London has a recorded history that goes back over 2,000 years. During this time, it has experienced
plague, devastating
fire,
civil war, aerial
bombardment and
terrorist attacks, yet, it has still grown to become one of the financial and
cultural capitals of the
world.
See
City of London for details on the historic core of London.
Legendary foundations and prehistoric London
According to the
legendary Historia Regum Britanniae, of
Geoffrey of Monmouth, London was founded by
Brutus of Troy after he defeated the incumbent giants
Gog and Magog and was known as
Caer Troia,
Troia Nova, or New
Troy, which, according to a pseudo-etymology, was corrupted to
Trinovantum. (In reality the
Trinovantes were the Iron Age tribe who inhabited the area prior to the Romans). Geoffrey provides prehistoric London with a rich array of legendary kings, such as King
Lud who, he claims, renamed the town
CaerLudein, from which London was derived, and was buried at
Ludgate.
However, despite intensive excavations, archaeologists have found no evidence of a prehistoric major settlement in the area. There have been scattered prehistoric finds, evidence of farming, burial and traces of habitation, but nothing more substantial. It is now considered unlikely that a pre-Roman city existed, but as some of the Roman city remains unexcavated, it is still just possible that some settlement may have yet to be discovered.
So, during
prehistoric times, London was most likely a rural area with scattered settlement. Rich finds such as the
Battersea Shield, found in the
Thames near Chelsea, suggest the area was important; there may have been important settlements at
Egham and
Brentford, and there was a
hillfort at Uppall, but no city in the area of the Roman London, the present day
City of London.
Numerous finds
[1] have been made of
spear heads and weaponry from the
Bronze and
Iron ages near the banks of the
Thames in the London area, many of which had clearly been used in battle. This suggests that the Thames was an important tribal boundary.
In 2002 a dig for the
Channel 4 series
Time Team unearthed a series of timbers driven vertically into the ground on the south bank of the
Thames next to the
SIS Building in
Vauxhall which suggests the presence of a bridge or jetty 3000 years ago
[2].
Roman London
Londinium was established as a civilian town by the
Romans about seven years after the
invasion of AD 43. The name
Londinium is thought to be pre-Roman (and probably pre-Celtic ) in origin although there has been no consensus on what it means, possibly something like "the flowing river".
Early Roman London occupied a relatively small area, roughly equivalent in size to Hyde Park. In around AD 60, it was sacked by the
Iceni led by their queen
Boudica. However, the city was quickly rebuilt as a planned Roman town and recovered after perhaps 10 years, the city growing rapidly over the following decades. During the
2nd century Londinium was at its height and replaced
Colchester as the capital of
Roman Britain (Britannia). Its population was around 60,000 inhabitants. It boasted major public buildings, including the largest
basilica north of the
Alps, a governor's palace,
temples,
bath houses,
amphitheatre and a large
fort for the city garrison. Political instabillity and recession from the
3rd century onwards, however, led to a slow decline.
At some time between 190 and 225 AD the Romans built the defensive
London Wall - around the landward side of the city. The wall was about 3 kilometres (2 miles) long, 6 metres (20 feet) high, and 2.5 metres (8 feet) thick.
In the late 3rd century, Londinium was raided on several occasions by Saxon pirates . This led, from around 255 onwards to the construction of an additional riverside wall.
The wall would survive for another 1,600 years and define London's perimeters for centuries to come. Six of the traditional seven city gates of London are of Roman origin, namely:
Ludgate,
Newgate,
Aldersgate,
Cripplegate,
Bishopsgate and
Aldgate (
Moorgate is the exception, being of medieval origin).
By the
5th century the Roman Empire was in rapid decline, and in
410 AD the Roman occupation of Britain came to an end. Following this, the Roman city went into rapid decline and by the end of the century had been practically abandoned.
Anglo-Saxon London
Following the virtual abandonment of the Roman city, the area's strategic location on the River Thames meant that the site was not deserted for long. From the 6th century,
Anglo-Saxons began to inhabit the area.
Although early Anglo-Saxon settlement avoided the area immediately around Londinium, there was occupation on a small scale of much of the hinterland on both sides of the river. There is no contemporary literary evidence, but the area must for some time have been an active frontier between Saxons and Britons. From the mid-6th century, the London area was incorporated into the
East Saxons kingdom, which extended as far west as
St Albans and included all of later
Middlesex, and probably
Surrey, too, for a time. In
604 Saeberht of the East Saxons converted to
Christianity and London received
Mellitus, its first post-Roman bishop. At this time Essex owed allegiance to the
Bretwalda Æthelberht of Kent, and it was under Æthelberht that Mellitus founded the first
St. Paul's Cathedral, traditionally said to be on the site of an old Roman Temple of Diana (although
Christopher Wren found no evidence of this). This would have only been a modest church at first and may well have been destroyed after he was expelled from the city by Saeberht's
pagan successors.
Later in the 7th Century a
Saxon village and trading centre named
Lundenwic ("London settlement")
[3] was established approximately one mile to the west of
Londinium. The new town came under direct
Mercian control in c.730 as the East Saxon kingdom of which it had once been part was gradually reduced in size and status. Mercian lordship was replaced by that of
Wessex after
825.


