Everything about Cheapside totally explained
Cheapside is a street in the
City of London, which links
Newgate Street with the junction of Queen Victoria Street,
Cornhill,
Threadneedle Street, Princes Street,
Lombard Street and
King William Street (via a small section called '
Poultry'). In
mediæval times it was known as 'Westcheap', as the opposite to
Eastcheap.
History
Cheapside is the former site of one of the principal
produce markets in London,
cheap broadly meaning "market" in mediæval English (see below
Etymology and usage). Many of the streets feeding into the main thoroughfare are named after the produce that was originally sold in those areas of the market, for example, Honey Lane, Milk Street, Bread Street and Poultry.
During the reign of
King Edward III (in the 1300s) tournaments were held in adjacent fields. The dangers were however not limited to the participants since a wooden stand, built to accommodate
Queen Philippa and her companions, collapsed during a tournament to celebrate the birth of the
Black Prince in 1330. No-one died but the King was greatly displeased and were it not for the Queen's intercession, the stand's builders would have been put to death.
On the day preceding her coronation during January 1559,
Queen Elizabeth I passed through a number of London streets in a pre-coronation procession and was entertained by a number of
pageants, including one in Cheapside.
Meat was brought in to Cheapside from
Smithfield, just outside
Newgate. After the great Church of St Michael le Querne, the top end of the street broadened into a
dual carriageway known as the
Shambles (referring to an open-air
slaughterhouse and meat market), with
butchers shops on both sides and a dividing central area also composed of butchers shops. Further down, on the right, was
Goldsmiths Row, an area of
commodity dealers. From the 14th Century until the Great Fire, the eastern end of Cheapside was the location of the
Great Conduit.
Literary connections
It was the birthplace of
John Milton and
Robert Herrick. It was for a long time one of the most important streets in London. It is also the site of the '
Bow Bells', the church of St Mary-le-Bow, which has played a part in London's
Cockney heritage and the tale of
Dick Whittington.
Thomas Middleton's play
A Chaste Maid in Cheapside (1613) both satirizes and celebrates the citizens of the neighbourhood during the Renaissance, when the street hosted the city's
goldsmiths.
Geoffrey Chaucer grew up around Cheapside and there are a scattering of references to the thoroughfare and its environs throughout his work. The first chapter of
Peter Ackroyd's
Brief Lives series on Chaucer also colourfully describes the street at that time.
Jane Austen, in her 1813 novel
Pride and Prejudice, characterizes Cheapside as a London neighbourhood frowned upon by the landed elite:
Charles Dickens, Jr wrote in his 1879 book
Dickens's Dictionary of London:
" Cheapside remains now what it was five centuries ago, the greatest thoroughfare in the City of London. Other localities have had their day, have risen, become fashionable, and have sunk into obscurity and neglect, but Cheapside has maintained its place, and may boast of being the busiest thoroughfare in the world, with the sole exception perhaps of London-bridge. "
Hugh Lofting's book
Doctor Dolittle, published in 1951, names a quarrelsome London sparrow with a
Cockney accent Cheapside. He lives most of the year in St. Edmund's left ear in St. Paul's Cathedral and is invited to the African country of Fantippo to deliver mail to cities because the other birds are not able to navigate city streets.
In a more contemporary treatment, the Cheapside of the
Middle Ages was referenced in a derogatory sense in the 2001
movie A Knight's Tale—as being the poor, unhealthy and low-class birthplace and home of the unlikely hero.
Also, Mary "Jacky" Faber lived there in
Bloody Jack by
L. A. Meyer
Contemporary Cheapside
Cheapside today is a street of offices and occasional small retail outlets in the City of London, the centre of the financial services industry. It is no longer a primary traffic route.
Cheapside was extensively damaged during
Luftwaffe Blitz raids in late 1940 and particularly during the
The Second Great Fire of London. Much of the rebuilding following these raids occurred during the 1950s and 1960s and included a number of unsympathetic contemporary attempts at recreating the centuries-old architecture that had been destroyed. In recent years many of these buildings have themselves been demolished as a programme of regeneration takes place along Cheapside from
Paternoster Square to Poultry.
Etymology and usage
Cheapside is also a common
English street name, meaning "market-place", the word
cheap referring to the
Old English ceapan meaning "to buy" or "market" as opposed to the modern meaning "low price" which is a shortening of "Good ceap", for example a 'good buy'.
Other cities and towns in England that have a Cheapside street include
Birmingham,
Bradford,
Bristol,
Derby,
Halifax,
Lancaster,
Leicester,
Luton,
Manchester,
Nottingham,
Reading, and
Ascot.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Cheapside'.
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