Bethlehem Hospital
Although its name evokes the pandemonium of the archetypal madhouse, Bethlehem (Bethlem, Bedlam) Hospital was not always an asylum. As John Stow tells us,
Saint Mary of Bethlehem began as a
Priorie of Cannons with brethren and sisters,founded in 1247 by Simon Fitzmary,
one of the Sheriffes of London(1.164). The name
Bethlehemlikely owes its origin to Fitzmary’s martial career in the Holy Land, where, as legend has it, divine providence saved him from certain peril (Masters 33). Out of gratitude, Fitzmary designated lands in the parish of St. Botolph, just north of Bishopsgate, to the new priory (33).
It is unclear precisely when Bethlehem extended its charitable duties to the care of the
mentally ill. The first reference to its role as a hospital appears in 1323
(Reed 13), and, in 1437, a Patent
Roll mentions Bethlehem undertaking
the succour of demented lunatics(qtd. in Masters 34). The priory was disbanded during the dissolution of England’s monasteries, but Bethlehem maintained its function as a hospital for the ill, the indigent, and, increasingly, the insane (Masters 35). Stow speaks of Bethlehem as being exclusively for
people that bee distraught in wits(1.165), and his catalogue of
Hospitals in the Citie,designates
S. Mary Bethelemas an institution
for lunaticke people(2.144).
Despite its shift in function from priory to hospital and hospital to asylum,
Bethlehem remained at its
original site well into the early modern period. We know from Stow’s Survey
that the hospital, part of Bishopsgate
ward (without), resided on the west side of Bishopsgate street, just north of St. Botolph’s church (2.73; 1.165). Aside from the building
itself (a u-shaped, two-story structure with twenty or so cells for inmates
[Reed 17]), Bethlehem’s grounds also contained a barn (which
stored the inmates’ straw bedding [Reed
17]) and a plot of enclosed land
to be a burial for the dead(Stow 1.114). The western perimeter of the cemetery was circumscribed by a
deepe ditchthat separated the hospital’s grounds from Moorfields (Stow 1.165).
In 1557, the City of London designated the administration of Bethlehem to the governors of Bridewell, a correction house
(nominally a hospital) in Farringdon Ward
(without) (Jackson 49). Bridewell’s governors, however,
devoted little attention or capital to Bethlehem, leaving it in the hands of a master or keeper, who did
with the hospital what his limited funds and equally limited conscience
decreed (Allderidge 149). Hence, Bethlehem’s reputation for squalor
and neglectful management began to accrue and, by the early 1600s, allusions
to the hospital’s notorious conditions surface repeatedly in plays and print
culture (Reed 50). Dekker and Webster’s Northward Ho (1607),
for example, refers to the straw that customarily served as the inmates’
bedding (
Let his straw be sweet and fresh[Ssg. F4v]), while Massinger’s A New Way to Pay Old Debts (1625) alludes to the privation and, possibly, the brutal
therapyapplied to Bethlehem’s patients:
Greed. Take a MittimusAnd carry him to Bedlam.[...]Well-doe. Carry him to some darke roomeThere try what Art can do for his recouery.(sig. M2r)
In his 1632 catalogue of the major landmarks and locales of London, Donald Lupton devotes an entire section
to a lurid portrait of the hospital, describing the pandemonium with which
Bedlamwould become synonymous:
[...] it seemes strange that any one shold recouer here, the cryings, screechings, roarings, brawlings, shaking of chaines, swearings, frettings, chaffings, are so many, so hideous, so great, that they are more able to driue a man that hath his witts, rather out of them, then to helpe one that neuer had them, or hath lost them, to finde them againe.
(75–76)
As Reed conjectures, part of the reason for Bethlehem’s notoriety may be that many Londoners would have
witnessed its conditions firsthand (24). Until 1770, the hospital was not only open for visitation, but
it appeared to encourage public admission as a major source of revenue (25). Certainly, if contemporary drama
is any indication, the citizens of early modern London regarded Bethlehem as a regular—if
slightly perverse— form of entertainment (Jackson 12). In Northward
Ho, for example, Bellamont and Mayberry take a detour to the
hospital to view the spectacle within:
Bel. Stay, yonders the Dolphin without Bishops-gate, where our horses are at rack and manger, and wee are going past it: come crosse ouer: and what place is this?May. Bedlam ist not?Bel. Where the mad-men are, I neuer was amongst them, as you loue me Gentlemen, lets see what Greekes are within.(sig. F3r)
References to Bethlehem as a
destination or attraction appear more than once in Ben Jonson’s plays. Wasp in Bartholomew Fair (1614) speaks of Mistress Overdo
being at Bedlam yesterday(sig. C1v), while in Epicoene, or The Silent Woman (1609), Lady Haughty lists Bethlehem among places worth visiting in the city:
(sig. I3v-I4r)Cen. Let him allow you your Coach, and foure Horses, your Woman, your Chamber-maid, your Page, your Gentleman-Vsher, your French Cooke, and four Groomes.Haughty. And goe with vs to Bed’lem, to the China Houses, and to theExchange.