Alfred the Great
Viking attacks dominated most of the
9th century, and such attacks became increasingly common from around
830 onwards. There were attacks on London in 842 and 851. In 865 the Viking "
Great Heathen Army" launched a large scale invasion of
East Anglia, and by 871 they had reached London, and are believed to have camped within the old Roman walls during the winter of that year. Although it is unclear what happened during this time, London may have come under Viking control for a period. In
878 however, English forces led by King
Alfred the Great defeated the Vikings at the
Battle of Edington and forced the Viking leader
Guthrum to sue for peace. English rule in London was restored and within ten years settlement within the old Roman walls was re-established to improve defences, but known as
Lundenburgh. The Roman walls were repaired and the defensive ditch re-cut. As the focus of the city was moved back to within the old Roman walls, the older settlement of
Lundenwic gained the name of
ealdwic or "old settlement". The name survives today as
Aldwych.
Alfred appointed his son-in-law
Earl Aethelred of Mercia, who was the heir to the destroyed Kingdom of Mercia, as
Governor of London and established two defended
Boroughs to defend the bridge which was probably rebuilt at this time. The southern end of the Bridge was established as the Borough of
Southwark or
Suthringa Geworc (defensive work of the men of
Surrey) as it was originally known. From this point, the
City of London began to develop its own unique local government.
After Aethelred's death, London came under the direct control of English kings. By the early
10th century London had become an important commercial centre. Although the capital of the
Kingdom of England was in
Winchester, London became increasingly important as a political centre. King
Aethelstan held many Royal Councils in London and issued laws from there. King
Aethelred the Unready favoured London as his capital and issued the Laws of London there in
978.
It was during the reign of Aethelred that Viking raids began again, led by King
Sweyn Forkbeard of
Denmark. London was unsuccessfully attacked in 994, but numerous raids followed. By
1013 London was being besieged and Aethered fled abroad. King Sven died but his son
Canute continued the attacks and eventually overran the city.
A Norse saga tells of a battle during the Viking occupation where Aethelred returned to attack Viking-occupied London. According to the sage, the Danes lined
London Bridge and showered the attackers with spears. Undaunted, the attackers pulled the roofs off nearby houses and held them over their heads in the boats. Thus protected, they were able to get close enough to the bridge to attach ropes to the piers and pull the bridge down, thus ending the Viking occupation of London. There is some speculation that the nursery rhyme "London Bridge is falling down" stems from this incident.
The Vikings however returned and Aethelred's son
Edmund Ironside initially managed to hold back the invaders. However, he was eventually forced to share power with Canute. When Edmund died Canute became the sole King of England. After two short lived Danish kings, the Anglo-Saxon line was restored when Canute's step-son
Edward the Confessor took up the throne in
1042.
Following Edward's death, no clear heir was apparent, and his cousin, Duke
William of Normandy, claimed the throne. The Royal Council, however, met in the city and elected the dead King's brother-in-law,
Harold Godwinson as King. He was crowned in Westminster Abbey. William, outraged by this, then sent an army to invade England.
Norman and Medieval London
.PNG)

London in 1300.
The
Norman invasion of Britain in 1066 is usually considered to be the beginning of the Medieval period.
William,
Duke of Normandy, killed English king
Harold Godwinson in the
Battle of Hastings. Although he burnt down
Southwark, south of the bridge, he avoided London, instead waiting to the north-west at
Berkhamsted until the city officials in London recognised him as King. They quickly did so, and William responded by granting the city a formal charter.
Under William (now known as William the Conqueror) several royal forts were constructed along the riverfront of London (the
Tower of London,
Baynard's Castle and
Montfichet's Castle) to defend against seaborne attacks by Vikings and prevent
rebellions. William the Conqueror also granted a
charter in 1067 upholding previous
Saxon rights, privileges and laws. Its growing self-government became firm with
election rights granted by
King John in 1199 and 1215.
In 1097
William Rufus, the son of William the Conqueror began the construction of 'Westminster Hall'. The hall was to become the basis of the
Palace of Westminster which, throughout the Mediæval period, was the prime royal residence.
In 1176 construction began of the most famous incarnation of
London Bridge (completed in 1209) which was built on the site of several earlier wooden bridges. This bridge would last for 600 years, and remained the only bridge across the
River Thames until 1739.
May 1216 saw the last time that London was truly occupied by a continental armed force, during the
First Barons' War. This was when the young
Louis VIII of France marched through the streets to
St Paul's Cathedral. Throughout the city and in the cathedral he was celebrated as the new ruler.
It was expected that this would free the English from the tyranny of King John. This was only temporarily true. The barons supporting the 29-year old French prince decided to throw their support back to an English king when John died. Over the next several hundred years, London would shake off the heavy French cultural and linguistic influence which had been there since the times of the Norman conquest. The city, like
Dover, would figure heavily into the development of
Early Modern English.
During the
Peasants' Revolt of 1381 led by
Wat Tyler, London was invaded. A group of peasants stormed the
Tower of London and executed the
Lord Chancellor, Archbishop
Simon Sudbury, and the
Lord Treasurer. The peasants looted the city and set fire to numerous buildings. Tyler was stabbed to death by the Lord Mayor
William Walworth in a confrontation at
Smithfield, thus ending the revolt.
During the medieval period London grew up in two different parts. The nearby up-river town of
Westminster became the
Royal capital and centre of government, whereas the
City of London became the centre of commerce and trade. The area between them became entirely
urbanised by 1600.
Trade and commerce grew steadily during the Middle Ages, and London grew rapidly as a result. In 1100 London's population was little more than 15,000. By 1300 it had grown to roughly 80,000. Trade in London was organised into various
guilds, which effectively controlled the city, and elected the
Lord Mayor of London.
