PART I THE GOVERNMENT OF LONDON Transcriber’s Notes The cover was created by adding text to a plain background and is placed in the public domain. Obvious typographical errors have been silently corrected. Variations in hyphenation and spelling remain unchanged except where in conflict with the index. The ancient documents reproduced, particularly in Appendix IX, contain abbreviations represented by symbols no longer in use. These have been represented by the tilde˜ . Lower case Latin numbers surmounted by xx (a score) are shown thus iiij ∕ xx. The two genealogical trees in volume 3 chapter 19 have been supplemented with genealogical tables prepared by the transcriber. UNIFORM WITH THIS VOLUME PRICE 30/ NET EACH LONDON With 146 Illustrations and a Reproduction of Agas’ Map of London in 1560. “For the student, as well as for those desultory readers who are drawn by the rare fascination of London to peruse its pages, this book will have a value and a charm which are unsurpassed by any of its predecessors.”—Pall Mall Gazette. “A vivid and fascinating picture of London life in the sixteenth century—a novelist’s picture, full of life and movement, yet with the accurate detail of an antiquarian treatise.”—Contemporary Review. LONDON With 116 Illustrations and a Reproduction of Ogilby’s Map of London in 1677. “It is a mine in which the student, alike of topography and of manners and customs, may dig and dig again with the certainty of finding something new and interesting.”—The Times. “The pen of the ready writer here is fluent; the picture wants nothing in completeness. The records of the city and the kingdom have been ransacked for facts and documents, and they are marshalled with consummate skill.”—Pall Mall Gazette. LONDON With 104 Illustrations and a Reproduction of Rocque’s Map of London in 1741-5. “The book is engrossing, and its manner delightful.”—The Times. “Of facts and figures such as these this valuable book will be found full to overflowing, and it is calculated therefore to interest all kinds of readers, from the student to the dilettante, from the romancer in search of matter to the most voracious student of Tit-Bits.”—The AthenÆum. MEDIÆVAL LONDON With 108 Illustrations, mostly from contemporary prints. “The book is at once exact and lively in its statements; there is no slovenly page in it—everywhere there is the sense of movement and colour, and the charm which belongs to a living picture.”—Standard. “One is struck by the admirable grouping, the consistency and order of the work throughout, and in none more than in this latest instalment.”—Pall Mall Gazette. |