London is richly endowed with neighborhoods
which, despite their absorption into the growing metropolis, have still
retained their village character. The history of these villages varies greatly.
Some, such as Shoreditch and Stepney, originated as agricultural settlements
very close to the edge of the City, and soon became incorporated into the urban
fabric. Others were at a greater distance from the City and remained
free-standing settlements amidst the fields of Middlesex, Surrey, Kent or Essex
until well into the 18th century and beyond. They were ultimately converted
into suburbs by a number of factors: turnpike roads brought Hampstead and
Highgate into the parameters of 18th-century London, while 19th-century railway
developments accounted for the absorption of Balham and Enfield. In the 20th
century, Underground lines meant that even far-flung centres such as Edgware
and Morden became part of Greater London. In addition, London has its share of
planned "villages" such as Hampstead Garden Suburb, which followed
the opening of the Golders Green Underground station in 1907, and Bedford Park,
which was described by John Betjeman as "the most significant suburb built
in the last century, probably in the western world".
Tudor and Stuart monarchs sought to contain
the spread of London through legislation; James I feared that "soon London
will be all England". His attempts and those of successive administrations
failed. The population of Middlesex, that most suburban of Home Counties, rose
from a mere 70,900 living in hamlets, villages and market towns in 1801, to
792,000 in 1901 and an astonishing 950,000 just four years later. Not until the
Green Belt legislation of 1938 and 1947 was London's suburban spread brought to
a notable and controversial halt.
Villages such as Harefield are still distinctly
recognizable as such, and not too much imagination is needed to identify the
village structure of Blackheath, Clapham, Hampstead or Highgate. Traces, often
more obscure, of London's historic villages abound elsewhere; beneath the
fabric of present-day suburbia the structure of many of London's villages still
survives.
Списоклитературы
London History Atlas (Times Books, London)
Для подготовки данной работы были
использованы материалы с сайта http://referatovbank.ru/