The history of British towns
A town is not just an
overgrown village. It
has its own economy. Goods are made and traded there. So a good site
might be on a bend in a navigable river, or beside a river crossing.
The development of towns is generally complex. In those of our historic towns not too mangled by Blitz or boom, you can trace the growth from medieval core through belts of Georgian, Victorian and modern buildings, almost like tree rings. Check your conclusions with a series of town maps. The date and magnificence of churches, public buildings and places of entertainment give other clues to the periods of greatest prosperity.
City status in England and Wales was traditionally given to towns with cathedrals, but from 1888 size of population became the chief factor in such designations.
Roman
In the 1st century BC a few tribal centres (oppida) grew up in southern Britain, though only one appears truly urban - Calleva (Silchester). Some became Roman district capitals - Canterbury, Silchester, St Albans and Winchester. Other district capitals, such as Carmarthen, Carlisle, Cirencester, Exeter and Wroxeter perhaps replaced a tribal meeting-place nearby, but as towns they were Roman creations, as was London, capital of the new province of Britannia. Other towns began life as legionary fortresses with settlements of ex-soldiers, like Caerleon, Chester, Gloucester, Lincoln and York, while Bath and Buxton were Roman spas. Roman towns were laid out on a grid plan and in the 4th century AD many gained defences. Bibliography.
Saxon/Viking
Urban life declined drastically after Britannia left the Roman Empire in 410, but blossomed anew in the 9th century. As the Vikings threatened, Saxon kings were driven to resurrect ruined Roman towns as walled market towns, which would generate income for their own defence (see Alfred's work on Bath and the Charter of Worcester). They also created new boroughs (burhs), such as Hereford, Oxford, Shrewsbury and Wilton. Meanwhile the Vikings were founding their own boroughs. They too made use of Roman defences where they could - at Leicester, Lincoln and York - but also founded towns like Derby. In Ireland they built fortified bases to wait out the winter between raiding seasons. A few of these, notably Cork, Dublin, Limerick, Waterford and Wexford, developed into Ireland's first true towns. Bibliography.
Medieval
The 12th century was a
time of new town foundation throughout western Europe. Kings, barons
and churchmen hoped to reap the profits of urban property and markets.
100 new towns were created in England and Wales between 1066 and 1190.
Some were to prosper, others to fail. Look for place-names like Newton,
Newport and Newmarket. As the Normans pressed into Ireland they founded
inland towns, such as Trim, as well as building on Viking foundations
along the
coast. Meanwhile the first burghs were formed in Scotland. Some were
existing centres like Aberdeen, Edinburgh, Perth and Stirling, which
were granted a degree of self-government by royal charter. Others were
new creations, often beside a royal castle, such as Roxburgh.
New towns continued to spring up in the 13th century, for example Salisbury, created to serve the new cathedral begun in 1220. It was the most successful of the English medieval planned towns, rising in wealth above many an older town. Edward I was a notable town planter. He laid out a series of towns between 1277 and 1296 beside his new castles in north Wales, such as Caernarvon and Conway. (See Mapping the Medieval Urban Landscape for locations and plans.) But as people crowded together in towns, they became more vulnerable to epidemics. The Black Death nearly halved Britain's population in the mid-14th century. Few new towns were founded after that, until populations began to rise once more in modern times.
By 1300 about thirty English provincial towns had over 5,000 inhabitants, but none in Wales. In Ireland and Scotland only Dublin and Edinburgh qualified. Dublin was the centre of English government in Ireland, while Edinburgh was emerging as the Scottish capital. But London dominated Britain's trade. With a population of over 60,000 it was by far the greatest city in these islands. Bibliography.
Tudor and Stuart plantations
The late 16th and 17th-century policy of encouraging English and Scottish settlement in Ireland created a swathe of new towns, since land grants to the immigrants required town building. Most towns in Ulster date from this period, including Belfast and Londonderry, the last walled city built in western Europe (see the Irish Historic Towns Atlas vols. 12 and 15 and BBC: London Companies). Some of the new towns were more successful than others.
Georgian
An early
18th-century growth spurt transformed Dublin into the next largest
British city after London. That growth was partly fuelled by
cloth-making, even before the industrial
revolution changed the focus from craft to mass-manufacture.
As industry gathered pace, good sources of raw materials and power
could turn a small town into a city. Manchester and Birmingham were not
even among the 40 largest English towns in 1662, but by 1801 they were
first and third on the list. (See provincial
town ranking.)
