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                <title>The Wrestlers (Lime Street Ward)</title>
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                   <resp ref="#aut">Author<date>2011</date></resp>
                   <name ref="#ADAM4">Neil Adams</name>
                </respStmt>
                <respStmt>
                    <resp ref="#top">Toponymist<date>2011</date></resp>
                    <name ref="#JENS1">Janelle Jenstad</name>
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                <respStmt>
                    <resp ref="#mrk">Encoder<date>2011-09-08</date></resp>
                    <name ref="#JENS1">Janelle Jenstad</name>
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                <respStmt>
                    <resp ref="#gis">Geo-Coordinate Researcher<date/></resp>
                    <name ref="#LEBE1">Kate LeBere</name>
                </respStmt>         
                <respStmt>
                    <resp ref="#prg">Programmer<date/></resp>
                    <name ref="#ARNL1">Stewart Arneil</name>
                </respStmt>
 
 
            <respStmt>
<resp ref="#dtm">Data Manager<date/></resp>
<name ref="#LAND2">Tye Landels</name>
</respStmt>
<respStmt>
               <resp ref="#prg">Junior Programmer<date/></resp>
               <name ref="#TAKE1">Joey Takeda</name>
            </respStmt>
            <respStmt>
               <resp ref="#prg">Programmer<date/></resp>
               <name ref="#HOLM3">Martin Holmes</name>
            </respStmt>
            <respStmt>
               <resp ref="#rth">Associate Project Director<date/></resp>
               <name ref="#MCFI1">Kim McLean-Fiander</name>
            </respStmt>
            <respStmt>
               <resp ref="#pdr">Project Director<date/></resp>
               <name ref="#JENS1">Janelle Jenstad</name>
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      <publisher><title level="m">The Map of Early Modern London</title></publisher><idno type="URL">http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/includes.xml</idno><pubPlace>Victoria, BC, Canada</pubPlace><address>
        <addrLine>Department of English</addrLine>
        <addrLine>P.O.Box 3070 STNC CSC</addrLine>
        <addrLine>University of Victoria</addrLine>
        <addrLine>Victoria, BC</addrLine>
        <addrLine>Canada</addrLine>
        <addrLine>V8W 3W1</addrLine>
    </address><date>2016</date><distributor>University of Victoria</distributor><idno type="ISBN">978-1-55058-519-3</idno><authority>
          <name ref="#JENS1">Janelle Jenstad</name>
          <ref target="mailto:london@uvic.ca">london@uvic.ca</ref>
        </authority><availability>
            <p>Copyright held by <title level="m">The Map of Early Modern London</title> on behalf of the contributors.</p>
            <licence target="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/">
              <p>This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. </p>
            </licence>
            <p>Further details of licences are available from our
              <ref target="licence.xml">Licences</ref> page. For more
              information, contact the project director, <name ref="#JENS1">Janelle Jenstad</name>, for
              specific information on the availability and licensing of content
              found in files on this site.</p>
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        <notesStmt><note xml:id="WRES1_citationsByStyle"><listBibl>
<bibl type="ris"><code>Provider: University of Victoria
Database: The Map of Early Modern London
Content: text/plain; charset="utf-8"

TY  - ELEC
A1  - Adams, Neil
ED  - Jenstad, Janelle
T1  - The Wrestlers (Lime Street Ward)
T2  - The Map of Early Modern London
ET  - 7.0
PY  - 2022
DA  - 2022/05/05
CY  - Victoria
PB  - University of Victoria
LA  - English
UR  - https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/edition/7.0/WRES1.htm
UR  - https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/edition/7.0/xml/standalone/WRES1.xml
ER  - </code></bibl>
