts of
-venery, and other circumstances of that pretended feast, well weighed,
-Westminster hall would hardly have sufficed; and, therefore, I will
-overpass it, and note somewhat of principal goldsmiths.
-
-First I read, that Leofstane, goldsmith, was provost of this city in
-the reign of Henry I. Also, that Henry Fitz Alewin Fitz Leafstane,
-goldsmith, was mayor of London in the 1st of Richard I., and continued
-mayor twenty-four years. Also that Gregory Rocksly, chief say-master of
-all the king's mints within England, (and therefore by my conjecture)
-a goldsmith, was mayor in the 3rd of Edward I., and continued mayor
-seven years together. Then, William Faringdon, goldsmith, alderman of
-Faringdon ward, one of the sheriffs 1281, the 9th of Edward I., who was
-a goldsmith, as appeareth in record, as shall be shown in Faringdon
-ward. Then Nicholas Faringdon his son, goldsmith, alderman of Faringdon
-ward, four times mayor in the reign of Edward II., etc. For the rest
-of latter time are more manifestly known, and therefore I leave them.
-The men of this mystery were incorporated or confirmed in the 16th of
-Richard II.
-
-Then at the north end of Noble street is the parish church of St. Olave
-in Silver street, a small thing, and without any noteworthy monuments.
-
-On the west side of Foster lane is the small parish church of St.
-Leonard's, for them of St. Martin's le Grand. A number of tenements
-being lately built in place of the great collegiate church of St.
-Martin, that parish is mightily increased. In this church remain these
-monuments. First, without the church is graven in stone on the east end,
-John Brokeitwell, an especial re-edifier, or new builder thereof. In
-the choir, graven in brass, Robert Purfet, grocer, 1507; Robert Trapis,
-goldsmith, 1526, with this epitaph:--
-
- "When the bels be merily roong,
- And the masse devoutly sung,
- And the meat merily eaten,
- Then shall Robert Trips, his wives
- And children be forgotten."
-
-Then in Pope lane, so called of one Pope that was owner thereof, on
-the north side of the parish church of St. Anne in the Willows, so
-called, I know not upon what occasion, but some say of willows growing
-thereabouts; but now there is no such void place for willows to grow,
-more than the churchyard, wherein do grow some high ash trees.
-
-This church, by casualty of fire in the year 1548, was burnt, so far as
-it was combustible, but since being newly repaired, there remain a few
-monuments of antiquity: of Thomas Beckhenton, clerk of the pipe, was
-buried there 1499; Raph Caldwell, gentleman, of Grays inn, 1527; John
-Lord Sheffelde; John Herenden, mercer, esquire, 1572, these verses on an
-old stone:--[230]
-
- _Qu an Tris di c vul stra
- os guis ti ro um nere uit
- h san Chris mi T mu la_
-
-William Gregory, skinner, mayor of London in the year 1451, was there
-buried, and founded a chantry, but no monument of him remaineth.
-
-Then in St. Martin's lane was of old time a fair and large college of
-a dean and secular canons or priests, and was called St. Martin's le
-Grand, founded by Ingelricus and Edwardus his brother, in the year
-of Christ 1056, and confirmed by William the Conqueror, as appeareth
-by his charter dated 1068. This college claimed great privileges of
-sanctuary and otherwise, as appeareth in a book, written by a notary of
-that house about the year 1442, the 19th of Henry VI., wherein, amongst
-other things, is set down and declared, that on the 1st of September,
-in the year aforesaid, a soldier, prisoner in Newgate, as he was led by
-an officer towards the Guildhall of London, there came out of Panyer
-alley five of his fellowship, and took him from the officer, brought
-him into sanctuary at the west door of St. Martin's church, and took
-grithe of that place; but the same day Philip Malpas and Rob. Marshall,
-then sheriffs of London, with many other, entered the said church, and
-forcibly took out with them the said five men thither fled, led them
-fettered to the Compter, and from thence, chained by the necks, to
-Newgate; of which violent taking the dean and chapter in large manner
-complained to the king, and required him, as their patron, to defend
-their privileges, like as his predecessors had done, etc. All which
-complaint and suit the citizens by their counsel, Markam, sergeant at
-the law, John Carpenter, late common clerk of the city, and other,
-learnedly answered, offering to prove that the said place of St. Martin
-had no such immunity or liberty as was pretended; namely, Carpenter
-offered to lose his livelihood, if that church had more immunity than
-the least church in London. Notwithstanding, after long debating of
-this controversy, by the king's commandment, and assent of his council
-in the starred chamber, the chancellor and treasurer sent a writ unto
-the sheriffs of London, charging them to bring the said five persons
-with the cause of their taking and withholding afore the king in his
-Chancery, on the vigil of Allhallows. On which day the said sheriffs,
-with the recorder and counsel of the city, brought and delivered them
-accordingly, afore the said lords; whereas the chancellor, after he had
-declared the king's commandment, sent them to St. Martin's, there to
-abide freely, as in a place having franchises, whiles them liked, etc.
-
-Thus much out of that book have I noted concerning the privilege of that
-place challenged in these days, since the which time, to wit, in the
-year 1457, the 36th of the said Henry VI., an ordinance was made by the
-king and his council concerning the said sanctuary men in St. Martin's
-le Grand, whereof the articles are set down in the book of K., within
-the chamber of the Guildhall, in the lease 299.
-
-This college was surrendered to King Edward VI., the 2nd of his reign,
-in the year of Christ 1548; and the same year the college church being
-pulled down, in the east part thereof a large wine tavern was built,
-and with all down to the west, and throughout the whole precinct of
-that college, many other houses were built and highly prized, letten to
-strangers born, and other such, as there claimed benefit of privileges
-granted to the canons serving God day and night (for so be the words in
-the charter of William the Conqueror), which may hardly be wrested to
-artificers, buyers and sellers, otherwise than is mentioned in the 21st
-of St. Matthew's Gospel.
-
-Lower down on the west side of St. Martin's lane, in the parish of
-St. Anne, almost by Aldersgate, is one great house, commonly called
-Northumberland house; it belonged to H. Percy. King Henry IV., in
-the 7th of his reign, gave this house, with the tenements thereunto
-appertaining, to Queen Jane his wife, and then it was called her
-Wardrobe: it is now a printing house.
-
-Without Aldersgate, on the east side of Aldersgate street, is the Cooks'
-hall; which Cooks (or Pastelars) were admitted to be a company, and to
-have a master and wardens, in the 22nd of Edward IV. From thence along
-into Houndsditch, or Barbican street, be many fair houses. On the west
-side also be the like fair buildings till ye come to Long lane, and so
-to Goswell street.
-
-In Briton street, which took that name of the dukes of Brittany lodging
-there, is one proper parish church of St. Buttolph, in which church was
-sometime a brotherhood of St. Fabian and Sebastian, founded in the year
-1377, the 51st of Edward III., and confirmed by Henry IV., in the 6th
-of his reign. Then Henry VI., in the 24th of his reign, to the honour
-of the Trinity, gave license to Dame Joan Astley, sometime his nurse,
-to R. Cawod and T. Smith, to found the same a fraternity, perpetually
-to have a master and two custoses, with brethren and sisters, etc. This
-brotherhood was endowed with lands more than thirty pounds by the year,
-and was suppressed by Edward VI. There lie buried, John de Bath, weaver,
-1390; Philip at Vine, capper, 1396; Benet Gerard, brewer, 1403; Thomas
-Bilsington founded a chantry there, and gave to that church a house,
-called the Helmet upon Cornhill; John Bradmore, chirurgeon, Margaret and
-Katheren his wives, 1411; John Michaell, sergeant-at-arms, 1415; Allen
-Bret, carpenter, 1425; Robert Malton, 1426; John Trigilion, brewer,
-1417; John Mason, brewer, 1431; Rob. Cawood, clerk of the pipe in the
-king's exchequer, 1466; Ri. Emmessey; John Walpole; I. Hartshorne,
-esquire, servant to the king, 1400, and other of that family, great
-benefactors to that church; W. Marrow, grocer, mayor, and Katherine his
-wife, were buried there about 1468. The Lady Ann Packington, widow, late
-wife to Jo. Packinton, knight, chirographer of the court of the common
-pleas; she founded alms houses near unto the White Fryers' church in
-Fleet street: the Clothworkers in London have oversight thereof.
-
-And thus an end of this ward; which hath an alderman, his deputy, common
-councillors five, constables eight, scavengers nine, for the wardmote
-inquest fourteen, and a beadle. It is taxed to the fifteen in London
-seven pounds, and[231] in the exchequer six pounds nineteen shillings.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[227] "It is taxed in London to the fifteene at forty pound, and in the
-Exchequer at thirty-nine pound ten shillings."--_1st edition_, p. 242.
-
-[228] "Thomas Leichfield."--_1st edition_, p. 244.
-
-[229] R. Grafton.
-
-[230] These disjointed syllables, it will be seen, may be so read as to
-form the following rhyming couplet:--
-
- "_Quos anguis tristi diro cum vulnere stravit,
- Hos sanguis Christi miro tum munere lavit._"
-
-
-[231] "Likewise in the exchequer."--_1st edition_, p. 247.
-
-
-
-
-FARINGDON WARD INFRA, OR WITHIN
-
-
-On the south side of Aldersgate ward lieth Faringdon ward, called
-_infra_ or within, for a difference from another ward of that name,
-which lieth without the walls of the city, and is therefore called
-Faringdon _extra_. These two wards of old time were but one, and had
-also but one alderman, till the 17th of Richard II., at which time the
-said ward, for the greatness thereof, was divided into twain, and by
-parliament ordered to have two aldermen, and so it continueth till this
-day. The whole great ward of Farindon, both _infra_ and _extra_, took
-name of W. Farindon, goldsmith, alderman of that ward, and one of the
-sheriffs of London in the year 1281, the 9th of Edward I. He purchased
-the Aldermanry of this ward, as by the abstract of deeds, which I have
-read thereof, may appear.
-
-"Thomas de Arderne, son and heir to Sir Ralph Arderne, knight, granted
-to Ralph le Feure, citizen of London, one of the sheriffs in the year
-1277, all the aldermanry, with the appurtenances within the city of
-London, and the suburbs of the same between Ludgate and Newgate, and
-also without the same gates: which aldermanry, Ankerinus de Averne
-held during his life, by the grant of the said Thomas de Arderna, to
-have and to hold to the said Ralph, and to his heirs, freely without
-all challenge, yielding therefore yearly to the said Thomas and his
-heirs one clove[232] or slip of gilliflowers, at the feast of Easter,
-for all secular service and customs, with warranty unto the said Ralph
-le Fevre and his heirs, against all people, Christians and Jews, in
-consideration of twenty marks, which the said Ralph le Fevre did give
-beforehand, in name of a gersum[233] or fine, to the said Thomas, etc.,
-dated the 5th of Edward I. Witness, G. de Rokesley, maior; R. Arrar,
-one of the shiriffes; H. Wales, P. le Taylor, T. de Basing, I. Horne,
-N. Blackthorn, aldermen of London." After this, John le Fevre, son and
-heir to the said Ralph le Fevre, granted to William Farindon, citizen
-and goldsmith of London, and to his heirs, the said aldermanry, with the
-appurtenances, for the service thereunto belonging, in the 7th of Edward
-I., in the year of Christ 1279. This aldermanry descended to Nicholas
-Farindon, son to the said William, and to his heirs; which Nicholas
-Farindon, also a goldsmith, was four times mayor, and lived many years
-after; for I have read divers deeds, whereunto he was a witness, dated
-the year 1360: he made his testament 1361, which was fifty-three years
-after his first being mayor, and was buried in St. Peter's church in
-Cheape. So this ward continued under the government of William Faringdon
-the father, and Nicholas his son, by the space of eighty-two years, and
-retaineth their name until this present day.
-
-This ward of Faringdon within the walls is bounded thus: Beginning in
-the east, at the great cross in Westcheape, from whence it runneth west.
-On the north side from the parish church of St. Peter, which is at the
-south-west corner of Wood street, on to Guthurun's lane, and down that
-lane to Hugon lane on the east side, and to Kery lane on the west.
-
-Then again into Cheape and to Foster lane, and down that lane on the
-east side, to the north side of St. Foster's church, and on the west,
-till over against the south-west corner of the said church, from whence
-down Foster lane and Noble street is all of Aldersgate street ward,
-till ye come to the stone wall, in the west side of Noble street, as is
-afore showed. Which said wall, down to Nevil's inn or Windsor house,
-and down Monkes well street, on that west side, then by London wall to
-Cripplegate, and the west side of that same gate is all of Faringdon
-ward.
-
-Then back again into Cheape, and from Foster lane end to St. Martin's
-lane end, and from thence through St. Nicholas shambles, by Penticost
-lane and Butchers' alley, and by Stinking lane through Newgate market to
-Newgate; all which is the north side of Faringdon ward.
-
-On the south, from against the said great cross in Cheape west to
-Fridayes street, and down that street on the east side, till over
-against the north-east corner of St. Mathew's church; and on the west
-side, till the south corner of the said church.
-
-Then again along Cheape to the old Exchange, and down that lane (on the
-east side) to the parish church of St. Augustine, which church, and one
-house next adjoining in Watheling street, be of this ward, and on the
-west side of this lane, to the east arch or gate by St. Augustine's
-church, which entereth the south churchyard of St. Paules, which arch
-or gate was built by Nicholas Faringdon about the year 1361, and within
-that gate, on the said north side, to the gate that entereth the north
-churchyard, and all the north churchyard is of this Faringdon ward.
-
-Then again into Cheape, and from the north end of the Old Exchange, west
-by the north gate of Paules churchyard, by Pater noster row, by the two
-lanes out of Paules church, and to a sign of the Golden Lion, which is
-some twelve houses short of Ave Mary lane; the west side of which lane
-is of this ward.
-
-Then at the south end of Ave Mary lane is Creed lane; the west side
-whereof is also of this ward.
-
-Now betwixt the south end of Ave Mary lane and the north end of Creede
-lane, is the coming out of Paules churchyard on the east, and the high
-street called Bowier row to Ludgate on the west, which way to Ludgate is
-of this ward. On the north side whereof is St. Martin's church, and on
-the south side a turning into the Blacke friars.
-
-Now to turn up again to the north end of Ave Mary lane, there is a short
-lane which runneth west some small distance, and is there closed up with
-a gate into a great house: and this is called Amen lane.
-
-Then on the north side of Pater noster row, beginning at the Conduit
-over against the Old Exchange lane end, and going west by St. Michael's
-church; at the west end of which church is a small passage through
-towards the north: and beyond this church some small distance is another
-passage, which is called Paniar alley, and cometh out against St.
-Martin's lane end.
-
-Then further west in Pater noster row is Ivie lane, which runneth north
-to the west end of St. Nicholas shambles; and then west Pater noster
-row, till over against the Golden Lion, where the ward endeth for that
-street.
-
-Then about some dozen houses (which is of Baynard's castle ward) to
-Warwick lane end; which Warwick lane stretcheth north to the high
-street of Newgate market. And the west side of Warwick lane is of this
-Faringdon ward; for the east side of Warwick lane, of Ave Marie lane,
-and of Creede lane, with the west end of Pater noster row, are all of
-Baynardes castle ward.
-
-Yet to begin again at the said Conduit by the Old Exchange, on the
-north side thereof is a large street that runneth up to Newgate, as is
-aforesaid. The first part, or south side whereof, from the Conduit to
-the shambles, is called Bladder street. Then on the back side of the
-shambles be divers slaughter-houses, and such like, pertaining to the
-shambles; and this is called Mount Godard street. Then is the shambles
-itself, and then Newgate market; and so the whole street, on both sides
-up to Newgate, is of this ward; and thus it is wholly bounded.
-
-Monuments in this ward be these: First, the great cross in Westcheape
-street, but in the ward of Faringdon; the which cross was first erected
-in that place by Edward I., as before is showed in Westcheape street.
-
-At the south-west corner of Wood street is the parish church of St.
-Peter the Apostle by the said cross, a proper church lately new built.
-John Sha, goldsmith, mayor, deceased 1508, appointed by his testament
-the said church and steeple to be newly built of his goods, with a flat
-roof; notwithstanding, Thomas Wood, goldsmith, one of the sheriffs
-1491, is accounted principal benefactor, because the roof of the middle
-aisle is supported by images of woodmen. I find to have been buried
-in this church--Nicholas Farendon, mayor; Richard Hadley, grocer,
-1592; John Palmer, fishmonger, 1500; William Rus, goldsmith, sheriff
-1429; T. Atkins, esquire, 1400; John Butler, sheriff 1420;[234] Henry
-Warley, alderman 1524; Sir John Monday, goldsmith, mayor, deceased
-1537; Augustine Hinde, cloth-worker, one of the sheriffs in the year
-1550, whose monument doth yet remain, the others be gone; Sir Alexander
-Auenon, mayor 1570.
-
-The long shop, or shed, incroaching on the high street before this
-church wall was licensed to be made in the year 1401, yielding to the
-chamber of London thirty shillings and four pence yearly for the time,
-but since thirteen shillings and four pence. Also the same shop was
-letten by the parish for three pounds at the most many years since.
-
-Then is Guthurun's lane, so called of Guthurun, sometime owner thereof.
-The inhabitants of this lane of old time were goldbeaters, as doth
-appear by records in the Exchequer; for the Easterling money was
-appointed to be made of fine silver, such as men made into foil, and was
-commonly called silver of Guthurun's lane, etc. The Embroiderers' hall
-is in this lane. John Throwstone, embroiderer, then goldsmith, sheriff,
-deceased 1519, gave forty pounds towards the purchase of this hall.
-Hugon lane on the east side, and Kery lane (called of one Kery) on the
-west.
-
-Then in the high street on the same north side is the Saddlers' hall,
-and then Fauster lane (so called) of St. Fauster's, a fair church lately
-new built. Henry Coote, goldsmith, one of the sheriffs, deceased 1509,
-built St. Dunston's chapel there. John Throwstone, one of the sheriffs,
-gave to the building thereof one hundred pounds by his testament.
-John Browne, sergeant painter, alderman, deceased 1532, was a great
-benefactor, and was there buried. William Trist, cellarer to the king,
-1425, John Standelfe,[235] goldsmiths, lie buried there; Richard
-Galder, 1544; Agnes, wife to William Milborne, chamberlain of London,
-1500, etc.
-
-Then down Foster lane and Noble street, both of Aldersgate street ward,
-till ye come to the stone wall which incloseth a garden plot before
-the wall of the city, on the west side of Noble street, and is of
-this Faringdon ward. This garden-plot, containing ninety-five ells in
-length, nine ells and a half in breadth, was by Adam de Burie, mayor,
-the alderman, and citizens of London, letten to John de Nevill, Lord of
-Raby, Radulph and Thomas his sons, for sixty years, paying 6_s._ 8_d._
-the year, dated the 48th of Edward III., having in a seal pendant on
-the one side, the figure of a walled city and of St. Paul, a sword in
-his right hand, and in the left a banner; three leopards about that
-seal, on the same side, written, _Sigillum Baronium Londoniarum_. On the
-other side, the like figure of a city, a bishop sitting on an arch; the
-inscription, _Me : que : te : peperi : ne : Cesses : Thoma : tueri_.
-Thus much for the barons of London, their common seal at that time. At
-the north end of this garden-plot is one great house built of stone and
-timber, now called the Lord Windsor's house, of old time belonging to
-the Nevils; as in the 19th of Richard II. it was found by inquisition
-of a jury, that Elizabeth Nevil died, seised of a great messuage in the
-parish of St. Olave, in Monk's well street in London, holden of the
-king in free burgage, which she held of the gift of John Nevell of Raby
-her husband, and that John Latimer was next son and heir to the said
-Elizabeth.
-
-In this west side is the Barbers-Chirurgeons' hall. This company was
-incorporated by means of Thomas Morestede, esquire, one of the sheriffs
-of London 1436, chirurgeon to the kings of England, Henry IV., V., and
-VI.: he deceased 1450. Then Jaques Fries, physician to Edward IV.,
-and William Hobbs, physician and chirurgeon for the same king's body,
-continuing the suit the full time of twenty years, Edward IV., in the
-2nd of his reign, and Richard, Duke of Gloucester, became founders of
-the same corporation in the name of St. Cosme and St. Damiane. The first
-assembly of that craft was Roger Strippe, W. Hobbs, T. Goddard, and
-Richard Kent; since the which time they built their hall in that street,
-etc.
-
-At the north corner of this street, on the same side, was sometime an
-hermitage, or chapel of St. James, called in the wall, near Cripplegate:
-it belonged to the abbey and convent of Garadon, as appeareth by a
-record, the 27th of Edward I., and also the 16th of Edward III. William
-de Lions was hermit there, and the abbot and convent of Geredon found
-two chaplains, Cistercian monks of their house, in this hermitage; one
-of them for Aymor de Valence, Earl of Pembroke, and Mary de Saint Paule,
-his countess.
-
-Of these monks, and of a well pertaining to them, the street took
-that name, and is called Monks' well street. This hermitage, with the
-appurtenances, was in the reign of Edward VI. purchased from the said
-king by William Lambe, one of the gentlemen of the king's chapel,
-citizen and cloth-worker of London: he deceased in the year 1577, and
-then gave it to the clothworkers of London, with other tenements, to the
-value of fifty pounds the year, to the intent they shall hire a minister
-to say divine service there, etc.
-
-Again to the high street of Cheape, from Fauster lane end to St.
-Martin's, and by that lane to the shambles or flesh-market, on the north
-side whereof is Penticost lane, containing divers slaughter-houses for
-the butchers.
-
-Then was there of old time a proper parish church of St. Nicholas,
-whereof the said flesh-market took the name, and was called St.
-Nicholas' shambles. This church, with the tenements and ornaments, was
-by Henry VIII. given to the mayor and commonalty of the city, towards
-the maintenance of the new parish church then to be erected in the late
-dissolved church of the Grey Friars; so was this church dissolved and
-pulled down. In place whereof, and of the churchyard, many fair houses
-are now built in a court with a well, in the midst whereof the church
-stood.
-
-Then is Stinking lane, so called, or Chick lane, at the east end of the
-Grey Friars church, and there is the Butchers' hall.
-
-In the 3rd of Richard II. motion was made that no butcher should kill
-no flesh within London, but at Knightsbridge, or such like distance of
-place from the walls of the city.
-
-Then the late dissolved church of the Grey Friars; the original whereof
-was this:
-
-The first of this order of friars in England, nine in number, arrived
-at Dover; five of them remained at Canterburie, the other four came to
-London, were lodged at the preaching friars in Oldborne for the space of
-fifteen days, and then they hired a house in Cornhill of John Trevers,
-one of the sheriffs of London. They built there little cells, wherein
-they inhabited; but shortly after, the devotion of citizens towards
-them, and the number of the friars so increased, that they were by the
-citizens removed to a place in St. Nicholas' shambles; which John Ewin,
-mercer, appropriated unto the commonalty, to the use of the said friars,
-and himself became a lay brother amongst them. About the year 1225,
-William Joyner built their choir, Henry Walles the body of the church,
-Walter Potter, alderman, the chapter house, Gregorie Rokesley their
-dorter; Bartholomew of the Castle made the refectory, Peter de Heliland
-made the infirmitory, Bevis Bond, king of heralds, made the study, etc.
-
-Margaret, queen, second wife to Edward I., began the choir of their
-new church in the year 1306; to the building whereof, in her lifetime,
-she gave two thousand marks, and one hundred marks by her testament.
-John Britaine, Earl of Richmond, built the body of the church to the
-charges of three hundred pounds, and gave many rich jewels and ornaments
-to be used in the same; Marie, Countess of Pembroke, seventy pounds.
-Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester, bestowed twenty great beams out of
-his forest of Tunbridge, and twenty pounds sterling. Lady Helianor le
-Spencer, Lady Elizabeth de Burgh, sister to Gilbert de Clare, gave sums
-of money; and so did divers citizens; as Arnald de Tolinea, one hundred
-pounds; Robert, Baron Lisle, who became a friar there, three hundred
-pounds; Bartholomew de Almaine, fifty pounds. Also Philippa, queen,
-wife to Edward III., gave sixty-two pounds; Isabell, queen, mother to
-Edward III., gave threescore and ten pounds. And so the work was done
-within the space of twenty-one years, 1337. This church was furnished
-with windows made at the charges of divers persons. The Lady Margaret
-Segrave, Countess of Norfolk, bare the charges of making the stalls in
-the choir, to the value of three hundred and fifty marks, about the
-year 1380. Richard Whittington, in the year 1429, founded the library,
-which was in length one hundred and twenty-nine feet, and in breadth
-thirty-one, all sealed with wainscot, having twenty-eight desks and
-eight double settles of wainscot; which in the next year following was
-altogether finished in building, and within three years after furnished
-with books, to the charges of five hundred and fifty-six pounds ten
-shillings; whereof Richard Whittington bare four hundred pounds; the
-rest was borne by Doctor Thomas Winchelsey, a friar there; and for
-the writing out of D. Nicholas de Lira, his works, in two volumes, to
-be chained there, one hundred marks, etc. The ceiling of the choir at
-divers men's charges, two hundred marks, and the painting at fifty
-marks; their conduit head and water-course given them by William Tailor,
-tailor to Henry III., etc.
-
-This whole church containeth in length three hundred feet, of the feet
-of St. Paule; in breadth eighty-nine feet, and in height from the ground
-to the roof sixty-four feet and two inches, etc. It was consecrated
-1325, and at the general suppression was valued at thirty-two pounds
-nineteen shillings, surrendered the 12th of November 1538, the 30th of
-Henry VIII., the ornaments and goods being taken to the king's use. The
-church was shut up for a time, and used as a storehouse for goods taken
-prizes from the French; but in the year 1546, on the 3rd of January, was
-again set open. On the which day preached at Paule's cross the Bishop of
-Rochester, where he declared the king's gift thereof to the city for the
-relieving of the poor. Which gift was by patent--of St. Bartholomew's
-Spittle, lately valued at three hundred and five pounds six shillings
-and seven pence, and surrendered to the king; of the said church of
-the Grey Friars, and of two parish churches, the one of St. Nicholas
-in the shambles, and the other of St. Ewines in Newgate market, which
-were to be made one parish church in the said Friars church; and in
-lands he gave for maintenance for the said church, with divine service,
-reparations, etc., five hundred marks by year for ever.
-
-The 13th of January, the 38th of Henry VIII., an agreement was made
-betwixt the king and the mayor[236] and commonalty of London, dated the
-27th of December, by which the said gift of the Grey Friars church, with
-all the edifices and ground, the fratry, the library, the dortor, and
-chapter-house, the great cloister and the lesser, tenements, gardens,
-and vacant grounds, lead, stone, iron, etc., the hospital of St.
-Bartholomew in West Smithfield, the church of the same, the lead, bells,
-and ornaments of the same hospital, with all the messuages, tenements,
-and appurtenances; the parishes of St. Nicholas and of St. Ewin, and
-so much of St. Sepulcher's parish as is within Newgate, were made one
-parish church in the Gray Friars church, and called Christ's church,
-founded by Henry VIII.
-
-The vicar of Christ's church was to have twenty-six pounds thirteen
-shillings and four pence the year; the vicar of St. Bartholomew thirteen
-pounds six shillings and eight pence; the visitor of Newgate (being
-a priest), ten pounds; and other five priests in Christ's church,
-all to be helping in Divine service, ministering the sacraments and
-sacramentals; the five priests to have eight pounds the piece, two
-clerks six pounds each, a sexton four pounds. Moreover, he gave them
-the hospital of Bethelem; with the laver of brass in the cloister, by
-estimation eighteen feet in length, and two feet and a half in depth;
-and the water-course of lead, to the said Friar house belonging,
-containing by estimation in length eighteen acres.
-
-In the year 1552 began the repairing of the Grey Friars house for the
-poor fatherless children; and in the month of November the children were
-taken into the same, to the number of almost four hundred. On Christmas
-day, in the afternoon, while the lord mayor and aldermen rode to Paules,
-the children of Christ's hospital stood, from St. Lawrence lane end
-in Cheape towards Paules, all in one livery of russet cotton, three
-hundred and forty in number; and in Easter next they were in blue at the
-Spittle, and so have continued ever since.
-
-The defaced monuments in this church were these; First in the choir,
-of the Lady Margaret, daughter to Philip, king of France, and wife to
-Edward I., foundress of this new church, 1317; of Isabel, queen, wife
-to Edward II., daughter to Philip, king of France, 1358; John of the
-Tower; Queen of Scots, wife to David Bruce, daughter to Edward II.,
-died in Hartford castle, and was buried by Isabel her mother 1362;
-William Fitzwarren, baron, and Isabel his wife, sometime Queen of Man;
-Isabel, daughter to Edward III., wedded to the Lord Courcy of France,
-after created Earl of Bedford; Elianor, wife to John, Duke of Britaine:
-Beatrix, Duchess of Britaine, daughter to Henry III.; Sir Robert Lisle,
-baron; the Lady Lisle, and Margaret de Rivers, Countess of Devon, all
-under one stone; Roger Mortimer, Earl of March, beheaded 1329; Peter,
-Bishop of Carbon in Hungary, 1331; Gregory Rocksley, mayor, 1282; Sir
-John Devereux, knight, 1385; John Hastings, Earl of Pembroke, 1389;
-Margaret, daughter to Thomas Brotharton, Earl Marshal; she was Duchess
-of Norfolk, and Countess Marshal and Lady Segrave, 1389; Richard
-Havering, knight, 1388; Robert Trisilian, knight justice, 1308; Geffrey
-Lucy, son of Geffrey Lucy; John Anbry, son to John, mayor of Norwich,
-1368; John Philpot, knight, mayor of London, and the Lady Jane Samford
-his wife, 1384; John, Duke of Bourbon and Anjou, Earl of Claremond,
-Montpensier, and Baron Beaujeu, who was taken prisoner at Agincourt,
-kept prisoner eighteen years, and deceased 1433; Robert Chalons, knight,
-1439; John Chalons; Margaret, daughter to Sir John Philpot, first
-married to T. Santlor, esquire, and after to John Neyband, esquire;
-Sir Nicholas Brimbar, mayor of London, buried 1386; Elizabeth Nevel,
-wife to John, son and heir to Ralph, Earl of Westmoreland, and mother
-to Ralph, Earl of Westmoreland, and daughter to Thomas Holland, Earl
-of Kent, 1423; Edward Burnell, son to the Lord Burnell. In Allhallows
-chapel: James Fines, Lord Say, 1450, and Helinor his wife, 1452; John
-Smith, Bishop of Landafe, 1478; John, Baron Hilton; John, Baron Clinton;
-Richard Hastings, knight, Lord of Willowby and Welles; Thomas Burdet,
-esquire, beheaded 1477; Robert Lisle, son and heir to the Lord Lisle.
-In our Lady's chapel: John Gisors, of London, knight; Hunfrey Stafford,
-esquire, of Worcestershire, 1486; Robert Bartram, Baron of Bothell;
-Ralph Barons, knight; William Apleton, knight; Reynold de Cambrey,
-knight; Thomas Beaumont, son and heir to Henry Lord Beaumont; John
-Butler, knight; Adam de Howton, knight, 1417; Bartholomew Caster, knight
-of London; Reinfride Arundele, knight, 1460; Thomas Covil, esquire,
-1422. In the 'Postles chapel: Walter Blunt, knight of the Garter,
-and Lord Mountjoy, treasurer of England, son and heir to T. Blunt,
-knight, treasurer of Normandy,[237] 1474; E. Blunt, Lord Mountjoy,
-1475; Alice Blunt Mountjoy, sometime wife to William Brown, mayor of
-London, and daughter to H. Kebel, mayor 1521; Anne Blunt, daughter to
-John Blunt, knight; Lord Mountjoy, 1480; Sir Allen Cheinie, knight, and
-Sir T. Greene, knight; William Blunt, esquire, son and heir to Walter
-Blunt,[238] captain of Gwynes, 1492; Elizabeth Blunt, wife to Robert
-Curson, knight, 1494; Bartholomew Burwashe, and John Burwashe his
-son; John Blunt, Lord Mountjoy, captain of Gwins and Hams, 1485; John
-Dinham, baron, sometime treasurer of England, knight of the Garter,
-1501; Elianor, Duchess of Buckingham, 1530; John Blunt, knight, 1531;
-Rowland Blunt, esquire, 1509; Robert Bradbury, 1489; Nicholas Clifton,
-knight; Francis Chape; two sons of Allayne Lord Cheiney, and John, son
-and heir to the same; Lord Allaine Cheinie, knight; John Robsart, knight
-of the Garter, 1450; Alleyne Cheiney, knight; Thomas Malory, knight,
-1470; Thomas Young, a justice of the bench, 1476; John Baldwin, fellow
-of Gray's inn, and common sergeant of London, 1469; Walter Wrotsley,
-knight of Warwickshire, 1473; Steven Jenins, mayor, 1523; Thomas a Par,
-and John Wiltwater, slain at Barnet, 1471; Nicholas Poynes, esquire,
-1512; Robert Elkenton, knight, 1460; John Water, alias Yorke herald,
-1520; John More, alias Norroy king of arms, 1491; George Hopton, knight,
-1489. Between the choir and the altar: Ralph Spiganel, knight; John
-Moyle, gentleman, of Gray's inn, 1495; William Huddy, knight, 1501;
-John Cobham, a baron of Kent; John Mortain, knight; John Deyncort,
-knight; John Norbery, esquire, high treasurer of England; Henry Norbery,
-his son, esquire; John Southlee, knight; Thomas Sakvile; Thomas Lucy,
-knight; 1525; Robert de la Rivar, son to Mauricius de la Rivar, Lord of
-Tormerton, 1457; John Malmaynas, esquire, and Thomas Malmaynas, knight;
-Hugh Acton, tailor, 1530; Nicholas Malmains; Hugh Parsal, knight, 1490;
-Alexander Kirketon, knight, etc. In the body of the church: William
-Paulet, esquire of Somersetshire, 1482; John Moyle, gentleman, 1530;
-Peter Champion, esquire, 1511; John Hart, gentleman, 1449; Alice Lat
-Hungerford, hanged at Tiborne for murdering her husband, 1523; Edward
-Hall, gentleman, of Gray's inn, 1470; Richard Churchyard, gentleman,
-fellow of Gray's inn, 1498; John Bramre, gentleman, of Gray's inn,
-1498; John Mortimar, knight, beheaded 1423; Henry Frowike, alderman;
-Renauld Frowike; Philip Pats, 1518; William Porter, sergeant at arms,
-1515; Thomas Grantham, gentleman, 1511; Edmond Rotheley, gentleman,
-1470; Henry Roston, gentleman, of Gray's inn, 1485; Nicholas Montgomery,
-gentleman, son to John Montgomery, of Northamptonshire, 1485; Sir
-Bartholomew Emfield, knight; Sir Barnard St. Peter, knight; Sir Ralph
-Sandwich, knight, custos of London; Sir Andrew Sakevile, knight; John
-Treszawall, gentleman and tailor of London, 1520. All these and five
-times so many more have been buried there, whose monuments are wholly
-defaced; for there were nine tombs of alabaster and marble, environed
-with strikes of iron in the choir, and one tomb in the body of the
-church, also coped with iron, all pulled down, besides sevenscore
-grave-stones of marble, all sold for fifty pounds, or thereabouts, by
-Sir Martin Bowes, goldsmith and alderman of London. Of late time buried
-there, Walter Hadden, doctor, etc. From this church west to Newgate is
-of this ward.
-
-Now for the south side of this ward, beginning again at the cross in
-Cheape, from thence to Friday street, and down that street on the west
-side, till over against the north-west corner of St. Matthew's church;
-and on the west side, to the south corner of the said church, which is
-wholly in the ward of Faringdon. This church hath these few monuments:
-Thomas Pole, goldsmith, 1395; Robert Johnson, goldsmith, alderman;
-John Twiselton, goldsmith, alderman, 1525; Ralph Allen, grocer, one
-of the sheriffs, deceased 1546; Anthony Gamage, ironmonger, one of
-the sheriffs, deceased 1579; Anthony Cage; John Mabbe, chamberlain of
-London, etc. Allen at Condit, and Thomas Warlingworth, founded a chantry
-there. Sir Nicholas Twiford, goldsmith, mayor, gave to that church a
-house, with the appurtenances, called the Griffon on the Hope, in the
-same street.[239]
-
-From this Friday street, west to the Old Exchange, a street so called
-of the king's exchange there kept, which was for the receipt of bullion
-to be coined. For Henry III., in the 6th of his reign, wrote to the
-Scabines and men of Ipre, that he and his council had given prohibition,
-that none, Englishmen or other, should make change of plate or other
-mass of silver, but only in his Exchange at London, or at Canterbury.
-Andrew Buckerell then had to farm the Exchange of England, and was mayor
-of London in the reign of Henry III. John Somercote had the keeping of
-the king's Exchange over all England. In the 8th of Edward I., Gregory
-Rockesly was keeper of the said Exchange for the king. In the 5th of
-Edward II., William Hausted was keeper thereof; and in the 18th, Roger
-de Frowicke, etc.
-
-These received the old stamps, or coining-irons, from time to time, as
-the same were worn, and delivered new to all the mints in London, as
-more at large in another place I have noted.
-
-This street beginneth by West Cheape in the north, and runneth down
-south to Knightriders street; that part thereof which is called Old Fish
-street, but the very housing and office of the Exchange and coinage was
-about the midst thereof, south from the east gate that entereth Paules
-churchyard, and on the west side in Baynard's castle ward.
-
-On the east side of this lane, betwixt West Cheape and the church of St.
-Augustine, Henry Walles, mayor (by license of Edward I.), built one row
-of houses, the profits rising of them to be employed on London bridge.
-
-The parish church of St. Augustine, and one house next adjoining in
-Watheling street, is of this ward called Faringdon. This is a fair
-church, and lately well repaired, wherein be monuments remaining--of
-H. Reade, armourer, one of the sheriffs 1450; Robert Bellesdon,
-haberdasher, mayor 1491; Sir Townley William Dere, one of the sheriffs
-1450; Robert Raven, haberdasher, 1500; Thomas Apleyard, gentleman,
-1515; William Moncaster, merchant-tailor, 1524; William Holte,
-merchant-tailor, 1544, etc.
-
-Then is the north churchyard of Paules, in the which standeth the
-cathedral church, first founded by Ethelbert, king of Kent, about the
-year of Christ 610: he gave thereto lands as appeareth:
-
-"_AEdelbertus Rex, Deo inspirante, pro animae suae remedio dedit episcopo
-Melito terram quae appellatur Tillingeham ad monasterii sui solatium,
-scilicet monasterium Sancti Pauli: et ego Rex AEthelbertus ita firmiter
-concedo tibi presuli Melito potestatem ejus habendi & possidendi ut in
-perpetuum in monasterii utilitate permaneat_," etc. Athelstan, Edgar,
-Edward the Confessor, and others, also gave lands thereunto. William
-the Conqueror gave to the church of St. Paule, and to Mauricius,
-then bishop, and his successors, the castle of Stortford, with the
-appurtenances, etc. He also confirmed the gifts of his predecessors in
-these words: "_W. Rex Angl. concedo Deo et S. Paulo in perpetuum, 24
-Hidas quas Rex AEthelbert dedit S. Paulo juxta London_," etc. The charter
-of King William the Conqueror, exemplified in the Tower, englished thus:
-
-"William, by the grace of God, king of Englishmen, to all his welbeloued
-French and English people, greeting: Know ye that I do giue vnto God
-and the church of S. Paule of London, and to the rectors and seruitors
-of the same, in all their lands which the church hath, or shall have,
-within borough and without, sack and sock, thole and theam, infangthefe
-and grithbriche, and all freeships, by strand and by land, on tide
-and off tide, and all the rights that into them christendome byrath,
-on morth sprake, and on unright hamed, and on unright work, of all
-that bishoprick on mine land, and on each other man's land. For I will
-that the church in all things be as free as I would my soul to be in
-the day of judgement. Witnesses: Osmund, our Chancellor; Lanfrank,
-the Archbishop of Canterbury; and T. Archbishop of York; Roger, Earle
-of Shrewesbury; Alane, the county; Geffrey de Magnavilla; and Ralph
-Peuerel."
-
-In the year 1087, this church of St. Paule was burnt with fire, and
-therewith the most part of the city; which fire began at the entry of
-the west gate, and consumed the east gate. Mauricius the bishop began
-therefore the foundation of a new church of St. Paule, a work that men
-of that time judged would never have been finished, it was to them so
-wonderful for length and breadth; and also the same was built upon
-arches (or vaults) of stone, for defence of fire, which was a manner
-of work before that time unknown to the people of this nation, and
-then brought in by the French; and the stone was fetched from Caen in
-Normandy.
-
-This Mauricius deceased in the year 1107. Richard Beamor succeeded
-him in the bishopric, who did wonderfully increase the said church,
-purchasing of his own cost the large streets and lanes about it, wherein
-were wont to dwell many lay people; which ground he began to compass
-about with a strong wall of stone and gates. King Henry I. gave to the
-said Richard so much of the moat (or wall) of the castle, on the Thames
-side, to the south, as should be needful to make the said wall of the
-church, and so much as should suffice to make a wall without the way on
-the north side, etc.
-
-It should seem that this Richard inclosed but two sides of the said
-church or cemetery of St. Paule, to wit, the south and north side;
-for King Edward II., in the 10th of his reign, granted that the said
-churchyard should be inclosed with a wall where it wanted, for the
-murders and robberies that were there committed. But the citizens then
-claimed the east part of the churchyard to be the place of assembly to
-their folkemotes, and that the great steeple there situate was to that
-use, their common bell, which being there rung, all the inhabitants of
-the city might hear and come together. They also claimed the west side,
-that they might there assemble themselves together, with the lord of
-Baynard's castle, for view of their armour, in defence of the city. This
-matter was in the Tower of London referred to Harvius de Stanton, and
-his fellow justices itinerants; but I find not the decision or judgment
-of that controversy.
-
-True it is, that Edward III., in the 17th of his reign, gave commandment
-for the finishing of that wall, which was then performed, and to this
-day it continueth; although now on both the sides (to wit, within and
-without) it be hidden with dwelling-houses. Richard Beamer deceased in
-the year 1127, and his successors in process of time performed the work
-begun.
-
-The steeple of this church was built and finished in the year 1222; the
-cross on the said steeple fell down, and a new was set up in the year
-1314. The new work of Pauls (so called) at the east end above the choir,
-was begun in the year 1251.
-
-Henry Lacy, Earl of Lincoln, constable of Chester, and custos of
-England, in his time was a great benefactor to this work, and was there
-buried in the year 1310. Also Ralph Baldocke, Bishop of London, in his
-lifetime gave two hundred marks to the building of the said new work,
-and left much by his testament towards the finishing thereof: he
-deceased in the year 1313, and was buried in the Lady chapel. Also the
-new work of Paules, to wit, the cross aisles, were begun to be new built
-in the year 1256.
-
-The 1st of February, in the year 1444, about two of the clock in the
-afternoon, the steeple of Paules was fired by lightning, in the midst
-of the shaft or spire, both on the west side and on the south; but by
-labour of many well-disposed people the same to appearance was quenched
-with vinegar, so that all men withdrew themselves to their houses,
-praising God; but between eight and nine of the clock in the same night
-the fire burst out again more fervently than before, and did much hurt
-to the lead and timber, till by the great labour of the mayor and people
-that came thither, it was thoroughly quenched.
-
-This steeple was repaired in the year 1462, and the weather-cock again
-erected. Robert Godwin winding it up, the rope brake, and he was
-destroyed on the pinnacles, and the cock was sore bruised; but Burchwood
-(the king's plumber) set it up again: since the which time, needing
-reparation, it was both taken down and set up in the year 1553; at which
-time it was found to be of copper, gilt over; and the length from the
-bill to the tail being four feet, and the breadth over the wings three
-feet and a half, it weighed forty pounds; the cross from the bowl to the
-eagle (or cock) was fifteen feet and six inches, of assize; the length
-thereof overthwart was five feet and ten inches, and the compass of the
-bowl was nine feet and one inch.
-
-The inner body of this cross was oak, the next cover was lead, and the
-uttermost was of copper, red varnished. The bowl and eagle, or cock,
-were of copper, and gilt also.
-
-The height of the steeple was five hundred and twenty feet, whereof the
-stone-work is two hundred and sixty feet, and the spire was likewise two
-hundred and sixty feet: the length of the whole church is two hundred
-and forty tailors' yards, which make seven hundred and twenty feet;
-the breadth thereof is one hundred and thirty feet, and the height of
-the body of that church is one hundred and fifty feet. This church
-hath a bishop, a dean, a precentor, chancellor, treasurer, and five
-archdeacons; to wit, of London, Middlesex, Essex, Colchester, and St.
-Albans: it hath prebendaries thirty, canons twelve, vicars choral six,
-etc.
-
-The college of petty canons there was founded by King Richard II. in
-honour of Queen Anne his wife, and of her progenitors, in the 17th of
-his reign. Their hall and lands were then given unto them, as appeareth
-by the patent; Master Robert Dokesworth then being master thereof. In
-the year 1408, the petty canons then building their college, the mayor
-and commonalty granted them their water-courses, and other easements.
-
-There was also one great cloister, on the north side of this church,
-environing a plot of ground, of old time called Pardon churchyard;
-whereof Thomas More, dean of Paules, was either the first builder, or
-a most especial benefactor, and was buried there. About this cloister
-was artificially and richly painted the Dance of Machabray, or Dance of
-Death, commonly called the Dance of Paul's; the like whereof was painted
-about St. Innocent's cloister at Paris, in France. The metres, or poesy
-of this dance, were translated out of French into English by John
-Lidgate, monk of Bury,[240] and with the picture of death leading all
-estates, painted about the cloister, at the special request and at the
-dispence of Jenken Carpenter, in the reign of Henry VI. In this cloister
-were buried many persons, some of worship, and others of honour; the
-monuments of whom, in number and curious workmanship, passed all other
-that were in that church.
-
-Over the east quadrant of this cloister was a fair library, built at
-the costs and charges of Walter Sherington, chancellor of the duchy of
-Lancaster, in the reign of Henry VI., which hath been well furnished
-with fair written books in vellum, but few of them now do remain there.
-In the midst of this Pardon churchyard was also a fair chapel, first
-founded by Gilbert Becket, portgrave and principal magistrate of this
-city, in the reign of King Stephen, who was there buried.
-
-Thomas Moore, dean of Paul's before named, re-edified or new built this
-chapel, and founded three chaplains there, in the reign of Henry V.
-
-In the year 1549, on the 10th of April, the said chapel, by commandment
-of the Duke of Somerset, was begun to be pulled down, with the whole
-cloister, the Dance of Death, the tombs and monuments; so that nothing
-thereof was left but the bare plot of ground, which is since converted
-into a garden for the petty canons. There was also a chapel at the north
-door of Paules, founded by the same Walter Sherrington, by license
-of Henry VI., for two, three, or four chaplains, endowed with forty
-pounds, by the year. This chapel also was pulled down in the reign of
-Edward VI., and in place thereof a fair house built.
-
-There was furthermore a fair chapel of the Holy Ghost in Paules church,
-on the north side, founded in the year 1400 by Roger Holmes, chancellor
-and prebendary of Paules, for Adam Berie, alderman, mayor of London
-1364, John Wingham and others, for seven chaplains, and called Holme's
-college. Their common hall was in Paul's churchyard, on the south
-side, near unto a carpenter's yard. This college was, with others,
-suppressed in the reign of Edward VI. Then under the choir of Paules is
-a large chapel, first dedicated to the name of Jesu, founded, or rather
-confirmed, the 37th of Henry VI., as appeareth by his patent thereof,
-dated at Croydone, to this effect: "Many liege men, and Christian
-people, having begun a fraternitie and guild, to the honour of the most
-glorious name of Jesus Christ our Saviour, in a place called the Crowdes
-of the cathedrall church of Paul's in London, which hath continued long
-time peaceably till now of late; whereupon they have made request, and
-we have taken upon us the name and charge of the foundation, to the
-laud of Almightie God, the Father, the Sonne, and the Holy Ghost, and
-especially to the honour of Jesu, in whose honour the fraternitie was
-begun," etc.
-
-The king ordained William Say, then dean of Paules, to be the rector,
-and Richard Ford (a remembrancer in the Exchequer), and Henry Bennis
-(clerk of his privy seal), the guardians of those brothers and sisters;
-they and their successors to have a common seal, license to purchase
-lands or tenements to the value of forty pounds by the year, etc.
-
-This foundation was confirmed by Henry VII., the 22nd of his reign, to
-Doctor Collet, then dean of Paules, rector there, etc.; and by Henry
-VIII., the 27th of his reign, to Richard Pace, then dean of Paules, etc.
-
-At the west end of this Jesus chapel, under the choir of Paules, also
-was a parish church of St. Faith, commonly called St. Faith under
-Paul's, which served for the stationers and others dwelling in Paule's
-churchyard, Paternoster row, and the places near adjoining. The said
-chapel of Jesus being suppressed in the reign of Edward VI., the
-parishioners of St. Faith's church were removed into the same, as to a
-place more sufficient for largeness and lightsomeness, in the year 1551,
-and so it remaineth.
-
-Then was there on the north side of this churchyard a large charnel
-house for the bones of the dead, and over it a chapel of an old
-foundation, such as followeth. In the year 1282, the 10th of Edward
-I., it was agreed, that Henry Walles, mayor, and the citizens, for
-the cause of shops by them built, without the wall of the churchyard,
-should assign to God and to the church of St. Paul ten marks of rent by
-the year for ever, towards the new building of a chapel of the Blessed
-Virgin Mary, and also to assign five marks of yearly rent to a chaplain
-to celebrate there.
-
-Moreover, in the year 1430, the 8th of Henry VI., license was granted
-to Jenkin Carpenter (executor to Richard Whittington) to establish upon
-the said charnel a chaplain, to have eight marks by the year. Then was
-also in this chapel two brotherhoods. In this chapel were buried Robert
-Barton, Henry Barton, mayor, and Thomas Mirfin, mayor, all skinners, and
-were entombed with their images of alabaster over them, grated or coped
-about with iron before the said chapel, all which were pulled down in
-the year 1549: the bones of the dead, couched up in a charnel under the
-chapel, were conveyed from thence into Finsbery field (by report of him
-who paid for the carriage[241]), amounting to more than one thousand
-cart-loads, and there laid on a moorish ground; in short space after
-raised, by soilage of the city upon them, to bear three windmills. The
-chapel and charnel were converted into dwelling-houses, warehouses, and
-sheds before them, for stationers, in place of the tombs.
-
-In the east part of this churchyard standeth Paules school, lately new
-built, and endowed in the year 1512 by John Collet, doctor of divinity
-and dean of Paules, for one hundred and fifty-three poor men's children,
-to be taught free in the same school; for which he appointed a master,
-a surmaster, or usher, and a chaplain, with large stipends for ever,
-committing the oversight thereof to the masters, wardens, and assistants
-of the mercers in London, because he was[242] son to Henry Collet,
-mercer, sometime mayor. He left to these mercers lands to the yearly
-value of one hundred and twenty pounds, or better.
-
-Near unto this school, on the north side thereof, was of old time a
-great and high clochier, or bell-house, four square, built of stone, and
-in the same a most strong frame of timber, with four bells, the greatest
-that I have heard; these were called Jesus' bells, and belonged to
-Jesus' chapel, but I know not by whose gift: the same had a great spire
-of timber covered with lead, with the image of St. Paul on the top, but
-was pulled down by Sir Miles Partridge, knight, in the reign of Henry
-VIII. The common speech then was, that he did set a hundred pounds upon
-a cast at dice against it, and so won the said clochiard and bells of
-the king; and then causing the bells to be broken as they hung, the rest
-was pulled down. This man was afterward executed on the Tower hill for
-matters concerning the Duke of Somerset, the 5th of Edward VI.
-
-In place of this clochiard, of old times the common bell of the city was
-used to be rung for the assembly of the citizens to their folke motes,
-as I have before showed.
-
-About the midst of this churchyard is a pulpit cross of timber, mounted
-upon steps of stone, and covered with lead, in which are sermons
-preached by learned divines every Sunday in the forenoon; the very
-antiquity of which cross is to me unknown. I read, that in the year
-1259, King Henry III. commanded a general assembly to be made at this
-cross, where he in proper person commanded the mayor, that on the next
-day following, he should cause to be sworn before the alderman every
-stripling of twelve years of age or upward, to be true to the king and
-his heirs, kings of England. Also, in the year 1262, the same king
-caused to be read at Paul's cross a bull, obtained from Pope Urban IV.,
-as an absolution for him, and for all that were sworn to maintain the
-articles made in parliament at Oxford. Also in the year 1299, the dean
-of Paules accursed at Paules cross all those which had searched in the
-church of St. Martin in the Field for a hoard of gold, etc. This pulpit
-cross was by tempest of lightning and thunder defaced. Thomas Kempe,
-Bishop of London, new built it in form as it now standeth.
-
-In the year 1561, the 4th of June, betwixt the hours of three and four
-of the clock in the afternoon, the great spire of the steeple of St.
-Paule's church was fired by lightning, which brake forth (as it seemed)
-two or three yards beneath the foot of the cross; and from thence it
-went downward the spire to the battlements, stone-work, and bells,
-so furiously, that within the space of four hours the same steeple,
-with all the roofs of the church, were consumed, to the great sorrow
-and perpetual remembrance of the beholders. After this mischance, the
-queen's majesty directed her letters to the mayor, willing him to take
-order for the speedy repairing of the same: and she, of her gracious
-disposition, for the furtherance thereof, did presently give and deliver
-in gold one thousand marks, with a warrant for a thousand loads of
-timber, to be taken out of her woods or elsewhere.
-
-The citizens also gave first a great benevolence, and after that three
-fifteens, to be speedily paid. The clergy of England likewise, within
-the province of Canterbury, granted the fortieth part of the value of
-their benefices, charged with first fruits, the thirtieth part of such
-as were not so charged; but the clergy of London diocese granted the
-thirtieth part of all that paid first fruits, and the twentieth part of
-such as had paid their fruits.
-
-Six citizens of London, and two petty canons of Paules church, had
-charge to further and oversee the work, wherein such expedition was
-used, that within one month next following the burning thereof, the
-church was covered with boards and lead, in manner of a false roof,
-against the weather; and before the end of the said year, all the said
-aisles of the church were framed out of new timber, covered with lead,
-and fully finished. The same year also the great roofs of the west and
-east ends were framed out of great timber in Yorkshire, brought thence
-to London by sea, and set up and covered with lead; the north and south
-ends were framed of timber, and covered with lead, before April 1566.
-Concerning the steeple, divers models were devised and made, but little
-else was done, through whose default, God knoweth; it was said that the
-money appointed for new building of the steeple was collected.[243]
-
-Monuments in this church be these: first, as I read, of Erkenwalde,
-Bishop of London, buried in the old church about the year of Christ 700,
-whose body was translated into the new work in the year 1140, being
-richly shrined above the choir behind the high altar.
-
-Sebba, or Seba, King of the East Saxons, first buried in the old church,
-since removed into the new, and laid in a coffin of stone, on the north
-side without the choirs; Ethelred, King of the West Saxons, was likewise
-buried and removed; William Norman, Bishop of London in the reigns of
-Edward the Confessor and of William the Conqueror, deceased 1070, and
-is new buried in the body of the church, with an epitaph, as in my
-_Summary_ I have shown; Eustauchius de Fauconbridge, Bishop of London,
-1228, buried in the south isle above the choir; Martin Pateshull,
-Dean of Powle's, 1239; W. Havarhul, canon; the king's treasurer, Hugh
-Pateshull, 1240; Roger Nigar, Bishop of London, 1241, buried in the
-north side of the choir; Fulco Basset, Bishop of London, 1259, and his
-brother, Philip Basset, knight, 1261; Henry Wingham, Bishop of London,
-buried in the south aisle above the choir, 1262; Geffrey de Arca,
-chaplain in the chapel of St. James, under the rood at north door, 1264;
-Alexander de Swarford, 1273; John Grantham, 1273; John Braynford, and
-Richard Umframuile, 1275; Roger de Iale, Archdeacon of Essex, 1280;
-Ralph Donion, canon, 1382; Godfrey S. Donstan, 1274; Fulke Lovell, 1298;
-William Harworth, clerk, 1302; Reginald Brandon, in the new Lady chapel,
-1305; Richard Newporte, Archdeacon of Middlesex, 1309; Henry Lacie, Earl
-of Lincolne, in the new work of Paules betwixt the Lady chapel and St.
-Dunston's chapel, where a fair monument was raised for him, with his
-picture in armour, cross-legged, as one professed for defence of the
-Holy Land against the infidels, 1310, his monument is foully defaced;
-Ralph Baldoke, Bishop of London, 1313, in the said Lady chapel, whereof
-he was founder.
-
-Some have noted,[244] that in digging the foundation of this new work,
-namely of a chapel on the south side of Paule's church, there were found
-more than a hundred scalps of oxen or kine, in the year 1316; which
-thing (say they) confirmed greatly the opinion of those which have
-reported, that of old time there had been a temple of Jupiter, and that
-there was daily sacrifice of beasts.
-
-Othersome, both wise and learned, have thought the buck's head, borne
-before the procession of Paule's on St. Paul's day, to signify the like.
-But true it is, I have read an ancient deed to this effect.
-
-Sir William Baud, knight, the 3rd of Edward I., in the year 1274, on
-Candlemas day, granted to Harvy de Borham, dean of Powle's, and to the
-chapter there, that in consideration of twenty-two acres of ground or
-land, by them granted, within their manor of Westley in Essex, to be
-inclosed into his park of Curingham, he would for ever, upon the feast
-day of the Conversion of St. Paul in winter, give unto them a good doe,
-seasonable and sweet, and upon the feast of the commemoration of St.
-Paul in summer, a good buck, and offer the same upon the high altar; the
-same to be spent amongst the canons residents. The doe to be brought by
-one man at the hour of procession, and through the procession to the
-high altar; and the bringer to have nothing: the buck to be brought
-by all his men in like manner, and they to have paid unto them by the
-chamberlain of the church twelve pence only, and no more to be required.
-This grant he made, and for performance bound the lands of him and his
-heirs to be distrained on; and if the lands should be evicted, that
-yet he and his heirs should accomplish the gift. Witnesses: Richard
-Tilberie, William de Wockendon, Richard de Harlowe, knights, Peter of
-Stanforde, Thomas of Waldon, and some others.
-
-Sir Walter Baude, son to William, confirmed this gift, in the 30th of
-the said king, and the witnesses thereunto were Nicholas de Wokendon,
-Richard de Rokeley, Thomas de Mandevile, John de Rochford, knights,
-Richard de Broniford, William de Markes, William de Fulham, and other.
-Thus much for the grant.
-
-Now what I have heard by report, and have partly seen, it followeth.
-On the feast day of the commemoration of St. Paul, the buck being
-brought up to the steps of the high altar in Paul's church, at the
-hour of procession, the dean and chapter being apparelled in copes and
-vestments, with garlands of roses on their heads, they sent the body
-of the buck to baking, and had the head fixed on a pole, borne before
-the cross in their procession, until they issued out of the west door,
-where the keeper that brought it blowed the death of the buck, and then
-the horners that were about the city presently answered him in like
-manner; for the which pains they had each one of the dean and chapter,
-four pence in money, and their dinner, and the keeper that brought it,
-was allowed during his abode there, for that service, meat, drink, and
-lodging, at the dean and chapter's charges, and five shillings in money
-at his going away, together with a loaf of bread, having the picture of
-St. Paul upon it, etc.
-
-There was belonging to the church of St. Paul, for both the days, two
-special suits of vestments, the one embroidered with bucks, the other
-with does, both given by the said Bauds (as I have heard). Thus much for
-the matter.
-
-Now to the residue of the monuments:--Sir Ralph Hingham, chief justice
-of both Benches successively, buried in the side of the north walk
-against the choir, 1308; Henry Guildford, clerk at the altar of the
-Apostles, 1313; Richard Newport, Bishop of London, 1318; William
-Chateslehunt, canon, in the new work, 1321, had a chantry there; Sir
-Nicholas Wokenden, knight, at the altar of St. Thomas in the new work,
-1323; John Cheshull, Bishop of London, 1279; Roger Waltham, canon,
-1325; Hamo Chikewell, six times mayor of London, 1328; Robert Monden,
-and John Monden his brother, canons, in the new work, 1332; Walter
-Thorpe, canon, in the new work, 1333; John Fable, 1334; James Fisil,
-chaplain, 1341; William Melford, Archdeacon of Colchester, 1345;
-Richard de Placeto, Archdeacon of Colchester, 1345, before St. Thomas'
-chapel; Geffrey Eton, canon, 1345; Nicholas Husband, canon, 1347; Sir
-John Poultney, mayor 1348, in a fair chapel by him built on the north
-side of Paule's, wherein he founded three chaplains; William Eversden,
-canon, in the crowds, 1349; Alan Hotham, canon, in the new crowds, 1351;
-Henry Etesworth, under the rood at north door, 1353; John Beauchampe,
-constable of Dover, warden of the ports, knight of the Garter, son to
-Guy Beauchampe, Earl of Warwick, and brother to Thomas Earl of Warwick,
-in the body of the church, on the south side, 1358, where a proper
-chapel and fair monument remaineth of him; he is by ignorant people
-misnamed to be Humfrey, Duke of Glocester, who lieth honourably buried
-at St. Albon's, twenty miles from London, and therefore such as merrily
-or simply profess themselves to serve Duke Humfrey in Paule's, are to
-be punished here, and sent to St. Albon's, there again to be punished
-for their absence from their lord and master, as they call him; Michael
-Norborow, Bishop of London, 1361; Walter Nele, blader, and Avis his
-wife, 1361; Gilbert Brewer, dean of Paule's, 1366; Richard Wendover,
-1366; John Hiltoft, goldsmith, and Alice his wife, in the new works,
-St. Dunston's chapel, 1368; Adam de Bery, mayor in the year 1364,
-buried in a chapel of St. Mary Magdalen, or of the Holy Ghost, called
-Holmes' college, behind the rood at the north door of Paul's, 1390;
-Roger Holmes, chancellor and prebend of Paul's, was buried there 1400;
-John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, 1399, buried on the north side the
-choir, beside Blanch his first wife, who deceased 1368; Sir Richard
-Burley, knight of the Garter, under a fair monument in the side of the
-north walk against the choir, a chantry was there founded for him,
-1409; Beatrix his wife, after his death, married to Thomas Lord Rouse,
-was buried in the chapel of St. John Baptist (or Poultney's chapel)
-near the north door of Paule's, 1409; Thomas Evers, dean of Paule's, in
-St. Thomas' chapel, the new work, 1411; Thomas More, dean of Paule's,
-in the chapel of St. Anne and St. Thomas, by him new built in Pardon
-churchyard, 1419; Thomas Ston, dean of Paule's, by the tomb of John
-Beauchampe, 1423; the Duchess of Bedford, sister to Philip Duke of
-Burgoyne, 1433; Robert Fitzhugh, Bishop of London, in the choir, 1435;
-Walter Sherington, in a chapel without the north door by him built,
-1457; John Drayton, goldsmith, in Alhallowes chapel, 1456; William
-Say, dean of Paul's, in the Crowds, or Jesus' chapel, 1468; Margaret,
-Countess of Shrewsbury, in the Crowds, or Jesus' chapel, as appeareth by
-an inscription on a pillar there.
-
-Here before the image of Jesu lieth the worshipful and right noble lady,
-Margaret Countess of Shrewsbury, late wife of the true and victorious
-knight and redoubtable warrior, John Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury, which
-worship died in Guien for the right of this land. The first daughter,
-and one of the heirs of the right famous and renowned knight, Richard
-Beauchamp, late Earl of Warwick, which died in Rouen, and Dame Elizabeth
-his wife, the which Elizabeth was daughter and heir to Thomas, late Lord
-Berkeley, on his side, and of her mother's side, Lady Lisle and Tyes,
-which countess passed from this world the 14th day of June, in the year
-of our Lord 1468, on whose soul Jesu have mercy. Amen.
-
-John Wenlocke, by his last will, dated 1477, appointed there should
-be dispended upon a monument over the Lady of Shrewsbury where she is
-buried afore Jesus, one hundred pounds. He left Sir Humfrey Talbot his
-supervisor. This Sir Humfrey Talbot, knight, lord marshal of the town of
-Calais, made his will the year 1492. He was younger son of John Earl of
-Shrewsbury, and Margaret his wife; he appointed a stone to be put in a
-pillar before the grave of his lady mother in Paul's, of his portraiture
-and arms, according to the will of John Wenlocke, but for want of room
-and lightsomeness in that place, it was concluded, the image of Jesus to
-be curiously painted on the wall of Paul's church, over the door that
-entereth into the said chapel of Jesus, and the portraiture also of the
-said Lady Margaret, Countess of Shrewsbury, kneeling in her mantle of
-arms, with her progeny; all which was so performed, and remaineth till
-this day.
-
-In the chapel of Jesus, Thomas Dowcrey, William Lambe, 1578, and many
-other, have been interred; John of London, under the north rood, 1266;
-John Lovell, clerk; John Romane; John of St. Olave; Waltar Bloxley;
-Sir Alen Boxhull, knight of the Garter, constable of the Tower, custos
-of the forest and park of Clarendon, the forest of Brokholt, Grovell,
-and Melchet, buried beside St. Erkenwald's shrine, and of later time
-Thomas Kempe, Bishop of London, in a proper chapel of the Trinity by
-him founded in the body of the church, on the north side, 1489; Thomas
-Linacre, doctor of physic; John Collet, dean of Paule's, on the south
-side without the choir, 1519; John Dowman, canon of Paule's, 1525;
-Richard Fitz-James, Bishop of London, hard beneath the north-west
-pillar of Paule's steeple, under a fair tomb, and a chapel of St. Paul,
-built of timber, with stairs mounting thereunto over his tomb, of grey
-marble, 1521. His chapel was burned by fire falling from the steeple,
-his tomb was taken thence. John Stokesley, Bishop of London, in our
-Lady chapel, 1539; John Nevill, Lord Latimer, in a chapel by the north
-door of Paule's, about 1542; Sir John Mason, knight, in the north walk,
-against the choir, 1566; William Herbert, Earl of Pembroke, knight of
-the Garter, on the north side of the choir, 1569; Sir Nicholas Bacon,
-lord-keeper of the great seal, on the south side of the choir, 1578;
-Sir Philip Sidney, above the choir on the north side, 1586; Sir Frances
-Walsingham, knight, principal secretary, and chancellor of the duchy of
-Lancaster, 1590; Sir Christopher Hatton, lord chancellor of England,
-knight of the Garter, above the choir, 1591, under a most sumptuous
-monument, where a merry poet wrote thus:--
-
- "Philip and Francis have no tombe,
- For _great_ Christopher takes all the roome."
-
-John Elmer, Bishop of London, before St. Thomas' chapel, 1594; the Lady
-Heneage, and her husband, Sir Thomas Heneage, chancellor of the duchy,
-1595; Richard Fletcher, Bishop of London, 1596. These, as the chief,
-have I noted to be buried there.
-
-Without the north gate of Paule's church from the end of the Old
-Exchange, west up Paternoster row, by the two lanes out of Paule's
-church, the first out of the cross aisle of Paule's, the other out of
-the body of the church, about the midst thereof, and so west to the
-Golden Lion, be all of this ward, as is aforesaid. The houses in this
-street, from the first north gate of Paule's churchyard unto the next
-gate, was first built without the wall of the churchyard, by Henry
-Walles, mayor in the year 1282. The rents of those houses go to the
-maintenance of London bridge. This street is now called Pater Noster
-row, because of stationers or text writers that dwelt there, who wrote
-and sold all sorts of books then in use, namely, A. B. C. with the Pater
-Noster, Ave, Creed, Graces, etc.
-
-There dwelt also turners of beads, and they were called Pater Noster
-makers, as I read in a record of one Robert Nikke, Pater Noster maker,
-and citizen, in the reign of Henry IV., and so of other. At the end of
-Pater Noster row is Ave Mary lane, so called upon the like occasion of
-text writers and bead makers then dwelling there; and at the end of
-that lane is likewise Creede lane, late so called, but sometime Spurrier
-row, of spurriers dwelling there; and Amen lane is added thereunto
-betwixt the south end of Warwicke lane and the north end of Ave Mary
-lane. At the north end of Ave Mary lane is one great house, built of
-stone and timber, of old time pertaining to John Duke of Britaine, Earl
-of Richmond, as appeareth by the records of Edward II., since that, it
-is called Pembrook's inn, near unto Ludgate, as belonging to the earls
-of Pembrook, in the times of Richard II., the 18th year, and of Henry
-VI., the 14th year. It is now called Burgaveny house, and belongeth to
-Henry, late Lord of Burgaveny.
-
-Betwixt the south end of Ave Mary lane, and the north end of Creed lane,
-is the coming out of Paule's church yard on the east, and the high
-street on the west, towards Ludgate, and this is called Bowyer row, of
-bowyers dwelling there in old time, now worn out by mercers and others.
-In this street, on the north side, is the parish church of St. Martin,
-a proper church, and lately new built; for in the year 1437, John
-Michael, mayor, and the commonalty, granted to William Downe, parson
-of St. Martin's at Ludgate, a parcel of ground, containing in length
-twenty-eight feet, and in breadth four feet, to set and build their
-steeple upon, etc. The monuments here have been of William Sevenoake,
-mayor 1418; Henry Belwase and John Gest, 1458; William Taverner,
-gentleman, 1466; John Barton, esquire, 1439; Stephen Peacock, mayor
-1533; Sir Roger Cholmley, John Went, and Roger Paine, had chantries
-there.
-
-On the south side of this street is the turning into the Black Friers,
-which order sometime had their houses in Old borne, where they remained
-for the space of fifty-five years, and then in the year 1276, Gregorie
-Roksley, mayor, and the barons of this city, granted and gave to Robert
-Kilwarby, Archbishop of Canterbury, two lanes or ways next the street of
-Baynard's castle, and also the tower of Mountfitchit, to be destroyed;
-in place of which the said Robert built the late new church of the Black
-Friers, and placed them therein. King Edward I., and Elianor his wife,
-were great benefactors thereunto. This was a large church, and richly
-furnished with ornaments, wherein divers parliaments, and other great
-meetings, hath been holden; namely, in the year 1450, the 28th of Henry
-VI., a parliament was begun at Westminster, and adjourned to the Black
-Friers in London, and from thence to Leycester. In the year 1522, the
-Emperor Charles V. was lodged there. In the year 1524, the 15th of
-April, a parliament was begun at the Black Friers, wherein was demanded
-a subsidy of eight hundred thousand pounds to be raised of goods and
-lands, four shillings in every pound, and in the end was granted two
-shillings of the pound of goods or lands that were worth twenty pounds,
-or might dispend twenty pounds by the year, and so upward, to be paid
-in two years. This parliament was adjourned to Westminster amongst the
-black monks, and ended in the king's palace there, the 14th of August,
-at nine of the clock in the night, and was therefore called the Black
-parliament. In the year 1529, Cardinal Campeius, the legate, with
-Cardinal Woolsey, sat at the said Black Friars, where before them, as
-legates and judges, was brought in question the king's marriage with
-Queen Katherine, as unlawful, before whom the king and queen were cited
-and summoned to appear, etc. whereof more at large in my _Annals_ I have
-touched.