Medieval London was made up of narrow and twisting streets, and most of the buildings were made from combustible materials such as wood and straw, which made fire a constant threat. Sanitation in London was poor. London lost at least half of its population during the
Black Death in the mid-14th century. Between 1348 and the
Great Plague of 1666 there were sixteen outbreaks of
plague in the city.
Tudor London (1485-1603)
The
Tudor period from
1485 until
1603 was a dramatic period of English history. Three of the monarchs of the
Tudor dynasty (
Henry VII,
Henry VIII and
Elizabeth I) played important roles in transforming England from a comparatively weak European backwater into a powerful state that in the coming centuries would dominate much of the world. The period saw the end of the
War of the Roses the
English Reformation and the
Elizabethan era.
The
Reformation produced little bloodshed in London, with most of the higher classes co-operating to bring about a gradual shift to
Protestantism. Before the Reformation, more than half of the area of London was occupied by
monasteries,
nunneries and other religious houses, and about a third of the inhabitants were monks, nuns and friars. Thus
Henry VIII’s “
Dissolution of the Monasteries” had a profound effect on the city as nearly all of this property changed hands. The process started in the mid 1530s, and by 1538 most of the larger houses had been abolished. Holy Trinity Aldgate went to Lord Audley, and the Marquess of Winchester built himself a house in part of its precincts. The
Charterhouse went to Lord North, Blackfriars to Lord Cobham, the leper hospital of St Giles to Lord Dudley, while the king took for himself the leper hospital of St James, which was rebuilt as
St James's Palace.
[4]
The period saw London was rapidly rising in importance amongst Europe’s commercial centres, its many small industries were booming, especially weaving. Trade expanded beyond Western Europe to Russia, the Levant, and the Americas. This was the period of
mercantilism and monopoly trading companies such as the
Russia Company (1555) and the
British East India Company (1600) were established in London by Royal Charter. The latter, which ultimately came to rule much of
India, was one of the key institutions in London, and in Britain as a whole, for two and a half centuries. In 1572 the Spanish destroyed the great commercial city of
Antwerp, giving London first place among the North Sea ports. Immigrants arrived in London not just from all over England and Wales, but from abroad as well, for example Huguenots from France; the population rose from an estimated 50,000 in 1530 to about 225,000 in 1605
[5].
The late 16th century, when
William Shakespeare and his contemporaries lived and worked in London, was one of the most lustrous periods in the city’s cultural history. There was considerable hostility to the development of the
theatre however. Public entertainments produced crowds, and crowds were feared by the authorities because they might become mobs, and by many ordinary citizens who dreaded that large gatherings might contribute to the spread of plague. Theatre itself was discountenanced by the increasingly influential
Puritan strand in the nation. However, Queen Elizabeth loved plays, which were performed for her privately at Court, and approved of public performances.
During the mostly calm later years of Elizabeth's reign, some of her courtiers and some of the wealthier citizens of London built themselves country residences in
Middlesex,
Essex and
Surrey. This was an early stirring of the villa movement, the taste for residences which were neither of the city nor on an agricultural estate, but when the last of the Tudors died in 1603, London was still very compact.
Stuart London (1603–1714)
London's expansion beyond the boundaries of the City was decisively established in the 17th century. In the opening years of that century the immediate environs of the City, with the principal exception of the aristocratic residences in the direction of Westminster, were still considered insalubrious. Immediately to the north was
Moorfields, which had recently been drained and laid out in walks, but it was frequented by beggars and travellers, who crossed it in order to get into London, tried not to linger. Adjoining Moorfields were
Finsbury Fields, a favourite practising ground for the archers.
Mile End, then a common on the Great Eastern Road, was famous as a rendezvous for the troops.
The preparations for the coronation of
King James I were interrupted by a severe plague epidemic, which may have killed over thirty thousand people. The
Lord Mayor's Show, which had been discontinued for some years, was revived by order of the king in 1609. The dissolved monastery of the
Charterhouse, which had been bought and sold by the courtiers several times, was purchased by Thomas Button for £13,000. The new hospital, chapel, and schoolhouse were begun in 1611.
Charterhouse School was to be one of the principal
public schools in London until it moved to Surrey in Victorian times, and the site is still used as a
medical school.
The general meeting-place of Londoners in the day-time was the nave of
Old St. Paul's Cathedral. Merchants conducted business in the aisles, and used the font as a counter upon which to make their payments; lawyers received clients at their particular pillars; and the unemployed looked for work. St Paul's Churchyard was the centre of the book trade and
Fleet Street was a centre of public entertainment. Under James I the theatre, which established itself so firmly in the latter years of Elizabeth, grew further in popularity. The performances at the public theatres were complemented by elaborate
masques at the royal court and at the inns of court.
Charles I acceded to the throne in 1625. During his reign aristocrats began to inhabit the
West End in large numbers. In addition to those who had specific business at court, increasing numbers of country landowners and their families lived in London for part of the year simply for the social life. This was the beginning of the "London season".
Lincoln's Inn Fields, was built about 1629. The piazza of
Covent Garden, designed by England's first classically trained architect
Inigo Jones followed in about 1632. The neighbouring streets were built shortly afterwards, and the names of Henrietta, Charles, James, King and York Streets were given after members of the royal family.
In January 1642 five members of parliament whom the King wished to arrest were granted refuge in the City. In August of the same year the King raised his banner at
Nottingham, and during the
English Civil War London took the side of the parliament. Initially the king had the upper hand in military terms and in November he won the
Battle of Brentford a few miles to the west of London. The City organised a new makeshift army and Charles hesitated and retreated. Subsequently an extensive system of fortifications was built to protect London from a renewed attack by the Royalists. This comprised a strong earthen rampart, enhanced with bastions and redoubts. It was well beyond the City walls and encompassed the whole urban area, including Westminster and Southwark. London was not seriously threatened by the royalists again, and the financial resources of the City made an important contribution to the parliamentarians victory in the war.
