‘History! What is history but the science which teaches us to
see the throbbing life of the present in the throbbing life of the
past.’—Jessopp’s Coming of the Friars
, p. 178.
THERE can be no doubt that our interest in the dim past is
increased the more we are able to read into the dry documents
before us the human character of the actors. As long as these
actors are only names to us we seem to be walking in a world of
shadows, but when we can realise them as beings like ourselves with
the same feelings and aspirations, although governed by other
conditions of life, all is changed, and we take the keenest
interest in attempting to understand circumstances so different
from those under which we live.
The history of London is so varied and the materials so vast
that it is impossible to compress into a single volume an account
of its many aspects.
This book therefore is not intended as a history but as, to
some extent, a guide to the manners of the people and to the
appearance of the city during the mediæval period.
An attempt is here made to put together some of the ample
materials for the domestic history of the city which have been
preserved for us.
The City of London possesses an unrivalled collection of
contemporary documents respecting its past history, some of which
have been made available to us by the late Mr. H. T. Riley, and
others are being edited with valuable notes by Dr. Reginald
Sharpe.
The Middle Ages may be considered as a somewhat indefinite
period, and their chronology cannot be very exactly defined, but
for the purposes of this book the portion of the mediæval period
dealt with is that which commences with the Norman Conquest and
ends with the Battle of Bosworth.
It is impossible to exaggerate the enormous influence of the
Norman Conquest. The Saxon period was as thoroughly mediæval as the
Norman period, but our full knowledge of history begins with the
Conquest because so few historical documents exist before that
event. Moreover, the mode of life in Saxon and Norman London was so
different that it would only lead to confusion to unite the two in
one picture.
In order, however, to show the position of the whole mediæval
period in the full history an introductory chapter is given which
contains a short notice of some of the events during the Saxon
rule, and a chapter at the end is intended to show what remains of
the mediæval times were left when Shakespeare lived and Johnson
expressed his opinion of the pre-eminent position of
London.
It is necessary for the reader to bear in mind that London
means the city and its liberties up to the end of the eighteenth
century. The enlarged idea of a London in the north and the south,
the east and the west, is a creation of the nineteenth
century.
The City of London is still the centre and heart of London,
and the only portion of the town which has an ancient municipal
history.
Other cities have shifted their centres, but London remains
as it always was. The Bank, the Royal Exchange and the Mansion
House occupy ground which has been the ‘Eye of London’ since Roman
times.
There is no greater mistake than to suppose that things were
quiescent during the Middle Ages, for these pages at least will
show that that was a time of constant change, when great questions
were fought out.
The first seven chapters of this book refer to life in the
Old Town. Here we see what it was to live in a walled town, what
the manners of the citizens were and what was done to protect their
health and morals. The following five chapters deal with the
government of the city. Some notice is taken of the governors and
the officials of the Corporation, the tradesmen and the
churchmen.
The subject of each chapter is of enough importance to form a
book by itself, and it is therefore hoped that the reader will not
look for an exhaustive treatment of these subjects. There is more
to be said in each place, but I have been forced to choose out of
the materials that which seemed most suitable for my
purpose.
During the editing of this volume a vivid picture of the
mediæval life has ever been before my mind, and I can only regret
that it has been so difficult to transfer that picture to paper. I
can only hope that my readers may not see the difference between
the conception and the performance so vividly as I do
myself.
In the preparation of these pages I have received the kind
assistance of more friends than I can mention here, but I wish
especially to thank Mr. Hubert Hall, Mr W. H. St. John Hope, Mr. J.
E. Matthew, General Milman, C.B., Mr D’Arcy Power, Sir Walter
Prideaux, Sir Owen Roberts, Mr. J. Horace Round, Dr Reginald Sharpe
and Sir William Soulsby, C.B.