Between the thirteenth and sixteenth centuries, the London Bridge House institution, which managed the constant upkeep of the sole stone bridge in the City of London, underwent extensive internal changes. It gradually transitioned from being a religious foundation, dedicated to the pious work of maintaining the bridge, to becoming a civic enterprise mostly under the auspices of the urban government. Previous scholarly work has situated the movement of society and institutions towards secularization, or profanation, to a large extent within the aftermath of the large-scale sixteenth-century religious reformations. This study complicates that perception by considering the transformations that occurred within the Bridge House in the preceding ...
This thesis explores structural changes to the institutions of urban life within the City of London ...
This study examines the relationships between the parish church(es) of Greenwich, London, and the lo...
Local parish churches were the most ubiquitous permanent structures of the English Middle Ages, but ...
Between the thirteenth and sixteenth centuries, the London Bridge House institution, which managed t...
In 1756 the Corporation of London began the removal of the houses that had lined the passage over Lo...
In 1756 the Corporation of London began the removal of the houses that had lined the passage over Lo...
This thesis explores the ways in which lay benefactors in the cities of London and York interacted w...
An analysis of the accounts of the churches of Salisbury, in conjunction with the ledgers of the civ...
This thesis examines the relationship between architectural arrangements and behavioural conventions...
This dissertation is a socio-economic analysis of the Knights Hospitallers’ estate management in Lon...
The political identity of the city of London was changing towards the end of the twelfth century. Th...
Saint Paul’s Cathedral is a contradiction. Beautiful and majestic, it combines an almost Catholic sh...
Around one-third of Methodist Central Halls were located in Greater London. They catered for religio...
This thesis explores structural changes to the institutions of urban life within the City of London ...
This thesis analyses the role played by the ruling élite of London in the City's religious developm...
This thesis explores structural changes to the institutions of urban life within the City of London ...
This study examines the relationships between the parish church(es) of Greenwich, London, and the lo...
Local parish churches were the most ubiquitous permanent structures of the English Middle Ages, but ...
Between the thirteenth and sixteenth centuries, the London Bridge House institution, which managed t...
In 1756 the Corporation of London began the removal of the houses that had lined the passage over Lo...
In 1756 the Corporation of London began the removal of the houses that had lined the passage over Lo...
This thesis explores the ways in which lay benefactors in the cities of London and York interacted w...
An analysis of the accounts of the churches of Salisbury, in conjunction with the ledgers of the civ...
This thesis examines the relationship between architectural arrangements and behavioural conventions...
This dissertation is a socio-economic analysis of the Knights Hospitallers’ estate management in Lon...
The political identity of the city of London was changing towards the end of the twelfth century. Th...
Saint Paul’s Cathedral is a contradiction. Beautiful and majestic, it combines an almost Catholic sh...
Around one-third of Methodist Central Halls were located in Greater London. They catered for religio...
This thesis explores structural changes to the institutions of urban life within the City of London ...
This thesis analyses the role played by the ruling élite of London in the City's religious developm...
This thesis explores structural changes to the institutions of urban life within the City of London ...
This study examines the relationships between the parish church(es) of Greenwich, London, and the lo...
Local parish churches were the most ubiquitous permanent structures of the English Middle Ages, but ...