-
-The same year, in the month of October, began a parliament in the Black
-Friers, in the which Cardinal Woolsey was condemned in the premunire;
-this house, valued at L104 15_s._ 5_d._, was surrendered the 12th of
-November, the 30th of Henry VIII. There were buried in this church,
-Margaret Queen of Scots; Hubert de Burgh, Earl of Kent, translated from
-their old church by Oldborne; Robert de Attabeto, Earl of Bellimon; Dame
-Isabel, wife to Sir Roger Bygot, earl marshal; William and Jane Huse,
-children to Dame Ellis, Countess of Arundell; and by them lieth Dame
-Ellis, daughter to the Earl Warren, and after Countess of Arundell;
-Dame Ide, wife to Sir Waltar ----, daughter to Ferrers of Chartley;
-Richard de Brewes; Richard Strange, son to Roger Strange; Elizabeth,
-daughter to Sir Barthol. Badlesmere, wife to Sir William Bohun, Earl
-of Northampton; Marsh; the Earls of Marsh and Hereford; and Elizabeth
-Countess of Arundell; Dame Joan, daughter to Sir John Carne, first
-wife to Sir Gwide Brian; Hugh Clare, knight, 1295; the heart of Queen
-Helianor, the foundress; the heart of Alfonce, her son; the hearts of
-John and Margaret, children to W. Valence; Sir William Thorpe, justice;
-the Lord Lioth of Ireland; Maude, wife to Geffrey Say, daughter to the
-Earl of Warwick; Dame Sible, daughter to Wil. Pattehulle, wife to Roger
-Beauchampe; and by her Sir Richard or Roger Beauchampe; Lord St. Amand,
-and Dame Elizabeth his wife, daughter to the Duke of Lancaster; Sir
-Stephen Collington, knight; Sir William Peter, knight; the Countess of
-Huntington; Duchess of Excester, 1425; Sir John Cornwall; Lord Fanhope,
-died at Amphill in Bedfordshire, and was buried here in 1443; Sir John
-Triptoste, Earl of Worcester, beheaded 1470; and by him in his chapel,
-James Tuochet Lord Audley, beheaded 1497; William Paston, and Anne,
-daughter to Edmond Lancaster; the Lord Beamount; Sir Edmond Cornewall,
-Baron of Burford; the Lady Nevell, wedded to Lord Dowglas, daughter
-to the Duke of Excester; Richard Scrope, esquire; Dame Katheren Vaux,
-_alias_ Cobham; Sir Thomas Browne, and Dame Elizabeth his wife; Jane
-Powell; Thomas Swinforth; John Mawsley, esquire, 1432; John De la Bere,
-Nicholas Eare, Geffrey Spring, William Clifford, esquires; Sir Thomas
-Brandon, knight of the Garter, 1509; William Stalworth, merchant-tailor,
-1518; William Courtney, Earl of Devonshire nominate, but not created,
-the 3rd of Henry VIII., etc.
-
-There is a parish of St. Anne within the precinct of the Black Friers,
-which was pulled down with the Friers' church, by Sir Thomas Carden;
-but in the reign of Queen Mary, he being forced to find a church to
-the inhabitants, allowed them a lodging chamber above a stair, which
-since that time, to wit, in the year 1597, fell down, and was again by
-collection therefore made, new built and enlarged in the same year, and
-was dedicated on the 11th of December.
-
-Now to turn again out of the Black Friers through Bowyer row, Ave Mary
-lane, and Pater Noster row, to the church of St. Michael _ad Bladum_,
-or at the corne (corruptly at the querne), so called, because in place
-thereof was sometime a corn market, stretching by west to the shambles.
-It seemeth that the church was new built[245] about the reign of Edward
-III. Thomas Newton, first parson there, was buried in the choir the
-year 1461. At the east end of this church stood a cross, called the old
-cross in West Cheape, which was taken down in the year 1390; since the
-which time the said parish church was also taken down, but new built
-and enlarged in the year 1430, the 8th of Henry VI. William Eastfield,
-mayor, and the commonalty, granted of the common soil of the city three
-feet and a half in breadth on the north part, and four feet in breadth
-toward the east. This is now a proper church, and hath the monuments
-of Thomas Newton, first parson; Roger Woodcocke, hatter, 1475; Thomas
-Rossel, brewer, 1473; John Hulton, stationer, 1475; John Oxney; Roger
-North, merchant-haberdasher, 1509; John Leiland, the famous antiquary;
-Henry Pranell, vintner, one of the sheriffs 1585; William Erkin, one of
-the sheriffs 1586; Thomas Bankes, barber-chirurgeon, 1598, etc. John
-Mundham had a chantry there in the reign of Edward II.
-
-At the east end of this church, in place of the old cross, is now a
-water-conduit placed. W. Eastfield, mayor the 9th of Henry VI., at the
-request of divers common councils, granted it so to be; whereupon, in
-the 19th of the same Henry, one thousand marks were granted by a common
-council towards the works of this conduit, and the reparations of other:
-this is called the little conduit in West Cheape by Paule's gate. At the
-west end of this parish church is a small passage for people on foot
-through the same church; and west from the said church, some distance,
-is another passage out of Pater Noster row, and is called, of such a
-sign, Panyar alley, which cometh out into the north over against St.
-Martin's lane. Next is Ivie lane, so called of ivy growing on the walls
-of the prebend[246] houses; but now the lane is replenished on both
-sides with fair houses, and divers offices be there kept by registers,
-namely, for the Prerogative Court of the Archbishop of Canterbury,
-the probate of wills, and for the lord treasurer's remembrance of the
-exchequer, etc.
-
-This lane runneth north to the west end of St. Nicholas shambles. Of old
-time was one great house sometimes belonging to the Earls of Britain,
-since that to the Lovels, and was called Lovels' inn; for Mathild, wife
-to John Lovell, held it in the 1st of Henry VI. Then is Eldenese lane,
-which stretcheth north to the high street of Newgate market; the same
-is now called Warwicke lane, of an ancient house there built by an Earl
-of Warwicke, and was since called Warwicke inn. It is in record called
-a messuage in Eldenese lane, in the parish of St. Sepulchre, the 28th
-of Henry the VI. Cicille Duchess of Warwicke possessed it. Now again
-from the conduit by Paule's gate on the north side is a large street
-running west to Newgate, the first part whereof, from the conduit to
-the shambles, is of selling bladders there, called Bladder street.
-Then behind the butchers' shops be now divers slaughter houses inward,
-and tippling houses outward. This is called Mountgodard street of the
-tippling houses there, and the goddards mounting from the tap to the
-table, from the table to the mouth, and sometimes over the head. This
-street goeth up to the north end of Ivie lane.
-
-Before this Mountgodard street stall boards were of old time set up by
-the butchers to show and sell their flesh meat upon, over the which
-stallboards they first built sheds to keep off the weather; but since
-that, encroaching by little and little, they have made their stallboards
-and sheds fair houses, meet for the principal shambles. Next is Newgate
-market, first of corn and meal, and then of other victuals, which
-stretcheth almost to Eldenese lane. A fair, new, and strong frame of
-timber, covered with lead, was therefore set up at the charges of the
-city, near to the west corner of St. Nicholas' shambles, for the meal to
-be weighed, in the 1st of Edward VI., Sir John Gresham being then mayor.
-On this side the north corner of Eldenese lane stood sometime a proper
-parish church of St. Ewine, as is before said, given by Henry VIII.,
-towards the erecting of Christ's church; it was taken down, and in place
-thereof a fair strong frame of timber erected, wherein dwell men of
-divers trades. And from this frame to Newgate is all of this ward, and
-so an end thereof.
-
-It hath an alderman, his deputy, common council twelve, constables
-seventeen, scavengers eighteen, wardmote inquest eighteen, and a beadle.
-And is taxed to the fifteen fifty pounds.[247]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[232] The word _clove_ is from the Anglo-Saxon _Clifian_ (the low German
-_Kloeven_, and Dutch _Klooven_), to split, or _clufe_, an ear of corn
-or _clove_ of garlic. In this case the flower is the common Stock,
-or Stock Gilliflower, so long a favourite in the gardens of England,
-and indeed a native of the cliffs by the sea-side. "The old English
-name of Gilliflower," says the author of the _Flora Domestica_, "which
-is now almost lost in the prefix Stock, is corrupted from the French
-_Giroflier_. Chaucer writes it _Gylofre_; but, by associating it with
-the nutmeg and other spices, appears to mean the clove-tree, which is in
-fact the proper signification of that word. Turner calls it _Gelover_
-and _Gelyflower_, Gerrarde and Parkinson _Gilloflower_."
-
-[233] The Anglo-Saxon _Gaersuma_--treasure, riches, fine, etc.
-
-[234] "John Palmer."--_1st edition_, p. 252.
-
-[235] "John Standelfe and John Standelfe."--_1st edition_, p. 253.
-
-[236] "The maior and communalty of London, parsons of Christ's church,
-the vicar to be at their appointment."--_Stow._
-
-[237] "Treasurer of England."--_1st edition_, p. 258.
-
-[238] "And father to Edward Lord Mountjoy; James Blunt, knighte, son to
-Walter Blunt, captain of Gwynes, 1492."--_Ibid._
-
-[239] In the first edition, Sir Nicholas Twiford is described as having
-a monument in the church.
-
-[240] Lydgate's verses were first printed at the end of Tottell's
-edition of the translation of his _Fall of Princes_, from Boccaccio,
-1554, folio, and afterwards in Sir W. Dugdale's _History of St. Paul's
-Cathedral_.
-
-[241] Reign Wolfe.
-
-[242] "Born in London, and son to Henry Collet."--_1st edition_, p. 267.
-
-[243] "And brought to the hands of Edmond Grendall, then Bishop of
-London."--_1st edition_, p. 269.
-
-[244] W. Paston.
-
-[245] "Was first builded about the reigne of Edward III. Thomas Newton,
-the first parson there, was buried in the quire, the year 1361, which
-was the 35th of Edward the Thirde."--_1st edition_, p. 277.
-
-[246] "Prebend almes houses."--_1st edition_, p. 277.
-
-
-
-
-BREAD STREET WARD
-
-
-Bred street ward beginneth in the high street of West Cheape, to wit,
-on the south side from the standard to the great cross. Then is also a
-part of Watheling street of this ward, to wit, from over against the
-Lion on the north side up almost to Paule's gate, for it lacketh but one
-house of St. Augustine's church. And on the south side, from the Red
-Lion gate to the Old Exchange, and down the same exchange on the east
-side by the west end of Mayden lane, or Distar lane, to Knightriders
-street, or, as they call that part thereof, Old Fish street. And all the
-north side of the said Old Fish street to the south end of Bread street,
-and by that still in Knightriders street till over against the Trinity
-church and Trinity lane. Then is Bread street itself, so called of bread
-in old time there sold; for it appeareth by records, that in the year
-1302, which was the 30th of Edward I., the bakers of London were bound
-to sell no bread in their shops or houses, but in the market, and that
-they should have four hallmotes in the year, at four several terms, to
-determine of enormities belonging to the said company.
-
-This street giving the name to the whole ward, beginneth in West Cheap,
-almost by the Standard, and runneth down south through or thwart
-Watheling street to Knightriders street aforesaid, where it endeth. This
-Bread street is wholly on both sides of this ward. Out of the which
-street, on the east side, is Basing lane, a piece whereof, to wit, to
-and over against the back gate of the Red Lion in Watheling street, is
-of this Bread street ward.
-
-Then is Fryday street beginning also in West Cheap, and runneth down
-south through Watheling street to Knightriders street, or Old Fish
-street. This Friday street is of Bread street ward on the east side from
-over against the north-east corner of St. Matthew's church, and on the
-west side from the south corner of the said church, down as aforesaid.
-
-In this Fryday street, on the west side thereof, is a lane, commonly
-called Mayden lane, or Distaffe lane, corruptly for Distar lane, which
-runneth west into the Old Exchange; and in this lane is also one other
-lane, on the south side thereof, likewise called Distar lane, which
-runneth down to Knightriders street, or Old Fish street; and so be the
-bounds of this whole ward.
-
-Monuments to be noted here, first at Bread street corner, the north-east
-end, 1595, of Thomas Tomlinson, causing in the high street of Cheape a
-vault to be digged and made, there was found, at fifteen feet deep, a
-fair pavement like unto that above ground, and at the further end at
-the channel was found a tree sawed into five steps, which was to step
-over some brook running out of the west towards Walbrooke; and upon the
-edge of the said brook, as it seemeth, there were found lying along
-the bodies of two great trees, the ends whereof were then sawed off,
-and firm timber as at the first when they fell, part of the said trees
-remain yet in the ground undigged. It was all forced ground until they
-went past the trees aforesaid, which was about seventeen feet deep or
-better; thus much hath the ground of this city in that place been raised
-from the main.
-
-Next to be noted, the most beautiful frame of fair houses and shops that
-be within the walls of London, or elsewhere in England, commonly called
-Goldsmith's row, betwixt Bread street end and the cross in Cheape,
-but is within this Bread street ward; the same was built by Thomas
-Wood, goldsmith, one of the sheriffs of London, in the year 1491. It
-containeth in number ten fair dwelling-houses and fourteen shops, all
-in one frame, uniformly built four stories high, beautified towards the
-street with the Goldsmiths' arms and the likeness of woodmen, in memory
-of his name, riding on monstrous beasts, all which is cast in lead,
-richly painted over and gilt: these he gave to the Goldsmiths, with
-stocks of money, to be lent to young men having those shops, etc. This
-said front was again new painted and gilt over in the year 1594; Sir
-Richard Martin being then mayor, and keeping his mayoralty in one of
-them, serving out the time of Cuthbert Buckle in that office from the
-2nd of July till the 28th of October.
-
-Then for Watheling street, which Leyland called Atheling or Noble
-street; but since he showeth no reason why, I rather take it to be so
-named of the great highway of the same calling. True it is, that at
-this present the inhabitants thereof are wealthy drapers, retailers of
-woollen cloths, both broad and narrow, of all sorts, more than in any
-one street of this city.
-
-Of the Old Exchange, I have noted in Faringdon ward; wherefore I pass
-down to Knightriders street, whereof I have also spoken in Cordwainers
-street ward; but in this part of the said Knightriders street is a fish
-market kept, and therefore called Old Fish street for a difference from
-New Fish street.
-
-In this Old Fish street is one row of small houses, placed along in
-the midst of Knightriders street, which row is also of Bread street
-ward: these houses, now possessed by fishmongers, were at the first but
-moveable boards (or stalls), set out on market-days, to show their fish
-there to be sold; but procuring license to set up sheds, they grew to
-shops, and by little and little to tall houses, of three or four stories
-in height, and now are called Fish street. Walter Turke, fishmonger,
-mayor 1349, had two shops in Old Fish street, over against St. Nicholas
-church; the one rented five shillings the year, the other four shillings.
-
-Bread street, so called of bread sold there (as I said), is now wholly
-inhabited by rich merchants; and divers fair inns be there, for good
-receipt of carriers and other travellers to the city.
-
-On the east side of this street, at the corner of Watheling street,
-is the proper church of Alhallowes in Bread street, wherein are the
-monuments--of James Thame, goldsmith; John Walpole, goldsmith, 1349;
-Thomas Beamount, alderman, one of the sheriffs 1442; Robert Basset,
-salter, mayor 1476; Sir Richard Chaury, salter, mayor 1509; Sir Thomas
-Pargitar, salter, mayor 1530; Henry Sucley, merchant-tailor, one of
-the sheriffs 1541; Richard Reade, alderman, that served and was taken
-prisoner in Scotland, 1542; Robert House, one of the sheriffs 1589;
-William Albany, Richard May, and Roger Abde, merchant-tailors.
-
-In the 23rd of Henry VIII., the 17th of August, two priests of this
-church fell at variance, that the one drew blood of the other; wherefore
-the same church was suspended, and no service sung or said therein for
-the space of one month after: the priests were committed to prison,
-and the 15th of October, being enjoined penance, went before a general
-procession, bare-headed, bare-footed, and bare-legged, before the
-children, with beads and books in their hands, from Paules, through
-Cheape, Cornehill, etc.
-
-More to be noted of this church, which had sometime a fair spired
-steeple of stone. In the year 1559, the 5th of September, about mid-day,
-fell a great tempest of lightning, with a terrible clap of thunder,
-which struck the said spire about nine or ten feet beneath the top; out
-of the which place fell a stone that slew a dog, and overthrew a man
-that was playing with the dog. The same spire being but little damnified
-thereby, was shortly after taken down, for sparing the charges of
-reparation.
-
-On the same side is Salters' hall, with six alms houses in number, built
-for poor decayed brethren of that company. This hall was burnt in the
-year 1539, and again re-edified.
-
-Lower down on the same side is the parish church of St. Mildred the
-Virgin. The monuments in this church be--of the Lord Trenchaunt of
-St. Alban's, knight, who was supposed to be either the new builder of
-this church, or best benefactor to the works thereof, about the year
-1300; and Odde Cornish, gentleman, 1312; William Palmer, blader, a
-great benefactor also, 1356; John Shadworth, mayor 1401, who gave the
-parsonage-house, a re-vestry, and churchyard to that parish, in the
-year 1428; notwithstanding, his monument is pulled down; Stephen Bugge,
-gentleman; his arms be three water-bugs,[248] 1419; Henry Bugge founded
-a chantry there 1419; Roger Forde, vintner, 1440; Thomas Barnwell,
-fishmonger, one of the sheriffs 1434; Sir John Hawlen, clerk, parson
-of that church, who built the parsonage-house newly after the same had
-been burnt to the ground, together with the parson and his man also,
-burnt in that fire, 1485; John Parnell, 1510; William Hurstwaight,
-pewterer to the king, 1526; Christopher Turner, chirurgeon to King Henry
-VIII., 1530; Ralph Simonds, fishmonger, one of the sheriffs in the year
-1527; Thomas Langham gave to the poor of that parish four tenements
-1575; Thomas Hall, salter, 1582; Thomas Collins, salter, alderman; Sir
-Ambrose Nicholas, salter, mayor 1575, was buried in Sir John Shadworth's
-vault.
-
-Out of this Bread street, on the same side, is Basing lane; a part
-whereof (as is afore showed) is of this ward, but how it took the name
-of Basing I have not read: in the 20th year of Richard II. the same was
-called the bakehouse, whether meant for the king's bakehouse, or of
-bakers dwelling there, and baking bread to serve the market in Bread
-street, where the bread was sold, I know not; but sure I am, I have not
-read of Basing, or of Gerrarde the giant, to have anything there to do.
-
-On the south side of this lane is one great house, of old time built
-upon arched vaults, and with arched gates of stone, brought from Caen in
-Normandy. The same is now a common hostrey for receipt of travellers,
-commonly and corruptly called Gerrardes hall, of a giant said to have
-dwelt there. In the high-roofed hall of this house sometime stood a
-large fir pole, which reached to the roof thereof, and was said to be
-one of the staves[249] that Gerrarde the giant used in the wars to
-run withal. There stood also a ladder of the same length, which (as
-they say) served to ascend to the top of the staff. Of later years
-this hall is altered in building, and divers rooms are made in it.
-Notwithstanding, the pole is removed to one corner of the hall, and
-the ladder hanged broken upon a wall in the yard. The hostelar of that
-house said to me, "the pole lacketh half a foot of forty in length:" I
-measured the compass thereof, and found it fifteen inches. Reason of
-the pole could the master of the hostrey give me none, but bade me read
-the great Chronicles, for there he heard of it: which answer seemed to
-me insufficient, for he meant the description of Britaine, for the most
-part drawn out of John Leyland his commentaries (borrowed of myself),
-and placed before Reyne Wolfe's Chronicle,[250] as the labours of
-another (who was forced to confess he never travelled further than from
-London to the university of Oxford): he writing a chapter of giants or
-monstrous men, hath set down more matter than truth, as partly against
-my will I am enforced here to touch. R. G., in his brief collection of
-histories (as he termeth it) hath these words: "I, the writer hereof,
-did see, the 10th day of March, in the yeare of our Lord 1564, and had
-the same in my hand, the tooth of a man, which weighed ten ounces of
-troy weight; and the skull of the same man is extant, and to be seene,
-which will hold five pecks of wheat; and the shin-bone of the same man
-is six foote in length, and of a marvellous greatness." Thus far of
-R. G.[251] The error thereof is thus: He affirmeth a stone to be the
-tooth of a man, which stone (so proved) having no shape of a tooth, had
-neither skull or shin-bone. Notwithstanding, it is added in the said
-description, that by conjectural symetry of those parts the body to be
-twenty-eight feet long, or more. From this he goeth to another like
-matter, of a man with a mouth sixteen feet wide, and so to Gerrard the
-giant and his staff. But to leave these fables, and return where I left,
-I will note what myself hath observed concerning that house.
-
-I read that John Gisors, mayor of London in the year 1245, was owner
-thereof, and that Sir John Gisors, knight, mayor of London, and
-constable of the Tower 1311, and divers others of that name and family,
-since that time owned it. William Gisors was one of the sheriffs 1329.
-More, John Gisors had issue, Henry and John; which John had issue,
-Thomas; which Thomas deceasing in the year 1350, left unto his son
-Thomas his messuage called Gisor's hall, in the parish of St. Mildred
-in Bread street; John Gisors made a feoffment thereof, 1386, etc. So
-it appeareth that this Gisor's hall, of late time by corruption hath
-been called Gerrard's hall[252] for Gisor's hall; as Bosom's inn for
-Blossom's inn, Bevis marks for Buries marks, Marke lane for Marte lane,
-Belliter lane for Belsetter's lane, Gutter lane for Guthuruns lane, Cry
-church for Christ's church, St. Mihel in the quorn for St. Mihel at
-corne, and sundry such others. Out of this Gisor's hall, at the first
-building thereof, were made divers arched doors, yet to be seen, which
-seem not sufficient for any great monster, or other than man of common
-stature to pass through, the pole in the hall might be used of old time
-(as then the custom was in every parish), to be set up in the summer
-as May-pole, before the principal house in the parish or street, and
-to stand in the hall before the screen, decked with holme and ivy, all
-the feast of Christmas.[253] The ladder served for the decking of the
-may-pole and roof of the hall. Thus much for Gisor's hall, and for that
-side of Bread street, may suffice.
-
-Now on the west side of Bread street, amongst divers fair and large
-houses for merchants, and fair inns for passengers, had ye one
-prison-house pertaining to the sheriffs of London, called the compter
-in Bread street; but in the year 1555 the prisoners were removed
-from thence to one other new compter in Wood street, provided by
-the city's purchase, and built for that purpose; the cause of which
-remove was this: Richard Husband, pastelar, keeper of this compter
-in Bread street, being a wilful and head-strong man, dealt, for his
-own advantage, hard with the prisoners under his charge, having also
-servants such as himself liked best for their bad usage, and would not
-for any complaint be reformed; whereupon, in the year 1550, Sir Rowland
-Hill being mayor, by the assent of a court of aldermen, he was sent to
-the gaol of Newgate, for the cruel handling of his prisoners; and it
-was commanded to the keeper to set those irons on his legs which are
-called the widow's alms. These he ware from Thursday to Sunday in the
-afternoon, and being by a court of aldermen released on the Tuesday,
-was bound in a hundred marks to observe from thenceforth an act made
-by the common council, for the ordering of prisoners in the compters;
-all which notwithstanding, he continued as afore, whereof myself am
-partly a witness; for being of a jury to inquire against a sessions of
-gaol delivery,[254] in the year 1552, we found the prisoners hardly
-dealt withal, for their achates and otherwise; as also that thieves
-and strumpets were there lodged for four pence the night, whereby
-they might be safe from searches that were made abroad; for the which
-enormities, and other not needful to be recited, he was indighted at
-that session, but did rub it out, and could not be reformed till this
-remove of prisoners, for the house in Bread street was his own by lease,
-or otherwise, so that he could not be put from it. Note, that gaolers
-buying their offices will deal hardly with pitiful prisoners.
-
-Now in Friday street, so called of fishmongers dwelling there, and
-serving Friday's market, on the east side, is a small parish church,
-commonly called St. John Evangelist: the monuments therein be of John
-Dogget, merchant tailor, one of the sheriffs in the year 1509; Sir
-Christopher Askew, draper, mayor 1533; William de Avinger, farrier, was
-buried there in the 34th of Edward III. Then lower down, is one other
-parish church of St. Margaret Moyses, so called (as seemeth) of one
-Moyses, that was founder or new builder thereof. The monuments there be
-of Sir Richard Dobbes, skinner, mayor 1551; William Dane, ironmonger,
-one of the sheriffs 1569; Sir John Allet, fishmonger, mayor 1591. There
-was of older time buried, Nicholas Stanes, and Nicholas Braye; they
-founded chantries there.
-
-On the west side of this Friday street, is Mayden lane, so named of
-such a sign, or Distaffe lane, for Distar lane, as I read in the record
-of a brewhouse called the Lamb, in Distar lane, the 16th of Henry VI.
-In this Distar lane, on the north side thereof, is the Cordwainers, or
-Shoemakers' hall, which company were made a brotherhood or fraternity,
-in the 11th of Henry IV. Of these cordwainers I read, that since the
-fifth of Richard II. (when he took to wife Anne, daughter to Vesalaus,
-King of Boheme), by her example, the English people had used piked
-shoes, tied to their knees with silken laces, or chains of silver or
-gilt, wherefore in the 4th of Edward IV. it was ordained and proclaimed,
-that beaks of shoone and boots, should not pass the length of two
-inches, upon pain of cursing by the clergy, and by parliament to pay
-twenty shillings for every pair. And every cordwainer that shod any man
-or woman on the Sunday, to pay thirty shillings.
-
-On the south side of this Distar lane, is also one other lane, called
-Distar lane, which runneth down to Knightriders' street, or Old Fish
-street, and this is the end of Bread street ward; which hath an
-alderman, his deputy, common council ten, constables ten, scavengers
-eight, wardmote inquest thirteen, and a beadle. It standeth taxed to the
-fifteen in London, at L37, and in the Exchequer at L36 18_s._ 2_d._[255]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[247] "In London at fifty-four pounds, and in the Exchequer at
-fifty-three pounds six shillings and eight pence."--_1st edition_, p.
-345.
-
-[248] Water Bougets--heraldic representations of the leathern bottles in
-which water was anciently carried.
-
-[249] "A pole of forty foote long, and fifteen inches about, fabuled to
-be the iusting staffe of Gerrard a giant."--_Stow._
-
-[250] "Which aunswere seemed to me insufficient, for hee meant the
-description of Brittaine, before Reinwolfe's Chronicle, wherein the
-author writing a chapter of Gyaunts, and having been deceived by some
-authours, too much crediting their smoothe speeche, hath set down more
-matter than troth, as partly (and also against my will) I am enforced to
-touch."--_1st edition_, p. 283.
-
-[251] "R. G. saw a stone, and said the same to bee a tooth, but being
-by my selfe proued a stone, there fayled both scull and shank-bone,
-and followed a cluster of lies together, yet since increased by
-other."--_Stow._
-
-[252] "Gerrard's hall overthrowne with Gerrard the giant, and his great
-spear."--_Stow._
-
-[253] "Every man's house of old time was decked with holly and ivy in
-the winter, especially at Christmas."--_Stow._
-
-[254] "Quest of inquiry indight the keepers of the gayles for dealing
-hardly with their prisoners. They indighted the bowling alleys,
-etc."--_Stow._
-
-
-
-
-QUEENE HITHE WARD
-
-
-Next unto Bread street ward, on the south side thereof, is Queene Hithe
-ward, so called of a water gate, or harbour for boats, lighters, and
-barges; and was of old time for ships, at what time the timber bridge of
-London was drawn up, for the passage of them to the said hithe, as to a
-principal strand for landing and unlading against the midst and heart of
-the city.
-
-This ward beginneth in the east, in Knightriders' street, on the south
-side thereof, at the east end of the parish church called the Holy
-Trinity, and runneth west on the south side to a lane called Lambert
-hill, which is the length of the ward in Knightriders' street, out of
-the which street are divers lanes, running south to Thames street, and
-are of this ward: the first is Trinity lane, which runneth down by the
-west end of Trinity church; then is Spuren lane, or Spooner's lane, now
-called Huggen lane; then Bread street hill; then St. Mary Mounthaunt,
-out of the which lane, on the east side thereof, is one other lane,
-turning east, through St. Nicholas Olave's churchyard to Bread street
-hill. This lane is called Finimore lane, or Fivefoot lane, because it
-is but five feet in breadth at the west end; in the midst of this lane
-runneth down one other lane broader, south to Thames street, I think
-the same to be called Desbourne lane, for I read of such a lane to have
-been in the parish of Mary Summerset, in the 22nd year of Edward III.,
-where there is said to lie between the tenement of Edward de Montacute,
-knight, on the east part, and the tenement some time pertaining to
-William Gladwine on the west, one plot of ground, containing in length
-towards Thames street, twenty-five feet, etc.
-
-Last of all, have you Lambart-hill lane, so called of one Lambart, owner
-thereof; and this is the furthest west part of this ward.
-
-On the north side coming down from Knightriders' street, the east side
-of Lambart hill, is wholly of this ward; and the west side, from the
-north end of the Blackesmiths' hall (which is about the midst of this
-lane) unto Thames street; then part of Thames street is also of this
-ward, to wit, from a cook's house called the sign of King David, three
-houses west from the Old Swan brewhouse in the east, unto Huntington
-house, over against St. Peter's church in the west, near unto Paul's
-wharf; and on the land side, from a cook's house called the Blue Boar,
-to the west end of St. Peter's church, and up St. Peter's hill, two
-houses north above the said church. And these be the bounds of this
-ward, in which are parish churches seven, halls of companies two, and
-other ornaments as shall be shewed.
-
-First in Knightriders' street, is the small parish church of the Holy
-Trinity, very old, and in danger of down falling: collections have been
-made for repairing thereof, but they will not stretch so far, and,
-therefore, it leaneth upon props or stilts. Monuments as followeth.
-
-John Brian, alderman in the reign of Henry V., a great benefactor; John
-Chamber had a chantry there; Thomas Rishby, esquire, and Alice his wife,
-within the chancel; John Mirfin, auditor of the exchequer 1471; Sir
-Richard Fowler, of Ricks in Oxfordshire, 1528; George Cope, second son
-to Sir John Cope of Copasashby in Northamptonshire, 1572.
-
-Towards the west end of Knightriders' street is the parish church of St.
-Nicolas Cold Abbey, a proper church, somewhat ancient, as appeareth by
-the ways raised thereabout, so that men are forced to descend into the
-body of the church: it hath been called of many Golden Abbey, of some,
-Gold Abbey, or Cold Bey, and so hath the most ancient writings,[256] as
-standing in a cold place, as Cold harbour, and such like. The steeple or
-tall tower of this church, with the south aisle, have been of a later
-building: to wit, the 1st of Richard II., when it was meant the whole
-old church should have been new built, as appeareth by the arching begun
-on the east side the steeple, under the which, in the stone work, the
-arms of one Buckland, esquire, and his wife, daughter to Beaupere, are
-cut in stone, and also are in the glass windows, whereby it appeareth
-he was the builder of the steeple, and repairer of the residue. The
-26th of Edward III., An. Aubrey being mayor,[257] T. Frere, fishmonger,
-gave one piece of ground to the said parish church of St. Nicholas,
-containing eighty-six feet in length, and forty-three feet at one end,
-and thirty-four at the other, in breadth, for a cemetery or churchyard.
-The 20th of Richard II., Thomas Barnard Castle, clerke, John Sonderash,
-clerke, and John Nouncy, gave to the parson and churchwardens of the
-said church and their successors, one messuage and one shop, with the
-appurtenances, in Distaffe lane and Old Fish street, for the reparation
-of the body of the said church, the belfry or steeple, and ornaments.
-
-Buried in this church, John Calfe, and William Cogeshall, 1426; Waltar
-Turke, fishmonger, mayor 1349; Richarde Esastone, fishmonger, 1330;
-Nicholas Wolberge, fishmonger, 1407; Thomas Paddington, fishmonger,
-1485; Robert Hary, fishmonger, John Suring, 1490; Roger Darlington,
-fishmonger, 1557; Richard Lacty, parson, under a fair tomb on the
-north side the choir, 1491; Richard Bradbrudge, 1497; William Clarke,
-1501; James Picman, 1507; Richard Farneford, 1525; Thomas Nicholas,
-fishmonger, 1527; William Barde, fishmonger, 1528.
-
-On the north side of this church, in the wall thereof, was of late built
-a convenient cistern of stone and lead, for receipt of Thames water,
-conveyed in pipes of lead to that place, for the ease and commodity of
-the fishmongers and other inhabitants in and about Old Fish street.
-Barnard Randolph, common serjeant of the city of London, did in his
-lifetime deliver to the company of Fishmongers the sum of nine hundred
-pounds, to be employed towards the conducting of the said Thames water,
-and cisterning the same, etc.; in the parishes of St. Mary Magdalen, and
-St. Nicholas Colde Abbey, near unto Fish street, seven hundred pounds;
-and other two hundred pounds to charitable deeds: he deceased 1583, and
-shortly after this conduit with the other was made and finished.
-
-In Trinity lane, on the west side thereof, is the Painterstainers'
-hall, for so of old time were they called, but now that workmanship of
-staining is departed out of use in England. Lower down in Trinity lane,
-on the east side thereof, was sometime a great messuage pertaining unto
-John, earl of Cornwall, in the 14th of Edward III. On Bread street hill,
-down to the Thames on both sides, be divers fair houses, inhabited
-by fishmongers, cheesemongers, and merchants of divers trades. On
-the west side whereof is the parish church of St. Nicholas Olive, a
-convenient church, having the monuments of W. Newport, fishmonger, one
-of the sheriffs 1375; Richard Willowes, parson, 1391; Richard Sturges,
-fishmonger, 1470; Thomas Lewen, ironmonger, one of the sheriffs 1537,
-who gave his messuage, with the appurtenances, wherein he dwelt, with
-fourteen tenements in the said parish of St. Nicholas, to be had
-after the decease of Agnes his wife, to the ironmongers, and they to
-give stipends appointed to almsmen, in five houses by them built in
-the churchyard of that parish, more to poor scholars in Oxford and
-Cambridge, etc. Blitheman, an excellent organist of the Queen's chapel,
-lieth buried there with an epitaph, 1591, etc.
-
-The next is Old Fishstreet hill, a lane so called, which also runneth
-down to Thames street. In this lane, on the east side thereof, is the
-one end of Finimore, or Five foot lane. On the west side of this Old
-Fishstreet hill is the Bishop of Hereford's inn or lodging, an ancient
-house and large rooms, built of stone and timber, which sometime
-belonged to the Mounthauntes in Norfolk. Radulphus de Maydenstone,
-Bishop of Hereford, about 1234, bought it of the Mounthauntes, and gave
-it to the Bishops of Hereford, his successors. Charles, both Bishop of
-Hereford and Chancellor of the Marches, about the year 1517, repaired
-it, since the which time the same is greatly ruinated, and is now
-divided into many small tenements; the hall and principal rooms, are a
-house to make sugar-loaves, etc.
-
-Next adjoining is the parish church of St. Mary de Monte Alto, or
-Mounthaunt; this is a very small church, and at the first built to
-be a chapel for the said house of the Mounthaunts, and for tenements
-thereunto belonging. The Bishop of Hereford is patron thereof. Monuments
-in this church of John Glocester, alderman 1345, who gave Salt wharf
-for two chantries there; John Skip, Bishop of Hereford, 1539, sate
-twelve years, died at London in time of parliament, and was buried in
-this church. There was sometime a fair house in the said parish of
-St. Mary Mounthaunt, belonging to Robert Belkenape, one of the king's
-justices, but the said Belkenape being banished this realm. King Richard
-II. in the twelfth of his reign, gave it to William Wickham, Bishop of
-Winchester.
-
-On the east side of this Old Fishstreet hill, is one great house, now
-let out for rent, which house sometime was one of the halls, pertaining
-to the company of Fishmongers, at such time as they had six hallmotes or
-meeting places: namely, two in Bridge street, or New Fish street; two in
-Old Fish street, whereof this was one; and two in Stockfishmonger row,
-or Thames street, as appeareth by a record, the 22nd of Richard II.
-
-Next westward is one other lane called Lambard hill, the east side
-whereof is wholly of this ward, and but half the west side, to wit, from
-the north end of the Blacksmiths' hall.
-
-Then in Thames street of this ward, and on the north side over against
-the Queen's hith, is the parish church of St. Michaell, a convenient
-church, but all the monuments therein are defaced.
-
-I find that Stephen Spilman, gentleman, of that family in Norfolk,
-sometime mercer, chamberlain of London, then one of the sheriffs, and
-alderman in the year 1404, deceasing without issue, gave his lands to
-his family the Spilmans, and his goods to the making or repairing of
-bridges and other like godly uses; and amongst others in this church he
-founded a chantry, and was buried in the choir.
-
-Also Richard Marlowe, ironmonger, mayor 1409, gave twenty pounds to the
-poor of that ward, and ten marks to the church.
-
-Richard Gray, ironmonger, one of the sheriffs 1515, gave forty pounds to
-that church, and was buried there. At the west end of that church goeth
-up a lane, called Pyel lane. On the same north side, at the south end of
-St. Mary Mounthaunt lane, is the parish church of St. Mary Summerset,
-over against the Broken wharf; it is a proper church, but the monuments
-are all defaced. I think the same to be of old time called Summer's
-hith, of some man's name that was owner of the ground near adjoining, as
-Edred's hithe was so called of Edred owner thereof, and thence called
-Queene hithe, as pertaining to the queen, etc.
-
-Then is a small parish church of St. Peter, called _parva_, or little,
-near unto Powle's wharf; in this church no monuments do remain. At the
-west end thereof, is a lane called St. Peter's hill, but two houses up
-that lane on the east side is of this ward, and the rest is of Castle
-Baynarde ward.
-
-On the south side of Thames street, beginning again in the east, among
-the cooks, the first in this ward, is the sign of David the King; then
-is Towne's end lane, turning down to the Thames; then is Queene hithe, a
-large receptacle for ships, lighters, barges, and such other vessels.
-
-Touching the antiquity and use of this gate and hithe, first, I find
-the same belongeth to one named Edred, and was then called Edred's
-hithe, which since falling to the hands of King Stephen, it was by his
-charter confirmed to William De Ypre;[258] the farm thereof in fee and
-in heritage, William De Ypre gave unto the prior and convent of the Holy
-Trinity within Aldgate, as appeareth by this charter:--
-
-"To Theobalde, by the grace of God, Archbishop of Canterbury, primate of
-England, and Legate Apostolike, to the Bishoppe of London, and to all
-faithful people, clarkes and layemen, William de Ypre sendeth greeting.
-
-"Know ye me to have given and graunted to God, and to the church of
-the Holy Trinitie of London, to the prior and canons there serving
-God in perpetuall almes, Edred's hith, with the appurtenances, with
-such devotion, that they shall send every yeare twentie pound unto the
-maintenance of the hospital of St. Katherens, which hospitall they have
-in their hands, and one hundred shillinges to the monkes of Bermondsey,
-and sixty shillinges to the brethren of the hospitall of St. Giles,
-and that which remayneth, the said prior and canons shall enjoy to
-themselves. Witnesses, Richard de Lucie, Raph Picot, etc."
-
-This Edred's hithe, after the aforesaid grants, came again to the king's
-hands, by what means I have not read, but it pertained unto the queen,
-and, therefore, was called _Ripa reginae_, the Queene's bank, or Queen's
-hithe, and great profit thereof was made to her use, as may appear by
-this which followeth.
-
-King Henry III. in the 9th of his reign, commanded the constables of the
-Tower of London to arrest the ships of the Cinque Ports on the river of
-Thames, and to compel them to bring their corne to no other place, but
-to the Queen's hithe only. In the eleventh of his reign, he charged the
-said constable to distrain all fish offered to be sold in any place of
-this city, but at the Queene hithe. Moreover, in the 28th of the said
-king's reign, an inquisition was made before William of Yorke, provost
-of Beverley, Henry of Bath, and Hierome of Caxton, justices itinerant,
-sitting in the Tower of London, touching the customs of Queen hithe,
-observed in the year last before the wars between the king and his
-father, and the barons of England, and of old customs of other times,
-and what customs had been changed, at what time the tax and payment of
-all things coming together, and between Woore path and Anedehithe,[259]
-were found and ceased, according to the old order, as well corn and fish
-as other things: all which customs were as well to be observed in the
-part of Downegate, as in Queen hithe, for the king's use. When also it
-was found that the corn arriving between the gate of the Guildhall of
-the merchants of Cologne, and the soke of the Archbishop of Canterbury
-(for he had a house near unto the Blacke Fryers), was not to be measured
-by any other quarter, than by that of the Queene's soke.
-
-After this, the bailiff of the said hithe complained that, since the
-said recognition, fourteen foreign ships laden with fish, arrived at
-Belinge's gate, which ships should have arrived at the same hithe;
-and, therefore, it was ordered, that if any foreign ship laden with
-fish, should in form aforesaid, arrive elsewhere than at this hithe,
-it should be at the king's pleasure to amerce them at forty shillings.
-Notwithstanding, the ships of the citizens of London were at liberty to
-arrive where the owners would appoint them.
-
-After this, the said Henry III. confirmed the grant of Richard Earl of
-Cornwall for the farm of the Queen hithe unto John Gisors, then mayor,
-and to the commonalty of London, and their successors for ever, as by
-this his charter appeareth:
-
-"Henry, by the grace of God, King of England, Lord of Ireland, Duke of
-Guien, and Earl of Anjou, to all archbishops, etc. Be it known, that we
-have seen the covenant between our brother, Richard Earl of Cornwall,
-on the one part, and the mayor and commonalty on the other part, which
-was in this sort. In the 30th year of Henry, the son of King John,[260]
-upon the feast of the Translation of St. Edward, at Westminster, this
-covenant was made between the honourable Lord Richard Earl of Cornwall,
-and John Gisors, then mayor of London, and the commons thereof,
-concerning certain exactions and demands pertaining to the Queen hithe
-of London. The said earl granted for himself and his heirs, that the
-said mayor, and all mayors ensuing, and all the commons of the city,
-should have and hold the Queen hithe, with all the liberties, customs,
-and other appurtenances, repaying yearly to the said earl, his heirs and
-assigns, fifty pounds, at Clarkenwell, at two several terms; to wit, the
-Sunday after Easter twenty-five pounds, and at Michaelmas twenty-five
-pounds. And for more surety hereof the said earl hath set thereunto his
-seal, and left it with the mayor, and the mayor and commonalty have
-set to their seal, and left it with the earl. Wherefore we confirm and
-establish the said covenant for us, and for our heirs. Witnesses, Raph
-Fitz Nichol, Richard Gray, John and Wil. Brithem, Paulin Painter, Raph
-Wancia, John Cumbaud, and other, at Windsor, 26th of February, in the
-31st of our reign."
-
-The charge of this Queen hithe was then committed to the sheriffs, and
-so hath continued ever since; the profits whereof are sore diminished,
-so that (as writeth Robert Fabian) it was worth in his time little above
-twenty marks, or fifteen pounds, one year with another. Now for customs
-of this Queen hithe.[261] In the year 1302, the 30th of Edward I., it
-was found by the oath of divers men, that bakers, brewers, and others,
-buying their corn at Queen hithe, should pay for measuring, portage,
-and carriage, for every quarter of corn whatsoever, from thence to West
-Cheap, to St. Anthonie's church, to Horshew bridge, and to Woolsey
-street, in the parish of Allhallowes the Less, and such like distances,
-one halfpenny farthing; to Fleet bridge, to Newgate, Cripplegate, to
-Bircheovers lane, to Eastcheape, and Billingsgate, one penny. Also, that
-the measure (or the meter) ought to have eight chief master-porters,
-every master to have three porters under him, and every one of them
-to find one horse, and seven sacks; and he that so did not, to lose
-his office. This hithe was then so frequented with vessels, bringing
-thither corn (besides fish, salt, fuel, and other merchandises), that
-all these men, to wit, the meter, and porters, thirty-seven in number,
-for all their charges of horses and sacks, and small stipend, lived well
-of their labours; but now[262] the bakers of London, and other citizens,
-travel into the countries, and buy their corn of the farmers, after the
-farmers' price.
-
-King Edward II., in the 1st of his reign, gave to Margaret, wife to
-Piers de Gavestone, forty-three pounds twelve shillings and nine pence
-halfpenny farthing, out of the rent of London, to be received of the
-Queen's hithe. Certain impositions were set upon ships and other vessels
-coming thither, as upon corn, salt, and other things, toward the charge
-of cleansing Roome-land there, the 41st of Edward III.
-
-The 3rd of Edward IV., the market at Queen hithe being hindered by the
-slackness of drawing up London bridge, it was ordained, that all manner
-of vessels, ships, or boats, great or small, resorting to the city with
-victual, should be sold by retail; and that if there came but one vessel
-at a time, were it salt, wheat, rye, or other corn, from beyond the
-seas, or other grains, garlic, onions, herrings, sprats, eels, whiting,
-plaice, cods, mackarel, etc., then that one vessel should come to Queen
-hithe, and there to make sale; but if two vessels come, the one should
-come to Queen hithe, the other to Billingsgate; if three, two of them
-should come to Queen hithe, the third to Billingsgate, etc., always the
-more to Queen hithe; if the vessel being great, coming with salt from
-the Bay, and could not come to these keys, then the same to be conveyed
-by lighters, as before is meant.
-
-One large house for stowage of corn craned out of lighters and barges,
-is there lately built; Sir John Lion, grocer, mayor 1554, by his
-testament, gave a hundred pounds towards it; but since increased and
-made larger at the charges of the city, in the year 1565.
-
-Against this Queen's hithe, on the river Thames, of late years, was
-placed a corn mill, upon or betwixt two barges or lighters, and there
-ground corn, as water mills in other places, to the wonder of many that
-had not seen the like; but this lasted not long without decay, such as
-caused the same barges and mill to be removed, taken asunder, and soon
-forgotten. I read of the like to have been in former time, as thus:--In
-the year 1525, the 16th of Henry VIII., Sir William Bayly being mayor,
-John Cooke of Glocester, mercer, gave to the mayor and commonalty of
-London, and theirs for ever, one great barge, in the which two corn
-mills were made and placed, which barge and mills were set in and upon
-the stream of the river of Thames, within the jurisdiction and liberty
-of the said city of London.
-
-And also he gave to the city all such timber, boards, stones, iron,
-etc., provided for making, mending, and repairing of the said barge and
-mills, in reward whereof the mayor gave him fifty pounds presently, and
-fifty pounds yearly during his life; and if the said Cooke deceased
-before Johan his wife, then she to have forty marks the year during her
-life.
-
-Next adjoining to this Queen hithe, on the west side thereof, is Salt
-wharf, named of salt taken up, measured, and sold there. The next is
-Stew lane, of a stew or hothouse there kept. After that is Timber hithe,
-or Timber street, so called of timber or boards there taken up and
-wharfed; it is in the parish of St. Mary Somershithe, as I read in the
-56th of Henry III., and in the 9th of Edward II. Then is Brookes wharf,
-and Broken wharf, a water gate or key, so called of being broken and
-fallen down into the Thames. By this Broken wharf remaineth one large
-old building of stone, with arched gates, which messuage, as I find,
-in the reign of Henry III., the 43rd year, pertaining unto Hugh de
-Bygot; and in the 11th of Edward III., to Thomas Brotherton, the king's
-brother, Earl of Norfolk, Marshal of England; in the 11th of Henry VI.
-to John Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk, etc.
-
-Within the gate of this house (now belonging to the city of London)
-is lately, to wit, in the years 1594 and 1595, built one large house
-of great height, called an engine, made by Bevis Bulmar, gentleman,
-for the conveying and forcing of Thames water to serve in the middle
-and west parts of the city. The ancient great hall of this messuage
-is yet standing, and pertaining to a great brewhouse for beer. West
-from this is Trigge lane, going down to Thames. Next is called Bosse
-lane, of a bosse of water, like unto that of Billingsgate, there placed
-by the executors of Richard Whittington. Then is one great messuage,
-sometime belonging to the abbots of Chertsey in Surrey, and was their
-inn, wherein they were lodged when they repaired to the city; it is now
-called Sandie house, by what reason I have not heard: I think the Lord
-Sands have been lodged there.
-
-And this is an end of this Queen hithe ward; which hath an alderman and
-his deputy, common council six, constables nine, scavengers eight,
-wardmote inquest thirteen, and a beadle. It is taxed to the fifteen in
-London twenty pounds, and in the Exchequer at nineteen pounds sixteen
-shillings and two pence.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[255] "In the Exchequer thirty-six pounds, ten shillings."--_1st
-edition_, p. 285.
-
-[256] "But I could never learne the cause why it should be so called,
-and therefore I will let it passe."--_1st edition_, p. 287.
-
-[257] "There bee monumentes in this church of Andrew Awbery, grocer,
-mayor, and Thomas Fryar, fishmonger, in the yeare 1351, who gave to this
-church and parish one plot of ground, containing fiftie-six foote in
-length, and fortie-three foote in breadth at both endes, to be a buriall
-place for the dead of the said parish, the twenty-sixt of Edward the
-third. Also Thomas Madefry, clarke, and John Pylot, gave to the wardens
-of that parish one shop and a house in Distar lane, for the continual
-repairing of the body of that church, the belles and ornaments, the
-twentieth of Richard II."--_1st edition_, p. 287.
-
-[258] Liber Trinitate.
-
-[259] It appears from Strype's _Stow_ (i. p, 214, ed. 1720), that "Were
-path or Wore path, is in the east part of the Flete of Barking, about
-seven miles from London; and Anedeheth is near Westminster, on the west
-part of London."
-
-[260] Liber Trinitate, Lon.
-
-[261] Liber Constitut.
-
-[262] "But now that case is altered."--_1st edition_, p. 293.
-
-
-
-
-CASTLE BAYNARD WARD
-
-
-The next is Castle Baynard ward, so named of an old castle there.
-This ward beginneth in the east on the Thames side, at a house called
-Huntingdon house, and runneth west by Paule's wharf, by Baynard's
-castle, Puddle wharf, and by the south side of Black Friers. Then
-turning by the east wall of the said Friers to the south-west end of
-Creed lane. Then, on the north side of Thames street, over against
-Huntington house, by St. Peter's church and lane, called Peter hill,
-along till over against Puddle wharf, and then north up by the great
-Wardrobe to the west end of Carter lane, then up Creed lane, Ave Mary
-lane, and a piece of Pater Noster row, to the sign of the Golden Lion,
-and back again up Warwicke lane, and all the east side thereof, to the
-sign of the Crown by Newgate market; and this is the farthest north part
-of this ward.
-
-Then out of Thames street be lanes ascending north to Knightriders
-street; the first is Peter hill lane, all of that ward (two houses
-excepted, adjoining to St. Peter's church). The next is Paule's wharf
-hill, which thwarting Knightriders street and Carter lane, goeth up to
-the south chain of Paule's churchyard.
-
-Then in Adle street, over against the west part of Baynard's castle,
-going up by the west end of Knightriders street and to Carter lane. Thus
-much for lanes out of Thames street. The one half of the west side of
-Lambard hill lane being of this ward, at the north-west end thereof, on
-the south side, and at the west end of St. Mary Magdalen's church on the
-north side beginneth Knightriders street to be of this ward, and runneth
-west on both sides to the parish church of St. Andrew by the Wardrobe.
-
-Then at the end of St. Mary Magdalen's church goeth up the Old Exchange,
-all the west side whereof up to the south-east gate of Paule's
-churchyard, and by St. Austen's church, is of this ward. About the midst
-of this Old Exchange, on the west side thereof is Carter lane, which
-runneth west to the east entry of the Blacke Friers, and to the south
-end of Creed lane, out of the which Carter lane descendeth a lane called
-Do-little lane, and cometh into Knightriders street by the Boar's head
-tavern; and more west is Sermon lane, by an inn called the Paule head.
-Then out of Carter lane, on the north side thereof, the south chain
-of Paules churchyard, and the churchyard itself on that south side of
-Paules church, and the church of St. Gregorie, the bishop's palace,
-and the dean's lodging, be all of this ward; and such be the bounds
-thereof. The ornaments in this ward be parish churches four. Of old time
-a castle, divers noblemen's houses, halls of companies twain, and such
-others, as shall be shown.
-
-In Thames street, at the south-east end, is an ancient messuage, of old
-time called Beaumount's inn, as belonging to that family of noblemen
-of this realm in the 4th of Edward III. Edward IV., in the 5th of his
-reign, gave it to W. Hastings, lord chamberlain, master of his mints. It
-is now called Huntington house, as belonging to the earls of Huntington.
-Next is Paul's wharf, a large landing place, with a common stair upon
-the river of Thames, at the end of a street called Paule's wharf hill,
-which runneth down from Paule's chain. Next is a great messuage, called
-Scropes inn, sometime belonging to Scropes, in the 31st of Henry VI.
-
-Then is one other great messuage, sometime belonging to the abbey of
-Fiscampe, beyond the sea, and by reason of the wars, it coming to the
-hands of King Edward III., the same was given to Sir Simon Burley,
-knight of the Garter, and, therefore, called Burley house in Thames
-street, between Baynard's castle and Paule's wharf.
-
-Then have you Baynard's castle, whereof this whole ward taketh the
-name. This castle banketh on the river Thames, and was called Baynard's
-castle, of Baynard, a nobleman that came in with William the Conqueror,
-of the which castle, and of Baynard himself, I have spoken in another
-place.
-
-There was also another tower by Baynard's castle, built by King Edward
-II. Edward III., in the 2nd of his reign, gave it to William Duke of
-Hamelake, in the county of York, and his heirs, for one rose yearly, to
-be paid for all service, the same place (as seemeth to me) was since
-called Legate's inn, in the 7th of Edward IV., where be now divers wood
-wharfs in place.
-
-Then is there a great brewhouse, and Puddle wharf, a watergate into the
-Thames, where horses use to water, and therefore being defiled with
-their trampling, and made puddle, like as also of one Puddle dwelling
-there, it is called Puddle wharf. Then is there a lane between the
-Blacke Fryers and the Thames, called in the 26th of Edward III. Castle
-lane.
-
-In this lane also is one great messuage, of old time belonging to the
-priory of Okeborne in Wiltshire, and was the prior's lodging when
-he repaired to London. This priory being of the French order, was
-suppressed by Henry V., and with other lands and tenements pertaining
-to the said priory, was by Henry VI. given to his college in Cambridge,
-called now the King's college. About this castle lane was sometime a
-mill or mills belonging to the Templars of the New Temple, as appeareth
-of record; for King John, in the 1st year of his reign, granted a place
-in the Fleet, near unto Baynard's castle, to make a mill, and the whole
-course of water of the Fleet to serve the said mill.
-
-I read also, that in the year 1247, the 2nd of Edward I., Ri. Raison,
-and Atheline his wife, did give to Nicho. de Musely, clerk, ten
-shillings of yearly free and quiet rent, out of all his tenements, with
-the houses thereupon built, and their appurtenances, which they had of
-the demise of the master and brethren of Knights Templars, in England,
-next to their mill of Fleet, over against the houses of Laurence de
-Brooke, in the parish of St. Andrew, next to Baynard's castle, which
-tenements lie between the way leading towards the said mill on the west
-part. Also in the rights belonging to Robert Fitzwater, and to his
-heirs, in the city of London, in the time of peace, it was declared
-in the year 1303, that the said Robert, castellan of London, and
-banner-bearer, had a soke (or ward) in the city, that was by the wall of
-St. Paule, as men go down the street before the brewhouse of St. Paule
-unto the Thames, and so to the side of the mill, which is in the water
-that cometh down from Fleet bridge, and goeth by London wall, betwixt
-Fryers preachers church and Ludgate; and so that ward turned back by the
-house of the said Fryers unto the said common wall of the said canonry
-of St. Paul; that is, all of the parish of St. Andrew, which is in the
-gift of his ancestors by seniority, as more I have shown in the Castles.
-
-Now here is to be noted, that the wall of London at that time went
-straight south from Ludgate down to the river of Thames; but for
-building of the Blacke Fryers church, the said wall in that place was by
-commandment taken down, and a new wall made straight west from Ludgate
-to Fleet bridge, and then by the water of Fleet to the river of Thames,
-etc.
-
-In the year 1307, the 35th of Edward I., in a parliament at Carlisle,
-Henry Lacie, Earl of Lincoln, complained of noyances done to the water
-of the Fleet; whereupon it was granted that the said mill should be
-removed and destroyed.
-
-This ward ascendeth up by the east wall of the Black Fryers to the
-south-west end of Creed lane, where it endeth on that side.
-
-Then to begin again on the north side of Thames street, over against
-Huntington house, by St. Peter's church and lane, called Peter hill, and
-so to St. Benet Hude (or Hithe) over against Powle's wharf, a proper
-parish church, which hath the monuments of Sir William Cheiny, knight,
-and Margaret his wife, 1442, buried there; Doctor Caldwell, physician;
-Sir Gilbert Dethik, knight, _alias_ Garter king at arms. West from this
-church, by the south end of Adle street, almost against Pudle wharf,
-there is one ancient building of stone and timber, built by the lords
-of Barkley, and therefore called Barklies inn. This house is all in
-ruin, and letten out in several tenements, yet the arms of the Lord
-Barkley remain in the stone work of an arched gate, gules, between a
-cheveron, crosses ten--three, three, and four. Richard Beauchampe, Earl
-of Warwicke, was lodged in this house, then called Barklies inn, in the
-parish of St. Andrew, in the reign of Henry VI.
-
-Then turning up towards the north is the parish church of St. Andrew in
-the Wardrobe, a proper church, but few monuments hath it. John Parnt
-founded a chantry there. Then is the king's Great Wardrobe: Sir John
-Beauchamp, knight of the Garter, Constable of Dover, Warden of the Sinke
-ports (son to Guido de Beauchampe, Earl of Warwicke), built this house,
-was lodged there, deceased in the year 1359, and was buried on the south
-side of the middle aisle of Paule's church. His executors sold the house
-to King Edward III., unto whom the parson of St. Andrewe's complaining
-that the said Beauchampe had pulled down divers houses, in their place
-to build the same house, where through he was hindered of his accustomed
-tithes, paid by the tenants of old time, granted him forty shillings by
-year out of that house for ever. King Richard III. was lodged there in
-the second of his reign.
-
-In this house of late years is lodged Sir John Fortescue, knight, master
-of the wardrobe, chancellor and under-treasurer of the exchequer, and
-one of her majesty's most honourable privy council. The secret letters
-and writings touching the estate of the realm were wont to be enrolled
-in the king's wardrobe, and not in the chancery, as appeareth by the
-records. Claus. 18. E. 4. 1. Memb. 13. Claus. 33. E. 1. Memb. 3. Et
-liberat. 1. E. 2. Memb. 4, etc. From this wardrobe, by the west end of
-Carter lane, then up Creede lane, Ave Mary lane, a piece of Pater Noster
-row, up Warwick lane, all the east side, to a brewhouse called the
-Crown, as I said is of this ward. Touching lanes ascending out of Thames
-street to Knightriders' street, the first is Peter's hill, wherein I
-find no matter of note, more than certain alms houses, lately founded on
-the west side thereof, by David Smith, embroiderer, for six poor widows,
-whereof each to have twenty shillings by the year.
-
-On the east side of this lane standeth a large house, of ancient
-building, sometime belonging to the abbot of St. Mary in York, and was
-his abiding house when he came to London; Thomas Randolfe, esquire, hath
-lately augmented and repaired it.
-
-At the upper end of this lane, towards the north, the corner-houses
-there be called Peters key, but the reason thereof I have not heard.
-Then is Paules wharf hill, on the east side whereof is Woodmongers'
-hall. And next adjoining is Darby house, sometime belonging to the
-Stanleys, for Thomas Stanley, first Earl of Derby of that name, who
-married the Lady Margaret, Countess of Richmond, mother to Henry VII.,
-in his time built it.
-
-Queen Mary gave it to Gilbert Dethike, then Garter principal king of
-arms of Englishmen; Thomas Hawley, Clarenceaux king of arms of the south
-parts; William Harvy, _alias_ Norroy king of arms of the north parts,
-and the other heralds and pursuivants of arms, and to their successors,
-all the same capital messuage or house called Derby house, with the
-appurtenances, situate in the parish of St. Benet and St. Peter, then
-being in the tenure of Sir Richard Sackvile, knight, and lately parcel
-of the lands of Edward, Earl of Derby, etc., to the end that the said
-kings of arms, heralds, and pursuivants of arms, and their successors,
-might at their liking dwell together, and at meet times to congregate,
-speak, confer, and agree among themselves, for the good government of
-their faculty, and their records might be more safely kept, etc. Dated
-the 18th of July, 1555, Philip and Mary I., and third year.
-
-Then higher up, near the south chain of Paules churchyard, is the Paule
-Head tavern, which house, with the appurtenances, was of old time called
-Paules brewhouse, for that the same was so employed, but been since left
-off, and let out.
-
-On the west side of this street, is one other great house, built of
-stone, which belongeth to Paules church, and was sometime let to the
-Blunts, Lords Mountjoy, but of latter time to a college in Cambridge,
-and from them to the doctors of the civil law and Arches, who keep a
-commons there; and many of them being there lodged, it is called the
-Doctors' Commons. Above this, on the same side, was one other great
-building over-against Paules brewhouse, and this was called Paules
-bakehouse, and was employed in baking of bread for the church of Paules.
-
-In Addle street, or lane, I find no monuments.
-
-In Lambart hill lane on the west side thereof, is the Blacksmiths' hall,
-and adjoining to the north side thereof have ye one plot of ground,
-inclosed with a brick wall for a churchyard, or burying-plot for the
-dead of St. Mary Magdalen's by Old Fish street, which was given to that
-use by John Iwarby, an officer in the receipt of the exchequer, in the
-26th of King Henry VI., as appeareth by patent. John Iwarby, etc., gave
-a piece of land lying void in the parish of St. Mary Magdalen, nigh to
-Old Fish street, between the tenement of John Philpot on the south,
-and the tenement of Bartholomewe Burwash on the west, and the tenement
-pertaining to the convent of the Holy Well on the north, and the way
-upon Lambarde's hill on the east, for a churchyard, to the parson, and
-churchwardens, etc.
-
-Over-against the north-west end of this Lambard hill lane in
-Knightriders' street, is the parish church of St. Mary Magdalen, a small
-church, having but few monuments, Richard Woodroffe, merchant tailor,
-1519; Barnard Randolph, esquire, 1583.
-
-On the west side of this church, by the porch thereof, is placed a
-conduit or cistern of lead, castellated with stone, for receipt of
-Thames water, conveyed at the charges of the before-named Barnard
-Randolph, esquire. By the east end of St. Mary Magdalen's church,
-runneth up the Old Exchange lane, by the west end of Carter lane, to
-the south-east gate or chain of Paule's churchyard, as is before shown.
-And in this part was the Exchange kept, and bullion was received for
-coinage, as is noted in Faringdon ward within.
-
-In this parish church of St. Mary Magdalen, out of Knightriders' street
-up to Carter lane, be two small lanes, the one of them called Do Little
-lane, as a place not inhabited by artificers or open shopkeepers, but
-serving for a near passage from Knightriders' street to Carter lane.
-
-The other, corruptly called Sermon lane, for Sheremoniers' lane, for
-I find it by that name recorded in the 14th of Edward I., and in that
-lane, a place to be called the Blacke loft (of melting silver) with four
-shops adjoining. It may, therefore, be well supposed that lane to take
-name of Sheremonyars, such as cut and rounded the plates to be coined
-or stamped into sterling pence; for the place of coining was the Old
-Exchange, near unto the said Sheremoniars' lane. Also I find that in the
-13th of Richard II. William de la Pole had a house there.
-
-In Knightriders' street is the College of Physicians, wherein was
-founded in the year 1582 a public lecture in surgery, to be read twice
-every week, etc., as is shown elsewhere.
-
-In the south churchyard of Paules, is the south side and west end of the
-said church; in the which west end be three stately gates or entries,
-curiously wrought of stone: namely, the middle gate, in the midst
-whereof is placed a massy pillar of brass, whereunto the leaves of the
-said great gate are closed and fastened with locks, bolts, and bars of
-iron; all which, notwithstanding, on the 24th of December in the year
-1565, by a tempest of wind then rising from the west, these gates were
-blown open, the bars, bolts, and locks broken in sunder, or greatly
-bended. Also on the 5th of January in the year 1589, by a like tempest
-of wind, then in the south-west, the lesser west gate of the said
-church, next to the bishop's palace, was broken, both bolts, bars, and
-locks, so that the same was blown over.
-
-At either corner of this west end is, also of ancient building, a strong
-tower of stone, made for bell towers: the one of them, to wit, next to
-the palace, is at this present to the use of the same palace; the other,
-towards the south, is called the Lowlardes' tower,[263] and hath been
-used as the bishop's prison, for such as were detected for opinions in
-religion, contrary to the faith of the Church.
-
-The last prisoner which I have known committed thereto, was in the
-year 1573, one Peter Burcher, gentleman, of the Middle Temple, for
-having desperately wounded, and minding to have murdered, a serviceable
-gentleman named John Hawkins, esquire, in the high street near unto the
-Strand, who being taken and examined, was found to hold certain opinions
-erroneous, and therefore committed thither, and convicted; but in the
-end, by persuasion, he promised to abjure his heresies; and was, by
-commandment of the council, removed from thence to the Tower of London,
-etc., where he committed as in my _Annales_ I have expressed.
-
-Adjoining to this Lowlardes' tower is the parish-church of St. Gregory,
-appointed to the petty canons of Paules. Monuments of note I know none
-there.
-
-The rest of that south side of St. Paules church, with the chapter-house
-(a beautiful piece of work, built about the reign of Edward III.) is
-now defaced by means of licenses granted to cutlers, budget-makers, and
-others, first to build low sheds, but now high houses, which do hide
-that beautiful side of the church, save only the top and south gate.
-
-On the north-west side of this churchyard is the bishop's palace, a
-large thing for receipt, wherein divers kings have been lodged, and
-great household hath been kept, as appeareth by the great hall, which
-of late years, since the rebatement of bishops' livings, hath not been
-furnished with household menie and guests, as was meant by the builders
-thereof, and was of old time used.
-
-The dean's lodging on the other side, directly against the palace,
-is a fair old house, and also divers large houses are on the same
-side builded, which yet remain, and of old time were the lodgings of
-prebendaries and residentiaries, which kept great households and liberal
-hospitality, but now either decayed, or otherwise converted.
-
-Then is the Stationers' hall on the same side, lately built for them in
-place of Peter College, where in the year 1549, the 4th of January, five
-men were slain by the fall of earth upon them, digging for a well. And
-let this be an end of Baynardes Castle ward, which hath an alderman, his
-deputy, common council nine, constables ten, scavengers seven, wardmote
-inquest fourteen, and a beadle. And to the fifteen is taxed at L12, in
-the exchequer L11 13_s._
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[263] For Lowlardes' Tower, read M. Foxe.--_Stow._
-
-
-
-
-THE WARD OF FARINGDON EXTRA, OR WITHOUT
-
-
-The farthest west ward of this city, being the twenty-fifth ward of
-London, but without the walls, is called Faringdon Without, and was of
-old time part of the other Faringdon Within, until the 17th of Richard
-II., that it was divided and made twain, by the names of Faringdon
-_infra_ and Faringdon _extra_, as is afore shown.
-
-The bounds of which ward without Newgate and Ludgate are these: first,
-on the east part thereof, is the whole precinct of the late priory
-of St. Bartholomew, and a part of Long lane on the north, towards
-Aldersgate street and Ducke lane, with the hospital of St. Bartholomew
-on the west, and all Smithfield to the bars in St. John Street. Then
-out of Smithfield, Chicke lane toward Turmile brook, and over that
-brook by a bridge of timber into the field, then back again by the
-pens (or folds) in Smithfield, by Smithfield pond to Cow lane, which
-turneth toward Oldborne, and then Hosiar lane out of Smithfield, also
-toward Oldborne, till it meet with a part of Cow lane. Then Cocke
-lane out of Smithfield, over-against Pie corner, then also is Giltspur
-street, out of Smithfield to Newgate, then from Newgate west by St.
-Sepulchres church to Turnagaine lane, to Oldborne conduit, on Snow hill,
-to Oldborne bridge, up Oldborne hill to the bars on both sides. On the
-right hand or north side, at the bottom of Oldborne hill, is Gold lane,
-sometime a filthy passage into the fields, now both sides built with
-small tenements. Then higher is Lither lane, turning also to the field,
-lately replenished with houses built, and so to the bar.
-
-Now on the left hand or south side from Newgate lieth a street called
-the Old Bayly, or court of the chamberlain of this city; this stretcheth
-down by the wall of the city unto Ludgate, on the west side of which
-street breaketh out one other lane, called St. Georges lane, till ye
-come to the south end of Seacole lane, and then turning towards Fleet
-street it is called Fleet lane. The next out of the high street from
-Newgate turning down south, is called the Little Bayly, and runneth down
-to the east of St. George's lane. Then is Seacole lane which turneth
-down into Fleet lane; near unto this Seacole lane, in the turning
-towards Oldborne conduit, is another lane, called in records Wind Againe
-lane, it turneth down to Turnemill brook, and from thence back again,
-for there is no way over. Then beyond Oldborne bridge to Shoe lane,
-which runneth out of Oldborne unto the Conduit in Fleet street. Then
-also is Fewtars lane, which likewise stretcheth south into Fleet street
-by the east end of St. Dunstans church, and from this lane to the bars
-be the bounds without Newgate.
-
-Now without Ludgate, this ward runneth by from the said gate to Temple
-bar, and hath on the right hand or north side the south end of the Old
-Bayly, then down Ludgate hill to the Fleet lane over Fleet bridge, and
-by Shoe lane and Fewters lane, and so to New street (or Chancery lane),
-and up that lane to the house of the Rolles, which house is also of this
-ward, and on the other side to a lane over against the Rolles, which
-entereth Ficquets' field.
-
-Then hard by the bar is one other lane called Shyre lane, because it
-divideth the city from the shire, and this turneth into Ficquets' field.
-
-From Ludgate again on the left hand, or south side to Fleet bridge, to
-Bride lane, which runneth south by Bridewell, then to Water lane, which
-runneth down to the Thames.
-
-Then by the White Fryers and by the Temple, even to the bar aforesaid,
-be the bounds of this Faringdon Ward without.
-
-Touching ornaments and antiquities in this ward, first betwixt the said
-Newgate and the parish church of St. Sepulchre's, is a way towards
-Smithfield, called Gilt Spurre, or Knightriders' street, of the knights
-and others riding that way into Smithfield, replenished with buildings
-on both sides up to Pie corner, a place so called of such a sign,
-sometimes a fair inn for receipt of travellers, but now divided into
-tenements, and over against the said Pie corner lieth Cocke lane, which
-runneth down to Oldborne conduit.