At the same time Britain
was seeking wider markets or securing them by conquest. The west-coast
ports of Bristol
and Liverpool expanded dramatically with cross-Atlantic trade, while London remained
the country's greatest trading magnet. The population of the capital
doubled during the 18th century to reach one million; by the end of the
Georgian era it was the largest city in the world and held that title
for a century.
A confident Enlightenment
Edinburgh trumpeted its status as the Capital of North Britain
with an entire New
Town laid out across Nor Loch from the old city to plans
approved in 1767. By 1820 much of it was complete. The wide streets on
a grid plan were in stark contrast to the steep, narrow ways of the old
town clustered below the castle. Bibliography.
And see Georgian style.
Resorts of health and pleasure
With rising wealth came a new type of town - the resort. The established spa of Bath burst out beyond its medieval walls in a flowering of late Georgian squares and crescents. Fishing hamlets blossomed into Regency seaside resorts such as Brighton, which grew as the railways brought travel within the means of the masses. In the mid-19th century they catered mainly to the middle classes, but by the 1890s the wages of factory workers were high enough for a seaside holiday. By 1900 Blackpool was a city of pleasure. The Edwardian period saw more resort development, such as the creation of Frinton-on-Sea from 1903. Bibliography.
Suburban sprawl
The Victorian population explosion added to urban sprawl, putting a Victorian fringe around market towns or joining villages to city in one huge conurbation. That trend gathered pace in the twentieth century, with council estates adding to private developments. Modern transport made possible the dormitory surburb; people no longer had to live within walking distance of the workplace.
Garden cities
Ebenezer Howard developed the concept of the garden city - a happy meld of town and country. His ideal was to make it a pleasant environment which would be fairly run, with ground rents used to benefit all the townspeople. It was put into practice at Letchworth (begun 1903) and Welwyn (begun 1919). Garden suburbs sprang up along similar lines. Two of the most successful were Hampstead Garden Suburb outside London (begun 1907) and Wythenshaw outside Manchester (begun 1927). Bibliography
Post-war new towns
Influenced by the garden cities, the New Towns Act of 1946 designated 14 sites for the creation of new towns, eight of which formed a ring around London. Another two were in Scotland (East Kilbride and Glenrothes), one in Wales (Cwmbran) and the rest in the North-East (Peterlee and Newton Aycliffe) and East Midlands (Corby).
Cumbernaud followed in 1956 and a further 11 new towns in the 1960s, such as Telford, Redditch and Milton Keynes.
More recently Charles, Prince of Wales, has set an example of urban planning with his development of Poundbury as an extension to Dorchester on 400 acres of Duchy of Cornwall land, formerly Poundbury Farm. The aim was to design on a human scale, respecting the varied traditions of Dorset building. Architect and urban planner Leon Krier created the masterplan and building began in 1993.
The British Government in 2007 announced a
plan
to build eco-towns
- communities
of low-carbon and carbon-neutral homes, powered by
locally generated energy from sustainable sources.
Bibliography
General
- Aston, M. and Bond, J., The Landscape of Towns (1976; 2000).
- Beckett, J., City Status in the United Kingdom, 1830-2002 (2005).
- Clark, P. (gen. ed.), The Cambridge Urban History of Britain. vol.1 (600-1540), ed. by D.M. Palliser (2000); vol. 2 (1540-1840), ed. by P.Clark (2000); vol. 3 (1840-1950), ed. by Martin Daunton (2001).
- Girouard, M., The English Town (1990).
- Girouard, M., Cities and People: A social and architectural history (1985).
- Hoskins, W.G., Local History in England, 3rd edn. (1984) gives a table ranking the largest English towns over the centuries.
- Leicester University, British Small Towns from the 16th-19th Century: a long-term research project.
- Naismith, R., The Story of Scotland's Towns (1989).
- Nolan, W. and Simms, A. (eds.) Irish Towns – A Guide to Sources (1998).
- Porter, S, Exploring Urban History: Sources for Local Historians (1990).
- Stokes, D., Urban Ireland: Development of Towns and Villages (1982).
- Thomas, A., The Walled Towns of Ireland 2 vols. (1992).
- West, J., Town Records (1983). Gives a gazetteer of boroughs in England and Wales from Anglo-Saxon to modern, listing related charters, Domesday, gild and borough ordinances, town plans, improvement acts, commercial directories, newspapers, photograph collections and census data.