<bibl type="mla"><author><name ref="#ADAM4"><name type="surname">Adams</name>, <name type="forename">Neil</name></name></author>. <title level="a">The Wrestlers (Lime Street Ward)</title>. <title level="m">The Map of Early Modern London</title>, Edition <edition>7.0</edition>, edited by <editor><name ref="#JENS1"><name type="forename">Janelle</name> <name type="surname">Jenstad</name></name></editor>, <publisher>U of Victoria</publisher>, <date>05 May 2022</date>, <ref target="https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/edition/7.0/WRES1.htm">mapoflondon.uvic.ca/edition/7.0/WRES1.htm</ref>.</bibl>
<bibl type="chicago"><author><name ref="#ADAM4"><name type="surname">Adams</name>, <name type="forename">Neil</name></name></author>. <title level="a">The Wrestlers (Lime Street Ward)</title>. <title level="m">The Map of Early Modern London</title>, Edition <edition>7.0</edition>. Ed. <editor><name ref="#JENS1"><name type="forename">Janelle</name> <name type="surname">Jenstad</name></name></editor>. <pubPlace>Victoria</pubPlace>: <publisher>University of Victoria</publisher>. Accessed <date>May 05, 2022</date>. <ref target="https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/edition/7.0/WRES1.htm">mapoflondon.uvic.ca/edition/7.0/WRES1.htm</ref>.</bibl>
<bibl type="apa"><author><name><name type="surname">Adams</name>, <name type="forename">N.</name></name></author> <date>2022</date>. <title>The Wrestlers (Lime Street Ward)</title>. In <editor><name ref="#JENS1"><name type="forename">J.</name> <name type="surname">Jenstad</name></name></editor> (Ed), <title level="m">The Map of Early Modern London</title> (Edition <edition>7.0</edition>). <pubPlace>Victoria</pubPlace>: <publisher>University of Victoria</publisher>. Retrieved  from <ref target="https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/edition/7.0/WRES1.htm">https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/editions/7.0/WRES1.htm</ref>.</bibl>
</listBibl></note><note n="abstract"><p>The <ref target="WRES1.xml">Wrestlers</ref> was a house in <ref target="#BISH1">Bishopsgate Ward</ref> located on the north side of <ref target="#CAMO2">Camomile Street</ref>, near the <ref target="#WALL2">Wall</ref> and <ref target="#BISH2">Bishopsgate</ref> (<ref type="bibl" target="#STOW15">Stow</ref>). The house predates the Wrestlers Court located on the opposite (south) side of <ref target="#CAMO2">Camomile Street</ref>.</p></note><note n="personography"><list type="person"><item xml:id="LEBE1">
      <name type="person">
       <reg>Kate LeBere</reg>
       <name type="forename">Kate</name>
       <name type="surname">LeBere</name>
       <abbr>KL</abbr>
      </name>
      <note>
       <p>Project Manager, 2020-2021. Assistant Project Manager, 2019-2020. Research Assistant, 2018-2020. Kate LeBere completed her BA (Hons.) in History and English at the University of Victoria in 2020. She published papers in <title level="j">The Corvette</title> (2018), <title level="j">The Albatross</title> (2019), and <title level="j">PLVS VLTRA</title> (2020) and presented at the English Undergraduate Conference (2019), Qualicum History Conference (2020), and the Digital Humanities Summer Institute’s Project Management in the Humanities Conference (2021). While her primary research focus was sixteenth and seventeenth century England, she completed her honours thesis on Soviet ballet during the Russian Cultural Revolution. During her time at MoEML, Kate made significant contributions to the 1598 and 1633 editions of Stow’s <title level="m">Survey of London</title>, old-spelling anthology of mayoral shows, and old-spelling library texts. She authored the MoEML’s first Project Management Manual and <soCalled>quickstart</soCalled> guidelines for new employees and helped standardize the Personography and Bibliography. She is currently a student at the University of British Columbia’s iSchool, working on her masters in library and information science.</p>
      </note>
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      <name type="person">
       <reg>Joey Takeda</reg>
       <name type="forename">Joey</name>
       <name type="surname">Takeda</name>
       <abbr>JT</abbr>
      </name>
      <note>
       <p>Programmer, 2018-present. Junior Programmer, 2015-2017. Research Assistant, 2014-2017.