-
-Beyond this Pie corner lieth West Smithfield, compassed about with
-buildings, as first on the south side following the right hand, standeth
-the fair parish church and large hospital of St. Bartilmew, founded by
-Rahere, the first prior of St. Bartilmewes thereto near adjoining, in
-the year 1102.
-
-Alfune, that had not long before built the parish church of St. Giles
-without Criplegate, became the first hospitaller, or proctor, for the
-poor of the house, and went himself daily to the shambles and other
-markets, where he begged the charity of devout people for their relief,
-promising to the liberal givers (and that by alleging testimonies of
-the holy scripture) reward at the hands of God. Henry III. granted
-to Katherine, late wife to W. Hardell, twenty feet of land in length
-and breadth in Smithfield, next to the chapel of the hospital of St.
-Bartilmew, to build her a recluse or anchorage, commanding the mayor and
-sheriffs of London to assign the said twenty feet to the said Katherine,
-Carta II of Henry III. The foundation of this hospital, for the poor
-and diseased their special sustentation, was confirmed by Edward III.
-the 26th of his reign: it was governed by a master and eight brethren,
-being priests, for the church, and four sisters to see the poor served.
-The executors of R. Whitington, sometime mayor of London, of his goods
-repaired this hospital, about the year 1423.
-
-Sir John Wakering, priest, master of this house in the year 1463,
-amongst other books, gave to their common library the fairest Bible that
-I have seen, written in large vellum by a brother of that house named
-John Coke, at the age of sixty-eight years, when he had been priest
-forty-three years: since the spoil of that library, I have seen this
-book in the custody of my worshipful friend, Master Walter Cope.
-
-Monuments in this church of the dead, benefactors thereunto, be these:
-Elizabeth, wife to Adam Hone, gentleman; Bartilmew Bildington; Jane,
-wife to John Cooke; Dame Alis, wife to Sir Richarde Isham; Alice, wife
-to Nicholas Bayly; John Woodhouse, esquire; Robert Palmar, gentleman;
-Idona, wife to John Walden, lying by her husband on the north side,
-late newly built, 1424; Sir Thomas Malifant, or Nanfant, Baron of
-Winnow, Lord St. George in Glamorgan, and Lord Ockeneton and Pile in the
-county of Pembroke, 1438; Dame Margaret his wife, daughter to Thomas
-Astley, esquire, with Edmond and Henry his children; William Markeby,
-gentleman, 1438; Richard Shepley, and Alice his wife; Thomas Savill,
-serjeant-at-arms; Edward Beastby, gentleman, and Margaret his wife;
-Waltar Ingham, and Alienar his wife; Robert Warnar, and Alice Lady
-Carne; Robert Caldset, Johan and Agnes his wives; Sir Robert Danvars,
-and Dame Agnes his wife, daughter to Sir Richard Delaber; William
-Brookes, esquire; John Shirley, esquire, and Margaret his wife, having
-their pictures of brass, in the habit of pilgrims, on a fair flat stone,
-with an epitaph thus:--
-
- "Beholde how ended is our poore pilgrimage,
- Of John Shirley, esquier, with Margaret his wife,
- That xii. children had together in marriage,
- Eight sonnes and foure daughters withouten strife,
- That in honor, nurtur, and labour flowed in fame,
- His pen reporteth his lives occupation,
- Since Pier his life time, John Shirley by name,
- Of his degree, that was in Brutes Albion,
- That in the yeare of grace deceased from hen,
- Fourteene hundred winter, and sixe and fiftie.
- In the yeare of his age, fourescore and ten,
- Of October moneth, the day one and twenty."
-
-This gentleman, a great traveller in divers countries, amongst other
-his labours, painfully collected the works of Geffrey Chaucer, John
-Lidgate, and other learned writers, which works he wrote in sundry
-volumes to remain for posterity; I have seen them, and partly do possess
-them. Jane, Lady Clinton, gave ten pounds to the poor of this house,
-was there buried, 1458; Agnes, daughter to Sir William St. George;
-John Rogerbrooke, esquire; Richard Sturgeon; Thomas Burgan, gentleman;
-Elizabeth, wife to Henry Skinard, daughter to Chincroft, esquire;
-William Mackley, gentleman, and Alice his wife; W. Fitzwater, gentleman,
-1466.
-
-This hospital was valued at the suppression in the year 1539, the
-31st of Henry VIII., to thirty-five pounds five shillings and seven
-pence yearly. The church remaineth a parish church to the tenants
-dwelling in the precinct of the hospital; but in the year 1546, on the
-13th of January, the bishop of Rochester, preaching at Paules cross,
-declared the gift of the said king to the citizens for relieving of
-the poor, which contained the church of the Gray Fryers, the church of
-St. Bartilmew, with the hospital, the messuages, and appurtenances in
-Giltspurre _alias_ Knightriders' street, Breton street, Petar quay,
-in the parish of St. Mary Magdalen, in Old Fish street, and in the
-parish of St. Benet Buda, Lymehurst, or Limehost, in the parish of
-Stebunheth, etc. Then also were orders devised for relief of the poor,
-the inhabitants were all called to their parish churches, whereby Sir
-Richard Dobbes, then mayor, their several aldermen, or other grave
-citizens, they were by eloquent orations persuaded how great and how
-many commodities would ensue unto them and their city, if the poor of
-divers sorts, which they named, were taken from out their streets,
-lanes, and alleys, and were bestowed and provided for in hospitals
-abroad, etc. Therefore was every man moved liberally to grant, what they
-would impart towards the preparing and furnishing of such hospitals, and
-also what they would contribute weekly towards their maintenance for a
-time, which they said should not be past one year, or twain, until they
-were better furnished of endowment: to make short, every man granted
-liberally, according to his ability; books were drawn of the relief in
-every ward of the city, towards the new hospitals, and were delivered
-by the mayor to the king's commissioners, on the 17th of February, and
-order was taken therein; so as the 26th of July in the year 1552, the
-repairing of the Gray Fryers' house, for poor fatherless children, was
-taken in hand; and also in the latter end of the same month, began the
-repairing of this hospital of St. Bartilmew, and was of new endowed, and
-furnished at the charges of the citizens.
-
-On the east side of this hospital lieth Ducke lane, which runneth out
-of Smithfield south to the north end of Little Britaine street. On the
-east side of this Ducke lane, and also of Smithfield, lieth the late
-dissolved priory of St. Bartilmew, founded also by Rahere, a pleasant
-witted gentleman, and therefore in his time called the king's minstrel,
-about the year of Christ 1102; he founded it in a part of the oft
-before-named morish ground, which was therefore a common laystall of all
-filth that was to be voided out of the city; he placed canons there,
-himself became their first prior, and so continued till his dying day,
-and was there buried in a fair monument,[264] of late renewed by Prior
-Bolton.
-
-Amongst other memorable matters touching this priory, one is of an
-archbishop's visitation, which Matthew Paris hath thus:--Boniface
-(saith he) Archbishop of Canterbury, in his visitation came to this
-priory, where being received with procession in the most solemn wise,
-he said, that he passed not upon the honour, but came to visit them;
-to whom the canons answered, that they having a learned bishop, ought
-not in contempt of him to be visited by any other: which answer so
-much offended the archbishop, that he forthwith fell on the subprior,
-and smote him on the face, saying, "Indeed, indeed, doth it become you
-English traitors so to answer me." Thus raging, with oaths not to be
-recited, he rent in pieces the rich cope of the subprior, and trod it
-under his feet, and thrust him against a pillar of the chancel with such
-violence, that he had almost killed him; but the canons seeing their
-subprior thus almost slain, came and plucked off the archbishop with
-such force that they overthrew him backwards, whereby they might see
-that he was armed and prepared to fight; the archbishop's men seeing
-their master down, being all strangers, and their master's countrymen,
-born at Provence, fell upon the canons, beat them, tare them, and trod
-them under feet; at length the canons getting away as well as they
-could, ran bloody and miry, rent and torn, to the bishop of London to
-complain, who bade them go to the king at Westminster, and tell him
-thereof; whereupon four of them went thither, the rest were not able,
-they were so sore hurt; but when they came to Westminster, the king
-would neither hear nor see them, so they returned without redress. In
-the mean season the whole city was in an uproar, and ready to have rung
-the common bell, and to have hewn the archbishop into small pieces, who
-was secretly crept to Lambhith, where they sought him, and not knowing
-him by sight, said to themselves, Where is this ruffian? that cruel
-smiter! he is no winner of souls, but an exactor of money, whom neither
-God, nor any lawful or free election did bring to this promotion, but
-the king did unlawfully intrude him, being utterly unlearned, a stranger
-born, and having a wife, etc. But the archbishop conveyed himself over,
-and went to the king with a great complaint against the canons, whereas
-himself was guilty. This priory of St. Bartholomew was again new built
-in the year 1410.
-
-Bolton was the last prior of this house, a great builder there; for
-he repaired the priory church, with the parish church adjoining, the
-offices and lodgings to the said priory belonging, and near adjoining;
-he built anew the manor of Canonbery at Islington, which belonged to the
-canons of this house, and is situate in a low ground, somewhat north
-from the parish church there; but he built no house at Harrow on the
-Hill, as Edward Hall hath written, following a fable then on foot. The
-people (saith he) being feared by prognostications, which declared,
-that in the year of Christ 1524 there should be such eclipses in watery
-signs, and such conjunctions, that by waters and floods many people
-should perish, people victualled themselves, and went to high grounds
-for fear of drowning, and especially one Bolton, which was prior of St.
-Bartholomewes in Smithfield, built him a house upon Harrow on the Hill,
-only for fear of this flood; thither he went, and made provision of all
-things necessary within him for the space of two months, etc.; but this
-was not so indeed, as I have been credibly informed. True it is, that
-this Bolton was also parson of Harrow, and therefore bestowed some small
-reparations on the parsonage-house, and built nothing there more than a
-dove-house, to serve him when he had forgone his priory.
-
-To this priory King Henry II. granted the privilege of fair, to be kept
-yearly at Bartholomew tide for three days, to wit, the eve, the day,
-and next morrow, to the which the clothiers of all England, and drapers
-of London, repaired,[265] and had their booths and standings within the
-churchyard of this priory, closed in with walls, and gates locked every
-night, and watched, for safety of men's goods and wares; a court of
-pie powders was daily during the fair holden for debts and contracts.
-But now, notwithstanding all proclamations of the prince, and also the
-act of parliament, in place of booths within this churchyard (only let
-out in the fair-time, and closed up all the year after), be many large
-houses built, and the north wall towards Long lane taken down, a number
-of tenements are there erected for such as will give great rents.
-
-Monuments of the dead in this priory are these: of Rahere, the first
-founder; Roger Walden, Bishop of London, 1406; John Wharton, gentleman,
-and Elizabeth his wife, daughter to William Scot, esquire; John Louth,
-gentleman; Robert Shikeld, gentleman; Sir ---- Bacon, knight; John
-Ludlow and Alice his wife; W. Thirlewall, esquire; Richard Lancaster,
-herald-at-arms; Thomas Torald; John Royston; John Watforde; John
-Carleton; Robert, son to Sir Robert Willowby; Gilbert Halstocke;
-Eleanor, wife to Sir Hugh Fen, mother to Margaret Lady Burgavenie;
-William Essex, esquire; Richard Vancke, baron of the exchequer, and
-Margaret his wife, daughter to William de la Rivar; John Winderhall;
-John Duram, esquire, and Elizabeth his wife; John Malwaine; Alice, wife
-to Balstred, daughter to Kniffe; William Scarlet, esquire; John Golding;
-Hugh Waltar, gentleman; and the late Sir Waltar Mildmay, knight,
-chancellor of the exchequer, etc.
-
-This priory at the late surrender, the 30th of Henry VIII., was valued
-at L653 15_s._ by year.
-
-This church having in the bell-tower six bells in a tune, those bells
-were sold to the parish of St. Sepulchre's; and then the church being
-pulled down to the choir, the choir was, by the king's order, annexed
-for the enlarging of the old parish church thereto adjoining, and so was
-used till the reign of Queen Mary, who gave the remnant of the priory
-church to the Friers preachers, or Black Friers, and was used as their
-conventual church until, the 1st of our sovereign lady Queen Elizabeth,
-those friars were put out, and all the said church, with the old parish
-church, was wholly as it stood in the last year of Edward VI., given by
-parliament to remain for ever a parish church to the inhabitants within
-the close called Great St. Bartholomewes. Since the which time that old
-parish church is pulled down, except the steeple of rotten timber ready
-to fall of itself. I have oft heard it reported, that a new steeple
-should be built with the stone, lead, and timber of the old parish
-church, but no such thing was performed. The parish have lately repaired
-the old wooden steeple to serve their turn. On the north side of this
-priory is the lane truly called Long, which reacheth from Smithfield to
-Aldersgate street. This lane is now lately built on both the sides with
-tenements for brokers, tipplers, and such like; the rest of Smithfield
-from Long lane end to the bars is enclosed with inns, brewhouses, and
-large tenements; on the west side is Chicken lane down to Cowbridge.
-Then be the pens or folds, so called, of sheep there parted, and penned
-up to be sold on the market-days.
-
-Then is Smithfield pond, which of old time in records was called
-Horse-pool, for that men watered horses there, and was a great water.
-In the 6th of Henry V. a new building was made in this west part of
-Smithfield betwixt the said pool and the river of the Wels, or Turnemill
-brooke, in a place then called the Elmes, for that there grew many
-elm-trees; and this had been the place of execution for offenders; since
-the which time the building there hath been so increased, that now
-remaineth not one tree growing.
-
-Amongst these new buildings is Cowbridge street, or Cow lane, which
-turneth toward Oldborne, in which lane the prior of Semperingham had his
-inn, or London lodging.
-
-The rest of that west side of Smithfield hath divers fair inns, and
-other comely buildings, up to Hosiar lane, which also turneth down to
-Oldborne till it meet with Cowbridge street. From this lane to Cocke
-lane, over against Pie corner.
-
-And thus much for encroachments and enclosure of this Smithfield,
-whereby remaineth but a small portion for the old uses; to wit, for
-markets of horses and cattle, neither for military exercises, as
-joustings, turnings, and great triumphs, which have been there performed
-before the princes and nobility both of this realm and foreign countries.
-
-For example to note:--In the year 1357, the 31st of Edward III., great
-and royal jousts were there holden in Smithfield; there being present,
-the Kings of England, France, and Scotland, with many other nobles and
-great estates of divers lands.
-
-1362, the 36th of Edward III., on the first five days of May, in
-Smithfield, were jousts holden, the king and queen being present, with
-the most part of the chivalry of England, and of France, and of other
-nations, to the which came Spaniards, Cyprians and Arminians, knightly
-requesting the king of England against the pagans that invaded their
-confines.
-
-The 48th of Edward III., Dame Alice Perrers (the king's concubine),
-as Lady of the Sun, rode from the Tower of London, through Cheape,
-accompanied of many lords and ladies, every lady leading a lord by his
-horse-bridle, till they came into West Smithfield, and then began a
-great joust, which endured seven days after.
-
-Also, the 9th of Richard II., was the like great riding from the Tower
-to Westminster, and every lord led a lady's horse-bridle; and on the
-morrow began the joust in Smithfield, which lasted two days: there
-bare them well, Henry of Darby, the Duke of Lankester's son, the Lord
-Beaumont, Sir Simon Burley, and Sir Paris Courtney.
-
-In the 14th of Richard II., after Froisart, royal jousts and tournaments
-were proclaimed to be done in Smithfield, to begin on Sunday next
-after the feast of St. Michael. Many strangers came forth of other
-countries, namely, Valarian, Earl of St. Paul, that had married King
-Richard's sister, the Lady Maud Courtney, and William, the young Earl
-of Ostervant, son to Albart of Baviere, Earl of Holland and Henault.
-At the day appointed there issued forth of the Tower, about the third
-hour of the day, sixty coursers, apparelled for the jousts, and upon
-every one an esquire of honour, riding a soft pace; then came forth
-sixty ladies of honour, mounted upon palfreys, riding on the one side,
-richly apparelled, and every lady led a knight with a chain of gold,
-those knights being on the king's party, had their harness and apparel
-garnished with white harts, and crowns of gold about the harts' necks,
-and so they came riding through the streets of London to Smithfield,
-with a great number of trumpets, and other instruments of music before
-them. The king and queen, who were lodged in the bishop's palace of
-London, were come from thence, with many great estates, and placed in
-chambers to see the jousts; the ladies that led the knights were taken
-down from their palfreys, and went up to chambers prepared for them.
-Then alighted the esquires of honour from their coursers, and the
-knights in good order mounted upon them; and after their helmets were
-set on their heads, and being ready in all points, proclamation made by
-the heralds, the jousts began, and many commendable courses were run, to
-the great pleasure of the beholders. These jousts continued many days,
-with great feasting, as ye may read in Froisart.
-
-In the year 1393, the 17th of Richard II., certain lords of Scotland
-came into England to get worship by force of arms; the Earl of Mare
-challenged the Earl of Notingham to joust with him, and so they rode
-together certain courses, but not the full challenge, for the Earl
-of Mare was cast both horse and man, and two of his ribs broken with
-the fall, so that he was conveyed out of Smithfield, and so towards
-Scotland, but died by the way at Yorke. Sir William Darell, knight,
-the king's banner-bearer of Scotland, challenged Sir Percie Courtney,
-knight, the king's banner-bearer of England; and when they had run
-certain courses, gave over without conclusion of victory. Then
-Cookeborne, esquire, of Scotland, challenged Sir Nicholas Hawberke,
-knight, and rode five courses, but Cookeborne was borne over horse and
-man, etc.
-
-In the year 1409, the 10th of Henry IV., a great play was played at the
-Skinners' well, which lasted eight days, where were to see the same the
-most part of the nobles and gentles in England. And forthwith began
-a royal jousting in Smithfield between the Earl of Somerset, and the
-Seneschal of Henalt, Sir John Cornwall, Sir Richard Arrundell, and the
-son of Sir John Cheiney, against certain Frenchmen. And the same year
-a battle was fought in Smithfield between two esquires, the one called
-Glaucester, appellant, and the other Arthure, defendant; they fought
-valiantly, but the king took up the quarrel into his hands, and pardoned
-them both.
-
-In the year 1430, the 8th of Henry VI., the 14th of January, a battle
-was done in Smithfield, within the lists, before the king, between two
-men of Feversham in Kent, John Upton, notary, appellant, and John Downe,
-gentleman, defendant; John Upton put upon John Downe, that he and his
-compeers should imagine the king's death the day of his coronation. When
-these had fought long, the king took up the matter, and forgave both the
-parties.
-
-In the year 1442, the 20th of Henry VI., the 30th of January, a
-challenge was done in Smithfield, within lists, before the king, there
-being Sir Philip la Beaufe of Aragon, knight, the other an esquire of
-the king's house, called John Ansley or Anstley; they came to the field
-all armed, the knight with his sword drawn, and the esquire with his
-spear, which spear he cast against the knight, but the knight avoided
-it with his sword, and cast it to the ground; then the esquire took his
-axe, and smote many blows on the knight, and made him let fall his axe,
-and brake up his uniber three times, and would have smote him on the
-face with his dagger, for to have slain him, but then the king cried
-hold, and so they were departed. The king made John Ansley, knight, and
-the knight of Aragon offered his harness at Windsor.
-
-In the year 1446, the 24th of Henry VI., John David appeached his
-master, Wil. Catur, of treason, and a day being assigned them to fight
-in Smithfield; the master being well-beloved, was so cherished by
-his friends, and plied with wine, that being therewith overcome, was
-also unluckily slain by his servant; but that false servant (for he
-falsely accused his master) lived not long unpunished, for he was after
-hanged at Teyborne for felony. Let such false accusers note this for
-example,[266] and look for no better end without speedy repentance.
-
-The same year Thomas Fitz-Thomas Prior of Kilmaine appeached Sir James
-Butlar, Earl of Ormond, of treasons; which had a day assigned them to
-fight in Smithfield, the lists were made, and the field prepared; but
-when it came to the point, the king commanded they should not fight, and
-took the quarrel into his hands.
-
-In the year 1467, the 7th of Edward IV., the Bastard of Burgoine
-challenged the Lord Scales, brother to the queen, to fight with him
-both on horseback and on foot; the king, therefore, caused lists to be
-prepared in Smithfield, the length of one hundred and twenty tailors'
-yards and ten feet, and in breadth eighty yards and twenty feet,
-double-barred, five feet between the bars, the timber-work whereof
-cost two hundred marks, besides the fair and costly galleries prepared
-for the ladies and other, at the which martial enterprise the king and
-nobility were present. The first day they ran together with spears, and
-departed with equal honour. The next day they tourneyed on horseback,
-the Lord Scales horse having on his chafron, a long spear pike of
-steel; and as the two champions coped together, the same horse thrust
-his pike into the nostrils of the Bastard's horse, so that for very
-pain he mounted so high that he fell on the one side with his master,
-and the Lord Scales rode about him with his sword drawn, till the king
-commanded the marshal to help up the Bastard, who said, I cannot hold me
-by the clouds; for though my horse fail me, I will not fail an encounter
-companion; but the king would not suffer them to do any more that day.
-
-The next morrow they came into the lists on foot with two pole-axes, and
-fought valiantly; but at the last the point of the pole-axe of the Lord
-Scales entered into the side of the Bastard's helm, and by force might
-have placed him on his knees; but the king cast down his warder, and the
-marshal severed them. The Bastard required that he might perform his
-enterprise; but the king gave judgment as the Bastard relinquished his
-challenge, etc. And this may suffice for jousts in Smithfield.
-
-Now to return through Giltspur street by Newgate, where I first began,
-there standeth the fair parish church called St. Sepulchers in the
-Bayly, or by Chamberlain gate, in a fair churchyard, though not so
-large as of old time, for the same is letten out for buildings and a
-garden-plot.
-
-This church was newly re-edified or built about the reign of Henry VI.
-or of Edward IV. One of the Pophames was a great builder there, namely,
-of one fair chapel on the south side of the choir, as appeareth by his
-arms and other monuments in the glass windows thereof, and also the fair
-porch of the same church towards the south; his image, fair graven in
-stone, was fixed over the said porch, but defaced and beaten down; his
-title by offices was this, Chancellor of Normandy, Captain of Vernoyle,
-Pearch, Susan, and Bayon, and treasurer of the king's household: he died
-rich, leaving great treasure of strange coins, and was buried in the
-Charterhouse church by West Smithfield. The first nobilitating of these
-Pophames was by Matilda the empress, daughter to Henry I., and by Henry
-her son: one Pophame, gentleman, of very fair lands in Southamptonshire,
-died without issue male, about Henry VI., and leaving four daughters,
-they were married to Fostar, Barentine, Wodham, and Hamden. Popham Deane
-(distant three miles from Clarendon, and three miles from Mortisham) was
-sometime the chief lordship or manor-house of these Pophames.
-
-There lie buried in this church, William Andrew, Stephen Clamparde,
-Lawrence Warcam, John Dagworth, William Porter, Robert Scarlet, esquires.
-
-Next to this church is a fair and large inn for receipt of travellers,
-and hath to sign the Sarasen's head.
-
-There lieth a street from Newgate west to the end of Turnagaine lane,
-and winding north to Oldborne conduit. This conduit by Oldborne cross
-was first built 1498. Thomasin, widow to John Percival, mayor, gave to
-the second making thereof twenty marks, Richard Shore ten pounds. Thomas
-Knesworth and others also did give towards it.
-
-But of late a new conduit was there built in place of the old, namely,
-in the year 1577, by William Lamb, sometime a gentleman of the chapel
-to King Henry VIII., and afterward a citizen and clothworker of London;
-the water thereof he caused to be conveyed in lead, from divers springs
-to one head, and from thence to the said conduit, and waste of one cock
-at Oldborne bridge, more than two thousand yards in length; all of which
-was by him performed at his own charges, amounting to the sum of fifteen
-hundred pounds.
-
-From the west side of this conduit is the high way, there called Snor
-hill; it stretcheth out by Oldborne bridge over the oft-named water of
-Turmill brook, and so up to Oldborne hill, all replenished with fair
-building.
-
-Without Oldborne bridge, on the right hand, is Gold lane, as is before
-shown; up higher on the hill be certain inns, and other fair buildings,
-amongst the which of old time was a messuage called Scropes inn, for so
-I find the same recorded in the 37th of Henry VI.
-
-This house was sometime letten out to serjeants-at-the-law, as
-appeareth, and was found by inquisition taken in the Guild hall of
-London, before William Purchase, mayor, and escheator for the king,
-Henry VII., in the 14th of his reign, after the death of John Lord
-Scrope, that he died deceased in his demesne of fee, by the feoffment
-of Guy Fairfax, knight, one of the king's justices, made in the 9th of
-the same king, unto the said John Scrope, knight. Lord Scrope of Bolton,
-and Robert Wingfield, esquire, of one house or tenement, late called
-Sergeants' inn, situate against the church of St. Andrew in Oldborne,
-in the city of London, with two gardens and two messuages to the same
-tenement belonging in the said city, to hold in burgage, valued by the
-year in all reprises ten shillings.
-
-Then is the bishop of Elie's inn,[267] so called of belonging and
-pertaining to the bishops of Elie. William de Luda, bishop of Elie,
-deceased 1297, gave this house by the name of his manor, with the
-appurtenances in Oldborne, to his successors, with condition his
-next successor should pay one thousand marks to the finding of three
-chaplains in the chapel there. More, John Hotham, bishop of Elie, did
-give by the name of six messuages, two cellars, and forty acres of land,
-in the suburbs of London, in the parish of St. Andrew in Oldborne, to
-the prior and convent of Elie, as appeareth by patent, the 9th of Edward
-III.: this man was bishop of Elie twenty years, and deceased 1336.
-
-Thomas Arundell, bishop of Elie, beautifully built of new his palace
-at Elie, and likewise his manors in divers places, especially this
-in Oldborne, which he did not only repair, but rather new-built, and
-augmented it with a large port, gate-house, or front, towards the street
-or highway; his arms are yet to be discerned in the stone-work thereof:
-he sat bishop of Elie fourteen years, and was translated to Yorke.
-
-In this house, for the large and commodious rooms thereof,
-divers great and solemn feasts have been kept, especially by the
-serjeants-at-the-law, whereof twain are to be noted for posterity.
-
-The first in the year 1464, the 4th of Edward IV., in Michaelmas term,
-the serjeants-at-law held their feast in this house, to the which,
-amongst other estates, Matthew Phillip, mayor of London, with the
-aldermen, sheriffs, and commons, of divers crafts, being invited, did
-repair; but when the mayor looked to keep the state in the hall, as
-it had been used in all places within the city and liberties (out of
-the king's presence), the Lord Gray of Ruthen, then lord treasurer of
-England, unwitting the Serjeants, and against their wills (as they
-said), was first placed; whereupon the mayor, aldermen, and commons,
-departed home, and the mayor made the aldermen to dine with him; howbeit
-he and all the citizens were wonderfully displeased, that he was so
-dealt with; and the new serjeants and others were right sorry therefore,
-and had rather then much good (as they said) it had not so happened.
-
-One other feast was likewise there kept in the year 1531, the 23rd of
-King Henry VIII.: the serjeants then made were in number eleven; namely,
-Thomas Audeley, Walter Luke, I. Bawdwine, I. Hinde, Christopher Jennie,
-John Dowsell, Edward Mervine, Edmond Knightley, Roger Chomley, Edward
-Montague, and Robert Yorke.
-
-These also held their feast in this Elie house for five days, to wit,
-Friday the 10th of November, Saturday, Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday. On
-Monday (which was their principal day) King Henry and Queen Katherine
-dined there (but in two chambers), and the foreign ambassadors in a
-third chamber. In the hall, at the high table, sat Sir Nicholas Lambard,
-Mayor of London, the judges, the barons of the exchequer, with certain
-aldermen of the city. At the board on the south side sat the master
-of the rolls, the master of the chancery, and worshipful citizens. On
-the north side of the hall certain aldermen began the board, and then
-followed merchants of the city; in the cloister, chapel, and gallery,
-knights, esquires, and gentlemen, were placed; in the halls the crafts
-of London; the serjeants-of-law and their wives, kept in their own
-chambers.
-
-It were tedious to set down the preparation of fish, flesh, and other
-victuals, spent in this feast, and would seem almost incredible,
-and, as to me it seemeth, wanted little of a feast at a coronation;
-nevertheless, a little I will touch, for declaration of the change of
-prices. There were brought to the slaughter-house twenty-four great
-beefs at twenty-six shillings and eight pence the piece from the
-shambles, one carcass of an ox at twenty-four shillings, one hundred
-fat muttons, two shillings and ten pence the piece, fifty-one great
-veals at four shillings and eight pence the piece, thirty-four porks
-three shillings and eight pence the piece, ninety-one pigs, sixpence the
-piece, capons of grese, of one poulter (for they had three) ten dozens
-at twenty pence the piece, capons of Kent, nine dozens and six at twelve
-pence the piece, capons coarse, nineteen dozen at six pence the piece,
-cocks of grose, seven dozen and nine at eight pence the piece, cocks
-coarse, fourteen dozen and eight at three pence the piece, pullets, the
-best, two pence halfpenny, other pullets two pence, pigeons thirty-seven
-dozen at ten pence the dozen, swans fourteen dozen, larks three hundred
-and forty dozen at five pence the dozen, etc. Edward Nevill was
-seneschal or steward, Thomas Ratcliffe, comptroller, Thomas Wildon,
-clerk of the kitchen.
-
-Next beyond this manor of Ely house is Lither lane, turning into the
-field. Then is Furnivalles inn, now an inn of chancery, but sometime
-belonging to Sir William Furnivall, knight, and Thomesin his wife, who
-had in Oldborne two messuages and thirteen shops, as appeareth by record
-of Richard II., in the 6th of his reign.
-
-Then is the Earl of Bathes inn, now called Bath place, of late for the
-most part new built, and so to the bars.
-
-Now again, from Newgate, on the left hand, or south side, lieth the Old
-Bayly, which runneth down by the wall upon the ditch of the city, called
-Houndes ditch, to Ludgate. I have not read how this street took that
-name, but is like to have risen of some court, of old time there kept;
-and I find, that in the year 1356, the 34th of Edward III., the tenement
-and ground upon Houndes ditch, between Ludgate on the south, and Newgate
-on the north, was appointed to John Cambridge, fishmonger, Chamberlain
-of London, whereby it seemeth that the chamberlains of London have
-there kept their courts, as now they do by the Guildhall, and till this
-day the mayor and justices of this city kept their sessions in a part
-thereof, now called the Sessions hall, both for the city of London and
-shire of Middlesex. Over against the which house, on the right hand,
-turneth down St. George's lane towards Fleet lane.
-
-In this St. George's lane, on the north side thereof, remaineth yet an
-old wall of stone, enclosing a piece of ground up Seacole lane, wherein
-by report sometime stood an inn of chancery; which house being greatly
-decayed, and standing remote from other houses of that profession, the
-company removed to a common hostelry, called of the sign Our Lady inn,
-not far from Clement's inn, which they procured from Sir John Fineox,
-lord chief justice of the king's bench, and since have held it of the
-owners by the name of the New inn, paying therefore six pounds rent by
-the year, as tenants at their own will, for more (as is said) cannot be
-gotten of them, and much less will they be put from it. Beneath this St.
-George's lane, the lane called Fleet lane, winding south by the prison
-of the Fleet into Fleet street by Fleet bridge. Lower down in the Old
-Bayly is at this present a standard of timber, with a cock or cocks,
-delivering fair spring water to the inhabitants, and is the waste of the
-water serving the prisoners in Ludgate.
-
-Next out of the high street turneth down a lane called the Little
-Bayly, which runneth down to the east end of St. George's lane. The next
-is Seacole lane, I think called Limeburner's lane, of burning lime there
-with seacole. For I read in record of such a lane to have been in the
-parish of St. Sepulcher, and there yet remaineth in this lane an alley
-called Limeburner's alley. Near unto this Seacole lane, in the turning
-towards Oldborne conduit is Turnagain lane, or rather, as in a record
-of the 5th of Edward III., Windagain lane, for that it goeth down west
-to Fleet dike, from whence men must turn again the same way they came,
-for there it stopped. Then the high street turneth down Snore hill to
-Oldborne conduit, and from thence to Oldborne bridge, beyond the which
-bridge, on the left hand, is Shoe lane, by the which men pass from
-Oldborne to Fleet street, by the conduit there. In this Shoe lane, on
-the left hand, is one old house called Oldborne hall, it is now letten
-out into divers tenements.
-
-On the other side, at the very corner, standeth the parish church of
-St. Andrew, in the which church, or near thereunto, was sometime kept
-a grammar school, as appeareth in another place by a patent made, as
-I have shown, for the erection of schools. There be monuments in this
-church of Thomas Lord Wriothesley, Earl of Southampton, buried 1550;
-Ralph Rokeby of Lincoln's inn, esquire, Master of St. Katherine's and
-one of the masters of requests to the queen's majesty, who deceased the
-14th of June, 1596. He gave by his testament to Christ's Hospital in
-London one hundred pounds, to the college of the poor of Queen Elizabeth
-in East Greenwich one hundred pounds, to the poor scholars in Cambridge
-one hundred pounds, to the poor scholars in Oxford one hundred pounds,
-to the prisoners in the two compters in London two hundred pounds, to
-the prisoners in the Fleet one hundred pounds, to the prisoners in
-Ludgate one hundred pounds, to the prisoners in Newgate one hundred
-pounds, to the prisoners in the King's Bench one hundred pounds, to the
-prisoners in the Marshalsea one hundred pounds, to the prisoners in the
-White Lion twenty pounds, to the poor of St. Katherine's twenty pounds,
-and to every brother and sister there forty shillings; William Sydnam
-founded a chantry there. There was also of old time (as I have read
-in the 3rd of Henry V.) an hospital for the poor, which was a cell to
-the house of Cluny in France, and was, therefore, suppressed among the
-priories aliens.
-
-From this church of St. Andrew, up Oldborne hill be divers fair built
-houses, amongst the which, on the left hand, there standeth three inns
-of Chancery, whereof the first adjoining unto Crookhorn alley is called
-Thaves inn, and standeth opposite, or over against the said Elyhouse.
-Then is Fewter lane, which stretcheth south into Fleet street, by the
-east end of St. Dunstone's church, and is so called of Fewters'[268] (or
-idle people) lying there, as in a way leading to gardens; but the same
-is now of latter years on both sides built through with many fair houses.
-
-Beyond this Fewter lane is Barnard's inn, _alias_ Mackworth's inn, which
-is of Chancery, belonging to the dean and chapter of Lincoln, as saith
-the record of Henry VI., the 32nd of his reign, and was founded by
-inquisition in the Guildhall of London, before John Norman, mayor, the
-king's escheator; the jury said, that it was not hurtful for the king to
-license T. Atkens, citizen of London, and one of the executors to John
-Mackworth, Dean of Lincoln, to give one messuage in Holborn in London,
-with the appurtenances called Mackworth's inn, but now commonly known by
-the name of Barnardes inn, to the dean and chapter of Lincoln, to find
-one sufficient chaplain to celebrate Divine service in the chapel of St.
-George, in the cathedral church of Lincoln, where the body of the said
-John is buried, to have and to hold the said messuage to the said dean
-and chapter, and to their successors for ever, in part of satisfaction
-of twenty pounds lands and rents, which Edward III. licensed the said
-dean and chapter to purchase to their own use, either of their own fee
-or tenor, or of any other, so the lands were not holden of the king _in
-capite_.
-
-Then is Staple inn, also of Chancery, but whereof so named I am
-ignorant; the same of late is for a great part thereof fair built, and
-not a little augmented. And then at the bar endeth this ward without
-Newgate.
-
-Without Ludgate, on the right hand, or north side from the said gate
-lieth the Old Bayly, as I said, then the high street called Ludgate hill
-down to Fleet lane, in which lane standeth the Fleet, a prison house so
-called of the Fleet or water running by it, and sometime flowing about
-it, but now vaulted over.
-
-I read that Richard I., in the 1st of his reign, confirmed to Osbert,
-brother to William Longshampe, Chancellor of England and elect of
-Elie, and to his heirs for ever, the custody of his house or palace
-at Westminster, with the keeping of his gaol of the Fleet at London;
-also King John, by his patent, dated the 3rd of his reign, gave to
-the Archdeacon of Welles, the custody of the said king's house at
-Westminster, and of his gaol of the Fleet, together with the wardship
-of the daughter and heir of Robert Loveland, etc. Then is Fleet bridge
-pitched over the said water, whereof I have spoken in another place.
-
-Then also against the south end of Shoe lane standeth a fair
-water-conduit, whereof William Eastfield, sometime mayor, was founder;
-for the mayor and commonalty of London being possessed of a conduit
-head, with divers springs of water gathered thereinto in the parish of
-Padington, and the water conveyed from thence by pipes of lead towards
-London unto Teyborne; where it had lain by the space of six years or
-more; the executors of Sir William Eastfield obtained licence of the
-mayor and commonalty for them, in the year 1453, with the goods of
-Sir William to convey the said waters, first in pipes of lead into a
-pipe begun to be laid beside the great conduit head at Maribone, which
-stretcheth from thence unto a separall, late before made against the
-chapel of Rounsevall by Charing cross, and no further, and then from
-thence to convey the said water into the city, and there to make receipt
-or receipts for the same unto the common weal of the commonalty, to wit,
-the poor to drink, the rich to dress their meats; which water was by
-them brought thus into Fleet street to a standard, which they had made
-and finished 1471.
-
-The inhabitants of Fleet street, in the year 1478, obtained licence of
-the mayor, aldermen, and commonalty, to make at their own charges two
-cisterns, the one to be set at the said standard, the other at Fleet
-bridge, for the receipt of the waste water; this cistern at the standard
-they built, and on the same a fair tower of stone, garnished with images
-of St. Christopher on the top, and angels round about lower down, with
-sweet sounding bells before them, whereupon, by an engine placed in the
-tower, they divers hours of the day and night chimed such an hymn as was
-appointed.
-
-This conduit, or standard, was again new built with a larger cistern, at
-the charges of the city, in the year 1582.
-
-From this conduit up to Fewtars lane, and further, is the parish church
-of St. Dunstan called in the West (for difference from St. Dunstan in
-the East), here lieth buried T. Duke, skinner, in St. Katherin's chapel
-by him built, 1421; Nicholas Coningstone, John Knape, and other, founded
-chantries there; Ralph Bane, Bishop of Coventrie and Lichfield, 1559,
-and other.
-
-Next beyond this church is Clifford's inn, sometime belonging to Robert
-Clifford, by gift of Edward II. in these words: "The king granteth to
-Robert Clifford that messuage, with the appurtenances, next the church
-of St. Dunstane in the West, in the suburbs of London, which messuage
-was sometime Malculines de Herley, and came to the hands of Edward
-I., by reason of certaine debts which the said Malculine was bound at
-the time of his death to our styde father, from the time that hee was
-escaetor on this side Trent; which house John, Earle of Richmount, did
-holde of our pleasure, and is now in our possession."--Patent, the 3rd
-of Edward II. After the death of this Robert Clifford, Isabel, his wife,
-let the same messuage to students of the law, as by the record following
-may appear:--
-
-"_Isabel quae fuit uxor Roberti Clifford, Messuagium unipartitum, quod
-Robertus Clifford habuit in parochia sci. Dunstonis West. in suburbio
-Londini, etc., tenuit, et illud dimisit post mortem dict. Roberti,
-Apprenticiis de banco, pro x. li. annuatium, etc. Anno 18 Eduardi
-Tertii, inquisitio post mortem Roberti Clifford._"
-
-This house hath since fallen into the king's hands, as I have heard, but
-returned again to the Cliffordes, and is now let to the said students
-for four pounds by the year.
-
-Somewhat beyond this Clifford's inn is the south end of New street (or
-Chancelar lane), on the right hand whereof is Sergeantes' inn called in
-Chauncery lane. And then next was sometime the house of the converted
-Jewes, founded by King Henry III., in place of a Jewe's house to him
-forfeited, in the year 1233, and the 17th of his reign, who built
-there for them a fair church now used, and called the chapel for the
-custody of the Rolles and Records of Chancerie. It standeth not far
-from the Old Temple, but in the midway between the Old Temple and the
-New, in the which house all such Jewes and infidels, as were converted
-to the Christian faith, were ordained and appointed, under an honest
-rule of life, sufficient maintenance, whereby it came to pass, that in
-short time there were gathered a great number of converts, which were
-baptized, instructed in the doctrine of Christ, and there lived under
-a learned Christian appointed to govern them; since the which time, to
-wit, in the year 1290, all the Jews in England were banished out of the
-realm, whereby the number of converts in this place was decayed: and,
-therefore, in the year 1377, this house was annexed by patent to William
-Burstall Clearke, custos rotulorum, or keeper of the Rolles of the
-Chauncerie, by Edward III., in the 5th year of his reign; and this first
-Master of the Rolles was sworn in Westminster hall, at the table of
-marble stone; since the which time, that house hath been commonly called
-the Rolles in Chancerie lane.
-
-Notwithstanding such of the Jewes, or other infidels, as have in this
-realm been converted to Christianity, and baptized, have been relieved
-there; for I find in record that one William Piers, a Jew that became a
-Christian, was baptised in the fifth of Richard II., and had two pence
-the day allowed him during his life by the said king.
-
-On the west side was sometime a house pertaining to the prior of Necton
-Parke, a house of canons in Lincolnshire; this was commonly called
-Hereflete inn, and was a brewhouse, but now fair built for the five
-clerks of the Chancerie, and standeth over against the said house called
-the Rolles, and near unto the lane which now entereth Fickets croft, or
-Fickets field. Then is Shere lane, opening also into Fickets field, hard
-by the bars.
-
-On this north side of Fleet street, in the year of Christ 1595, I
-observed, that when the labourers had broken up the pavement, from
-against Chancerie lane's end up towards St. Dunston's church, and had
-digged four feet deep, they found one other pavement of hard stone, more
-sufficient than the first, and, therefore, harder to be broken, under
-the which they found in the made ground, piles of timber driven very
-thick, and almost close together, the same being as black as pitch or
-coal, and many of them rotten as earth, which proveth that the ground
-there (as sundry other places of the city) have been a marish, or full
-of springs.
-
-On the south side from Ludgate, before the wall of the city be fair
-built houses to Fleet bridge, on the which bridge a cistern for receipt
-of spring water was made by the men of Fleet street, but the watercourse
-is decayed, and not restored.
-
-Next is Bride lane, and therein Bridewell, of old time the king's house,
-for the kings of this realm have been there lodged; and till the ninth
-of Henry III. the courts were kept in the king's house, wheresoever he
-was lodged, as may appear by ancient records, whereof I have seen many,
-but for example set forth one in the Chapter of Towers and Castles.
-
-King Henry VIII. built there a stately and beautiful house of new, for
-receipt of the Emperor Charles V., who, in the year of Christ 1522, was
-lodged himself at the Blacke Friers, but his nobles in this new built
-Bridewell, a gallery being made out of the house over the water, and
-through the wall of the city, into the emperor's lodging at the Blacke
-Friers. King Henry himself oftentimes lodged there also, as, namely,
-in the year 1525, a parliament being then holden in the Black Friers,
-he created estates of nobility there, to wit, Henry Fitz Roy, a child
-(which he had by Elizabeth Blunt) to be Earl of Nottingham, Duke of
-Richmond and of Somerset, Lieutenant General from Trent northward,
-Warden of the East, Middle, and West Marches for anenst Scotland; Henry
-Courtney, Earl of Devonshire, cousin-german to the king, to be marquis
-of Exeter; Henry Brandon a child of two years old, son to the Earl of
-Suffolke, to be Earl of Lincolne; Sir Thomas Mannars, Lord Rose, to
-be Earl of Rutland; Sir Henry Clifford, to be Earl of Cumberland; Sir
-Robert Ratcliffe, to be Viscount Fitzwater; and Sir Thomas Boloine,
-treasurer of the king's household, to be Viscount Rochford.
-
-In the year 1528, Cardinal Campeius was brought to the king's presence,
-being then at Bridewell, whither he had called all his nobility, judges,
-and councillors, etc. And there, the 8th of November, in his great
-chamber, he made unto them an oration touching his marriage with Queen
-Katherine, as ye may read in Edward Hall.
-
-In the year 1529, the same King Henry and Queen Katherine were lodged
-there, whilst the question of their marriage was argued in the Blacke
-Friers, etc.
-
-But now you shall hear how this house became a house of correction. In
-the year 1553, the 7th of King Edward VI., the 10th of April, Sir George
-Baron, being mayor of this city, was sent for to the court at Whitehall,
-and there at that time the king gave unto him for the commonalty and
-citizens to be a workhouse for the poor and idle persons of the city,
-his house of Bridewell, and seven hundred marks land, late of the
-possessions of the house of the Savoy, and all the bedding and other
-furniture of the said hospital of the Savoy, towards the maintenance
-of the said workhouse of Bridewell, and the hospital of St. Thomas in
-Southwark.
-
-This gift King Edward confirmed by his charter, dated the 26th of June
-next following; and in the year 1555, in the month of February, Sir
-William Gerarde, mayor, and the aldermen entered Bridewell, and took
-possession thereof according to the gift of the said King Edward, the
-same being confirmed by Queen Mary.
-
-The Bishop of St. David's had his inn over against the north side of
-this Bridwell, as I have said.
-
-Then is the parish church of St. Bridges, or Bride, of old time a small
-thing, which now remaineth to be the choir, but since increased with a
-large body and side aisles towards the west, at the charges of William
-Venor, esquire, warden of the Fleet, about the year 1480, all which he
-caused to be wrought about in the stone in the figure of a vine with
-grapes, and leaves, etc. The partition betwixt the old work and the new,
-sometime prepared as a screen to be set up in the hall of the Duke of
-Somerset's house at Strand, was brought for eight score pounds, and set
-up in the year 1557; one wilful body began to spoil and break the same
-in the year 1596, but was by the high commissioners forced to make it up
-again, and so it resteth. John Ulsthorpe, William Evesham, John Wigan,
-and other, found chantries there.
-
-The next is Salisburie court, a place so called for that it belonged to
-the Bishops of Salisburie, and was their inn, or London house, at such
-time as they were summoned to come to the parliament, or came for other
-business; it hath of late time been the dwelling, first of Sir Richard
-Sackvile, and now of Sir Thomas Sackvile his son, Baron of Buckhurst,
-Lord Treasurer, who hath lately enlarged it with stately buildings.
-
-Then is Water lane, running down, by the west side of a house called the
-Hanging Sword, to the Thames.
-
-Then was the White Friers' church, called _Fratres beatae Mariae de Monte
-Carmeli_, first founded (saith John Bale) by Sir Richard Gray, knight,
-ancestor to the Lord Gray Codnor, in the year 1241. King Edward I.
-gave to the prior and brethren of that house a plot of ground in Fleet
-street, whereupon to build their house, which was since re-edified or
-new built, by Hugh Courtney, Earl of Devonshire, about the year 1350,
-the 24th of Edward III. John Lutken, mayor of London, and the commonalty
-of the city, granted a lane called Crockers lane, reaching from Fleet
-street to the Thames, to build in the west end of that church. Sir
-Robert Knoles, knight, was a great builder there also, in the reign
-of Richard II., and of Henry IV.; he deceased at his manor of Scone
-Thorpe, in Norffolke, in the year 1407, and was brought to London, and
-honourably buried by the Lady Constance his wife, in the body of the
-said White Friers' church, which he had newly built.
-
-Robert Marshall, Bishop of Hereford, built the choir, presbytery,
-steeple, and many other parts, and was there buried, about the year
-1420. There were buried also in the new choir, Sir John Mowbery, Earl
-of Nottingham, 1398; Sir Edwarde Cortney; Sir Hugh Montgomerie, and Sir
-John his brother; John Wolle, son to Sir John Wolle; Thomas Bayholt,
-esquire; Elizabeth, Countess of Athole; Dame Johan, wife to Sir Thomas
-Say of Alden; Sir Pence Castle, Baron; John, Lord Gray, son to Reginald,
-Lord Gray of Wilton, 1418; Sir John Ludlow, knight; Sir Richard Derois,
-knight; Richarde Gray, knight; John Ashley, knight; Robert Bristow,
-esquire; Thomas Perry, esquire; Robert Tempest, esquire; William Call;
-William Neddow.
-
-In the old choir were buried: Dame Margaret, etc.; Eleanor Gristles; Sir
-John Browne, knight, and John his son and heir; Sir Simon de Berforde,
-knight; Peter Wigus, esquire; Robert Mathew, esquire; Sir John Skargell,
-knight; Sir John Norice, knight; Sir Geffrey Roose, knight; Mathew
-Hadocke, esquire; William Clarell, esquire; John Aprichard, esquire;
-William Wentworth, esquire; Thomas Wicham, esquire; Sir Terwit, knight;
-Sir Stephen Popham, knight; Bastard de Scales; Henrie Blunt, esquire;
-Elizabeth Blunt; John Swan, esquire; Alice Foster, one of the heirs of
-Sir Stephen Popham; Sir Robert Brocket, knight; John Drayton, esquire;
-John, son to Robert Chanlowes, and his daughter Katherine; John Salvin,
-William Hampton, John Bampton, John Winter, Edmond Oldhall, William
-Appleyard, Thomas Dabby, esquires; Sir Hugh Courtney, knight; John
-Drury, son to Robert Drurie; Elizabeth Gemersey, gentlewoman; Sir Thomas
-Townsend, knight; Sir Richarde Greene, knight; William Scot, esquire;
-Thomas Federinghey, I. Fulforde, esquire; Edward Eldsmere, gentleman;
-W. Hart, gentleman; Dame Mary Senclare, daughter to Sir Thomas Talbot,
-knight; Ancher, esquire; Sir William Moris, knight, and Dame Christian
-his wife; Sir Peter de Mota, knight; Richard Hewton, esquire; Sir I.
-Heron, knight; Richard Eton, esquire; Hugh Stapleton, gentleman; William
-Copley, gentleman; Sir Ralph Saintowen, knight; Sir Hugh Bromeflete,
-knight; Lord Vessey, principal founder of that order, the 6th of Edward
-IV., etc.
-
-This house was valued at L62 7_s._ 3_d._, and was surrendered the 10th
-of November, the 30th of Henry VIII.
-
-In place of this Friers' church be now many fair houses built, lodgings
-for noblemen and others.
-
-Then is the Sargeants' inn, so called, for that divers judges and
-sargeants at the law keep a commons, and are lodged there in term time.
-
-Next is the New Temple, so called because the Templars, before the
-building of this house, had their Temple in Oldborne. This house was
-founded by the Knights Templars in England, in the reign of Henry II.,
-and the same was dedicated to God and our blessed Lady, by Heraclius,
-Patriarch of the church called the Holy Resurrection, in Jerusalem, in
-the year of Christ, 1185.
-
-These Knights Templars took their beginning about the year 1118, in
-manner following. Certain noblemen, horsemen, religiously bent, bound
-by vow themselves in the hands of the Patriarch of Jerusalem, to serve
-Christ after the manner of regular canons in chastity and obedience, and
-to renounce their own proper wills for ever; the first of which order
-were Hugh Paganus, and Geffrey de S. Andromare. And whereas at the first
-they had no certain habitation, Baldwin, king of Jerusalem, granted unto
-them a dwelling place in his palace by the Temple, and the canons of the
-same Temple gave them the street thereby to build therein their houses
-of office, and the patriarch, the king, the nobles, and prelates gave
-unto them certain revenues out of their lordships.
-
-Their first profession was for safeguard of the pilgrims coming to
-visit the sepulchre, and to keep the highways against the lying in wait
-of thieves, etc. About ten years after they had a rule appointed unto
-them, and a white habit, by Honorius II. then Pope; and whereas they
-had but nine in number, they began to increase greatly. Afterward, in
-Pope Eugenius' time, they bare crosses of red cloth on their uppermost
-garments, to be known from others; and in short time, because they had
-their first mansion hard by the Temple of our Lord in Jerusalem, they
-were called Knights of the Temple.
-
-Many noble men in all parts of Christendom became brethren of this
-order, and built for themselves temples in every city or great town in
-England, but this at London was their chief house, which they built
-after the form of the temple near to the sepulchre of our Lord at
-Jerusalem; they had also other temples in Cambridge,[269] Bristow,
-Canterbury, Dover, Warwick.[270] This Temple in London, was often made a
-storehouse of men's treasure, I mean such as feared the spoil thereof in
-other places.
-
-Matthew Paris noteth, that in the year 1232, Hubert de Burgh, Earl of
-Kent, being prisoner in the Tower of London, the king was informed that
-he had much treasure laid up in this New Temple, under the custody
-of the Templars; whereupon he sent for the master of the Temple, and
-examined him straitly, who confessed that money being delivered unto him
-and his brethren to be kept, he knew not how much there was of it; the
-king demanded to have the same delivered, but it was answered, that the
-money being committed unto their trust, could not be delivered without
-the licence of him that committed it to ecclesiastical protection,
-whereupon the king sent his Treasurer and Justiciar of the Exchequer
-unto Hubert, to require him to resign the money wholly into his hands,
-who answered that he would gladly submit himself, and all his, unto the
-king's pleasure; and thereupon desired the knights of the Temple, in his
-behalf, to present all the keys unto the king, to do his pleasure with
-the goods which he had committed unto them. Then the king commanded the
-money to be faithfully told and laid up in his treasury, by inventory,
-wherein was found (besides ready money) vessels of gold and silver
-unpriceable, and many precious stones, which would make all men wonder
-if they knew the worth of them.
-
-This Temple was again dedicated 1240, belike also newly re-edified then.
-
-These Templars at this time were in so great glory, that they
-entertained the nobility, foreign ambassadors, and the prince himself
-very often, insomuch that Matthew Paris crieth out on them for their
-pride, who being at the first so poor, as they had but one horse to
-serve two of them (in token whereof they gave in their seal two men
-riding of one horse), yet suddenly they waxed so insolent, that they
-disdained other orders, and sorted themselves with noblemen.
-
-King Edward I. in the year 1283, taking with him Robert Waleran, and
-other, came to the Temple, where calling for the keeper of the treasure
-house, as if he meant to see his mother's-jewels, that were laid up
-there to be safely kept, he entered into the house, breaking the coffers
-of certain persons that had likewise brought their money thither, and he
-took away from thence to the value of a thousand pounds.
-
-Many parliaments and great councils have been there kept, as may appear
-by our histories. In the year 1308, all the Templars in England, as also
-in other parts of Christendom, were apprehended and committed to divers
-prisons. In 1310, a provincial council was holden at London, against the
-Templars in England, upon heresy and other articles whereof they were
-accused, but denied all except one or two of them, notwithstanding they
-all did confess that they could not purge themselves fully as faultless,
-and so they were condemned to perpetual penance in several monasteries,
-where they behaved themselves modestly.
-
-Philip, king of France, procured their overthrow throughout the whole
-world, and caused them to be condemned by a general council to his
-advantage, as he thought, for he believed to have had all their lands
-in France, and, therefore, seized the same in his hands (as I have
-read), and caused the Templars to the number of four and fifty (or after
-Fabian, threescore) to be burned at Paris.
-
-Edward II. in the year 1313, gave unto Aimer de Valence, Earl of
-Pembroke, the whose place and houses called the New Temple at London,
-with the ground called Ficquetes Croft, and all the tenements and rents,
-with the appurtenances, that belonged to the Templars in the city of
-London and suburbs thereof.
-
-After Aimer de Valence (sayeth some) Hugh Spencer, usurping the same,
-held it during his life, by whose death it came again to the hands of
-Edward III.; but in the meantime, to wit, 1324, by a council holden at
-Vienna, all the lands of the Templars (lest the same should be put to
-profane uses) were given to the knights hospitalers of the order of St.
-John Baptist, called St. John of Jerusalem, which knights had put the
-Turkes out of the Isle of Rhodes, and after won upon the said Turkes
-daily for a long time.
-
-The said Edward III., therefore, granted the same to the said knights,
-who possessed it, and in the eighteenth year of the said king's reign,
-were forced to repair the bridge of the said Temple. These knights had
-their head house for England by West Smithfield, and they in the reign
-of the same Edward III. granted (for a certain rent of ten pounds by the
-year) the said Temple, with the appurtenances thereunto adjoining, to
-the students of the common laws of England, in whose possession the same
-hath ever since remained; and is now divided into two houses of several
-students, by the same of inns of court, to wit, the Inner Temple, and
-the Middle Temple, who kept two several halls, but they resort all to
-the said Temple church, in the round walk whereof (which is the west
-part without the choir) there remaineth monuments of noblemen buried, to
-the number of eleven, eight of them are images of armed knights, five
-lying cross-legged as men vowed to the Holy Land, against the infidels
-and unbelieving Jews; the other three straight-legged; the rest are
-coped stones all of grey marble; the first of the cross-legged was W.
-Marshall, the elder Earl of Pembroke, who died 1219; Will. Marshall
-his son, Earl of Pembroke, was the second, he died, 1231; and Gilbert
-Marshall his brother, Earl of Pembroke, slain in a tournament at
-Hertford, beside Ware, in the year 1241.
-
-After this Robert Rose, otherwise called Fursan, being made a Templar in
-the year 1245, died and was buried there, and these are all that I can
-remember to have read of. Sir Nicholas Hare, Master of the Rolls, was
-buried there in the year 1557.
-
-In the year 1381, the rebels of Essex and of Kent destroyed and plucked
-down the houses and lodgings of this Temple, took out of the church the
-books and records that were in hutches of the apprentices of the law,
-carried them into the streets, and burnt them; the house they spoiled
-and burnt for wrath that they bare Sir Robert Halles, Lord-prior of St.
-John's in Smithfield; but it was since again at divers times repaired,
-namely, the gate-house of the Middle Temple, in the reign of Henry
-VIII., by Sir Amias Paulet, knight, upon occasion, as in my _Annales_ I
-have shown. The great hall of the Middle Temple was newly built in the
-year 1572, in the reign of our Queen Elizabeth.
-
-This Temple church hath a master and four stipendiary priests, with a
-clerk: these for the ministration of Divine service there have stipends
-allowed unto them out of the possessions and revenues of the late
-hospital and house of St. John's of Jerusalem in England, as it had
-been in the reign of Edward VI.; and thus much for the said new Temple,
-the farthest west part of this ward, and also of this city for the
-liberties thereof; which ward hath an alderman, and his deputies three.
-In Sepulchre's parish, common council six, constables four, scavengers
-four, wardmote inquest twelve; St. Bridgetes parish, common councillors
-eight, constables eight, scavengers eight, wardmote inquest twenty; in
-St. Andrewes, common council two, constables two, scavengers three,
-wardmote inquest twelve. It is taxed to the fifteen at thirty-five
-pounds one shilling.[271]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[264] With the following inscription: "_Hic jacet Raherus primus
-canonicus, et primus prior istius Ecclesiae_."
-
-[265] "The forrens were licensed for three dayes; the freemen so long as
-they would, which was sixe or seven dayes."--_Stow._
-
-[266] "John Davy, a false accuser of his master, of him was raised the
-by-word,--If ye serve me so, I will call you Davy."--_Stow._
-
-[267] "Commonly called Ely place."--_1st edition_, p. 323.
-
-[268] Fewters, idle people, probably from the old French _Fautier_,
-which Roquefort, _Glossaire de la Langue Romane_, defines "_Criminel
-Coupable_," or from _Fautteur_, "_rempli de defauts et de mauvaises
-habitudes_."
-
-[269] Matthew Paris.
-
-[270] "And others in other places."--_1st edition_, p. 325.
-
-
-
-
-BRIDGE WARDE WITHOUT, THE TWENTY-SIXTH IN NUMBER; CONSISTING OF THE
-BOROUGH OF SOUTHWARKE, IN THE COUNTY OF SURREY.
-
-
-Having treated of wards in London, on the north side of the Thames (in
-number twenty-five), I am now to cross over the said river into the
-borough of Southwark, which is also a ward of London without the walls,
-on the south side thereof, as is Portsoken on the east, and Farringdon
-extra on the west.
-
-This borough being in the county of Surrey, consisteth of divers
-streets, ways, and winding lanes, all full of buildings, inhabited; and,
-first, to begin at the west part thereof, over against the west suburb
-of the city.
-
-On the bank of the river Thames there is now a continual building of
-tenements, about half a mile in length to the bridge. Then from the
-bridge, straight towards the south, a continual street, called Long
-Southwark, built on both sides with divers lanes and alleys up to St.
-George's church, and beyond it through Blackman street towards New
-town (or Newington); the liberties of which borough extend almost to
-the parish church of New town aforesaid, distant one mile from London
-Bridge, and also south-west a continual building almost to Lambeth, more
-than one mile from the said bridge.
-
-Then from the bridge along by the Thames eastward is St. Olave's street,
-having continual building on both the sides, with lanes and alleys, up
-to Battle bridge, to Horsedowne, and towards Rother hithe; also some
-good half mile in length from London Bridge.
-
-So that I account the whole continual buildings on the bank of the said
-river, from the west towards the east, to be more than a large mile in
-length.
-
-Then have ye, from the entering towards the said Horsedown, one other
-continual street called Bermondes high street, which stretcheth south,
-likewise furnished with buildings on both sides, almost half a mile
-in length, up to the late dissolved monastery of St. Saviour called
-Bermondsey. And from thence is one Long lane (so called of the length),
-turning west to St. George's church afore named. Out of the which lane
-mentioned Long lane breaketh one other street towards the south and by
-east, and this is called Kentish street, for that is the way leading
-into that country: and so have you the bounds of this borough.
-
-The antiquities most notable in this borough are these: First, for
-ecclesiastical, there was Bermondsey, an abbey of black monks, St. Mary
-Overies, a priory of canons regular, St. Thomas, a college or hospital
-for the poor, and the Loke, a lazar house in Kent street. Parish
-churches there have been six, whereof five do remain; viz., St. Mary
-Magdalen, in the priory of St. Mary Overy, now the same St. Mary Overy
-is the parish church for the said Mary Magdalen, and for St. Margaret on
-the hill, and is called St. Saviour.
-
-St. Margaret on the hill being put down is now a court for justice;
-St. Thomas in the hospital serveth for a parish church as before; St.
-George a parish church as before it did; so doth St. Olave and St. Mary
-Magdalen, by the abbey of Bermondsey.
-
-There be also these five prisons or gaols:
-
- The Clinke on the Banke.
- The Compter, in the late parish church of St. Margaret.
- The Marshalsey.
- The Kinges Bench.
- And the White Lion, all in Long Southwarke.
-
-Houses most notable be these:
-
- The Bishop of Winchester's house.
- The Bishop of Rochester's house.
- The Duke of Suffolk's house, or Southwark place.
- The Tabard, an hostery or inn.
- The Abbot of Hyde, his house.
- The Prior of Lewes, his house.
- The Abbot of St. Augustine, his house.
- The Bridge house.
- The Abbot of Battaile, his house.
- Battaile bridge.
- The Stewes on the bank of Thames.
- And the Bear gardens there.
-
-Now, to return to the west bank, there be two bear gardens, the old
-and new places, wherein be kept bears, bulls, and other beasts, to be
-baited; as also mastiffs in several kennels, nourished to bait them.
-These bears and other beasts are there baited in plots of ground,
-scaffolded about for the beholders to stand safe.
-
-Next on this bank was sometime the Bordello, or Stewes, a place so
-called of certain stew-houses privileged there, for the repair of
-incontinent men to the like women; of the which privilege I have read
-thus:
-
-In a parliament holden at Westminster, the 8th of Henry II., it was
-ordained by the commons, and confirmed by the king and lords, that
-divers constitutions for ever should be kept within that lordship or
-franchise, according to the old customs that had been there used time
-out of mind: amongst the which these following were some, viz.
-
-"That no stew-holder or his wife should let or stay any single woman, to
-go and come freely at all times when they listed.
-
-"No stew-holder to keep any woman to board, but she to board abroad at
-her pleasure.
-
-"To take no more for the woman's chamber in the week than fourteen pence.
-
-"Not to keep open his doors upon the holidays.
-
-"Not to keep any single woman in his house on the holidays, but the
-bailiff to see them voided out of the lordship.
-
-"No single woman to be kept against her will that would leave her sin.
-
-"No stew-holder to receive any woman of religion, or any man's wife.
-
-"No single woman to take money to lie with any man, but she lie with him
-all night till the morrow.
-
-"No man to be drawn or enticed into any stew-house.
-
-"The constables, bailiff, and others, every week to search every
-stew-house.
-
-"No stew-holder to keep any woman that hath the perilous infirmity
-of burning, not to sell bread, ale, flesh, fish, wood, coal, or any
-victuals, etc."
-
-These and many more orders were to be observed upon great pain and
-punishment. I have also seen divers patents of confirmation, namely, one
-dated 1345, the 19th of Edward III.[272] Also I find, that in the 4th
-of Richard II., these stew-houses belonging to William Walworth, then
-mayor of London, were farmed by Froes of Flanders, and spoiled by Walter
-Tyler, and other rebels of Kent: notwithstanding, I find that ordinances
-for the same place and houses were again confirmed in the reign of Henry
-VI., to be continued as before. Also, Robert Fabian writeth, that in the
-year 1506, the 21st of Henry VII., the said stew-houses in Southwarke
-were for a season inhibited, and the doors closed up, but it was not
-long (saith he) ere the houses there were set open again, so many as
-were permitted, for (as it was said) whereas before were eighteen
-houses, from thenceforth were appointed to be used but twelve only.
-These allowed stew-houses had signs on their fronts, towards the Thames,
-not hanged out, but painted on the walls, as a Boar's head, the Cross
-keys, the Gun, the Castle, the Crane, the Cardinal's hat, the Bell,
-the Swan, etc. I have heard of ancient men, of good credit, report,
-that these single women were forbidden the rites of the church, so long
-as they continued that sinful life, and were excluded from Christian
-burial, if they were not reconciled before their death. And therefore
-there was a plot of ground called the Single Woman's churchyard,
-appointed for them far from the parish church.
-
-In the year of Christ 1546, the 37th of Henry VIII., this row of
-stews in Southwarke was put down by the king's commandment, which was
-proclaimed by sound of trumpet, no more to be privileged, and used as a
-common brothel, but the inhabitants of the same to keep good and honest
-rule as in other places of this realm, etc.
-
-Then next is the Clinke, a gaol or prison for the trespassers in those
-parts; namely, in old time, for such as should brabble, frey, or break
-the peace on the said bank, or in the brothel houses, they were by the
-inhabitants thereabout apprehended and committed to this gaol, where
-they were straitly imprisoned.
-
-Next is the bishop of Winchester's house, or lodging, when he cometh to
-this city; which house was first built by William Gifford, bishop of
-Winchester, about the year 1107, the 7th of Henry I., upon a plot of
-ground pertaining to the prior of Bermondsey, as appeareth by a writ
-directed unto the barons of the Exchequer, in the year 1366, the 41st of
-Edward III. (the bishop's see being void), for eight pounds, due to the
-monks of Bermondsey for the bishop of Winchester's lodging in Southwark.
-This is a very fair house, well repaired, and hath a large wharf and
-landing-place, called the bishop of Winchester's stairs.
-
-Adjoining to this, on the south side the roof, is the bishop of
-Rochester's inn or lodging, by whom first erected I do not now remember
-me to have read; but well I wot the same of long time hath not been
-frequented by any bishop, and lieth ruinous for any lack of reparations.
-The abbot of Maverley had a house there.
-
-East from the bishop of Winchester's house, directly over against it,
-standeth a fair church called St. Mary over the Rie, or Overie, that
-is over the water. This church, or some other in place thereof, was
-of old time, long before the Conquest, a house of sisters, founded by
-a maiden named Mary; unto the which house and sisters she left (as
-was left to her by her parents) the oversight and profits of a cross
-ferry, or traverse ferry over the Thames, there kept before that any
-bridge was built. This house of sisters was after by Swithen, a noble
-lady, converted into a college of priests, who in place of the ferry
-built a bridge of timber, and from time to time kept the same in good
-reparations, but lastly the same bridge was built of stone; and then
-in the year 1106 was this church again founded for canons regulars by
-William Pont de la Arche and William Dauncy, knights, Normans.
-
-William Gifford, bishop of Winchester, was a good benefactor also, for
-he, as some have noted, built the body of that church in the year 1106,
-the 7th of Henry I.
-
-The canons first entered the said church then; Algodus was the first
-prior.
-
-King Henry I. by his charter gave them the church of St. Margaret in
-Southwarke.
-
-King Stephen confirmed the gift of King Henry, and also gave the
-stone-house, which was William Pont de le Arche's, by Downegate.
-
-This priory was burnt about the year 1207, wherefore the canons did
-found a hospital near unto their priory, where they celebrated until the
-priory was repaired; which hospital was after, by consent of Peter de la
-Roch, bishop of Winchester, removed into the land of Anicius, archdeacon
-of Surrey, in the year 1228, a place where the water was more plentiful,
-and the air more wholesome, and was dedicated to St. Thomas.
-
-This Peter de Rupibus, or de la Roch, founded a large chapel of St. Mary
-Magdalen, in the said church of St. Mary Overie; which chapel was after
-appointed to be the parish church for the inhabitants near adjoining.
-
-This church was again newly built in the reign of Richard II. and King
-Henry IV.
-
-John Gower, esquire, a famous poet,[273] was then an especial benefactor
-to that work, and was there buried on the north side of the said church,
-in the chapel of St. John, where he founded a chantry: he lieth under a
-tomb of stone, with his image, also of stone, over him: the hair of his
-head, auburn, long to his shoulders, but curling up, and a small forked
-beard; on his head a chaplet, like a coronet of four roses; a habit of
-purple, damasked down to his feet; a collar of esses gold about his
-neck; under his head the likeness of three books, which he compiled. The
-first, named _Speculum Meditantis_, written in French; the second, _Vox
-Clamantis_, penned in Latin; the third, _Confessio Amantis_, written in
-English, and this last is printed. _Vox Clamantis_, with his _Cronica
-Tripartita_, and other, both in Latin and French, never printed, I have
-and do possess, but _Speculum Meditantis_ I never saw, though heard
-thereof to be in Kent. Beside on the wall where he lieth, there was
-painted three virgins crowned; one of the which was named Charity,
-holding this device:
-
- "En toy qui es Fitz de dieu le pere,
- Sauve soit, que gist souz cest piere."
-
-The second writing, Mercy, with this device:
-
- "O bone Jesu, fait ta mercie,
- Al alme, dont le corps gist icy."
-
-The third writing, Pity, with this device:
-
- "Pur ta pite Jesu regarde,
- Et met cest alme en sauve garde."
-
-His arms a field argent, on a cheveron azure, three leopards' heads
-gold, their tongues gules; two angels supporters, on the crest a talbot:
-his epitaph,
-
- "Armigeri scutum nihil a modo fert sibi tutum,
- Reddidit immolutum morti generale tributum,
- Spiritus exutum se gaudeat esse solutum,
- Est ubi virtutum regnum sine labe statutum,"
-
-The roof of the middle west aisle fell down in the year 1469. This
-priory was surrendered to Henry VIII., the 31st of his reign, the 27th
-of October, the year of Christ 1539, valued at L624 6_s._ 6_d._ by the
-year.