The unsanitary and overcrowded City of London has suffered from the numerous outbreaks of the plague many times over the centuries, but in Britain it is the last major outbreak which is remembered as the "
Great Plague" It occurred in 1665 and 1666 and killed around 60,000 people, which was one fifth of the population.
Samuel Pepys chronicled the epidemic in his diary. On the
4 September 1665 he wrote
"I have stayed in the city till above 7400 died in one week, and of them about 6000 of the plague, and little noise heard day or night but tolling of bells."
The Great Plague was immediately followed by another catastrophe, albeit one which helped to put an end to the plague. On the Sunday,
2 September 1666 the
Great Fire of London broke out at one o'clock in the morning at a house in Pudding Lane in the southern part of the City. Fanned by an eastern wind the fire spread, and efforts to arrest it by pulling down houses to make firebreaks were disorganised to begin with. On Tuesday night the wind fell somewhat, and on Wednesday the fire slackened. On Thursday it was extinguished, but on the evening of that day the flames again burst forth at the Temple. Some houses were at once blown up by gunpowder, and thus the fire was finally mastered.
The Monument was built to commemorate the fire: for over a century and a half it bore an inscription attributing the conflagration to a
"popish frenzy".


John Evelyn's plan for the rebuilding of London after the Great Fire.
The fire destroyed about 60% of the City, including
Old St Paul's Cathedral, 87 parish churches, 44
livery company halls and the
Royal Exchange. However the number of lives lost was surprisingly small; it is believed to have been 16 at most. Within a few days of the fire, three plans were presented to the king for the rebuilding of the city, by
Christopher Wren,
John Evelyn and
Robert Hooke. Wren proposed to build main thoroughfares north and south, and east and west, to insulate all the churches in conspicuous positions, to form the most public places into large piazzas, to unite the halls of the 12 chief livery companies into one regular square annexed to the
Guildhall, and to make a fine quay on the bank of the river from
Blackfriars to the
Tower of London. Wren wished to build the new streets straight and in three standard widths of thirty, sixty and ninety feet. Evelyn's plan differed from Wren's chiefly in proposing a street from the church of
St Dunstan's in the East to the St Paul's, and in having no quay or terrace along the river. These plans were not implemented, and the rebuilt city generally followed the streetplan of the old one, and most of it has survived into the 21st century.


Richard Blome's map of London (1673). The development of the West End had recently begun to accelerate.
Nonetheless, the new City was different from the old one. Many aristocratic residents never returned, preferring to take new houses in the West End, where fashionable new districts such as
St. James's were built close to the main royal residence, which was
Whitehall Palace until it was destroyed by fire in the 1690s, and thereafter
St. James's Palace. The rural lane of
Piccadilly sprouted courtiers mansions such as
Burlington House. Thus the separation between the middle class mercantile City of London, and the aristocratic world of the court in
Westminster became complete. In the City itself there was a move from wooden buildings to stone and brick construction to reduce the risk of fire. The
Act of Parliament "for rebuilding the city of London" stated
"building with brick [is] not only more comely and durable, but also more safe against future perils of fire". From then on only doorcases, window-frames and shop fronts were allowed to be made of wood.
Christopher Wren's plan for a new model London came to nothing, but he was appointed to rebuild the ruined parish churches and to replace
St Paul's Cathedral. His domed
baroque cathedral was the primary symbol of London for at least a century and a half. As city surveyor,
Robert Hooke oversaw the reconstruction of the City's houses. The
East End, that is the area immediately to the east of the city walls, also became heavily populated in the decades after the Great Fire. London's docks began to extend downstream, attracting many working people who worked on the docks themselves and in the processing and distributive trades. These people lived in
Whitechapel,
Wapping,
Stepney and
Limehouse, generally in slum conditions.
In the winter of
1683–
4 a
frost fair was held on the Thames. The frost, which began about seven weeks before Christmas and continued for six weeks after, was the greatest on record. The
Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685, led to a large migration on
Huguenots to London. They established a silk industry at
Spitalfields.
At this time the City of London was becoming the world's leading financial centre, superseding
Amsterdam in primacy. The
Bank of England was founded in 1694, and the
British East India Company was expanding its influence.
Lloyd's of London also began to operate in the late
17th century. In 1700 London handled 80% of England's imports, 69% of its exports and 86% of its re-exports. Many of the goods were luxuries from the Americas and Asia such as silk, sugar, tea and tobacco. The last figure emphasises London's role as an
entrepot: while it had many craftsmen in the 17th century, and would later acquire some large factories, its economic prominence was never based primarily on industry. Instead it was a great trading and redistribution centre. Goods were brought to London by England's increasingly dominant merchant navy, not only to satisfy domestic demand, but also for re-export throughout Europe and beyond.
William III cared little for London, the smoke of which gave him asthma, and after the first fire at Whitehall Palace (1691) he purchased Nottingham House and transformed it into
Kensington Palace.
Kensington was then an insignificant village, but the arrival of the court soon caused it to grow in importance. The palace was rarely favoured by future monarchs, but its construction was another step in the expansion of the bounds of London. During the same reign
Greenwich Hospital, then well outside the boundary of London, but now comfortably inside it, was begun; it was the naval complement to the
Chelsea Hospital for former soldiers, which has been founded in 1681. During the reign of
Queen Anne an act was passed authorising the building of 50 new churches to serve the greatly increased population living outside the boundaries of the City of London.