        Joey Takeda was a graduate student at the University of British Columbia in the Department
        of English (Science and Technology research stream). He completed his BA honours in English
        (with a minor in Women’s Studies) at the University of Victoria in 2016. His primary
        research interests included diasporic and indigenous Canadian and American literature,
        critical theory, cultural studies, and the digital humanities.</p>
      </note>
     </item><item xml:id="LAND2">
      <name type="person">
       <reg>Tye Landels-Gruenewald</reg>
       <name type="forename">Tye</name>
       <name type="surname">Landels-Gruenewald</name>
       <abbr>TLG</abbr>
      </name>
      <note>
       <p>Data Manager, 2015-2016. Research Assistant, 2013-2015. Tye completed his undergraduate
        honours degree in English at the University of Victoria in 2015.</p>
      </note>
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      <name type="person">
       <reg>Neil Adams</reg>
       <name type="forename">Neil</name>
       <name type="surname">Adams</name>
       <abbr>NA</abbr>
      </name>
      <note>
       <p>Research Assistant, 2010–2011. Neil Adams completed a BA (first class honours) in History
        at the University of Kent, Canterbury (UK) in 2008, and an MA in History at the University
        of Victoria in 2010. His MA paper analyzed the historiography of Canadian conscripts during
        the Second World War. A keen historian of early modern London, Neil Adams was responsible
        for redrawing the ward boundaries on the Agas Map.</p>
      </note>
     </item><item xml:id="MCFI1">
      <name type="person">
       <reg>Kim McLean-Fiander</reg>
       <name type="forename">Kim</name>
       <name type="surname">McLean-Fiander</name>
       <abbr>KMF</abbr>
      </name>
      <note>
       <p>Director of Pedagogy and Outreach, 2015–2020. Associate Project Director, 2015.
        Assistant Project Director, 2013-2014. MoEML Research Fellow, 2013. Kim McLean-Fiander comes
        to <title level="m">The Map of Early Modern London</title> from the <ref target="http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/"><title level="m">Cultures of Knowledge</title></ref>
        digital humanities project at the <ref target="http://www.ox.ac.uk/">University of
         Oxford</ref>, where she was the editor of <ref target="http://emlo.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/"><title level="m">Early Modern Letters Online</title></ref>, an open-access union
        catalogue and editorial interface for correspondence from the sixteenth to eighteenth
        centuries. She is currently Co-Director of a sister project to <ref target="http://emlo.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/"><title level="m">EMLO</title></ref> called <title level="m">Women’s Early Modern Letters Online</title> (<ref target="http://wemlo.net/"><title level="m">WEMLO</title></ref>). In the past, she held an internship with the
        curator of manuscripts at the <ref target="https://www.folger.edu/">Folger Shakespeare
         Library</ref>, completed a doctorate at <ref target="http://www.ox.ac.uk/">Oxford</ref> on
        paratext and early modern women writers, and worked a number of years for the <ref target="http://www.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/">Bodleian Libraries</ref> and as a freelance editor.
