Street names of the City of London
This is a list of the etymology of street names in the City of London.
A
- Abchurch Lane and Abchurch Yard – after the adjacent St Mary Abchurch[1][2][3]
- Adam’s Court – thought to be for Sir Thomas Adams, 1st Baronet, master of the Worshipful Company of Drapers and later Lord Mayor of London[4]
- Addle Hill – from an Old English word for prince (athling)[5][6][7]
- Addle Street – from an Old English word for filth/dung, presumably descriptive,[5] though also may be the same etymology as Addle Hill above[7]
- Alban Highwalk and St Albans Court – after the adjacent St Alban, Wood Street church, of which only the tower now remains[8]
- Albion Place (off London Wall)
- Albion Way
- Aldermanbury and Aldermanbury Square – the site of a burgh (enclosed settlement) of a Saxon-era alderman[9][10][11]
- Alderman’s Walk – formerly Dashwood's Walk, for Francis Dashwood, who lived here in the 18th century; it was changed when he became an alderman[9][11]
- Aldersgate Court and Aldersgate Street – The name Aldersgate is first recorded around 1000 in the form Ealdredesgate, i.e. "gate associated with a man named Ealdrād". The gate, constructed by the Romans in the 2nd or 3rd centuries when London Wall was constructed, probably acquired its name in the late Saxon period[12]
- Aldgate, Aldgate Avenue and Aldgate High Street – thought to be an alteration of ‘Old Gate’; others think it stems from ‘Ale Gate’ (after a local inn) or ‘All Gate’ (as it was open to all)[13][14][15][16][17][18]
- Allhallows Lane – after the church of All-Hallows-the-Great and Less, both destroyed in the Great Fire of 1666; the Great was rebuilt by Christopher Wren, but was demolished in 1894[19][20]
- Amen Corner and Amen Court – by association with the nearby St Paul’s Cathedral[21][22]
- America Square – laid out in 1767–1770 by George Dance the Younger and named in honour of the American colonies[23][22]
- Andrewes Highwalk – presumably after Lancelot Andrewes, rector of the nearby St Giles-without-Cripplegate Church
- Angel Court – named after a long demolished inn of this name[24][25]
- Angel Lane
- Angel Street – after a demolished inn of this name; formerly Angle Alley[24][25]
- Apothecary Street – after the nearby Worshipful Society of Apothecaries[24][26]
- Appold Street
- The Arcade (Liverpool Street) – presumably descriptive
- Arthur Street – unknown[27]
- Artillery Lane – this formerly led to the Tasel Close Artillery Yard, which stood here in the 17th–18th centuries[28][27]
- Artizan Street
- Ashentree Court – after the ashen trees formerly located here at the Whitefriars' monastery[29]
- Athene Place
- Austin Friars and Austin Friars Passage and Austin Friars Square – after Austin Friars, a medieval friary which stood here in the Medieval period[28][30]
- Ave Maria Lane – after the Hail Mary (Ave Maria), by association with the nearby St Paul’s Cathedral[21][30]
- The Avenue (Cutlers Gardens) – presumably descriptive
B
- Back Alley – presumably descriptive
- Back Passage – presumably descriptive
- Bakers Hall Court – after the nearby hall of the Worshipful Company of Bakers[31]
- Ball Court
- Baltic Street West – the streets here were built by a timber merchant circa 1810 who named them after trade-related activities; Baltic refers to the Baltic softwood trade[32][33]
- Barbon Alley – after Nicholas Barbon, 17th-century economist [34]
- Barley Mow Passage – after a former inn here of this name, possibly by reference to alcohol, or else a corruption of the nearby St Bartholomew's church and hospital[35]
- Barnard’s Inn – named after Lionel Barnard, owner of a town house (or ‘inn’) here in the mid-15th century[36]
- Bartholomew Close and Bartholomew Place – after St Bartholomew’s Priory, which stood here and is remembered in the names of the local hospital and two churches[37][38]
- Bartholomew Lane – after the former St Bartholomew-by-the-Exchange church, demolished in 1840[37][39][40]
- Bartlett Court, Bartlett Street and Bartletts Passage – after Thomas Bartlett, court printer to Edward VI, who owned property here[41][42]
- Basinghall Avenue and Basinghall Street – thought to be after land owned here by the people of Basa or Basing (in Old Basing, Hampshire), or possibly after a mansion house of the Bassing (or Basing) family, who were prominent in the City beginning in the 13th century[37][43][44][42]
- Bassishaw Highwalk – after the Bassishaw ward in which it is located[42]
- Bastion Highwalk – presumably after the adjacent Roman bastion ruins
- Bear Alley – thought to be after a former inn of this name[45][46]
- Beech Gardens and Beech Street – after beech trees which formerly stood here; the name is an old one, recorded as ‘Bechestrete’ in the 13th century[47][48]
- Beehive Passage – after a former tavern here of this name[48]
- Bengal Court – presumably after the former British colony of Bengal
- Bell Court
- Bell Inn Yard – after a former inn of this name[49][50]
- Bell Wharf Lane – unknown, possibly after a former tavern of this name; formerly Emperor’s Head Lane, after an inn here[51][50]
- Ben Jonson Place – after Ben Jonson, 17th-century playwright and poet
- Bennet’s Hill – after the adjacent St Benet’s church[52]
- Bevis Marks – corruption of ‘Bury Marks’, after a former house on this site given to Bury St Edmunds Abbey in the 1100s; mark is thought to note a boundary here[53][54][55]
- Billiter Court and Billiter Street – after former ‘belzeter’ (bell foundry) located here[56][57][58]
- Birchin Lane – unknown, though suggested to come from the Old English ‘beord-ceorfere’ (bear carver i.e. a barbers); it has had several variation on this name in the past, including Berchervere, Berchenes and Birchen[56][55][59]
- Bishop’s Court
- Bishopsgate, Bishopsgate Arcade and Bishopsgate Churchyard – after one of the City gates that formerly stood here, thought to commemorate Saint Earconwald, Bishop of London in the 7th century[60][61]
- Blackfriars Bridge, Blackfriars Court, Blackfriars Lane, Blackfriars Passage and Blackfriars Underpass – after the former Dominican (or Black friars, after their robes) friary that stood here 1276–1538[62][63]
- Blomfield Street – after Charles James Blomfield, Bishop of London 1828–1856[64][65]
- Bloomberg Arcade – after its owners/developers Bloomberg L.P.