- And see town defences and the bibliography of local history, which includes publications on place-names.
Roman towns
- Bédoyère, G. de la, Roman Towns in Britain, 2nd. edn. (2003). Appendix 1: written evidence for Roman towns is online.
- Rivet, A.L.F., Town and Country in Roman Britain, 2nd edn. (1964). His plans showing the comparative sizes of Roman towns are online at Romano-British Walled Towns.
- Wacher, J., The Towns of Roman Britain, 2nd edn. (1995).
Saxon/Viking
- The Burghal Hidage: page from University College London explaining this Anglo-Saxon list of 33 fortified places, largely in Wessex, with map.
- Clark, H. and Ambrosiani, B., Towns in the Viking Age (1991; rev. edn 1995). Includes Britain and Ireland.
- Haslam, J. (ed.), Anglo-Saxon Towns in Southern England (1984).
- Hodges, R. and Hobley, B. (eds.), The Rebirth of Towns in the West AD 700-1050 CBA Research Report no. 68 (1988). Can be read online in PDF format via the Archaeology Data Service.
- Rogerson, A., Vikings and the new East Anglian towns, British Archaeology, issue no 35, (June 1998).
- Russo, D.G., Town Origins and Development in Early England c.400-950 AD (1998).
Medieval towns
- Alsford, S., Medieval English Towns.
- Barley, M. W. (ed.), The Plans and Topography of Medieval Towns in England and Wales, CBA Research Report no. 14 (1976). Can be read online in PDF format via the Archaeology Data Service.
- Beresford, M.W., New Towns of the Middle Ages: Town plantation in England, Wales and Gascony (1967) lists over 130 new towns created in England between 1100 and 1300 and at least 66 in Wales.
- Beresford, M.W. and Finberg, H. P.R., English Medieval Boroughs: A handlist (1973); extended in Urban History Yearbook (1981), 59-65.
- Griffiths, R.A., (ed.) Boroughs of Medieval Wales (1978). Individual histories.
- Hindle, P., Medieval Town Plans (1990).
- Letters, S., Gazetteer of Markets and Fairs in England and Wales to 1516 (Online comprehensive catalogue.)
- Lilley, K.D., Urban Life in the Middle Ages, 1000-1450 (2002).
- Lynch, M., Spearman, M., and Stell, G., (eds.), The Scottish Medieval Town (1988).
- Nicholas, D., The Growth of the Medieval City from Late Antiquity to the Early Fourteenth Century (1997)
- Nicholas, D., The Later Medieval City, 1300-1500 (1997). The focus of the two volumes by Prof. Nicholas is on western Europe, including England.
- Platt, C., The English Medieval Town (1976). Combines archaeology and history.
- Schofield, J. and Vince, A., Medieval Towns (1994). An archaeological approach.
- Soulsby, I., The Towns of Medieval Wales (1983)
- Swanson, H., Medieval British Towns (1999).
- Tait, J., The Medieval English Borough (1936). Full text of this seminal study online in pdf format (requires Acrobat Reader).
Georgian towns and cities
- Ayres, J., Building the Georgian City (1998). Covers London, Bath and Edinburgh.
- Cruickshank, D., and
Burton, N., Life in the Georgian City (1990).
Mainly based on London and including much architectural detail.
- Department of the Environment and Local Government (Ireland), Georgian Dublin. Online leaflet with bibliography.
- Downes, K., The Georgian Cities of Britain (1979).
- Vrodgen, W.A. (ed.), The Neo-Classical Town: Scottish contributions to urban development since 1750 (1996).
- Youngson, A.J., The Making of Classical Edinburgh (1988).
Resort towns
- Hembry, P., The English Spa, 1560-1815: A social history (1990).
- Walton, J. K. The English Seaside Resort : a social history, 1750-1914 (1983).
Garden cities
- Howard, E., Garden Cities of Tomorrow (1902). Extracts online.
- M. Miller, Letchworth: the First Garden City, 2nd edn. (2002)
- Unwin, R., Town Planning in Practice (1909).
Primary sources
Much useful material can be gleaned from the guide books and street directories which began to appear in the 18th century. By the late 19th century any significant town should appear in county directories, while major cities had their own directories.