        She has a passion for rare books and manuscripts as social and material artifacts, and is
        interested in the development of digital resources that will improve access to these
        materials while ensuring their ongoing preservation and conservation. An avid traveler, Kim
        has always loved both London and maps, and so is particularly delighted to be able to bring
        her early modern scholarly expertise to bear on the MoEML project.</p>
      </note>
     </item><item xml:id="JENS1">
      <name type="person">
       <reg>Janelle Jenstad</reg>
       <name type="forename">Janelle</name>
       <name type="surname">Jenstad</name>
       <abbr>JJ</abbr>
      </name>
      <note>
       <p>Janelle Jenstad is Associate Professor of English at the University of Victoria, Director
        of <title level="m">The Map of Early Modern London</title>, and PI of <title level="m">Linked Early Modern Drama Online</title>. She has taught at Queen’s University, the Summer
        Academy at the Stratford Festival, the University of Windsor, and the University of
        Victoria. With Jennifer Roberts-Smith and Mark Kaethler, she co-edited <title level="m">Shakespeare’s Language in Digital Media</title> (<ref target="https://www.routledge.com/Shakespeares-Language-in-Digital-Media-Old-Words-New-Tools/Jenstad-Kaethler-Roberts-Smith/p/book/9781472427977">Routledge</ref>). She has prepared a documentary edition of John Stow’s <title level="m">A
         Survey of London</title> (1598 text) for MoEML and is currently editing <title level="m">The Merchant of Venice</title> (with Stephen Wittek) and Heywood’s <title level="m">2 If
         You Know Not Me You Know Nobody</title> for DRE. Her articles have appeared in <title level="j">Digital Humanities Quarterly</title>, <title level="j">Renaissance and
         Reformation</title>,<title level="j">Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies</title>,
         <title level="j">Early Modern Literary Studies</title>, <title level="j">Elizabethan
         Theatre</title>, <title level="j">Shakespeare Bulletin: A Journal of Performance
         Criticism</title>, and <title level="j">The Silver Society Journal</title>. Her book
        chapters have appeared (or will appear) in <title level="m">Institutional Culture in Early
         Modern Society</title> (Brill, 2004), <title level="m">Shakespeare, Language and the Stage,
         The Fifth Wall: Approaches to Shakespeare from Criticism, Performance and Theatre
         Studies</title> (Arden/Thomson Learning, 2005), <title level="m">Approaches to Teaching
         Othello</title> (Modern Language Association, 2005), <title level="m">Performing Maternity
         in Early Modern England</title> (Ashgate, 2007), <title level="m">New Directions in the
         Geohumanities: Art, Text, and History at the Edge of Place</title> (Routledge, 2011), Early
        Modern Studies and the Digital Turn (Iter, 2016), <title level="m">Teaching Early Modern
         English Literature from the Archives</title> (MLA, 2015), <title level="m">Placing Names:
         Enriching and Integrating Gazetteers</title> (Indiana, 2016), <title level="m">Making
         Things and Drawing Boundaries</title> (Minnesota, 2017), and <title level="m">Rethinking
         Shakespeare’s Source Study: Audiences, Authors, and Digital Technologies</title>
        (Routledge, 2018).</p>
      </note>
     </item><item xml:id="ARNL1">
      <name type="person">
       <reg>Stewart Arneil</reg>
       <name type="forename">Stewart</name>
       <name type="surname">Arneil</name>
      </name>
      <note>
       <p>Programmer at the University of Victoria Humanities Computing and Media Centre (HCMC) who
        maintained the <title level="m">Map of London</title> project between 2006 and 2011. Stewart
        was a co-applicant on the SSHRC Insight Grant for 2012–16.</p>
      </note>
     </item><item xml:id="HOLM3">
      <name type="person">
       <reg>Martin D. Holmes</reg>
       <name type="forename">Martin</name>
       <name type="forename">D.</name>
       <name type="surname">Holmes</name>
       <abbr>MDH</abbr>
      </name>
      <note>
       <p>Programmer at the University of Victoria Humanities Computing and Media Centre (HCMC).