-
-About Christmas next following, the church of the said priory was
-purchased of the king by the inhabitants of the borough, Doctor Stephen
-Gardner, bishop of Winchester, putting to his helping hand; they made
-thereof a parish church for the parish church of St. Mary Magdalen, on
-the south side of the said choir, and of St. Margaret on the hill, which
-were made one parish of St. Saviour.
-
-There be monuments in this church,--of Robert Liliarde, or Hiliarde,
-esquire; Margaret, daughter to the Lady Audley, wife to Sir Thomas
-Audley; William Grevill, esquire, and Margaret his wife; one of the
-heirs of William Spershut, esquire; Dame Katherine, wife to John Stoke,
-alderman; Robert Merfin, esquire; William Undall, esquire; Lord Ospay
-Ferar; Sir George Brewes, knight; John Browne; Lady Brandon, wife to
-Sir Thomas Brandon; William, Lord Scales; William, Earl Warren; Dame
-Maude, wife to Sir John Peach; Lewknor; Dame Margaret Elrington, one
-of the heirs of Sir Thomas Elrington; John Bowden, esquire; Robert St.
-Magil; John Sandhurst; John Gower; John Duncell, merchant-tailor, 1516;
-John Sturton, esquire; Robert Rouse; Thomas Tong, first Norroy, and
-after Clarenceaux king of arms; William Wickham, translated from the
-see of Lincoln to the bishopric of Winchester in the month of March,
-1595, deceased the 11th of June next following, and was buried here;
-Thomas Cure, esquire, saddler to King Edward VI., Queen Mary, and Queen
-Elizabeth, deceased the 24th of May, 1598, etc.
-
-Now passing through St. Mary Over's close (in possession of the Lord
-Mountacute), and Pepper alley, into Long Southwark, on the right hand
-thereof the market-hill, where the leather is sold, there stood the late
-named parish church of St. Margaret, given to St. Mary Overies by Henry
-I., put down and joined with the parish of St. Mary Magdalen, and united
-to the late dissolved priory church of St. Mary Overy.
-
-A part of this parish church of St. Margaret is now a court, wherein the
-assizes and sessions be kept, and the court of admiralty is also there
-kept. One other part of the same church is now a prison, called the
-Compter in Southwark, etc.
-
-Farther up on that side, almost directly over against St. George's
-church, was sometime a large and most sumptuous house, built by Charles
-Brandon, late Duke of Suffolk, in the reign of Henry VIII., which was
-called Suffolk house, but coming afterwards into the king's hands, the
-same was called Southwarke place, and a mint of coinage was there kept
-for the king.
-
-To this place came King Edward VI., in the second of his reign, from
-Hampton Court, and dined in it. He at that time made John Yorke, one
-of the sheriffs of London, knight, and then rode through the city to
-Westminster.
-
-Queen Mary gave this house to Nicholas Heath, Archbishop of Yorke, and
-to his successors, for ever, to be their inn or lodging for their repair
-to London, in recompense of Yorke house near to Westminster, which King
-Henry her father had taken from Cardinal Wolsey, and from the see of
-Yorke.
-
-Archbishop Heath sold the same house to a merchant, or to merchants,
-that pulled it down, sold the lead, stone, iron, etc.; and in place
-thereof built many small cottages of great rents, to the increasing
-of beggars in that borough. The archbishop bought Norwich house, or
-Suffolke place, near unto Charing cross, because it was near unto the
-court, and left it to his successors.
-
-Now on the south side to return back again towards the bridge, over
-against this Suffolke place, is the parish church of St. George,
-sometime pertaining to the priory of Barmondsey, by the gift of Thomas
-Arderne and Thomas his son, in the year 1122. There lie buried in this
-church, William Kirton, esquire, and his wives, 1464.
-
-Then is the White Lion, a gaol so called, for that the same was a common
-hosterie for the receipt of travellers by that sign. This house was
-first used as a gaol within these forty years last, since the which time
-the prisoners were once removed thence to a house in Newtowne, where
-they remained for a short time, and were returned back again to the
-foresaid White Lion, there to remain as in the appointed gaol for the
-county of Surrey.
-
-Next is the gaol or prison of the King's Bench, but of what antiquity
-the same is I know not. For I have read that the courts of the King's
-Bench and Chancery have ofttimes been removed from London to other
-places, and so hath likewise the gaols that serve those courts; as in
-the year 1304, Edward I. commanded the courts of the King's Bench and
-the Exchequer, which had remained seven years at Yorke, to be removed to
-their old places at London. And in the year 1387, the 11th of Richard
-II., Robert Tresilian, chief justice, came to the city of Coventrie, and
-there sate by the space of a month, as justice of the Kinge's benches,
-and caused to be indited in that court, about the number of two thousand
-persons of that country, etc.
-
-It seemeth, therefore, that for that time, the prison or gaol of that
-court was not far off. Also in the year 1392, the 16th of the same
-Richard, the Archbishop of York being Lord Chancellor, for good will
-that he bare to his city, caused the King's Bench and Chancery to be
-removed from London to York, but ere long they were returned to London.
-
-Then is the Marshalsey, another gaol or prison, so called, as pertaining
-to the marshals of England. Of what continuance kept in Southwark I have
-not learned; but like it is, that the same hath been removable, at the
-pleasure of the marshals: for I find that in the year 1376, the 50th
-of Edward III., Henry Percie (being marshal) kept his prisoners in the
-city of London, where having committed one John Prendergast, of Norwich,
-contrary to the liberties of the city of London, the citizens, by
-persuasion of the Lord Fitzwalter their standard-bearer, took armour and
-ran with great rage to the marshal's inn, brake up the gates, brought
-out the prisoner, and conveyed him away, minding to have burnt the
-stocks in the midst of their city, but they first sought for Sir Henry
-Percy to have punished him, as I have noted in my _Annales_.
-
-More about the feast of Easter next following, John, Duke of Lancaster,
-having caused all the whole navy of England to be gathered together at
-London: it chanced a certain esquire to kill one of the shipmen, which
-act the other shipmen taking in ill part, they brought their suit into
-the king's court of the Marshalsey, which then as chanced (saith mine
-author) was kept in Southwark: but when they perceived that court to be
-so favourable to the murderer, and further that the king's warrant was
-also gotten for his pardon, they in great fury ran to the house wherein
-the murderer was imprisoned, brake into it, and brought forth the
-prisoner with his gyves on his legs, they thrust a knife to his heart,
-and sticked him as if he had been a dog; after this they tied a rope
-to his gyves, and drew him to the gallows, where when they had hanged
-him, as though they had done a great act, they caused the trumpets to
-be sounded before them to their ships, and there in great triumph they
-spent the rest of the day.
-
-Also the rebels of Kent, in the year 1381, brake down the houses of
-the Marshalsey and King's Bench in Southwark, took from thence the
-prisoners, brake down the house of Sir John Immorth, then marshal of the
-Marshalsey and King's Bench, etc. After this, in the year 1387, the 11th
-of Richard II., the morrow after Bartholomew day, the king kept a great
-council in the castle of Nottingham, and the Marshalsey of the king was
-then kept at Loughborrow by the space of five days or more. In the year
-1443, Sir Walter Manny was marshal of the Marshalsey, the 22nd of Henry
-VI. William Brandon, esquire, was marshal in the 8th of Edward IV. In
-the year 1504 the prisoners of the Marshalsey, then in Southwark, brake
-out, and many of them being taken were executed, especially such as had
-been committed for felony or treason.
-
-From thence towards London bridge, on the same side, be many fair inns,
-for recepit of travellers, by these signs, the Spurre, Christopher,
-Bull, Queene's Head, Tabarde, George, Hart, Kinge's Head, etc. Amongst
-the which, the most ancient is the Tabard, so called of the sign, which,
-as we now term it, is of a jacket, or sleeveless coat, whole before,
-open on both sides, with a square collar, winged at the shoulders; a
-stately garment of old time, commonly worn of noblemen and others, both
-at home and abroad in the wars, but then (to wit in the wars) their arms
-embroidered, or otherwise depict upon them, that every man by his coat
-of arms might be known from others: but now these tabards are only worn
-by the heralds, and be called their coats of arms in service; for the
-inn of the tabard, Geffrey Chaucer, esquire, the most famous poet of
-England, in commendation thereof, writeth thus:--
-
- "Befell that in that season, on a day,
- In Southwarke at the Tabard, as I lay,
- Readie to wenden on my Pilgrimage
- To Canterburie with devout courage,
- At night was come into that hosterie,
- Well nine-and-twentie in a companie,
- Of sundrie folke, by adventure yfall,
- In fellowship, and pilgrimes were they all,
- That toward Canterburie woulden ride,
- The chambers and the stables weren wide,
- And well we weren eased at the best," etc.
-
-Within this inn was also the lodging of the abbot of Hide (by the city
-of Winchester), a fair house for him and his train, when he came to that
-city to parliament, etc.
-
-And then Theeves lane, by St. Thomas' hospital. The hospital of St.
-Thomas, first founded by Richard Prior of Bermondsey, in the Selerers
-ground against the wall of the monastery, in the year 1213, he named
-it the Almerie, or house of alms for converts and poor children; for
-the which ground the prior ordained that the almoner should pay ten
-shillings and four pence yearly to the Selerer at Michaelmas.
-
-But Peter de Rupibus,[274] Bishop of Winchester, in the year 1215,
-founded the same again more fully for canons regular in place of the
-first hospital; he increased the rent thereof to three hundred and
-forty-four pounds in the year. Thus was this hospital holden of the
-prior and abbot of Bermondsey till the year 1428, at which time a
-composition was made between Thomas Thetford, abbot of Bermondsey, and
-Nicholas Buckland, master of the said hospital of St. Thomas, for all
-the lands and tenements which were holden of the said abbot and convent
-in Southwark, or elsewhere, for the old rent to be paid unto the said
-abbot.
-
-There be monuments in this hospital church of Sir Robert Chamber,
-knight; William Fines, Lord Say; Richard Chaucer, John Gloucester,
-Adam Atwood, John Ward, Michael Cambridge, William West, John Golding,
-esquires; John Benham, George Kirkes, Thomas Kninton, Thomas Baker,
-gentlemen; Robert, son to Sir Thomas Fleming; Agnes, wife to Sir Walter
-Dennis, knight, daughter, and one of the heirs of Sir Robert Danvars;
-John Evarey, gentleman; etc.
-
-This hospital was by the visitors, in the year 1538, valued at two
-hundred and sixty-six pounds seventeen shillings and six pence, and was
-surrendered to Henry VIII., in the 30th of his reign.
-
-In the year 1552, the citizens of London having purchased the void
-suppressed hospital of St. Thomas in Southwark, in the month of July
-began the reparations thereof, for poor, impotent, lame, and diseased
-people, so that in the month of November next following, the sick and
-poor people were taken in. And in the year 1553, on the 10th of April,
-King Edward VI., in the 7th of his reign, gave to the mayor, commonalty,
-and citizens of London, to be a workhouse for the poor and idle persons
-of this city, his house of Bridewell, and seven hundred marks land
-of the Savoy rents, which hospital he had suppressed, with all the
-beds, bedding, and other furniture belonging to the same, towards the
-maintenance of the said workhouse of Bridewell, and of this hospital of
-St. Thomas in Southwark. This gift the king confirmed by his charter,
-dated the 26th of June next following, and willed it to be called the
-King's hospital in Southwark.
-
-The church of this hospital, which of old time served for the tenements
-near adjoining, and pertaining to the said hospital, remaineth as a
-parish church.
-
-But now to come to St. Olave's street. On the bank of the river of
-Thames, is the parish church of St. Olave, a fair and meet large church,
-but a far larger parish especially of aliens or strangers, and poor
-people; in which church there lieth entombed Sir John Burcettur, knight,
-1466.
-
-Over against this parish church, on the south side the street was
-sometime one great house built of stone, with arched gates, pertaining
-to the prior of Lewes in Sussex, and was his lodging when he came to
-London; it is now a common hosterie for travellers, and hath to sign the
-Walnut Tree.
-
-Then east from the said parish church of St. Olave is a key. In the
-year 1330, by the license of Simon Swanlond, mayor of London, built by
-Isabel, widow to Hamond Goodchepe. And next thereunto was then a great
-house of stone and timber, belonging to the abbot of St. Augustine
-without the walls of Canterburie, which was an ancient piece of work,
-and seemeth to be one of the first built houses on that side the river
-over-against the city; it was called the abbot's inn of St. Augustine in
-Southwark, and was sometime holden of the Earls of Warren and Surrey, as
-appeareth by a deed made 1281, which I have read, and may be Englished
-thus:--
-
-"To all whom this present writing shall come, John Earl Warren sendeth
-greeting. Know ye, that we have altogether remised and quit-claimed for
-us and our heirs for ever, to Nicholas, abbot of St. Augustine's of
-Canterburie, and the convent of the same, and their successors, suit to
-our court of Southwarke, which they owe unto us, for all that messuage
-and houses thereon built, and all their appurtenances, which they have
-of our fee in Southwarke, situate upon the Thames, between the Bridge
-house and the church of St. Olave. And the said messuage, with the
-buildings thereon built, and all their appurtenances, to them and their
-successors, we have granted in perpetual alms, to hold of us and our
-heirs for the same, saving the service due to any other persons, if any
-such be, then to us; and for this remit and grant the said abbot and
-convent have given unto us five shillings of rent yearly in Southwarke,
-and have received us and our heirs in all benefices which shall be in
-their church for ever." This suit of court one William Graspeis was
-bound to do to the said earl for the said messuage, and heretofore to
-acquit in all things the church of St. Augustine against the said earl.
-
-This house of late time belonged to Sir Anthony Sentlegar, then to
-Warham Sentlegar, etc., and is now called Sentlegar house, but divided
-into sundry tenements. Next is the Bridgehouse, so called as being a
-storehouse for stone, timber, or whatsoever pertaining to the building
-or repairing of London bridge.
-
-This house seemeth to have taken beginning with the first founding of
-the bridge either of stone or timber; it is a large plot of ground, on
-the bank of the river Thames, containing divers large buildings for
-stowage of things necessary towards reparation of the said bridge.
-
-There are also divers garners, for laying up of wheat, and other
-grainers for service of the city, as need requireth. Moreover, there
-be certain ovens built, in number ten, of which six be very large, the
-other four being but half so big. These were purposely made to bake out
-the bread corn of the said grainers, to the best advantage for relief of
-the poor citizens, when need should require. Sir John Throstone, knight,
-sometime an embroiderer, then a goldsmith, one of the sheriffs 1516,
-gave by his testament towards the making of these ovens, two hundred
-pounds, which thing was performed by his executors. Sir John Munday,
-goldsmith, then being mayor, there was of late, for the enlarging of the
-said Bridge house, taken in an old brewhouse, called Goldings, which
-was given to the city by George Monex, sometime mayor, and in place
-thereof, is now a fair brewhouse new built, for service of the city with
-beer.
-
-Next was the abbot of Battailes inn, betwixt the Bridge house and
-Battaile bridge, likewise on the bank of the river of Thames; the walks
-and gardens thereunto appertaining, on the other side of the way before
-the gate of the said house, and was called the Maze; there is now an
-inn, called the Flower de Luce, for that the sign is three Flower de
-Luces. Much other buildings of small tenements are thereon builded,
-replenished with strangers and other, for the most part poor people.
-
-Then is Battaile bridge, so called of Battaile abbey, for that it
-standeth on the ground, and over a water-course (flowing out of Thames)
-pertaining to that abbey, and was, therefore, both built and repaired by
-the abbots of that house, as being hard adjoining to the abbot's lodging.
-
-Beyond this bridge is Bermondsey street, turning south, in the south end
-whereof was sometime a priory or abbey of St. Saviour, called Bermond's
-Eye in Southwark, founded by Alwin Childe, a citizen of London, in the
-year 1081.
-
-Peter, Richard, Obstert, and Umbalde, monks de Charitate, came unto
-Bermondsey, in the year 1089, and Peter was made first prior there, by
-appointment of the prior of the house, called Charity in France, by
-which means this priory of Bermondsey (being a cell to that in France)
-was accounted a priory of Aliens.
-
-In the year 1094 deceased Alwin Childe, founder of this house. Then
-William Rufus gave to the monks his manor of Bermondsey, with the
-appurtenances, and built for them there a new great church.
-
-Robert Blewet, Bishop of Lincolne (King William's chancellor), gave them
-the manor of Charlton, with the appurtenances. Also Geffrey Martell, by
-the grant of Geffrey Magnavile, gave them the land of Halingbury, and
-the tithe of Alferton, etc.
-
-More, in the year 1122, Thomas of Arderne, and Thomas his son, gave to
-the monks of Bermond's Eye the church of St. George in Southwark, etc.
-
-In the year 1165, King Henry II. confirmed to them the hyde or territory
-of Southwark, and Laygham Wadden, with the land of Coleman, etc.
-
-In the year 1371, the priors of Aliens, throughout England, being seized
-into the king's hands, Richard Denton an Englishman was made prior of
-Bermondsey, to whom was committed the custody of the said priory, by the
-letters patents of King Edward III., saving to the king the advowsons of
-churches.
-
-In the year 1380, the 4th of Richard II., this priory was made a denison
-(or free English) for the fine of two hundred marks paid to the king's
-Hanaper in the Chancery. In the year 1399 John Attelborough, prior of
-Bermondsey, was made the first abbot of that house by Pope Boniface IX.,
-at the suit of King Richard II.
-
-In the year 1417, Thomas Thetford, abbot of Bermondsey, held a plea in
-chancery against the king, for the manors of Preston, Bermondsey, and
-Stone, in the county of Somerset, in the which suit the abbot prevailed
-and recovered against the king.
-
-In the year 1539 this abbey was valued to dispend by the year four
-hundred and seventy-four pounds fourteen shillings and four pence
-halfpenny, and was surrendered to Henry VIII., the 31st of his reign;
-the abbey church was then pulled down by Sir Thomas Pope, knight, and in
-place thereof a goodly house built of stone and timber, now pertaining
-to the earls of Sussex.
-
-There are buried in that church, Leoftane, provost, shrive or domesman
-of London, 1115; Sir William Bowes, knight, and Dame Elizabeth his wife;
-Sir Thomas Pikeworth, knight; Dame Anne Audley; George, son to John Lord
-Audley; John Winkefield, esquire; Sir Nicholas Blonket, knight; Dame
-Bridget, wife to William Trussell; Holgrave, baron of the exchequer; etc.
-
-Next unto this abbey church standeth a proper church of St. Mary
-Magdalen, built by the priors of Bermondsey, serving for resort of the
-inhabitants (tenants to the prior or abbots near adjoining) there to
-have their Divine service: this church remaineth, and serveth as afore,
-and is called a parish church.
-
-Then in Kent street is a lazar house for leprous people, called the Loke
-in Southwark; the foundation whereof I find not. Now, having touched
-divers principal parts of this borough, I am to speak somewhat of its
-government, and so to end.
-
-This borough, upon petition made by the citizens of London to Edward
-I., in the 1st year of his reign, was, for divers causes, by parliament
-granted to them for ever, yielding into the exchequer the fee-firm of
-ten pounds by the year; which grant was confirmed by Edward III., who,
-in the 3rd of his reign gave them license to take a toll towards the
-charge of paving the said borough with stone. Henry IV. confirmed the
-grant of his predecessors, so did Edward IV., etc.
-
-But in the year 1550, King Edward VI., for the sum of six hundred and
-forty-seven pounds two shillings and one penny, paid into his court
-of augmentations and revenues of his crown, granted to the mayor
-and commonalty all his lands and tenements in Southwark, except, and
-reserved, the capital messuage, two mansions, called Southwark place,
-late the Duke of Suffolk's, and all the gardens and lands to the same
-appertaining, the park, and the messuage called the Antilope. Moreover,
-he gave them the lordship and manor of Southwark, with all members and
-rights thereof, late pertaining to the monastery of Bermondsey. And
-all messuages, places, buildings, rents, courts, waifs and strays, to
-the same appertaining, in the county of Surrey, except as is before
-excepted. He also granted unto them his manor and borough of Southwark,
-with all the members, rights, and appurtenances, late of the possession
-of the Archbishop of Canterbury and his see in Southwark. Moreover,
-for the sum of five hundred marks, he granted to the said mayor and
-commonalty, and their successors, in and through the borough and town of
-Southwark, and in all the parishes of St. Saviour, St. Olave, and St.
-George, and the parish of St. Thomas Hospital, now called the King's
-hospital, and elsewhere, in the said town and borough of Southwark,
-and Kentish street, Bermondsey street, in the parish of Newington, all
-waifs and strays, treasure trove, all felons' goods, etc., within the
-parishes and precinct aforesaid, etc.: the return of writs, processes,
-and warrants, etc.: together with a fair in the whole town for three
-days, to wit, the 7th, 8th, and 9th of September, yearly, with a court
-of pye powders. A view of franke pledge, with attachments, arrests, etc.
-Also to arrest all felons, and other malefactors, within their precinct,
-and send them to ward, and to Newgate. Provided that nothing in that
-grant should be prejudicial to the stewards and marshal of the king's
-house. The same premises to be holden of the manor of East Greenwich, in
-the county of Kent, by fealty in free forage. Dated at Westminster, the
-23rd of April, in the 4th of his reign. All which was also confirmed by
-parliament, etc. And the same year, in the Whitsun week, in a court of
-aldermen, kept at the Guildhall of London, Sir John Aylophe, knight, was
-sworn the first alderman of Bridge ward without, and made up the number
-of twenty-six aldermen of London.
-
-This borough at a subsidy to the king yieldeth about one thousand
-marks, or eight hundred pounds, which is more than any one city in
-England payeth, except the city of London. And also the muster of men
-in this borough doth likewise in number surpass all other cities,
-except London. And thus much for the borough of Southwark, one of the
-twenty-six wards of London, which hath an alderman, deputies three,
-and a bailiff, common-council none, constables sixteen, scavengers six,
-wardmote inquest twenty. And is taxed to the fifteen at seventeen pounds
-seventeen shillings and eight pence.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[271] "And in the Exchequer at thirty-four pounds."--_1st edition_, p.
-338.
-
-[272] "Li. St. Mary Eborum. English people disdayned to be baudes. Froes
-of Flaunders were women for that purpose."--_Stow._
-
-[273] "John Gower was no knight, neither had he any garland of ivie and
-roses, but a chaplet of foure roses onely."--_Stow._
-
-[274] Li. St. Marie Overy.
-
-
-
-
-THE SUBURBS WITHOUT THE WALLS OF THE SAID CITY BRIEFLY TOUCHED. AS ALSO
-WITHOUT THE LIBERTIES MORE AT LARGE DESCRIBED.
-
-
-Having spoken of this city, the original, and increase, by degrees: the
-walls, gates, ditch, castles, towers, bridges, the schools, and houses
-of learning: of the orders and customs, sports, and pastimes: of the
-honour of citizens, and worthiness of men: and last of all, how the same
-city is divided into parts and wards: and how the same be bounded: and
-what monuments of antiquity, or ornaments of building, in every of them,
-as also in the borough of Southwark: I am next to speak briefly of the
-suburbs, as well without the gates and walls as without the liberties,
-and of the monuments in them.
-
-Concerning the estate of the suburbs of this city, in the reign of Henry
-II., Fitz Stephen hath these words:--"Upwards, on the west (saith he),
-is the king's palace, which is an incomparable building, rising with a
-vawmure and bulwark aloft upon the river, two miles from the wall of the
-city, but yet conjoined with a continual suburb. On all sides, without
-the houses of the suburbs, are the citizens' gardens and orchards,
-planted with trees, both large, sightly, and adjoining together. On
-the north side are pastures and plain meadows, with brooks running
-through them, turning water-mills with a pleasant noise. Not far off
-is a great forest, a well wooded chase, having good covert for harts,
-bucks, does, boars, and wild bulls. The corn fields are not of a hungry
-sandy mould, but as the fruitful fields of Asia, yielding plentiful
-increase, and filling the barns with corn. There are near London, on the
-north side, especial wells in the suburbs, sweet, wholesome, and clear.
-Amongst which, Holywell, Clarkenwell, and St. Clement's well, are most
-famous, and most frequented by scholars and youths of the city in summer
-evenings, when they walk forth to take the air." Thus far out of Fitz
-Stephen for the suburbs at that time.
-
-The 2nd of King Henry III. the forest of Middlesex, and the warren of
-Staines, were disafforested; since the which time the suburbs about
-London hath been also mightily increased with buildings; for first,
-to begin in the East, by the Tower of London, is the hospital of St.
-Katherine, founded by Matilda the queen, wife to King Stephen, as is
-afore shown in Portsoken ward; from this precinct of St. Katherine to
-Wapping in the west,[275] the usual place of execution for hanging of
-pirates and sea rovers, at the low-water mark, and there to remain,
-till three tides had overflowed them, was never a house standing within
-these forty years; but since the gallows being after removed farther
-off, a continual street, or filthy strait passage, with alleys of small
-tenements, or cottages, built, inhabited by sailors' victuallers, along
-by the river of Thames, almost to Radcliff, a good mile from the Tower.
-
-On the east side, and by north of the Tower, lieth East Smithfield,
-Hogs' street, and Tower hill; and east from them both, was the new abbey
-called Grace, founded by Edward III. From thence Radcliffe, up East
-Smithfield, by Nightingall lane (which runneth south to the hermitage,
-a brewhouse so called of a hermit sometime being there), beyond this
-lane to the manor of Bramley (called in record of Richard II. Villa
-East Smithfield, and Villa de Bramley), and to the manor of Shadwell,
-belonging to the Dean of Pauls, there hath been of late, in place of
-elm trees, many small tenements raised towards Radcliffe; and Radcliffe
-itself hath been also increased in building eastward (in place where I
-have known[276] a large highway, with fair elm trees on both the sides),
-that the same hath now taken hold of Lime hurst, or Lime host, corruptly
-called Lime house, sometime distant a mile from Ratcliffe.
-
-Having said this much for building at Wapping, East Smithfield, Bramley,
-and Shadwell, all on the south side of the highway to Radcliffe, now
-one note on the north side, also concerning pirates. I read that in the
-year 1440, in the Lent season, certain persons, with six ships, brought
-from beyond the seas fish to victual the city of London, which fish,
-when they had delivered, and were returning homeward, a number of sea
-thieves, in a barge, in the night came upon them, when they were asleep
-in their vessels, riding at anchor on the river Thames, and slew them,
-cut their throats, cast them overboard, took their money, and drowned
-their ships, for that no man should espy or accuse them. Two of these
-thieves were after taken, and hanged in chains upon a gallows set
-upon a raised hill, for that purpose made, in the field beyond East
-Smithfield, so that they might be seen far into the river Thames. The
-first building at Radcliffe in my youth (not to be forgotten) was a fair
-free school and alms houses, founded by Avice Gibson, wife to Nicholas
-Gibson, grocer, as before I have noted: but of late years shipwrights,
-and (for the most part) other marine men, have built many large and
-strong houses for themselves, and smaller for sailors, from thence
-almost to Poplar, and so to Blake wall. Now for Tower hill; the plain
-there is likewise greatly diminished by merchants[277] for building of
-small tenements; from thence towards Aldgate was the Minories, whereof I
-have spoken.
-
-From Aldgate east again lieth a large street, replenished with
-buildings; to wit, on the north side the parish church of St. Botolph,
-and so other buildings, to Hog lane, and to the bars on both sides.
-
-Also without the bars both the sides of the street be pestered with
-cottages and alleys, even up to Whitechapel church, and almost half a
-mile beyond it, into the common field; all which ought to be open and
-free for all men. But this common field, I say, being sometime the
-beauty of this city on that part, is so encroached upon by building of
-filthy cottages, and with other purpressors, inclosures, and laystalls
-(notwithstanding all proclamations and acts of parliament made to
-the contrary), that in some places it scarce remaineth a sufficient
-highway for the meeting of carriages and droves of cattle; much less is
-there any fair, pleasant, or wholesome way for people to walk on foot;
-which is no small blemish to so famous a city to have so unsavoury and
-unseemly an entrance or passage thereunto.
-
-Now of Whitechapel church somewhat, and then back again to Aldgate. This
-church is, as it were, a chapel of ease to the parish of Stebinhith,
-and the parson of Stebinhith hath the gift thereof; which being first
-dedicated to the name of God and the blessed Virgin, is now called St.
-Mary Matfellon. About the year 1428, the 6th of King Henry VI., a devout
-widow of that parish had long time cherished and brought up of alms a
-certain Frenchman, or Breton born, which most unkindly and cruelly in
-a night murdered the said widow sleeping in her bed, and after fled
-with such jewels and other stuff of her as he might carry; but he was
-so freshly pursued, that for fear he took the church of St. George in
-Southwark, and challenged privilege of sanctuary there, and so abjured
-the king's land. Then the constables (having charge of him) brought him
-into London, intending to have conveyed him eastward; but so soon as
-he was come into the parish, where before he had committed the murder,
-the wives cast upon him so much filth and odour of the street, that
-(notwithstanding the best resistance made by the constables) they slew
-him out of hand; and for this feat, it hath been said, that parish to
-have purchased that name of St. Mary Matfellon; but I find in record the
-same to be called Villa beatae Mariae de Matfellon, in the 21st of Richard
-II.
-
-More, we read, that in the year 1336, the 10th of Edward III., the
-bishop of Alba, cardinal and parson of Stebinhith, procurator general
-in England, presented a clerk to be parson in the church of the blessed
-Mary called Matfellon, without Aldgate of London, etc.
-
-Now again from Aldgate north-west to Bishopsgate, lieth Houndsditch, and
-so to Bishopsgate.
-
-North, and by east from Bishopsgate, lieth a large street or highway,
-having on the west side thereof the parish church of St. Buttolph.
-
-Then is the hospital of St. Mary of Bethelem, founded by a citizen
-of London, and as before is showed: up to the bars without the which
-is Norton fall gate, a liberty so called, belonging to the dean of
-Pauls; thence up to the late dissolved priory of St. John Baptist,
-called Holywell, a house of nuns, of old time founded by a bishop of
-London. Stephen Grausend, bishop of London, about the year 1318, was a
-benefactor thereunto; re-edified by Sir Thomas Lovel,[278] knight of the
-garter, who built much there in the reigns of Henry VII. and of Henry
-VIII.; he endowed this house with fair lands, and was there buried in a
-large chapel by him built for that purpose. This priory was valued at
-the suppression to have of lands two hundred and ninety-three pounds
-by year, and was surrendered 1539, the 31st of Henry VIII. The church
-thereof being pulled down, many houses have been built for the lodgings
-of noblemen, of strangers born, and other.[279]
-
-From Holywell in the high street is a continual building of tenements
-to Sewers ditch,[280] having one small side of a field, already made a
-garden plot. Over against the north corner of this field, between it and
-the church of St. Leonarde in Shoreditch, sometime stood a cross, now
-a smith's forge, dividing three ways: forth right the highway is built
-upon either side, more than a good flight shot, towards Kinges land,
-Newington, Totanham, etc.
-
-On the left hand is Galde street, which reacheth west to a stone cross,
-over against the north end of Golden lane,[281] and so to the end of
-Goswell street. On the right hand of this Galde street, not far from
-Sowers ditch, but on the north side thereof, is Hoxton, a large street
-with houses on both sides, and is a prebend belonging to Pauls church in
-London, but of Soers ditch parish.
-
-On the right hand beyond Soers ditch church toward Hackney are some late
-built houses upon the common soil, for it was a leystall, but those
-houses belong to the parish of Stebunhith.
-
-On the other side of the highway from Bishopsgate and Houndsditch is the
-Dolphin, a common inn for receipt of travellers; then a house built by
-the Lord John Powlet, then Fisher's folly,[282] and so up to the west
-end of Berwardes lane, is a continual building of small cottages, then
-the hospital called St. Mary Spittle, hard within the bars, whereof I
-have spoken in Bishopsgate ward.
-
-From the which bars towards Soers ditch[283] on that side is all along a
-continual building of small and base tenements, for the most part lately
-erected.
-
-Amongst the which (I mean of the ancientest building) was one row
-of proper small houses, with gardens for poor decayed people, there
-placed by the prior of the said hospital; every one tenant whereof paid
-one penny rent by the year at Christmas, and dined with the prior on
-Christmas day: but after the suppression of the hospital, these houses,
-for want of reparations, in few years were so decayed, that it was
-called Rotten row, and the poor worn out (for there came no new in their
-place) houses, for a small portion of money, were sold from Goddard to
-Russell, a draper, who new built them, and let them out for rent enough,
-taking also large fines of the tenants, near as much as the houses cost
-him purchase and building; for he made his bargains so hardly with all
-men, that both carpenter, bricklayer, and plasterer, were by that work
-undone: and yet, in honour of his name, it is now called Russell's row.
-
-Now for the parish of St. Leonard at Soers ditch, the archdeacon of
-London is always parson thereof, and the cure is served by a vicar. In
-this church have been divers honourable persons buried, as appeareth
-by monuments yet remaining: Sir John Elrington, with Margaret his
-wife, daughter and heir to Thomas Lord Itchingham, widow to William
-Blount, son and heir to Walter Blount, the first Lord Mountjoy, which
-Margaret died 1481, Sir Humfrey Starkie, recorder of London, baron of
-the Exchequer; John Gadde, shereman of London, and Anne his wife, 1480;
-Sir Thomas Seymore, mayor of London, deceased 1535; Sir Thomas Ligh,
-doctor of law, 1545. Item, under one fair monument lieth buried the Lady
-Katherine, daughter to Edward, duke of Buckingham, wife to Ralph Nevell,
-Earl of Westmoreland, who died 1553; also Elianor, daughter to Sir
-William Paston, wife to Thomas Mannars, earl of Rutland, 1551; Margaret,
-daughter to Ralph Nevel, earl of Westmoreland, and wife to Henry
-Mannars, earl of Rutland, 1560; Katherine, daughter to Henry Nevel, earl
-of Westmoreland, and wife to Sir John Constable of Holderness, 1591;
-Anne, daughter to T. Mannars, earl of Rutland; Sir T. Mannars, fourth
-son to Thomas, earl of Rutland, 1591; Oliver Mannars, fifth son to
-Thomas, earl of Rutland, 1563, all under one monument; Richard and Harry
-Young, 1545.
-
-Notwithstanding that of late one vicar there, for covetousness of the
-brass, which he converted into coined silver, plucking up many plates
-fixed on the graves, and left no memory of such as had been buried under
-them, a great injury both to the living and the dead, forbidden by
-public proclamation, in the reign of our sovereign lady Queen Elizabeth,
-but not forborne by many, that either of a preposterous zeal, or of a
-greedy mind, spare not to satisfy themselves by so wicked a means.
-
-One note of Shoreditch, and so an end of that suburb. I read, that in
-the year 1440, the 18th of Henry VI. a fuller of Shoreditch appeached
-of treason many worthy esquires and gentlemen of Kent, but he being
-proved false, was attainted, condemned, and had judgment to be drawn,
-hanged, and quartered; which was done; his head set on London bridge,
-and his quarters on the gates. This justice was done according to the
-xvith of Deuteronomy: "The judges shall make diligent inquisition, and
-if the witness be found false, and to have given false witness against
-his brother, then shall they do unto him as he had thought to do unto
-his brother," etc. I read of the King's Manor vocatur Shoreditch-place,
-in the parish of Hackney, but how it took that name I know not, and
-therefore I will turn back from Shoreditch cross to Bethelem cross, and
-so pass through that hospital into the Morefield, which lieth without
-the postern called Moregate.
-
-This field of old time was called the More, as appeareth by the charter
-of William the Conqueror to the college of St. Martin, declaring a
-running water to pass into the city from the same More. Also Fitzstephen
-writeth of this More, saying thus: "When the great fen, or moor, which
-watereth the walls on the north side, is frozen," etc. This fen, or moor
-field, stretching from the wall of the city betwixt Bishopsgate and the
-postern called Cripples gate, to Fensbery and to Holy well, continued
-a waste and unprofitable ground a long time, so that the same was all
-letten for four marks the year, in the reign of Edward II.; but in
-the year 1415, the 3rd of Henry V., Thomas Fawconer, mayor, as I have
-showed, caused the wall of the city to be broken toward the said moor,
-and built the postern called Moregate, for the ease of the citizens to
-walk that way upon causeys towards Iseldon and Hoxton: moreover, he
-caused the ditches of the city, and other the ditches from Soers ditch
-to Deepe ditch, by Bethelem, into the More ditch, to be new cast and
-cleansed; by means whereof the said fen or moor was greatly drained and
-dried; but shortly after, to wit, in 1477, Ralph Joceline, mayor, for
-repairing of the wall of the city, caused the said moor to be searched
-for clay, and brick to be burnt there, etc.; by which means this field
-was made the worse for a long time.
-
-In the year 1498, all the gardens, which had continued time out of mind
-without Moregate, to wit, about and beyond the lordship of Finsbury,
-were destroyed; and of them was made a plain field for archers to shoot
-in. And in the year 1512, Roger Archley, mayor, caused divers dikes
-to be cast, and made to drain the waters of the said Morefielde, with
-bridges arched over them, and the grounds about to be levelled, whereby
-the said field was made somewhat more commodious, but yet it stood
-full of noisome waters; whereupon, in the year 1527, Sir Thomas Semor,
-mayor, caused divers sluices to be made to convey the said waters over
-the Town ditch, into the course of Walbrooke, and so into the Thames;
-and by these degrees was this fen or moor at length made main and hard
-ground, which before being overgrown with flags, sedges, and rushes,
-served to no use; since the which time also the further grounds beyond
-Finsbury court have been so overheightened with lay-stalls of dung, that
-now three windmills are thereon set; the ditches be filled up, and the
-bridges overwhelmed.
-
-And now concerning the inclosures of common grounds about this city,
-whereof I mind not much to argue, Edward Hall setteth down a note of
-his time, to wit, in the 5th, or rather 6th of Henry VIII. "Before this
-time," saith he, "the inhabitants of the towns about London, as Iseldon,
-Hoxton, Shoreditch, and others, had so inclosed the common fields with
-hedges and ditches, that neither the young men of the city might shoot,
-nor the ancient persons walk for their pleasures in those fields, but
-that either their bows and arrows were taken away or broken, or the
-honest persons arrested or indicted; saying, 'that no Londoner ought to
-go out of the city, but in the highways.' This saying so grieved the
-Londoners, that suddenly this year a great number of the city assembled
-themselves in a morning, and a turner, in a fool's coat, came crying
-through the city, 'Shovels and spades! shovels and spades!' so many
-of the people followed, that it was a wonder to behold; and within
-a short space all the hedges about the city were cast down, and the
-ditches filled up, and every thing made plain, such was the diligence
-of these workmen. The king's council hearing of this assembly, came
-to the Gray Friars and sent for the mayor and council of the city to
-know the cause, which declared to them the injury and annoying done to
-the citizens and to their liberties, which though they would not seek
-disorderly to redress, yet the commonalty and young persons could not
-be stayed thus to remedy the same. When the king's council had heard
-their answer, they dissimuled the matter, and commanded the mayor to
-see that no other thing were attempted, but that they should forthwith
-call home the younger sort; who having speedily achieved their desire,
-returned home before the king's council, and the mayor departed without
-more harm: after which time (saith Hall) these fields were never hedged,
-but now we see the thing in worse case than ever, by means of inclosure
-for gardens, wherein are built many fair summer-houses;[284] and, as
-in other places of the suburbs, some of them like Midsummer pageants,
-with towers, turrets, and chimney-tops, not so much for use of profit
-as for show and pleasure, betraying the vanity of men's minds, much
-unlike to the disposition of the ancient citizens, who delighted in the
-building of hospitals and alms-houses for the poor, and therein both
-employed their wits, and spent their wealths in preferment of the common
-commodity of this our city."
-
-But to come back again to Moregate, and from thence west through a
-narrow lane called the Postern, because it hath at either end a door to
-be shut in the night season, betwixt the More ditch inclosed with brick
-for tenter-yards, and the gardens of the said More field, to More lane;
-a part of the suburb without Cripplegate, without this postern, called
-Cripplegate, also lay a part of the said More even to the river of the
-Wells, as in another place I have showed; and no houses were there built
-till the latter end of the reign of William the Conqueror, and of his
-son William Rufus; about which times some few houses being there built
-along east and west, thwart before the said gate, one Alfune built for
-the inhabitants a parish church, which is of St. Giles, somewhat west
-from the said gate, and is now on the bank of the town ditch; and so was
-there a street, since called Fore street, as standing before the gate.
-
-This Alfune, in the reign of Henry I., became the first hospitaller of
-St. Bartlemewe's hospital in Smithfield, as in another place I have
-noted. And this parish church of St. Giles being at the first a small
-thing, stood in place where now standeth the vicarage-house, but hath
-been since at divers times much enlarged, according as the parish
-hath increased, and was at the length newly built in place where now
-it standeth. But the same new church being large, strongly built, and
-richly furnished with ornaments, was in the year 1545, by casualty of
-fire, sore burnt and consumed, notwithstanding it was again within a
-short space of time repaired, as now it showeth.
-
-Some little distance from the east end of this church standeth a fair
-conduit, castellated, in Fore street. Then have ye a boss of sweet water
-in the wall of the churchyard, lately made a pump, but already decayed.
-
-Then have ye a fair pool of sweet water near to the church of St. Giles,
-wherein Anne of Lodbery was drowned, as I have before declared.
-
-In the east end of Fore street is More lane: then next is Grub street;
-of late years inhabited, for the most part, by bowyers, fletchers,
-bow-string makers, and such like occupations, now little occupied;
-archery giving place to a number of bowling-alleys and dicing-houses,
-which in all places are increased, and too much frequented.
-
-This street stretcheth north to Guerades Well street, which thwarteth it
-to White cross street; the next from Fore street north is White cross
-street, likewise extending itself up to the west end of Guerades Well
-street, and from the end thereof to Eald street.
-
-From the west end of Fore street lieth Red cross street; from the which
-cross on the right hand east lieth Beech lane, and reacheth to the White
-cross street. From Red cross north lieth Golding lane, which stretcheth
-up to a cross in Ealde street, which Golding lane on both the sides is
-replenished with many tenements of poor people.
-
-On the left hand, and west of the Red cross, lieth a street of old
-time called Houndes ditch, and of later time named Barbican, of such
-cause as I have before noted. And thus have you all the suburb without
-Cripplegate, being almost altogether in the parish of St. Giles, which
-hath more than eighteen hundred householders, and above four thousand
-communicants.
-
-Without Aldersgate on the left hand is the parish church of St.
-Buttolph; on the north side of the which church lieth a way called
-Little Britane street, towards the priory of St. Bartholomew in
-Smithfield; but the highway without Aldersgate runneth straight north
-from the said gate unto Houndes ditch, or Barbican street, on the right
-hand, and Long lane on the left hand, which runneth into Smithfield.
-
-Then from the farther end of Aldersgate street, straight north to
-the bar, is called Goswell street, replenished with small tenements,
-cottages, and alleys, gardens, banqueting-houses, and bowling-places.
-
-Beyond these bars, leaving the Charter-house on the left hand, or the
-west side, the way stretcheth up towards Iseldon, and on the right hand,
-or east side, at a Red cross, turneth into Eald street, so called, for
-that it was the old highway from Aldersgate, for the north-east parts
-of England, before Bishopsgate was built, which street runneth east
-to a smith's forge, sometime a cross before Shoreditch church, from
-whence the passengers and carriages were to turn north to King's land,
-Tottenham, Waltham, Ware, etc.
-
-There was sometime in this suburb without Aldersgate an hospital for the
-poor, but an alien of Clunie, a French order, and therefore suppressed
-by King Henry V., who gave the house, with lands and goods, to the
-parish of St. Buttolph, and a brotherhood of the Trinity was there
-founded, which was afterward suppressed by Henry VIII. or Edward VI.
-
-There is at the farthest north corner of this suburb a windmill, which
-was sometime by a tempest of wind overthrown, and in place thereof a
-chapel was built by Queen Katherine (first wife to Henry VIII.), who
-named it the Mount of Calvary, because it was of Christ's passion, and
-was in the end of Henry VIII. pulled down, and a windmill newly set up
-as afore.
-
-Without Newgate lieth the west and by north suburb; on the right hand,
-or north side whereof, betwixt the said gate and the parish of St.
-Sepulchre, turneth a way towards West Smithfield, called, as I have
-showed, Giltspurre street, or Knightriders street; then is Smithfield
-itself compassed about with buildings, as I have before declared, in
-Faringdon ward without.
-
-And without the bar of West Smithfield lieth a large street or way,
-called of the house of St. John there St. John's street, and stretcheth
-toward Iseldon, on the right hand whereof stood the late dissolved
-monastery called the Charterhouse, founded by Sir Walter Manny, knight,
-a stranger born, lord of the town of Manny, in the diocese of Cambrey,
-beyond the seas, who for service done to King Edward III. was made
-knight of the garter: so his house he founded upon this occasion. A
-great pestilence entering this island, began first in Dorsetshire,
-then proceeded into Devonshire, Somersetshire, Gloucestershire, and
-Oxfordshire, and at length came to London, and overspread all England,
-so wasting the people, that scarce the tenth person of all sorts was
-left alive, and churchyards were not sufficient to receive the dead,
-but men were forced to choose out certain fields for burials; whereupon
-Ralph Stratford, bishop of London, in the year 1348, bought a piece of
-ground called No Man's Land, which he inclosed with a wall of brick, and
-dedicated for burial of the dead, building thereupon a proper chapel,
-which is now enlarged and made a dwelling-house; and this burying plot
-is become a fair garden, retaining the old name of Pardon churchyard.
-
-About this, in the year 1349, the said Sir Walter Manny, in respect
-of danger that might befall in this time of so great a plague and
-infection, purchased thirteen acres and a rod of ground adjoining to the
-said No Man's Land, and lying in a place called Spittle cross, because
-it belonged to St, Bartilmewe's hospital, since that called the New
-church haw, and caused it to be consecrated by the said bishop of London
-to the use of burials.
-
-In this plot of ground there were in that year more than fifty thousand
-persons buried, as I have read in the charters of Edward III.: also,
-I have seen and read an inscription fixed on a stone cross, sometime
-standing in the same churchyard, and having these words:--"_Anno Domini
-1349, regnante magna pestilentia consecratum fuit hoc Coemiterium, in quo
-et infra septa presentis monasterii, sepulta fuerunt mortuorum corpora
-plusquam quinquaginta millia, praeter alia multa abhinc usque ad presens,
-quorum animabus propitietur Deus. Amen._"
-
-In consideration of the number of Christian people here buried, the
-said Sir Walter Manny caused first a chapel to be built, where for
-the space of twenty-three years offerings were made; and it is to be
-noted, that above one hundred thousand bodies of Christian people had
-in that churchyard been buried; for the said knight had purchased that
-place for the burial of poor people, travellers, and other that were
-deceased, to remain for ever; whereupon an order was taken for the
-avoiding of contention between the parsons of churches and that house;
-to wit, that the bodies should be had unto the church where they were
-parishioners, or died, and, after the funeral service done, had to
-the place where they should be buried. And in the year 1371 he caused
-there to be founded a house of Carthusian monks, which he willed to be
-called the Salutation, and that one of the monks should be called prior;
-and he gave them the said place of thirteen acres and a rod of land,
-with the chapel and houses there built, for their habitation: he also
-gave them the three acres of land lying without the walls on the north
-part, betwixt the lands of the abbot of Westminster and the lands of
-the prior of St. John (which three acres were purchased, inclosed, and
-dedicated by Ralph Stratford, bishop of London, as is afore showed),
-and remained till our time by the name of Pardon churchyard, and served
-for burying of such as desperately ended their lives, or were executed
-for felonies, who were fetched thither usually in a close cart, bailed
-over and covered with black, having a plain white cross thwarting, and
-at the fore end a St. John's cross without, and within a bell ringing by
-shaking of the cart, whereby the same might be heard when it passed; and
-this was called the friary cart, which belonged to St. John's, and had
-the privilege of sanctuary.
-
-In this charter-house were the monuments of the said Sir Walter Manny,
-and Margaret his wife; Marmaduke Lumley; Laurence Brumley, knight; Sir
-Edward Hederset, knight; Sir William Manny, knight; Dame Joan Borough;
-John Dore; Want Water, knight; Robert Olney, esquire; Katherine,
-daughter to Sir William Babington, knight; Blanch, daughter to Hugh
-Waterton; Katherine, wife to John at Poote, daughter and heir to Richard
-de Lacie; William Rawlin; Sir John Lenthaine, and Dame Margaret his
-wife, daughter to John Fray; John Peake, esquire; William Baron, and
-William Baron, esquire; Sir Thomas Thawites, knight; Philip Morgan,
-bishop of Ely, 1434.
-
-In the cloister:--Bartholomew Rede, knight, mayor of London, buried
-1505; Sir John Popham, etc.
-
-This monastery, at the suppression in the 29th of Henry VIII., was
-valued at six hundred and forty-two pounds and four pence halfpenny
-yearly.
-
-A little without the bars of West Smithfield is Charterhouse lane, so
-called, for that it leadeth to the said plot of the late dissolved
-monastery; in place whereof, first the Lord North, but since Thomas
-Howard, late Duke of Norfolk, have made large and sumptuous buildings
-both for lodging and pleasure. At the gate of this Charter-house is a
-fair water conduit, with two cocks, serving the use of the neighbours to
-their great commodity.
-
-St. John's street, from the entering this lane, is also on both the
-sides replenished with buildings up to Clerkenwell. On the left hand of
-which street lieth a lane called Cow cross, of a cross sometime standing
-there; which lane turneth down to another lane called Turnemill street,
-which stretcheth up to the west of Clerkenwell, and was called Turnemill
-street, for such cause as is afore declared.
-
-One other lane there is called St. Peter's lane, which turneth from St.
-John's street to Cow cross.
-
-On the left hand also stood the late dissolved priory of St. John of
-Jerusalem in England, founded about the year of Christ 1100 by Jorden
-Briset, baron, and Muriell his wife, near unto Clarkes well besides West
-Smithfield; which Jorden having first founded the priory of nuns at
-Clarkes well, bought of them ten acres of land, giving them in exchange
-ten acres of land in his lordship of Welling hall, in the county of
-Kent. St. John's church was dedicated by Eraclius, patriarch of the holy
-resurrection of Christ at Jerusalem, in the year 1185, and was the chief
-seat in England of the religious knights of St. John of Jerusalem; whose
-profession was, besides their daily service of God, to defend Christians
-against pagans, and to fight for the church, using for their habit a
-black upper garment, with a white cross on the fore part thereof; and
-for their good service was so highly esteemed, that when the order of
-Templars was dissolved, their lands and possessions were by parliament
-granted unto these, who after the loss of Jerusalem recovered the isle
-of Rhodes from the Turks, and there placed themselves, being called
-thereof for many years knights of the Rhodes; but after the loss
-thereof, 1523, they removed to the isle of Malta, manfully opposing
-themselves against the Turkish invasions.
-
-The rebels of Essex and of Kent, 1381, set fire on this house, causing
-it to burn by the space of seven days together, not suffering any to
-quench it; since the which time the priors of that house have new built
-both the church and houses thereunto appertaining; which church was
-finished by Thomas Docwrey, late lord prior there, about the year 1504,
-as appeareth by the inscription over the gate-house, yet remaining.
-This house, at the suppression in the 32nd of Henry VIII., was valued
-to dispend in lands three thousand three hundred and eighty-five pounds
-nineteen shillings and eight pence yearly. Sir W. Weston being then
-lord prior, died on the same seventh of May, on which the house was
-suppressed; so that great yearly pensions being granted to the knights
-by the king, and namely to the lord prior during his life one thousand
-pounds, he never received a penny.
-
-The king took into his hands all the lands that belonged to that house
-and that order, wheresoever in England and Ireland, for the augmentation
-of his crown.
-
-This priory church and house of St. John was preserved from spoil or
-down pulling, so long as King Henry VIII. reigned, and was employed
-as a store-house for the king's toils and tents, for hunting, and for
-the wars, etc.; but in the 3rd of King Edward VI., the church, for the
-most part, to wit, the body and side aisles, with the great bell tower
-(a most curious piece of workmanship, graven, gilt, and enamelled, to
-the great beautifying of the city, and passing all other that I have
-seen), was undermined and blown up with gunpowder; the stone thereof
-was employed in building of the lord protector's house at the Strand.
-That part of the choir which remaineth, with some side chapels, was by
-cardinal Pole, in the reign of Queen Mary, closed up at the west end,
-and otherwise repaired; and Sir Thomas Tresham, knight, was then made
-lord prior there, with restitution of some lands, but the same was again
-suppressed in the first year of Queen Elizabeth.
-
-There were buried in this church brethren of that house and knights
-of that order: John Botell; William Bagecore; Richard Barrow; John
-Vanclay; Thomas Launcelen; John Mallory; William Turney; William
-Hulles, Hils, or Hayles; John Weston; Redington; William Longstrother;
-John Longstrother; William Tong; John Wakeline. Then of other: Thomas
-Thornburgh, gentleman; William West, gentleman; John Fulling, and Adam
-Gill, esquires; Sir John Mortimor, and Dame Elianor his wife; Nicholas
-Silverston; William Plompton, esquire; Margaret Tong, and Isabel Tong;
-Walter Bellingham, alias Ireland, king of arms of Ireland; Thomas Bedle,
-gentleman; Katherine, daughter of William Plompton, esquire; Richard
-Turpin, gentleman; Joan, wife to Alexander Dikes; John Bottle, and
-Richard Bottle, esquires; Rowland Darcie; Richard Sutton, gentleman;
-Richard Bottill, gentleman; Sir W. Harpden, knight; Robert Kingston,
-esquire, and Margery his wife; John Roch; Richard Cednor, gentleman;
-Simon Mallory, 1442; William Mallory, Robert Longstrother, Ralph
-Asteley, William Marshall, Robert Savage, Robert Gondall, esquires, and
-Margery his wife; William Bapthorpe, baron of the Exchequer, 1442.
-
-North from the house of St. John's was the priory of Clarkenwell, so
-called of Clarkes well adjoining; which priory was also founded about
-the year 1100 by Jorden Briset, baron, the son of Ralph, the son of
-Brian Briset; who gave to Robert, a priest, fourteen acres of land lying
-in the field next adjoining to the said Clarkes well, thereupon to
-build a house of religious persons, which he founded to the honour of
-God and the assumption of our lady, and placed therein black nuns. This
-Jorden Briset gave also to that house one piece of ground, thereby to
-build a windmill upon, etc. He and Muriall his wife were buried in the
-Chapter-house there. More buried in this church: John Wikes, esquire,
-and Isabel his wife; Dame Agnes Clifford; Ralph Timbleby, esquire; Dame
-Jahan, baroness of Greystocke; Dame Jahan, Lady Ferrars. And of later
-time in the parish church, Constances Bennet, a Greek born: he gave two
-houses, the one in St. John's street, the other in Turnmill street; the
-rents of them to be distributed in coals every year against Christmas to
-the poor of that parish.
-
-William Herne, a master of defence, and yeoman of the guard, 1580,
-gave lands and tenements to the clothworkers in London; they to pay
-yearly for ever fourteen pounds to the churchwardens of Clarkenwell,
-and fourteen pounds to the churchwardens of St. Sepulcher's, towards
-reparations of these churches, and relief of the poor men; more he gave
-after the death of one man, yet living, eight pounds the year for ever
-to the mending of highways.
-
-Thomas Sackeford, esquire, one of the masters of requests, gave to
-the poor of that parish forty shillings the year for ever, out of his
-alms-house at Woodbridge in Suffolk, where he is buried. Henry Stoke,
-gardener, buried there, gave twenty shillings the year for ever, towards
-reparation of that church. This priory was valued to dispend two hundred
-and sixty-two pounds nine shillings by the year, and was surrendered the
-31st of Henry VIII. Many fair houses are now built about the priory,
-namely, by the highway towards Iseldon.
-
-So much of the church which remaineth (for one great aisle thereof fell
-down) serveth as a parish church of St. John, not only for the tenements
-and near inhabitants, but also (as is aforesaid) for all up to Highgate,
-Muswell, etc.
-
-Near unto this church, beside Clarke's well lane, divers other wells,
-namely, Skinners well, Fags well, Tode well, Loder's well, Rede well,
-etc., now dammed up.
-
-Now to return again to Giltspurre street, where I first began with
-this suburb, there standeth the parish church of St. Sepulchre in the
-Bayly, as is before showed; from this street to Turnagaine lane, by
-Hosiar lane, Cow lane, and Holdborn conduit, down Snore hill to Oldborne
-bridge, and up Oldborne hill, by Gold lane on the right hand, and Lither
-lane beyond it, to the bars; beyond the which bars on the same side is
-Porte pool, or Grayes inn lane, so called of the inn of court, named
-Grayes inn, a goodly house there situate, by whom built or first begun I
-have not yet learned, but seemeth to be since Edward III.'s time, and is
-a prebend to Paule's church in London.
-
-This lane is furnished with fair buildings and many tenements on both
-the sides, leading to the fields towards Highgate and Hamsted.
-
-On the high street have ye many fair houses built, and lodgings for
-gentlemen, inns for travellers, and such like up almost (for it lacketh
-but little) to St. Giles in the fields; amongst the which buildings,
-for the most part being very new, one passeth the rest in largeness
-of rooms, lately built by a widow, sometime wife to Richard Alington,
-esquire; which Richard Alington deceased in the year 1561. And thus much
-for that north side of Oldborne.
-
-Now from Newgate, on the left hand or south side, lieth the Old Bayly,
-and so down by Seacole lane end to Oldborne bridge, up Oldborne hill, by
-Shoe lane and Fewters lane, to the bars.
-
-Beyond the bars had ye in old time a temple built by the Templars, whose
-order first began in the year of Christ 1118, in the 19th of Henry I.
-This temple was left and fell to ruin since the year 1184, when the
-Templars had built them a new temple in Fleet street, near to the river
-of Thames. A great part of this old temple was pulled down, but of late
-in the year 1595. Adjoining to this old Temple[285] was sometime the
-bishop of Lincolne's inn, wherein he lodged when he repaired to this
-city. Robert de Curars, bishop of Lincoln, built it about the year 1147.
-John Russell, bishop of Lincoln, chancellor of England, in the reign of
-Richard III., was lodged there. It hath of late years belonged to the
-earls of Southampton, and therefore called Southampton house. Master
-Ropar hath of late built much there; by means whereof part of the ruins
-of the old Temple were seen to remain built of Caen stone, round in form
-as the new Temple, by Temple bar, and other temples in England. Beyond
-this old Temple and the bishop of Lincoln's house[286] is New street, so
-called in the reign of Henry III., when he of a Jew's house founded the
-house of Converts, betwixt the old Temple and the new.
-
-The same street hath since been called Chancery lane, by reason that
-King Edward III. annexed the house of Converts by patent to the office
-of Custos Rotulorum, or master of the rolls, in the 15th of his reign.
-
-In this street the first fair building to be noted on the east side
-is called the Coursitors' office, built with divers fair lodgings for
-gentlemen, all of brick and timber, by Sir Nicholas Bacon, late lord
-keeper of the great seal.
-
-Near unto this Coursitors' office be divers fair houses and large
-gardens, built and made in a ground sometime belonging to one great
-house on the other side the street, there made by Ralph Nevel, bishop of
-Chichester. This ground he had by the gift of Henry III., as appeareth.
-The king granteth to Ralph, bishop of Chichester, chancellor, that
-place, with the garden, which John Herlirum forfeited in that street,
-called New street, over against the land of the said bishop in the same
-street; which place, with the garden and appurtenance, was the king's
-escheat by the liberty of the city of London, as it was acknowledged
-before the king in his court at the Tower of London, in the last pleas
-of the crown of that city, cart. 11 Henry III.
-
-Then was the house of Converts, wherein now the rolls of Chancery be
-kept; then the Sergeants' inn, etc.
-
-On the west side of New street, towards the north end thereof, was
-of old time the church and house of the Preaching Friers; concerning
-the which house I find, that in the year of Christ 1221, the friars'
-preachers, thirteen in number, came into England, and having to their
-prior one named Gilbert de Fraxineto, in company of Peter de la Roche,
-bishop of Winchester, came to Canterbury, where presenting themselves
-before the archbishop Steven, he commanded the said prior to preach,
-whose sermon he liked so well, that ever after he loved that order.
-These friars came to London, and had their first house without the wall
-of the city by Oldborne, near unto the old Temple.
-
-Hubert de Burgh, earl of Kent, was a great benefactor unto these friars,
-and deceasing at his manor of Bansted in Surrey, or, after some writers,
-at his castle of Barkhamsted in Hartfordshire, in the year 1242, was
-buried in their church; unto the which church he had given his place
-at Westminster, which the said friars afterwards sold to Walter Grey,
-archbishop of York; and he left it to his successors in that see for
-ever, to be their house, when they should repair to the city of London.
-And therefore the same was called York place; which name so continued
-until the year 1529, that King Henry VIII. took it from Thomas Wolsey,
-cardinal and archbishop of York, and then gave it to name White hall.
-
-Margaret, sister to the king of Scots, widow to Geffrey, earl marshal,
-deceased 1244, and was buried in this church.
-
-In the year 1250, the friars of this order of preachers through
-Christendom and from Jerusalem, were by a convocation assembled together
-at this their house by Oldborne, to intreat of their estate, to the
-number of four hundred, having meat and drink found them of alms,
-because they had no possessions of their own. The first day, the king
-came to their chapter, found them meat and drink, and dined with them.
-Another day the queen found them meat and drink; afterward the bishop
-of London, then the abbot of Westminster, of St. Alban's, Waltham, and
-others. In the year 1276, Gregory Rokesley, mayor, and the barons of
-London, granted and gave to Robert Kilwarbie, archbishop of Canterbury,
-two lanes or ways next the street of Baynard's castle, and the tower of
-Mountfichet, to be destroyed. On the which place the said Robert built
-the late new church, with the rest of the stones that were left of
-the said tower: and thus the black friars left their church and house
-by Oldborne, and departed to their new. This old friar house (juxta
-Holborne, saith the patent) was by King Edward I., in the 16th of his
-reign, given to Henry Lacy, earl of Lincoln.
-
-Next to this house of friars was one other great house, sometime
-belonging to the bishop of Chichester, whereof Matthew Paris writeth
-thus:--"Ralph de Nova Villa, or Nevill, bishop of Chichester and
-chancellor of England, sometime built a noble house, even from the
-ground, not far from the new Temple and house of Converts; in the which
-place he deceased in the year 1244. In this place, after the decease
-of the said bishop, and in place of the house of black friars before
-spoken of, Henry Lacy, earl of Lincoln, constable of Chester, and custos
-of England, built his inn, and for the most part was lodged there: he
-deceased in this house in the year 1310, and was buried in the new work
-(whereunto he had been a great benefactor) of St. Paul's church betwixt
-our Lady chapel and St. Dunstan's chapel. This Lincoln's inn, sometime
-pertaining to the bishops of Chichester, as a part of the said great
-house, is now an inn of court, retaining the name of Lincoln's inn as
-afore, but now lately increased with fair buildings, and replenished
-with gentlemen studious in the common laws. In the reign of Henry VIII.
-Sir Thomas Lovell was a great builder there; especially he built the
-gate-house and fore front towards the east, placing thereon as well
-the Lacies' arms as his own: he caused the Lacies' arms to be cast and
-wrought in lead, on the louer of the hall of that house, which was in
-the three escutcheons, a lion rampant for Lacie, seven mascules voided
-for Quincie, and three wheatsheafs for Chester. This louer being of late
-repaired, the said escutcheons were left out. The rest of that side,
-even to Fleet street, is replenished with fair buildings."
-
-Now the High Oldborne street, from the north end of New street,
-stretcheth on the left hand in building lately framed, up to St. Giles
-in the field, which was an hospital founded by Matilda the queen, wife
-to Henry I., about the year 1117. This hospital, said the record of
-Edward III., the 19th year, was founded without the bar: _Veteris Templi
-London, et conversorum_.
-
-This hospital was founded as a cell to Burton Lager of Jerusalem, as may
-appear by a deed dated the 24th of Henry VII. in these words:--"Thomas
-Norton, knight, master of Burton Lager of Jerusalem in England, and
-the brethren of the same place, keepers of the hospital of St. Giles,
-without the bars of the old Temple of London, have sold to Geffrey
-Kent, citizen and draper of London, a messuage or house, with two
-cellars above, edified in the parish of Alhallowes, Hony lane, in West
-Chepe, adjoining to the west part of a tenement called the Cote on the
-Hope, pertaining to the drapers of London, for thirty-one pounds."
-
-At this hospital, the prisoners conveyed from the city of London
-towards Teyborne, there to be executed for treasons, felonies, or other
-trespasses, were presented with a great bowl of ale, thereof to drink at
-their pleasure, as to be their last refreshing in this life.
-
-Now without Ludgate lieth the south end of the Old Bayly, then down
-Ludgate hill by Fleet lane, over Fleet bridge, up Fleet street, by Shoe
-lane, Fewtar's lane, New street, or Chauncerie lane, and to Shire lane,
-by the bar on the right hand; and from Ludgate on the left hand, or
-south side, by Bride lane, Water lane, Croker's lane, Sergeants' inn,
-and the new Temple, by the bar; all which is of Faringdon ward, as is
-afore showed.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[275] "To Wapping in the Wose, and Wapping itself, the usual place,
-etc."--_1st edition_, p. 347.
-
-[276] "Fayre hedges, long rowes of elme, and other trees."--_Ibid._
-
-[277] "By encroachments for building of small tenements, and taking
-in of garden-plots, timber-yards, or what they list. From this tower
-hill towards Aldgate (being a long continuous street), amongst
-other buildings, was that abbey of nunnes called the Minorities, or
-Minories, whereof I have spoken. And on the other side of that streete
-lyeth the ditche without the wall of the citie from the Tower unto
-Aldegate."--_1st edition_, pp. 347-8.
-
-[278] "Brought up in Lincoln's inn."--_1st edition_, p. 349.
-
-[279] "And neare thereunto are builded two publique houses for the
-acting and shewe of comedies, tragedies, and histories, for recreation.
-Whereof one is called the Courtein, the other the Theatre; both standing
-on the south-west side towards the field."--_Ibid._
-
-[280] Shoreditch. In the first edition, it is called Sors ditch, or
-Sewers ditch.
-
-[281] "Over against the north end of Grub street."--_1st edition_, p.
-349.
-
-[282] "Next to that a large house, with gardens of pleasure, builded by
-Jasper Fisher, from this up to the west end of Hog lane, etc."--_1st
-edition_, p. 350.
-
-[283] "Soerditch, so called more than four hundred yeares since, as I
-can prove by record."--_Stow._
-
-[284] "Banqueting houses like banqueroutes, bearing great shew and
-little worth."--_Stow._
-
-[285] "The same was after the bishop of Lincoln's inn."--_1st edition_,
-p. 361.
-
-[286] "Beyond this Southampton house."--_Ibid._
-
-
-
-
-LIBERTIES OF THE DUCHY OF LANCASTER
-
-
-Next without the bar is the New Temple, and liberties of the city
-of London, in the suburbs, is a liberty pertaining to the duchy of
-Lancaster, which beginneth in the east, on the south side or left
-hand, by the river Thames, and stretcheth west to Ivie bridge, where
-it endeth; and again on the north side, or right hand, some small
-distance without Temple bar, in the high street, from a pair of stocks
-there standing, stretcheth one large Middle row, or troop of small
-tenements, partly opening to the south, partly towards the north, up
-west to a stone cross, now headless, over against the Strand; and this
-is the bounds to that liberty, which sometime belonged to Briane Lisle,
-since to Peter of Savoy, and then to the house of Lancaster, as shall
-be showed. Henry III., in the 30th year of his reign, did grant to his
-uncle Peter of Savoy all those houses upon the Thames, which sometimes
-pertained to Briane de Insula, or Lisle, without the walls of his city
-of London, in the way or street called the Strand, to hold to him and
-to his heirs, yielding yearly in the Exchequer, at the feast of St.
-Michaell the Archangell, three barbed arrows, for all services, dated at
-Reding, etc. This Peter of Savoy built the Savoy.
-
-But first amongst other buildings memorable for greatness, on the river
-of Thames, Excester house, so called for that the same belonged to the
-bishops of Excester, and was their inn or London lodging: who was first
-builder thereof I have not read, but that Walter Stapleton was a great
-builder there in the reign of Edward II. is manifest; for the citizens
-of London, when they had beheaded him in Cheape, near unto the cathedral
-church of St. Paule, they buried him in a heap of sand or rubbish in his
-own house without Temple bar, where he had made great building. Edmond
-Lacie, bishop of Excester, built the great hall in the reign of Henry
-VI., etc. The same hath since been called Paget house, because William
-Lord Paget enlarged and possessed it. Then Leycester house, because
-Robert Dudley, earl of Leycester, of late new built there, and now Essex
-house, of the earl of Essex lodging there.
-
-Then west was a chapel dedicated to the Holy Ghost, called St. Sprite,
-upon what occasion founded I have not read. Next is Milford lane down to
-the Thames, but why so called I have not read as yet.
-
-Then was the bishop of Bathes inn, lately new built, for a great part
-thereof, by the Lord Thomas Seymour, admiral; which house came since to
-be possessed by the earl of Arundel, and thereof called Arundel house.
-
-Next beyond the which, on the street side, was sometime a fair cemetery
-or churchyard, and in the same a parish church called of the Nativity
-of our Lady, and the Innocents of the Strand, and of some by means of
-a brotherhood kept there, called St. Ursula at the Strand. And near
-adjoining to the said church, betwixt it and the river of Thames, was an
-inn of Chancery commonly called Chester's inn (because it belonged to
-the bishop of Chester), by others, named of the situation, Strand inn.
-
-Then was there a house belonging to the bishop of Landaff; for I find in
-record, the 4th of Edward II., that a vacant place lying near the church
-of our Lady at Strand, the said bishop procured it of Thomas, earl of
-Lancaster, for the enlarging of this house. Then had ye in the high
-street a fair bridge called Strand bridge, and under it a lane or way
-down to the landing-place on the bank of Thames.
-
-Then was the bishop of Chester's (commonly called of Lichfield and
-Coventrie), his inn or London lodging: this house was first built by
-Walter Langton, bishop of Chester, treasurer of England in the reign of
-Edward I.
-
-And next unto it adjoining was the bishop of Worcester's inn: all which,
-to wit, the parish of St. Mary at Strand, Strand inn, Strand bridge,
-with the lane under it, the bishop of Chester's inn, the bishop of
-Worcester's inn, with all the tenements adjoining, were by commandment
-of Edward, duke of Somerset, uncle to Edward VI., and lord protector,
-pulled down, and made level ground in the year 1549; in place whereof he
-built that large and goodly house, now called Somerset house.
-
-In the high street, near unto the Strand, sometime stood a cross of
-stone against the bishop of Coventrie or Chester his house; whereof
-I read, that in the year 1294, and divers other times, the justices
-itinerants sate without London, at the stone cross over against the
-bishop of Coventrie's house, and sometime they sate in the Bishop's
-house, which was hard by the Strand, as is aforesaid.