Even if a Londoner did not visit Bethlehem, he or she would likely have some acquaintance with its
inmates. As Stow observes, people were committed to the hospital at the
behest and expense of friends or relatives (1.165). After twelve months, patients were typically discharged
back to their kin or, if no such care was available, onto the streets to beg
(Masters 36). Following the
draconian anti-begging acts of the sixteenth century, the insane were among
the few
demonstrably unfortunategroups who could solicit charity without reprisal. Hence, ex-Bedlamites would have constituted a substantial class of beggar in early modern London (Jackson 47). In King Lear (1607), Edgar’s plan to impersonate
Tom O’ Bedlamalludes to the mad beggar’s legal impunity:
Edgar: […] The country gives me proof and precedentOf Bedlam beggars, who, with roaring voicesStrike in their numbed and mortified bare armsPins, wooden pricks, nails, sprigs of rosemary;And with this horrible object, from low farms,Poor pelting villages, sheepcotes, and mills,Sometimes with lunatic bans, sometimes with prayers,Enforce their charity.(2.3.13–20)
Indeed, counterfeit Bedlamites—those who feign madness to
enforce charity—were evidently common enough to be mentioned in William Harrison’s 1587 catalogue of
Idle Vagabonds(qtd. in Dionne 34).
Whether due to the ubiquity of its denizens (spurious or otherwise), its
function as lurid spectacle, or its frequent mention in popular plays and
pamphlets, it would appear that Londoners regarded Bethlehem as an integral part of the city’s
landscape. In
The Manner of Her Will(1573), Isabella Whitney includes the hospital in her enumeration of London landmarks and favourite haunts:
And Bedlam must not be forgot,For that was oft my walkI there too many people leaveThat out of tune do talk.(225–28)
Simon Eyre in The Shoemaker’s Holiday (1599) calls his shoemakers
the mad knaves of Bedlamwhen he tells Rafe to fight for
the Shoemakers, the courageous cordwainers, the flower of St. Martin’s, the mad knaves of Bedlam, Fleet Street, Tower Street, and Whitechapel(1.223–25). Simon seems to be riffing on the notion of madness, linking the festive madness (i.e., exuberance) of shoemakers with the medical madness of Bethlehem’s inmates. This passage may also suggest that there were shoemakers working in the vicinity of Bethlehem.
Indeed, the idea of Bethlehem appears
so prominently in the early modern imagination that it functions in a
figurative as well as a literal capacity. Later in The Shoemakers’s Holiday, Firk uses the expression
bandog and bedlam(4.10) to mean
furiously and madly(OED, qtd. in Smith 108). Similarly, Thomas Adams’s 1615 sermon Mystical Bedlam evokes the concept of Bethlehem to describe the various forms of vice (spiritual
Madnesse) to which one can fall victim (sig. B1r). Thus, it would seem that Bethlehem occupied a dual conceptual status in the minds of early modern Londoners. It was at once a tangible civic landmark and a byword for derangement, chaos, and uproar.
In 1674, the governors of Bridewell
commissioned Robert Hooke to design a
new facility for the chronically overcrowded asylum (Masters 42). The result, a palatial structure
capable of housing over two hundred inmates, opened at Moorfields in 1676 (42). This incarnation of Bethlehem, later immortalized in William Hogarth’s infamous Rake’s
Progress, is arguably the source of most popular, modern-day
conceptions of the hospital (Jackson
14). In 1930, Bethlehem
moved to its current location in the Borough of Bromley, a southeastern
suburb of London (Bethlem Royal Hospital,
General Historical Information). Its management under Bridewell ended in 1948 (Allderidge 149), and today, Bethlehem (or, as it is now called, Bethlem Royal Hospital), operates as a multi-purpose psychiatric facility under the South London and Maudsley National Health Service (Bethlem Royal Hospital,
General Historical Information). Though members of the public are no longer permitted to
viewthe inmates, educational visits to the hospital’s museum and art gallery are encouraged free of charge (Bethlem Royal Hospital,
Visits).