Census returns from each decade after 1801 are prime sources for population data, now online at Vision of Britain. For the previous centuries some taxation records give an indication of the number of people living in a town and their occupations. For England see town ranking and The Poll Taxes of 1377, 1379 and 1381 ed. C.C. Fenwick, Records of Social and Economic History New Series vols. 27 and 29 (1998, 2001). Online transcripts of medieval tax records are listed by Medieval English Genealogy.
Local authority records will generally be found in the relevant local record office. Many are now catalogued online: see archives. Many early borough records have been published by local record societies, whose volumes are listed online by the Royal Historical Society. The first three volumes of Extracts from the Records of the Burgh of Glasgow are now online. For other contemporary surveys and descriptions see primary sources in print.
And see maps, images and building regulations.
Specific towns
Lobel, M.D. (gen. ed.), Historic Towns Atlas
- Banbury, Caernarvon, Glasgow, Gloucester, Hereford, Nottingham, Reading, Salisbury (1969).
- Bristol, Cambridge, Coventry, Norwich (1975).
- The City of London from Prehistoric Times to c.1570 (1989; rev. edn. 1991).
Irish Historic Towns Atlas published by the Royal Irish Academy.
- Kildare (1986).
- Carrickfergus (1986).
- Bandon (1988).
- Kells (1990).
- Mullingar (1992).
- Athlone (1994).
- Maynooth (1995).
- Downpatrick (1997).
- Bray (1998).
- Kilkenny (2000).
- Dublin, Part 1: to 1610 (2002).
- Belfast, Part 1: to 1840 (2003).
- Fethard (2003).
- Trim (2004).
- Derry~Londonderry (2005).
- Dundalk (2006).
- Belfast, Part 2: 1840 to 1900 (2007).
- Armagh (2007).
Property surveys
A few historic towns have been analysed in detail, property by property, drawing on deeds, original surveys and other sources:
- Keene, D., Survey of Medieval Winchester, 2 vols. (1985).
- Keene, D.J. and Harding, V., Historical Gazetteer of London before the Great Fire Cheapside; parishes of All Hallows Honey Lane, St Martin Pomary, St Mary le Bow, St Mary Colechurch and St Pancras Soper Lane (1987). The same authors produced A Survey of Documentary Sources for Property Holding in London before the Great Fire, London Record Society, vol. 22 (1985).
- Leech, R. (ed.), The Topography of Medieval and Early Modern Bristol, 2 vols., Bristol Record Society vols. 48 (1997) and 52 (2000).
- Owen, D.M., The Making of King's Lynn: A documentary survey, British Academy Records of Social and Economic History, New Series vol. 9 (1984).
- Salter, H.E., Oxford City Properties, Oxford Historical Society vol. 83 (1926).
- Salter, H.E., Survey of Oxford, 2 vols., Oxford Historical Society New Series vols. 14 (1960) and 20 (1969).
- Survey of London (1900-). Detailed, sourced gazetteer by street or building.
- Urry, W., Canterbury under the Angevin Kings (1967).
Gazetteers
For some historic towns, there are gazetteers giving the history of street-names and some individual buildings. Those with full references are to be preferred, such as:
- Harben, H.H, A Dictionary of London (1918).
- Hodsdon, J. An Historical Gazetteer of Cheltenham: An on-line, revised version of vol. 9 in the Gloucestershire Record Series (1997).
- See official inventories for gazetteers by official bodies of historic monuments in Cambridge, Edinburgh, London, Northampton, Oxford, Salisbury, Stamford and York.
- And see general Gazetteers.
Regional studies of urban topographical development: SW England
- Aston, M. and Leech, R., Historic Towns in Somerset: Archaeology and planning (1977).
- Cornwall and Scilly Urban Survey covers 19 historic towns. Detailed reports and analytical maps online in pdf format. (This is part of the Historic Town and City Surveys project by English Heritage - see below).
- Leech, R., Historic Towns in Gloucestershire: Archaeology and planning (1981).
- Leech, R., Small Mediaeval Towns in Avon: Archaeology and Planning (1975).
Historic Town and City Surveys
English Heritage is supporting a national programme of surveys of the archaeology, topography and historic buildings of England's historic towns and cities. The intention is to publish reports. Currently some databases are held either as part of the local Historic Environment Record (or Sites and Monuments Record), or as a free-standing Urban Archaeological Database. Some are online via the Archaeology Data Service, which also has links to those on local authority websites.