-
-Then next is the Savoy, so called of Peter, earl of Savoy, and Richmond,
-son to Thomas, earl of Savoy, brother to Boniface, archbishop of
-Canterbury, and uncle unto Eleanor, wife to King Henry III.
-
-He first built this house in the year 1245; and here is occasion
-offered me for satisfying of some deniers thereof, to prove that this
-Peter of Savoy was also earl of Savoy: wherefore, out of a book of the
-genealogies of all the whole house of Savoy, compiled by Phillebert
-Pingonio, baron of Guzani, remaining in the hands of W. Smith, alias
-Rougedragon, officer of arms, I have gathered this:--Thomas, earl of
-Savoy, had issue by Beatrix, daughter to Aimon, earl of Geneva, nine
-sons and three daughters. Amades, his first son, succeeded earl of Savoy
-in the year 1253; Peter, his second son, earl of Savoy and of Richmond,
-in 1268; Philip, his third son, earl of Savoy and Burgundie, 1284;
-Thomas, the fourth, earl of Flanders and prince of Piemont; Boniface,
-the eighth, archbishop of Canterbury; Beatrix, his daughter, married to
-Raymond Beringarius of Aragon, earl of Province and Narbone, had issue,
-and was mother to five queens: the first, Margaret, wife to Lewes, king
-of France; the second, Eleanor, wife to Henry III. king of England;
-the third, Sanctia, wife to Richard, king of the Romans; the fourth,
-Beatrix, wife to Charles, king of Naples; the fifth, Johanna, wife to
-Philip, king of Navarre.
-
-To return again to the house of Savoy: Queen Eleanor, wife to king Henry
-III., purchased this place afterwards of the fraternity or brethren of
-Montjoy;[287] unto whom Peter of Savoy, as it seemeth, had given it,
-for her son, Edmond earl of Lancaster (as M. Camden hath noted out of
-a register-book of the dukes of Lancaster). Henry, duke of Lancaster,
-repaired or rather new built it, with the charges of fifty-two thousand
-marks, which money he had gathered together at the town of Bridgerike.
-John, the French king, was lodged there in the year 1357, and also in
-the year 1363; for it was at that time the fairest manor in England.
-
-In the year 1381, the rebels of Kent and Essex burnt this house; unto
-the which there was none in the realm to be compared in beauty and
-stateliness (saith mine author).[288] They set fire on it round about,
-and made proclamation that none, on pain to lose his head, should
-convert to his own use anything that there was, but that they should
-break such plate and vessels of gold and silver as was found in that
-house (which was in great plenty) into small pieces, and throw the same
-into the river of Thames: precious stones they should bruise in mortars,
-that the same might be to no use, and so it was done by them. One of
-their companions they burnt in the fire, because he minded to have
-reserved one goodly piece of plate.[289]
-
-They found there certain barrels of gunpowder, which they thought had
-been gold or silver, and throwing them into the fire more suddenly
-than they thought, the hall was blown up, the houses destroyed, and
-themselves very hardly escaped away.
-
-This house being thus defaced, and almost overthrown by these rebels
-for malice they bare to John of Gaunt, duke of Lancaster, of latter
-time came to the king's hands, and was again raised and beautifully
-built for an hospital of St. John Baptist by King Henry VII. about
-the year 1509, for the which hospital, retaining still the old name
-of Savoy, he purchased lands to be employed upon the relieving of a
-hundred poor people. This hospital being valued to dispend five hundred
-and twenty-nine pounds fifteen shillings, etc. by year, was suppressed
-the tenth of June, the 7th of Edward VI.: the beds, bedding, and other
-furniture belonging thereunto, with seven hundred marks of the said
-lands by year, he gave to the citizens of London, with his house of
-Bridewell, to the furnishing thereof, to be a workhouse for the poor and
-idle persons, and towards the furnishing of the hospital of St. Thomas
-in Southwark, lately suppressed.
-
-This hospital of Savoy was again new founded, erected, corporated, and
-endowed with lands by Queen Mary, the third of November: in the 4th of
-her reign, one Jackson took possession, and was made master thereof
-in the same month of November. The ladies of the court and maidens of
-honour (a thing not to be forgotten) stored the same of new with beds,
-bedding, and other furniture, in very ample manner, etc.; and it was by
-patent so confirmed at Westminster the 9th of May, the 4th and 5th of
-Philip and Mary. The chapel of this hospital serveth now as a parish
-church to the tenements thereof near adjoining, and others.
-
-The next was sometime the bishop of Carlisle's inn, which now belongeth
-to the earl of Bedford, and is called Russell or Bedford house. It
-stretcheth from the hospital of Savoy, west to Ivie bridge, where Sir
-Robert Cecill, principal secretary to her majesty, hath lately raised a
-large and stately house of brick and timber, as also levelled and paved
-the highway near adjoining, to the great beautifying of that street and
-commodity of passengers. Richard II., in the 8th of his reign, granted
-license to pave with stone the highway called Strand street from Temple
-bar to the Savoy, and toll to be taken towards the charges; and again
-the like was granted in the 42nd of Henry VI.
-
-Ivie bridge, in the high street, which had a way under it leading down
-to the Thames, the like as sometime had the Strand bridge, is now taken
-down, but the lane remaineth as afore, or better, and parteth the
-liberty of the duchy and the city of Westminster on that south side.
-
-Now to begin again at Temple bar, over against it.[290] In the high
-street, as is afore showed, is one large Middle row of houses and small
-tenements built, partly opening to the south, partly towards the north;
-amongst the which standeth the parish church of St. Clement Danes, so
-called because Harold, a Danish king, and other Danes, were buried
-there. This Harold, whom king Canutus had by a concubine, reigned three
-years, and was buried at Westminster; but afterward Hardicanutus, the
-lawful son of Canutus, in revenge of a displeasure done to his mother,
-by expelling her out of the realm, and the murder of his brother
-Allured, commanded the body of Harold to be digged out of the earth,
-and to be thrown into the Thames, where it was by a fisherman taken up
-and buried in this churchyard; but out of a fair ledger-book, sometime
-belonging to the abbey of Chartsey, in the county of Surrey, is noted,
-as in Francis Thin, after this sort. In the reign of king Etheldred,
-the monastery of Chartsey was destroyed: ninety monks of that house
-were slain by the Danes, whose bodies were buried in a place next to
-the old monastery. William Malmseberie saith,--"They burnt the church,
-together with the monks and abbot; but the Danes continuing in their
-fury (throughout the whole land), desirous at the length to return home
-into Denmarke, were by the just judgment of God all slain at London in a
-place which is called the church of the Danes."
-
-This said middle row of houses stretching west to a stone cross, now
-headless, by or against the Strand, including the said parish church of
-St. Clement, is also wholly of the liberty and duchy of Lancaster.
-
-Thus much for the bounds and antiquities of this liberty, wherein I
-have noted parish churches twain, sometime three, houses of name six;
-to wit, the Savoy or Lancaster house, now a hospital, Somerset house,
-Essex house, Arundel house, Bedford or Russell house, and Sir Robert
-Cecil's house; besides of Chester's inn or Strand inn, sometime an inn
-of Chancery, etc. This liberty is governed by the chancellor of that
-duchy at this present, Sir Robert Cecil, knight, principal secretary to
-her majesty, and one of her majesty's most honourable privy councillors;
-there is under him a steward that keepeth court and leet for the queen;
-giveth the charge and taketh the oaths of every under officer: then is
-there four burgesses and four assistants, to take up controversies;
-a bailiff, which hath two or three under-bailiffs, that make arrests
-within that liberty; four constables; four wardens, that keep the lands
-and stock for the poor; four wardens for highways; a jury or inquest of
-fourteen or sixteen, to present defaults; four ale-conners, which look
-to assize of weights and measures, etc.; four scavengers and a beadle;
-and their common prison is Newgate. There is in this liberty fifty men,
-which is always to be at an hour's warning, with all necessary furniture
-to serve the queen, as occasion shall require. Their charge at a fifteen
-is thirteen shillings and four pence. Thus much for the suburb in the
-liberty of the duchy of Lancaster.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[287] "Fratres de Monte Jovis, or Priory de Cornuto, by Havering at the
-Bower."--_Stow._
-
-[288] H. Knighton.--_Stow._
-
-[289] "Savoy brent: blown up with gunpowder. Rebels, more malitious then
-covetous, spoyle all before them."--_Stow._
-
-[290] "In the high street standeth a pair of stocks."--_1st edition_, p.
-369.
-
-
-
-
-THE CITY OF WESTMINSTER, WITH THE ANTIQUITIES, BOUNDS, AND LIBERTIES
-THEREOF
-
-
-Now touching the city of Westminster, I will begin at Temple bar, on
-the right hand or north side, and so pass up west through a back lane
-or street, wherein do stand three inns of chancery; the first called
-Clement's inn, because it standeth near to St. Clement's church, but
-nearer to the fair fountain called Clement's well; the second, New
-inn, so called as latelier made, of a common hostery, and the sign
-of Our Lady, an inn of chancery for students than the other, to wit,
-about the beginning of the reign of Henry VII., and not so late as
-some have supposed; to wit, at the pulling down of Strand inn, in the
-reign of King Edward VI.; for I read that Sir Thomas More, sometime
-lord chancellor, was a student in this new inn, and went from thence to
-Lincolne's inn, etc. The third is Lyon's inn, an inn of chancery also.
-
-This street stretcheth up unto Drury lane, so called, for that there
-is a house belonging to the family of the Druries. This lane turneth
-north toward St. Giles in the field: from the south end of this lane in
-the high street are divers fair buildings, hosteries, and houses for
-gentlemen and men of honour; amongst the which Cicile house is one,
-which sometime belonged to the parson of St. Martin's in the field, and
-by composition came to Sir Thomas Palmer, knight, in the reign of Edward
-VI., who began to build the same of brick and timber, very large and
-spacious, but of later time it hath been far more beautifully increased
-by the late Sir William Cicile, baron of Burghley, lord treasurer, and
-great councillor of the estate.
-
-From thence is now a continual new building of divers fair houses,
-even up to the earl of Bedford's house,[291] lately built nigh to Ivy
-bridge, and so on the north side to a lane that turneth to the parish
-church of St. Martin's in the field, in the liberty of Westminster. Then
-had ye one house, wherein sometime were distraught and lunatic people,
-of what antiquity founded or by whom I have not read, neither of the
-suppression; but it was said that sometime a king of England, not liking
-such a kind of people to remain so near his palace, caused them to be
-removed farther off, to Bethlem without Bishops gate of London, and to
-that hospital: the said house by Charing cross doth yet remain.
-
-Then is the Mewse, so called of the king's falcons there kept by the
-king's falconer, which of old time was an office of great account,
-as appeareth by a record of Richard II., in the first year of his
-reign. Sir Simon Burley, knight, was made constable for the castles of
-Windsor, Wigmore, and Guilford, and of the manor of Kenington, and also
-master of the king's falcons at the Mewse, near unto Charing cross by
-Westminster; but in the year of Christ 1534, the 28th of Henry VIII.,
-the king having fair stabling at Lomsbery (a manor in the farthest west
-part of Oldborne), the same was fired and burnt, with many great horses
-and great store of hay: after which time, the fore-named house, called
-the Mewse by Charing cross, was new built, and prepared for stabling of
-the king's horses, in the reign of Edward VI. and Queen Mary, and so
-remaineth to that use: and this is the farthest building west on the
-north side of that high street.
-
-On the south side of the which street, in the liberties of Westminster
-(beginning at Ivie bridge), first is Durham house, built by Thomas
-Hatfielde, bishop of Durham, who was made bishop of that see in the year
-1545, and sat bishop there thirty-six years.
-
-Amongst matters memorable concerning this house, this is one:--In the
-year of Christ 1540, the 32nd of Henry VIII., on May-day, a great and
-triumphant justing was holden at Westminster, which had been formerly
-proclaimed in France, Flanders, Scotland, and Spain, for all comers that
-would undertake the challengers of England; which were, Sir John Dudley,
-Sir Thomas Seymour, Sir Thomas Ponings, and Sir George Carew, knights,
-and Anthonie Kingston and Richarde Cromwell, esquires; all which came
-into the lists that day richly apparelled, and their horses trapped
-all in white velvet. There came against them the said day forty-six
-defendants or undertakers, viz., the earl of Surrey, foremost, Lord
-William Howard, Lord Clinton, and Lord Cromwell, son and heir to Thomas
-Cromwell, earl of Essex, and chamberlain of England, with other; and
-that day, after the justs performed, the challengers rode unto this
-Durham house, where they kept open household, and feasted the king and
-queen, with her ladies, and all the court: the second day, Anthonie
-Kingston and Richard Cromwell were made knights there: the third day
-of May the said challengers did tournay on horseback with swords, and
-against them came forty-nine defendants; Sir John Dudley and the earl of
-Surrey running first, which at the first course lost their gauntlets;
-and that day Sir Richarde Cromwell overthrew master Palmer and his horse
-in the field, to the great honour of the challengers: the fifth of May
-the challengers fought on foot at the barriers, and against them came
-fifty defendants, which fought valiantly; but Sir Richard Cromwell
-overthrew that day at the barriers master Culpepper in the field; and
-the sixth day the challengers brake up their household.
-
-In this time of their housekeeping they had not only feasted the
-king, queen, ladies, and all the court, as is afore shewed; but also
-they cheered all the knights and burgesses of the common house in the
-parliament, and entertained the mayor of London, with the aldermen,
-and their wives, at a dinner, etc. The king gave to every of the said
-challengers, and their heirs for ever, in reward of their valiant
-activity, one hundred marks and a house to dwell in, of yearly revenue,
-out of the lands pertaining to the hospital of St. John of Jerusalem.
-
-Next beyond this Durham house is another great house, sometime
-belonging to the bishop of Norwich, and was his London lodging, which
-now pertaineth to the archbishop of York by this occasion. In the
-year 1529, when Cardinal Wolsey, archbishop of Yorke, was indicted in
-the Premunire, whereby King Henry VIII. was entitled to his goods and
-possessions: he also seized into his hands the said archbishop's house,
-commonly called Yorke place, and changed the name thereof into White
-hall; whereby the archbishops of Yorke being dispossessed, and having no
-house of repair about London, Queen Mary gave unto Nicholas Heath, then
-archbishop of Yorke, and to his successors, Suffolke house in Southwark,
-lately built by Charles Brandon, duke of Suffolke, as I have showed.
-
-This house the said archbishop sold, and bought the aforesaid house
-of old time belonging to the bishops of Norwich, which of this last
-purchase is now called Yorke house, the lord chancellors or lord keepers
-of the great seal of England, have been lately there lodged.
-
-Then was there an hospital of St. Marie Rouncivall by Charing cross
-(a cell to the priory and covent of Rouncivall in Navar, in Pampelion
-diocese), where a fraternity was founded in the 15th of Edward IV., but
-now the same is suppressed and turned into tenements.
-
-Near unto this hospital was a hermitage, with a chapel of St. Katherine,
-over against Charing cross; which cross, built of stone, was of old time
-a fair piece of work, there made by commandment of Edward I., in the
-21st year of his reign, in memory of Eleanor, his deceased queen, as is
-before declared.
-
-West from this cross stood sometime an hospital of St. James, consisting
-of two hides of land, with the appurtenances, in the parish of St.
-Margaret in Westminster, and founded by the citizens of London, before
-the time of any man's memory, for fourteen sisters, maidens, that were
-leprous, living chastely and honestly in divine service.
-
-Afterwards divers citizens of London gave five-and-fifty pounds rent
-thereunto, and then were adjoined eight brethren to minister divine
-service there. After this, also, sundry devout men of London gave to
-this hospital four hides of land in the field of Westminster; and in
-Hendon, Calcote, and Hampsted, eighty acres of land and wood, etc. King
-Edward I. confirmed those gifts, and granted a fair to be kept on the
-eve of St. James, the day, the morrow, and four days following, in the
-18th of his reign.
-
-This hospital was surrendered to Henry VIII. the 23rd of his reign: the
-sisters being compounded with, were allowed pensions for the term of
-their lives; and the king built there a goodly manor, annexing thereunto
-a park, closed about with a wall of brick, now called St. James' park,
-serving indifferently to the said manor, and to the manor or palace of
-White hall.
-
-South from Charing cross, on the right hand, are divers fair houses
-lately built before the park, then a large tilt-yard for noblemen, and
-other, to exercise themselves in justing, turning, and fighting at
-barriers.
-
-On the left hand from Charing cross be also divers fair tenements lately
-built, till ye come to a large plot of ground inclosed with brick, and
-is called Scotland, where great buildings have been for receipt of the
-kings of Scotland, and other estates of that country; for Margaret,
-queen of Scots, and sister to King Henry VIII., had her abiding there,
-when she came into England after the death of her husband, as the kings
-of Scotland had in former times, when they came to the parliament of
-England.
-
-Then is the said White hall, sometime belonging to Hubert de Burgh,
-earl of Kent, and justice of England, who gave it to the Black Friars
-in Oldborne, as I have before noted. King Henry VIII. ordained it to be
-called an honour, and built there a sumptuous gallery and a beautiful
-gate-house, thwart the high street to St. James' park, etc.
-
-In this gallery the princes, with their nobility, used to stand or sit,
-and at windows, to behold all triumphant justings and other military
-exercises.
-
-Beyond this gallery, on the left hand, is the garden or orchard
-belonging to the said White hall.
-
-On the right hand be divers fair tennis-courts, bowling-alleys, and a
-cock-pit, all built by King Henry VIII.; and then one other arched
-gate, with a way over it, thwarting the street from the king's gardens
-to the said park.
-
-From this gate up King's street to a bridge over Long ditch (so called
-for that the same almost insulateth the city of Westminster), near
-which bridge is a way leading to Chanon row, so called for that the
-same belonged to the dean and chanons of St. Stephen's chapel, who were
-there lodged, as now divers noblemen and gentlemen be; whereof one is
-belonging to Sir Edward Hobbey, one other to John Thine, esquire, one
-stately built by Ann Stanhope, duchess of Somerset, mother to the earl
-of Hartford, who now enjoyeth that house. Next a stately house, now in
-building by William earl of Darby; over against the which is a fair
-house, built by Henry Clinton, earl of Lincoln.
-
-From this way up to the Woolestaple and to the high tower, or gate
-which entereth the palace court, all is replenished with buildings and
-inhabitants.
-
-Touching this Woolestaple, I read, that in the reign of Edward I.,
-the staple being at Westminster, the parishioners of St. Margaret and
-merchants of the staple built of new the said church, the great chancel
-excepted, which was lately before new built by the abbot of Westminster.
-
-Moreover, that Edward III., in the 17th of his reign, decreed that no
-silver be carried out of the realm on pain of death; and that whosoever
-transporteth wool should bring over for every sack four nobles of silver
-bullion.
-
-In the 25th of his reign, he appointed the staple of wool to be kept
-only at Canterbury, for the honour of St. Thomas; but in the 27th
-of the same King Edward, the staple of wool, before kept at Bruges
-in Flanders, was ordained by parliament to be kept in divers places
-of England, Wales, and Ireland, as at Newcastle, Yorke, Lincoln,
-Canterbury, Norwich, Westminster, Chichester, Winchester, Excester,
-Bristow, Carmardyn, etc., to the great benefit of the king and loss unto
-strangers and merchants: for there grew unto the king by this means
-(as it was said) the sum of one thousand one hundred and two pounds
-by the year, more than any his predecessors before had received; the
-staple at Westminster at that time began on the next morrow after the
-feast of St. Peter ad vincula. The next year was granted to the king by
-parliament, towards the recovery of his title in France, fifty shillings
-of every sack of wool transported over seas, for the space of six years
-next ensuing; by means whereof the king might dispend daily during
-those years more than a thousand marks sterling: for by the common
-opinion there were more than one hundred thousand sacks of wool yearly
-transported into foreign lands, so that during six years the said grant
-extended to fifteen hundred thousand pounds sterling.
-
-In the 37th of Edward III., it was granted unto him for two years, to
-take five-and-twenty shillings and eight pence upon every sack of wool
-transported; and the same year the staple of wool (notwithstanding the
-king's oath and other great estates) was ordained to be kept at Callis,
-and six-and-twenty merchants, the best and wealthiest of all England, to
-be farmers there, both of the town and staple, for three years: every
-merchant to have six men of arms and four archers at the king's cost. He
-ordained there also two mayors, one for the town and one for the staple;
-and he took for _mala capta_, commonly called Maltorth,[292] twenty
-shillings, and of the said merchants' guardians of the town forty pence,
-upon every sack of wool.
-
-In the 44th of Edward III., Quinborough, Kingston-upon-Hull, and Boston,
-were made staples of wool; which matter so much offended some, that in
-the 50th of his reign, in a parliament at London, it was complained
-that the staple of wool was so removed from Callis to divers towns in
-England, contrary to the statute, appointing that citizens and merchants
-should keep it there, and that the king might have the profits and
-customs, with the exchange of gold and silver, that was there made by
-all the merchants in Christindome (esteemed to amount to eight thousand
-pounds by year), the exchange only; and the citizens and merchants so
-ordered the matter, that the king spent nothing upon soldiers, neither
-upon defence of the town against the enemies; whereas now he spent eight
-thousand pounds by year.
-
-In the 51st of Edward III., when the staple was sealed at Callis, the
-mayor of the staple did furnish the captain of the town upon any road
-with one hundred bilmen, twelve hundred archers of merchants and their
-servants, without any wages.
-
-In the year 1388, the 12th of Richard II., in a parliament at Cambridge,
-it was ordained that the staple of wools should be brought from
-Middleborough in Holland to Callis.
-
-In the 14th of his reign, there was granted forty shillings upon every
-sack of wool, and in the 21st was granted fifty shillings upon every
-sack transported by Englishmen, and three pounds by strangers, etc. It
-seemeth that the merchants of this staple be the most ancient merchants
-of this realm; and that all commodities of the realm are staple
-merchandises by law and charter as wools, leather, wool fells, lead,
-tin, cloth, etc.
-
-King Henry VI. had six wool-houses within the staple at Westminster:
-those he granted to the dean and canons of St. Stephen at Westminster,
-and confirmed it the 21st of his reign. Thus much for the staple have I
-shortly noted.
-
-And now to pass to the famous monastery of Westminster: at the very
-entrance of the close thereof, is a lane that leadeth toward the
-west, called Thieving lane, for that thieves were led that way to the
-gate-house, while the sanctuary continued in force.
-
-This monastery was founded and built by Sebert,[293] king of the East
-Saxons, upon the persuasion of Ethelbert, king of Kent, how having
-embraced Christianity, and being baptised by Melitus, bishop of London,
-immediately (to show himself a Christian indeed) built a church to the
-honour of God and St. Peter, on the west side of the city of London,
-in a place which (because it was overgrown with thorns, and environed
-with water) the Saxons called Thorney, and now of the monastery and west
-situation thereof is called Westminster.
-
-In this place (saith Sulcardus) long before was a temple of Apollo,
-which being overthrown, King Lucius built therein a church of
-Christianity.
-
-Sebert was buried in this church, with his wife Athelgoda; whose
-bodies many years after, to wit, in the reign of Richard II. (saith
-Walsingham), were translated from the old church to the new, and there
-entered.
-
-Edgar, king of the West Saxons, repaired this monastery about the year
-of Christ 958; Edward the Confessor built it of new, whereupon T.
-Clifford writeth thus:
-
-"Without the walls of London (saith he), upon the river of Thames,
-there was in times passed a little monastery, built to the honour of
-God and St. Peter, with a few Benedict monks in it, under an abbot,
-serving Christ: very poor they were, and little was given them for their
-relief. Here the king intended (for that it was near to the famous
-city of London and the river of Thames, that brought in all kinds of
-merchandises from all parts of the world) to make his sepulchre: he
-commanded, therefore, that of the tenths of all his rents the work
-should be begun in such sort as should become the prince of the Apostles.
-
-"At this his commandment the work is nobly begun, even from the
-foundation, and happily proceedeth till the same was finished: the
-charges bestowed, or to be bestowed, are not regarded. He granted to
-this church great privileges, above all the churches in this land, as
-partly appeareth by this his charter:--
-
- "Edwarde, king, greets William, bishop, and Leofstane, and
- Aelsie Portreves, and all my burgesses of London friendly, and I
- tell you, that I have this gift given and granted to Christ and St.
- Peter the holy Apostle, at Westminster, full freedome over all the
- land that belongeth to that holy place, etc."
-
-He also caused the parish church of St. Margaret to be newly built
-without the abbey church of Westminster, for the ease and commodity of
-the monks, because before that time the parish church stood within the
-old abbey church in the south aisle, somewhat to their annoyance.
-
-King Henry III., in the year of Christ 1220, and in the 5th of his
-reign, began the new work of our Lady's chapel, whereof he laid the
-first stone in the foundation; and in the year 1245, the walls and
-steeple of the old church (built by King Edward) were taken down, and
-enlarging the same church, caused them to be made more comely; for the
-furtherance whereof, in the year 1246, the same king (devising how to
-extort money from the citizens of London towards the charges) appointed
-a mart to be kept at Westminster, the same to last fifteen days, and
-in the mean space all trade of merchandise to cease in the city; which
-thing the citizens were fain to redeem with two thousand pounds of
-silver.
-
-The work of this church, with the houses of office, was finished to the
-end of the choir, in the year 1285, the 14th of Edward I.: all which
-labour of sixty-six years was in the year 1299 defaced by a fire kindled
-in the lesser hall of the king's palace at Westminster; the same, with
-many other houses adjoining, and with the queen's chamber, were all
-consumed; the flame thereof also (being driven with the wind), fired the
-monastery, which was also with the palace consumed.
-
-Then was this monastery again repaired by the abbots of that church;
-King Edward I. and his successors putting to their helping hands.
-
-Edward II. appropriated unto this church the patronages of the churches
-of Kelveden and Sawbridgeworth in Essex, in the diocese of London.
-
-Simon Langham, abbot (having been a great builder there in the year
-1362), gave forty pounds to the building of the body of the church; but
-(amongst others) Abbot Islip was in his time a great builder there, as
-may appear in the stonework and glass windows of the church; since whose
-decease that work hath staid as he left it, unperfected, the church and
-steeple being all of one height.
-
-King Henry VII., about the year of Christ 1502, caused the chapel of
-our Lady, built by Henry III., with a tavern also, called the White
-Rose, near adjoining, to be taken down: in which plot of ground, on
-the 24th of January, the first stone of the new chapel was laid by the
-hands of Abbot Islip, Sir Reginald Bray, knight of the garter, Doctor
-Barnes, master of the Rolls, Doctor Wall, chaplain to the king, Master
-Hugh Aldham, chaplain to the countess of Darby and Richmond (the king's
-mother), Sir Edward Stanhope, knight, and divers other: upon the which
-stone was engraven the same day and year, etc.
-
-The charges in building this chapel amounted to the sum of fourteen
-thousand pounds. The stone for this work (as I have been informed) was
-brought from Huddlestone quarry in Yorkshire.
-
-The altar and sepulture of the same King Henry VII., wherein his body
-resteth in this his new chapel, was made and finished in the year 1519
-by one Peter, a painter of Florence; for the which he received one
-thousand pounds sterling for the whole stuff and workmanship at the
-hands of the king's executors; Richard, bishop of Winchester; Richard,
-bishop of London; Thomas, bishop of Durham; John, bishop of Rochester;
-Thomas, duke of Norfolk, treasurer of England; Charles, earl of
-Worcester, the king's chamberlain; John Fineaux, knight, chief justice
-of the King's bench; Robert Reade, knight, chief justice of the Common
-Pleas.
-
-This monastery being valued to dispend by the year three thousand four
-hundred and seventy pounds, etc., was surrendered to Henry VIII. in
-the year 1539. Benson, then abbot, was made the first dean, and not
-long after it was advanced to a bishop's see in the year 1541. Thomas
-Thirlby being both the first and last bishop there, who, when he had
-impoverished the church, was translated to Norwich in the year 1550, the
-4th of Edward VI., and from thence to Elie in the year 1554, the 2nd of
-Queen Mary. Richard Cox, doctor in divinity (late schoolmaster to King
-Edward VI.), was made dean of Westminster, whom Queen Mary put out, and
-made Doctor Wonest dean until the year 1556, and then he being removed
-from thence on the 21st of November, John Feckenham (late dean of
-Pauls) was made abbot of Westminster, and took possession of the same,
-being installed, and fourteen monks more received the habit with him
-that day of the order of St. Benedict; but the said John Feckenham, with
-his monks, enjoyed not that place fully three years, for in the year
-1559, in the month of July, they were all put out, and Queen Elizabeth
-made the said monastery a college, instituting there a dean, twelve
-prebends, a schoolmaster, and usher, forty scholars, called commonly the
-Queen's scholars, twelve alms men; and so it was named the Collegiate
-church of Westminster, founded by Queen Elizabeth, who placed Doctor
-Bill,[294] first dean of that new erection; after whom succeeded Doctor
-Gabriel Goodman, who governed that church forty years, and after Doctor
-Lancelot Andrewes.
-
-Kings and queens crowned in this church: William, surnamed the
-Conqueror, and Matilde his wife, were the first, and since them all
-other kings and queens of this realm have been there crowned.
-
-Kings and queens buried in this church are these: Sebert, king of the
-East Saxons, with his wife Athelgede; Harold, surnamed Harefoot, king of
-the West Saxons; Edward the Simple, surnamed Confessor, sometime richly
-shrined in a tomb of silver and gold, curiously wrought by commandment
-of William the Conqueror; Egitha his wife was there buried also;
-Hugolyn, chamberlain to Edward the Confessor; King Henry III., whose
-sepulture was richly garnished with precious stones of jasper, which his
-son Edward I. brought out of France for that purpose; Eleanor, wife to
-Henry III.; Edward I., who offered to the shrine of Edward the Confessor
-the chair of marble, wherein the kings of Scotland were crowned, with
-the sceptre and crown, also to the same king belonging.
-
-He gave also to that church lands to the value of one hundred pounds by
-the year; twenty pounds thereof yearly to be distributed to the poor
-for ever. Then there lieth Eleanor, his wife, daughter to Ferdinando,
-king of Castile, 1293; Edward III. by Queen Philippa of Henault his
-wife; Richard II. and Anne his wife, with their images upon them, which
-cost more than four hundred marks for the gilding; Henry V., with a
-royal image of silver and gilt, which Katherine his wife caused to be
-laid upon him, but the head of this image being of massy silver, is
-broken off, and conveyed away with the plates of silver and gilt that
-covered his body; Katherine, his wife, was buried in the old Lady
-chapel 1438, but her corpse being taken up in the reign of Henry VII.,
-when a new foundation was to be laid, she was never since buried, but
-remaineth above ground in a coffin of boards behind the east end of
-the presbytery; Henry VII. in a sumptuous sepulture and chapel before
-specified, and Elizabeth his wife; Edward VI. in the same chapel,
-without any monument; Queen Mary, without any monument, in the same
-chapel; Matilde, daughter to Malcolm, king of Scots, wife to Henry I.,
-died 1118, lieth in the revestry; Anne, wife to Richard III.; Margaret,
-countess of Richmond and Darby, mother to Henry VII.; Anne of Cleves,
-wife to Henry VIII.; Edmond, second son to Henry III., first earl of
-Lancaster, Darby, and Leycester, and Aveline his wife, daughter and heir
-to William de Fortibus, earl of Albemarle. In St. Thomas' chapel lie the
-bones of the children of Henry III. and of Edward I., in number nine.
-In the chapter-house,--Elianor, countess of Barre, daughter to Edward
-I.; William of Windsor, and Blaunch his sister, children to Edward III.;
-John of Eltham, earl of Cornewell, son to Edward II.; Elianor, wife to
-Thomas of Woodstocke, duke of Gloucester; Thomas of Woodstocke by King
-Edward III. his father; Margaret, daughter to Edward IV.; Elizabeth,
-daughter to Henry VII.; William de Valence, earl of Pembroke; Aymer
-de Valence, earl of Pembroke; Margaret and John, son and daughter to
-William de Valence; John Waltham, bishop of Sarum, treasurer of England;
-Thomas Ruthal, bishop of Durham, 1522; Giles, Lord Dawbeny,[295]
-lord lieutenant of Callis, chamberlain to King Henry VII., 1508, and
-Elizabeth his wife, of the family of the Arundels in Cornwal, 1500;
-John, Viscount Wells, 1498; the Lady Katherine, daughter to the duchess
-of Norfolk; Sir Thomas Hungerford, knight, father to Sir John Hungerford
-of Downampney, knight; a son and daughter to Humfrey Bohun, earl of
-Hereford and Essex, and Elizabeth his wife; Philippa, duchess of York,
-daughter to the Lord Mohun, thrice married, to the Lord Fitzwalter, Sir
-John Golofer, and to the duke of Yorke; William Dudley, bishop elect
-of Durham, son to John, baron of Dudley; Nicholas, Baron Carew, 1470;
-Walter Hungerford, son to Edward Hungerford, knight; Sir John Burley,
-knight, and Anne his wife, daughter to Alane Buxull, knight, 1416; Sir
-John Golofer, knight, 1396; Humfrey Burcher, Lord Cromwell, son to
-Bourchier, earl of Essex, slain at Barnet; Henry Bourchier, son and
-heir to John Bourchier, Lord Barners, also slain at Barnet, 1471; Sir
-William Trussell, knight; Sir Thomas Vaughan, knight; Frances Brandon,
-duchess of Suffolke, 1560; Mary Gray, her daughter, 1578; Sir John
-Hampden, knight; Sir Lewis, Viscount Robsart, knight; Lord Bourchere of
-Henalt, 1430, and his wife, daughter and heir to the Lord Bourchere;
-Robert Brown, and William Browne, esquires; the Lady Johane Tokyne,
-daughter of Dabridge Court; George Mortimer, bastard; John Felbye,
-esquire; Ann, wife to John Watkins; William Southwike, esquire; William
-Southcot, esquire; Ralph Constantine, gentleman; Arthur Troffote,
-esquire; Robert Hawley, esquire, slain in that church; Sir Richarde
-Rouse, knight; Sir Geffrey Maundevile, earl of Essex, and Athelarde
-his wife; Sir Foulke of Newcastle; Sir James Barons, knight; Sir John
-Salisbury, knight; Margaret Dowglas, countess of Lennox, with Charles
-her son, earl of Lennox; Henrie Scogan, a learned poet, in the cloister;
-Geffrey Chaucer, the most famous poet of England, also in the cloister,
-1400, but since Nicholas Brigham, gentleman, raised a monument for him
-in the south cross aisle of the church: his works were partly published
-in print by William Caxton, in the reign of Henry VI., increased by
-William Thinne, esquire, in the reign of Henry VIII.; corrected and
-twice increased, through mine own painful labours, in the reign of Queen
-Elizabeth, to wit, in the year 1561; and again beautified with notes by
-me, collected out of divers records and monuments, which I delivered to
-my loving friend, Thomas Speght; and he having drawn the same into a
-good form and method, as also explained the old and obscure words, etc.,
-hath published them in anno 1597.
-
-Anne Stanhope, duchess of Somerset, and Jane her daughter; Anne Cecill,
-countess of Oxford, daughter to the Lord Burghley, with Mildred Burghley
-her mother; Elizabeth Barkley, countess of Ormond; Frances Sidney,
-countess of Sussex; Francis Howard, countess of Hertford, 1598; Thomas,
-Baron Wentworth; Thomas, Baron Warton; John, Lord Russell; Sir Thomas
-Bromley, lord chancellor; Sir John Puckering, lord keeper; Sir Henry
-Cary, Lord Hunsdon, and lord chamberlain, 1596, to whose memory his son,
-Sir George Cary, Lord Hunsdon, and lord chamberlain, hath created a
-stately monument.
-
-This church hath had great privilege of sanctuary within the precinct
-thereof, to wit, the church, churchyard, and close, etc.; from whence
-it hath not been lawful for any prince or other to take any person that
-fled thither for any cause: which privilege was first granted by Sebert,
-king of the East Saxons, since increased by Edgar, king of the West
-Saxons, renewed and confirmed by King Edward the Confessor, as appeareth
-by this his charter following:
-
-"Edward, by the grace of God, king of Englishmen: I make it to be known
-to all generations of the world after me, that by speciall commandement
-of our holy father, Pope Leo, I have renewed and honored the holy
-church of the blessed apostle St. Peter, of Westminster; and I order
-and establish for ever, that what person, of what condition or estate
-soever he be, from whence soever he come, or for what offence or cause
-it be, either for his refuge into the said holy place, he be assured of
-his life, liberty, and limbs. And over this I forbid, under the paine of
-everlasting damnation, that no minister of mine, or of my successors,
-intermeddle them with any the goods, lands, or possessions of the said
-persons taking the said sanctuary; for I have taken their goodes and
-livelode into my special protection, and therefore I grant to every each
-of them, in as much as my terrestriall power may suffice, all maner
-freedom of joyous libertie; and whosoever presumes or doth contrary to
-this my graunt, I will hee lose his name, worship, dignity, and power,
-and that with the great traytor Judas that betraied our Saviour, he be
-in the everlasting fire of hell; and I will and ordayne that this my
-graunt endure as long as there remayneth in England eyther love or dread
-of Christian name."
-
-More of this sanctuary ye may read in our histories, and also in the
-statute of Henry VIII., the 32nd year.
-
-The parish church of St. Margaret, sometime within the abbey, was
-by Edward the Confessor removed, and built without, for ease of the
-monks. This church continued till the days of Edward I., at which time
-the merchants of the staple and parishioners of Westminster built it
-all of new, the great chancel excepted, which was built by the abbots
-of Westminster; and this remaineth now a fair parish church, though
-sometime in danger of down pulling. In the south aisle of this church is
-a fair marble monument of Dame Mary Billing, the heir of Robert Nesenham
-of Conington, in Huntingdonshire, first married to William Cotton, to
-whose issue her inheritance alone descended, remaining with Robert
-Cotton at this day, heir of her and her first husband's family; her
-second husband was Sir Thomas Billing, chief justice of England; and her
-last, whom likewise she buried, was Thomas Lacy; erecting this monument
-to the memory of her three husbands, with whose arms she hath garnished
-it, and for her own burial, wherein she was interred in the year 1499.
-
-Next to this famous monastery is the king's principal palace, of what
-antiquity it is uncertain; but Edward the Confessor held his court
-there, as may appear by the testimony of sundry, and, namely, of
-Ingulphus, as I have before told you. The said king had his palace, and
-for the most part remained there; where he also so ended his life, and
-was buried in the monastery which he had built. It is not to be doubted
-but that King William I., as he was crowned there, so he built much at
-his palace, for he found it far inferior to the building of princely
-palaces in France: and it is manifest, by the testimony of many authors,
-that William Rufus built the great hall there about the year of Christ
-1097. Amongst others, Roger of Wendover and Mathew Paris do write, that
-King William (being returned out of Normandy into England) kept his
-feast of Whitsontide very royally at Westminster, in the new hall which
-he had lately built; the length whereof (say some) was two hundred and
-seventy feet, and seventy-four feet in breadth; and when he heard men
-say that this hall was too great, he answered and said, "This hall is
-not big enough by the one half, and is but a bed-chamber in comparison
-of that I mean to make." A diligent searcher (saith Paris) might find
-out the foundation of the hall, which he was supposed to have built,
-stretching from the river of Thames, even to the common highway.
-
-This palace was repaired about the year 1163 by Thomas Becket,
-chancellor of England, with exceeding great celerity and speed, which
-before was ready to have fallen down. This hath been the principal seat
-and palace of all the kings of England since the Conquest; for here have
-they in the great hall kept their feasts of coronation especially, and
-other solemn feasts, as at Christmas and such like, most commonly: for
-proof whereof, I find recorded, that in the year 1236, and the 20th of
-Henry, III., on the 29th of December, William de Haverhull, the king's
-treasurer, is commanded, that upon the day of circumcision of our Lord,
-he caused six thousand poor people to be fed at Westminster, for the
-state of the king, the queen, and their children; the weak and aged to
-be placed in the great hall and in the lesser; those that were most
-strong, and in reasonable plight, in the king's chamber; the children in
-the queen's; and when the king knoweth the charge, he would allow it in
-the accounts.[296]
-
-In the year 1238, the same King Henry kept his feast of Christmas at
-Westminster in the great hall; so did he in the year 1241, where he
-placed the legate in the most honourable place of the table, to wit, in
-the midst, which the noblemen took in evil part: the king sat on the
-right hand, and the archbishop on the left, and then all the prelates
-and nobles according to their estates; for the king himself set the
-guests. The year 1242 he likewise kept his Christmas in the hall, etc.
-Also, in the year 1243, Richard, earl of Cornewall, the king's brother,
-married Cincia, daughter to Beatrice, countess of Province, and kept his
-marriage-feast in the great hall at Westminster, with great royalty and
-company of noblemen: insomuch that there were told (_triginta millia_)
-thirty thousand dishes of meats at that dinner.
-
-In the year 1256, King Henry sate in the exchequer of this hall, and
-there set down order for the appearance of sheriffs, and bringing in of
-their accounts: there were five marks set on every sheriff's head for a
-fine, because they had not distrained every person that might dispend
-fifteen pounds land by the year to receive the order of knighthood,
-as the same sheriffs were commanded. Also, the mayor, aldermen, and
-sheriffs of London, being accused of oppression and wrongs done by them,
-and submitting themselves in this place before the king sitting in
-judgment upon that matter, they were condemned to pay their fines for
-their offences committed, and further, every one of them discharged of
-assise and ward.
-
-In the years 1268 and 1269, the same king kept his Christmas feasts
-at Westminster as before; and also in the same 1269 he translated
-with great solemnity the body of King Edward the Confessor into a new
-chapel, at the back of the high altar: which chapel he had prepared of a
-marvellous workmanship, bestowing a new tomb or shrine of gold; and on
-the day of his translation he kept a royal feast in the great hall of
-the palace. Thus much for the feasts of old time in this hall.
-
-We read also, that in the year 1236, the river of Thames overflowing the
-banks, caused the marshes about Woolwitch to be all on a sea, wherein
-boats and other vessels were carried with the stream; so that besides
-cattle, the greatest number of men, women, and children, inhabitants
-there, were drowned: and in the great palace of Westminster men did row
-with wherries in the midst of the hall, being forced to ride to their
-chambers.
-
-Moreover, in the year 1242, the Thames overflowing the banks about
-Lambhithe, drowned houses and fields by the space of six miles, so
-that in the great hall at Westminster men took their horses, because
-the water ran over all. This palace was (in the year 1299, the 27th of
-Edward I.) burnt by a vehement fire, kindled in the lesser hall of the
-king's house: the same, with many other houses adjoining, and with the
-queen's chamber, were consumed, but after that repaired.
-
-In the year 1313, the 31st of Edward I., the king's treasury at
-Westminster was robbed; for the which, Walter, abbot of Westminster,
-with forty-nine of his brethren and thirty-two other, were thrown into
-the Tower of London, and indicted of the robbery of a hundred thousand
-pounds; but they affirming themselves to be clear of the fact, and
-desiring the king of speedy justice, a commission was directed for
-inquiry of the truth, and they were freed.
-
-In the year 1316, Edward II. did solemnize his feast of Penticost at
-Westminster, in the great hall; where sitting royally at the table, with
-his peers about him, there entered a woman adorned like a minstrel,
-sitting on a great horse, trapped as minstrels then used, who rode
-round about the tables, showing pastime, and at length came up to the
-king's table, and laid before him a letter, and forthwith turning her
-horse, saluted every one, and departed. The letter being opened, had
-these contents:,--"Our soveraigne lord and king, hath nothing curteously
-respected his knights, that in his father's time, and also in his owne,
-have put forth their persons to divers perils, and have utterly lost, or
-greatly diminished their substance, for honor of the said king, and he
-hath inriched abundantly such as have not borne the waight as yet of the
-busines, etc."
-
-This great hall was begun to be repaired in the year 1397 by Richard
-II., who caused the walls, windows, and roof, to be taken down, and new
-made, with a stately porch, and divers lodgings of a marvellous work,
-and with great costs; all which he levied of strangers banished or
-flying out of their countries, who obtained license to remain in this
-land, by the king's charters, which they had purchased with great sums
-of money; John Boterell being then clerk of the works.
-
-This hall being finished in the year 1398, the same king kept a most
-royal Christmas there, with daily justings and runnings at tilt;
-whereunto resorted such a number of people, that there was every day
-spent twenty-eight or twenty-six oxen, and three hundred sheep, besides
-fowl without number: he caused a gown for himself to be made of gold,
-garnished with pearl and precious stones, to the value of three thousand
-marks: he was guarded by Cheshire men, and had about him commonly
-thirteen bishops, besides barons, knights, esquires, and other more
-than needed; insomuch, that to the household came every day to meat ten
-thousand people, as appeareth by the messes told out from the kitchen to
-three hundred servitors.
-
-Thus was this great hall, for the honour of the prince, oftentimes
-furnished with guests, not only in this king's time (a prodigal
-prince), but in the time of other also, both before and since, though
-not so usually noted. For when it is said, the king held his feast of
-Christmas, or such a feast at Westminster, it may well be supposed to be
-kept in this great hall, as most sufficient to such a purpose.
-
-I find noted by Robert Fabian (sometime an alderman of London), that
-King Henry VII., in the 9th of his reign (holding his royal feast of
-Christmas at Westminster), on the twelfth day, feasted Ralph Austry,
-then mayor of London, and his brethren the aldermen, with other
-commoners in great number, and after dinner dubbing the mayor knight,
-caused him with his brethren to stay and behold the disguisings and
-other disports in the night following, showed in the great hall,
-which was richly hanged with arras, and staged about on both sides;
-which disports being ended in the morning, the king, the queen, the
-ambassadors, and other estates, being set at a table of stone, sixty
-knights and esquires served sixty dishes to the king's mess, and as
-many to the queen's (neither flesh nor fish), and served the mayor with
-twenty-four dishes to his mess, of the same manner, with sundry wines
-in most plenteous wise: and finally, the king and queen being conveyed
-with great lights into the palace, the mayor with his company in barges
-returned and came to London by break of the next day. Thus much for
-building of this great hall, and feasting therein.
-
-It moreover appeareth that many parliaments have been kept there; for I
-find noted, that in the year 1397, the great hall at Westminster being
-out of reparations, and therefore, as it were, new built by Richard II.
-(as is afore showed), the same Richard, in the mean time having occasion
-to hold a parliament, caused for that purpose a large house to be built
-in the midst of the palace-court, betwixt the clock tower and the gate
-of the old great hall. This house was very large and long, made of
-timber, covered with tile, open on both the sides and at both the ends,
-that all men might see and hear what was both said and done.
-
-The king's archers (in number four thousand Cheshire men) compassed the
-house about with their bows bent, and arrows knocked in their hands,
-always ready to shoot: they had bouch of court (to wit, meat and drink),
-and great wages of six pence by the day.
-
-The old great hall being new built, parliaments were again there kept
-as before:[297] namely, one in the year 1399, for the deposing of
-Richard II. A great part of this palace at Westminster was once again
-burnt in the year 1512, the 4th of Henry VIII.; since the which time it
-hath not been re-edified: only the great hall, with the offices near
-adjoining, are kept in good reparations, and serveth as afore for feasts
-at coronations, arraignments of great persons charged with treasons,
-keeping of the courts of justice, etc. But the princes have been lodged
-in other places about the city, as at Baynarde's castle, at Bridewell,
-and White hall, sometime called York place, and sometime at St. James'.
-
-This great hall hath been the usual place of pleadings, and ministration
-of justice, whereof somewhat shortly I will note. In times past the
-courts and benches followed the king wheresoever he went, as well since
-the Conquest as before; which thing at length being thought cumbersome,
-painful, and chargeable to the people, it was in the year 1224, the 9th
-of Henry III., agreed that there should be a standing place appointed,
-where matters should be heard and judged, which was in the great hall at
-Westminster.
-
-In this hall he ordained three judgment seats; to wit, at the entry
-on the right hand, the Common Pleas, where civil matters are to be
-pleaded, specially such as touch lands or contracts: at the upper end
-of the hall, on the right hand, or south-east corner, the King's Bench,
-where pleas of the crown have their hearing; and on the left hand, or
-south-west corner, sitteth the lord chancellor, accompanied with the
-master of the rolls, and other men, learned for the most part in the
-civil law, and called masters of the chancery, which have the king's
-fee. The times of pleading in these courts are four in the year, which
-are called terms: the first is Hillary term, which beginneth the 23rd
-of January, if it be not Sunday, and endeth the 12th of February; the
-second is Easter term, and beginneth seventeen days after Easter day,
-and endeth four days after Ascension day; the third term beginneth six
-or seven days after Trinity Sunday, and endeth the Wednesday fortnight
-after; the fourth is Michaelmas term, which beginneth the 9th of
-October, if it be not Sunday, and endeth the 28th of November.
-
-And here it is to be noted, that the kings of this realm have used
-sometimes to sit in person in the King's Bench; namely, King Edward IV.,
-in the year 1462, in Michaelmas term, sat in the King's Bench three days
-together, in the open court, to understand how his laws were ministered
-and executed.
-
-Within the port, or entry into the hall, on either side are ascendings
-up into large chambers, without the hall adjoining thereunto, wherein
-certain courts be kept, namely, on the right hand, is the court of the
-Exchequer, a place of account for the revenues of the crown: the hearers
-of the account have auditors under them; but they which are the chief
-for accounts of the prince, are called barons of the Exchequer, whereof
-one is called the chief baron. The greatest officer of all is called the
-high treasurer.[298] In this court be heard those that are delators,
-or informers, in popular and penal actions, having thereby part of the
-profit by the law assigned unto them.
-
-In this court, if any question be, it is determined after the order of
-the common law of England by twelve men, and all subsidies, taxes, and
-customs, by account; for in this office the sheriffs of the shire do
-attend upon the execution of the commandments of the judges, which the
-earl should do, if he were not attending upon the princes in the wars,
-or otherwise about him; for the chief office of the earl was to see the
-king's justice to have course, and to be well executed in the shire, and
-the prince's revenues to be well answered and brought into the treasury.
-
-If any fines or amerciaments be extracted out of any of the said courts
-upon any man, or any arrerages of accounts of such things as is of
-customs, taxes, and subsidies, or other such like occasions, the same
-the sheriff of the shire doth gather, and is answerable therefore in
-the Exchequer: as for other ordinary rents of patrimonial lands, and
-most commonly of taxes, customs, and subsidies, there be particular
-receivers and collectors, which do answer it into the Exchequer. This
-court of the Exchequer hath of old time, and, as I think, since the
-Conquest, been kept at Westminster, notwithstanding sometimes removed
-thence by commandment of the king, and after restored again, as, namely,
-in the year 1209, King John commanded the Exchequer to be removed from
-Westminster to Northampton, etc.
-
-On the left hand above the stair is the Duchy chamber, wherein is kept
-the court for the duchy of Lancaster by a chancellor of that duchy, and
-other officers under him. Then is there in another chamber the office of
-the receipts of the queen's revenues for the crown: then is there also
-the Star chamber, where in the term time, every week once at the least,
-which is commonly on Fridays and Wednesdays, and on the next day after
-the term endeth, the lord chancellor, and the lords, and other of the
-privy council, and the chief justices of England, from nine of the clock
-till it be eleven, do sit.
-
-This place is called the Star chamber, because the roof thereof is
-decked with the likeness of stars gilt: there be plaints heard of riots,
-routs, and other misdemeanors; which if they be found by the king's
-council, the party offender shall be censured by these persons, which
-speak one after another, and he shall be both fined and commanded to
-prison.
-
-Then at the upper end of the great hall, by the King's Bench, is a going
-up to a great chamber, called the White hall, wherein is now kept the
-court of Wards and Liveries, and adjoining thereunto is the Court of
-Requests. Then is St. Stephen's chapel, of old time founded by King
-Stephen. King John, in the 7th of his reign, granted to Baldwinus de
-London, clerk of his Exchequer, the chapelship of St. Stephen's at
-Westminster, etc. This chapel was again since, of a far more curious
-workmanship, new built by King Edward III. in the year 1347, for
-thirty-eight persons in that church to serve God; to wit, a dean,
-twelve secular canons, thirteen vicars, four clerks, five choristers,
-two servitors, to wit, a verger and a keeper of the chapel. He built
-for those from the house of Receipt, along nigh to the Thames, within
-the same palace, there to inhabit; and since that there was also built
-for them, betwixt the clock-house and the wool staple, called the Wey
-house. He also built to the use of this chapel (though out of the palace
-court), some distance west, in the little sanctuary, a strong clochard
-of stone and timber, covered with lead, and placed therein three great
-bells, since usually rung at coronations, triumphs, funeral of princes,
-and their obits. Of those bells men fabuled that their ringing soured
-all the drink in the town: more, that about the biggest bell was
-written,--
-
- "King Edward made me,
- Thirtie thousand and three;
- Take me downe and wey me,
- And more shall ye find me."
-
-But these bells being taken down indeed, were found all three not
-to weigh twenty thousand. True it is, that in the city of Rouen, in
-Normandie, there is one great bell, that hath such inscription as
-followeth:--
-
- "Je suis George de Ambois,
- Qui trente cinq mil a pois,
- Mes lui qui me pesera,
- Trente six mil me trouera.
-
- "I am George of Ambois,
- Thirty-five thousand in pois;
- But he that shall weigh me,
- Thirty-six thousand shall find me."
-
-The said King Edward endowed this chapel with lands to the yearly value
-of five hundred pounds. Doctor John Chambers, the king's physician,
-the last dean of this college, built thereunto a cloister of curious
-workmanship, to the charges of eleven thousand marks. This chapel, or
-college, at the suppression, was valued to dispend in lands by the year
-one thousand and eighty-five pounds ten shillings and five pence, and
-was surrendered to Edward VI.; since the which time the same chapel hath
-served as a parliament house.
-
-By this chapel of St. Stephen was sometime one other smaller chapel,
-called our Lady of the Pew, to the which lady great offerings were
-used to be made: amongst other things, I have read, that Richard II.,
-after the overthrow of Wat Tyler and other his rebels, in the 4th of
-his reign, went to Westminster, and there giving thanks to God for his
-victory, made his offering in this chapel; but as divers have noted,
-namely, John Piggot, in the year 1252, on the 17th of February, by
-negligence of a scholar appointed by his schoolmaster to put forth
-the lights of this chapel, the image of our lady, richly decked with
-jewels, precious stones, pearls, and rings, more than any jeweller could
-judge the price for, so saith mine author, was, with all this apparel,
-ornaments, and chapel itself, burnt; but since again re-edified by
-Anthonie, Earl Rivers, Lord Scales, and of the Isle of Wight, uncle and
-governor to the Prince of Wales, that should have been King Edward V.,
-etc.
-
-The said palace, before the entry thereunto, hath a large court, and
-in the same a tower of stone, containing a clock, which striketh every
-hour on a great bell, to be heard into the hall in sitting time of the
-courts, or otherwise; for the same clock, in a calm, will be heard into
-the city of London. King Henry VI. gave the keeping of this clock,
-with the tower called the clock-house, and the appurtenances, unto
-William Walsby, dean of St. Stephen's, with the wages of six pence the
-day out of his Exchequer. By this tower standeth a fountain, which at
-coronations and great triumphs is made to run with wine out of divers
-spouts.
-
-On the east side of this court is an arched gate to the river of Thames,
-with a fair bridge and landing-place for all men that have occasion. On
-the north side is the south end of St. Stephen's alley, or Canon row,
-and also a way into the old wool staple; and on the west side is a very
-fair gate, begun by Richard III. in the year 1484, and was by him built
-a great height, and many fair lodgings in it, but left unfinished, and
-is called the high tower of Westminster. Thus much for the monastery
-and palace may suffice. And now will I speak of the gate-house, and of
-Totehill street, stretching from the west part of the close.
-
-The gate-house is so called of two gates, the one out of the College
-court towards the north, on the east side whereof was the bishop of
-London's prison for clerks' convict; and the other gate, adjoining to
-the first, but towards the west, is a gaol or prison for offenders
-thither committed. Walter Warfield, cellarer to the monastery, caused
-both these gates, with the appurtenances, to be built in the reign of
-Edward III.
-
-On the south side of this gate, King Henry VII. founded an alms-house
-for thirteen poor men; one of them to be a priest, aged forty-five
-years, a good grammarian, the other twelve to be aged fifty years,
-without wives: every Saturday the priest to receive of the abbot, or
-prior, four pence by the day, and each other two pence halfpenny by the
-day for ever, for their sustenance, and every year to each one a gown
-and a hood ready made; and to three women that dressed their meat, and
-kept them in their sickness, each to have every Saturday sixteen pence,
-and every year a gown ready made. More, to the thirteen poor men yearly
-eighty quarters of coal and one thousand of good faggots to their use,
-in the hall and kitchen of their mansion; a discreet monk to be overseer
-of them, and he to have forty shillings by the year, etc.; and hereunto
-was every abbot and prior sworn.
-
-Near unto this house westward was an old chapel of St. Anne; over
-against the which the Lady Margaret, mother to King Henry VII., erected
-an alms-house for poor women, which is now turned into lodgings for the
-singing men of the college. The place wherein this chapel and alms-house
-standeth was called the Elemosinary, or Almonry, now corruptly the
-Ambry,[299] for that the alms of the abbey were there distributed to
-the poor. And therein Islip, abbot of Westminster, erected the first
-press of book printing that ever was in England, about the year of
-Christ 1471. William Caxton, citizen of London, mercer, brought it into
-England, and was the first that practised it in the said abbey; after
-which time, the like was practised in the abbeys of St. Augustine at
-Canterbury, St. Alban's, and other monasteries.
-
-From the west gate runneth along Totehil street, wherein is a house
-of the Lord Gray of Wilton; and on the other side, at the entry into
-Totehill field, Stourton house, which Gyles, the last Lord Dacre of
-the south, purchased and built new, whose lady and wife Anne, sister
-to Thomas, the Lord Buckhurst, left money to her executors to build an
-hospital for twenty poor women, and so many children, to be brought up
-under them, for whose maintenance she assigned lands to the value of one
-hundred pounds by the year, which hospital her executors have new begun
-in the field adjoining. From the entry into Totehill field the street is
-called Petty France, in which, and upon St. Hermit's hill, on the south
-side thereof, Cornelius Van Dun (a Brabander born, yeoman of the guard
-to King Henry VIII., King Edward VI., Queen Mary, and Queen Elizabeth,)
-built twenty houses for poor women to dwell rent-free: and near hereunto
-was a chapel of Mary Magdalen, now wholly ruinated.
-
-In the year of Christ 1256, the 40th of Henry III., John Mansell, the
-king's councillor and priest, did invite to a stately dinner the kings
-and queens of England and Scotland, Edward the king's son, earls,
-barons, and knights, the Bishop of London, and divers citizens, whereby
-his guests did grow to such a number, that his house at Totehill could
-not receive them, but that he was forced to set up tents and pavilions
-to receive his guests, whereof there was such a multitude that seven
-hundred messes of meat did not serve for the first dinner.
-
-The city of Westminster for civil government is divided into twelve
-several wards; for the which the dean of the collegiate church of
-Westminster, or the high-steward, do elect twelve burgesses, and as
-many assistants; that is, one burgess, and one assistant, for every
-ward; out of the which twelve burgesses two are nominated yearly, upon
-Thursday in Easter week, for chief burgesses to continue for one year
-next following, who have authority given them by the act of parliament,
-27th Elizabeth, to hear, examine, determine, and punish, according to
-the laws of the realm, and lawful customs of the city of London, matters
-of incontinency, common scolds, inmates, and common annoyances; and
-likewise, to commit such persons as shall offend against the peace, and
-thereof to give knowledge within four-and-twenty hours to some justice
-of peace, in the county of Middlesex.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[291] "Which is a goodly house, lately builded nigh to Ivy bridge, over
-against the old Bedforde house, namely, called Russell house and Dacres
-house, now the house of Sir Thomas Cecile, Lorde Burghley; and so on the
-north side to a lane that turneth to the parish church of St. Martin in
-the Fielde, and stretcheth to St. Giles in the Fielde."--_1st edition_,
-pp. 370-1.
-
-[292] "I thinke custome."--_1st edition_, p. 376.
-
-[293] "Foundation of Westminster by Sebert, a Christian king, not onely
-in word, but in deed."--_Stow._
-
-[294] "One of her majesties chaplens."--_1st edition_, p. 381.
-
-[295] "Earle of Bridgewater."--_1st edition_, p. 382.
-
-[296] In the first edition, the passage relative to Henry II.'s command
-to Hugh Gifford and William Browne, to distribute alms "according to
-the weight and measure of the king's children" (see ante, page 83), is
-inserted in this place.
-
-[297] "I find of record, the 50th of Edward III., that the chapter-house
-of the abbot of Westminster was then the usual house for the commons in
-parliament."--_Stow._
-
-[298] "Of England."--_1st edition_, p. 387.
-
-[299] The corruption alluded to by Stow exists to the present day--the
-Almonry being styled by the lower classes in Westminster, the Ambry. The
-house said to have been Caxton's is also, we believe, still remaining,
-though in a state of great dilapidation.
-
-
-
-
-GOVERNORS OF THE CITY OF LONDON; AND FIRST OF ECCLESIASTICAL BISHOPS AND
-OTHER MINISTERS THERE
-
-
-Having thus run through the description of these cities of London
-and Westminster, as well in their original foundations, as in their
-increases of buildings and ornaments, together with such incidents of
-sundry sorts as are before, both generally and particularly discoursed,
-it remaineth that somewhat be noted by me touching the policy and
-government, both ecclesiastical and civil, of London, as I have already
-done for Westminster, the order whereof is appointed by the late
-statute, even as that of London is maintained by the customs thereof,
-most laudably used before all the time of memory.
-
-And first, to begin with the ecclesiastical jurisdiction: I read that
-the Christian faith was first preached in this island (then called
-Britaine) by Joseph of Arimathea, and his brethren, disciples of Christ,
-in the time of Aruiragus, then governor here under the Roman emperor;
-after which time, Lucius, king of the Britaines, sent his ambassadors,
-Eluanus and Meduvanus, two men learned in the Scriptures, with letters
-to Eleutherius,[300] bishop of Rome, desiring him to send some devout
-and learned men, by whose instruction he and his people might be taught
-the faith and religion of Christ. Eleutherius baptised those messengers,
-making Eluanus a bishop, and Meduvius a teacher, and sent over with
-them into Britain two other famous clerks, Faganus and Deruvianus, by
-whose diligence Lucius, and his people of Britaine, were instructed in
-the faith of Christ, and baptized, the temples of idols were converted
-into cathedral churches, and bishops were placed where Flammines
-before had been; at London, Yorke, and Carleon upon Uske, were placed
-archbishops, saith some. The epistle said to be sent by Eleutherius
-to king Lucius, for the establishing of the faith, ye may read in my
-_Annals_, _Summaries_, and _Chronicles_, truly translated and set down
-as mine author hath it, for some have curtailed and corrupted it, and
-then fathered it upon reverend Bede, who never wrote word thereof, or
-otherwise to that effect, more than this as followeth.
-
-In the year 156, Marcus Aurelius Verus, the fourteenth emperor after
-Augustus, governed the empire with his brother Aurelius Comodus;
-in whose time, Glutherius, a holy man, being pope of the church of
-Rome, Lucius, king of Britaines, wrote unto him, desiring that by his
-commandment he might be made Christian; which his request was granted
-him; whereby the Britaines receiving then the faith, kept it sound and
-undefiled in rest and peace until Dioclesian the emperor's time. Thus
-far Bede, which may suffice to prove the Christian faith there to be
-received here. And now of the London bishops as I find them.
-
-There remaineth in the parish church of St. Peter upon Cornhill in
-London a table, wherein is written, that Lucius founded the same church
-to be an archbishop's see, and metropolitan or chief church of his
-kingdom, and that it so endured the space of four hundred years, until
-the coming of Augustine the monk, and others, from Rome, in the reign
-of the Saxons. The archbishops' names I find only to be set down by
-Joceline of Furnes, in his book of British bishops, and not elsewhere.
-Thean (saith he) was the first archbishop of London, in the time of
-Lucius, who built the said church of St. Peter, in a place called
-Cornhill in London, by the aid of Ciran, chief butler to King Lucius.
-
-2. Eluanus was the second, and he built a library to the same church
-adjoining, and converted many of the Druids (learned men in the Pagan
-law) to the Christian faith.
-
-3. Cadar was the third; then followed,
-
-4. Obinus.
-
-5. Conan.
-
-6. Paludius.
-
-7. Stephen.
-
-8. Iltute.
-
-9. Dedwin.
-
-10. Thedred.
-
-11. Hillary.
-
-12. Guidelium.
-
-13. Vodimus, slain by the Saxons.
-
-14. Theanus, the fourteenth, fled with the Britaines into Wales, about
-the year of Christ 587.
-
-Thus much out of Joceline of the archbishops; the credit whereof I leave
-to the judgment of the learned; for I read of a bishop of London (not
-before named) in the year of Christ 326, to be present at the second
-council, holden at Arles, in the time of Constantine the Great, who
-subscribed thereunto in these words: _Ex provinciae Britaniae Civitate
-Londiniensi Restitutus Episcopus_, as plainly appeareth in the first
-tome of the councils, he writeth not himself archbishop, and therefore
-maketh the matter of archbishops doubtful, or rather, overthroweth that
-opinion.
-
-The Saxons being pagans, having chased the Britons, with the Christian
-preachers, into the mountains of Wales and Cornewall; and having divided
-this kingdom of the Britons amongst themselves, at the length, to wit,
-in the year 596, Pope Gregory, moved of a godly instinction (sayeth
-Bede), in the 147th year after the arrival of the Angles or Saxons in
-Britaine, sent Augustine, Miletus, Justus, and John, with other monks,
-to preach the Gospel to the said nation of the Angles: these landed
-in the isle of Thanet, and were first received by Ethelbert, king of
-Kent, whom they converted to the faith of Christ, with divers other of
-his people, in the 34th year of his reign, which Ethelbert gave unto
-Augustine the city of Canterbury.
-
-This Augustine, in the year of Christ 604, consecrated Miletus and
-Justus bishops, appointing Miletus to preach unto the East Saxons, whose
-chief city was London; and there King Sebert, nephew to Ethelbert, by
-preaching of Miletus, received the Word of Life: and then Ethelbert king
-of Kent, built in the city of London St. Paul's church, wherein Miletus
-began to be bishop in the year 619, and sat five years. Ethelbert, by
-his charter, gave lands to this church of St. Paul, so did other kings
-after him. King Sebert, through the good life, and like preaching of
-Miletus, having received baptism, to show himself a Christian, built a
-church to the honour of God and St. Peter, on the west side of London,
-which church is called Westminster; but the successors of Sebert being
-pagans, expelled Miletus out of their kingdoms.
-
-Justus, the second bishop for a time, and then Miletus again; after
-whose decease the seat was void for a time. At length Sigebert, son to
-Sigebert, brother to Sebert, ruled in Essex; he became a Christian,
-and took to him a holy man named Cedde, or Chadde, who won many by
-preaching, and good life, to the Christian religion.
-
-Cedde, or Chad, was by Finan consecrated bishop of the East Saxons, and
-he ordered priests and deacons in all the parts of Essex, but especially
-at Ithancaster and Tilberie.
-
-This city of Ithancaster (saith Raph Cogshall) stood on the bank of the
-river Pante, that runneth by Maldun, in the hundred of Danesey, but now
-is drowned in Pante, so that nothing remaineth but the ruin of the city
-in the river Tilberie (both the west and east) standeth on the Thames
-side, nigh over against Gravesend.
-
-Wina, expelled from the church of Winchester by Cenewalche the king, was
-adopted to be the fourth bishop of London, in the reign of Wolferus king
-of Mercia, and sat nine years.
-
-Erkenwalde, born in the castle or town of Stallingborough in Lindsey,
-first abbot of Crotesey, was by Theodore archbishop of Canterbury
-appointed to be bishop of the East Saxons, in the city of London. This
-Erkenwalde, in the year of Christ 677, before he was made bishop, had
-built two monasteries, one for himself, being a monk, in the isle of
-Crote in Surrey, by the river of Thames, and another for his sister
-Edilburge, being a nun, in a certain place called Berching in Essex;
-he deceased at Berching in the year 697, and was then buried in Paul's
-church, and translated into the new church of St. Paul in the year 1148.
-
-Waldhere was bishop of London. Sebba king of the East Saxons at his
-hands received the habit of monk, for at that time there were monks
-in Paul's church, as writeth Radulphus de Diceto, and others. To this
-bishop he brought a great sum of money, to be bestowed and given to the
-poor, reserving nothing to himself, but rather desired to remain poor
-in goods as in spirit, for the kingdom of heaven. When he had reigned
-thirty years he deceased at Paul's, and was there buried, and lieth now
-in a coffin of stone, on the north side of the aisle next the choir.
-
-Ingwaldus bishop of London was at the consecration of Tatwine archbishop
-of Canterbury; he confirmed the foundation of Crowland in the year 716,
-saith Ingulfus, and deceased in the year 744, as saith Hoveden.
-
-746. Engulfe bishop of London.
-
-754. Wichet, or Wigerus, bishop of London.
-
-761. Eaderightus, or Edbrithe, bishop of London.
-
-768. Eadgain, or Eadgarus, bishop of London.
-
-773. Kenewallth bishop of London.
-
-784. Eadbaldus bishop of London.
-
-795. Heatbright bishop of London, deceased 802, saith Hoveden.
-
-813. Osmond bishop of London; he was witness to a charter made to
-Crowland in the year 833, saith Ingulphus.
-
-835. Ethelmothe bishop of London.
-
-838. Elbertus, or Celbertus, bishop of London.
-
-841. Caulfe bishop of London.
-
-850. Swithulfus bishop of London; he likewise was witness to a charter
-of Crowland 851.
-
-860. Edstanus bishop of London; witness to a charter to Crowland 860.
-
-870. Ulsius bishop of London.
-
-878. Ethelwardus bishop of London.
-
-886. Elstanus bishop of London, died in the year 900, saith Asser; and
-all these, saith the author of _Flores Historiarum_, were buried in the
-old church of St. Paul, but there remaineth now no memory of them.
-
-900. Theodricus bishop of London; this man confirmed King Edred's
-charter made to Winchester in the year 947, whereby it seemeth that he
-was bishop of London of a later time than is here placed.
-
-922. Welstanus bishop of London.
-
-941. Brithelme bishop of London.
-
-958. Dunstanus, abbot of Glastonberie, then bishop of Worcester, and
-then bishop of London; he was afterwards translated to Canterbury 960.
-
-960. Ealfstanus bishop of London; the 28th in number.
-
-981. Edgare bishop of London; he confirmed the grants made to Winchester
-and to Crowland 966, and again to Crowland 970, the charter of Ethelred,
-concerning Ulfrunhampton, 996.
-
-1004. Elphinus bishop of London.
-
-1010. Alwinus bishop of London; he was sent into Normandy in the year
-1013, saith Asser.