References
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Citation
This item is cited in the following documents:
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Citation
Adams, Thomas. Mystical bedlam, or the vvorld of mad-men. London: n.p., 1615. STC 124. EEBO. Subscription.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Citation
Allderidge, Patricia.Management and Mismanagement at Bedlam, 1547 to 1633.
Health, Medicine, and Morality in the Sixteenth Century. Ed. Charles Webster. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1979. 141–64.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Citation
This item is cited in the following documents:
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Citation
Dekker, Thomas. The Shoemaker’s Holiday. Ed. R.L. Smallwood and Stanley Wells. Manchester: Manchester UP, 1979. The Revels Plays.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Citation
Dionne, Craig.Fashioning Outlaws: The Early Modern Rogue and Urban Culture.
Rogues and Early Modern English Culture. Ed. Craig Dionne and Steve Mentz. Ann Arbor: U of Michigan P, 2004. 33–61.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Citation
Jackson, Kenneth S. Separate Theaters: Bethlem (Bedlam
) Hospital and the Shakespearean Stage. Newark: U of Delaware P, 2005.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Jonson, Ben. The vvorkes of Beniamin Ionson. Containing these playes, viz. 1 Bartholomew Fayre. 2 The staple of newes. 3 The Divell is an asse. London, 1641. EEBO. Reprint. Subscription. STC 14754.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Citation
Lupton, Donald. London and the countrey carbonadoed and quartred into seuerall characters. London, 1632. EEBO. Reprint. Subscription. STC 16944.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Citation
Massinger, Philip. A New Way to Pay Old Debts. London: Printed by E[lizabeth] P[urslowe] for Henry Seyle, 1633. Reprint. Early English Books Online. Web.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Citation
Masters, Anthony. Bedlam. London: Michael Joseph, 1977.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Citation
Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2012. Subscription. OED.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Reed, Robert Rentoul, Jr. Bedlam on the Jacobean Stage. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 1952.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Shakespeare, William. King Lear. The Complete Works of Shakespeare. Ed. David Bevington. 5th ed. New York: Pearson Longman, 2004. 1201–54.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Citation
Smith, Peter J. Glossary. The Shoemakers’ Holiday. By Thomas Dekker. London: Nick Hern, 2004. 108–10.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Citation
Stow, John. A Survey of London. Reprinted from the Text of 1603. Ed. Charles Lethbridge Kingsford. 2 vols. Oxford: Clarendon, 1908. [Also available as a reprint from Elibron Classics (2001). Articles written before 2011 cite from the print edition by volume and page number.]This item is cited in the following documents:
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Citation
Webster, John, and Thomas Dekker. Northward Ho. London, 1607. STC 6539. Reprint. Early English Books Online. Web.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Citation
Whitney, Isabella.The Manner of Her Will, and What She Left to London.
Women Writers in Renaissance England. Ed. Randall Martin. London: Longman, 1997. 289–302.This item is cited in the following documents:
Cite this page
MLA citation
Bethlehem Hospital.The Map of Early Modern London, edited by , U of Victoria, 20 Jun. 2018, mapoflondon.uvic.ca/BETH1.htm.
Chicago citation
Bethlehem Hospital.The Map of Early Modern London. Ed. . Victoria: University of Victoria. Accessed June 20, 2018. http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/BETH1.htm.
APA citation
The Map of Early Modern London. Victoria: University of Victoria. Retrieved from http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/BETH1.htm.