- Bolt Court – thought to be after a former tavern called the Bolt-in-Tun[66][67]
- Bond Court – after a 17th-century property developer of this name[68][69]
- Booth Lane
- Botolph Alley and Botolph Lane – after the St Botolph Billingsgate church which stood near here, destroyed in the Great Fire of 1666[68][39][70]
- Bouverie Street – after William Bouverie, 1st Earl of Radnor[71][72]
- Bow Churchyard and Bow Lane – after the adjacent St Mary-le-Bow church; it was formerly known as Hosier Lane (after the local stocking making trade), and prior to that Cordewanere Street (meaning ‘leather-workers’)[73][2][72]
- Brabant Court – thought to be after the Dutch/Belgian province of this name, though possibly a corruption of a personal name (prior to the 18th century it was known as Braben Court, and before that Brovens Court)[74]
- Brackley Street – after the Earls of Bridgewater, also called the Viscounts Brackley, who owned a house near here[74][75]
- Braidwood Passage – presumably after 19th-century fireman James Braidwood
- Brandon Mews
- Bread Street – after the bakery trade that formerly took place here[76][77][78]
- Bream’s Buildings – thought to be named for its 18th-century builder[78]
- Breton Highwalk – presumably after the 16th–17th-century poet Nicholas Breton
- Brewer’s Hall Gardens – after the adjacent Worshipful Company of Brewers hall
- Brick Court – as this was home to the first set of brick buildings in the area[79]
- Bride Court, Bride Lane, St Bride’s Avenue, St Bride’s Passage and St Bride Street – after the adjacent St Bride's Church[80][39][79]
- Bridewell Place – after the adjacent St Bride's Church and a well that was formerly located here in the early Middle Ages; the name was later given to Bridewell Palace (demolished in the 1860s[81][79]
- Bridgewater Highwalk, Bridgewater Square and Bridgewater Street – after the Earls of Bridgewater, also called the Viscounts Brackley, who owned a house near here[74][75]
- Britannic Highwalk
- Broadgate and Broadgate Circle – developed in the late 1980s, presumably named for the former Broad Street station on this site and the adjacent Bishopsgate
- Broad Lane, Broad Street Avenue, New Broad Street and Old Broad Street – simply a descriptive name, dating to the early Middle Ages; the northern-most section was formerly ‘New Broad Street’; however, this has now switched onto an adjacent sidestreet[82][83][84]
- Broken Wharf – this wharf fell into disrepair owing to a property dispute in the 14th century[85][86]
- Brown’s Buildings
- Brushfield Street – after Thomas Brushfield, Victorian-era representative for this area at the Metropolitan Board of Works; the western-most section, here forming the boundary with Tower Hamlets, was formerly called Union Street[87][88]
- Bucklersbury and Bucklersbury Passage – after the Buckerel/Bucherel family who owned land here in the 1100s[87][89][90]
- Budge Row – formerly home to the drapery trade; a ‘budge/boge’ was a type of lamb’s wool[91][92][90]
- Bull's Head Passage – thought to be after an inn or shop of this name[93][90]
- Bunyan Court – after the author John Bunyan, who attended the nearby St Giles-without-Cripplegate church
- Burgon Street – after Dean Burgon of St Paul’s Cathedral; prior to 1885 it was called New Street[94]
- Bury Court and Bury Street – after a former house on this site given to Bury St Edmunds Abbey in the 1100s[95][96][55]
- Bush Lane – thought to be after a former inn of this name[95][97][98]
- Byward Street – after the adjacent Byward Tower of the Tower of London[99][98]
C
- Camomile Street – after the camomile formerly grown here for medicine[100][101]
- Canon Alley – presumably in reference to the adjacent St Paul’s Cathedral
- Cannon Street – a contraction of the 14th-century ‘Candlewick Street’, meaning a street where candle-makers were based[102][103]
- Capel Court – after William Capel, Lord Mayor of London in the early 16th century[104]
- Carlisle Avenue – unknown[105]
- Carmelite Street – after the Carmelite order (known as the White friars), who were granted land here by Edward I[106][107]
- Carter Court and Carter Lane – after the cartering trade that formerly took place here,[108][109] or possibly also after someone with this name[110]
- Carthusian Street – after the Carthusian monks who lived near here in the Middle Ages[111][112]
- Castle Baynard Street – after Castle Baynard which formerly stood here[108]
- Castle Court – after a former inn of this name[108]
- Catherine Wheel Alley – after a former inn of this name, which was named for the Catherine wheel on the coat of arms of the Worshipful Company of Turners[113][114]
- Cavendish Court – after the Cavendish family, Dukes of Devonshire, who owed a house near here in the 1600s[113][115]
- Chancery Lane – the former site of Edward III's office of the Master of the Rolls of Chancery[116][117][118]
- Change Alley – after the nearby Royal Exchange[116][119]