-
-1044. Robert, a monk of Gemerisins in Normandy, bishop of London seven
-years, afterwards translated from London to Canterbury.
-
-1050. Specgasius, elected, but rejected by the king.
-
-1051. William, a Norman chaplain to Edward the Confessor, was made
-bishop of London 1051, sate 17 years, and deceased 1070. He obtained of
-William the Conqueror the charter of liberties for the city of London,
-as I have set down in my _Summary_, and appeareth by his epitaph in
-Paul's church. 1070. Hugh de Orwell bishop of London; he died of a
-leprosy when he had sitten fifteen years.
-
-1085. Maurice bishop of London; in whose time, to wit, in the year
-1086, the church of St. Paul was burnt, with the most part of this city;
-and therefore he laid the foundation of a new large church; and having
-sat twenty-two years he deceased 1107, saith Paris.
-
-1108. Richard Beame, or Beamor, bishop of London, did wonderfully
-increase the work of this church begun, purchasing the streets and lanes
-adjoining with his own money; and he founded the monastery of St. Osyth
-in Essex. He sat bishop nineteen years, and deceased 1127.
-
-1127. Gilbertus Universalis, a canon of Lyons, elected by Henry I.; he
-deceased 1141, when he had sat fourteen years.
-
-1142. Robert de Segillo, a monk of Reading, whom Mawde the empress made
-bishop of London, where he sat eleven years. Geffrey de Magnavile took
-him prisoner at Fulham, and he deceased 1152.
-
-1153. Richard Beames, archdeacon of Essex, bishop of London ten years,
-who deceased 1162.
-
-1163. Gilbert Foliot, bishop of Hereford, from whence translated to
-London, sat twenty-three years, and deceased 1186.
-
-1189. Richard Fitz Nele, the king's treasurer, archdeacon of Essex,
-elected bishop of London at Pipwel, 1189. He sate nine years, and
-deceased 1198. This man also took great pains about the building of
-Paul's church, and raised many other goodly buildings in his diocese.
-
-1199. William S. Mary Church, a Norman, bishop of London, who was one
-of the three bishops that, by the pope's commandment, executed his
-interdiction, or curse, upon the whole realm of England; but he was
-forced, with the other bishops, to flee the realm in 1208; and his
-castle at Stratford in Essex was by commandment of King John overthrown,
-1210. This William, in company of the archbishop of Canterburie, and of
-the bishop of Elie, went to Rome, and there complained against the king,
-1212, and returned, so as in the year 1215 King John, in the church of
-St. Paul, at the hands of this William, took upon him the cross for the
-Holy Land. He resigned his bishoprick of his own voluntary in the year
-1221, saith Cogshall.
-
-1221. Eustachius de Fauconbridge, treasurer of the exchequer (saith
-Paris), chancellor of the exchequer (saith Textor and Cogshall), bishop
-of London, 1223, whilst at Chelmesforde he was giving holy orders, a
-great tempest of wind and rain annoyed so many as came thither, whereof
-it was gathered how highly God was displeased with such as came to
-receive orders, to the end that they might live a more easy life of the
-stipend appointed to the churchmen, giving themselves to banquetting;
-and so with unclean and filthy bodies (but more unclean souls) presume
-to minister unto God, the author of purity and cleanness. Falcatius de
-Brent was delivered to his custody in the year 1224. This Eustachius
-deceased in the year 1228, and was buried in Paul's church, in the south
-side, without, or above, the choir.
-
-1229. Roger Niger, archdeacon of Colchester, made bishop of London. In
-the year 1230 (saith Paris), upon the feast day of the Conversion of St.
-Paul, when he was at mass in the cathedral church of St. Paul, a great
-multitude of people being there present, suddenly the weather waxed
-dark, so as one could scantly see another, and a horrible thunder-clap
-lighted on the church, which so shook it, that it was like to have
-fallen, and therewithal out of a dark cloud proceeded a flash of
-lightning, that all the church seemed to be on fire, whereupon such a
-stench ensued, that all men thought they should have died; thousands of
-men and women ran out of the church, and being astonied, fell upon the
-ground void of all sense and understanding; none of all the multitude
-tarried in the church save the bishop and one deacon, which stood still
-before the high altar, awaiting the will of God. When the air was
-cleansed, the multitude returned into the church, and the bishop ended
-the service.
-
-This Roger Niger is commended to have been a man of worthy life,
-excellently well-learned, a notable preacher, pleasant in talk, mild
-of countenance, and liberal at his table. He admonished the usurers of
-his time to leave such enormities as they tendered the salvation of
-their souls, and to do penance for that they had committed. But when
-he saw they laughed him to scorn, and also threatened him, the bishop
-generally excommunicated and accursed all such, and commanded straitly
-that such usurers should depart farther from the city of London, which
-hither towards had been ignorant of such mischief and wickedness, least
-his diocese should be infected therewithal. He fell sick and died at his
-manor of Bishops hall, in the lordship and parish of Stebunheth, in the
-year 1241, and was buried in Paul's church, on the north side of the
-presbytery, in a fair tomb, coped, of grey marble.
-
-1241. Fulco Basset, dean of Yorke, by the death of Gilbert Basset,
-possessed his lands, and was then made bishop of London, deceased on the
-21st of May, in the year 1259, as saith John Textor, and was buried in
-Paul's church.
-
-1259. Henry Wingham, chancellor of England, made bishop of London,
-deceased in the year 1262, saith Textor, and was buried in Paul's
-church, on the south side, without or above the choir, in a marble
-monument, close at the head of Fauconbridge.
-
-1262. Richard Talbot, bishop of London, straightways after his
-consecration deceased, saith Eversden.
-
-1262. Henry Sandwich, bishop of London, deceased in the year 1273, the
-same author affirmeth.
-
-1273. John Cheshul, dean of Paul's, treasurer of the Exchequer, and
-keeper of the great seal, was bishop of London, and deceased in the year
-1279, saith Eversden.
-
-1280. Fulco Lovel, archdeacon of Colchester, elected bishop of London,
-but refused that place.
-
-1280. Richard Gravesend, archdeacon of Northampton, bishop of London.
-It appeareth by the charter-warren granted to this bishop, that in his
-time there were two woods in the parish of Stebunhith pertaining to the
-said bishop. I have since I kept house for myself known the one of them
-by Bishops hall; but now they are both made plain of wood, and not to
-be discerned from other grounds. Some have fabuled that this Richard
-Gravesend, bishop of London, in the year 1392, the 16th of Richard II.,
-purchased the charter of liberties to this city; which thing hath no
-possibility of truth, as I have proved, for he deceased in the year
-1303, almost ninety years before that time.
-
-1307. Raph Baldocke, dean of Paul's, bishop of London, consecrated
-at Lyons by Peter, bishop of Alba, in the year 1307; he was a great
-furtherer of the new work of Paul's; to wit, the east end, called our
-Lady chapel, and other adjoining. This Raph deceased in the year 1313,
-and was buried in the said Lady chapel, under a flat stone.
-
-1313. Gilbert Segrave was consecrated bishop of London, and sat three
-years.
-
-1317. Richard Newport, bishop of London, sat two years, and was buried
-in Paul's church.
-
-1318. Stephen Gravesend, bishop of London, sat twenty years.
-
-1338. Richard Wentworth, bishop of London, and chancellor of England,
-and deceased the year 1339.
-
-1339. Raph Stratford, bishop of London; he purchased the piece of ground
-called No Man's land, beside Smithfield, and dedicated it to the use of
-burial, as before hath appeared. He was born at Stratford upon Avon, and
-therefore built a chapel to St. Thomas there: he sat fourteen years,
-deceased at Stebunhith.
-
-1354. Michael Norbroke, bishop of London, deceased in the year 1361,
-saith Mirimouth, sat seven years.
-
-1362. Simon Sudbery, bishop of London, sat thirteen years, translated to
-be archbishop of Canterbury in the year 1375.
-
-1375. William Courtney, translated from Hereford to the bishoprick
-of London, and after translated from thence to the archbishoprick of
-Canterbury in the year 1381.
-
-1381. Robert Breybrook, canon of Lichfield, bishop of London, made
-chancellor in the 6th of Richard II., sat bishop twenty years, and
-deceased in the year 1404: he was buried in the said Lady chapel at
-Paul's.
-
-1405. Roger Walden, treasurer of the exchequer, archbishop of
-Canterbury, was deposed, and after made bishop of London; he deceased in
-the year 1406, and was buried[301] in Paul's church, Allhallowes altar.
-
-1406. Richard Bubwith, bishop of London, treasurer of the exchequer,
-translated to Salisbury, and from thence to Bathe, and lieth buried at
-Wels.
-
-1407. Richard Clifford, removed from Worcester to London, deceased 1422,
-as saith Thomas Walsingham, and was buried in Paul's.
-
-1422. John Kempe, fellow of Martin college in Oxford, was made bishop of
-Rochester, from whence removed to Chichester, and thence to London; he
-was made the king's chancellor in the year 1425, the 4th of Henry VI.,
-and was removed from London to York in the year 1426: he sat archbishop
-there twenty-five years, and was translated to Canterbury; he was
-afterwards made cardinal in the year 1452. In the bishop of London's
-house at Fulham he received the cross, and the next day the pall, at the
-hands of Thomas Kempe, bishop of London. He deceased in the year 1454.
-
-1426. William Gray, dean of York, consecrated bishop of London, who
-founded a college at Thele in Hartfordshire, for a master and four
-canons, and made it a cell to Elsing spittle in London; it had of old
-time been a college, decayed, and therefore newly-founded. He was
-translated to Lincoln 1431.
-
-1431. Robert Fitzhugh, archdeacon of Northampton, consecrated bishop of
-London, sat five years, deceased 1435, and was buried on the south side
-of the choir of Paul's.
-
-1435. Robert Gilbert, doctor of divinity, dean of York, consecrated
-bishop of London, sat twelve years, deceased 1448.
-
-1449. Thomas Kempe, archdeacon of Richmond, consecrated bishop of London
-at York house (now Whitehall), by the hands of his uncle John Kemp,
-archbishop of York, the 8th of February, 1449; he founded a chapel of
-the Trinity in the body of St. Paul's church, on the north side; he
-sat bishop of London thirty-nine years and forty-eight days, and then
-deceased in the year 1489, was there buried.
-
-1489. John Marshal, bishop of London, deceased in the year 1493.
-
-1493. Richard Hall, bishop of London, deceased 1495, and was buried in
-the body of St. Paul's church.
-
-1496. Thomas Savage, first bishop of Rochester, then bishop of London
-five years, was translated to York 1501, where he sat archbishop seven
-years, and was there buried in the year 1507.
-
-1502. William Warrham, bishop of London, made keeper of the great seal,
-sat two years, was translated to Canterbury.
-
-1504. William Barons, bishop of London, sat ten months and eleven days,
-deceased in the year 1505.
-
-1505. Richard Fitz James, fellow of Merton college in Oxford, in the
-reign of Henry VI., was made bishop of Rochester, after bishop of
-Chichester, then bishop of London; he deceased 1521, and lieth buried
-hard beneath the north-west pillar of the steeple in St. Paul's, under a
-fair tomb of marble, over the which was built a fair chapel of timber,
-with stairs mounting thereunto: this chapel was burned with fire from
-the steeple 1561, and the tomb was taken down.
-
-1521. Cuthbert Tunstal, doctor of law, master of the rolls, lord privy
-seal, and bishop of London, was thence translated to the bishopric of
-Durham in the year 1529.
-
-1529. John Stokeley, bishop of London, sat thirteen years, deceased in
-the year 1539, and was buried in the Lady chapel in Paul's.
-
-1539. Edmond Boner, doctor of the civil law, archdeacon of Leycester,
-then bishop of Hereford, was elected to London in the year 1539, whilst
-he was beyond the seas, ambassador to King Henry VIII. On the 1st of
-September, 1549, he preached at Paul's cross; for the which sermon he
-was charged before the council of King Edward VI., by William Latimer,
-parson of St. Lawrence Poltney, and John Hooper, sometime a white monk,
-and being convented before certain commissioners at Lambith, was for his
-disobedience to the king's order, on the 20th day of the same month sent
-to the Marshalsey, and deprived from his bishopric.
-
-1550. Nicholas Ridley, bishop of Rochester, elected bishop of London,
-was installed in Paul's church on the 12th of April. This man by his
-deed, dated the twelfth day after Christmas, in the 4th year of Edward
-VI., gave to the king the manors of Branketrie and Southminster, and the
-patronage of the church of Cogshall in Essex, the manors of Stebunheth
-and Hackney, in the county of Middlesex, and the marsh of Stebunheth,
-with all and singular messuages, lands, and tenements, to the said
-manors belonging, and also the advowson of the vicarage of the parish
-church of Cogshall in Essex aforesaid; which grant was confirmed by the
-dean and chapter of Paul's, the same day and year, with exception of
-such lands in Southminster, Stebunheth, and Hackney, as only pertained
-to them. The said King Edward, by his letters patents, dated the 16th
-of April, in the said 4th year of his reign, granted to Sir Thomas
-Wentworth, Lord Wentworth, lord chamberlain of the king's household,
-for, and in consideration of his good and faithful service before done,
-a part of the late received gift, to wit, the lordships of Stebunheth
-and Hackney, with all the members and appurtenances thereunto belonging,
-in Stebunheth, Hackney way, Shoreditch, Holiwell street, Whitechappell,
-Stratford at Bow, Poplar, North street, Limehouse, Ratliffe, Cleve
-street, Brock street, Mile end, Bleten hall green, Oldford, Westheth,
-Kingsland, Shakelwell, Newinton street _alias_ Hackney street, Clopton,
-Church street, Wel street, Humbarton, Grove street, Gunston street,
-_alias_ More street, in the county of Middlesex, together with the marsh
-of Stebunhith, etc. The manor of Hackney was valued at sixty-one pounds
-nine shillings and fourpence, and the manor Stebunhith at one hundred
-and forty pounds eight shillings and eleven pence, by year, to be holden
-in chief, by the service of the twentieth part of a knight's fee. This
-bishop, Nicholas Ridley, for preaching a sermon at Paul's cross, on the
-16th of July, in the year 1553, was committed to the Tower of London,
-where he remained prisoner till the 10th of April, 1554, and was thence
-sent to Oxford, there to dispute with the divines and learned men of the
-contrary opinion; and on the 16th of October, 1555, he was burned at
-Oxford for opinions against the Romish order of sacraments, etc.
-
-1553. Edmond Boner aforesaid, being released out of the Marshalsey,
-was restored to the bishoprick of London, by Queen Mary, on the 5th
-of August, in the year 1553, and again deposed by Queen Elizabeth, in
-the month of July 1559, and was eftsoones committed to the Marshalsey,
-where he died on the 5th of September, 1569, and was at midnight buried
-amongst other prisoners in St. George's churchyard.
-
-1559. Edmond Grindal, bishop of London, being consecrated the 21st of
-December, 1559, was translated to York in the year 1570, and from thence
-removed to Canterbury in the year 1575. He died blind 1583 on the 6th of
-July, and was buried at Croydowne in Surrey.
-
-1570. Edwine Stands, being translated from Worcester to the bishoprick
-of London, in the year 1570, was thence translated to Yorke in the year
-1576, and died in the year 1588.
-
-1576. John Elmere, bishop of London, deceased in the year 1594, on the
-3rd of June at Fulham, and was buried in Paul's church, before St.
-Thomas chapel.
-
-1594. Richard Fletcher, bishop of Worcester, was on the 30th of December
-in Paul's church elected bishop of London, and deceased on the 15th of
-June, 1596: he was buried in Paul's church without any solemn funeral.
-
-1597. Richard Bancroft, doctor of divinity, consecrated at Lambeth on
-Sunday, the 8th of May, now sitteth bishop of London, in the year 1598
-being installed there.
-
-This much for the succession of the bishops of London, whose diocese
-containeth the city of London, the whole shires of Middlesex and
-Essex and part of Hartfordshire. These bishops have for assistants in
-the cathedral church of St. Paul, a dean, a chaunter, a chancellor,
-a treasurer, five archdeacons--to wit, London, Middlesex, Essex,
-Colchester, and St. Alban's, and thirty prebendaries; there appertaineth
-also to the said churches for furniture of the choir in Divine service,
-and ministration of the sacraments, a college of twelve petty canons,
-six vicars choral, and choristers, etc.
-
-This diocese is divided into parishes, every parish having its parson,
-or vicar at the least, learned men for the most part, and sufficient
-preachers, to instruct the people. There were in this city, and within
-the suburbs thereof, in the reign of Henry II. (as writeth Fitz
-Stephens), thirteen great conventual churches, besides the lesser sort
-called parish churches, to the number of one hundred and twenty-six,
-all which conventual churches, and some others since that time founded,
-are now suppressed and gone, except the cathedral church of St. Paul in
-London, and the college of St. Peter at Westminster; of all which parish
-churches, though I have spoken, yet for more ease to the reader I will
-here again set them down in manner of a table, not by order of alphabet,
-but as they be placed in the wards and suburbs.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[300] "Eleutherius died in the yeare 186, when he had sitten bishop 15
-yeares."--_Stow._
-
-[301] "At Bartholomew's priory in Smithfield."--_1st edition_, p. 304.
-
-
-
-
-PARISH CHURCHES
-
-
-1. _In Portsoken ward, parish churches, three._
-
- The hospital of St. Katherine, serveth for that liberty.
- Trinity, in the Minories, for precinct thereof.
- St. Bottolphe, by Aldegate, the only parish church for that ward.
-
-2. _In Tower street ward, four._
-
- In the Tower, St. Peter, for the inhabitants there.
- Alhallowes Barking, by the Tower.
- St. Olave, in Hart street.
- St. Dunstone in the East.
-
-3. _In Aldgate ward, three._
-
- St. Katheren Christ's church.
- St. Andrewes Undershafte.
- St. Katheren Colman church.
-
-4. _In Lime street ward none. There was St. Mary at the Axe, and St.
-Augustine in the Wall, both suppressed and united, the one to Alhallowes
-in the Wall in Brode street ward, the other to St. Andrewe Undershaft in
-Lime street ward._
-
-5. _In Bishopsgate ward, three._
-
- St. Bottolphes, without Bishopsgate.
- St. Ethelburge, within the gate.
- St. Helens', adjoining the nuns' priory.
-
-6. _In Brode street ward, six._
-
- Alhallowes by the Wall.
- St. Peter's the Poor.
- St. Martin's Oteswitche.
- St. Benet Fynke.
- St. Bartilmew, by the Exchange.
- St. Christopher, by the Stocks' market.
-
-7. _In Cornhill ward, two._
-
- St. Peter, upon Cornehill.
- St. Michaell, upon Cornehill.
-
-8. _In Langborne ward, seven._
-
- St. Gabriel Fenchurch.
- St. Dyones Backchurch.
- Alhallowes, in Lombard street.
- St. Edmond, in Lombard street.
- Alhallowes Staning, at Mart lane end.
- St. Nicholas Acon, in Lombard street.
- St. Mary Wolnoth, in Lombard street.
-
-9. _In Billingsgate ward, five._
-
- St. Buttolph, by Billingsgate.
- St. Mary, on the hill.
- St. Margaret Pattens.
- St. Andrew Hubert, in Eastcheape.
- St. George, in Buttolph lane.
-
-10. _In Bridge ward within, four._
-
- St. Magnus, at the bridge foot.
- St. Margaret, Bridge street.
- St. Leonard Milkchurch, Fish street hill.
- St. Benet Grasse church.
-
-11. _In Candlewike street ward, five._
-
- St. Clement's, Eastcheape.
- St. Mary Abchurch.
- St. Michael, in Crooked lane, sometime a college.
- St. Martin's Orgars.
- St. Laurence Pountney, sometime a college.
-
-12. _In Walbrooke ward, five._
-
- St. Swithen, by London stone.
- St. Mary Woolchurch.
- St. Stephen, by Walbrooke.
- St. John, upon Walbrooke.
- St. Mary Bothaw.
-
-13. _In Downegate ward, two._
-
- Alhallowes, Hay wharf, in the Roperie.
- Alhallowes the Less, in the Roperie.
-
-14. _In the Vintry ward, four._
-
- St. Michael Paternoster, in the Royall, sometime a college.
- St. Thomas Apostles.
- St. Martin, in the Vintrie.
- St. James, in Garlicke hith.
-
-15. _In Cordwainer street ward, three._
-
- St. Anthonies, in Budge row.
- Alde Mary church, new Mary church, or Mary le Bow.
-
-16. _In Cheap ward, seven, and a chapel._
-
- St. Benet Sorhoge, or Syth.
- St. Pancreate, by Sopar's lane.
- St. Mildred, in the Poultrie.
- St. Mary Colchurch.
- St. Martin's Pomerie, in Ironmonger lane.
- Alhallowes, Honie lane.
- St. Laurence, in the Jury.
- The Chapel in Guildhall, sometime a college.
-
-17. _In Coleman street ward, three._
-
- St. Olave Upwell, in the Old Jurie.
- St. Margaret, in Lothburie.
- St. Stephen, in Coleman street.
-
-18. _In Bassings hall ward, one._
-
- St. Michael, at Bassings hall.
-
-19. _In Cripplegate ward, six._
-
- St. Mary Aldermanburie.
- St. Alphage, sometime an hospital of Elsing.
- St. Mary Magdalen, in Milk street.
- St. Albon's, in Wood street.
- St. Michael, in Hugen lane.
- St. Giles, without Cripplegate.
-
-20. _In Aldersgate ward, six._
-
- St. John Zachery.
- St. Mary Staning.
- St. Olave, in Silver street.
- St. Leonard, in Foster Lane.
- St. Anne, by Aldersgate.
- St. Buttolph, without Aldgate.
-
-21. _In Faringdon ward within, the cathedral church of St. Paule, and
-parish churches nine._
-
- St. Peter's, at the Cross in Cheape.
- St. Fauster, in Fauster lane.
- Christ church, made a parish church of the Gray Friers
- church, and of two parish churches, St. Nicholas
- and St. Ewin, and also an hospital for poor children.
- St. Mathew, in Fryday street.
- St. Augustine, by Paules gate.
- St. Faith, under Paules church.
- St. Martin's, at Ludgate.
- St. Anne, at the Blacke Friers.
- St. Michael at Corne, by Paules.
- Chapel of St. James, by Cripplegate.
-
-22. _In Bread Street ward, four._
-
- Alhallowes, in Bread street.
- St. Mildred's, in Bread street.
- St. John Evangelist, in Fryday street.
- St. Margaret Moses, in Fryday street.
-
-23. _In Queene hithe ward, seven._
-
- St. Trinitie, in Trinity lane.
- St. Nicholas, Cold abbey.
- St. Nicholas, Olave.
- St. Mary Mounthaunt.
- St. Michael, at Queene hithe.
- St. Mary, at Sommers hithe.
- St. Peter's, at Paules wharf.
-
-24. _In Castle Baynard's ward, four._
-
- St. Benet Hude, or hith, by Paules wharf.
- St. Andrewe, by the Wardrobe.
- St. Mary Magdalen, in Old Fish street.
- St. Gregorie, by Paules church
-
-25. _In Faringdon ward without, seven._
-
- St. Sepulcher's, without Newgate.
- St. Andrew, in Oldborne.
- St. Dunstone in the West.
- St. Bartlemew, by the priory.
- St. Bartlemew, the hospital.
- St. Briget, or Brides, in Fleet street.
- St. Parnell, in the Temple, for the students there.
-
-26. _In the borough of Southwark, and Bridge ward without, four._
-
- St. Saviour's in Southwark, made of }
- twain, viz., St. Mary Magdalen, and } Diocese
- St. Margaret. } of
- St. George the Martyr. } Winchester.
- St. Thomas, the hospital. }
- St. Olave, in Southwark. }
-
-Thus have ye in the twenty-six wards of London and borough of Southwark
-parish churches to the number of one hundred and fourteen.
-
-_And in the suburbs adjoining, parish churches nine, as followeth_:--
-
- St. Mary Magdalen, at Bermondsey, in the borough of
- Southwark, diocese of Winton.
- St. Mary Matfellon, Whitechapel.
- St. Leonard, Shoreditch.
- St. John Baptist, Clearken well.
- St. Giles in the Field, sometime an hospital.
-
-_In the duchy of Lancaster_:
-
- St. Clement Danes, without Temple bar.
- St. John Baptist, Savoy, an hospital.
-
-_In the city of Westminster, that liberty, as followeth_:
-
- The college of St. Peter, called Westminster.
-
-_Parish churches twain_:
-
- St. Margaret, a parish church, by Westminster.
- St. Martin in the Field, by Charing cross.
-
-Thus have ye in the wards of London, and in the suburbs of the same
-city, the borough of Southwark, and the city of Westminster, a cathedral
-church of St. Paul, a collegiate church of St. Peter in Westminster, and
-parish churches one hundred and twenty-three.
-
-
-
-
-HOSPITALS IN THIS CITY, AND SUBURBS THEREOF, THAT HAVE BEEN OF OLD TIME,
-AND NOW PRESENTLY ARE, I READ OF THESE AS FOLLOWETH:
-
-
-Hospital of St. Mary, in the parish of Barking church, that was provided
-for poor priests and others, men and women in the city of London, that
-were fallen into frenzy or loss of their memory, until such time as they
-should recover, was since suppressed and given to the hospital of St.
-Katherine, by the Tower.
-
-St. Anthonies, an hospital of thirteen poor men, and college, with a
-free school for poor men's children, founded by citizens of London,
-lately by John Tate, first a brewer and then a mercer, in the ward of
-Broad street, suppressed in the reign of Edward VI., the school in some
-sort remaining, but sore decayed.
-
-St. Bartlemew, in Smithfield, an hospital of great receipt and relief
-for the poor, was suppressed by Henry VIII., and again by him given to
-the city, and is endowed by the citizens' benevolence.
-
-St. Giles in the Fields was an hospital for leprous people out of the
-city of London and shire of Middlesex, founded by Matilde the queen,
-wife to Henry I., and suppressed by King Henry VIII.
-
-St. John of Jerusalem, by West Smithfield, an hospital of the Knights of
-the Rhodes, for maintenance of soldiers against the Turks and infidels,
-was suppressed by King Henry VIII.
-
-St. James in the Field was an hospital for leprous virgins of the city
-of London, founded by citizens for that purpose, and suppressed by King
-Henry VIII.
-
-St. John, at Savoy, an hospital for relief of one hundred poor people,
-founded by Henry VII., suppressed by Edward VI.: again new founded,
-endowed, and furnished by Queen Mary, and so remaineth.
-
-St. Katherine, by the Tower of London, an hospital, with a master,
-brethren, and sisters, and alms women, founded by Matilde, wife to King
-Stephen; not suppressed, but in force as before.
-
-St. Mary within Cripplegate, an hospital founded by William Elsing, for
-a hundred blind people of the city, was suppressed by King Henry VIII.
-
-St. Mary Bethelem, without Bishopsgate, was an hospital, founded
-by Simon Fitzmary, a citizen of London, to have been a priory, and
-remaineth for lunatic people, being suppressed and given to Christ's
-hospital.
-
-St. Mary, without Bishopsgate, was an hospital and priory, called St.
-Mary Spittle, founded by a citizen of London for relief of the poor,
-with provision of one hundred and eighty beds there for the poor: it was
-suppressed in the reign of King Henry VIII.
-
-St. Mary Rouncevall, by Charing cross, was an hospital suppressed with
-the priories aliens in the reign of King Henry V.; then was it made a
-brotherhood in the 15th of Edward IV., and again suppressed by King
-Edward VI.
-
-St. Thomas of Acres, in Cheape, was an hospital for a master and
-brethren (in the record called Militia); it was surrendered and sold to
-the mercers.
-
-St. Thomas, in Southwark, being an hospital of great receipt for the
-poor, was suppressed, but again newly founded and endowed by the
-benevolence and charity of the citizens of London.
-
-An hospital there was without Aldersgate, a cell to the house of Cluny,
-of the French order, suppressed by King Henry V.
-
-An hospital without Cripplegate, also a like cell to the said house of
-Cluny, suppressed by King Henry V.
-
-A third hospital in Oldborne, being also a cell to the said house of
-Cluny, suppressed by King Henry V.
-
-The hospital, or alms-house, called God's house, for thirteen poor
-men, with a college, called Whitington college, founded by Richard
-Whitington, mercer, and suppressed; but the poor remain, and are paid
-their allowance by the mercers.
-
-Christ's hospital, in Newgate market, of a new foundation in the Grey
-Fryers church by King Henry VIII.: poor fatherless children be there
-brought up and nourished at the charges of the citizens.
-
-Bridewell, now an hospital (or house of correction), founded by King
-Edward VI., to be a workhouse for the poor and idle persons of the
-city, wherein a great number of vagrant persons be now set a-work,
-and relieved at the charges of the citizens. Of all these hospitals,
-being twenty in number, you may read before in their several places,
-as also of good and charitable provisions made for the poor by sundry
-well-disposed citizens.
-
-
-
-
-NOW OF LEPROSE PEOPLE, AND LAZAR HOUSES
-
-
-It is to be observed that leprous persons were always, for avoiding the
-danger of infection, to be separated from the sound, etc.; God himself
-commanding to put out of the host every leper.[302] Whereupon I read,
-that in a provincial synod holden at Westminster by Hubert, archbishop
-of Canterbury, in the year of Christ 1200, the 2nd of King John, it
-was decreed, according to the institution of the Lateran council, that
-when so many leprous people were assembled, that might be able to build
-a church, with a churchyard, for themselves, and to have one especial
-priest of their own, that they should be permitted to have the same
-without contradiction, so they be not injurious to the old churches,
-by that which was granted to them for pity's sake. And further, it was
-decreed that they be not compelled to give any tithes of their gardens
-or increase of cattle.
-
-I have moreover heard, that there is a writ in our law, _de leproso
-amovendo_; and I have read that King Edward III., in the 20th year of
-his reign, gave commandment to the mayor and sheriffs of London, to make
-proclamation in every ward of the city and suburbs, that all leprous
-persons inhabiting there should avoid within fifteen days next, and
-that no man suffer any such leprous person to abide within his house,
-upon pain to forfeit his said house, and to incur the king's further
-displeasure; and that they should cause the said lepers to be removed
-into some out places of the fields, from the haunt or company of sound
-people: whereupon certain lazar-houses, as may be supposed, were then
-built without the city some good distance; to wit, the Locke without
-Southwark in Kent street; one other betwixt the Miles end and Stratford,
-Bow; one other at Kingsland, betwixt Shoreditch and Stoke Newington; and
-another at Knightes bridge, west from Charing cross. These four I have
-noted to be erected for the receipt of leprous people sent out of the
-city. At that time, also, the citizens required of the guardian of St.
-Giles' hospital to take from them, and to keep continually, the number
-of fourteen persons leprous, according to the foundation of Matilde the
-queen, which was for leprous persons of the city of London and the shire
-of Middlesex, which was granted. More, the wardens, or keepers of the
-ports, gates, or posterns of this city, were sworn in the mayor's court
-before the recorder, etc., that they should well and faithfully keep the
-same ports and posterns, and not to suffer any leprous person to enter
-the said city.
-
-John Gardener, porter of the postern by the Tower, his oath before
-the mayor and recorder of London, on Monday, after the feast of St.
-Bartlemew, the 49th of Edward III.: That the gates and postern be well
-and faithfully kept in his office and baylywicke, and that he should
-not suffer any lepers or leper to enter the city, or to remain in the
-suburbs; and if any leper or lepers force themselves to enter by his
-gates or postern, he to bind them fast to horses, and send them to be
-examined of the superiors, etc.
-
-Finally, I read that one William Pole, yeoman of the crown to King
-Edward IV., being stricken with a leprosy, was also desirous to build
-an hospital, with a chapel, to the honour of God and St. Anthony, for
-the relief and harbouring of such leprous persons as were destitute in
-the kingdom, to the end they should not be offensive to other in their
-passing to and fro: for the which cause Edward IV. did by his charter,
-dated the 12th of his reign, give unto the said William for ever a
-certain parcel of his land lying in his highway of Highgate and Haloway,
-within the county of Middlesex, containing sixty feet in length and
-thirty-four in breadth.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[302] "Leviticus 13. Numbers 5. Leprose persons to be separated from the
-sound."--_Stow._
-
-
-
-
-THE TEMPORAL GOVERNMENT OF THIS CITY, SOMEWHAT IN BRIEF MANNER
-
-
-This city of London, being under the government of the Britons, Romans,
-and Saxons, the most ancient and famous city of the whole realm, was at
-length destroyed by the Danes, and left desolate, as may appear by our
-histories. But Aelfred, king of the West Saxons, having brought this
-whole realm (from many parts) into one monarchy, honourably repaired
-this city, and made it again habitable, and then committed the custody
-thereof to his son-in-law Adhered, earl of Mercia; after whose decease
-the city, with all other possessions pertaining to the said earl,
-returned to King Edward, surnamed the Elder, etc.: and so remained in
-the king's hands, being governed under him by portgraves (or portreves),
-which name is compounded of the two Saxon words, _porte_ and _gerefe_,
-or _reve_. Porte betokeneth a town, and gerefe signifieth a guardian,
-ruler, or keeper of the town.
-
-These governors of old time (saith Robert Fabian), with the laws and
-customs then used within this city, were registered in a book called the
-Dooms' day, written in the Saxon tongue; but of later days, when the
-said laws and customs were changed, and for that also the said book was
-of a small hand, sore defaced, and hard to be read or understood, it was
-less set by, so that it was embezzled and lost. Thus far Fabian.
-
-Notwithstanding, I have found, by search of divers old registers and
-other records abroad, namely, in a book sometime appertaining to the
-monastery of St. Alban's, of the portgraves, and other governors of this
-city, as followeth:
-
-First, that in the reign of King Edward, the last before the Conquest,
-Wolfegare was portgrave, as may appear by the charter of the same king,
-in these words: "Edward, king, greeteth Alfward, bishop, and Wolfegare,
-my portgrave, and all the burgesses in London." And afterward that, in
-another charter, "King Edward greeteth William, bishop, and Sweetman, my
-portgrave." And after, that in another charter to the abbey of Chertsey,
-to William, bishop, and Leofstane and Alsy, portgraves. In the reign of
-William the Conqueror, William, bishop of London, procured of the said
-Conqueror his charter of liberties, to the same William, bishop, and
-Godfrey, portgrave, in Saxon tongue, and corrected in English thus:
-
-"William, king, greet William, bishop, and Godfrey, portgrave, and all
-the burgeses within London, French and English. And I graunt that they
-be all their law worthy that they were in Edward's dayes the king. And I
-will that each child bee his father's heire. And I will not suffer that
-any man do you wrong, and God you keepe." And then in the reign of the
-said Conqueror and of William Rufus, Godfrey de Magnavile was portgrave
-(or sheriff), as may appear by their charters, and Richard de Par was
-provost.
-
-In the reign of King Henry I., Hugh Buche was portgrave, and Leofstanus,
-goldsmith, provost, buried at Bermondsey.
-
-After them Aubrey de Vere was portgrave, and Robert Bar Querel provost.
-This Aubrey de Vere was slain in the reign of King Stephen. It is to be
-noted, also, that King Henry I. granted to the citizens of London the
-shrivewick thereof, and of Middlesex, as in another place is showed.
-
-In the reign of King Stephen, Gilbert Becket was portgrave, and Andrew
-Buchevet provost.
-
-After him, Godfrey Magnavile, the son of William, the son of Godfrey
-Magnavile, by the gift of Maude, the empress, was portgrave, or sheriff
-of London and Middlesex, for the yearly farm of three hundred pounds, as
-appeareth by the charter.
-
-In the time of King Henry II., Peter Fitzwalter was portgrave; after
-him John Fitznigel was portgrave; after him Ernulfus Buchel became
-portgrave; and after him William Fitz Isabel. These portgraves are also
-in divers records called vice-counties, vicounties, or sheriffs,[303]
-as being under an earl; for that they then, as since, used that office
-as the sheriffs of London do till this day. Some authors do call them
-domesmen, aldermen, or judges of the king's court,
-
-William Fitz Stephen, noting the estate of this city, and government
-thereof in his time, under the reign of King Stephen and of Henry II.,
-hath these words:
-
-"This city (saith he), even as Rome, is divided into wards; it hath
-yearly sheriffs instead of consuls; it hath the dignity of senators and
-aldermen; it hath under officers, and, according to the quality of laws,
-it hath several courts and general assemblies upon appointed days." Thus
-much for the antiquity of sheriffs, and also of aldermen, in several
-wards of this city, may suffice. And now for the name of bailiffs, and
-after that of mayors, as followeth:
-
-In the first year of King Richard I., the citizens of London obtained
-to be governed by two bailiffs, which bailiffs are in divers ancient
-deeds called sheriffs, according to the speech of the law, which called
-the shire Balliva, for that they, like as the portgraves, used the same
-office of shrivewicke, for the which the city paid to fee farm three
-hundred pounds yearly as before, since the reign of Henry I., which also
-is yet paid by the city into the Exchequer until this day.
-
-They also obtained to have a mayor, to be their principal governor and
-lieutenant of the city, as of the king's chamber.
-
-1180. The names of the first bailiffs, or officers, entering into
-their office at the feast of St. Michael the Archangel, in the year of
-Christ 1189, were named Henry Cornhill and Richard Reynere, bailiffs or
-sheriffs.
-
-Their first mayor was Henry Fitz Alwin Fitz Liefstane, goldsmith,
-appointed by the said king, and continued mayor from the 1st of Richard
-I. until the 15th of King John, which was twenty-four years and more.
-
-1190. The 2nd of Richard I., sheriffs, John Herlion, Roger Duke; mayor,
-Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1191. The 3rd, sheriffs, William Haverill, John Bucknote; mayor, Henry
-Fitz Alwin.
-
-1192. The 4th, Nicholas Duke, Peter Newlay; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1193. The 5th, Roger Duke, Richard Fitz Alwin; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1194. The 6th, William Fitz Isabel, William Fitz Arnold; mayor, Henry
-Fitz Alwin.
-
-1195. The 7th, Robert Besaunt, John de Josue; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1196. The 8th, Gerard de Anteloche, Robert Durant; mayor, Henry Fitz
-Alwin.
-
-1197. The 9th, Roger Blunt, Nicholas Ducket; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1198. The 10th, Constantine Fitz Arnold, Richard de Beaco; mayor, Henry
-Fitz Alwin.
-
- * * * * *
-
-King John began his reign the 6th of April, 1199.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1199. The 1st of King John, sheriffs, Arnold Fitz Arnold, Richard Fitz
-Bartilmew; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-King John granted the sheriffwicke of London and Middlesex to the
-citizens thereof, as King Henry I. before had done, for the sum of three
-hundred pounds yearly. Also he gave them authority to choose and deprive
-their sheriffs at their pleasure.
-
-1200. The 2nd, sheriffs, Roger Dorsit, James Bartilmew; mayor, Henry
-Fitz Alwin.
-
-1201. The 3rd, Walter Fitz Alis, Simon de Aldermanbury; mayor, Henry
-Fitz Alwin.
-
-1202. The 4th, Norman Blundel, John de Glie; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1203. The 5th, Walter Browne, William Chamberlain; mayor, Henry Fitz
-Alwin.
-
-Walter Brune, and Rose his wife, founded the hospital of St. Mary
-without Bishopsgate, commonly called St. Mary Spittle.
-
-1204. The 6th, Thomas Haverel, Hamond Brond; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1205. The 7th, John Walgrave, Richard Winchester; mayor, Henry Fitz
-Alwin.
-
-1206. The 8th, John Holland, Edmond Fitz Gerard; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1207. The 9th, Roger Winchester, Edmond Hardle; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1208. The 10th, Peter Duke, Thomas Nele; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-The king, by his letters patents, granted to the citizens of London
-liberty and authority yearly to choose to themselves a mayor.
-
-1209. The 11th, Peter le Josue, William Blund; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1210. The 12th, Adam Whitley, Stephen le Grace; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1211. The 13th, John Fitz Peter, John Garland; mayor, Henry Fitz Alwin.
-
-1212. The 14th, Randolph Giland, Constantine Josue; mayor, Henry Fitz
-Alwin.
-
-This Henry Fitz Alwin deceased, and was buried in the priory of the Holy
-Trinity, near unto Aldgate.
-
-1213. The 15th, Martin Fitz Alis, Peter Bate; mayor, Roger Fitz Alwin.
-
-This year the ditch about London was begun to be made, of two hundred
-and four feet broad, by the Londoners.
-
-1214. The 16th, Salomon Basing, Hugh Basing; mayor, Serle Mercer.
-
-1215. The 17th, John Travars, Andrew Newland; mayor, William Hardel.
-
- * * * * *
-
-King Henry III. began his reign the 19th of October, 1216.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1216. The 1st, sheriffs, Benet Senturer, William Bluntinars: mayor,
-James Alderman for part, and Salomon Basing for part.
-
-1217. The 2nd, Thomas Bokerel, Ralph Eiland; mayor, Serle Mercer.
-
-1218. The 3rd, John Viel, John le Spicer; mayor, Serle Mercer.
-
-The forest of Middlesex and the warren of Staines were this year
-disafforested.
-
-1219. The 4th, Richard Wimbledon, John Viel; mayor, Serle Mercer.
-
-1220. The 5th, Richard Renger, John Viel; mayor, Serle Mercer.
-
-1221. The 6th, Richard Renger, Thomas Lambart; mayor, Serle Mercer.
-
-1222. The 7th, Richard Renger, Thomas Lambart; mayor, Serle Mercer.
-
-Constantine Fitz Aluf raised great troubles in this city, and was hanged
-with his nephew and other.
-
-1223. The 8th, John Travars, Andrew Bokerel; mayor, Richard Renger.
-
-1224. The 9th, John Travars, Andrew Bokerel; mayor Richard Renger.
-
-The king granted to the commonalty of London to have a common seal.
-
-1225. The 10th, Roger Duke, Martin Fitz William; mayor, Richard Renger.
-
-1226. The 11th, Roger Duke, Martin Fitz William; mayor, Richard Renger.
-
-This year the king confirmed to the citizens of London free warren
-or liberty to hunt a certain circuit about the city, in the warren
-of Staines, etc. And, also, that the citizens of London should pass
-toll-free throughout all England, and that the keddles, or wears, in the
-river of Thames and Medway should be plucked up and destroyed for ever,
-etc. Patent, 16th Henry III.
-
-1227. The 12th, Stephen Bokerel, Henry Cocham; mayor, Roger Duke.
-
-The liberties and franchises of London were ratified; and the king
-granted that either sheriff should have two clerks and two sergeants,
-also that the citizens should have a common seal.
-
-1228. The 13th, Stephen Bokerell, Henry Cocham; mayor, Roger Duke.
-
-1229. The 14th, William Winchester, Robert Fitz John; mayor, Roger Duke.
-
-1230. The 15th, Richard Walter, John de Woborne; mayor, Roger Duke.
-
-1231. The 16th, Michael S. Helan, Walter de Bussell; mayor, Andrew
-Bokerel, pepperer.
-
-1232. The 17th, Henry de Edmonton, Gerard Bat; mayor, Andrew Bokerel,
-pepperer.
-
-1233. The 18th, Simon Fitzmary, Roger Blunt; mayor, Andrew Bokerel,
-pepperer.
-
-1234. The 19th, Raph Ashwye, John Norman; mayor, Andrew Bokerel,
-pepperer.
-
-1235. The 20th, Gerard Bat, Richard Hardle; mayor, Andrew Bokerel,
-pepperer.
-
-1236. The 21st, Henry Cocham, Jordan of Coventrie; mayor, Andrew
-Bokerel, pepperer.
-
-1237. The 22nd, John Toloson, Gervais the cordwainer; mayor, Andrew
-Bokerel, pepperer.
-
-1238. The 23rd, John Codras, John Withal; mayor, Richard Renger.
-
-1239. The 24th, Roger Bongey, Raph Ashwye; mayor, William Joyner.
-
-This William Joyner builded the choir of the Grey Friers church in
-London, and became a lay brother of that house.
-
-1240. The 25th, John Gisors, Michael Tony; mayor, Gerard Bat.
-
-This year aldermen of London were chosen, and changed yearly, but that
-order lasted not long. Gerard Bat was again elected mayor for that year
-to come, but the king would not admit him, being charged with taking
-money of the victuallers in the precedent year.
-
-1241. The 26th, Thomas Duresme, John Viel; mayor, Reginald Bongey.
-
-1242. The 27th, John Fitzjohn, Raph Ashwye; mayor, Reginald Bongey.
-
-1243. The 28th, Hugh Blunt, Adam Basing; mayor, Raph Ashwye.
-
-1244. The 29th, Raph Foster, Nicholas Bat; mayor, Michael Tony.
-
-1245. The 30th, Robert of Cornehil, Adam of Bentley; mayor, John Gisors,
-pepperer.
-
-1246. The 31st, Simon Fitz Mary, Laurence Frowicke; mayor, John Gisors,
-pepperer.
-
-Simon Fitz Mary founded the hospital of Mary, called Bethlem without
-Bishopsgate. Queene hithe let to farm to the citizens of London.
-
-1247. The 32nd, John Viel, Nicholas Bat; mayor, Peter Fitz Alwin.
-
-1248. The 33rd, Nicholas Fitz Josey, Geffrey Winchester; mayor, Michael
-Tony.
-
-1249. The 34th, Richard Hardell, John Tholason; mayor, Roger Fitz Roger.
-
-1250. The 35th, Humfrey Bat, William Fitz Richard; mayor, John Norman.
-
-The king granted that the mayor should be presented to the barons of the
-exchequer, and they should admit him.
-
-1251. The 36th, Laurence Frowike, Nicholas Bat; mayor, Adam Basing.
-
-1252. The 37th, William Durham, Thomas Wimborne; mayor, John Tolason,
-draper.
-
-The liberties of this city were seized, the mayor charged that he looked
-not to the assise of bread.
-
-1253. The 38th, John Northampton, Richard Pickard; mayor, Richard
-Hardell, draper.
-
-1254. The 39th, Raph Ashwie, Robert of Limon; mayor, Richard Hardell,
-draper.
-
-1255. The 40th, Stephen Doo, Henry Walmond; mayor, Richard Hardle,
-draper.
-
-The mayor, divers aldermen, and the sheriffs of London, were deprived,
-and others placed in their rooms.
-
-1256. The 41st, Michael Bockeril, John the Minor; mayor, Richard Hardle,
-draper.
-
-1257. The 42nd, Richard Owel, William Ashwie; mayor, Richard Hardle,
-draper.
-
-The king caused the walls of this city to be repaired and made with
-bulwarks.
-
-1258. The 43rd, Robert Cornhill, John Adrian; mayor, Richard Hardle,
-draper.
-
-1259. The 44th, John Adrian, Robert Cornhill; John Gisors, pepperer.
-
-1260. The 45th, Adam Browning, Henry Coventry; mayor, William Fitz
-Richard.
-
-1261. The 46th, John Northampton, Richard Picard; mayor, William Fitz
-Richard.
-
-1262. The 47th, John Tailor, Richard Walbrooke; mayor, Thomas Fitz
-Richard.
-
-1263. The 48th, Robert de Mountpilier, Osbert de Suffolke; mayor, Thomas
-Fitz Thomas Fitz Richard.
-
-The citizens of London fortified the city with iron chains drawn thwart
-their streets.
-
-1264. The 49th, Gregory Rokesly, Thomas de Deford; mayor, Thomas Fitz
-Thomas Fitz Richard.
-
-1265. The 50th, Edward Blund, Peter Angar; mayor, Thomas Fitz Thomas
-Fitz Richard.
-
-The chains and posts in London were plucked up, the mayor and principal
-citizens committed to ward, and Othon, constable of the tower, was made
-custos of the city, etc.
-
-1266. The 51st, John Hind, John Walraven; mayor, William Richards.
-
-The earl of Gloucester entered the city with an army, and therein
-builded bulwarks, cast trenches, etc.
-
-1267. The 52nd, John Adrian, Lucas de Batencourt; mayor, Alen de la
-Souch. This Alen de la Souch, being a baron of this realm, and also
-chief justice, was in the year 1270 slain in Westminster hall by John
-Warren earl of Surrey.
-
-Thomas Fitz Theobald and Agnes his wife, founded the hospital of St.
-Thomas of Acon in Westcheap.
-
-1268. The 53rd, Walter Harvy, William Duresm, Thomas Wimborn; mayor, Sir
-Stephen Edward.
-
-A variance fell in London between the goldsmiths and the tailors,
-wherethrough many men were slain.
-
-1269. The 54th, Thomas Basing, Robert Cornhill; custos, Hugh Fitz
-Ottonis, custos of London, and constable of the tower.[304]
-
-1270. The 55th, Walter Potter, Philip Tailor; mayor, John Adrian,
-vintner.
-
-1271. The 56th, Gregory Rocksley, Henry Waleys; mayor, John Adrian,
-vintner.
-
-The steple of Bow church in Cheap fell down, and slew many people.
-
-1272. The 57th, Richard Paris, John de Wodeley; mayor, Sir Walter Harvy;
-custos, Henry Frowike, pepperer, for part of that year.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Edward I. began his reign the 16th of November, 1272.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1273. The first sheriffs, John Horne, Walter Potter; mayor, Sir Walter
-Harvy, knight.
-
-1274. The 2nd, Nicholas Winchester, Henry Coventry; mayor, Henry Walles.
-
-1275. The 3rd, Lucas Batecorte, Henry Frowike; mayor, Gregory Rocksley:
-chief say-master of all the king's mints throughout England, and keeper
-of the king's exchange at London.
-
-1276. The 4th, John Horn, Raph Blunt; mayor, Gregory Rocksley.
-
-1277. The 5th, Robert de Arar, Raph L. Fewre; mayor, Gregory Rocksley.
-
-1278. The 6th, John Adrian, Walter Langley; mayor, Gregory Rocksley.
-
-1279. The 7th, Robert Basing, William Maraliver; mayor, Gregory Rocksley.
-
-1280. The 8th, Thomas Fox, Raph Delamere; mayor, Gregory Rocksley.
-
-1281. The 9th, William Farindon, Nicholas Winchester; mayor, Gregory
-Rocksley.
-
-This William Farindon, goldsmith, one of the sheriffs, was father to
-Nicholas Farindon: of these two, Farindon ward took that name.
-
-1282. The 10th, William Maraliver, Richard Chigwel; mayor, Henry Walleis.
-
-This Henry Walleis builded the tun upon Cornhill to be a prison, and the
-stocks to be a market house.
-
-1283. The 11th, Raph Blund, Anketrin de Betanil; mayor, Henry Walleis.
-
-1284. The 12th, Jordain Goodcheape, Martin Box: mayor, Henry Walleis.
-
-Laurence Ducket, goldsmith, murdered in Bow church, and the murderers
-hanged.
-
-1285. The 13th, Stephen Cornhill, Robert Rocksley; mayor, Gregory
-Rocksley; custos, Raph Sandwitch, and John Briton.
-
-It was ordained, that millers should have but one halfpenny for a
-quarter of wheat grinding, and the great water conduit in Cheap was
-begun to be made.
-
-1286. The 14th, Walter Blunt, John Wade; custos, Raph Sandwitch.
-
-Wheat was sold at London for sixteen pence, and for twelve pence the
-quarter.
-
-1287. The 15th, Thomas Cros, Walter Hawtoune; custos, Raph Sandwitch.
-
-1288. The 16th, William Hereford, Thomas Stanes; custos, Raph Sandwitch.
-
-1289. The 17th, William Betain, John Canterbury; custos, Raph Sandwitch,
-Raph Barnauars, and Sir John Britaine.
-
-This year a subsidy was granted, for the reparations of London bridge.
-
-1290. The 18th, Falke S. Edmond, Salamon Le Sotel; custos, Sir John
-Briton, knight.
-
-1291. The 19th, Thomas Romain, William de Lier; custos, Sir John Briton,
-knight, Raph Sandwitch.
-
-1292. The 20th, Raph Blunt, Hamo. Box; custos, Raph Sandwitch.
-
-1293. The 21st, Henry Bole, Elias Russel; custos, Raph Sandwitch.
-
-Three men had their right hands cut off at the Standard in Cheape, for
-rescuing of a prisoner, arrested by a sergeant of London.
-
-1294. The 22nd, Robert Rokesley the younger, Martin Amersbery; custos,
-Sir Raph Sandwitch.
-
-1295. The 23rd, Henry Box, Richard Gloucester; custos, Sir Raph
-Sandwitch.
-
-1296. The 24th, John Dunstable, Adam de Halingbery; custos, Sir John
-Briton.
-
-This year all the liberties of the city were restored, the mayoralty
-excepted.
-
-1297. The 25th, Thomas of Suffolke, Adam of Fulham; custos, Sir John
-Briton.
-
-1298. The 26th, Richard Resham, Thomas Sely; mayor, Henry Walleis.
-
-Certain citizens of London brake up the tun upon Cornhill, and took out
-prisoners, for the which they were grievously punished.
-
-1299. The 27th, John Amenter, Henry Fingene; mayor, Elias Russel.
-
-1300. The 28th, Lucas de Havering, Richard Champs; mayor, Elias Russel.
-
-1301. The 29th, Robert Callor, Peter de Bosenho; mayor, Sir John Blunt,
-knight.
-
-1302. The 30th, Hugh Pourt, Simon Paris; mayor, Sir John Blunt.
-
-1303. The 31st, William Combmartin, John Buckford; custos, Sir John
-Blunt.
-
-1304. The 32nd, Roger Paris, John de Lincolne; custos, Sir John Blunt.
-
-Geffrey Hertilepole Alderman was elected to be recorder of London, and
-took his oath, and was appointed to wear his apparel as an alderman.
-
-1305. The 33rd, William Cosine, Reginald Thunderley; custos, Sir John
-Blunt.
-
-1306. The 34th, Geffrey Cundute, Simon Bilet; custos, Sir John Blunt.
-
-Seacoal was forbid to be burned in London, Southwark, etc.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Edward II. began his reign 7th of July, the year of Christ, 1307.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1307. The 1st, sheriffs, Nicholas Pigot, Nigellus Drury; mayor, Sir John
-Blunt.
-
-1308. The 2nd, William Basing, James Botenar; mayor, Nicholas
-Farringdon, goldsmith.
-
-1309. The 3rd, Roger le Paumer, James of St. Edmond; mayor, Thomas
-Romaine.
-
-1310. The 4th, Simon de Corpe, Peter Blakney; mayor, Richard Reffam,
-mercer.
-
-The king commanded the mayor and commonality, to make the wall of London
-from Ludgate to Fleetbridge, and from thence to the Thames.
-
-1311. The 5th, Simon Merwood, Richard Wilford; mayor, Sir John Gisors,
-pepperer.
-
-Order was taken, that merchant strangers should sell their wares within
-forty days after their arrival, or else the same to be forfeited.
-
-1312. The 6th, John Lambin, Adam Lutkin; mayor, Sir John Gisors,
-pepperer.
-
-1313. The 7th, Robert Gurden, Hugh Garton; mayor, Nicholas Farrindon,
-goldsmith.
-
-Prices set on victuals:--a fat stalled ox, twenty-four shillings; a fat
-mutton, twenty pence; a fat goose, two pence halfpenny; a fat capon, two
-pence; a fat hen, one penny; two chickens, one penny; three pigeons, one
-penny; twenty-four eggs, one penny, etc.
-
-1314. The 8th, Stephen Abingdon, Hamond Chigwel; mayor, Sir John Gisors,
-pepperer.
-
-Famine and mortality of the people, so that the quick might unneath bury
-the dead; horse-flesh, and dogs-flesh, was good meat.
-
-1315. The 9th, Hamond Goodcheap, William Bodelay; mayor, Stephen
-Abendon.
-
-1316. The 10th, William Canston, Raph Belancer; mayor, John Wingrave.
-
-An early harvest, a bushel of wheat that had been sold for ten
-shillings, was now sold for ten pence, etc.
-
-1317. The 11th, John Prior, William Furneis; mayor, John Wingrave.
-
-Such a murrain of kine, that dogs and ravens that fed on them were
-poisoned.
-
-1318. The 12th, John Pontel, John Dalling; mayor, John Wingrave.
-
-1319. 13th, Simon Abindon, John Preston; mayor, Hamond Chickwel,
-pepperer.
-
-John Gisors late mayor of London, and many other citizens, fled the city
-for things laid to their charge.
-
-1320. The 14th, Renauld at Conduit, William Produn; mayor, Nicholas
-Farindon, goldsmith.
-
-1321. The 15th, Richard Constantine, Richard Hackney; mayor, Hamond
-Chickwell, pepperer.
-
-1322. The 16th, John Grantham, Richard Elie; mayor, Hamond Chickwell,
-pepperer.
-
-Fish and flesh market established at the Stocks in the midst of the city.
-
-1323. The 17th, Adam of Salisbury, John of Oxford; mayor, Nicholas
-Farindon, goldsmith.
-
-Of this Nicholas Farindon, and of William Farindon, and of William
-Farindon his father, read more in Farindon ward.
-
-1324. The 18th, Benet of Fulham, John Cawson; mayor, Hamond Chickwell,
-pepperer.
-
-1325. The 19th, Gilbert Mordon, John Cotton; mayor, Hamond Chickwell,
-pepperer.
-
-The citizens of London took the bishop of Exeter, and cut off his head
-at the Standard in Cheape.
-
-1326. The 20th, Richard Rothing, Roger Chaunteclere; mayor, Richard
-Britaine, goldsmith.
-
-This Richard Rothing is said to new build the parish church of St. James
-at Garlicke hith.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Edward III. began his reign the 25th of January, the year 1326.
-
- * * * * *
-
-This King Edward granted, that the mayor should be justice for the
-gaol delivery at Newgate, that the citizens of London should not be
-constrained to go out of the city of London to any war. More he granted,
-that the liberties and the franchises of the city should not after
-this time for any cause be taken into the king's hands, etc. More,
-he granted by his letters patents, dated the 6th of March, that no
-Escheater should be in the city, but the mayor for his time.
-
-1327. The 1st sheriffs, Henry Darcie, John Hauton; mayor, Hamond
-Chickwell, pepperer.
-
-This year the walls of London were repaired.
-
-1328. The 2nd, Simon Francis, Henry Combmartin; mayor, John Grantham.
-
-1329. The 3rd, Richard Lazar, William Gisors; mayor, Richard Swandland.
-
-This year, the king kept a great justing in Cheape, betwixt Sopars lane
-and the great Crosse.
-
-1330. The 4th, Robert of Elie, Thomas Whorwode; mayor, Sir John Pultney,
-draper.
-
-1331. The 5th, John Mocking, Andrew Auberie; mayor, Sir John Pultney,
-draper.
-
-1332. The 6th, Nicholas Pike, John Husbond; mayor, John Preston, draper.
-
-This year was founded Elsinges' spittle, by W. Elsing, mercer, that
-became first prior of that hospital.
-
-1333. The 7th, John Hamond, William Hansard; mayor, Sir John Pultney,
-draper.
-
-1334. The 8th, John Hingstone, Walter Turke; mayor, Reginald at Conduct,
-vintner.
-
-1335. The 9th, Walter Motdon, Richard Upton; mayor, Nicholas Woton.
-
-1336. The 10th, John Clark, William Curtis; mayor, Sir John Pultney,
-draper.
-
-This Sir John Pultney founded a college in the parish church of St.
-Laurence, by Candlewicke street.
-
-1337. The 11th, Walter Nele, Nicholas Crane; mayor, Henry Darcy.
-
-Walter Nele, bladesmith, gave lands to the repairing of the high ways
-about London.
-
-1338. The 12th, William Pomfret, Hugh Marbeler; mayor, Henry Darcy.
-
-The king granted that the sergeants of the mayor, and sheriffs of
-London, should bear maces of silver and gilt with the king's arms.
-
-1339. The 13th, William Thorney, Roger Frosham; mayor, Andrew Aubery,
-grocer.
-
-1340. The 14th, Adam Lucas, Bartemew Maris; mayor, Andrew Aubery,
-grocer.
-
-1341. The 15th, Richard de Barking, John de Rokesley: mayor, John of
-Oxenford, vintner.
-
-1342. The 16th, John Louekin, Richard Killingbury; mayor, Simon Francis,
-mercer.
-
-The price of Gascoyn wines at London, four pence, and Rheinish wine, six
-pence the gallon.
-
-1343. The 17th, John Steward, John Aylesham; mayor, John Hamond.
-
-1344. The 18th, Geffrey Wichingham, Thomas Leg; mayor, John Hamond.
-
-1345. The 19th, Edmond Hemenhall, John of Gloucester; mayor, Richard
-Leget.
-
-1346. The 20th, John Croyden, William Cloptun; mayor, Geffrey
-Winchingham.
-
-1347. The 21st, Adam Brapsen, Richard Bas; mayor, Thomas Leggy, skinner.
-
-King Edward won Calais from the French.
-
-1348. The 22nd, Henry Picard, Simon Dolseby; mayor, John Louekin,
-fishmonger.
-
-A great pest. Sir Walter Mannie, knight, founded the Charterhouse by
-Smithfield, to be a burial for the dead.
-
-1349. The 23rd, Adam of Bury, Raph of Lym; mayor, Walter Turk,
-fishmonger.
-
-1350. The 24th, John Notte, W. Worcester; mayor, Richard Killingbury.
-
-1351. The 25th, John Wroth, Gilbert of Stenineshorpe; mayor, Andrew
-Aubery, grocer.
-
-1352. The 26th, John Pech, John Stotley; mayor, Adam Francis, mercer.
-
-This mayor procured an act of parliament, that no known whore should
-wear any hood or attire on her head, except red or striped cloth of
-divers colours, etc.
-
-1353. The 27th, William Wilde, John Little; mayor, Adam Francis, mercer.
-
-This Adam Francis was one of the founders of the college in Guildhall
-chapel, etc., Henry Fowke was the other.
-
-1354. The 28th, William Tottingham, Richard Smelt; mayor, Thomas Leggy,
-skinner.
-
-Aldermen of London were used to be changed yearly, but now it was
-ordained that they should not be removed without some special cause.
-
-1355. The 29th, Walter Foster, Thomas Brandon; mayor, Simon Francis,
-mercer.
-
-1356. The 30th, Richard Nottingham, Thomas Dossel; mayor, Henry Picard,
-vintner.
-
-This Henry Picard feasted the kings of England, of France, Cypres, and
-Scots, with other great estates, all in one day.
-
-1357. The 31st, Stephen Candish, Bartilmew Frostling; mayor, Sir John
-Stody, vintner.
-
-This John Stody gave tenements to the vintners in London, for relief of
-the poor of that company.
-
-1358. The 32nd, John Barnes, John Buris; mayor, John Louekin,
-stock-fishmonger.
-
-1359. The 33rd, Simon of Benington, John of Chichester; mayor, Simon
-Dolseby, grocer.
-
-1360. The 34th, John Denis, Walter Berny; mayor, John Wroth, fishmonger.
-
-1361. The 35th, William Holbech, James Tame; mayor, John Peche,
-fishmonger.
-
-1362. The 36th, John of St. Albans, James Andrew; mayor, Stephen
-Gondish, draper.
-
-1363. The 37th, Richard Croyden, John Litoft; mayor, John Not, pepperer.
-
-1364. The 38th, John de Mitford, Simon de Mordon; mayor, Adam of Bury,
-skinner.
-
-1365. The 39th, John Bukulsworth, Thomas Ireland; mayor, John Louekin,
-fishmonger, and Adam of Bury, skinner.
-
-1366. The 40th, John Warde, Thomas of Lee; mayor, John Lofkin,
-fishmonger.
-
-This John Lofkin builded the parish church of St. Michael in Crooked
-lane.
-
-1367. The 41st, John Turngold, William Dikeman; mayor, James Andrew,
-draper.
-
-1368. The 42nd, Robert Cordeler, Adam Wimondham; mayor, Simon Mordon,
-stock-fishmonger.
-
-This year wheat was sold for two shillings and six pence the bushel.
-
-1369. The 43rd, John Piel, Hugh Holdich; mayor, John Chichester,
-goldsmith.
-
-1370. The 44th, William Walworth, Robert Geyton; mayor, John Barnes,
-mercer.
-
-1371. The 45th, Adam Staple, Robert Hatfield; mayor, John Barnes, mercer.
-
-This John Barnes gave a chest with three locks, and one thousand marks
-to be lent to poor young men.
-
-1372. The 46th, John Philpot, Nicholas Brembar; mayor, John Piel, mercer.
-
-1373. The 47th, John Aubery, John Fished; mayor, Adam of Bury, skinner.
-
-1374. The 48th, Richard Lions, William Woodhouse; mayor, William
-Walworth, fishmonger.
-
-1375. The 49th, John Hadley, William Newport; mayor, John Ward, grocer.
-
-1376. The 50th, John Northampton, Robert Laund; mayor, Adam Staple,
-mercer.
-
-The Londoners meant to have slain John duke of Lancaster: Adam Staple,
-mayor, put down, and Nicholas Brembar elected. Also the aldermen were
-deposed, and others set in their places.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Richard II. began his reign the 21st of June, in the year 1377.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1377. The 1st sheriffs, Nicholas Twiford, Andrew Pikeman; mayor, Sir
-Nicholas Brembar, grocer.
-
-John Philpot, a citizen of London, sent ships to the sea, and scoured it
-of pirates, taking many of them prisoners.
-
-1378. The 2nd, John Boseham, Thomas Cornwalis; mayor, Sir John Philpot,
-grocer.
-
-This Sir John Philpot gave to the city, lands for the finding of
-thirteen poor people for ever.
-
-1379. The 3rd, John Helisdon, William Barat; mayor, John Hadley, grocer.
-
-1380. The 4th, Walter Doget, William Knightcoate; mayor, William
-Walworth, fishmonger.
-
-This William Walworth arrested Wat Tyler the rebel, and was knighted. He
-increased the parish church of St. Michael in Crooked lane, and founded
-there a college. Other aldermen were also knighted for their service in
-the field.
-
-1381. The 5th, John Rote, John Hend; mayor, John Northampton, draper.
-
-1382. The 6th, Adam Bamme, John Sely; mayor, John Northampton, draper,
-or skinner, as I find in record.
-
-1383. The 7th, Simon Winchcombe, John More; mayor, Sir Nicholas Brembar,
-grocer.
-
-John Northampton, late mayor of London, was committed to perpetual
-prison, and his goods confiscated.
-
-1384. The 8th, Nicholas Exton, John French; mayor, Sir Nicholas Brembar,
-grocer, knighted with William Walworth.
-
-1385. The 9th, John Organ, John Churchman; mayor, Sir Nicholas Brembar,
-grocer.
-
-The foresaid John Churchman new-built the custom-house, near to the
-Tower of London, and did many other works for the commodity of this city.
-
-1386. The 10th, W. Standone, W. More; mayor, Nicholas Exton, fishmonger.
-
-This year the citizens of London, fearing the French, pulled down houses
-near about their city, repaired their walls, and cleansed their ditches,
-etc.
-
-1387. The 11th, William Venor, Hugh Forstalfe; mayor, Nicholas Exton,
-fishmonger.
-
-Sir Nicholas Brembar, late mayor of London, was this year beheaded.
-
-1388. The 12th, Thomas Austin, Adam Carlhul; mayor, Nicholas Tuiford,
-goldsmith, knighted with W. Walworth.
-
-1389. The 13th, John Walcot, John Lovenay; mayor, William Venor, grocer.
-
-1390. The 14th, John Francis, Thomas Vivent; mayor, Adam Bamme,
-goldsmith.
-
-This Adam Bamme provided from beyond the seas corn in great abundance,
-so that the city was able to serve the country.
-
-1391. The 15th, John Shadworth, Henry Vamer; mayor, John Hend, draper.
-
-This mayor was for displeasure taken, sent to Windsor castle, and the
-king made wardens of the city, etc.
-
-1392. The 16th, Gilbert Maghfield, Thomas Newington; mayor, William
-Stondon, grocer.
-
-1393. The 17th, Drew Barintin, Richard Whitington; mayor, John Hadley,
-grocer.
-
-Faringdon ward was by parliament appointed to be divided into two wards,
-to wit, infra and extra.
-
-1394. The 18th, William Branston, Thomas Knoles; mayor, John Froshe,
-mercer.
-
-1395. The 19th, Roger Elles, William Sevenoke; mayor, William More,
-vintner.
-
-1396. The 20th, Thomas Wilford, William Parker; mayor, Adam Bamme,
-goldsmith.
-
-1397. The 21st, John Wodcoke, William Askam; mayor, Richard Whitington,
-mercer.
-
-1398. The 22nd, John Wade, John Warnar; mayor, Drew Barentin, goldsmith.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Henry IV. began his reign the 29th of September, the year 1399.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1399. The 1st sheriffs, William Waldern, William Hende; mayor, Thomas
-Knoles, grocer.
-
-1400. The 2nd, John Wakel, William Ebot; mayor, John Francis, goldsmith.
-
-1401. The 3rd, William Venor, John Fremingham; mayor, John Shadworth,
-mercer.
-
-The conduit upon Cornhill was this year made of an old prison house
-called the Tun.
-
-1402. The 4th, Richard Marlow, Robert Chicheley; mayor, I. Walcote,
-draper.
-
-1403. The 5th, Thomas Falconer, Thomas Poole; mayor, W. Ascham,
-fishmonger.
-
-1404. The 6th, William Bouth, Stephen Spilman; mayor, John Hend, draper.
-
-This John Hend was a new builder of the parish church of St. Swithen, by
-London stone.
-
-1405. The 7th, Henry Barton, William Grome; mayor, John Wodcocke, mercer.
-
-This mayor caused all the weirs in the river of Thames, from Stanes to
-the river of Medway, to be destroyed, and the trinkes to be burned, etc.
-
-1406. The 8th, Nicholas Wooton, Gefferey Brooke; mayor, Richard
-Whitington, mercer.
-
-This year a great pestilence in London took away more than thirty
-thousand people.
-
-1407. The 9th, Henry Pontfrackt, Henry Halton, mercer; mayor, William
-Sandon, grocer.
-
-1408. The 10th, Thomas Ducke, William Norton; mayor, Drew Barentine,
-goldsmith.
-
-This Drew Barentine built a part of the Goldsmiths' hall, and gave them
-lands.
-
-1409. The 11th, John Law, William Chichley; mayor, Richard Marlow,
-ironmonger.
-
-A great play at Skinners' well, which lasted eight days, and was of
-matter from the Creation of the world; the most part of all the great
-estates of England were there to behold it.
-
-1410. The 12th, John Penne, Thomas Pike; mayor, Thomas Knoles, grocer.
-
-This Thomas Knoles began anew to build the Guildhall in London, etc.
-
-1411. The 13th, John Rainwel, William Cotton; mayor, Robert Chichley,
-grocer.
-
-1412. The 14th, Raph Lovinhinde, William Sevenocke; mayor, William
-Waldren, mercer.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Henry V. began his reign, the 20th of March, the year 1412.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1413. The 1st sheriffs, John Sutton, John Michell; mayor, William
-Cromar, draper.
-
-Sir John Oldcastle assembled a great power in Fickets field, by London,
-which power was overcome and taken by the king and his power.
