Billingsgate
Template:Short description Template:About Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Template:Infobox UK place
Billingsgate is one of the 25 Wards of the City of London. This small City Ward is situated on the north bank of the River Thames between London Bridge and Tower Bridge in the south-east of the Square Mile.
The modern Ward extends south to the Thames, west to Lovat Lane and Rood Lane, north to Fenchurch Street and Dunster Court, and east to Mark Lane and St Dunstan's Hill.
HistoryEdit
Legendary originEdit
Billingsgate's most ancient historical reference is as a water gate to the city of Trinovantum (the name given to London in medieval British legend), as mentioned in the Historia Regum Britanniae (Eng: History of the Kings of Britain) written Template:Circa 1136 by Geoffrey of Monmouth. This work describes how Belinus, a legendary king of Britain said to have held the throne from about 390 BC, erected London's first fortified water gate: Template:Quotation
Historical originEdit
Originally known as Blynesgate and Byllynsgate,<ref>Spelling was not standardised until much later: Borer 1978.</ref> its name apparently derives from its origins as a water gate on the Thames, where goods were landed, becoming Billingsgate Wharf, part of London's docks close to Lower Thames Street.
Historian John Stow records that Billingsgate Market was a general market for corn, coal, iron, wine, salt, pottery, fish and miscellaneous goods until the 16th century, when neighbouring streets became a specialist fish market.<ref name=City>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> By the late 16th century, most merchant vessels had become too large to pass under London Bridge, and so Billingsgate, with its deeply recessed harbour, replaced Queenhithe as the most important landing place in the city.
Great Fire of LondonEdit
Until boundary changes in 2003, the Ward included Pudding Lane,<ref>The name was derived from the butchers in Eastcheap "having their scalding house for hogs there; and their puddings with other filth being conveyed thence down to their dung boats in the Thames": Stow.</ref> where in 1666 the Great Fire of London started.<ref name=new>Book 2, Ch. 7: "Billingsgate Ward", A New History of London: Including Westminster and Southwark (1773), pp. 551-53 accessed: 21 May 2007</ref> A sign was erected over the property where the Great Fire began:
After the Great FireEdit
After the Great Fire of London, shops and stalls set up trade forming arcades on the harbour's west side, whilst on the main quay, an open market soon developed, called "Roomland".
Fish marketEdit
Billingsgate Fish Market was formally established by an act of Parliament in 1699, the Billingsgate, etc. Act 1698 (10 Will. 3. c. 13), to be "a free and open market for all sorts of fish whatsoever".<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Oranges, lemons, and Spanish onions were also landed there, alongside the other main commodities, coal and salt. In 1849, the fish market was moved off the streets into its own riverside building, which was subsequently demolished (c. 1873) and replaced by an arcaded-market hall (designed by City architect Horace Jones, built by John Mowlem) in 1875.<ref name=City/>
In 1982, Billingsgate Fish Market was relocated to its present location close to Canary Wharf in east London. The original riverside market building was then refurbished by the architect Richard Rogers to provide office accommodation and an entertainment venue.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
The raucous cries of the fish vendors gave rise to the word Billingsgate as a synonym for profanity or offensive language.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Within the ward are the Custom House and the Watermen's Hall, built in 1780 and the city's only surviving Georgian livery company hall. Centennium House<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> in Lower Thames Street has Roman baths within its basement foundations.
ChurchesEdit
Within the Ward remain two churches: St Mary-at-Hill<ref>Built by Wren, but gutted in 1941 (Whinney)</ref> and St Margaret Pattens,<ref>So called after the templates that were used by the clogmakers of the district (Reynolds)</ref> after the demolition of St George Botolph Lane in 1904.<ref>As the resident population of the area declined (Huelin).</ref>
PoliticsEdit
Billingsgate is one of the City's 25 Wards returning an Alderman and two Common Councilmen (the City equivalent of a Councillor) to the City of London Corporation. The two common councilmen elected in March 2025 were Melissa Collett and Nighat Qureishi.<ref name="Councillors">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
In popular cultureEdit
{{ safesubst:#invoke:Unsubst||date=__DATE__ |$B= {{ safesubst:#invoke:Unsubst||date=__DATE__ |$B= Template:Ambox }} }} Lord Blackadder, the titular hero of Blackadder II, is said to have resided at Billingsgate, and in Thackeray's Vanity Fair (Ch. 3), Mr. Sedley has "brought home the best turbot in Billingsgate".
Billingsgate is also referred to in the song "Sister Suffragette" in the 1964 version of Mary Poppins.
Due to the real and perceived vulgar language used by the fishmongers, which Francis Grose referred to in his Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue, Billingsgate came to be used as a noun—billingsgate—referring to coarse or foul language.
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
- Ward Constable profile
- Ward map
- Ward Club Template:Webarchive
- Map of Early Modern London: Billingsgate Ward - Historical Map and Encyclopedia of Shakespeare's London (Scholarly)
BibliographyEdit
- The City of London: A History Borer M I C, New York, D.McKay Co, 1978 Template:ISBN
- Vanished churches of the City of London Huelin G, London, Guildhall Library Publishing 1996 Template:ISBN
- The Churches of the City of London Reynolds H London, Bodley Head, 1922
- A Survey of London, Vol I Stow J p. 427 Originally, 1598: this edn-London, A.Fullarton & Co, 1890
- Wren, Whinney M, London, Thames & Hudson, 1971 Template:ISBN
Template:City of London wards Template:London landmarks Template:City of London gates