- Charterhouse Square and Charterhouse Street – Anglicisation of Chartreuse, from Grande Chartreuse, head monastery of the Carthusians in France; a nearby abbey was founded by monks of this order in 1371[120][121]
- Cheapside and Cheapside Passage – from ‘chepe’, an Old English word meaning 'market'; this was the western end of a market that stretched over the Eastcheap[122][123][121]
- Cheshire Court – after the adjacent Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese pub[124]
- Chiswell Street – either for old term meaning 'stony/gravelly earth',[125] or a corruption of 'Choice Well', denoting a source of clean water[55]
- Church Cloisters – after the adjacent St Mary-at-Hill church; Church Passage till 1938[126]
- Church Court – after the adjacent Temple Church
- Church Entry – after the former St Ann Blackfriars church which burned down in the 1666 fire[127][63]
- Circus Place – after the adjacent Finsbury Circus[128]
- Clements Lane and St Clement’s Court – after the adjacent St Clement's, Eastcheap church[39][129]
- Clerk’s Place
- Clifford’s Inn Passage – after an inn (townhouse) given to Robert de Clifford, 1st Baron de Clifford by Edward II[130][131]
- Cloak Lane – unknown, though possibly from 'cloaca', an old word for a sewer; prior to the mid-17th century it was Horseshoebridge Street, after a bridge that stood here over the Walbrook[130][132]
- Cloth Court, Cloth Fair and Cloth Street – after a long-running cloth fair that was formerly held here[130][133]
- Clothier Street – after the former clothes market that operated here[130][133]
- Cobb’s Court
- Cock Hill – unknown, possibly from an old inn of this name[134]
- Cock Lane – thought to be after either cock rearing or cock fighting that formerly occurred here[135][136][134]
- Coleman Street and Coleman Street Buildings – possibly after a church of this name or a personal name,[137][138] or literally after the coalmen who formerly lived in this area in the Middle Ages[139]
- College Hill, College Street and Little College Lane – after the adjacent St Michael Paternoster Royal, which was created as a collegiate church by Richard Whittington in 1419; College Street was formerly Paternoster Street (meaning rosary makers]] and College Hill was Royal Street (a corruption of La Réole, France, where local wine merchants hailed from)[140][141][142]
- Compter Passage – presumably after the former Wood Street Compter
- Cooper’s Row – after an 18th-century property owner of this name; prior to this it was Woodruffe Lane, also thought to be after a property owner[143][144]
- Copthall Avenue, Copthall Buildings and Copthall Close – after a former ‘copt hall’ (crested hall) that stood here[145][144]
- Corbet Court – after a local 17th-century property developer[145]
- Cornhill – thought to be after the corn formerly grown or sold here[145][146][147]
- Cousin Lane – after either Joanna or William Cousin, the first a local landowner, the latter a 14th-century sheriff[148][149][150]
- Cowper’s Court – after the Cowper family, local landowners[151]
- Crane Court – formerly Two Crane Court, possibly after a coat of arms of one of the local landowning families[151]
- Creechurch Lane and Creechurch Place – after the former Holy Trinity Priory, Aldgate near here; it was also named Christ Church, later corrupted to ‘Creechurch’, and later also given to St Katharine Cree church[152][153]
- Creed Court and Creed Lane – by association with the nearby St Paul’s Cathedral[21][153]
- Crescent – thought to be first crescent-shaped street in London[128]
- Cripplegate Street – after the former Cripplegate that stood here, referring either to a crepel (Latin for ‘covered way’) or the association with the nearby St Giles-without-Cripplegate church (St Giles is the patron saint of cripples)[152][154]
- Cromwell Highwalk and Cromwell Place – presumably after Oliver Cromwell, who was married in the nearby St Giles-without-Cripplegate Church in 1620
- Crosby Square – after Crosby House, built for Sir John Crosby, 15th-century merchant and politician[155][156]
- Cross Keys Square – after a house or inn called Cross Keys that stood here in Tudor times[155][156]
- Cross Lane – descriptive; it was formerly Fowle Lane (literally ‘foul’)[155][157][156]
- Crosswall – descriptive, as it crosses the boundary of the city wall[155][158]
- Crown Court
- Crown Office Row – after the Clerks of the Crown Office formerly located here[159]
- Crutched Friars – after the Crutched Friars, a religious order who had a friary here in the early Middle Ages which was dissolved by Henry VIII[160][161][159]
- Cullum Street – after either Sir John Cullum, 17th-century sheriff who owned land here,[160] or Thomas Cullum[162]
- Cunard Place – after the Cunard Line headquarters, formerly located here[162]
- Cursitor Street – after the Cursitors’ office, established here in the 16th century[163][162]
- Custom House Walk – after the adjacent Custom House
- Cutler Street and Cutlers Gardens Arcade – after the Worshipful Company of Cutlers, who owned land here[163][164]
D