-
-1414. The 2nd, John Michell, Thomas Allen; mayor, Th. Falconer, mercer.
-
-This mayor caused the postern called Moregate to be built, and he lent
-to the king ten thousand marks upon jewels, etc.
-
-1415. The 3rd, William Cambridge, Alen Everard; mayor, Nicholas Wotton,
-draper.
-
-1416. The 4th, Robert Whittington, John Coventrie; mayor, Henry Barton,
-skinner.
-
-This Henry Barton ordained lanthorns with lights to be hanged out on the
-winter evening betwixt Hallontide[305] and Candlemasse.
-
-1417. The 5th, H. Read, John Gidney; mayor, Richard Marlow, ironmonger.
-
-1418. The 6th, John Brian, Raph Barton, John Parnesse; mayor, William
-Sevenoke.
-
-This William Sevenoke, son to William Rumsched of Sevenoke in Kent, was
-by his father bound an apprentice with Hugh de Bois, citizen and ferrer
-of London, for a term of years, which being expired in the year 1394,
-the 18th of Richard II., John Hadley being mayor of London, and Stephen
-Spilman, chamberlain of the Guildhall, he alleged that his master
-had used the trade or mystery of a grocer, and not of a ferrer, and
-therefore required to be made free of the grocers' company, which was
-granted. This William Sevenoke founded in the town of Sevenoke a free
-school, and alms houses for the poor.
-
-1419. The 7th, Robert Whittington, John Butler; mayor, Richard
-Whittington, mercer.
-
-This mayor founded Whittington college.
-
-1420. The 8th, John Butler, John Wels; mayor, William Cambridge, grocer.
-
-1421. The 9th, Richard Gosseline, William Weston; mayor, Robert
-Chichley, grocer.
-
-This mayor gave one plot of ground, thereupon to build the parish church
-of St. Stephen upon Walbrooke.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Henry VI. began his reign the 31st of August, the year 1422.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1422. The 1st sheriffs, William Eastfield, Robert Tatarsal; mayor,
-William Waldern, mercer.
-
-This year the west gate of London was begun to be built by the executors
-of Richard Whitington.
-
-1423. The 2nd, Nicholas James, Thomas Windford; mayor, William Cromer,
-draper.
-
-1424. The 3rd, Simon Seman, John Bywater; mayor, John Michel, fishmonger.
-
-1425. The 4th, William Melreth, John Brokell; mayor, John Coventrie,
-mercer.
-
-1426. The 5th, John Arnold, John Higham; mayor, John Reinwell,
-fishmonger.
-
-This mayor gave tenements to the city for the discharge of three wards
-in London for fifteens, etc.
-
-1427. The 6th, Henry Frowicke, Robert Oteley; mayor, John Gidney, draper.
-
-1428. The 7th, Thomas Duffehouse, John Abbot; mayor, Henry Barton,
-skinner.
-
-1429. The 8th, William Russe, Raph Holland; mayor, William Eastfield,
-mercer.
-
-Raph Holland gave to impotent poor, one hundred and twenty pounds, to
-prisoners eighty pounds, to hospitals forty pounds, etc.
-
-1430. The 9th, Walter Chartesey, Robert Large; mayor, Nicholas Wootton,
-draper.
-
-Walter Chartesey, draper, gave to the poor one hundred pounds, besides
-twenty pounds to the hospitals, etc.
-
-1431. The 10th, John Aderley, Stephen Browne; mayor, John Wels, grocer.
-
-This John Wels, a great benefactor to the new building of the chapel by
-the Guildhall, and of his goods the standard in West Cheape was made.
-
-1432. The 11th, John Olney, John Paddesley; mayor, John Patneis,
-fishmonger.
-
-1433. The 12th, Thomas Chalton, John Ling; mayor, John Brokle, draper.
-
-1434. The 13th, Thomas Barnewell, Simon Eyre; mayor, Roger Oteley,
-grocer.
-
-1435. The 14th, Thomas Catworth, Robert Clopton; mayor, Henry Frowicke,
-mercer.
-
-1436. The 15th, Thomas Morsted, William Gregorie; mayor, John Michel,
-fishmonger.
-
-1437. The 16th, William Hales, William Chapman; mayor, Sir William
-Eastfield, mercer.
-
-This Sir William Eastfield, knight of the Bath, a great benefactor to
-the water-conduits.
-
-1438. The 17th, Hugh Diker, Nicholas Yoo; mayor, Stephen Brown, grocer.
-
-Wheat sold for three shillings the bushel; but this man sent into
-Prussia, and caused to be brought from thence certain ships laden with
-rye, which did great relief.
-
-1439. The 18th, Philip Malpas, Robert Marshal; mayor, Robert Large,
-mercer.
-
-Philip Malpas at his decease gave one hundred and twenty pounds to poor
-prisoners, and every year for five years four hundred and three shirts
-and smocks, forty pairs of sheets, and one hundred and fifty gowns of
-frieze to the poor, to poor maids' marriages one hundred marks, to
-highways one hundred marks, and to five hundred poor people in London
-every one six shillings and eight pence, etc.
-
-1440. The 19th, John Sutton, William Wetinhall; mayor, John Paddesley,
-goldsmith, master of the works of money in the Tower of London.
-
-1441. The 20th, William Combis, Richard Rich; mayor, Robert Clopton,
-draper.
-
-1442. The 21st, Thomas Beamont, Richard Morden; mayor, John Hatherley,
-ironmonger.
-
-1443. The 22nd, Nicholas Wilforde, John Norman; mayor, Thomas Catworth,
-grocer.
-
-1444. The 23rd, Stephen Forstar, Hugh Witch; mayor, Henry Frowicke,
-mercer.
-
-This year Paul's steeple was fired with lightning, and hardly quenched.
-
-1445. 24th, John Darby, Godfrey Fielding; mayor, Simon Eyre, draper.
-
-This Simon Eyre built the Leaden hall in London, to be a common garner
-for the city, etc.
-
-1446. The 25th, Robert Horne, Godfrey Bolaine; mayor, John Olney, mercer.
-
-1447. The 26th, William Abraham, Thomas Scot; mayor, John Sidney,
-draper.
-
-1448. The 27th, William Catlow, William Marrow; mayor, Stephen Browne,
-grocer.
-
-1449. The 28th, William Hulin, Thomas Caninges; mayor, Thomas Chalton,
-mercer.
-
-This year Jack Cade, a rebel of Kent, came to London, entered the city,
-etc.
-
-1450. The 29th, I. Middleton, William Deere; mayor, Nicholas Wilforde,
-grocer.
-
-Soldiers made a fray against the mayor the same day he took his charge
-at Westminster.
-
-1451. The 30th, Matthew Philip, Christopher Warton; mayor, William
-Gregory, skinner.
-
-1452. The 31st, Richard Lee, Richard Alley; mayor, Godfrey Fielding,
-mercer, of council to Henry VI. and Edward IV.
-
-This year was a great fray at the wrestling.
-
-1453. The 32nd, John Waldron, Thomas Cooke; mayor, John Norman, draper.
-
-This John Norman was the first mayor that was rowed to Westminster by
-water, for before that time they rode on horseback.
-
-1454. The 33rd, John Field, W. Taylor; mayor, Stephen Forstar,
-fishmonger.
-
-This Stephen Forstar enlarged Ludgate, for the ease of prisoners there,
-etc.
-
-1455. The 34th, John Yong, Thomas Olgrave; mayor, William Marrow, grocer.
-
-The mercers' servants made a riot upon the Lombards and other strangers.
-
-1456. The 35th, John Steward, Raph Verney; mayor, Thomas Caning, grocer.
-
-1457. The 36th, William Edwards, Thomas Reiner; mayor, Godfrey Boloine,
-mercer.
-
-This Godfrey Boloine gave one thousand pounds to poor householders in
-London, etc.
-
-1458. The 37th, Ralph Joceline, Richard Medham; mayor, Thomas Scot,
-draper.
-
-1459. The 38th, John Plommar, John Stockar; mayor, William Hulin,
-fishmonger.
-
-1460. 39th, Richard Fleming, John Lambard; mayor, Richard Lee, grocer.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Edward IV. began his reign the 4th of March, in the year 1460, after the
-account of the Church of England.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1461. The 1st sheriffs, George Ireland, John Locke; mayor, Hugh Witch,
-mercer.
-
-1462. The 2nd, William Hampton, Bartholomew James; mayor, Thomas Cooke,
-draper, made knight of the Bath in the 5th of Edward IV. and had great
-troubles after.
-
-1463. The 3rd, Robert Baslet, Thomas Muschampe; mayor, Matthew Philip,
-goldsmith, made knight of the Bath the 5th of Edward IV., and after in
-the field, the 10th of Edward IV.
-
-1464. The 4th, John Tate, John Stone; mayor, Raph Joceline, draper,
-knight of the Bath, and also in the field.
-
-1465. The 5th, Henry Waver, William Constantine; mayor, Raph Verney,
-mercer. Henry Waver, one of the sheriffs, made knight of the Bath.
-
-1466. The 6th, John Browne, Henry Brice; mayor, John Yong, grocer, made
-knight in the field.
-
-This year began the troubles of Sir Thomas Cooke, and other aldermen, as
-ye may read in my Summary.
-
-1467. The 7th, Thomas Stalbroke, Humfrey Heyford; mayor, Thomas
-Oldgrave, skinner.
-
-1468. The 8th, Symon Smith, William Hariot; mayor, William Taylor,
-grocer.
-
-This mayor gave tenements to discharge Cordwainer street ward of
-fifteens.
-
-1469. The 9th, Richard Gardener, Robert Drope; mayor, Richard Lee,
-grocer.
-
-This year the Tower of London being delivered to the mayor and his
-brethren, they delivered King Henry from thence.
-
-1470. The 10th, Sir John Crosbie, John Ward; mayor, Sir John Stockton,
-mercer.
-
-Thomas the Bastard Fauconbridge, with a riotous company, set upon this
-city at Aldgate, Bishopsgate, the Bridge, etc., and twelve aldermen,
-with the recorder, were knighted in the field by Edward IV., to wit,
-John Stockton, mayor, Raph Verney, late mayor, John Yong, later mayor,
-William Tayler, late mayor, Richard Lee, late mayor, Matthew Philips,
-late mayor, George Ireland, William Stoker, William Hampton, since
-mayor, Thomas Stolbroke, John Crosbie, and Bartlemew James, since mayor,
-with Thomas Urswike, recorder.
-
-1471. The 11th, John Allin, John Shelley; mayor, William Edward, grocer.
-
-The water-conduit at Aldermanburie, and the standard in Fleet street
-were finished.
-
-1472. The 12th, John Browne, Thomas Bedlow; mayor, Sir William Hampton,
-fishmonger.
-
-This Sir William Hampton punished strumpets, and caused stocks to be set
-in every ward to punish vagabonds.
-
-1473. The 13th, Sir William Sokar, Robert Belisdon; mayor, John Tate,
-mercer.
-
-This year the sheriffs of London were appointed each of them to have
-sixteen serjeants, every serjeant to have his yeoman, and six clerks, to
-wit, a secondary, a clerk of the papers, and four other clerks, besides
-the under-sheriff's clerks.
-
-1474. The 14th, Edmond Shaw, Thomas Hill; mayor, Robert Drope, draper.
-
-This Robert Drope increased the water-conduit upon Cornhill, etc.
-
-1475. The 15th, Hugh Brice, Robert Colwich; mayor, Robert Basset, salter.
-
-This Robert Basset corrected the bakers and other victuallers of this
-city.
-
-1476. The 16th, Richard Rawson, William Horne; mayor, Sir Raph Joceline,
-draper, knight of the Bath.
-
-By the diligence of this mayor the walls of the city were repaired.
-
-1477. The 17th, Henry Collet, John Stoker; mayor, Humphrey Hayford,
-goldsmith.
-
-1478. The 18th, Robert Harding, Robert Bifield; mayor, Richard Gardener,
-mercer.
-
-Robert Bifield, sheriff, was fined by the mayor, and paid fifty pounds
-toward the water-conduits.
-
-1479. The 19th, Thomas Ilam, John Warde; mayor, Sir Bartholomew James,
-draper, made knight in the field by Edward IV.
-
-Thomas Ilam newly built the great conduit in West Cheape.
-
-1480. The 20th, Thomas Daniel, William Bacon; mayor, John Browne, mercer.
-
-1481. The 21st, Robert Tate, William Wiking; mayor, William Hariot,
-draper.
-
-1482. The 22nd, William Whit, John Mathew; mayor, Edmond Sha, goldsmith.
-
-This Edmond Sha caused the postern called Cripplesgate to be newly
-built, etc.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Edward V. began his reign the 9th of April, in the year 1483.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Richard III. began his reign the 22nd of June, in the year 1483.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1483. The 1st sheriffs, Thomas Norland, William Martin; mayor, Robert
-Bilisden, haberdasher.
-
-1484. The 2nd, Richard Chester, Thomas Brittaine, Raphe Austrie; mayor,
-Thomas Hill, grocer, Sir William Stoaker, draper, John Ward, grocer.
-
-Three sheriffs and three mayors this year by means of the sweating
-sickness, etc. Thomas Hill appointed by his testament the water-conduit
-in Grasse street to be built.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Henry VII. began his reign the 22nd of August, in the year 1485.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1485. The 1st sheriffs, John Tate, John Swan; mayor, Hugh Brise,
-goldsmith.
-
-This Hugh Brise was keeper of the king's mints at London.
-
-1486. The 2nd, John Percivall, Hugh Clopton; mayor, Henry Cellet, mercer.
-
-The cross in Cheap was new built in beautiful manner.
-
-1487. The 3rd, John Fenkell, William Remington; mayor, Sir William
-Horne, salter.
-
-This William Horne made knight in the field by Henry VII., gave to the
-repairing of highways betwixt London and Cambridge five hundred marks,
-and to the preachers at Paul's cross, etc.
-
-1488. The 4th, W. Isaack, Raph Tilney; mayor, Robert Tate, mercer.
-
-1489. The 5th, William Caple, John Brocke; mayor, W. White, draper.
-
-1490. The 6th, Henry Cote, Robert Revell, Hugh Pemberton; mayor, John
-Mathew, mercer.
-
-1491. The 7th, Thomas Wood, William Browne; mayor, Hugh Clopton, mercer.
-
-Hugh Clopton built the great stone bridge at Stratford upon Haven in
-Warwickshire.
-
-1492. The 8th, William Purchase, William Welbecke; mayor, William
-Martin, skinner.
-
-A riot made upon the Esterlings by the mercers' servants and other.
-
-1493. The 9th, Robert Fabian, John Winger; mayor, Sir Raph Astrie,
-fishmonger, made knight by Henry VII.
-
-Robert Fabian, alderman, made _Fabian's Chronicle_, a painful labour, to
-the honour of the city, and the whole realm.
-
-1494. The 10th, Nicholas Alwine, John Warner; mayor, Richard Chawry,
-salter.
-
-1495. The 11th, Thomas Knesworth, Henry Somer; mayor, Henry Colet,
-mercer.
-
-1496. The 12th, Sir John Sha, Sir Richard Haddon; mayor, Sir John Tate,
-the younger, mercer.
-
-The king made this mayor, Robert Shefield, recorder, and both the
-sheriffs, knights, for their good service against the rebels at Black
-Hith field.
-
-1497. The 13th, Bartlemew Read, Thomas Windout; mayor, W. Purchase,
-mercer.
-
-All the gardens in the Morefield were destroyed, and made plain ground.
-
-1498. Thomas Bradbury, Stephen Jeninges; mayor, Sir John Percevall, made
-knight in the field by King Henry VII.
-
-1499. The 15th, James Wilford, Thomas Brond; mayor, Nicholas Alwin,
-mercer.
-
-This Nicholas Alwin gave to three thousand poor people in London twelve
-pence the piece, and to three thousand in the town of Spalding, the
-like, etc.
-
-1500. The 16th, John Hawes, William Steede; mayor, W. Remington,
-fishmonger.
-
-1501. The 17th, Lawrence Ailmer, Henry Hede; mayor, Sir John Sha,
-goldsmith, made knight in the field by Henry VII.
-
-This Sir John Sha caused his brethren the aldermen to ride from the
-Guildhall unto the water's side, where he took his barge to Westminster;
-he was sworn by the king's council: he commonly in the afternoons kept a
-court alone, called before him many matters, and redressed them.
-
-1502. The 18th, Henry Kebel, Nicholas Nines; mayor, Bartlemew Reade,
-goldsmith.
-
-1503. The 19th, Christopher Hawes, Robert Wats, Thomas Granger; mayor,
-Sir William Capell, draper, made knight by Henry VII.
-
-This Sir William caused a cage in every ward to be set for punishing of
-vagabonds.
-
-1504. The 20th, Roger Acheley, William Brown; mayor, John Winger, grocer.
-
-1505. The 21st, Richard Shore, Roger Grove; mayor, Thomas Knesworth,
-fishmonger.
-
-This Thomas Knesworth appointed the water-conduit at Bishopsgate to be
-built, etc.
-
-1506. The 22nd, William Copenger, Thomas Johnson, William Fitzwilliams,
-merchant-tailor, after of council to Henry VIII.; mayor, Sir Richard
-Haddon, mercer.
-
-1507. The 23rd, William Butler, John Kirkby; mayor, William Browne,
-mercer, for part, Lawrence Ailmer, draper.
-
-1508. The 24th, Thomas Exmew, Richard Smith; mayor, Stephen Jeninges,
-merchant-tailor.
-
-This Stephen Geninges built the greatest part of St. Andrewes church
-called Undershaft. He built a free-school at Ulfrunehampton in
-Staffordshire, etc.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Henry VIII. began his reign the 22nd of April, the year 1509.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1509. The 1st sheriffs, George Monoxe, John Doget; mayor, Thomas
-Bradbury, mercer, for part, Sir William Caple, draper.
-
-1510. The 2nd, John Milborne, John Rest; mayor, Henry Keble, grocer.
-
-This Henry Keble gave one thousand pounds toward the new building of his
-parish church of Aldermary.
-
-1511. The 3rd, Nicholas Shelton, Thomas Mirfine; mayor, Roger Achiley,
-draper.
-
-This Roger Achiley provided corn for service of this city in great
-plenty. He caused the same to be stowed up in the common garner called
-Leaden hall.
-
-1512. The 4th, Robert Aldarnes, Robert Fenrother; mayor, Sir William
-Copinger, fishmonger, for part, Richard Haddon, mercer, for the rest.
-
-Sir W. Copinger gave half his goods to his wife, and the other half to
-the poor that had most need.
-
-1513. The 5th, John Dawes, John Bridges, Roger Bafford; mayor, W.
-Browne, mercer, and John Tate, mercer.
-
-This John Tate new built the church of St. Anthonies hospital in London.
-
-1514. The 6th, James Yarford, John Monday; mayor, George Monoux, draper.
-
-1515. The 7th, Henry Warley, Richard Grey, W. Bayly; mayor, Sir William
-Butler, grocer.
-
-1516. The 8th, Thomas Seimer, John Thurstone; mayor, John Rest, grocer.
-
-1517. The 9th, Thomas Baldrie, Raph Simondes; mayor, Sir Thomas Exmew,
-goldsmith.
-
-Sir Thomas Exmew made the water-conduit in London wall by Mooregate, etc.
-
-1518. The 10th, John Allen, James Spencer; mayor, Thomas Mirfin, skinner.
-
-1519. The 11th, John Wilkenson, Nicholas Partrich; mayor. Sir James
-Yarford, mercer.
-
-From this time the mayors of London, for the most part, have been
-knighted by courtesy of the kings, and not otherwise.
-
-1520. The 12th, Sir John Skevington, John Kyme; mayor, Sir John Bruge,
-draper.
-
-1521. The 13th, John Breton, Thomas Pargetor; mayor, Sir John Milborne,
-draper.
-
-This Sir John Milborne founded fourteen alms houses by the Crossed
-Fryers church, etc.
-
-1522. The 14th, John Rudstone, John Champneis; mayor, Sir John Mundy,
-goldsmith.
-
-1523. The 15th, Michael English, Nicholas Jenines; mayor, Sir T. Baldry,
-mercer.
-
-1524. The 16th, Raph Dodmer, William Roch; mayor, Sir W. Bayly, draper.
-
-1525. The 17th, John Caunton, Christopher Askew; mayor, Sir John Allen,
-mercer.
-
-1526. The 18th, Stephen Peacocke, Nicholas Lambert; mayor, Sir Thomas
-Seamer, mercer.
-
-1527. The 19th, John Hardy, William Holles; mayor, Sir James Spencer,
-vintner.
-
-1528. The 20th, Raph Warren, John Long; mayor, Sir John Rudstone, draper.
-
-1529. The 21st, Michael Dormer, Walter Champion; mayor, Sir Raph Dodmer,
-mercer.
-
-This year it was decreed that no man should be mayor of London more than
-one year.
-
-1530. The 22nd, William Dauntsey, Richard Champion; mayor, Sir T.
-Pargitor, salter.
-
-1531. The 23rd, Richard Gresham, Edward Altham; mayor, Sir Nicholas
-Lambard, grocer.
-
-1532. The 24th, Richard Reynoldes, Nicholas Pinchon, John Martin, John
-Prist; mayor, Sir Stephen Pecocke, haberdasher.
-
-1533. The 25th, William Forman, Sir T. Kitson; mayor, Sir Christopher
-Askew, draper.
-
-1534. The 26th, Nicholas Levison, W. Denham; mayor, Sir John Chamneis,
-skinner.
-
-1535. The 27th, Humfrey Munmoth, John Cootes; mayor, Sir John Allen,
-mercer. By the king's appointment he was of his council. A man of great
-wisdom, and also of great charity.
-
-The forenamed sheriffs, Munmouth and Cootes, put away twelve serjeants
-and twelve yeomen, but were by a common council forced to take them
-again.
-
-1536. The 28th, Robert Paget, William Boyer; mayor, Sir Raph Waren,
-mercer.
-
-1537. The 29th, Sir John Gresham, Thomas Lewen; mayor, Sir Richard
-Gresham, mercer.
-
-1538. The 30th, William Welkenson, Nicholas Gibson; mayor, William
-Forman, haberdasher.
-
-1539. The 31st, John Feiry, Thomas Huntlow; mayor, Sir W. Holles, mercer.
-
-1540. The 32nd, Sir William Laxton, Martin Bowes; mayor, Sir William
-Roch, draper.
-
-1541. The 33rd, Rowland Hill, Henry Suckley; mayor, Sir Michael Dormer,
-mercer.
-
-1542. The 34th, Henry Habberthorne, Henry Amcotes; mayor, John Cootes,
-salter.
-
-1543. The 35th, John Toleus, Richard Dobbes; mayor, Sir W. Bowyer,
-draper, for part, Sir Raph Waren, mercer.
-
-1544. The 36th, John Wilford, Andrew Jude; mayor, Sir W. Laxton, grocer.
-
-1545. The 37th, George Barnes, Ralph Alley; mayor, Sir Martin Bowes,
-goldsmith.
-
-1546. The 38th, Richard Jarveis, Thomas Curteis; mayor, Sir Henry
-Hubbathorne, merchant-tailor.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Edward VI. began his reign the 28th of January, in the year 1546.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1547. The 1st sheriffs, Thomas White, Robert Charsey; mayor, Sir John
-Gresham, mercer.
-
-1548. The 2nd, William Locke, Sir John Ailife; mayor, Sir Henry Amcotes,
-fishmonger.
-
-1549. The 3rd, Richard Turke, John Yorke; mayor, Rowland Hill, mercer.
-
-1550. The 4th, Augustine Hind, John Lyon; mayor, Sir Andrew Jude,
-skinner.
-
-1551. The 5th, John Lamberd, John Cowper; mayor, Sir Richard Dobbes,
-skinner.
-
-1552. The 6th, William Gerard, John Maynard; mayor, Sir George Barnes,
-haberdasher.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Queen Mary began her reign, the 6th of July, the year 1553.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1553. The 1st sheriffs, Thomas Ofley, William Huet; mayor, Sir Thomas
-White, merchant-tailor.
-
-This Thomas White founded St. John's college, in Oxford. He gave to the
-city of Bristow two thousand pounds.
-
-1554. The 2nd, David Woodrofe, William Chester; mayor, Sir John Lion,
-grocer.
-
-1555. The 3rd, Thomas Leigh, John Machil; mayor, Sir William Gerard,
-haberdasher.
-
-1556. The 4th, William Harper, John White; mayor, Sir Thomas Ofley,
-merchant-tailor.
-
-1557. The 5th, Richard Malorie, James Aitham; mayor, Sir Thomas Curteis,
-fishmonger.
-
-1558. The 6th, John Halse, Richard Champion; mayor, Sir Thomas Legh,
-mercer.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Queen Elizabeth began her reign, the 17th of November, in the year of
-Christ 1558.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1559. The 1st sheriffs, Thomas Lodge, Roger Martin; mayor, Sir William
-Huet, clothworker.
-
-1560. The 2nd, Christopher Draper, Thomas Row; mayor, Sir William
-Chester, draper.
-
-This year the merchant-tailors founded their notable free-school for
-poor men's children, etc.
-
-1561. The 3rd, Alexander Avenon, Humfrey Baskervile; mayor, Sir William
-Harper, merchant-tailor.
-
-1562. The 4th, William Alin, Richard Chamberlaine; mayor, Sir Thomas
-Lodge, grocer.
-
-1563. The 5th, Edward Bankes, Rowland Heyward; mayor, Sir John White,
-grocer.
-
-1564. The 6th, Edward Jackeman, Lionel Ducket; mayor, Sir Richard
-Malorie, mercer.
-
-1565. The 7th, John Rivers, James Hawes; mayor, Sir Richard Champion,
-draper.
-
-1566. The 8th, Richard Lambert, Ambrose Nicholas, John Langley; mayor,
-Sir Christopher Draper, ironmonger.
-
-1567. The 9th, Thomas Ramsey, William Bond; mayor, Sir Roger Martin,
-mercer.
-
-1568. The 10th, John Oleph, Robert Harding, James Bacon; mayor, Sir
-Thomas Row, merchant-tailor.
-
-1569. The 11th, Henry Becher, William Dane; mayor, Alexander Avenon,
-ironmonger.
-
-1570. The 12th, Francis Bernam, William Box; mayor, Sir Rowland Heyward,
-clothworker.
-
-1571. The 13th, Henry Miles, John Braunch; mayor, Sir William Allin,
-mercer.
-
-1572. The 14th, Richard Pipe, Nicholas Woodrofe; mayor, Sir Lionel
-Ducket, mercer.
-
-1573. The 15th, James Harvy, Thomas Pullison; mayor, Sir J. Rivers,
-grocer.
-
-1574. The 16th, Thomas Blanke, Anthony Gamage; mayor, James Hawes,
-clothworker.
-
-1575. The 17th, Edward Osborne, Wolstane Dixie; mayor, Ambrose Nicholas,
-salter.
-
-1576. The 18th, William Kimpton, George Barne; mayor, Sir John Langley,
-goldsmith.
-
-1577. The 19th, Nicholas Backhouse, Francis Bowyer; mayor, Sir Thomas
-Ramsey, grocer.
-
-1578. The 20th, George Bond, Thomas Starkie; mayor, Sir Richard Pipe,
-draper.
-
-1579. The 21st, Martin Calthrope, John Hart; mayor, Sir Nicholas
-Woodrofe, haberdasher.
-
-1580. The 22nd, Ralph Woodcock, John Alate; mayor, Sir John Branch,
-draper.
-
-1581. The 23rd, Richard Martin, William Webbe; mayor, Sir James Harvie,
-ironmonger.
-
-1582. The 24th, William Roe, John Hayden, Cuthbert Buckle; mayor, Sir
-Thomas Blancke, haberdasher.
-
-1583. The 25th, William Masham, John Spencer; mayor, Edward Osborne,
-clothworker.
-
-1584. The 26th, Stephen Slany, Henry Billingsley; mayor, Sir Thomas
-Pullison, draper.
-
-1585. The 27th, Anthony Radclife, Henry Pranell; mayor, Sir Wolstane
-Dixie, skinner.
-
-1586. The 28th, Robert House, William Elkin; mayor, Sir George Barne,
-haberdasher.
-
-1587. The 29th, Thomas Skinner, John Katcher; mayor, Sir George Bond,
-haberdasher.
-
-1588. The 30th, Hugh Ofley, Richard Saltenstall; mayor, Sir Martin
-Calthorpe, draper, for part, and Richard Martin, goldsmith, for the rest
-of that year.
-
-1589. The 31st, Richard Gurney, Stephen Some; mayor, Sir John Hart,
-grocer.
-
-1590. The 32nd, Nicholas Mosley, Robert Broke; mayor, John Allot,
-fishmonger, for part, Sir Rowland Heyward, clothworker, for the rest.
-
-1591. The 33rd, William Rider, Benet Barnham; mayor, Sir William Webb,
-salter.
-
-1592. The 34th, John Garrard, Robert Taylor; mayor, Sir William Roe,
-ironmonger.
-
-1593. The 35th, Paule Banning, Peter Hauton; mayor, Sir Cuthbert
-Buckle, vintner, for part, Sir Richard Martin, goldsmith, for the rest.
-
-1594. The 36th, Robert Lee, Thomas Benet; mayor, Sir John Spencer,
-clothworker.
-
-1595. The 37th, Thomas Low, Leonard Holiday; mayor, Sir Stephen Slany,
-skinner.
-
-1596. The 38th, John Wattes, Richard Godard; mayor, Thomas Skinner,
-clothworker, for part, Sir Henry Billingsley, haberdasher.
-
-1597. The 39th, Henry Roe, John More; mayor, Sir Richard Saltenstall,
-skinner.
-
-1598. The 40th, Edward Holmeden, Robert Hampson; mayor, Sir Stephen
-Some, grocer.
-
-1599. The 41st, Humfrey Welde, grocer, Roger Clarke, salter; mayor, Sir
-Nicholas Mosley, clothworker.
-
-1600. The 42nd, Thomas Cambell, ironmonger, Thomas Smith, haberdasher,
-William Craven, merchant-tailor; mayor, Sir William Rider, haberdasher.
-
-1601. The 43rd, Henry Anderson, girdler; William Glover, dyer; mayor,
-Sir John Garrard, haberdasher.
-
-1602. The 44th, James Pemberton, goldsmith, John Swinerton,
-merchant-tailor; mayor, Robert Lee, merchant-tailor.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Thus much for the chief and principal governors of this famous city; of
-whose public government, with the assistance of inferior officers, their
-charges for keeping of the peace, service of the prince, and honour of
-this city, much might have been said, and I had thought to have touched
-more at large; but being informed that a learned gentleman (James
-Dalton, a citizen born), minded such a labour, and promised to perform
-it, I have forborne and left the same to his good leisure, but he being
-now lately deceased without finishing any such work (a common fault to
-promise more than to perform), and I hear not of any other that taketh
-it in hand, I have been divers times minded to add certain chapters
-to this book, but being (by the good pleasure of God) visited with
-sickness, such as my feet (which have borne me many a mile) have of late
-years refused, once in four or five months, to convey me from my bed to
-my study, and therefore could not do as I would.
-
-At length, remembering I had long since gathered notes to have
-chaptered, am now forced to deliver them unperfected, and desire the
-readers to pardon me, that want not will to pleasure them.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[303] "Since called shiriffes, and judges of the King's court, and have
-therefore under-shiriffes, men learned in the law, to sit in their
-courts. Domesmen, or judges of the King's court."--_Stow._
-
-[304] The first edition has "mayor Hugh Fitz Thomas," and does not make
-mention of "Fitz Ottonis."
-
-[305] Hallontide,--or, as it was more generally designated, All
-Hallontide,--is the older designation of All Saints' day, the 1st of
-November.
-
-
-
-
-ALDERMEN AND SHERIFFS OF LONDON
-
-
-There be in this city, according to the number of wards, twenty-six
-aldermen; whereof yearly, on the feast day of St. Michael the Archangel,
-one of them is elected to be mayor for the year following, to begin
-on the 28th of October: the other aldermen, his brethren, are to him
-assistants in councils, courts, etc.
-
-More, there is a recorder of London, a grave and learned lawyer, skilful
-in the customs of this city, also assistant to the lord mayor: he taketh
-place in councils and in courts before any man that hath not been mayor,
-and learnedly delivereth the sentences of the whole court.
-
-The sheriffs of London, of old time chosen out of the commonalty,
-commoners, and oftentimes never came to be aldermen, as many aldermen
-were never sheriffs, and yet advanced to be mayor, but of late (by
-occasion) the sheriffs have been made aldermen before or presently after
-their election.
-
-Nicholas Faringdon was never sheriff, yet four times mayor of this city,
-and so of other, which reproveth a bye word, such a one will be mayor,
-or he be sheriff, etc.
-
-Then is there a chamberlain of London. A common clerk, or town clerk. A
-common sergeant.
-
-
-
-
-OFFICERS BELONGING TO THE LORD MAYOR'S HOUSE
-
-
- Sword-bearer, }
- Common hunt, } esquires, four.
- Common crier, }
- Water bailiff. }
- Coroner of London.
- Sergeant carvers, three.
- Sergeants of the chamber, three.
- Sergeant of the channel.
- Yeoman of the channel.
- Yeomen of the water side, four.
- Under water-bailiff.
- Yeomen of the chamber, two.
- Meal weighers, three.
- Yeomen of the wood wharfs, two.
- The sword-bearer's man. }
- Common hunt's men, two. }
- Common crier's man. } gentlemen's men, seven.
- Water-bailiffs' men, two. }
- The carver's man. }
-
-Whereof nine of these have liveries of the lord mayor, viz., the
-sword-bearer, and his man, the three carvers, and the four yeomen of the
-water side; all the rest have their liveries from the chamber of London.
-
-Thus far after my notes delivered by an officer of the lord mayor's
-house, but unperfected; for I remember a crowner, an under-chamberlain,
-and four clerks of the mayor's court, and others.
-
-
-
-
-THE SHERIFFS OF LONDON; THEIR OFFICERS
-
-
-The sheriffs of London, in the year 1471, were appointed each of them
-to have sixteen sergeants, every sergeant to have his yeoman, and six
-clerks; to wit, a secondary, a clerk of the papers, and four other
-clerks, besides the under sheriffs' clerks, their stewards, butlers,
-porters, and other in household many.
-
-
-
-
-OF THE MAYOR'S AND SHERIFFS' LIVERIES SOMEWHAT
-
-
-To follow precedent of former time, the clerks of companies were to
-inquire for them of their companies that would have the mayor's livery,
-their money as a benevolence given, which must be twenty shillings at
-the least put in a purse, with their names that gave it, and the wardens
-to deliver it to the mayor by the first of December; for the which
-every man had then sent him four yards of broad cloth, rowed or striped
-athwart, with a different colour to make him a gown, and these were
-called ray gowns, which was then the livery of the mayor, and also of
-the sheriffs, but each differing from others in the colours.
-
-Of older times I read, that the officers of this city wore gowns of
-party colours, as the right side of one colour and the left side of
-another; as, for example, I read in books of accounts in the Guildhall,
-that in the 19th year of Henry VI. there was bought for an officer's
-gown two yards of cloth, coloured mustard villars (a colour now out of
-use), and two yards of cloth, coloured blue, price two shillings the
-yard, in all eight shillings. More, paid to John Pope, draper, for two
-gown cloths, eight yards of two colours, _eux ombo deux de rouge_ (or
-red), _medle bune_, and _porre_ (or purple) colour, price the yard two
-shillings. These gowns were for Piers Rider and John Bukles, clerks of
-the chamber.
-
-More, I read that in the year 1516, in the 7th of Henry VIII., it
-was agreed by a common council in the Guildhall that the sheriffs of
-London should (as they had been accustomed) give yearly rayed gowns
-to the recorder, chamberlain, common sergeant, and common clerk, the
-sword-bearer, common hunt, water-bailiff, common crier, like as to their
-own offices, etc.
-
-1525. More, in the 16th of Henry VIII., Sir William Bayly, then being
-mayor, made a request, for that clothes of ray (as he alleged) were evil
-wrought, his officers might be permitted (contrary to custom) for that
-year to wear gowns of one colour; to the which, in a common council,
-one answered and said, "Yea, it might be permitted," and no man said,
-"Nay," and so it passed. Thus much for party coloured and ray gowns have
-I read: but for benevolence to the mayor, I find that of later time that
-each man giving forty shillings towards his charges, received four yards
-of broad cloth to make him a gown, for Thomas White performed it in
-the 1st of Queen Mary; but Sir Thomas Lodge gave instead of four yards
-of broad cloth, three yards of satin to make them doublets, and since
-that the three yards of satin is turned into a silver spoon, and so it
-holdeth.
-
-The days of attendance that the fellowships do give to the mayor at his
-going to Paules were seven, as followeth:--
-
- 1. Alhallowen day.
- 2. Christmasse day.
- 3. St. Stephen's day.
- 4. St. John's day.
- 5. New Year's day.
- 6. Twelfth day.
- 7. Candlemasse day.
-
-The 23rd of Henry VIII., these companies had place at the mayor's feast
-in the Guildhall, in order as followeth; I speak by precedent, for I was
-never feast-follower:--
-
- 1. Mercers, the wardens, and seventeen persons, five messes.
- 2. Grocers, the wardens, and sixteen persons, four messes.
- 3. Drapers, the wardens, and twelve persons, four messes.
- 4. Fishmongers, the wardens, and twelve persons, four messes.
- 5. Goldsmiths, the wardens, and ten persons, three messes.
- 6. Skinners, the wardens, and eight persons, three messes.
- 7. Merchant-tailors, the wardens, and nine persons, three messes.
- 8. Vintners, the wardens, and six persons, two messes.
- 9. Ironmongers, the wardens, and four persons, four messes and a
- half.
- 10. Merchant-haberdashers, the wardens, and fourteen persons, four
- messes and a half.
- 11. Salters, the wardens, and eight persons, two messes and a half.
- 12. Dyers, the wardens, and six persons, two messes.
- 13. Leathersellers, the wardens, and eight persons, three messes.
- 14. Pewterers, the wardens, and five persons, two messes.
- 15. Cutlers, the wardens and five persons, two messes.
- 16. Armourers, the wardens and three persons, one mess.
- 17. Waxchandlers, the wardens and six persons, two messes.
- 18. Tallow-chandlers, the wardens and three persons, two messes.
- 19. Shiremen, the wardens and five persons, two messes.
- 20. Fullers, the wardens and nine persons, two messes.
- 21. Sadlers, the wardens and four persons, two messes.
- 22. Brewers, the wardens and twelve persons, four messes.
- 23. Scriveners, the wardens and six persons, two messes.
- 24. Butchers, the wardens and seven persons, three messes.
- 25. Bakers, the wardens and four persons, two messes.
- 26. Poulterers, the wardens and one person, one mess.
- 27. Stationers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 28. Inholders, the wardens and four persons, two messes.
- 29. Girdlers, the wardens and four persons, two messes.
- 30. Chirurgeons, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 31. Founders, the wardens and one person, one mess.
- 32. Barbers, the wardens and four persons, two messes.
- No Clothing. Upholders, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 34. Broiderers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 35. Bowyers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 36. Fletchers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- No Clothing. Turners, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 38. Cordwainers, the wardens and four persons, two messes.
- 39. Painters-stainers, the wardens and five persons, two messes.
- 40. Masons, the wardens and one person, one mess.
- 41. Plumbers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 42. Carpenters, the wardens and four persons, two messes.
- 43. Pouch-makers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 44. Joiners, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 45. Coopers, the wardens and one person, one mess.
- No Clothing. Glaziers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- No Clothing. Linendrapers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- No Clothing. Woodmongers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 49. Curriers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- No Clothing. Foystors, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- No Clothing. Grey Tanners, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 52. Tilers, the wardens and one person, one mess.
- 53. Weavers, the wardens and one person, one mess.
- 54. Blacksmiths, the wardens, and one mess.
- No Clothing. Lorimars, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 56. Spurriers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 57. Wiresellers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- No Clothing. Fruiterers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- No Clothing. Farriers, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
- 60. Bladesmiths, the wardens and two persons, one mess.
-
-These companies severally, at sundry times, purchased the king's
-favour and license by his letters patents, to associate themselves
-in brotherhoods, with master and wardens for their government: many
-also have procured corporations, with privileges, etc.; but I read
-not of license by them procured for liveries to be worn, but at their
-governor's discretion to appoint, as occasion asketh, some time in
-triumphant manner, some time more mourning like, and such liveries have
-they taken upon them, as well before, as since they were by license
-associated into brotherhoods, or corporations. For the first of these
-companies that I read of to be a guild, brotherhood, or fraternity,
-in this city, were the weavers, whose guild was confirmed by Henry
-II. The next fraternity, which was of St. John Baptist, time out of
-mind, called of tailors and linen-armourers of London; I find that King
-Edward I., in the 28th of his reign, confirmed that guild by the name of
-tailors and linen-armourers, and gave to the brethren there of authority
-yearly to choose unto them a governor, or master, with wardens, etc. The
-other companies have since purchased license of societies, brotherhoods,
-or corporations, in the reigns of Edward III., Richard II., Henry IV.,
-Henry V., Henry VI., and Edward IV., etc.
-
-
-
-
-SOMEWHAT OF LIVERIES WORN BY CITIZENS OF LONDON, IN TIME OF TRIUMPHS AND
-OTHERWAYS
-
-
-1236. The 20th of Henry III., the mayor, aldermen, sheriffs, and
-citizens of London, rode out to meet the king and his new wife, Queen
-Elianor, daughter to Reymond Beringarius of Aragon, earl of Provence and
-Narbone. The citizens were clothed in long garments, embroidered about
-with gold, and silk in divers colours, their horses finely trapped, to
-the number of three hundred and sixty, every man bearing a golden or
-silver cup in his hand, the king's trumpets before them sounding, etc.,
-as ye may read in my _Annales_.
-
-1300. The 29th of Edward I., the said king took to wife Margaret, sister
-to Philip Le Beau, king of France; they were married at Canterbury. The
-queen was conveyed to London, against whom the citizens to the number of
-six hundred rode in one livery of red and white, with the cognizances of
-their mysteries embroidered upon their sleeves, they received her four
-miles out of London, and so conveyed her to Westminster.
-
-1415. The 3rd of Henry V., the said king arriving at Dover, the mayor of
-London with the aldermen and crafts-men riding in red, with hoods red
-and white, met with the king on the Blacke hith, coming from Eltham with
-his prisoners out of France.
-
-1432. The 10th of Henry VI., he being crowned in France, returning
-into England, came to Eltham towards London, and the mayor of London,
-John Welles, the aldermen, with the commonalty, rode against him on
-horseback, the mayor in crimson velvet, a great velvet hat furred,
-a girdle of gold about his middle, and a bawdrike of gold about his
-neck trilling down behind him, his three henxemen, on three great
-coursers following him, in one suit of red, all spangled in silver,
-then the aldermen in gowns of scarlet, with sanguine hoods, and all the
-commonality of the city clothed in white gowns, and scarlet hoods, with
-divers cognizances embroidered on their sleeves, etc.
-
-1485. The 1st of Henry VII., the mayor, aldermen, sheriffs, and
-commonality, all clothed in violet (as in a mourning colour), met the
-king at Shorditch, and conveyed him to Powles church, where he offered
-his banners.
-
-Thus much for liveries of citizens in ancient times, both in triumphs
-and otherwise, may suffice, whereby may be observed, that the coverture
-of men's heads was then hoods, for neither cap nor hat is spoken of,
-except that John Welles mayor of London to wear a hat in time of
-triumph, but differing from the hats lately taken in use, and now
-commonly worn for noblemen's liveries. I read that Thomas earl of
-Lancaster in the reign of Edward II. gave at Christmas in liveries, to
-such as served him, a hundred and fifty-nine broad cloaths, allowing to
-every garment furs to fur their hoods: more near our time, there yet
-remaineth the counterfeits and pictures of aldermen, and others that
-lived in the reigns of Henry VI. and Edward IV., namely alderman Darby
-dwelling in Fenchurch street, over against the parish church of St.
-Diones, left his picture, as of an alderman, in a gown of scarlet on
-his back, a hood on his head, etc., as is in that house (and elsewhere)
-to be seen: for a further monument of those late times, men may behold
-the glass windows of the mayor's court in the Guildhall above the
-stairs, the mayor is there pictured sitting in habit, party-coloured,
-and a hood on his head, his swordbearer before him with a hat or cap
-of maintenance: the common clerk, and other officers bare-headed,
-their hoods on their shoulders; and therefore I take it, that the use
-of square bonnets worn by noblemen, gentlemen, citizens, and others,
-took beginning in this realm by Henry VII. and in his time, and of
-further antiquity, I can see no counterfeit or other proof of use.
-Henry VIII. (towards his latter reign) wore a round flat cap of scarlet
-or of velvet, with a bruch or jewel, and a feather; divers gentlemen,
-courtiers, and others, did the like. The youthful citizens also took
-them to the new fashion of flat caps, knit of woollen yarn black, but so
-light, that they were obliged to tie them under their chins, for else
-the wind would be master over them. The use of these flat round caps so
-far increased (being of less price than the French bonnet) that in short
-time young aldermen took the wearing of them; Sir John White wore it in
-his mayoralty, and was the first that left example to his followers;
-but now the Spanish felt, or the like counterfeit, is most commonly of
-all men both spiritual and temporal taken to use, so that the French
-bonnet or square cap, and also the round or flat cap, have for the most
-part given place to the Spanish felt; but yet in London amongst the
-graver sort (I mean the liveries of companies), remaineth a memory of
-the hoods of old time worn by their predecessors: these hoods were worn,
-the roundlets upon their heads, the skirts to hang behind in their necks
-to keep them warm, the tippet to lie on their shoulder, or to wind about
-their necks, these hoods were of old time made in colours according to
-their gowns, which were of two colours, as red and blue, or red and
-purple, murrey, or as it pleased their masters and wardens to appoint
-to the companies; but now of late time, they have used their gowns to
-be all of one colour, and those of the saddest, but their hoods being
-made the one half of the same cloth their gowns be of, the other half
-remaineth red as of old time. And so I end, as wanting time to travel
-further in this work.
-
-Now since that I have given you an outward view of this city, it shall
-not be impertinent to let you take an insight also of the same, such
-as a Londoner born discoursed about twenty years gone, for answer (as
-it seemeth) to some objections that then were made against the growing
-greatness thereof. The author gave it me, and therefore, howsoever I
-conceal his name (which itself pretendeth not), I think I may without
-his offence impart it to others, that they may take pleasure in the
-reading, as I doubt not but he did in the writing. Long may they (that
-list) envy, and long may we and our posterity enjoy the good estate of
-this city.
-
-
-
-
-A DISCOURSE OF THE NAMES AND FIRST CAUSES OF THE INSTITUTION OF CITIES
-AND PEOPLED TOWNS AND OF THE COMMODITIES THAT DO GROW BY THE SAME; AND,
-NAMELY, OF THE CITY OF LONDON
-
- WRITTEN BY WAY OF AN APOLOGY (OR DEFENCE) AGAINST THE OPINION OF
- SOME MEN, WHICH THINK THAT THE GREATNESS OF THAT CITY STANDETH NOT
- WITH THE PROFIT AND SECURITY OF THIS REALM
-
-
-Cities and well-peopled places be called _Oppida_, in Latin; either _ab
-ope danda_, or _ab opibus_, or _ab opponendo se hostibus_. They be named
-also _Civitates a coeeundo_, and _urbes_, either of the word _urbare_,
-because the first inclosure of them was described with the draught of a
-plough, or else _ab orbe_, for the round compass that they at the first
-had.
-
-In the Greek a city is termed ~polis~, either of the word ~polus~,
-_multus_, or of ~poleino poleneon~,[306] _id est_, _habitare_, _alere_,
-_gubernare_.
-
-In the Saxon (or old English) sometimes _Tun_, which we now call town,
-derived of the word _Tynan_, to inclose or tyne, as some yet speak.
-But forasmuch as that word was proper to every village and inclosed
-dwelling, therefore our ancestors called their walled towns _Burh_ or
-_Byrg_, and we now Bury and Borough, of the Greek word ~pyrgos~ (as I
-think), which signifieth a tower or a high building.
-
-The walls of these towns had their name of _vallum_, because at the
-first they were but of that earth which was cast out of the trench,
-or ditch, wherewith they were environed. But afterward, being made of
-matter more fit for defence, they were named _a muniendo moenia_. By
-the etymology of these names, it may appear that common weals, cities,
-and towns, were at the first invented, to the end that men might lead
-a civil life amongst themselves, and be saved harmless against their
-enemies; whereupon Plato saith, "_Civitates ab initio utilitatis causa
-constitutae sunt_." Aristotle, 1. Politicorum, 2. saith, "_Civitas a
-natura profecta est: homo enim animal aptum est ad coetus, et proinde
-civitatis origo ad viuendum, institutio ad bene viuendum refertur._"
-And Cicero, _lib. primo de Inventione_, in the beginning, saith, "_Fuit
-quoddam tempus cum in agris homines passim bestiarum more vagabantur,
-etc. quo quidem tempore, quidam (magnus, viz. vir et sapiens) dispersos
-homines in agris, et tectis silvestribus abditos, ratione quadam
-compulit in unum locum, atque eos in unamquamq; rem induxit utilem et
-honestam. Urbibus vero constitutis fidem colere, et justitiam retinere
-discebant, et aliis parere sua voluntate consuescebant_," etc. The same
-man discourseth notably to the same effect in his Oration _Pro Sestio_,
-a little after the midst thereof, showing that in the life of men
-dispersed, _vis_, beareth all the sway; but in the civil life, _ars_ is
-better maintained, etc. This thing well saw King William the Conqueror,
-who in his laws, fol. 125, saith, "_Burgi et civitates fundata, et
-edificata sunt, ad tuitionem gentium et populorum Regni, et idcirco
-observari debent cum omni libertate, integritate et ratione_." And his
-predecessors, King Ethelstane and King Canutus, in their laws, fol. 62
-and 106, had commanded thus: "_Oppida instaurantur_," etc.
-
-Seeing, therefore, that as Cicero, 2. _Officior._ saith, "_Proxime et
-secundum Deos, homines hominibus maxime utiles esse possunt_;" and
-that men are congregated into cities and commonwealths for honesty
-and utility's sake, these shortly be the commodities that do come by
-cities, commonalties, and corporations. First, men by this nearness
-of conversation are withdrawn from barbarous feritie and force to a
-certain mildness of manners, and to humanity and justice; whereby they
-are contented to give and take right, to and from their equals and
-inferiors, and to hear and obey their heads and superiors. Also the
-doctrine of God is more fitly delivered, and the discipline thereof
-more aptly to be executed, in peopled towns than abroad, by reason of
-the facility of common and often assembling; and consequently such
-inhabitants be better managed in order, and better instructed in
-wisdom: whereof it came to pass, that at the first, they that excelled
-others this way, were called _astuti_, of the Greek word ~asty~, which
-signifieth a city, although the term be now declined to the worst
-part, and do betoken evil, even as _tyrannus_, _sophista_, and some
-such other originally good words are fallen; and hereof also good
-behaviour is yet called _urbanitas_, because it is rather found in
-cities than elsewhere. In some, by often hearing men be better persuaded
-in religion, and for that they live in the eyes of others, they be
-by example the more easily trained to justice, and by shamefastness
-restrained from injury.
-
-And whereas commonwealths and kingdoms cannot have, next after God, any
-surer foundation than the love and goodwill of one man towards another,
-that also is closely bred and maintained in cities, where men by mutual
-society and companying together, do grow to alliances, commonalties, and
-corporations.
-
-The liberal sciences and learnings of all sorts, which be _lumina
-reipublicae_, do flourish only in peopled towns; without the which a
-realm is in no better case than a man that lacketh both his eyes.
-
-Manual arts, or handicrafts, as they have for the most part been
-invented in towns and cities, so they cannot anywhere else be either
-maintained or amended. The like is to be said of merchandise, under
-which name I comprehend all manner of buying, selling, bartering,
-exchanging, communicating of things that men need to and fro. Wealth and
-riches, which are truly called _subsidia belli, et ornamenta pacis_, are
-increased chiefly in towns and cities both to the prince and people.
-
-The necessity of the poor and needy is in such places both sooner to be
-espied, and hath means to be more charitably relieved.
-
-The places themselves be surer refuges in all extremities of foreign
-invasion, and the inhabitants be a ready hand and strength of men, with
-munition to oppress intestine sedition.
-
-Moreover, forasmuch as the force of the wars of our time consisteth
-chiefly in shot, all other soldiers being either horsemen or footmen,
-armed on land, or mariners at the sea, it seemeth to me that citizens
-and townsmen be as fit to be employed in any of these services, that on
-horseback only excepted, as the inhabitants that be drawn out of the
-country.
-
-Furthermore, even as these societies and assemblies of men in cities
-and great towns are a continual bridle against tyranny, which was the
-cause that Tarquin, Nero, Dionysius, and such others, have always sought
-to weaken them: so, being well tempered, they are a strong fort and
-bulwark, not only in the aristocracy, but also in the lawful kingdom or
-just royalty.
-
-At once the propagation of religion, the execution of good policy, the
-exercise of charity, and the defence of the country, is best performed
-by towns and cities; and this civil life approacheth nearest to the
-shape of that mystical body whereof Christ is the head, and men be the
-members; whereupon both at the first, that man of God Moses, in the
-commonwealth of the Israelites, and the governors of all countries, in
-all ages since, have continually maintained the same; and to change it
-were nothing else but to metamorphose the world, and to make wild beasts
-of reasonable men. To stand longer upon this it were, _in re non dubia,
-uti oratione non necessaria_; and therefore I will come to London.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[306] Sic in Stow; Strype corrects it into ~poleuo~.
-
-
-
-
-THE SINGULARITIES OF THE CITY OF LONDON
-
-
-Whatsoever is said of cities generally, maketh also for London
-specially; howbeit, these things are particularly for our purpose to be
-considered in it. The situation; the former estimation that it hath had;
-the service that it hath done; the present estate and government of it,
-and such benefits as do grow to the realm by the maintenance thereof.
-
-This realm hath only three principal rivers, whereon a royal city may
-well be situated: Trent, in the north, Severn in the south-west, and
-Thames in the south-east; of the which Thames, both for the straight
-course in length reacheth furthest into the belly of the land, and for
-the breadth and stillness of the water is most navigable up and down the
-stream; by reason whereof London, standing almost in the middle of that
-course, is more commodiously served with provision of necessaries than
-any town standing upon the other two rivers can be, and doth also more
-easily communicate to the rest of the realm the commodities of her own
-intercourse and traffic.
-
-This river openeth indifferently upon France and Flanders, our mightiest
-neighbours, to whose doings we ought to have a bent eye and special
-regard; and this city standeth thereon in such convenient distance
-from the sea, as it is not only near enough for intelligence of the
-affairs of those princes, and for the resistance of their attempts,
-but also sufficiently removed from the fear of any sudden dangers that
-may be offered by them; whereas for the prince of this realm to dwell
-upon Trent were to turn his back or blind side to his most dangerous
-borderers; and for him to rest and dwell upon Severn were to be shut up
-in a cumbersome corner, which openeth but upon Ireland only, a place of
-much less importance.
-
-Neither could London be pitched so commodiously upon any other part
-of the same river of Thames as where it now standeth; for if it were
-removed more to the west it should lose the benefit of the ebbing and
-flowing, and if it were seated more towards the east it should be nearer
-to danger of the enemy, and further both from the good air and from
-doing good to the inner parts of the realm; neither may I omit that none
-other place is so plentifully watered with springs as London is.
-
-And whereas, amongst other things, corn and cattle, hay and fuel, be of
-great necessity; of the which cattle may be driven from afar, and corn
-may easily be transported. But hay and fuel, being of greater bulk and
-burthen, must be at hand: only London, by the benefit of this situation
-and river, may be sufficiently served therewith. In which respect an
-alderman of London reasonably (as me thought) affirmed, that although
-London received great nourishment by the residence of the prince, the
-repair of the parliament and courts of justice, yet it stood principally
-by the advantage of the situation upon the river; for when, as on a
-time, it was told him by a courtier that Queen Mary, in her displeasure
-against London, had appointed to remove with the parliament and term to
-Oxford, this plain man demanded whether she meant also to divert the
-river of Thames from London, or no? and when the gentleman had answered
-"No," "Then," quoth the alderman, "by God's grace, we shall do well
-enough at London, whatsoever become of the term and parliament." I
-myself being then a young scholar at Oxford, did see great preparation
-made towards that term and parliament, and do well remember that the
-common opinion and voice was, that they were not holden there, because
-provision of hay could not be made in all the country to serve for ten
-whole days together, and yet is that quarter plentifully stored with hay
-for the proportion of the shire itself.
-
-For proof of the ancient estimation of London, I will not use the
-authority of the British history, nor of such as follow it (although
-some hold it credible enough that London was first _Trinobantum
-civitas_, or _Troja nova_, that famous city in our histories, and then
-Ludstoune, and by corruption London, as they report), because they be
-not of sufficient force to draw the gainsayers. Neither will I stand
-much upon that honourable testimony which Gervas. Tilburiens. giveth to
-London in his book, _De Otiis Imperialibus_, saying thus, concerning
-the blessing of God towards it:--"_In Urbe London. exceptione habet
-divulgatum id per omnes aeque gentes Lucani proverbium_:
-
- Invida fatorum series summisque negatum
- Stare diu.
-
-"_Nam ea annis 354 ante Romam condita nunquam amisit principatum, nec
-bello consumpta est._"
-
-But I will rather use the credit of one or two ancient foreign writers,
-and then descend to later histories. Cornel. Tacitus, lib. 4. Annal.,
-saith, "_Londinum copia negociatorum, et comeatu maxime celebris_," and
-Herodian, in the Life of Severus the emperor, saith, "_Londinum urbs
-magna et opulenta_." Beda, lib. Ecclesiastic. 10. chap. 29, showeth
-that Pope Gregory appointed two archbishops' sees in England, the one
-at London, the other at York. King Ethelstane, in his laws, appointing
-how many mint-masters should be in each city, allotteth eight to London,
-and not so many to any other city. The penner of those laws, that are
-said to be made by Edward the Confessor, and confirmed by William the
-Conqueror, saith, "_London est caput Regni, et Legum_." King Henry I.,
-in the third chapter of his Laws, commandeth that no citizen of London
-should be amerced above one hundred shillings for any pecuniary pain.
-The great charter of England, that Helena for which there was so long
-and so great war and contention, in the ninth chapter, saith, "_Civitas
-London. habeat omnes suas Libertates antiquas_," etc. About the time of
-King John London was reputed "_regni firmata Columna_," as Alexander
-Neckham writeth; and in the beginning of the reign of Richard II. it was
-called "_Camera regis_," as Thomas Walsingham reporteth. I pass over the
-recital of the Saxon charter of King William the Conqueror, the Latin
-charter of Henry I. and II., of Richard I., of John, and of Edward I.,
-all which gave unto the citizens of London great privileges, and of
-Edward III., who reciting all the grants of his predecessors, not only
-confirmed but also increased the same, and of the latter kings, who
-have likewise added many things thereunto. Only I wish to be noted by
-them, that during all this time, all those wise and politic princes have
-thought it fit, not only to maintain London in such plight as they found
-it, but also to adorn, increase, and amplify it with singular tokens
-of their liberal favour and good liking. And whether there be not now
-the same or greater causes to draw the like, or better estimation and
-cherishing, let any man be judge, that will take the pains to compare
-the present estate of London, yet still growing to better, with the
-former condition of the same.
-
-It were too much to recite particularly the martial services that this
-city hath done from time to time; neither do I think that they be all
-committed to writing; only for a taste, as it were, I will note these
-few following.
-
-Almost sixty years before the Conquest a huge army of the Danes (whereof
-King Sweyne was the leader) besieged King Etheldred in London (than the
-which, as the story saith, then he had none other refuge), but they were
-manfully repulsed, and a great number of them slain.
-
-After the death of this Sweyne, his son Canutus (afterward king of
-England) besieged London, both by land and water; but after much labour,
-finding it impregnable, he departed; and in the same year repairing his
-forces, he girded it with a new siege, in the which the citizens so
-defended themselves, and offended him, that in the end he went away with
-shame.
-
-In the dissension that arose between King Edward the Confessor and his
-father-in-law, Earl Goodwin (which was the mightiest subject within
-this land that ever I have read of), the earl with a great army came
-to London, and was for all that by the countenance of the citizens
-resisted, till such time as the nobility made reconciliation between
-them. About seventy years after the Conquest, Maude, the empress, made
-war upon King Stephen for the right of the crown, and had taken his
-person prisoner; but, by the strength and assistance of the Londoners
-and Kentishmen, Maude was put to flight at Winchester, and her brother
-Robert, then earl of Gloucester, was taken, in exchange for whom King
-Stephen was delivered: I dispute not whose right was better, but I
-avouch the service, seeing Stephen was in possession.
-
-The history of William Walworth, the mayor of London, is well known; by
-whose manhood and policy the person of King Richard II. was rescued,
-the city saved, Wat Tiler killed, and all his straglers discomfited; in
-reward of which service, the mayor and other aldermen were knighted.
-
-Jack Cade also having discomfited the king's army that was sent against
-him, came to London, and was there manfully and with long fight
-resisted, until that by the good policy of the citizens his company was
-dispersed.
-
-Finally, in the 10th year of the reign of King Edward IV., and not many
-days before the death of Henry VI., Thomas Nevill, commonly called the
-bastard of Fauconbridge, armed a great company against the king, and
-being denied passage through London, he assaulted it on divers parts;
-but he was repulsed by the citizens, and chased as far as Stratford,
-with the loss of a great many.
-
-Thus much of certain their principal and personal services in war
-only, for it were infinite to repeat the particular aids of men and
-money which London hath ministered; and I had rather to leave it to be
-conjectured at, by comparison to be made between it and other cities,
-whereof I will give you this one note for an example. In the 12th year
-of the reign of King Edward II., it was ordered by parliament that every
-city of the realm should make out soldiers against the Scots; at which
-time London was appointed to send two hundred men, and Canterbury, being
-then one of our best cities, forty, and no more: and this proportion
-of five to one is now in our age increased, at the least five to one,
-both in soldiers and subsidy. As for the other services that London hath
-done in times of peace, they are to be measured by consideration of the
-commodities, whereof I will speak anon. In the mean season, let the
-estate and government of this city be considered, to the end that it may
-appear that it standeth well with the policy of the realm.
-
-Caesar, in his Commentaries, is witness, that in his time the cities
-of Britain had large territories annexed unto them, and were several
-estates of themselves, governed by particular kings, or potentates,
-as in Italy and Germany yet be; and that Mandubratius was king of the
-Trinobants, whose chief city London is taken to have been. And I find
-not that this government was altered either by Caesar or his successors,
-notwithstanding that the country became tributary unto them: but that
-it continued until at length the Britons themselves reduced all their
-peoples into one monarchy; howbeit, that lasted not any long season,
-for upon Vortiger their king came the Saxons our ancestors, and they
-drave the Britons into Wales, Cornwall, and Bretagne in France, and
-in process of war divided the country amongst themselves into an
-heptarchy, or seven kingdoms; of the which one was called the kingdom
-of the East Saxons, which having in manner the same limits that the
-bishopric of London now enjoyeth, contained Essex, Middlesex, and a part
-of Hertfordshire, and so included London. Again, it appeareth, that
-in course of time, and about eight hundred years after Christ, Egbert
-(then king of the West Saxons), _ut pisces saepe minutos magnus comest_,
-overcame the rest of the kings, and once more erected a monarchy; the
-which till the coming in of the Normans, and from thence even hitherto
-hath continued.
-
-Now I doubt not (whatsoever London was in the time of Caesar), but
-that under the heptarchy and monarchy it hath been a subject, and no
-free city, though happily endowed with some large privileges, for
-King William the Conqueror found a portreeve there, whose name was
-Godfrey (by which name he greeteth him in his Saxon Charter), and his
-office was none other than the charge of a bailiff or reeve, as by the
-self-same name continuing yet in Gravesend, and certain other places,
-may well appear: but the Frenchmen, using their own language, called
-him sometimes a provost and sometime a bailiff: whatsoever his name and
-office were, he was _perpetuus magistratus_, given by the prince, and
-not chosen by the citizens, as it seemeth; for what time King Richard
-I. needed money towards his expedition in the Holy Land, they first
-purchased of him the liberty to choose yearly from amongst themselves
-two bailiffs; and King John, his successor, at their like suit, changed
-their bailiffs into a mayor and two sheriffs. To these Henry III. added
-aldermen, at the first eligible yearly, but afterward by King Edward
-III. made perpetual magistrates and justices of the peace within their
-wards, in which plight of government it presently standeth. This,
-shortly as I could, is the historical and outward estate of London; now
-come I to the inward pith and substance.
-
-The estate of this city is to be examined by the quantity and by the
-quality.
-
-The quantity therefore consisteth in the number of the citizens which
-is very great, and far exceedeth the proportion of Hippodamus, which
-appointed ten thousand, and of others which have set down other numbers,
-as meet stintes in their opinions to be well governed; but yet seeing
-both reason and experience have freed us from the law of any definite
-number, so that other things be observed, let that be admitted: neither
-is London, I fear me, so great as populous; for well saith one, "_Non
-idem est magna civitas et frequens, magna est enim quae multos habet qui
-arma ferre possunt_:" whatsoever the number be, it breedeth no fear of
-sedition; forasmuch as the same consisteth not in the extremes, but in a
-very mediocrity of wealth and riches, as it shall better appear anon.
-
-And if the causes of English rebellions be searched out, they shall be
-found in effect to be these twain, ambition and covetousness; of which
-the first reigneth in the minds of high and noble personages, or of
-such others as seek to be gracious and popular, and have robbed the
-hearts of the multitude; whereas in London, if any where in the world,
-_honos vere onus est_, and every man rather shunneth than seeketh the
-mayoralty, which is the best mark amongst them; neither hath there been
-any strong faction, nor any man more popular than the rest, forasmuch
-as the government is by a pattern, as it were, and always the same, how
-often soever they change their magistrate. Covetousness, that other
-sire of sedition, possesseth the miserable and needy sort, and such as
-be naughty packs, unthrifts, which although it cannot be chosen, but
-that in a frequent city as London is, there shall be found many, yet
-bear they not any great sway, seeing the multitude and most part there
-is of a competent wealth, and earnestly bent to honest labour. I confess
-that London is a mighty arm and instrument to bring any great desire to
-effect, if it may be known to a man's devotion; whereof also there want
-not examples in the English history. But forasmuch as the same is, by
-the like reason, serviceable and meet to impeach any disloyal attempt,
-let it rather be well governed than evil liked therefore; for it shall
-appear anon, that as London hath adhered to some rebellions, so hath
-it resisted many, and was never the author of any one. The quality of
-this city consisteth either in the law and government thereof, or in the
-degrees and condition of the citizens or in their strength and riches.
-
-It is besides the purpose to dispute, whether the estate of the
-government here be a democracy or aristocracy; for whatever it be, being
-considered in itself, certain it is, that in respect of the whole realm,
-London is but a citizen and no city, a subject and no free estate, an
-obedienciary and no place endowed with any distinct or absolute power;
-for it is governed by the same law that the rest of the realm is, both
-in causes criminal and civil, a few customs only excepted, which also
-are to be adjudged or forejudged by the common law. And in the assembly
-of the estates of our realm (which we call parliament) they are but a
-member of the commonalty, and send two burgesses for their city, as
-every poor borough doth, and two knights for their county, as every
-other shire doth; and are as straitly bound by such laws as any part of
-the realm is, for if contribution in subsidy of money to the prince be
-decreed, the Londoners have none exemption; no, not so much as to assess
-themselves, for the prince doth appoint the commissioners.
-
-If soldiers must be mustered, Londoners have no law to keep themselves
-at home; if provision for the prince's household be to be made, their
-goods are not privileged. In sum, therefore, the government of London
-differeth not in substance, but in ceremony, from the rest of the
-realm, as, namely, in the names and choice of their officers, and in
-their guilds and fraternities, established for the maintenance of
-handicrafts and labourers, and for equity and good order to be kept in
-buying and selling. And yet in these also are they to be controlled by
-the general law; for by the statutes, 28 Edward III. chap. 10, and 1
-Henry IV. chap. 15, the points of their misgovernment are inquirable by
-the inhabitants of the foreign shires adjoining, and punishable by such
-justiciars as the prince shall thereunto depute: to conclude, therefore,
-the estate of London, for government, is so agreeable a symphony with
-the rest, that there is no fear of dangerous discord to ensue thereby.
-
-The multitude (or whole body) of this populous city is two ways to
-be considered, generally and specially: generally, they be natural
-subjects, a part of the commons of this realm, and are by birth
-for the most part a mixture of all countries of the same; by blood
-gentlemen, yeomen, and of the basest sort, without distinction, and by
-profession busy bees, and travailers for their living in the hive of
-this commonwealth; but specially considered, they consist of these three
-parts,--merchants, handicraftsmen, and labourers.
-
-Merchandise is also divided into these three sorts,--navigation, by the
-which merchandizes are brought, and carried in and out over the seas;
-invection, by the which commodities are gathered into the city, and
-dispersed from thence into the country by land and negotiation, which I
-may call the keeping of a retailing or standing shop. In common speech,
-they of the first sort be called merchants, and both the other retailers.
-
-Handicraftsmen be those which do exercise such arts as require both
-labour and cunning, as goldsmiths, tailors, and haberdashers, skinners,
-etc.
-
-Labourers and hirelings I call those _quorum operae non artes emuntur_,
-as Tullie saith; of which sort be porters, carmen, watermen, etc.
-
-Again, these three sorts may be considered, either in respect of their
-wealth or number: in wealth, merchants and some of the chief retailers
-have the first place; the most part of retailers and all artificers the
-second or mean place; and hirelings the lowest room: but in number they
-of the middle place be first, and do far exceed both the rest; hirelings
-be next, and merchants be the last. Now, out of this, that the estate of
-London, in the persons of the citizens, is so friendly interlaced, and
-knit in league with the rest of the realm, not only at their beginning
-by birth and blood, as I have showed, but also very commonly at their
-ending by life and conversation, for that merchants and rich men (being
-satisfied with gain) do for the most part marry their children into the
-country, and convey themselves, after Cicero's counsel, "_Veluti ex
-portu in agros et possessiones_:" I do infer that there is not only
-no danger towards the common quiet thereby, but also great occasion
-and cause of good love and amity. Out of this, that they be generally
-bent to travel, and do fly poverty, "_Per mare, per saxa, per ignes_,"
-as the poet saith: I draw hope that they shall escape the note of many
-vices which idle people do fall into. And out of this, that they be
-a great multitude, and that yet the greatest part of them be neither
-too rich nor too poor, but do live in the mediocrity, I conclude with
-Aristotle, that the prince needeth not to fear sedition by them, for
-thus saith he: "_Magnae urbes magis sunt a seditione liberae, quod in eis
-dominetur mediocritas; nam in parvis nihil medium est, sunt enim omnes
-vel pauperes vel opulenti._" I am now to come to the strength and power
-of this city, which consisteth partly in the number of the citizens
-themselves, whereof I have spoken before, partly in their riches, and
-in their warlike furniture; for as touching the strength of the place
-itself, that is apparent to the eye, and therefore is not to be treated
-of.