        Martin ported the MOL project from its original PHP incarnation to a pure eXist database
        implementation in the fall of 2011. Since then, he has been lead programmer on the project
        and has also been responsible for maintaining the project schemas. He was a co-applicant on
        MoEML’s 2012 SSHRC Insight Grant.</p>
      </note>
     </item><item xml:id="STOW6">
      <name type="person">
       <reg>John Stow</reg>
       <name type="forename">John</name>
       <name type="surname">Stow</name>
      </name>
      <date type="birth">1524/25-1525/26</date>
      <date type="death">1605/06</date>
      <note>
       <p>Historian and author of <title level="m">A Survey of London</title>. Husband of <name ref="PERS1.xml#STOW23">Elizabeth Stow</name>.</p>
       <list type="links">
        <item><ref target="STOW3.xml">MoEML</ref></item>
        <item><ref target="https://www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-26611"><title level="m">ODNB</title></ref></item>
        <item><ref target="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Stow"><title level="m">Wikipedia</title></ref></item>
       </list>
      </note>
     </item></list></note></notesStmt><sourceDesc><bibl>Born digital.</bibl>
<listBibl>
<bibl xml:id="VERT3" type="sec">
            <!--change type to tool-->
            <editor><name ref="PERS1.xml#NEWT2">Newton, Greg</name></editor>, dev. <title level="m">Vertexer: Mercator Vertex Generator</title>. <sponsor>U of Victoria</sponsor>. <ref target="http://hcmc.uvic.ca/people/greg/vertexer/">https://hcmc.uvic.ca/people/greg/vertexer/</ref>. [This tool was developed by
              <name ref="PERS1.xml#NEWT2">Greg Newton</name>, programmer, <ref target="http://hcmc.uvic.ca/">Humanities Computing and Media Centre (HCMC)</ref> at
            the U of Victoria in 2014, and rewritten in 2021. For instructions on how to use this 
            tool, see MoEML’s <ref target="geo.xml">documentation for encoding GIS
              coordinates of locations</ref>.] </bibl>
<bibl xml:id="STOW15" type="both">
            <author><name ref="#STOW6">Stow, John</name></author>. <title level="m">A Survey of
              London. Reprinted from the Text of 1603</title>. Ed. <editor>Charles Lethbridge
                Kingsford</editor>. 2 vols. Oxford: Clarendon, <date>1908</date>.
            Remediated by British History Online. [Kingsford edition, courtesy of <ref target="http://www.history.ac.uk/cmh/main">The Centre for Metropolitan History</ref>.
            Articles written after 2011 cite from <ref target="https://www.british-history.ac.uk/no-series/survey-of-london-stow/1603">this searchable transcription</ref>.]</bibl>
</listBibl>

<list type="place">
<item xml:id="BISH1">
<name type="place">Bishopsgate Ward</name>
<note>
<p><ref target="#BISH1">Bishopsgate Ward</ref> shares its western boundary with the eastern boundaries of <ref target="SHOR1.xml">Shoreditch</ref> and <ref target="BROA3.xml">Broad Street Ward</ref> and, thus, encompasses area both inside and outside the <ref target="#WALL2">Wall</ref>. The ward and its main street, <ref target="BISH3.xml">Bishopsgate Street</ref>, are named after <ref target="#BISH2">Bishopsgate</ref>.</p>
<lb/>(<ref target="BISH1.xml">BISH1.xml</ref>)
</note>
</item>

<item xml:id="CAMO2">
<name type="place">Camomile Street (Lime Street Ward)</name>
<note>
<p><ref target="#CAMO2">Camomile Street</ref> lay south of the <ref target="#WALL2">city wall</ref> from <ref target="BEVI1.xml">Bevis Marks</ref>
                    to <ref target="BISH3.xml">Bishopsgate Street</ref>. <ref target="#CAMO2">Camomile Street</ref> is the seventeenth century
      name for a street that was nameless when <name ref="#STOW6">Stow</name> wrote his <title level="m">Survey of London</title>. <name ref="#STOW6">Stow</name> merely calls it <q>the streete which runneth by the north ende of <ref target="STMA7.xml">saint Marie
          streete</ref></q> (<ref type="bibl" target="#STOW15">Stow</ref>).</p>
<lb/>(<ref target="CAMO2.xml">CAMO2.xml</ref>)
</note>
</item>

<item xml:id="WALL2">
<name type="place">The Wall</name>
<note>
<p>Originally built as a Roman fortification for the provincial city of <ref target="LOND5.xml">Londinium</ref> in the second century C.E., the <ref target="#WALL2">London Wall</ref> remained a material and spatial boundary for the city throughout the early modern period. Described by <name ref="#STOW6">Stow</name> as <q>high and great</q> (<ref target="BIBL1.xml#STOW1" type="bibl">Stow 1:8</ref>), the <ref target="#WALL2">London Wall</ref> dominated the cityscape and spatial imaginations of Londoners for centuries. Increasingly, the eighteen-foot high wall created a pressurized constraint on the growing city; the various gates functioned as relief valves where development spilled out to occupy spaces <soCalled>outside the wall</soCalled>.</p>
<lb/>(<ref target="WALL2.xml">WALL2.xml</ref>)
</note>
</item>

<item xml:id="BISH2">
<name type="place">Bishopsgate</name>
<note>
Information is not yet available.