- Dark House Walk – after a former inn here called the Darkhouse; it was formerly Dark House Lane, and prior to that Dark Lane[165]
- Dean’s Court – after the Dean of St Paul’s[166][167]
- Defoe Place – after the author Daniel Defoe
- Devonshire Row and Devonshire Square – after the Cavendish family, Dukes of Devonshire, who owed a house near here in the 1600s[168][169]
- Distaff Lane – formerly Little Distaff Lane, as it lay off the main Distaff Lane (now absorbed into Cannon Street); in Medieval times the area was home to a distaff industry[170][171][172]
- Doby Court – thought to be after a local landowner; prior to 1800 called Maidenhead Court[170]
- Dorset Buildings and Dorset Rise – Salisbury Court, London home of the bishops of Salisbury, formerly stood near here; after the Dissolution of the Monasteries it passed to Thomas Sackville, 1st Earl of Dorset[173][174]
- Dowgate Hill – after a former watergate leading to the Thames here; it was formerly Duuegate, Old English for ‘dove’ (possibly a personal name), or possibly simply from the word 'down'[175][176][177]
- Drapers Gardens – after the adjacent Worshipful Company of Drapers building[178][179]
- Dukes Place – after Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk, who inherited a house near here from his uncle Thomas Audley, who had gained the land following the Dissolution of the Monasteries[180][181]
- Dunster Court – corruption of St Dunstan’s Court, as it lay in the parish of St Dunstan-in-the-East[180]
- Dyer’s Buildings – after almshouses owned by the Worshipful Company of Dyers formerly located here[182]
E
- Eastcheap – as it was the eastern end of the former Cheapside market[183][182]
- East Harding Street and West Harding Street – after local 16th-century property owner Agnes Harding, who bequeathed the surrounding area to the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths for the upkeep of widows[184][185]
- East Passage – presumably descriptive
- East Poultry Avenue and West Poultry Avenue – after the meat trade here at Smithfield Market[186]
- Eldon Street – after John Scott, 1st Earl of Eldon, Lord Chancellor in the early 19th century, or a tavern named after him[187][188]
- Elm Court – after the elm trees in the Temple Gardens[189][190]
- Essex Court – presumably after the earls of Essex, who owned a townhouse near here (hence the nearby Essex Street)[191][192]
- Exchange Arcade, Exchange Place and Exchange Square
F
- Falcon Court – after a former inn or shop of this name[193][194]
- Falcon Highwalk
- Fann Street – thought to be named after a local property owner or tradesman of this name[195][196]
- Farringdon Street – from Sir William or Nicholas de Farnedon/Faringdon, local sheriffs or aldermen in the 13th century[197][198][199]
- Fen Court, Fenchurch Avenue, Fenchurch Buildings, Fenchurch Place and Fenchurch Street – after a fen which was formerly located near here, and possibly the former St Gabriel Fenchurch[197][200][201]
- Fetter Lane and New Fetter Lane – formerly Fewter Lane, a Medieval term for an idler,[197][202] stemming originally from the Old French 'faitour' (lawyer)[203]
- Finch Lane – after Robert Fink (some sources: Aelfwin Finnk), who paid for the rebuilding of the former St Benet Fink Church in the 13th century; the church was destroyed in the 1666 Fire, and its replacement demolished in the 1840s[204][205]
- Finsbury Avenue, Finsbury Avenue Square, Finsbury Circus – after a Saxon burgh (settlement) owned by someone called Finn[204][198][206]
- Fish Street Hill, Fish Wharf and Old Fish Street Hill – after the former local fish trade here, centred on Billingsgate Fish Market[207][208][209]
- Fishmongers Hall Wharf – after the adjacent Fishmongers' Hall[204]
- Fleet Place, Fleet Street and Old Fleet Lane – after the now covered river Fleet which flowed near here[210][211][212]
- Fore Street and Fore Street Avenue – named after its location in front of the City walls[213][214][215]
- Fort Street – after the former armoury and artillery grounds located near here[213]
- Foster Lane – corruption of Vedast, after the adjacent St Vedast Church[213][216][182]
- Founders’ Court – after the Worshipful Company of Founders, who were formerly based here[217][218]
- Fountain Court – after the 17th-century fountain located here[218]
- Frederick’s Place – after John Frederick, Lord Mayor of London in 1661[219][218]
- French Ordinary Court – former site of an ‘ordinary’ (cheap eating place) for the local French community in the 17th century[219][220]
- Friar Street – after the former Dominican friary that stood here 1276–1538[219][221]
- Friday Street – after the former local fish trade here, with reference to the popularity of fish on this day owing to the Catholic Friday Fast; the street formerly extended all the way to Cheapside[222][223][221]
- Frobisher Crescent – after the explorer Martin Frobisher, who is buried in the nearby St Giles-without-Cripplegate
- Fruiterers Passage – after the Worshipful Company of Fruiterers, formerly based here[224]