-
-The wealth and warlike furniture of London is either public or private,
-and no doubt the common treasure cannot be much there, seeing that the
-revenue which they have hardly sufficeth to maintain their bridge and
-conduits, and to pay their officers and servants. Their toll doth not
-any more than pay their fee farm, that they pay to the prince. Their
-issues for default of appearances be never levied, and the profits of
-their courts of justice do go to particular men's hands. Arguments
-hereof be these two: one, that they can do nothing of extraordinary
-charge without a general contribution; another, that they have suffered
-such as have borne the chief office amongst them, and were become
-bankrupt, to depart the city without relief, which I think they neither
-would nor could have done, if the common treasure had sufficed to cover
-their shame; hereof therefore we need not be afraid. The public armour
-and munition of this city remaineth in the halls of the companies, as
-it doth throughout the whole realm, for a great part in the parish
-churches; neither is that kept together, but only for obedience to the
-law, which commandeth it, and therefore if that threaten danger to the
-estate, it may by another law be taken from them, and committed to a
-more safe armoury.
-
-The private riches of London resteth chiefly in the hands of the
-merchants and retailers, for artificers have not much to spare, and
-labourers have need that it were given unto them. Now how necessary
-and serviceable the estate of merchandise is to this realm, it may
-partly appear by the practice of that peaceable, politic, and rich
-prince, King Henry VII., of whom Polidore (writing his life) sayeth
-thus: "_Mercatores ille saepenumero pecunia multa data gratuite juvabat,
-ut mercatura ars una omnium cunctis aeque mortalibus tum commoda,
-tum necessaria, in suo regno copiosior esset_." But chiefly by the
-inestimable commodities that grow thereby: for who knoweth not that we
-have extreme need of many things, whereof foreign countries have great
-store, and that we may spare many things whereof they have need: or who
-is ignorant of this, that we have no mines of silver or gold within
-our realm, so that the increase of our coin and bullion cometh from
-elsewhere; and yet nevertheless we be both fed, clad, and otherwise
-served with foreign commodities and delights, as plentiful as with our
-domestical; which thing cometh to pass by the mean of merchandise only,
-which importeth necessaries from other countries, and exporteth the
-superfluities of our own.
-
-For seeing we have no way to increase our treasure by mines of gold or
-silver at home, and can have nothing without money or ware from other
-countries abroad, it followeth necessarily, that if we follow the
-counsel of that good old husband, Marcus Cato, saying, "_Oportet patrem
-familias vendacem esse, non emacem_," and do carry more commodities in
-value over the seas than we bring hither from thence, that then the
-realm shall receive that overplus in money; but if we bring from beyond
-the seas merchandise of more value than that which we do send over may
-countervail, then the realm payeth for that overplus in ready money,
-and consequently is a loser by that ill husbandry; and therefore in
-this part great and heedful regard must be had that symmetry and due
-proportion be kept, lest otherwise either the realm be defrauded of her
-treasure, or the subjects corrupted in vanity, by excessive importation
-of superfluous and needless merchandise, or else that we feel penury,
-even in our greatest plenty and store, by immoderate exportation of our
-own needful commodities.
-
-Other the benefits that merchandise bringeth shall hereafter appear
-in the general recital of the commodities that come by London; and
-therefore it resteth that I speak a word of retailers, and finally
-show that much good groweth by them both. The chief part of retailing
-is but a handmaid to merchandise, dispersing by piecemeal that which
-the merchant bringeth in gross; of which trade be mercers, vintners,
-haberdashers, ironmongers, milliners, and all such as sell wares growing
-or made beyond the seas; and therefore so long as merchandise itself
-shall be profitable, and such proportion kept as neither we lose our
-treasure thereby, nor be cloyed with unnecessary foreign wares, this
-kind of retailing is to be retained also.
-
-Now that merchants and retailers of London be very rich and great,
-it is so far from any harm, that it is a thing both praiseworthy and
-profitable; for "_Mercatura_ (saith Cicero), _si tenuis est, sordida
-putanda est; sin magna est et copiosa, non est vituperanda_." And truly
-merchants and retailers do not altogether _intus canere_, and profit
-themselves only, for the prince and realm both are enriched by their
-riches: the realm winneth treasure, if their trade be so moderated by
-authority that it break not proportion, and they besides bear a good
-fleece, which the prince may shear when he seeth good.
-
-But here, before I conclude this part, I have shortly to answer the
-accusation of those men, which charge London with the loss and decay
-of many (or most) of the ancient cities, corporate towns, and markets
-within this realm, by drawing from them to herself alone, say they, both
-all trade of traffic by sea, and the retailing of wares and exercise
-of manual arts also. Touching navigation, which I must confess is
-apparently decayed in many port towns, and flourisheth only or chiefly
-at London, I impute that partly to the fall of the Staple, the which
-being long since a great trade, and bestowed sometimes at one town and
-sometimes at another within the realm, did much enrich the place where
-it was, and being now not only diminished in force, but also translated
-over the seas, cannot but bring some decay with it, partly to the
-impairing of havens, which in many places have impoverished those towns,
-whose estate doth ebb and flow with them, and partly to the dissolution
-of religious houses, by whose wealth and haunt many of those places were
-chiefly fed and nourished. I mean not to rehearse particular examples of
-every sort, for the thing itself speaketh, and I haste to an end.
-
-As for retailers, therefore, and handicraftsmen, it is no marvel if they
-abandon country towns, and resort to London; for not only the court,
-which is now-a-days much greater and more gallant than in former times,
-and which was wont to be contented to remain with a small company,
-sometimes at an abbey or priory, sometimes at a bishop's house, and
-sometimes at some mean manor of the king's own, is now for the most part
-either abiding at London, or else so near unto it, that the provision
-of things most fit for it may easily be fetched from thence; but also by
-occasion thereof, the gentlemen of all shires do fly and flock to this
-city; the younger sort of them to see and show vanity, and the elder to
-save the cost and charge of hospitality and house-keeping.
-
-For hereby it cometh to pass, that the gentlemen being either for a
-good portion of the year out of the country, or playing the farmers,
-graziers, brewers, or such like, more than gentlemen were wont to do
-within the country, retailers and artificers, at the least of such
-things as pertain to the back or belly, do leave the country towns,
-where there is no vent, and do fly to London, where they be sure to
-find ready and quick market. And yet I wish, that even as many towns in
-the low countries of King Philip do stand, some by one handy art, and
-some by another; so also that it might be provided here that the making
-of some things might (by discreet dispensation) be allotted to some
-special towns, to the end, that although the daintiness of men cannot
-be restrained, which will needs seek those things at London, yet other
-places also might be relieved, at the least by the workmanship of them.
-
-Thus much then of the estate of London, in the government thereof, in
-the condition of the citizens, and in their power and riches. Now follow
-the enumeration of such benefits as redound to the prince and this realm
-by this city: in which doing I profess not to rehearse all, but only to
-recite and run over the chief and principal of them.
-
-Besides the commodities of the furtherance of religion and justice,
-the propagation of learning, the maintenance of arts, the increase of
-riches, and the defence of countries (all which are before showed to
-grow generally by cities, and be common to London with them), London
-bringeth singularly these good things following.
-
-By advantage of the situation it disperseth foreign wares (as the
-stomach doth meat) to all the members most commodiously.
-
-By the benefit of the river of Thames, and great trade of merchandise,
-it is the chief maker of mariners, and nurse of our navy; and ships (as
-men know) be the wooden walls for defence of our realm.
-
-It maintaineth in flourishing estate the countries of Norfolk, Suffolk,
-Essex, Kent, and Sussex, which as they lie in the face of our most
-puissant neighbour, so ought they above others to be conserved in the
-greatest strength and riches; and these, as it is well known, stand not
-so much by the benefit of their own soil, as by the neighbourhood and
-nearness which they have to London.
-
-It relieveth plentifully, and with good policy, not only her own poor
-people, a thing which scarcely any other town or shire doth, but also
-the poor that from each quarter of the realm do flock unto it, and it
-imparteth liberally to the necessity of the universities besides. It is
-an ornament to the realm by the beauty thereof, and a terror to other
-countries, by reason of the great wealth and frequency. It spreadeth the
-honour of our country far abroad by her long navigations, and maketh our
-power feared, even of barbarous princes. It only is stored with rich
-merchants, which sort only is tolerable; for beggarly merchants do bite
-too near, and will do more harm than good to the realm.
-
-It only of any place in this realm is able to furnish the sudden
-necessity with a strong army. It availeth the prince in tronage,
-poundage, and other her customs, much more than all the rest of the
-realm.
-
-It yieldeth a greater subsidy than any one part of the realm; I mean
-not for the proportion of the value of the goods only, but also for the
-faithful service there used, in making the assess, for no where else
-be men taxed so near to their just value as in London; yea, many are
-found there, that for their countenance and credit sake, refuse not to
-be rated above their ability, which thing never happeneth abroad in the
-country. I omit that in ancient time the inhabitants of London and other
-cities were accustomably taxed after the tenth of their goods, when the
-country was assessed at the fifteenth, and rated at the eighth; when the
-country was set at the twelfth, for that were to awake a sleeping dog;
-and I should be thought "_dicenda, tacenda, locutus_," as the poet said.
-
-It only doth and is able to make the prince a ready present or loan of
-money.
-
-It only is found fit and able to entertain strangers honourably, and to
-receive the prince of the realm worthily.
-
-Almighty God (_qui nisi custodiat civitatem, frustra vigilat custos_)
-grant that her majesty evermore rightly esteem and rule this city; and
-he give grace, that the citizens may answer duty, as well towards God
-and her majesty, as towards this whole realm and country. Amen.
-
-
-
-
-AN APPENDIX, CONTAINING THE EXAMINATION OF SUCH CAUSES AS HAVE
-HERETOFORE MOVED THE PRINCES EITHER TO FINE AND RANSOM THE CITIZENS OF
-LONDON, OR TO SEIZE THE LIBERTIES OF THE CITY ITSELF.
-
-
-These all may be reduced to these few heads; for either the citizens
-have adhered, in aid or arms, to such as have warred upon the prince, or
-they have made tumult, and broken the common peace at home; or they have
-misbehaved themselves in point of government and justice; or finally,
-and to speak the plain truth, the princes have taken hold of small
-matters, and coined good sums of money out of them.
-
-To the first head I will refer whatsoever they have done, either in
-those wars that happened between King Stephen and Maude the empress,
-being competitors of the crown, or between King John and his nobles,
-assisting Lewis, the French king's son, when he invaded the realm; for
-it is apparent by all histories that the Londoners were not the movers
-of these wars, but were only used as instruments to maintain them. The
-like is to be said of all the offences that King Henry III., whose whole
-reign was a continual warfare, conceived against this city, concerning
-the bearing of armour against him; for the first part of his reign was
-spent in the continuation of those wars that his father had begun with
-Lewis; and the rest of his life he bestowed in that contention, which
-was commonly called the Barons' wars: in which tragedy London, as it
-could not be otherwise, had now and then a part, and had many a snub
-at the king's hand for it: but in the end, when he had triumphed over
-Simon Montford at Evesham, London felt it most tragical; for then he
-both seized their liberties and sucked themselves dry; and yet Edictum
-Kenilworth, made shortly after, hath an honourable testimony for London,
-saying, "_Te London laudamus_," etc. As for the other offences that
-he took against the Londoners, they pertain to the other parts of my
-division.
-
-Next after this, against whom the Londoners did put on arms, followeth
-King Edward II., who in the end was deprived of his kingdom, not by
-their means, but by a general defection both of his own wife and son,
-and almost of the whole nobility and realm besides. In which trouble,
-that furious assault and slaughter committed by them upon the bishop of
-Excester, then treasurer of the realm, is to be imputed partly to the
-sway of the time wherewith they were carried, and partly to a private
-displeasure which they had to the bishop.
-
-Finally cometh to hand King Richard II.; for these three only, in all
-the catalogue of our kings, have been heavy lords to London, who also
-had much contention with his nobility, and was in the end deposed. But
-whatsoever countenance and aid the city of London brought to the wars
-and uproars of that time, it is notoriously true that London never led
-the dance, but ever followed the pipe of the nobility. To close up this
-first part, therefore, I affirm, that in all the troublesome actions
-during the reign of these three kings, as also in all that heaving in
-and hurling out that afterward happened between King Henry VI. and King
-Edward IV., the city of London was many times a friend and fautor, but
-never the first motive or author of any intestine war or sedition.
-
-In the second room I place a couple of tumultuous affrays that chanced
-in the days of King Richard I.; the one upon the day of his coronation
-against the Jews, which, contrary to the king's own proclamation, would
-needs enter the church to see him sacred, and were therefore cruelly
-handled by the common people. The other was caused by William with the
-long beard, who after that he had inflamed the poor people against the
-richer sort, and was called to answer for his fault, took Bow church for
-sanctuary, and kept it, castle-like, till he was fired out.
-
-Here is place also for the stoning to death of a gentleman, servant
-to the half-brother of King Henry III., which had before provoked the
-citizens to fury by wounding divers of them without any cause, 1257;
-for the riotous fray between the servants of the goldsmiths and the
-tailors, 1268; for the hurly burly and bloodshed between the Londoners
-and the men of Westminster, moved by the young men upon an occasion of
-a wrestling on St. James' day, 1221; and made worse by one Constantine,
-an ancient citizen, for the brawl and business that arose about a
-baker's loaf at Salisbury place, 1391; for the which, and some other
-misdemeanours, King Richard II. was so incensed by evil counsel against
-the Londoners, that he determined to destroy them and raze their city:
-and for the fight that was between the citizens and sanctuary men of St.
-Martin's, 1454, under King Henry VI.: and finally, for the misrule on
-evil May-day 1519, and for such other like, if there have been any.
-
-To the third head may be referred the seizure of their liberties, for
-a false judgment given against a poor widow, called Margaret Viel,
-1246; the two several seizures in one year, 1258, for false packing in
-collections of money and other enormities; and finally the seizure made
-by King Edward I. for taking of bribes of the bakers, 1285. But all this
-security in seizing and resuming of the liberties, which was in old time
-the only ordinary punishment, was at length mitigated by King Edward
-III. and King Henry IV., in their statutes before remembered.
-
-In the last place stand those offences, which I repute rather taken
-than given, and do fall within the measure of the adage, "_Ut canem
-caedas, cito invenias baculum_:" for King John, in the 10th of his reign,
-deposed the bailiffs of London, because they had bought up the wheat in
-the market, so that there was not to serve his purveyors. King Henry
-III., his son, compelled the Londoners to pay him five thousand pounds,
-because they had lent to Lewis, the French king, the like sum, of a good
-mind to dispatch him out of their city and the realm, at such time as
-the protector and the whole nobility fell to composition with him for
-his departure. And the same king fined them at three thousand marks for
-the escape of a prisoner out of Newgate, of whom they took no charge;
-for he was a clerk, prisoner to the bishop of London, under the custody
-of his own servants; and as for the place, it was only borrowed of the
-Londoners to serve that turn. Hitherto of these things to this end, that
-whatsoever misdemeanour shall be objected out of history against London,
-the same may herein appear, both in its true place and proper colour.
-
-
-
-
-FITZSTEPHEN'S DESCRIPTION OF LONDON
-
-
-OF THE SITUATION OF THE SAME
-
-Amongst the noble and celebrated cities of the world, that of London,
-the capital of the kingdom of England, is one of the most renowned,
-possessing above all others abundant wealth, extensive commerce, great
-grandeur and magnificence. It is happy in the salubrity of its climate,
-in the profession of the Christian religion, in the strength of its
-fortresses, the nature of its situation, the honour of its citizens, and
-the chastity of its matrons; in its sports too it is most pleasant, and
-in the production of illustrious men most fortunate. All which things I
-wish separately to consider.
-
-
-OF THE MILDNESS OF THE CLIMATE
-
-There then
-
- "Men's minds are soft'ned by a temp'rate clime,"
-
-not so however that they are addicted to licentiousness, but so that
-they are not savage and brutal, but rather kind and generous.
-
-
-OF THE RELIGION
-
-There is in St. Paul's church an episcopal see: it was formerly
-metropolitan, and, it is thought, will be so again, should the citizens
-return to the island: unless perhaps the archiepiscopal title of St.
-Thomas, and his bodily presence there, should always retain that dignity
-at Canterbury, where it now is. But as St. Thomas has ennobled both
-these cities, London by his birth, and Canterbury by his death, each of
-them, with respect to the saint, has much to allege against the other,
-and with justice too. As regards divine worship, there are also in
-London and in the suburbs thirteen larger conventual churches, besides
-one hundred and thirty-six lesser parochial ones.
-
-
-OF THE STRENGTH OF THE CITY
-
-On the east stands the Palatine tower, a fortress of great size and
-strength, the court and walls of which are erected upon a very deep
-foundation, the mortar used in the building being tempered with the
-blood of beasts. On the west are two castles strongly fortified; the
-wall of the city is high and thick, with seven double gates, having on
-the north side towers placed at proper intervals. London formerly had
-walls and towers in like manner on the south, but that most excellent
-river the Thames, which abounds with fish, and in which the tide ebbs
-and flows, runs on that side, and has in a long space of time washed
-down, undermined, and subverted the walls in that part. On the west
-also, higher up on the bank of the river, the royal palace rears its
-head, an incomparable structure, furnished with a breastwork and
-bastions, situated in a populous suburb, at a distance of two miles from
-the city.
-
-
-OF THE GARDENS
-
-Adjoining to the houses on all sides lie the gardens of those citizens
-that dwell in the suburbs, which are well furnished with trees, spacious
-and beautiful.
-
-
-OF THE PASTURE AND TILLAGE LANDS
-
-On the north side too are fields for pasture, and a delightful plain of
-meadow land, interspersed with flowing streams, on which stand mills,
-whose clack is very pleasing to the ear. Close by lies an immense
-forest, in which are densely wooded thickets, the coverts of game,
-stags, fallow-deer, boars, and wild bulls. The tillage lands of the city
-are not barren gravelly soils, but like the fertile plains of Asia,
-which produce abundant crops, and fill the barns of their cultivators
-with
-
- "Ceres' plenteous sheaf."
-
-
-OF THE SPRINGS
-
-There are also round London, on the northern side, in the suburbs,
-excellent springs; the water of which is sweet, clear, and salubrious,
-
- "'Mid glistening pebbles gliding playfully:"
-
-amongst which, Holywell, Clerkenwell, and St. Clement's well, are of
-most note, and most frequently visited, as well by the scholars from the
-schools, as by the youth of the city when they go out to take the air in
-the summer evenings. The city is delightful indeed, when it has a good
-governor.
-
-
-OF THE HONOUR OF THE CITIZENS
-
-This city is ennobled by her men, graced by her arms, and peopled by a
-multitude of inhabitants; so that in the wars under King Stephen there
-went out to a muster, of armed horsemen, esteemed fit for war, twenty
-thousand, and of infantry sixty thousand. The citizens of London are
-respected and noted above all other citizens for the elegance of their
-manners, dress, table, and discourse.
-
-
-OF THE MATRONS
-
-The matrons of the city are perfect Sabines.
-
-
-OF THE SCHOOLS
-
-The three principal churches possess, by privilege and ancient dignity,
-celebrated schools; yet often, by the favour of some person of note,
-or of some learned men eminently distinguished for their philosophy,
-other schools are permitted upon sufferance. On festival days the
-masters assemble their pupils at those churches where the feast of the
-patron saint is solemnised; and there the scholars dispute, some in the
-demonstrative way, and others logically; some again recite enthymemes,
-while others use the more perfect syllogism. Some, to show their
-abilities, engage in such disputation as is practised among persons
-contending for victory alone; others dispute upon a truth, which is the
-grace of perfection. The sophisters, who argue upon feigned topics,
-are deemed clever according to their fluency of speech and command of
-language. Others endeavour to impose by false conclusions. Sometimes
-certain orators in their rhetorical harangues employ all the powers
-of persuasion, taking care to observe the precepts of the art, and to
-omit nothing apposite to the subject. The boys of the different schools
-wrangle with each other in verse, and contend about the principles of
-grammar or the rules of the perfect and future tenses. There are some
-who in epigrams, rhymes, and verses, use that trivial raillery so much
-practised amongst the ancients, freely attacking their companions with
-Fescennine licence, but suppressing the names, discharging their scoffs
-and sarcasms against them, touching with Socratic wit the failings of
-their schoolfellows, or perhaps of greater personages, or biting them
-more keenly with a Theonine tooth. The audience,
-
- "well disposed to laugh,
- With curling nose double the quivering peals."
-
-
-OF THE MANNER IN WHICH THE AFFAIRS OF THE CITY ARE DISPOSED
-
-The artizans of the several crafts, the vendors of the various
-commodities, and the labourers of every kind, have each their separate
-station, which they take every morning. There is also in London, on
-the bank of the river, amongst the wine-shops which are kept in ships
-and cellars, a public eating-house: there every day, according to the
-season, may be found viands of all kinds, roast, fried, and boiled, fish
-large and small, coarser meat for the poor, and more delicate for the
-rich, such as venison, fowls, and small birds. If friends, wearied with
-their journey, should unexpectedly come to a citizen's house, and, being
-hungry, should not like to wait till fresh meat be bought and cooked:
-
- "The canisters with bread are heap'd on high;
- The attendants water for their hands supply:"--DRYDEN.
-
-Meanwhile some run to the river side, and there every thing that they
-could wish for is instantly procured. However great the number of
-soldiers or strangers that enters or leaves the city at any hour of
-the day or night, they may turn in there if they please, and refresh
-themselves according to their inclination; so that the former have no
-occasion to fast too long, or the latter to leave the city without
-dining. Those who wish to indulge themselves would not desire a
-sturgeon, or the bird of Africa, or the godwit of Ionia, when the
-delicacies that are to be found there are set before them. This indeed
-is the public cookery, and is very convenient to the city, and a
-distinguishing mark of civilisation. Hence we read in Plato's Gorgias,
-"Juxta medicinam esse coquorum officium, simulantium et adulationem
-quartae particulae civilitatis." There is, without one of the gates,
-immediately in the suburb, a certain smooth field in name and in
-reality. There every Friday, unless it be one of the more solemn
-festivals, is a noted show of well-bred horses exposed for sale. The
-earls, barons, and knights, who are at the time resident in the city,
-as well as most of the citizens, flock thither either to look on or buy.
-It is pleasant to see the nags, with their sleek and shining coats,
-smoothly ambling along, raising and setting down alternately, as it
-were, their feet on either side: in one part are horses better adapted
-to esquires; these, whose pace is rougher but yet expeditious, lift up
-and set down, as it were, the two opposite fore and hind feet together;
-in another the young blood colts, not yet accustomed to the bridle,
-
- "Which upright walk on pasterns firm and straight,
- Their motions easy, prancing in their gait."--DRYDEN.
-
-in a third are the horses for burden, strong and stout-limbed; and in
-a fourth, the more valuable chargers, of an elegant shape and noble
-height, with nimbly moving ears, erect necks, and plump haunches. In
-the movements of these the purchasers observe first their easy pace,
-and then their gallop, which is when the fore-feet are raised from
-the ground and set down together, and the hind ones in like manner,
-alternately. When a race is to be run by such horses as these, and
-perhaps by others, which in like manner, according to their breed, are
-strong for carriage, and vigorous for the course, the people raise a
-shout, and order the common horses to be withdrawn to another part of
-the field. The jockeys, who are boys expert in the management of horses,
-which they regulate by means of curb-bridles, sometimes by threes, and
-sometimes by twos, according as the match is made, prepare themselves
-for the contest. Their chief aim is to prevent a competitor getting
-before them. The horses, too, after their manner, are eager for the
-race; their limbs tremble, and, impatient of delay, they cannot stand
-still; upon the signal being given, they stretch out their limbs, hurry
-over the course, and are borne along with unremitting speed. The riders,
-inspired with the love of praise and the hope of victory, clap spurs to
-their flying horses, lashing them with their whips, and inciting them by
-their shouts. You would think with Heraclitus, that all things were in
-motion, and that Zeno's opinion was altogether erroneous, when he said,
-that there was no such thing as motion, and that it was impossible to
-reach the goal. In another quarter, apart from the rest, stand the goods
-of the peasants, implements of husbandry, swine with their long sides,
-cows with distended udders,
-
- "Oxen of bulk immense, and woolly flocks."
-
-There, too, stand the mares fitted for the plough, the dray, and the
-cart, of which some are big with foal, others have their frolicsome
-colts running close by their sides. To this city, from every nation
-under heaven, merchants bring their commodities by sea,
-
- "Arabia's gold, Sabaea's spice and incense,
- Scythia's keen weapons, and the oil of palms
- From Babylon's rich soil, Nile's precious gems,
- Norway's warm peltries, Russia's costly sables,
- Sera's rich vestures, and the wines of Gaul,
- Hither are sent."
-
-According to the evidence of chroniclers London is more ancient than
-Rome: for, as both derive their origin from the same Trojan ancestors,
-this was founded by Brutus before that by Romulus and Remus. Hence
-it is that, even to this day, both cities use the same ancient laws
-and ordinances. This, like Rome, is divided into wards; it has annual
-sheriffs instead of consuls; it has an order of senators and inferior
-magistrates, and also sewers and aqueducts in its streets; each class
-of suits, whether of the deliberative, demonstrative, or judicial kind,
-has its appropriate place and proper court; on stated days it has its
-assemblies. I think that there is no city in which more approved customs
-are observed--in attending churches, honouring God's ordinances, keeping
-festivals, giving alms, receiving strangers, confirming espousals,
-contracting marriages, celebrating weddings, preparing entertainments,
-welcoming guests, and also in the arrangement of the funeral ceremonies
-and the burial of the dead. The only inconveniences of London are,
-the immoderate drinking of foolish persons, and the frequent fires.
-Moreover, almost all the bishops, abbots, and great men of England, are,
-in a manner, citizens and freemen of London; as they have magnificent
-houses there, to which they resort, spending large sums of money,
-whenever they are summoned thither to councils and assemblies by the
-king or their metropolitan, or are compelled to go there by their own
-business.
-
-
-OF THE SPORTS
-
-Let us now proceed to the sports of the city; since it is expedient
-that a city be not only an object of utility and importance, but also a
-source of pleasure and diversion. Hence even in the seals of the chief
-pontiffs, up to the time of Pope Leo, there was engraved on one side of
-the Bull the figure of St. Peter as a fisherman, and above him a key
-stretched out to him, as it were, from heaven by the hand of God, and
-around him this verse--
-
- "For me thou left'st thy ship, receive the key."
-
-On the obverse side was represented a city, with this inscription,
-GOLDEN ROME. It was also said in praise of Augustus Caesar and the city
-of Rome,
-
- "All night it rains, the shows return with day,
- Caesar, thou bear'st with Jove alternate sway."
-
-London, instead of theatrical shows and scenic entertainments, has
-dramatic performances of a more sacred kind, either representations of
-the miracles which holy confessors have wrought, or of the passions and
-sufferings in which the constancy of martyrs was signally displayed.
-Moreover, to begin with the sports of the boys (for we have all been
-boys), annually on the day which is called Shrovetide, the boys of the
-respective schools bring each a fighting cock to their master, and
-the whole of that forenoon is spent by the boys in seeing their cocks
-fight in the school-room. After dinner, all the young men of the city
-go out into the fields to play at the well-known game of foot-ball. The
-scholars belonging to the several schools have each their ball; and the
-city tradesmen, according to their respective crafts, have theirs. The
-more aged men, the fathers of the players, and the wealthy citizens,
-come on horseback to see the contests of the young men, with whom, after
-their manner, they participate, their natural heat seeming to be aroused
-by the sight of so much agility, and by their participation in the
-amusements of unrestrained youth. Every Sunday in Lent, after dinner, a
-company of young men enter the fields, mounted on warlike horses--
-
- "On coursers always foremost in the race;"
-
-of which
-
- "Each steed's well-train'd to gallop in a ring."
-
-The lay-sons of the citizens rush out of the gates in crowds, equipped
-with lances and shields, the younger sort with pikes from which the
-iron head has been taken off, and there they get up sham fights, and
-exercise themselves in military combat. When the king happens to be near
-the city, most of the courtiers attend, and the young men who form the
-households of the earls and barons, and have not yet attained the honour
-of knighthood, resort thither for the purpose of trying their skill. The
-hope of victory animates every one. The spirited horses neigh, their
-limbs tremble, they champ their bits, and, impatient of delay, cannot
-endure standing still. When at length
-
- "The charger's hoof seizes upon the course,"
-
-the young riders having been divided into companies, some pursue those
-that go before without being able to overtake them, whilst others throw
-their companions out of their course, and gallop beyond them. In the
-Easter holidays they play at a game resembling a naval engagement. A
-target is firmly fastened to the trunk of a tree which is fixed in the
-middle of the river, and in the prow of a boat driven along by oars and
-the current stands a young man who is to strike the target with his
-lance; if, in hitting it, he break his lance, and keep his position
-unmoved, he gains his point, and attains his desire: but if his lance
-be not shivered by the blow, he is tumbled into the river, and his boat
-passes by, driven along by its own motion. Two boats, however, are
-placed there, one on each side of the target, and in them a number of
-young men to take up the striker, when he first emerges from the stream,
-or when
-
- "A second time he rises from the wave."
-
-On the bridge, and in balconies on the banks of the river, stand the
-spectators,
-
- "well disposed to laugh."
-
-During the holydays in summer the young men exercise themselves in
-the sports of leaping, archery, wrestling, stone-throwing, slinging
-javelins beyond a mark, and also fighting with bucklers. Cytherea leads
-the dances of the maidens, who merrily trip along the ground beneath
-the uprisen moon. Almost on every holyday in winter, before dinner,
-foaming boars, and huge-tusked hogs, intended for bacon, fight for
-their lives, or fat bulls or immense boars are baited with dogs. When
-that great marsh which washes the walls of the city on the north side
-is frozen over, the young men go out in crowds to divert themselves
-upon the ice. Some, having increased their velocity by a run, placing
-their feet apart, and turning their bodies sideways, slide a great way:
-others make a seat of large pieces of ice like mill-stones, and a great
-number of them running before, and holding each other by the hand, draw
-one of their companions who is seated on the ice: if at any time they
-slip in moving so swiftly, all fall down headlong together. Others are
-more expert in their sports upon the ice; for fitting to, and binding
-under their feet the shinbones of some animal, and taking in their hands
-poles shod with iron, which at times they strike against the ice, they
-are carried along with as great rapidity as a bird flying or a bolt
-discharged from a cross-bow. Sometimes two of the skaters having placed
-themselves a great distance apart by mutual agreement, come together
-from opposite sides; they meet, raise their poles, and strike each
-other; either one or both of them fall, not without some bodily hurt:
-even after their fall they are carried along to a great distance from
-each other by the velocity of the motion; and whatever part of their
-heads comes in contact with the ice is laid bare to the very skull. Very
-frequently the leg or arm of the falling party, if he chance to light
-upon either of them, is broken. But youth is an age eager for glory and
-desirous of victory, and so young men engage in counterfeit battles,
-that they may conduct themselves more valiantly in real ones. Most of
-the citizens amuse themselves in sporting with merlins, hawks, and other
-birds of a like kind, and also with dogs that hunt in the woods. The
-citizens have the right of hunting in Middlesex, Hertfordshire, all
-the Chilterns, and Kent, as far as the river Cray. The Londoners, then
-called Trinovantes, repulsed Caius Julius Caesar, a man who delighted to
-mark his path with blood. Whence Lucan says,
-
- "Britain he sought, but turn'd his back dismay'd."
-
-The city of London has produced some men, who have subdued many
-kingdoms, and even the Roman empire; and very many others, whose virtue
-has exalted them to the skies, as was promised to Brutus by the oracle
-of Apollo:
-
- "Brutus, there lies beyond the Gallic bounds
- An island which the western sea surrounds:
-
- * * * * *
-
- To reach this happy shore thy sails employ:
- There fate decrees to raise a second Troy,
- And found an empire in thy royal line
- Which time shall ne'er destroy, nor bounds confine."
-
-Since the planting of the Christian religion there, London has given
-birth to the noble emperor Constantine, who gave the city of Rome and
-all the insignia of the empire to God and St. Peter, and Pope Sylvester,
-whose stirrup he held, and chose rather to be called defender of the
-holy Roman church, than emperor: and that the peace of our lord the
-Pope might not, by reason of his presence, be disturbed by the turmoils
-consequent on secular business, he withdrew from the city which he had
-bestowed upon our lord the Pope, and built for himself the city of
-Byzantium. London also in modern times has produced illustrious and
-august princes, the empress Matilda, King Henry the Third, and St.
-Thomas, the archbishop and glorious martyr of Christ, than whom no man
-was more guileless or more devoted to all good men throughout the whole
-Roman world.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- Abchurch lane, 196
-
- Aeldgate, 29 ff.
-
- Aetheling street. _See_ Watheling street
-
- Alcestone, Manor of, 22
-
- Aldemarie church, 226
-
- Alder street, 30
-
- Aldersgate (Aeldresgate, Ealdersgate), 27, 33
-
- Aldersgate street, 272
-
- Aldersgate ward, 271
-
- Aldgate (Aeldgate), 27
-
- Aldgate ward, 125
-
- Alfred, King, 10
-
- Alhallowes, Bread Street, Church of, 309
-
- Allen, Sir John, 103
-
- Allhallowes, _ad foenum_, 210
-
- Allhallowes the Great, Grammar school at, 67, 175
-
- Allhallowes the Less, Church of, 97, 210
-
- Allhallowes the More, Church of, 210
-
- Allhallows, Barking, Church of, 119
-
- Allhallows, Church of (Stane church), 182
-
- Allhallows Grasse church, 181
-
- Allhallows, Honey lane, Church of, 243
-
- Allhallows-in-the-Wall, Church of, 145, 158
-
- Armourers' hall, 254
-
- Askew, Sir Christopher and Lady, 270
-
- Audley, Thomas, 81, 117
-
- Augustine Friars, Church of, 159, 160
-
- Augustine Papey, Church of, St., 132. _See_ Papey
-
- Austrie, Sir Raph, 222
-
- Ave Mary lane, 34, 280, 303
-
- Axe, The, 74
-
-
- Bacon house, 272
-
- Bakers' hall, 121
-
- Bakewell hall (Blakewell hall), 256 ff.
-
- Baldoke, Robert, 35
-
- Bamme, Adam, 99
-
- Barbers-Chirurgeons' hall, 282
-
- Barbican, Burhkenning, 64, 271
-
- Barnard's inn, 71
-
- Barnes, John, 98
-
- Basset family, The, 133
-
- Basset, Robert, 30
-
- Bassinges hall street, 248
-
- Bassings family, The, 257, 258
-
- Bassings hall ward, 255
-
- Battailes inn, Abbot of, 371
-
- Battle abbey, 22
-
- Baynard's castle, 56 ff., 325
-
- Beamore, Richard, 34
-
- Beare lane, 121
-
- Bear gardens, on Bank side, 87
-
- Becket, Thomas, 43, 83, 96
-
- Bedrisworth (Bury St. Edmonds), 32
-
- Belinsgate, 185
-
- Belinsgate (Belins gate), 17, 39, 41, 123. _See_ Billingsgate
-
- Belzettar's lane (Billitar lane), 126
-
- Benbrige's inn, 137
-
- Benet, Abbot of Wirrall, 9
-
- Benonye Mittun, 250
-
- Bermondes high street, 359
-
- Bethlehem hospital, 97
-
- Bevis markes, 133. _See_ also Buries markes
-
- Billingsgate ward, 185. _See_ Belinsgate
-
- Birchin lane, 278. _See_ Birchover lane
-
- Birchover lane, 75, 178, 182
-
- Bishopsgate, 27, 30, 31
-
- Bishopsgate ward, 148 ff.
-
- Bishops of London, List of, 424 ff.
-
- Blacke-friers stairs, 38
-
- Blacke Fryers, 63
-
- Blackesmiths' hall, 315
-
- Blackfriars church, 11
-
- Bladder street, 280
-
- Blanch Apleton, Manor called, 135
-
- Blethenhall (Bethnal-Bednal) green, 30
-
- Blossoms inn, 243
-
- Bollein, Godfrey, 101
-
- Boniface, 336
-
- Bordello, The, 360
-
- Bosse alley, 187
-
- Bourns serving the City, 12
-
- Bow lane, 240
-
- Bowyers' row, 75
-
- Boyers' hall, 268
-
- Bread street, 307
-
- Bread street ward, 307
-
- Brewers' hall, 266
-
- Bricklayers' hall, 125
-
- Bride lane, 351
-
- Bridewell, 64, 351 ff.
-
- Bridge gate, 40
-
- Bridgegate, 27
-
- Bridgehouse, The, 142
-
- Bridge ward within, 189 ff.
-
- Bridge ward without, 358 ff.
-
- Bridges of the city, 21
-
- Bridges over the town ditch, 26
-
- Broad street ward, 157
-
- Brode street, 15, 158
-
- Brooks serving the City, 12
-
- Browne, Stephen, 100
-
- Brune, Walter, 97
-
- Buckles bury (Bucklesberrie), 74, 205, 232
-
- Budge row, 74, 224
-
- Bulmer, Bevis, 323
-
- Burhkennings, watch-towers, 65, 66
-
- Buries markes, 124, 133. _See_ Bevis markes
-
- Bush lane (Carter lane), 207
-
- Butchers' alley, 279
-
- Butchers' hall, 283
-
- Buttolfe wharf, 23
-
- Buttolph's gate, 22, 40, 186
-
-
- Cade, Jack, 25, 121, 137, 237
-
- Caire-Lud, or Lud's town, 3
-
- Cambridge heath, 30
-
- Cambridge University, 66, 157, 347
-
- Campeius, Cardinal, 304
-
- Candlewick street, 74
-
- Candlewick street ward, 194 ff.
-
- Carpenter, Jenken, 35
-
- Carpenter, John, 99
-
- Carpenters' hall, 158
-
- Castle Baynard ward, 324 ff.
-
- Cavendish, John, 192
-
- Caxton, 421
-
- Cernet's Tower, 233
-
- Champneis, Sir John, 121
-
- Chancelar lane, 350
-
- Charterhouse lane, 386
-
- Chaucer, 130, 216, 334, 368
-
- Cheape, The, 34, 240 ff.
-
- Cheape ward, 231 ff.
-
- Cheape, West, 74
-
- Chequer alley, 208
-
- Chester's inn (Strand inn), 71
-
- Chichley, Robert, 100
-
- Chichley, William, 122
-
- Christ's hospital, 68, 286, 347
-
- Churchman, John, 98
-
- Clarkenwell (Clarkes' well), 16, 95
-
- Clarkenwell, Priory of, 388
-
- Clarkes' well, 12
-
- Clement's inn, 71
-
- Clement's well, 12, 16
-
- Clifford's inn, 71
-
- Clinke, The, 362
-
- Clopton, Hugh, 101
-
- Clothworkers' hall, 121
-
- Coke, Edward, 147
-
- Cold Harbrough, 211
-
- Coleman street, 248
-
- Coleman street ward, 248
-
- Colet, John (Collet), 68, 102, 294, 295
-
- Compter, The, 235, 265, 360
-
- Conduits, 12, 18, 171, 190
-
- Conyhope lane, 232
-
- Cooke's row, 73
-
- Cooks' hall, 276
-
- Coopers' hall, 259
-
- Copped hall (Skinners' hall), 206
-
- Cordwainers' hall, 314
-
- Cordwainer street ward, 224
-
- Cordwayner street, 74
-
- Cornehill, 74, 86
-
- Cornhill ward, 168
-
- Cornewallies, Mistress, 126
-
- Coursitors' office, 390
-
- Court of Arches, 227
-
- Courtein (theatre), The, 377
-
- Cowbridge, 26
-
- Creed lane, 280
-
- Cripplegate, 13, 32, 33
-
- Cripplesgate ward, 260 ff.
-
- Crockers lane, 353
-
- Cromwell, Thomas, 82, 161
-
- Crooked lane, 193
-
- Crosby place, 155
-
- Crosley, Sir John, 155
-
- Culver alley, 126
-
- Curriers' hall, 266
-
- Curriers' row, 158
-
- Customers' key, 41, 123
-
- Cutlers' hall, 219
-
-
- Danne, Margaret, 106
-
- Day, John, 33
-
- Distaffe lane. _See_ Mayden lane
-
- Ditch, The, without the wall of the city, 12, 19
-
- Dixie, Sir Wolston, 105
-
- Doctors' Commons, 328
-
- Dolphin, The, 148, 378
-
- Dowgate, 206
-
- Downe gate, 39
-
- Downegate ward, 206 ff.
-
- Drake, Sir Francis, 207
-
- Drapers' company, 11, 134 _n._
-
- Drapers' hall, 158, 162
-
- Drury lane, 399
-
- Ducke lane, 335
-
- Dyers' hall, 212
-
-
- Eastcheape, 74, 194, 195
-
- Eastfield, Wm., 100
-
- Eayre (Eyre), Simon, 69, 101, 139
-
- Ebgate, 39
-
- Ebgate lane, 40, 191
-
- Edington, William, Bishop of Winchester, 51
-
- Edredes hithe, 221. _See_ Queen's hithe
-
- Edward, Earl of Derby, 81
-
- Elbow lane, 207
-
- Eldenese lane, 306
-
- Elemosinary (Almonry, Ambry), Westminster, 421
-
- Elie's inn, Bishop of, 344, 345
-
- Elms, The, Smithfield, 46
-
- Elsing Spittle, 97
-
- Elsing, William, 97
-
- Embroiderers' hall, 281
-
- Erbar (Herber), The, 80, 205
-
- Ethelred, Earl of Mercia, 10
-
- Ethelwald, Bishop of Winchester, 82
-
- Exchange, The, 50
-
-
- Fabian, Robert, 101
-
- Fags' well, 12, 16
-
- Falconar, Thomas, 99
-
- Farringdon ward within, 277 ff.
-
- Farringdon ward without, 331 ff.
-
- Fauster's lane, 142
-
- Fenchurch street, 15, 133, 180 ff.
-
- Fensburie field, 95
-
- Fewter lane, 332, 348
-
- Ficquetes Croft, 357
-
- Filpot, John, 98
-
- Finkes lane, 158, 164
-
- Fish street hill, 190
-
- Fisher, Jasper, 149
-
- Fishmongers' hall, 191
-
- Fishmongers' hall (six), 192
-
- Fisher's folly, 149, 150, 378
-
- Fitz Alewine, Henry, 174
-
- Fitzmary, Simon, 97
-
- Fitzosbert, William, 46, 228
-
- Fitzstephens, William (William Stephanides), 1
-
- Fitzwalter, Robert, 58 ff.
-
- Fleet dike, 14
-
- Fleet (Fleete) bridge, 13, 26
-
- Fleet (gaol), The, 97
-
- Fleet street, 332, 349
-
- Flower de Luce inn, 371
-
- Foster, Agnes, 37, 106
-
- Foster, Stephen, 37
-
- Founders' hall, 254
-
- Foxley, William, 55
-
- Friday street, 288, 308
-
- Frosh wharf, 41
-
- Fruiterers' hall, 217
-
- Fuller, John, 105
-
- Furnival's inn, 71, 346
-
-
- Galley key, 121
-
- Galley Row, 122
-
- Garland, The, Little East Cheape, 189
-
- Gates in the wall of the City, 27
-
- Gayspurre lane, 260, 263
-
- Gennings, Stephen, 102, 131
-
- Gerrarde the Giant, 311
-
- Gibson, Avice, 106, 376
-
- _Gilda Teutonicorum_, 124
-
- Giltspur street, 332
-
- Girdlers' hall, 256
-
- Gisors hall, 222
-
- Golding lane, 270
-
- Goldsmiths' company, 12
-
- Goldsmiths' hall, 273
-
- Goldsmiths' row, 265, 308
-
- Goswel street, 30
-
- Governors of the City of London, 422
-
- Gower, John, 363
-
- Grantham's lane, 208, 214
-
- Gra street, 15
-
- Grasse church market, 191
-
- Grasse church street, 93
-
- Grasse street, 75, 142
-
- Gray's inn, 71
-
- Gray's inn lane, 389
-
- Gresham house, 159
-
- Gresham, Sir John, 103
-
- Gresham, Sir Thomas, 69, 104
-
- Grey Friars Church, 283
-
- Grocers' hall, 235
-
- Guildhall, The, 60 ff., 99, 243, 244
-
- Guildhalla Theutonicorum, 31, 208, 261
-
- Gundulph, Bishop of Rochester, 42
-
- Gutheron's (Guthurun's, Guthurons) lane, 49, 142, 281
-
-
- Haberdashers' hall, 260, 267
-
- Hall, Edward, 103
-
- Hampstead heath, 14
-
- Harper, William, 104
-
- Haunce merchants, 31, 208, 209
-
- Haydon, John, 104
-
- Herber (Erbar), The, 80, 205
-
- High Oldborne, 392
-
- High Oldborne hill, 16
-
- Hill, Sir Rowland, 103
-
- Hill, Thomas, 101
-
- Hils, Richard, 103
-
- Hinde, John, 99
-
- Hog (Hogge) lane, 116, 150
-
- Holy Trinity, Church of, 67, 315
-
- Holy well, 12
-
- Holywell, 17
-
- Horsedown, 359
-
- Horsemill, The, 139
-
- Horsepoole, Smithfield, 12, 17, 338
-
- Horseshew bridge over Walbrooke, 26
-
- Hosier lane, 74
-
- Hospitals, List of, 438 ff.
-
- Hound's ditch, 65, 116
-
- Houses of Students in the Common Law, 70 ff.
-
- Hoxton, 378
-
- Hubert of Burge, 47
-
- Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, 61
-
-
- Ilam, Thomas, 101, 237
-
- Ingulphus, Abbot of Crowland, 67
-
- Inner Temple, 71
-
- Innholders' hall, 207
-
- Ipres inn, 221
-
- Ipres, William of, 221
-
- Ironmongers' lane, 74, 232, 242
-
- Ivie lane, 280, 306
-
-
- Jesus' Commons, 207
-
- Jews' Garden, 270
-
- Joiners' hall, The, 208
-
- Jud, Sir Andrew, 103
-
-
- Keble, Henry, 102, 226
-
- King's Bench prison, 366
-
- King's Bench, The, 361
-
- King's College, Cambridge, 326
-
- Knesworth, Thomas, 156
-
- Knighten Guild, or Portsoken ward, 110 ff.
-
- Knightriders' street, 74, 214, 220, 315
-
- Knoles, Sir Robert, 98
-
- Knoles, Thomas, 99
-
-
- Lady Mary Magdalen, Chapel or college of, 244
-
- Lambe, William, 18, 104
-
- Lambert, William, 104
-
- Langborne ward, and Fennie About, 279
-
- Langborne water, 15
-
- Large, Robert, 100, 249
-
- Laxton, Sir William, 103, 227
-
- Lazar houses, 440, 441
-
- Leaden hall market, 168
-
- Leaden hall, The, 69, 101, 138 ff.
-
- Leaden porch, The, 138, 196
-
- Leathersellers' Company, 155
-
- Legat's inn, 62
-
- Liberties of the Duchy of Lancaster, 393
-
- Lichfield, William, 210
-
- Lidgate (monk of Bury), 195, 334
-
- Lime house (Lime host, Lime hurst, Lymehurst), 335, 375
-
- Lime street ward, 136
-
- Lincoln's inn, 71
-
- Lion Tower, The, 45
-
- Lion's inn, 71
-
- Lions, Richard, 210
-
- Lither lane, 332, 346
-
- Little Bayly, 332
-
- Little Britaine, 335
-
- Little St. Helen, 154
-
- Loder's well, 12, 16
-
- Lofken, John, 97
-
- Loke, The, 359, 372
-
- Lollesworth (Spittle field), 150, 152
-
- Lombard street, 74, 180
-
- Lomsbery, 400
-
- London bridge, 74, 21 ff.
-
- London stone, 22, 25, 201, 202
-
- London, various names for, 9
-
- London, Wall of, 7, 326
-
- Long lane, 338
-
- Long Southwark, 359
-
- Longshampe, William, 28, 43
-
- Lothbury (Lothberie or Loodberie) 75, 162, 248
-
- Love lane (once Lucas lane), 188
-
- Lovell, Sir Thos., 172
-
- Lowlardes' tower, 330
-
- Lud, King, 3
-
- Ludgate, 27, 28, 36
-
- Ludgate gaol, 18, 36, 37
-
- Lumbard street, 15
-
-
- Magdalen College, Cambridge, 117
-
- Malpas, Philip, 100, 137
-
- Mampudding, Mother, 124
-
- Marshalsey, The, 360, 366
-
- Mart lane, 120, 135. _See also_ Marke lane
-
- Masons' hall, 255
-
- Mauricius (Mauritius), 34, 290, 291
-
- May, Richard, 105
-
- Mayden lane, or Distar lane, 273, 307, 308
-
- Mayors of the City, 444 ff.
-
- Mercers' chapel, The, 241, 242
-
- Merchant Taylors' Grammar school, 68
-
- Merchant Tailors' hall, 163
-
- Mewse, The, 399
-
- Mewsgate, 17
-
- Middle Temple, 71
-
- Milborne, Sir John, 102, 134
-
- Milk street, 260, 264
-
- Mincheon lane, 120
-
- Minories, Abbey called the, 114
-
- Monkswell street, 261, 268, 283
-
- Monox, George, 102
-
- Moore ditch, The, 20
-
- Moorfield, 11, 380
-
- Moorgate, 27
-
- Moregate, Postern of, 31, 32
-
- Morris, Peter, 18, 169
-
- Mountfiquit, Tower of, 63
-
- Mountgodard street, 306
-
-
- Needlers' lane, 232, 233
-
- Nevill, Richard, Earl of Warwick, 81
-
- New inn, 71
-
- New street (Chancery lane), 350, 390
-
- New Temple, 354
-
- Newgate, 33
-
- Newgate gaol, 18, 34, 97
-
- Nicholas, Ambrose, 104
-
- Noble street, 271
-
- Norman, first canon regular in England, 127
-
- Northampton (or Combarton), John, 192, 193
-
- Northumberland house, 135, 276
-
-
- Offley, Sir Thomas, 104, 146
-
- Offrem, John, 35
-
- Old Bayly, 332
-
- Old Change, 50
-
- Old Exchange, 289
-
- Old Fish street, 289. 309
-
- Old Fish street hill, 317
-
- Old Jurie, 74, 135, 236
-
- Oldborne, 12
-
- Oldborne conduit, 332
-
- Oldbourne hill, 26
-
- Oldborne bridge, 13, 26
-
- Ormond place, 214, 221
-
- Our Lady of Rouncivall, Priory of Charing Cross, 67
-
- Our Lady of the Canons, Southwark, 24
-
- Our Lady of the Pew, Chapel of, 419
-
- Owens, gunfounders, 117
-
- Oxford University, 13, 66, 157, 165, 347
-
- Oyster gate, 40
-
-
- Paddington, 17
-
- Painted Tavern lane, 214
-
- Painterstainers' hall, 317
-
- Panyar alley, 306
-
- Papey, The, 132
-
- Pardon churchyard, 293, 384, 385
-
- Parish churches, List of, 434 ff.
-
- Paternoster lane, 217
-
- Pater noster row, 75, 302
-
- Patricksey (Batersey), 23
-
- Patten, Wm., 104
-
- Pattens' lane, 75
-
- Paul's chain, 325
-
- Paul's cross, 151, 296
-
- Paul's Head Tavern, 328
-
- Penticost lane, 279
-
- Percivall, Sir John, and the Lady Thomasine, 101
-
- Perillous pond, 17
-
- Peter, of Cole Church, 22
-
- Petty France, 148
-
- Petty Wales, 123
-
- Pewterers' hall, 180
-
- Physicians, College of, 69, 330
-
- Picard, Henry, 97
-
- Pie corner, 332, 333
-
- Plumbers' hall, 217
-
- Pools serving the City, 12
-
- Pope's head tavern, 279
-
- Porta Contractorum (Criplesgate), 32
-
- Porte pool, or Grayes inn lane, 389
-
- Portsoken ward, 28, 110
-
- Postern (gate), The, 27, 44
-
- Postern out of Christ's Hospital, 33
-
- Poultney, Sir John, 35, 97
-
- Poultry, 75, 167
-
- Powle's wharf, 39
-
- Powlet, William, Marquis of Winchester, 81
-
- Pudding lane (Rother lane), 189
-
- Puddle wharf, 38, 325
-
-
- Queene hithe ward, 314 ff.
-
- Queenhithe (Queen's hithe or Queen's bank), 25, 39, 185, 320 ff.
-
- Queen's wardrobe, 65, 218
-
-
- Radcliffe (Ratcliffe), 377
-
- Radclyffe, Free school at, 106
-
- Radwell, 12, 17
-
- Rahere, 333
-
- Rainwell, John, 100
-
- Ramsey, Mary, 106
-
- Randolph, Barnard, 104
-
- Rawson, Richard, 101
-
- Red Cross street, 64, 270
-
- Redman, Richard, Bishop of Ely, 81
-
- Rich, Richard, 101
-
- Richard de Berie, Bishop of Durham 83
-
- Richborough (Richborrow), 6
-
- Ripa Regina, 39. _See_ Queene hithe
-
- Rivers serving the city, 12
-
- Roe, Sir Thomas, 149
-
- Roo, Sir Thomas, 104, 135
-
- Roode lane (once St. Margaret Pattens), 187, 188
-
- Royal Exchange, The, 70, 104, 173, 180. _See_ Exchange
-
- Rudstone, Sir John, 278
-
- Rus, William, 176
-
- Russell, or Bedford house, 397
-
-
- Saddlers' hall, 281
-
- St. Alphage, Church of, 264
-
- St. Andrew, Church of, 347
-
- St. Andrew Hubbert, East Cheap, Church of, 188
-
- St. Andrew in the Wardrobe, Church of, 327
-
- St. Andrew, Oldborne, Grammar school, 67, 175
-
- St. Andrew Undershaft (St. Andrew the Apostle), Church of, 130
-
- St. Anne in the Willows, Church of, 274
-
- St. Anthonie Budgerow, Church of, 225
-
- St. Anthonie, Hospital of, 165
-
- St. Anthony's Grammar school, 67
-
- St. Augustine Papey, Church of, 132, 146. _See_ Papey
-
- St. Bartholomew, Church of, 166
-
- St. Bartholomew, Hospital of, 99, 285, 333
-
- St. Bartholomew's Priory, Smithfield, 67
-
- St. Benet Hude (or Hithe), Church of, 327
-
- St. Bennet (commonly called Fink), Church of, 164
-
- St. Buttolph, Church of, 115, 148, 186
-
- St. Christopher, Church of, 167
-
- St. Clements Danes, 397
-
- St. Dionys, Church of (Backe church), 180
-
- St. Dunstan's Grammar School, 67
-
- St. Dunstan's hill, 123
-
- St. Dunstan's in the West, Church of, 122, 349
-
- St. Edmond, king and martyr, Church of, 181
-
- St. Erkenwald's shrine in Powle's (Paul's) Church, 22
-
- St. Ethelburge Virgin, Church of, 154
-
- St. Faith under Paul's, Church of, 294
-
- St. Fauster's (St. Foster's) church, 281
-
- St. Gabriel Fen, Church of (Fan church), 180
-
- St. George, Buttolph lane, Church of, 189
-
- St. George, Southwark, Church of, 22
-
- St. Giles', Cripplesgate, 268
-
- St. Giles' Hospital, 97, 392
-
- St. Helen, Church of, 154
-
- St. James's park, 94, 402
-
- St. John Evangelist, Church of, 313
-
- St. John of Jerusalem, Priory of, 67, 181, 386
-
- St. John upon Walbrooke, 205
-
- St. John Zacharies Church, 271
-
- St. John's College, Oxford, 103
-
- St. Katherine, Church of, 129, 135
-
- St. Katherine's, Hospital of, 113
-
- St. Laurence, Jury, Church of, 246
-
- St. Laurence, Poultney, Church of, 97, 196, 200
-
- St. Leonard (Milke), Church of, 190
-
- St. Leonard, Shoreditch, Church of, 379
-
- St. Magnus, Church of, 190
-
- St. Margaret Moyses, Church of, 314
-
- St. Margaret (on the hill), 359
-
- St. Margaret's, Westminster, 406, 411
-
- St. Martin in the Vintry, Church of, 222
-
- St. Martin (Pomary), Church of, 242
-
- St. Martin Orgar, Church of, 200
-
- St. Martin Orgar lane, 200
-
- St. Martin Oteswich, 148
-
- St. Martin's le Grand, College of, 13, 32, 67, 275
-
- St. Marie Abchurch, 196
-
- St. Marie at the Axe, Church of, 145
-
- St. Marie Magdalen, Church of, 264
-
- St. Marie (on the hill), 187
-
- St. Marie Pellipar, 74, 145. _See also_ St. Marie at the Axe
-
- St. Mary Aldermanbury, Church of,262
-
- St. Mary of Bethlehem, Hospital of 97, 148, 377
-
- St. Mary Bothaw, 205
-
- St. Mary Bow, 227 ff.
-
- St. Mary de Monte Alto, Church of, 318
-
- St. Mary le Bow, Grammar school, 67
-
- St. Mary Magdalen, Chapel of, 153, 372
-
- St. Mary Overie, Southwark, Priory of, 67, 359, 362
-
- St. Mary Sommerset, 196, 319
-
- St. Mary Spittle, Hospital of, 31, 97 150
-
- St. Mary Stayning, Church of, 273
-
- St. Mary street, 132
-
- St. Mary Wool Church, 203
-
- St. Mary Woolnoth, Church of, 184, 279
-
- St. Michael, Crooked Lane, Church of, 98, 196
-
- St. Michael de Paternoster, Church of, 217
-
- St. Michael, Wood street, 266
-
- St. Michael th' Archangel, Church of, 175 ff.
-
- St. Michaell, Bassings hall, Church of, 259
-
- St. Mildred the Virgin, Church of, 310
-
- St. Nicholas Acon, Church of, 183
-
- St. Nicholas, Church of, 283
-
- St. Nicholas lane, 196
-
- St. Nicolas Cole Abbey, 316
-
- St. Olave, Church of, 120
-
- St. Olave Upwell, Church of, 252
-
- St. Pancrate, Church of, 232, 233
-
- St. Paul's, 34, 50, 62, 63, 89, 108, 291 ff.
-
- St. Paul's Churchyard, 75
-
- St. Paul's school, 67, 68, 102, 295
-
- St. Peter, at Westminster, Church of, 22
-
- St Peter, called _parva_, 319
-
- St. Peter the Poor, Church of, 158, 159
-
- St. Peter upon Cornhill, 174, 423
-
- St. Peter's upon Cornhill, Grammar school, 67, 175
-
- St. Peter's, Monastery at Westminster, 67
-
- St. Saviour, Monastery of, Bermondsey, Southwark, 67
-
- St. Sepulchers in the Bayly, Church of, 342
-
- St. Sithes, Church of, 225, 233
-
- St. Stephen upon Walbrooke, 15, 100, 203
-
- St. Stephen, Westminster, Chapel of, 66, 418
-
- St. Swithen, Church of, 201
-
- St. Swithen's lane, 200
-
- St. Thomas Apostle, Church of, 98, 220
-
- St. Thomas, Hospital of, 368, 369
-
- St. Thomas of Acon hospital, 241
-
- St. Thomas of Acons, Grammar school at, 67, 175
-
- Salisburie court, 353
-
- Salters' hall, 310
-
- Sanctuary, The, 94
-
- Sarasen's Head, 343
-
- Sargeants' inn, 354
-
- Savoy, The, 395 ff.
-
- Scalding alley (formerly Scalding house or Scalding wick), 158, 167
-
- Schools, and other houses of learning, 66 ff.
-
- Scrop's inn, 71
-
- Seacole lane, 332
-
- Sergeants' inn, 71
-
- Serne's Tower, 48, 66
-
- Sevenoke, William, 99
-
- Shaft alley, 130
-
- Shaw, Edmond, 33
-
- Shaw, Edward, 101
-
- Sheremoniers' lane (Sermon lane), 329
-
- Shoe lane, 332, 347
-
- Shoemakers' hall, 314
-
- Shoreditch (Sors ditch, Sewer's-ditch), 30, 378, 379
-
- Shorne, Benedict, 233
-
- Sidon lane (Sything lane), 120
-
- Single Woman's churchyard, The, 362
-
- Skinners' hall, 206
-
- Skinners' well, 12, 16, 86, 340
-
- Smart's key, 41
-
- Smithfield, East, 113
-
- Snow hill (Snor hill), 332, 343
-
- Somar's (Sommer's) key, 41, 186
-
- Somerset, Edward, Duke of, 82
-
- Somerset house, 173, 395
-
- Soper's lane, 74
-
- Sporiar lane, 121
-
- Sprinckle alley (Sugarloaf alley), 126
-
- Spurrier row, 303
-
- Standard in Cheape, The, 18, 237
-
- Staple inn, 71, 348
-
- Star chamber, 418
-
- Stationers' hall, 331
-
- Stayning lane, 272
-
- Steelyard, The, 208
-
- Stepney (Stebunheath), 90
-
- Stews, The, 360
-
- Stikoneth, 105. _See_ Stepney
-
- Stinking lane, 279, 283
-
- Stocke Fishmonger row, 191
-
- Stocks, The, 202
-
- Stocks market, The, 74, 97
-
- Stodie, John, 97
-
- Stokenewenton, Parish Church of, 104
-
- Strand street, 397
-
- Stratford at the Bow, 142
-
- Straw, Jack, 193
-
- Styleyard, The, 39
-
- Suburbs without the walls, The, 374 ff.
-
- Sweyn, 21
-
-
- Tabard, The, 367
-
- Tallow-chandlers' hall, 206
-
- Tasel close, 150
-
- Tate, John, 102, 166
-
- Temple bar, 71, 173
-
- Temple Church, 357
-
- Thames street, 74, 325 ff.
-
- Thames, The, 13
-
- Thavies inn, 71, 348
-
- Theatre, The, 377
-
- Theeves lane, 368
-
- Thieving lane, 405
-
- Thorne, Robert, 102
-
- Three Cranes' lane, 214
-
- Three needle street, 158
-
- Timber hithe, 323
-
- Tode well (Todwell), 12, 16
-
- Totehill, 421
-
- Tower ditch, The, 20
-
- Tower hill, 45, 114
-
- Tower of London, 42 ff., 54
-
- Tower Royall, 65, 214, 218, 219
-
- Tower street ward, 118
-
- Towers on London Bridge, 56
-
- Trinity lane, 317
-
- Trinobants, The, 4
-
- Troynovants, The, 4
-
- Tun, The, 97, 169, 170
-
- Turnagaine lane, 332
-
- Turnebase (Turnebasse) lane, 224
-
- Turnmill or Tremill brook, 14
-
- Tyborn, 76
-
- Tyler (Tighlar), Wat, 24, 65, 193, 197, 223
-
-
- Vintners' hall, The, 97
-
- Vintry ward, 213
-
-
- Wakering, Sir John, 333
-
- Walbrook ward, 200 ff.
-
- Walbrooke, 12, 108
-
- Walworth, William, 98, 193, 361
-
- Wall about the City of London, 7
-
- Wallice, Henry, 97
-
- Walter de Suffilde, Bishop of Norwich, 83
-
- Wards on the east side of Walbrooke, 109
-
- Wards on the west side of Walbrooke, 109
-
- Water-gates on the Thames, 38 ff.
-
- Watheling (Atheling or Noble) street, 34, 224, 307, 309
-
- Waxchandlers hall, 267
-
- Weavers' hall, 255
-
- Wells, John, 100, 245
-
- Wells river (Turnemill brook, Fleete dike), 12
-
- Wells serving the City, 12
-
- West Cheaping, 236
-
- Westminster Abbey, 406 ff.
-
- Westminster Hall, 412 ff.
-
- West, Nicholas, Bishop of Ely, 81
-
- Wey house, The, 418
-
- White Chappell, 116
-
- White Crosse street, 269
-
- White Friars' Church, 353
-
- White hall, 391
-
- White Lion Church, Southwarke, 360
-
- White Lion, The, 366
-
- White, Sir Thomas, 103
-
- White Tower, The, 42
-
- Whitechapel Church, 376
-
- Whitington, Richard, 217
-
- Whittington, William, 99
-
- William de Haverhull, 83
-
- Winchcombe, Oxfordshire, 13
-
- Winchelsey, Robt., Archbishop of Canterbury, 83
-
- Winchester's house, Bishop of, 362
-
- Windgoose lane, 210
-
- Wolfes gate, 39
-
- Wolsey, Thomas, Cardinal, 81, 128, 304
-
- Wood street, 260, 265
-
- Woodmongers' hall, 328
-
- Worcester house, 217
-
- Wrestlers, The, 136
-
-
-THE TEMPLE PRESS, PRINTERS, LETCHWORTH
-
-
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Note
-
-
-Superscript text is indicated with caret symbols, e.g. L^{TD}. Greek
-has been transliterated and is marked with ~swung dashes~.
-
-Footnote 51 is referenced twice in the text.
-
-Entries in the table of contents do not all match the headings in the
-text.
-
-
-The following printing errors have been corrected:
-
-p. x "to empty" changed to "to "empty"
-
-p. xviii "S. Androwes" changed to "S. Androwes."
-
-p. 13 (note) "1st." changed to "1st"
-
-p. 17 "Glibert" changed to "Gilbert"
-
-p. 46 "recepit" changed to "receipt"
-
-p. 72 "default, of" changed to "default, of"
-
-p. 76 (note) "Liber Constitutions. Liber Horme." changed to "Liber
-
-Constitutionis. Liber Horne."
-
-p. 91 "kept a" changed to "kept at"
-
-p. 92 (note) "Decretat," changed to "Decretal."
-
-p. 107 "First, Through" changed to "First, through"
-
-p. 113 (note) "Rech Altherthuemer" changed to "Rechtsalterthuemer"
-
-p. 136 (note) "10s." changed to "10_s._"
-
-p. 162 (note) "p. 141" changed to "p. 141."
-
-p. 173 "Enchange" changed to "Exchange"
-
-p. 174 "expect the steeple" changed to "except the steeple"
-
-p. 189 "s a principal" changed to "is a principal"
-
-p. 231 (note) "16s." changed to "16_s._"
-
-p. 231 (note) "p. 207" changed to "p. 207."
-
-p. 243 "so called." changed to "so called,"
-
-p. 260 "Kery lan" changed to "Kery lane"
-
-p. 264 "Rowlard" changed to "Rowland"
-
-p. 266 "ncroachments" changed to "encroachments"
-
-p. 269 "1546:" changed to "1546;"
-
-p. 287 (note) "Hountjoy" changed to "Mountjoy"
-
-p. 298 "buck,and" changed to "buck, and"
-
-p. 299 "chantry there," "chantry there;"
-
-p. 331 "low sheds" changed to "low sheds,"
-
-p. 355 "partiarch" changed to "patriarch"
-
-p. 364 "he dieu" changed to "de dieu"
-
-p. 376 "h ll" changed to "hill"
-
-p. 382 "this our city." changed to "this our city.""
-
-p. 390 (note) "inn." changed to "inn.""
-
-p. 392 "fair buildings." changed to "fair buildings.""
-
-p. 407 "Richard, Bishop" changed to "Richard, bishop"
-
-p. 407 "younds" changed to "pounds"
-
-p. 411 "by thi" changed to "by this"
-
-p. 442 "French and English" changed to "French and English."
-
-p. 448 "Richard Handle" changed to "Richard Hardle"
-
-p. 454 "Sr John Pultney" changed to "Sir John Pultney"
-
-p. 461 "Waltar Chartesey" changed to "Walter Chartesey"
-
-p. 473 "mayor Sir William" changed to "mayor, Sir William"
-
-p. 480 "aldermen Darby" changed to "alderman Darby"
-
-p. 482 "maenia" changed to "moenia"
-
-p. 483 "caetus" changed to "coetus"
-
-p. 487 typography of the paragraph beginning "Nam ea annis" was
-regularised.
-
-p. 493 "liberoe" changed to "liberae"
-
-p. 500 "proper colour" changed to "proper colour."
-
-p. 511 "Bassett, Robert" changed to "Basset, Robert"
-
-p. 511 "Benbridge's inn" changed to "Benbrige's inn"
-
-p. 511 "Bollein Godfrey" changed to "Bollein, Godfrey"
-
-p. 512 "Chesters' inn" changed to "Chester's inn"
-
-p. 512 "Crosley place, 155" changed to "Crosby place, 155"
-
-p. 512 "Crosley, Sir John" changed to "Crosby, Sir John"
-
-p. 513 "Elies' inn" changed to "Elie's inn"
-
-p. 513 "Gutuhrons" changed to "Guthurons"
-
-p. 513 "Stephanides,)" changed to "Stephanides),"
-
-p. 513 "208 261" changed to "208, 261"
-
-p. 513 "243, 244," changed to "243, 244"
-
-p. 514 "Horsepool" changed to "Horsepoole"
-
-p. 514 "Lomsberry" changed to "Lomsbery"
-
-p. 515 "Church of 130" changed to "Church of, 130"
-
-p. 515 "Oldeborne bridge" changed to "Oldborne bridge"
-
-p. 517 "Single- Woman's" changed to "Single Woman's"
-
-p. 518 "Waxchandler's hall" changed to "Waxchandlers hall"
-
-p. 518 "Wolfesgate, 39" changed to "Wolfes gate, 39"
-
-p. 518 "Noble) street 34," changed to "Noble) street, 34,"
-
-
-Many instances of inconsistent punctuation have not been changed.
-
-The following possible printing errors have not been changed:
-
-p. xi his memory,
-
-p. 11 reparing
-
-p. 62 where thither
-
-p. 158 Three needle street
-
-p. 196 John Merston. knight
-
-p. 259 Ienet and Agnes
-
-p. 356 mother's-jewels
-
-p. 462 and 463 respectively: Godfrey Bolaine and Godfrey Boloine
-
-p. 466: Raphe Austrie and Raph Astrie
-
-p. 488 straglers
-
-p. 514 "_See also_ Marke lane" refers to a non-existent entry
-
-
-The book includes many inconsistent spellings, including:
-
-32d and 32nd
-
-Aeldresgate and AEldresgate
-
-Arcubus and Arches
-
-Bank's side and Bankside
-
-Bridwell and Bridewell
-
-clothworker and cloth-worker
-
-commonalty and commonality
-
-Cordewainers, Cordwainer and Cordwayner
-
-four-pence and four pence
-
-Howe, Howes and Howse
-
-Knight riders and Knightriders'
-
-Meduvanus and Meduvius
-
-Needlar's. Needelars and Needler's
-
-Sherington and Sherrington
-
-Surrey and Surry
-
-Totehil and Totehill
-
-Tunstal and Tunstall
-
-Turnebase and Turnebasse
-
-Walbrook and Walbrooke
-
-West Cheape and Westcheape
-
-Wokendon and Wokenden
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Survey of London, by John Stow
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