<lb/>(<ref target="BISH2.xml">BISH2.xml</ref>)
</note>
</item>

<item xml:id="LIME1">
<name type="place">Lime Street Ward</name>
<note>
<p><ref target="#LIME1">Lime Street Ward</ref> is west of <ref target="ALDG2.xml">Aldgate Ward</ref>. The ward is named after its principle street, <ref target="LIME2.xml">Lime Street</ref>, which takes its name from the <q>making or ſelling of Lime there</q>, according to <name ref="#STOW6">Stow</name> (<ref target="#LIME1_1603Excerpt">Stow 1603</ref>).</p>
<lb/>(<ref target="LIME1.xml">LIME1.xml</ref>)
</note>
</item>

<item xml:id="STAU2">
<name type="place">St. Augustine Papey</name>
<note>
<p><ref target="#STAU2">St Augustine Papey</ref> was a church on the south side
            of the <ref target="#WALL2">city wall</ref> and opposite the north end of
            <ref target="STMA7.xml">St. Mary Axe Street</ref>. The church dated from the
            twelfth century and in <date>1442</date> a fraternity of brothers was installed (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#HARB1">Harben</ref>). The church and brotherhood were suppressed
            during the Reformation and <name ref="#STOW6">Stow</name> tells us the church was pulled down and houses
            built on the site (<ref type="bibl" target="#STOW15">Stow</ref>).</p>
<lb/>(<ref target="STAU2.xml">STAU2.xml</ref>)
</note>
</item>
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        responsibility. </gloss>
       <gloss type="mol">MoEML uses the term <mentioned>author</mentioned> to designate a
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        sources regularly to ensure that our databases are current.</gloss>
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        digital files and supporting documentation.</gloss>
       <gloss type="mol">MoEML uses the term <mentioned>programmer</mentioned> to designate a person
        or organization responsible for the creation and/or maintenance of computer program design
        documents, source code, and machine-executable digital files and supporting
        documentation.</gloss></catDesc>
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       <term>Research team head</term>
       <gloss type="marcRelator">A person who directed or managed a research project.</gloss>
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         <mentioned>assistant project manager</mentioned> interchangeably.</gloss>
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       <gloss type="mol">MoEML uses the term <mentioned>toponymist</mentioned> to designate the
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        our locations database. The toponymist does not necessarily encode the toponyms. In most
        cases, the author of a born-digital article or the editor of a primary-source document will
        also be the toponymist.</gloss>
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      <revisionDesc status="published">
          <change who="#LEBE1" when="2021-07-27">Added geo-coordinates.</change>
          <change who="#HOLM3" when="2021-03-25">Removed old geo coordinates now superceded by GeoJSON.</change>
          <change who="#TAKE1" when="2016-02-27">Added <gi>sourceDesc</gi> information for born-digital documents.</change>
          <change who="#TAKE1" when="2015-06-23">Standardized <gi>respStmt</gi>s for JENS1, MCFI1, and HOLM3 and added TAKE1 as Junior Programmer.</change>
          <change who="#HOLM3" when="2014-09-29">Added XInclude for <gi>listPrefixDef</gi> in the header.</change>
          <change who="#TAKE1" when="2014-06-25">Removed byline, added <gi>abstract</gi> element and proper <gi>respStmt</gi>s. Changed status from "stub" to "published".</change>
