River Thames History
This magnificent city owes its very existance to the majestic Royal River Thames which flows through its centre.
The Roman Influence
The Romans invading Britain in AD43 landed in Kent. Pursuing the ancient Britons along the banks of the Thames they came to the first fordable point of the river. On a site nearby they built a garrison and Londinium was born. Later they erected the first bridge over the Thames. Built entirely in wood it stood a little down stream from the present London Bridge.
On the Romans withdrawal from Britain, London and its bridge suffered from neglect and damage by Viking raiders who came to plunder the wealth it had gained as a major trading post. It was not until 886 when Alfred the Great finally drove out the invaders that London fully recovered and moved into a further golden age as trade under the Anglo-Saxons increased. The bridge was repaired and the City and its citizens prospered.
The Vikings
In 980 the Vikings were back, occupying London until 1014 when Ethelred accompanied by the Norseman, Olaf, recaptured the City. He had sailed up the Thames and attaching ropes to the supports of a heavily defended London Bridge, headed downstream tearing part of the bridge down.
In the 8th century Benedictine monks had settled on the north bank of the river to the west of London. At high tide their settlement on Thorney island was completely surrounded by the then much wider Thames. Subsequently the area was to be used as a Royal residence, King Canute held court there and later Edward the Confessor made it his home. It was he who established the historic division between the centre for trade - the City of London - and that of government - the City of Westminster.
Leading up to 1066
Edward had long had the dream of restoring the ancient monastery and he started to do so as soon as he became king. He lived just long enough to see the abbey church consecrated on 28th December 1065, twenty years after work had begun. On 5th January he died and was buried in his new church on the following day.
Harold, nominated by Edward as his successor was crowned king in the new abbey, starting the tradition which continues to the present day
1066 had started with a new king and was to end with another, William the Conqueror who was crowned at Westminster on Christmas Day. To consolidate his power over the Anglo-Saxons William began to build a series of castles at strategic sites, the best known being the keep of the Tower of London, now known as the White Tower
Begun
in 1078, the keep commanded the approaches to London by either river or
road and was strengthened and enlarged by succeeding monarchs. The infamous
Bloody Tower was to be the setting for the murders of the boy King Edward
and his younger brother, possibly on the orders of Richard III in 1483.
Their bodies were found in the 17th century and reburied in Westminster
Abbey.
Later Norman kings valued the Tower as a means of dominating London but preferred the Palace at Westminster, which William Rufus had rebuilt in 1097, as their residence. The lower walls of the Great Hall still survive, and together with the splendid hammerbeam vaulted timber roof added by Richard II in the 14th century remain the oldest part of the Houses of Parliament.
History of London Bridges
The most famous of London Bridges was completed in 1209, it had a chapel
built in the centre, then shops, and by the middle of the 14th century had
198 houses over its 350 yard (320m) length. At its south entrance, Bridge
Gate, the heads of traitors were displayed on poles. The 19 piers of stone
supporting the bridge, restricted the flow of the river so much that in
winter it would freeze over and Frost Fairs would be held on the ice.
Norman kings seldom remained at Westminster or anywhere else for very long and government was wherever the king was, but the increase in record keeping and administration, made a permanent seat of government necessary.
In 1240 the very first Parliament was to sit in Westminster as Henry III made the Palace more of a settled home. His son Edward was born there and he was to die there.
The Tudors
Throughout the 16th century reigns of the Tudors, the country prospered and London's importance as a port and centre for world trade increased. However a fire in 1512 destroyed much of the original Palace of Westminster and for the first twenty years of his reign Henry VIII ruled England from Greenwich.
The final break with the Royal tradition of maintaining a Palace at Westminster came one cold day in January 1649, when following his trial in the original Great Hall of Westminster Palace, Charles I was lead to his execution outside the Banqueting Hall of Whitehall.
The Great Fire of London
Never
again would the Palace of Westminster be a monarch's residence. By the early
17th century, the City of London had spread far from its original Roman
walled centre to meet the City of Westminster at Temple Bar. The City of
London, however, was virtually destroyed in 1666 when a fire starting in
the king's baker's shop in Pudding Lane spread through the timber buildings
of the old City. The catalogue of destruction was appaling: in four days
13,200 houses were destroyed and over 100,000 people made homeless.
Londoners had long used ferrymen to row them across the river, and it was these men that rowed many to safety as their homes went up in smoke. Parliament had passed an Act in 1555 appointing Rulers of all ferrymen, the 'Watermen's Company' which still grant licenses to all skippers to this day. Out of the ashes, a new City of London would emerge. Its centrepiece, Christopher Wren's St Paul's Cathedral, completed in 1710.
Trading via the River Thames
London's trade with the continent and the rest of the World steadily increased, along the banks of the Thames shipbuilding flourished, new wharves to handle their cargos were built, and London prospered. A survey of 1598 related that over forty thousand men earned a living on or about the river.
By the mid 17th century the river was so crowded with shipping waiting to unload, in many cases up to several weeks, that it was said to be almost possible to walk from shore to shore across the craft. To ease this burden, in 1661 the first dock was constructed below Tower Bridge, over the next 200 years, to met the every expanding merchant fleet, they grew in number and size, culminating with the Albert dock in 1880.
These
English ships, as with all others, had problems with calculating longitude
at sea; in 1675 Charles II founded the Royal Observatory at Greenwich to
solve this problem. 1688 brought new sovereigns to London, William of Orange
and his English Queen Mary, and it was after the great naval victory of
La Hogue in 1692 that they rewarded the seamen of England with a hospital,
also at Greenwich.
With
the increase in commercial growth, London took on two faces, with the wealthier
citizens moving west, into the many famous squares that were being built
at this time. The merchants and the working classes remaining in the City,
or migrating eastwards as the need for labour to service the expanding trade
and industies increased; by 1710 London had become the centre of world finance
and commerce.
With this new found wealth, bridges were built to ease access over the Thames, Westminster bridge was opened in 1750, then Waterloo, Southwark and Blackfriars, finally Tower bridge was opened in 1894.
The coming of the railways brought even more changes to London, bringing in workers and day trippers from the suburbs and beyond, with the increase in leisure time, trips on the Thames started to meet the demand for new ways to enjoy the river, a pleasure that still exists to this day.