- Furnival Street – after the nearby Furnival’s Inn, owned by Sir Richard Furnival in the late 1500s[225][226]
- Fye Foot Lane – corruption of ‘five foot’, after its original breadth; formerly Finamour Lane, after an individual with this surname[227][228]
G
- Garden Court – after the adjacent Temple Gardens[229]
- Gardner’s Lane – unknown, though thought to be after a local property owner; formerly called Dunghill Lane in the 18th century[230][229]
- Garlick Hill – as it led to the former Garlick Hythe, a wharf where garlic was unloaded from ships[231][229]
- George Yard – after the adjacent George and Vulture pub,[232] or another pub of this name formerly located here[233]
- Giltspur Street – thought to be the former location of a spurriers[234][235][236]
- Gloucester Court
- Godliman Street – thought to be after Godalming, Surrey, a family bearing this name, or the selling of godalmins (a type of skin/leather); it was formerly Paul’s Chain, after the chain placed here to prevent access to St Paul’s churchyard[237][238]
- Golden Lane – formerly Goldynglane, thought to be after a local property owner of the name Golding/Golda[237][238]
- Goldsmith Street – after the nearby Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths[239][240]
- Goodman’s Court and Goodman’s Yard – thought to be after the Goodman family, local farmers in the 16th century[239][241]
- Gophir Lane – formerly Gofaire Lane, thought to be for Elias Gofaire, 14th-century property owner[242][243]
- Goring Street – unknown; prior to 1885 known as Castle Court, after a former inn[242]
- Goswell Road – there is dispute over the origins of the name, with some sources claiming the road was named after a nearby garden called 'Goswelle' or 'Goderell' which belonged to Robert de Ufford, 1st Earl of Suffolk,[244] whilst others state it derives from "God's Well", and the traditional pagan practice of well-worship,[245] and others a 'Gode Well' formerly located here[246]
- Gough Square – after Richard Gough, wool merchant, local landowners in the early 1700s[242][246]
- Gracechurch Street – formerly Garscherch Street, Grass Church Street and Gracious Street, presumably after a local church (mostly likely St Benet Gracechurch and/or grassy area[247][248][249]
- Grand Avenue – presumably descriptive[250]
- Grant's Quay Wharf
- Gravel Lane – descriptive, after its gravelly texture[251][252]
- Great Bell Alley – formerly just Bell Alley, it was named for a former inn[251][253]
- Great Eastern Walk (Liverpool Street station) – presumably descriptive, or after the Great Eastern Railway company
- Great New Street, Little New Street, Middle New Street, New Street Court, New Street Square – built in the mid-1600s, and named simply as they were then new[254][185]
- Great St Helen’s and St Helen’s Place – after the adjacent St Helen's Church, Bishopsgate and former priory here of the same name[255][256]
- Great St Thomas Apostle – after the St Thomas the Apostle church, destroyed in the Great Fire[255][256]
- Great Swan Alley – after a former inn here called The White Swan[257][258]
- Great Tower Street – after the adjacent Tower of London[257][258]
- Great Trinity Lane, Little Trinity Lane and Trinity Lane – after the former Holy Trinity the Less church, demolished 1871[257][258]
- Great Winchester Street – following the Dissolution of the Monasteries, the nearby Austin Friars was acquired by Sir William Powlet, Lord Treasurer; his son Lord Winchester renamed it for himself[257]
- Green Arbour Court – thought to be from a 17th-century inn[257]
- The Green Yard
- Gresham Street – after Thomas Gresham, merchant and founder the Royal Exchange; the western part of this street was formerly known as Lad Lane, and the eastern part Cat Eaton Street (named literally after the cats here); they were amalgamated in 1845[259][260][261]
- Greyfriars Passage – after the Franciscan order, also known as the Grey friars, who owned land here in the Middle Ages[262][263]
- Greystoke Place – after a local 18th-century property owner of this name; prior to this it was Black Raven Alley, after a local inn[264][263]
- Grocer’s Hall Court and Grocer’s Hall Gardens – after the adjacent Worshipful Company of Grocers[263]
- Groveland Court
- Guildhall Buildings and Guildhall Yard – after the adjacent Guildhall[265]
- Guinness Court
- Gunpowder Square
- Gutter Lane – corruption of Guthrun/Godrun, thought to be after an early Danish landowner[266][267]
H
- Half Moon Court – after a former inn of this name[268][267]
- Hammett Street – after its 18th-century builder Benjamin Hammett, also Lord Mayor of London in 1797[269]
- Hanging Sword Alley – thought to be after a former inn, shop or fencing school of this name[268][270]
- Hanseatic Walk – presumably in reference to Hanseatic League
- Hare Place – after Hare House which formerly stood here; formerly Ram Alley, a noted criminal area, prompting the name change[258]
- Harp Alley – thought to be after a former 17th-century inn of this name[271][272]