18th century London
Main article: 18th century London


A view of London from the east in 1751
The 18th century was a period of rapid growth for London, reflecting an increasing national population, the early stirrings of the
Industrial Revolution, and London's role at the centre of the evolving
British Empire.
In 1707 an
Act of Union was passed merging the Scottish and the English Parliaments, thus establishing The Kingdom of Great Britain. A year later, in 1708
Christopher Wren's masterpiece,
St. Paul's Cathedral was completed on his birthday. However, the first service had been held on
December 2,
1697; more than 10 years earlier! This Cathedral replaced the original St. Paul's which had been completely destroyed in the
Great Fire of London. This building is considered one of the finest in Britain and a fine example of
Baroque architecture.
During the Georgian period London spread beyond its traditional limits at an accelerating pace. New districts such as
Mayfair were built for the rich in the West End, new bridges over the Thames encouraged an acceleration of development in
South London and in the East End, the Port of London expanded downstream from the City. During this period was also the uprising of the American colonies. In 1780, the
Tower of London held its only American prisoner, former
President of the
Continental Congress,
Henry Laurens. In 1779 he was the Congress's representative of Holland, and got the country's support for the Revolution. On his return voyage back to America, the Royal Navy captured him and charged him with treason after finding evidence of a reason of war between Great Britain and the Netherlands. He was released from the Tower on
December 21,
1781 in exchange for General
Lord Cornwallis.
In 1762
George III acquired
Buckingham Palace (then known as "house") from the Duke of Buckingham. It was enlarged over the next 75 years by architects such as John Nash. It would not be until the
19th century, however, that the palace would become the principle London royal residence.


Buckingham Palace as it appeared in the 17th century
A phenomenon of 18th century London was the
coffee house, which became a popular place to debate ideas. Growing
literacy and the development of the
printing press meant that news became widely available.
Fleet Street became the centre of the embryonic British press during the century.
18th century London was dogged by
crime, the
Bow Street Runners were established in 1750 as a professional police force. Penalties for crime were harsh, with the
death penalty being applied for fairly minor crimes. Public
hangings were common in London, and were popular public events.
In 1780 London was rocked by the
Gordon Riots, an uprising by
Protestants against
Roman Catholic emancipation led by Lord
George Gordon. Severe damage was caused to Catholic churches and homes, and 285 rioters were killed.
In the year 1787, freed slaves from London, America, and many of Britain's colonies founded
Freetown in modern-day Sierra Leone.
Up until 1750,
London Bridge was the only crossing over the
Thames, but in that year
Westminster Bridge was opened and, for the first time in history, London Bridge, in a sense, had a rival.
The 18th century saw the breakaway of the American colonies and many other unfortunate events in London, but also great change and Enlightenment. This all led into the beginning of modern times, the 19th century.
19th century London
Main article: 19th century London


London as engraved by J. & C. Walker in 1845 from a map by R Creighton. Many districts in the West End were fully developed, and the
East End also extended well beyond the eastern fringe of the City of London. There were now several bridges over the Thames, allowing the rapid development of
South London.
During the 19th century, London was transformed into the world's largest city and capital of the
British Empire. Its population expanded from 1 million in 1800 to 6.7 million a century later. During this period, London became a global political, financial, and trading capital. In this position, it was largely unrivaled until the latter part of the century, when Paris and New York began to threaten its dominance.
While the city grew wealthy as Britain's holdings expanded, 19th century London was also a city of poverty, where millions lived in overcrowded and unsanitary
slums. Life for the poor was immortalised by
Charles Dickens in such novels as
Oliver Twist.
In 1829 the prime minister
Robert Peel established the
Metropolitan Police as a police force covering the entire urban area. The force gained the nickname of "bobbies" or "peelers" named after Robert Peel.
19th century London was transformed by the coming of the
railways. A new network of metropolitan railways allowed for the development of
suburbs in neighboring counties from which middle-class and wealthy people could commute to the centre. While this spurred the massive outward growth of the city, the growth of greater London also exacerbated the class divide, as the wealthier classes emigrated to the suburbs, leaving the poor to inhabit the inner city areas.
The first railway to be built in London was a line from
London Bridge to
Greenwich, which opened in 1836. This was soon followed by the opening of great rail termini which linked London to every corner of Britain. These included
Euston station (1837),
Paddington station (1838),
Fenchurch Street station (1841),
Waterloo station (1848),
King's Cross station (1850), and
St Pancras station (1863). From 1863, the first lines of the
London Underground were constructed.
The urbanised area continued to grow rapidly, spreading into
Islington,
Paddington,
Belgravia,
Holborn,
Finsbury,
Shoreditch,
Southwark and
Lambeth. Towards the middle of the century, London's antiquated
local government system, consisting of ancient
parishes and
vestries, struggled to cope with the rapid growth in population. In 1855 the
Metropolitan Board of Works (MBW) was created to provide London with adequate infrastructure to cope with its growth.
One of its first tasks was addressing London's sanitation problems. At the time, raw
sewage was pumped straight into the
River Thames. This culminated in
The Great Stink of 1858. The polluted drinking water (sourced from the Thames) also brought disease and epidemics to London's populace.
