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Seven gates into the City
The Romans
built a fort
around 120 A.D.
Between 190 and
220 AD the
defensive wall
was built around
the settlement using rag-stone carried by
boat from Kent. The reason for the wall was
that there had been much unrest and civil
wars throughout the Roman Empire across
Europe. The wall was around six metres high
and three metres thick at it's base. The
Romans incorporated one of the fort gates,
Cripplegate, and created four others -
Aldgate, Bishopsgate, Ludgate and
Newgate. Their purpose was to control traffic
in and out of the city and collect any taxes
due on goods brought in. Aldersgate was
added almost two hundred years later by the
Romans, and centuries after that, in 1415,
Moorgate was built into the wall. The seven
gates to the City of London, with many
repairs and rebuilding over the years, stood
until they were all demolished between 1760
and 1767. Blue plaques mark six of their
sites and a Bishop's mitre on a building
shows where Bishopsgate once stood.
Aldersgate
Aldersgate is
thought to
have been built
by the Romans
in the late
fourth century to replace an older gate to the
fort, the wall of which had been incorporated
into the city wall. Probably named
Ældresgate in Saxon times after one Ealdred
or Aldred.
In 1603 James I entered the city through
Aldersgate when first coming to London as
King of England. A relief of him on horseback
was placed on the outward face of the
structure.
It was demolished and rebuilt in 1617. John
Day, a printer of many religious works, had
his workshop in the room above the gate.
In 1660 Samuel Pepys wrote, “I saw the
limbs of some of our new traitors set upon
Aldersgate, which was a
sad sight to see...”.
It was renovated after
suffering damage in the
great fire of 1666. and
remained standing until
being taken down in
1761.
Aldgate
Aldgate is believed to
have been standing
before the Romans built
the city wall. It spanned
the road to Colchester,
the former capital of
England.
It was rebuilt in the early
12th century and possibly got its name from
the Saxon word Ealdgate, or old gate.
In 1215 the rebel Barons used Aldgate to
enter the city. “Aldgate being then most
ruinous”, according to Stow. After pressuring
King John to sign the Magna Carta they
rebuilt the gate in Norman style from Caen
stone and Flanders tile.
The poet Geoffrey Chaucer lived in rooms
above the gate from 1374 to 1385, and in
1553 Mary Tudor entered the city through
Aldgate for the first time as Queen.
Aldgate was rebuilt again in 1606 when
Roman coins were found in the foundation
stones. It remained until being demolished in
1761.
Moorgate
Moorgate takes its
name from the Moor
fields which were one of
the last sections of open
land in the city. It was
the last of the seven
gates to be constructed
and was originally a
postern or narrow passage in the wall not
suitable for heavy traffic.
Mercer and Lord Mayor, Thomas Falconer,
ordered the wall to be broken and the gate to
be built in 1415. This was to allow the people
access to the moors for their recreation.
Moorgate was renovated in 1472 and rebuilt
in 1672. The gate entrances were made
higher to enable the elite regiments of the
London Trained Bands to march through with
their pikes held high. When Moorgate was
demolished, in 1762, the stone was used to
strengthen the old London Bridge.
Newgate
Probably called
Newgate in the medieval
era because it was
thought to be the newer
of the gates at that time.
In his 1598 publication,
“A Survay of London”,
John Stow refers to it as
“latelier built than the rest”. He writes that it
was probably built in the reign of Henry I or
King Stephen but modern excavations have
proved it to be much earlier than that
probably one of the original Roman gates. It
was rebuilt in 1555 after fire damage, and
again in 1628 and 1672. The gate led to the
Oxford road and the West. It was being used
as a prison as early as the twelfth century
and this continued until its demolition in
1767. In 1770 work began to build another
Newgate prison that was demolished in
1904.
The City Bars
I don’t mean the City
bars where bankers
spend their bonuses on
Champagne! Beside the
seven main gates there
were other minor gates
added over the years,
mainly from the River.
These were mainly for the use of traders.
A few hundred yards from each of the seven
main gates were what are known as the
Bars. These bars started off as just that; a
bar or chain across the road to the gate
where travellers and traders were stopped to
pay any taxes or duty due on their wares
before reaching the gates. I presume that
this was to avoid congestion at the actual
entrances to the City. The bars were
eventually marked by heraldic dragons and
can still be seen today.
Long Gone
Legislation was passed in 1760 allowing
the remaining gates of the City to be
demolished. By the year 1771 they had all
gone. Most had been in ruins long before
this. If you can find out where they were
situated you will see the blue plaques on the
wall where the gate once stood. The sites of
the "bars", the markers of the City
boundaries outside (without) the walls where
travellers paid their tolls, are still marked
today with the City’s heraldic dragons.
One of the largest bars was the one that
separated the City of London from the City of
Westminster in Fleet Street. This was
Temple Bar. The latest one designed by
Christopher Wren. It was removed because
the traffic became too heavy to pass through
the narrow gate and can now be seen fully
restored in Paternoster Square.
People and places >>
Bishopsgate
Bishopsgate was
originally built by the
Romans and is believed
to have been rebuilt in
the seventh century by
Erkenwald, Bishop of
London. During the reign
of William I it was
repaired by a Bishop William. Effigies of the
two Bishops were said to have adorned it.
The Bishops of London were bound to make
hinges for the gates and for this they
received one stick from every cart carrying
wood through the gate. Bishopsgate led to
Ermine Street, the Roman road to York.
In 1471 it was rebuilt by merchants of the
Hanseatic League. Henry III had given them
trading privileges in return for maintaining
the gate. In 1731 it was repaired again, by
the City.
The heads of criminals were often placed on
spikes on the gate to deter wrongdoers
entering the city. Bishopsgate was
demolished in 1760. A Bishop's mitre on the
wall of a building near Wormwood Street
marks the site.
Cripplegate
Cripplegate was one
of the gates into the
Roman fort but was later
enlarged and the fort
wall used to form part of
the new Roman wall.
The origin of the name
is believed to come from
the old Saxon word “Crepel”, meaning a
narrow covered gate or passage. In ancient
documents the word “Crepelgate” was often
used.
The body of Edmund the Martyr reputedly
passed through Cripplegate in 1010 and this
gave rise to the idea that the gate would
possess miraculous healing powers.
Cripples would gather there hoping to be
cured.
In 1244 the Brewers Company rebuilt it and
it was again rebuilt in 1491.
During the fourteenth century the room
above the gate was put to use as a prison.
Queen Elizabeth 1st. entered the city
through the gate In 1558 for the first time as
Queen. It was renovated in 1663 and
demolished in 1760.
Ludgate
Ludgate was said to be
named after King Lud, a
pre Roman British King
but probably derives
from “Flood" or "Fleet”
gate due to the close
proximity of the river
Fleet. Ludgate led to one
of the main Roman burial mounds in the
Fleet Street area of today. When it was
rebuilt in 1215 the rooms above became as
a prison for petty criminals. Stephen Forster,
Lord Mayor of London 1454-55, was there as
a debtor when younger. A rich widow saw
him at the window and paid his debts. They
were later married. Ludgate was rebuilt
again in 1586 and repaired after damage
from great the fire of 1666. It was
demolished in 1760 and the prisoners moved
to a workhouse. Statues of King Lud and
Queen Elizabeth were removed from the
gate and placed outside the church of St.
Dunstans in the West, Fleet Street.
GATES TO THE CITY of LONDON