London, a Social HistoryHarvard University Press, 1998 - 431 ページ 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. London experienced a cruel civil war, fires, enlightenment in thought, government, and living, and the struggle and benefits of empire from the eighteenth through the twentieth centuries. From the lament that "London was but is no more" to "you, who are to stand a wonder to all Years and ages ... a phoenix," London became an elegant, eye-catching, metropolitan hub. It was a mosaic that represented the shared values of a people - both high and low born - at work and play. London was and is a wonder city, a marvel. Not since ancient times has there been such a city - not eternal, but vibrant, living, full of a free people ever evolving. As no one before him, Roy Porter captures the deep pulse of his hometown and makes it our own. London's fortunes, people, and imperial glory are recaptured with brio and wit. This is a transcendent book for all lovers of London, cities, and the habits and fortunes of peoples. |
目次
Introduction I | 1 |
Formation to Reformation II | 11 |
Tudor London | 34 |
War Plague and Fire | 66 |
From Restoration to Regency | 93 |
16501800 | 131 |
Life under the Georges | 160 |
The Victorian Age | 185 |
18201890 | 257 |
Victorian Life | 279 |
Expansion 18901945 | 306 |
18901945 | 326 |
19451975 | 344 |
Thatchers London | 364 |
The London Marathon | 385 |
Further Reading | 390 |
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aldermen Bank became Becontree Bermondsey Bethnal Green boroughs building built Camden Town capital capital's cent centre century Charles church City City's Clerkenwell companies Council Court Covent Garden created districts Docklands docks Earl East End Fleet Street Georgian Greater London grew guilds Hackney Hall Hampstead Hill History Holborn houses industry Isle of Dogs Islington John Kensington King Labour Lambeth Lane later living London Bridge London County Council London London Lord Marylebone Mayor merchants metropolis Metropolitan Metropolitan Board miles million opened Oxford Paddington Palace parish Park Parliament Piccadilly political poor popular population railway reform Regent river Road Royal sewers shops Shoreditch slums social Society Somers Town South Southwark Spitalfields Square St James's St Pancras St Paul's Stepney Strand suburbs Thames theatre Thomas Tower town trade urban vestries walls West End Westminster Wharf Whitechapel William workhouse