Parliament finally gave consent for the MBW to construct a massive system of
sewers. The engineer put in charge of building the new system was
Joseph Bazalgette. In what was one of the largest
civil engineering projects of the 19th century, he oversaw construction of over 2100 km of tunnels and pipes under London to take away sewage and provide clean drinking water. When the
London sewerage system was completed, the death toll in London dropped dramatically, and epidemics of
cholera and other diseases were curtailed. Bazalgette's system is still in use today.
One of the most famous events of 19th-century London was the
Great Exhibition of 1851. Held at
The Crystal Palace, the fair attracted visitors from across the world and displayed Britain at the height of its Imperial dominance.


The Houses of Parliament from old Westminster Bridge in the early 1890s
As the capital of a massive empire, London became a magnet for immigrants from the colonies and poorer parts of Europe. A large
Irish population settled in the city during the Victorian period, with many of the newcomers refugees from the
Great Famine (1845-1849). At one point, Irish immigrants made up about 20% of London's population. London also became home to a sizable
Jewish community, and small communities of Chinese and South Asians settled in the city.
In 1888, the new
County of London was established, administered by the
London County Council. This was the first elected London-wide administrative body, replacing the earlier Metropolitan Board of Works, which had been made up of appointees. The County of London covered broadly what was then the full extent of the London conurbation, although the conurbation later outgrew the boundaries of the county. In 1900, the county was sub-divided into 28
metropolitan boroughs, which formed a more local tier of administration than the county council.
Many famous buildings and landmarks of London were constructed during the 19th century including:
20th century London
London from 1900 to World War II
Main article: History of London 1900-1939
London entered the
20th century at the height of its influence as the capital of largest empire in history, but the new century was to bring many challenges.
London's population continued to grow rapidly in the early decades of the century, and
public transport was greatly expanded. A large
tram network was constructed by the London County Council, through the
LCC Tramways. And the first
motorbus service began in the 1900s. Improvements to London's overground and underground rail network, including large scale electrification were progressively carried out.
During
World War I, London experienced its first bombing raids carried out by German
zeppelin airships; these killed around 700 people and caused great terror, but were merely a foretaste of what was to come. The city of London would experience many more terrors as a result of both World Wars. The largest explosion in London occurred during World War I: the
Silvertown explosion, when a munitions factory containing 50 tons of
TNT exploded, killing 73 and injuring 400.
The
period between the two World Wars saw London's geographical extent growing more quickly than ever before or since. A preference for lower density
suburban housing, typically
semi-detached, by Londoners seeking a more "rural" lifestyle, superseded Londoners' old predilection for
terraced houses. This was facilitated not only by a continuing expansion of the rail network, including
trams and the Underground, but also by slowly widening car ownership. London's suburbs expanded outside the boundaries of the County of London, into the neighboring counties of
Essex,
Hertfordshire,
Kent,
Middlesex and
Surrey.
Like the rest of the country, London suffered severe unemployment during the
Great Depression of the
1930s. In the
East End during the 1930s, politically extreme parties of both right and left flourished. The
Communist Party of Great Britain won a seat in the House of Commons, and the far-right
British Union of Fascists received extensive support. Clashes between right and left culminated in the
Battle of Cable Street in 1936. The population of London reached an all time peak of 8.6 million in
1939.
Large numbers of
Jewish immigrants fleeing from
Nazi Germany, settled in London during the 1930s, who settled mostly in the
West End.
London in World War II
Main article: London in World War II


Firefighters putting out flames at a bomb site during the blitz
During
World War II, London, as many other British cities, suffered severe damage, being bombed extensively by the
Luftwaffe as a part of
The Blitz. Prior to the bombing, hundreds of thousands of children in London were evacuated to the countryside to avoid the bombing. Civilians took shelter from the air raids in underground stations.
The heaviest bombing took place between
7 September 1940 and
10 May 1941. During this period, London was subjected to 71 separate raids receiving over 18,000 tonnes of high explosive. Less intensive bombing followed over the following few years as
Hitler concentrated on the Eastern front. Towards the end of the war, during
1944/
45 London came under heavy attack again by pilotless
V-1 and
V-2 rockets, which were fired from Nazi occupied Europe.
London suffered severe damage and heavy casualties, the worst hit part being the
Docklands area of the
East End. By the war's end, just under 30,000 Londoners had been killed by the bombing, and over 50,000 seriously injured
[6], tens of thousands of buildings were destroyed, and hundreds of thousands of people were made homeless.
London 1945–2000
Main article: Modern London (from 1945)
Immediately after the war, the
1948 Summer Olympics were held at
Wembley Stadium, at a time when the city had barely recovered from the war. London's rebuilding was slow to begin. However, in
1951 the
Festival of Britain was held, which marked an increasing mood of optimism and forward looking.
In the immediate postwar years housing was a major issue in London, due to the large amount of housing which had been destroyed in the war. The authorities decided upon high-rise
blocks of flats as the answer to housing shortages. During the
1950s and
1960s the skyline of London altered dramatically as tower blocks were erected, although these later proved unpopular. In a bid to reduce the number of people living in overcrowded housing, a policy was introduced of encouraging people to move into newly built
new towns surrounding London.
Through the 19th and in the early half of the 20th century, Londoners used
coal for heating their homes, which produced large amounts of smoke. In combination with climatic conditions this often caused a characteristic
smog, and London became known for its typical "London Fog", also known as "Pea Soupers". London was sometimes referred to as "The Smoke" because of this. In
1952 this culminated in the disastrous
Great Smog of 1952 which lasted for five days and killed over 4,000 people. In response to this, the
Clean Air Act 1956 was passed, mandating the creating of "smokeless zones" where the use of "smokeless" fuels was required (this was at a time when most households still used open fires); the Act was effective, though the nickname is still used
sarcastically.