- Harp Lane – after the Harp brewhouse which formerly stood here[271][51][272]
- Harrow Place – thought to be named for a harrow-making shop formerly located here after a former inn of this name[273][274]
- Hart Street – unknown, formerly Herthstrete and Hertstrete, possibly after the hearthstone trade here[275][235][274]
- Hartshorn Alley – after the Hart’s Horn inn which formerly stood here[275][276]
- Haydon Street and Haydon Walk – after John Heydon, Master of the Ordnance 1627–42, who lived near here[277][276]
- Hayne Street – after Haynes timber merchants and carpenters, who owned a shop here after a former inn of this name[277][278]
- Hen and Chicken Court – after a former inn(s) here of this name[279]
- Heneage Lane and Heneage Place – after Thomas Heneage, who acquired a house here after the dissolution of the nearby abbey[280][55]
- High Holborn, Holborn, Holborn Circus and Holborn Viaduct – thought to be from ‘hollow bourne’ i.e. the river Fleet which formerly flowed in a valley near here. The ‘High’ stems from the fact that rode led away from the river to higher ground. 'Circus' is a British term for a road junction, and 'viaduct' is a self-explanatory term.[281][282][283]
- High Timber Street – after a former timber hythe (wharf), recorded here from the late 13th century[284][285][286]
- Hind Court
- Hogarth Court – the artist William Hogarth formerly lodged here at a local tavern[287][288]
- Honey Lane – after honey that was formerly sold here as art of the Cheapside market[289][290][291]
- Hood Court
- Hope Square
- Hosier Lane – after the former hosiery trade based here[292][293][294]
- Houndsditch – generally thought to be literally after a local ditch where dead dogs were dumped;[295] however, others think it may refer to a nearby kennels[292][296][297]
- Huggin Court and Huggin Hill – formerly Hoggen Lane, as hogs were kept here[298][291][297]
- Hutton Street
I
- Idol Lane – formerly Idle Lane, it may be a personal name or denote local idlers[299][300]
- India Street – after the former warehouses here of the East India Company; prior to 1913 it was George Street[299][301]
- Inner Temple Lane – after the adjacent Inner Temple[302]
- Ireland Yard – after haberdasher William Ireland, who owned a house here in the 1500s[303][304]
- Ironmonger Lane – an ancient name, after the former ironmongery trade here[303][305][304]
J
- Jewry Street – after the former Jewish community which was based here; formerly Poor Jewry Street[306][307][308][309]
- John Carpenter Street – after John Carpenter, Town Clerk of London in the mid-15th century[306][310]
- John Milton Passage – after the author John Milton
- John Trundle Highwalk – after John Trundle, 16th–17th-century author and book seller
- John Wesley Highwalk – after John Wesley, founder of Methodism
- Johnsons Court – after a local 16th-century property owning family of this name; the connection with Samuel Johnson is coincidental[283][310]
K
- Keats Place
- Kennett Wharf Lane – after its late 18th-century owner[311]
- Kinghorn Street – formerly King Street, renamed in 1885 to avoid confusion with many other streets of this name[308][312]
- Kingscote Street – formerly King Edward Street (for Edward VI), renamed in 1885 to avoid confusion with the street of this name off Newgate Street[308][312]
- King Street – built after the Great Fire and named for Charles II[313][314]
- King Edward Street – named for Edward VI, who turned the adjacent Greyfriars monastery into a hospital; it was formerly known as Stinking Lane[308][315][312]
- King William Street – named for William IV, reigning monarch when the street was built in 1829–1835[316][315][314]
- King’s Arms Yard – named after a former inn of this name[308][314]
- King’s Bench Walk – named for the adjacent housing for lawyers of the King’s Bench[308][317]
- Knightrider Court and Knightrider Street – thought to be literally a street where knights used to ride[318][319][320]
L
- Lakeside Terrace – descriptive
- Lambert Jones Mews – after Lambert Jones, Victorian-era councilman
- Lambeth Hill – corruption of Lambert/Lambart, local property owner[321][322][323]
- Langthorn Court – named after a former property owner of this name[324]
- Lauderdale Place – named for the Earls of Lauderdale, who owned a house here[325]
- Laurence Pountney Hill and Laurence Pountney Lane – after the former St Laurence Pountney church, built by Sir John de Pulteney but destroyed in the Great Fire[326][327][328]
- Lawrence Lane – after the nearby St Lawrence Jewry church[329][216][330]
- Leadenhall Market, Leadenhall Place and Leadenhall Street – after the Leaden Hall, a house owned by Sir Hugh Neville in the 14th century[331][141][332]
- Lime Street – Medieval name denoting a place of lime kilns[333][334][335]
- Limeburner Lane – after the lime burning trade formerly located here[305]
- Lindsey Street – unknown[335]
- Little Britain – thought to be after Robert le Bretoun, 13th-century local landowner, probably from Brittany[333][336][337]