          <change who="#HOLM3" when="2013-12-19">Added global publicationStmt through XInclude.</change>
          <change who="#HOLM3" when="2013-08-23">Eliminated superfluous catRef elements from the header.</change>
          <change who="#HOLM3" when="2013-08-23">Added <gi>catRef</gi> elements based on the <gi>place</gi>/<att>type</att> values in the document.</change>
          <change who="#HOLM3" when="2013-08-13">Put <gi>change</gi> elements inside <gi>revisionDesc</gi> into the correct (latest first) order.</change>
          <change who="#HOLM3" when="2013-08-12">Added <gi>profileDesc</gi> containing document type information expressed in <gi>catRef</gi> elements.</change>
          <change who="#HOLM3" when="2013-02-04">Converted @rend to @style, through XSLT transformation.</change>
          <change who="#HOLM3" when="2012-09-10">Added <gi>front</gi> element with <gi>docTitle</gi> as part of a normalization process. This will be used as the definitive page title on rendering.</change>
          <change when="2011-10" who="#HOLM3">Various updates and fixes made through XSLT, to standardize and normalize encoding practices.</change> 
          <change who="#HOLM3" when="2011-09-30">Data in the old INDEX1.xml was merged into this file in the form of a <gi>facsimile</gi> element and a <gi>listPlace</gi> in the body of the text. Various markup errors were fixed, and markup was normalized to some degree, to make it valid against tei_all.</change>
          <change who="#JENS1" when="2011-09-08">Page created.</change>
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    </teiHeader><text>
      <front>
         <docTitle>
            <titlePart type="main">The Wrestlers (Lime Street Ward)</titlePart>
         </docTitle>
      </front>
        <body>
            <div type="placeInfo" xml:id="WRES1_placeInfo">
                <head>The Wrestlers (Lime Street Ward)</head>
              <list type="place">
                <item>
                  <name type="place">The Wrestlers (Lime Street Ward)</name>
                    <p>

            Location:
            
                        <code lang="gis">"geometry": {"type":"Point","coordinates":[-0.080055,51.515383]}</code>
                    </p>
                </item>
              </list>
            </div>
            <div>
                <p>The <ref target="WRES1.xml">Wrestlers</ref> was a house in <ref target="#BISH1">Bishopsgate Ward</ref> located on the north side of <ref target="#CAMO2">Camomile Street</ref>, near the <ref target="#WALL2">Wall</ref> and <ref target="#BISH2">Bishopsgate</ref> (<ref type="bibl" target="#STOW15">Stow</ref>). The house predates the Wrestlers Court located on the opposite (south) side of <ref target="#CAMO2">Camomile Street</ref>. Wrestlers Court was named after the house, which was later renamed Clark’s Court (for the location of Clark’s Court’s, see <ref target="http://www.bl.uk/onlinegallery/onlineex/crace/b/zoomify88531.html">Blome’s 1755 engraving</ref> of <ref target="#BISH1">Bishopsgate Ward</ref>). There are few details about the <ref target="WRES1.xml">Wrestlers</ref> in historical records.</p>
                
                <p>For <name ref="#STOW6">Stow</name>, the house is important only as the boundary marker between <ref target="#LIME1">Lime Street Ward</ref> and <ref target="#BISH1">Bishopsgate Ward</ref> (<ref type="bibl" target="#STOW15">Stow</ref>).</p>
                
                <p>Though the <ref target="WRES1.xml">Wrestlers</ref> itself is not featured on the Agas map, the house would have been directly west of the wall surrounding <ref target="#STAU2">St. Augustine Papey</ref> and east of <ref target="#BISH2">Bishopsgate</ref>.</p>
            </div>
        </body>
    </text></TEI>