Starting in the mid-
1960s, and partly as a result of the success of such UK musicians as
the Beatles and the Rolling Stones, London became a centre for the worldwide
youth culture, exemplified by the
Swinging London subculture which made
Carnaby Street a household name of youth fashion around the world. London's role as a trendsetter for youth fashion was revived strongly in the
1980s during the
New Wave and Punk eras. In the mid-
1990s this was revived to some extent with the emergence of the
Britpop era.
From the
1950s onwards London became home to a large number of immigrants, largely from
Commonwealth countries such as
Jamaica,
India and
Pakistan, which dramatically changed the face of London, turning it into one of the most diverse cities in Europe. However, the integration of the new immigrants was not always easy. Racial tensions emerged in events such as the
Brixton Riots in the early 1980s.
From the beginning of "
The Troubles" in
Northern Ireland in the early
1970s until the mid-
1990s, London was subjected to repeated
terrorist attacks by the
Provisional IRA.
The outward expansion of London was slowed by the war, and the
Green Belt established soon afterwards. Due to this outward expansion, in
1965 the old
County of London (which by now only covered part of the London conurbation) and the
London County Council were abolished, and the much larger area of
Greater London was established with a new
Greater London Council (GLC) to administer it, along with 32 new
London boroughs.
Greater London's population declined steadily in the decades after World War II, from an estimated peak of 8.6 million in 1939 to around 6.8 million in the
1980s. However it then began to increase again in the late 1980s, encouraged by strong economic performance and an increasingly positive image.
London's traditional status as a major port declined dramatically in the post-war decades as the old
Docklands could not accommodate large modern container ships. The principal ports for London moved to the upstream towns of
Felixstowe and
Tilbury. The docklands area had become largely derelict by the 1980s, but was redeveloped into flats and offices from the mid-1980s onwards. The
Thames Barrier was completed in the 1980s to protect London against tidal surges from the
North Sea.
In the early 1980s political disputes between the GLC run by
Ken Livingstone and the
Conservative government of
Margaret Thatcher led to the GLC's abolition in
1986, with most of its powers relegated to the
London boroughs. This left London as the only large metropolis in the world without a central administration.
In 2000, London-wide government was restored, with the creation of the
Greater London Authority (GLA) by
Tony Blair's government, covering the same area of Greater London. The new authority had similar powers to the old GLC, but was made up of a directly elected
Mayor and a
London Assembly. London was also recognised as one of the nine
regions of England.
21st century London
At the turn of the 21st century, London hosted the much derided
Millennium Dome at
Greenwich, to mark the new century. Other Millennium projects were more successful. One was the largest observation wheel in the world, the "Millennium Wheel", or the
London Eye, which was erected as a temporary structure, but soon became a fixture, and draws four million visitors a year. The
National Lottery also released a flood of funds for major enhancements to existing attractions, for example the roofing of the Great Court at the
British Museum.
The
London Plan, published by the
Mayor of London in
2004, estimated that the population would reach 8.1 million by
2016, and continue to rise thereafter. This was reflected in a move towards denser, more urban styles of building, including a greatly increased number of
tall buildings,
[7] and proposals for major enhancements to the public transport network. However, funding for projects such as
Crossrail remained a struggle.
On
July 6,
2005 London won
the bid to host the 2012 Olympics. However, celebrations were cut short the following day when, on
July 7,
2005, London was rocked by
a series of terrorist attacks. More than 50 were killed and 750 injured in three bombings on
London Underground and another aboard a
double decker bus near
Russell Square in King's Cross.
Population
- 1AD — a few farmsteaders
- 50 — 50–100
- 140 — 45–60,000
- 300 — 10–20000
- 400 — fewer than 5000?
- 500 — a few hundred?
- 700 — a few thousand in the new city of Lundenwic
- 900 — a few thousand in the re-established city of Lundenburgh
- 1000 — 5–10,000
- 1100 — 10–20,000
- 1300 — 50–100,000 (according to research by Derek Keene)
- 1350 — 25–50,000 following the Black Death
- 1500 — 50–75,000
- 1600 — 200,000
- 1650 — 350,000
- 1700 — 550,000 (nearly 10% of the population of England and Wales)
- 1750 — 700,000
- 1801 — 959,300 (at the time, Europe's largest city)
- 1831 — 1,655,000 (most populous city in the world)
- 1851 — 2,363,000
- 1891 — 5,572,012
- 1901 — 6,506,954
- 1911 — 7,160,525
- 1921 — 7,386,848 (soon to be overtaken by New York City as most populous city in the world)
- 1931 — 8,110,480
- 1939 — 8,615,245 (population peak)
- 1951 — 8,196,978
- 1961 — 7,992,616
- 1971 — 7,452,520
- 1981 — 6,805,000
- 1991 — 6,829,300
- 2001 — 7,172,091
- 2006 — 7,657,300
- 2016 — 8.2m (forecast in 'London's Place in the UK Economy' Corporation of London Sept. 2002)
The first Census was in 1801, so early dates are estimates based on archaeological density of sites compared with known population of the City of London between 1600–1800 (
i.e., 50,000). Dates from 1300 onwards are based on what is probably better evidence, from historic records.
Figures for 1891 onwards are for
Greater London in its 2001 limits (Greater London did not exist until 1965). Figures before 1971 have been reconstructed by the Office for National Statistics based on past censuses in order to fit the 2001 limits. Figures from 1981 onward are midyear estimates (revised as of 2004), which are more accurate than the censuses themselves, known to underestimate the population of London .