2018. Bethlehem Hospital. In (Ed), RIS file (for RefMan, EndNote etc.)
Provider: University of Victoria Database: The Map of Early Modern London Content: text/plain; charset="utf-8" TY - ELEC A1 - Mead-Willis, Sarah ED - Jenstad, Janelle T1 - Bethlehem Hospital T2 - The Map of Early Modern London PY - 2018 DA - 2018/06/20 CY - Victoria PB - University of Victoria LA - English UR - http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/BETH1.htm UR - http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/xml/standalone/BETH1.xml ER -
RefWorks
RT Web Page SR Electronic(1) A1 Mead-Willis, Sarah A6 Jenstad, Janelle T1 Bethlehem Hospital T2 The Map of Early Modern London WP 2018 FD 2018/06/20 RD 2018/06/20 PP Victoria PB University of Victoria LA English OL English LK http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/BETH1.htm
TEI citation
<bibl type="mla"><author><name ref="#MEAD1"><surname>Mead-Willis</surname>, <forename>Sarah</forename></name></author>. <title level="a">Bethlehem Hospital</title>. <title level="m">The Map of Early Modern London</title>, edited by <editor><name ref="#JENS1"><forename>Janelle</forename> <surname>Jenstad</surname></name></editor>, <publisher>U of Victoria</publisher>, <date when="2018-06-20">20 Jun. 2018</date>, <ref target="http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/BETH1.htm">mapoflondon.uvic.ca/BETH1.htm</ref>.</bibl>Personography
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Janelle Jenstad
JJ
Janelle Jenstad, associate professor in the department of English at the University of Victoria, is the general editor and coordinator of The Map of Early Modern London. She is also the assistant coordinating editor of Internet Shakespeare Editions. She has taught at Queen’s University, the Summer Academy at the Stratford Festival, the University of Windsor, and the University of Victoria. Her articles have appeared in the Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Early Modern Literary Studies, Elizabethan Theatre, Shakespeare Bulletin: A Journal of Performance Criticism, and The Silver Society Journal. Her book chapters have appeared (or will appear) in Performing Maternity in Early Modern England (Ashgate, 2007), Approaches to Teaching Othello (Modern Language Association, 2005), Shakespeare, Language and the Stage, The Fifth Wall: Approaches to Shakespeare from Criticism, Performance and Theatre Studies (Arden/Thomson Learning, 2005), Institutional Culture in Early Modern Society (Brill, 2004), New Directions in the Geohumanities: Art, Text, and History at the Edge of Place (Routledge, 2011), and Teaching Early Modern English Literature from the Archives (MLA, forthcoming). She is currently working on an edition of The Merchant of Venice for ISE and Broadview P. She lectures regularly on London studies, digital humanities, and on Shakespeare in performance.Roles played in the project
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Kim McLean-Fiander
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Director of Pedagogy and Outreach, 2015–present; Associate Project Director, 2015–present; Assistant Project Director, 2013-2014; MoEML Research Fellow, 2013. Kim McLean-Fiander comes to The Map of Early Modern London from the Cultures of Knowledge digital humanities project at the University of Oxford, where she was the editor of Early Modern Letters Online, 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 EMLO called Women’s Early Modern Letters Online (WEMLO). In the past, she held an internship with the curator of manuscripts at the Folger Shakespeare Library, completed a doctorate at Oxford on paratext and early modern women writers, and worked a number of years for the Bodleian Libraries 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.Roles played in the project
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Sarah Mead-Willis
SMW
BA English, University of Alberta; MA library and information science, University of Alberta; MA, English, University of Victoria; English 521, Representations of London, Summer 2008. Mead-Willis won the Lieutenant Governor’s Silver Medal (top master’s other than thesis, all faculties). After her graduation in 2009, she returned to the University of Alberta as a rare book cataloguer.Roles played in the project
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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.Roles played in the project
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Thomas Adams is mentioned in the following documents:
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Thomas Dekker is mentioned in the following documents:
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Edgar is mentioned in the following documents:
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Simon Eyre
Dramatic character in Thomas Dekker’s The Shoemaker’s Holiday and Thomas Deloney’s The Gentle Craft.Simon Eyre is mentioned in the following documents:
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Firk
Dramatic character in The Shoemaker’s Holiday.Firk is mentioned in the following documents:
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Simon Fitz-Mary
Simon Fitz-Mary Sheriff
Sheriff of London from 1233—1234 CE and from 1246—1247 CE. Founded Bethlehem Hospital. Stow mistakenly names him Lawrence Fitz Marie.Simon Fitz-Mary is mentioned in the following documents:
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William Harrison is mentioned in the following documents:
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Lady Haughty
Dramatic character in Epicœne.Lady Haughty is mentioned in the following documents:
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Robert Hooke is mentioned in the following documents:
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Ben Jonson is mentioned in the following documents:
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Donald Lupton is mentioned in the following documents:
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Philip Massinger is mentioned in the following documents:
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Dame Overdo
Dramatic character in Bartholomew Fair (Justice Adam Overdo’s wife).Dame Overdo is mentioned in the following documents:
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Rafe
Dramatic character in The Shoemaker’s Holiday.Rafe is mentioned in the following documents:
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John Webster is mentioned in the following documents:
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Isabella Whitney is mentioned in the following documents:
Locations
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Bishopsgate Ward
MoEML is aware that the ward boundaries are inaccurate for a number of wards. We are working on redrawing the boundaries. This page offers a diplomatic transcription of the opening section of John Stow’s description of this ward from his Survey of London.Bishopsgate Ward is mentioned in the following documents:
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Bishopsgate Street
Bishopsgate Street ran north from Cornhill Street to the southern end of Shoreditch Street at the city boundary. South of Cornhill, the road became Gracechurch Street, and the two streets formed a major north-south artery in the eastern end of the walled city of London, from London Bridge to ShoreditchImportant sites included: Bethlehem Hospital, commonly corrupted to the short form -bedlam, a mental hospital and Bull Inn, where plays were performedbefore Shakespeare’s time
(Weinreb and Hibbert 67).Bishopsgate Street is mentioned in the following documents:
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St. Botolph without Bishopsgate
St. Botolph without Bishopsgate stood on the west side of Bishopsgate Street north of Bishopsgate. It was in Bishopsgate Ward. St. Botolph without Bishopsgate is featured on the Agas map, south of Bethlehem Hospital and west of Houndsditch. It is labelledS. Buttolphes.