- Little Somerset Street
- Liverpool Street – built in 1829 and named for Robert Jenkinson, 2nd Earl of Liverpool, Prime Minister 1812–1827[338][339]
- Lloyd’s Avenue – as the headquarters of the Lloyd's Register (named for Lloyd's Coffee House) were located here[340]
- Lombard Court and Lombard Lane – from Lombardy, as this area was home to a community from there; the name was altered from Lombard Street to avoid confusion with the other street of this name[341][342]
- Lombard Street – from the wool merchants from Lombardy who traded and lent money here from the 13th century onwards[341][343][342]
- London Bridge – self-explanatory; for centuries this was the only bridge crossing the Thames[344]
- London Street and New London Street – named after local 18th-century property owner John London, not the city; the ‘New’ section was a later extension[328][344]
- London Wall – after the city wall which formerly ran along this route (though there are still some ruins visible)[345][346][344]
- Long Lane – a descriptive name[347][344]
- Lothbury – meaning ‘burgh’ of Lotha/Hlothere, a 7th-century name[348][89][349]
- Lovat Street – thought to be either a corruption of Lucas Lane, after a local landowner, or for Lord Lovat, local politician; it was formerly ‘Love Lane’, probably a euphemism for prostitution, and changed to avoid confusion with the other city lane of this name[350][349]
- Love Lane – unknown, but possible with reference to the prostitution that occurred here in the 16th century; it was formerly Roper Lane, probably after the rope making trade, but possibly after a person with this surname[350][351][349]
- Lower Thames Street and Upper Thames Street – thought to mark the bank of the Thames in Roman/Saxon times[352][353][349]
- Ludgate Broadway, Ludgate Circus, Ludgate Hill and Ludgate Square – the former city gate of this name that formerly stood here, thought to an Old English term for ‘postern-gate’[350][354][355]
M
- Mac’s Place
- Magpie Alley – after a former inn here of this name[340][356]
- Mansell Street – named after either local landowner Sir William Leman, 2nd Baronet for his wife Mary Mansell[357] or Mansel Leman, also a local property owner in the 17th century[358]
- Mansion House Place and Mansion House Street – after the adjacent Mansion House[359]
- Mark Lane – unknown, though possibly a corruption of ‘Martha’; formerly known as Martlane and Marke Lane[360][361][362]
- Martin Lane – after the former St Martin Orgar church, demolished (save for the tower) in 1820[363][327][364][365]
- Mason’s Avenue – after the Worshipful Company of Masons, whose headquarters formerly stood here[363]
- Middle Street – descriptive[366]
- Middlesex Passage – formerly Middlesex Court, thought to be after Middlesex House which formerly stood here[367]
- Middlesex Street (Petticoat Lane) and Petticoat Square – as this street forms the boundary of the City with the county of Middlesex, with the alternative name Petticoat stemming from the clothes market formerly held here; prior to 1602 it was known as Hog Lane after the animal[367][368][366]
- Middle Temple Lane – after the adjacent Middle Temple[367][366]
- Milk Street – after the milk and dairy trade that formerly occurred here in connection with the nearby Cheapside market[369][370][371]
- Millennium Bridge – as it was built to commemorate the 2000 millennium
- Milton Court and Milton Street – after an early 19th-century lease owner of this name, or possibly the poet John Milton; prior to this it was Grub/Grubbe Street, after the former owner, or perhaps to a 'grube' (drain)[372][373][374]
- Mincing Lane – after ‘minchins/mynecen’, a term for the nuns who formerly held property here prior to 1455[372][375][376]
- Minerva Walk
- Miniver Place – after the type of fur, named by connection with the nearby Skinner's Hall[377]
- Minories – after a former church/convent here of the Little Sisters (Sorores Minores) nuns[372][161][378]
- Minster Court and Minster Pavement
- Mitre Square and Mitre Street – after the former Mitre Inn which stood near here[372][276]
- Modern Court
- Monkwell Square – after the former street here also of this name, variously recorded as Mogwellestrate or Mukewellestrate, and thought to refer to a well owned by one Mucca[379][380][381]
- Montague Street – after Ralph Montagu, 1st Duke of Montagu, who owned a mansion here[382]
- Monument Street – after the nearby Monument to the Great Fire of London[382][383]
- Moorfields and Moorfield Highwalk – after the marshy moorlands that formerly stood here[382]
- Moorgate and Moorgate Place – after the gate, leading to the marshy moorlands beyond, that formerly stood here[382][384]
- Moor Lane and Moor Place – after the marshy moorlands that formerly stood here[382][385][384]
- Muscovy Street – after the Muscovy Company of Elizabethan times, or the Russian merchants formerly based here[386][387]
N
- Nettleton Court
- Nevill Lane
- New Bell Yard