A panorama of modern london, taken from the Golden Gallery of Saint Paul’s Cathedral A panorama of modern london, taken from the Golden Gallery of Saint Paul’s Cathedral
Historical places of note in London


London in flames after a German bombardment (1941)
Notes
See also
External links
London
Canary Wharf is the centre of London's modern office towers
London shown within England
Coordinates:
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Constituent country England
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Black Death, or The Black Plague, was one of the most deadly pandemics in human history. It began in South-western or Central Asia and spread to Europe by the late 1340s.
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Great Fire of London was a major conflagration that swept through the central parts of London, England, from Sunday, 2 September to Wednesday, 5 September, 1666.[1] The fire gutted the medieval City of London inside the old Roman City Wall.
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The English Civil War consisted of a series of armed conflicts and political machinations that took place between Parliamentarians (known as Roundheads) and Royalists (known as Cavaliers) between 1642 and 1651.
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The Blitz was the sustained bombing of the United Kingdom by Nazi Germany between 7 September 1940 and 10 May 1941, in World War II. While the "Blitz" hit many towns and cities across the UK, it began with the bombing of London for 57[1] nights in a row.
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7 July 2005 London bombings
Ambulances at Russell Square following the bombings.
Location London, United Kingdom
Target(s) London Underground and a double-decker bus
Date 7 July 2005
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Culture (from the Latin cultura stemming from colere, meaning "to cultivate,") generally refers to patterns of human activity and the symbolic structures that give such activity significant importance.
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capital (also called capital city or political capital — although the latter phrase has a second meaning based on an alternative sense of "capital") is the center of government.
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..... Click the link for more information. - For London as a whole, see the main article London.
- For wider coverage, visit the .
City of LondonCoat of armsMotto: Domine dirige nos Latin:
Lord, guide us..... Click the link for more information. legend (Latin, legenda, "things to be read") is a narrative of human actions that are perceived both by teller and listeners to take place within human history and to possess certain qualities that give the tale verisimilitude.
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Historia Regum Britanniae
Author Geoffrey of Monmouth
Translator Wace, Layamon
Country Wales
Language Latin
Genre(s) Pseudohistory
Publisher None
Publication date 1138
Geoffrey of Monmouth's
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Geoffrey of Monmouth (Welsh: Gruffudd ap Arthur or Sieffre o Fynwy) (c. 1100 – c. 1155) was a clergyman and one of the major figures in the development of British history and the popularity of tales of King Arthur.
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Brutus (Brut, Brute, Welsh Brutus), a descendant of the Trojan hero Aeneas, was known in medieval British legend as the eponymous founder and first king of Britain.
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Gog and Magog begins in the Hebrew Bible with the reference to Magog, son of Japheth, in the Book of Genesis and continues in cryptic prophecies in the War of Ezekiel 38-39, which are echoed in the Book of Revelation and in the Qur'an.
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State Party Turkey
Type Cultural
Criteria ii, iii, vi
Reference 849
Region Europe and North America
Inscription History
Inscription 1998 (22nd Session)
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The Trinovantes or Trinobantes were one of the Celtic tribes that lived in pre-Roman Britain. Their territory was on the north side of the Thames estuary in current Essex and Suffolk, and included lands now located in Greater London.
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Lud, according to Geoffrey of Monmouth's legendary History of the Kings of Britain and related medieval texts, is a king of Britain in pre-Roman times. He is the eldest son of King Heli, and succeeds his father to the throne.
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Ludgate was the westernmost gate in London Wall. The name survives in Ludgate Hill, an eastward continuation of Fleet Street, and Ludgate Circus.
The Romans built a road along the north bank of the River Thames westwards through the gate later called Lud Gate.
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Prehistory (Latin, præ = before Greek, ιστορία = history) is a term often used to describe the period before written history. Paul Tournal originally coined the term Pré-historique
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Battersea Shield is a sheet bronze shield. It probably dates from the first century BC to early first century AD, though an earlier date is possible. Dates from 300BC have been suggested.
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Thames The Thames in London
Country | England
Regions | Gloucestershire,Oxfordshire,Berkshire,Buckinghamshire,Surrey,Greater London,Kent
..... Click the link for more information. |240px|Egham (
..... Click the link for more information. Brentford..... Click the link for more information. A hill fort is a fortified refuge or defended settlement, located to exploit a rise in elevation for military advantage. The fortification usually follows the contours of the hill, consisting of one or more lines of earthworks, with stockades or defensive walls, and external
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- For London as a whole, see the main article London.
- For wider coverage, visit the .
City of LondonCoat of armsMotto: Domine dirige nos Latin:
Lord, guide us..... Click the link for more information. SPEAR (Stanford Positron Electron Asymmetric Ring) is a collider at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center. It began running in 1972, colliding electrons and positrons with an energy of 3 GeV.
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The term Bronze Age refers to a period in human cultural development when the most advanced metalworking (at least in systematic and widespread use) consists of techniques for smelting copper and tin from naturally occurring outcroppings of ore, and then alloying those metals in
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Iron Age was the stage in the development of any people in which tools and weapons whose main ingredient was iron were prominent. The adoption of this material coincided with other changes in some past societies often including differing agricultural practices, religious beliefs
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Thames The Thames in London
Country | England
Regions | Gloucestershire,Oxfordshire,Berkshire,Buckinghamshire,Surrey,Greater London,Kent
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