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This dazzling and yet intimate book is the first modern one-volume history of London from Roman times to the present. An extraordinary city, London grew from a backwater in the Classical age into an important medieval city, a significant Renaissance urban center, and a modern collossus.
Roy Porter writes a whole life of this world-renowned place - from the grid streets and fortresses of Julius Caesar and William the Conqueror to the medieval, walled "most noble city" of churches, friars, and crown and town relationships. Within the crenellated battlements, manufactures and markets developed and street-life buzzed, enlivened with the cries of hawkers and peddlers.
People worked, talked, haggled, and relaxed in London's medieval streets, while craftsmen lived where they worked, nestled trade-by-trade in neighborhoods.
London's profile in 1500 was much as it was at the peak of Roman power. The city owed its courtly splendor and national pride of the Tudor Age to the phenomenal expansion of its capital. It was the envy of foreigners, the spur of civic patriotism, and a hub of culture, architecture, and great literature and new religion. Tudor Londoners had an insatiable appetite for new workshops, yards and stores, and comfortable homes; and makeshift quarters for laborers from rural areas began to dot the rising city.
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Previews available in: English
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Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. 390-[408]) and index.
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- Created September 19, 2008
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January 15, 2023 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
December 8, 2022 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
November 17, 2022 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
November 1, 2022 | Edited by Scott365Bot | Linking back to Internet Archive. |
September 19, 2008 | Created by ImportBot | Imported from Western Washington University MARC record |