St. Botolph without Bishopsgate is mentioned in the following documents:
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Bishopsgate is mentioned in the following documents:
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Moorfields is mentioned in the following documents:
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Bridewell
Bridewell, once palace, then prison, was an intriguing site in the early modern period. It changed hands several times before falling into the possession of the City of London to be used as a prison and hospital. The prison is mentioned in many early modern texts, including plays by Jonson and Dekker as well as the surveys and diaries of the period. Bridewell is located on the Agas map at the corner of the Thames and Fleet Ditch, labelled asBrideWell.
Bridewell is mentioned in the following documents:
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Farringdon Without Ward
MoEML is aware that the ward boundaries are inaccurate for a number of wards. We are working on redrawing the boundaries. This page offers a diplomatic transcription of the opening section of John Stow’s description of this ward from his Survey of London.Farringdon Without Ward is mentioned in the following documents:
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Aldgate
Aldgate was the easternmost gate into the walled city. The nameAldgate
is thought to come from one of four sources: Æst geat meaningEastern gate
(Ekwall 36), Alegate from the Old English ealu meaningale,
Aelgate from the Saxon meaningpublic gate
oropen to all,
or Aeldgate meaningold gate
(Bebbington 20–1).Aldgate is mentioned in the following documents:
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Royal Exchange is mentioned in the following documents:
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St. Martin’s le Grand is mentioned in the following documents:
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Fleet Street
Fleet Street runs east-west from Temple Bar to Fleet Hill (Ludgate Hill), and is named for the Fleet River. The road has existed since at least the 12th century (Sugden 195) and known since the 14th century as Fleet Street (Beresford 26). It was the location of numerous taverns including the Mitre and the Star and the Ram.Fleet Street is mentioned in the following documents:
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Tower Street
Tower Street ran east-west from Tower Hill in the east to St. Andrew Hubbard church. It was the principal street of Tower Street Ward. That the ward is named after the street indicates the cultural significance of Tower Street, which was a key part of the processional route through London and home to many wealthy merchants who traded in the goods that were unloaded at the docks and quays immediately south of Tower Street (for example, Billingsgate, Wool Key, and Galley Key).Tower Street is mentioned in the following documents:
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Whitechapel
Whitechapel was a street running east-west to the Aldgate Bars from the east. Stow comments that the street, like Aldgate Street, wasfully replenished with buildings outward, & also pestered with diuerse Allyes, on eyther side
(Stow).Whitechapel is mentioned in the following documents:
Mentions of this place in Internet Shakespeare Editions texts
- Did instigate the Bedlam braine-sick Duchesse, (Henry VI, Part 2 (Folio 1, 1623))
- To Bedlem with him, is the man growne mad. (Henry VI, Part 2 (Folio 1, 1623))
- I Clifford, a Bedlem and ambitious humor (Henry VI, Part 2 (Folio 1, 1623))
Variant spellings
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Documents using the spelling
bedlam
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Documents using the spelling
Bedlam Asylum
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Documents using the spelling
Bedlem
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Documents using the spelling
Bed’lem
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Documents using the spelling
Bethelem
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Documents using the spelling
Bethlehem
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Documents using the spelling
Bethlehem Hospital
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Documents using the spelling
Bethlem
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Documents using the spelling
Bethlem without Bishopsgate
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Documents using the spelling
Bethleme
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Documents using the spelling
hospital
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Documents using the spelling
Hospitall of Bethelem
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Documents using the spelling
Hospitall of Marie
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Documents using the spelling
Hospitall of S. Marie
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Documents using the spelling
Hospitall of S. Mary of Bethelem
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Documents using the spelling
S. Mary Bethelem
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Documents using the spelling
S. Mary Bethlem
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Documents using the spelling
S. Mary of Bechelem
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Documents using the spelling
St. Mary’s of Bethlehem