- New Bridge Street – named in 1765 as it leads to the then new Blackfriars Bridge[388][389]
- Newbury Street – formerly New Street, renamed 1890 to avoid confusion with other streets of this name[388][390]
- Newcastle Close – either after a former inn called the Castle located here,[388] or after the city, with reference to the coal trade here[391]
- Newcastle Court
- New Change, New Change Passage and Old Change Court – formerly Old Change, and named for a former mint and gold exchange here[388][392]
- New Court – built circa 1700 and named simply because it was then new[393]
- Newgate Street – after a new gate built here in the 1000s; the eastern part of this street was formerly Bladder Street, after the bladder selling trade here[394][395][390]
- Newman’s Court – after Lawrence Newman, who leased land here in the 17th century[392]
- New Street – named simply as it was new when first built[254][390]
- New Union Street – named as it united Moor Lane and Moorfields; it was formerly Gunn Alley[254]
- Nicholas Lane and Nicholas Passage – after the former St Nicholas Acons church, destroyed in the Great Fire[254][396][397]
- Noble Street – after Thomas de Noble, local 14th-century property developer[398][397]
- Northumberland Alley – after Northumberland House, house of the Earls of Northumberland, which formerly stood here[399][400]
- Norton Folgate – the former word a corruption of ‘North Town’, and the latter after the local Folgate family[399]
- Norwich Street – unknown; formerly Norwich Court, and prior to that Magpie Yard, probably from a local inn[400]
- Nun Court – thought to be after a local builder/property owner[401]
O
- Oat Lane – as oats were formerly sold here in the Middle Ages[402][291][403]
- Octagon Arcade (Broadgate)
- Old Bailey – after a bailey fortification that formerly stood here[82][404][403]
- Old Billingsgate Walk – after the former watergate of this name, the derivation of ‘Billings’ in unknown[58]
- Old Jewry – after a Saxon-era settlement of Jews here, thought to be termed ‘Old’ following the Edict of Expulsion of all Jews from England by Edward I[405][307][406]
- Old Mitre Court – after a former tavern of this name here[405][406]
- Old Seacole Lane – thought to be after the coal trade that came from the sea and up the river Fleet here[407][408][409]
- Old Watermen's Walk
- Outwich Street – after either Oteswich/Ottewich, meaning ‘Otho’s dwelling’, a name for this area of London in the early Middle Ages[410] or the former St Martin Outwich church, named for the Outwich family, demolished 1874[411]
- Oystergate Walk – after a watergate here, and the oyster trade[412]
- Oxford Court – after a former house here owned by the Earls of Oxford[410][413]
P
- Pageantmaster Court
- Pancras Lane – after St Pancras, Soper Lane church which stood here until destroyed in the Great Fire; it was formerly Needlers Lane, after the needle making trade here[414][305][415]
- Panyer Alley – after a Medieval brewery here called the ‘panyer’ (basket)[414][416][417]
- Paternoster Lane, Paternoster Row and Paternoster Square – after the paternoster (rosary) makers who formerly worked here[418][419][420]
- Paul’s Walk
- Pemberton Row – after James Pemberton, Lord Mayor of London in 1611[421]
- Pepys Street – after 17th-century diarist Samuel Pepys, who lived and worked here[422][423]
- Peterborough Court – after the abbots of Peterborough, who prior to the Dissolution of the Monasteries had a house here[424][425]
- Peter’s Hill – after St Peter, Paul's Wharf church, which formerly stood here until destroyed in the 1666 fire[424][425]
- Petty Wales – unknown, but possibly after a Welsh community formerly based here[426]
- Philpot Lane – commemorates prominent local family the Philpots; originally probably after John Philpot, 14th-century grocer[427][428][429]
- Pilgrim Street – thought to be a former route for pilgrims to St Paul's cathedral; formerly known as Stonecutters Alley and Little Bridge Street[430]
- Pindar Street – after Paul Pindar, 14th–16th-century diplomat, who had a house here[431][430]
- Pinner’s Passage
- Plaisterers Highwalk – after the nearby Worshipful Company of Plaisterers
- Plantation Lane
- Playhouse Yard – after the Blackfriars Playhouse, which stood here in the 17th century[41][432]
- Pleydell Court and Pleydell Street – formerly Silver Street, it was renamed in 1848 by association with the neighbouring Bouverie Street; the Bouverie family were by this time known as the Pleydell-Bouveries[41][72]
- Plough Court – thought to be either from an inn of this name, or an ironmongers; formerly Plough Yard[41]
- Plough Place – after the Plough/Plow, a 16th-century eating place located here[41][432]
- Plumtree Court – thought to be after either literally a plumtree, or else an inn of this name[41][432]
- Pope’s Head Alley – after the Pope’s Head Tavern which formerly stood here, thought to stem from the 14th-century Florentine merchants who were in Papal service[433][434]
- Poppins Court – shortening of Popinjay Court, meaning a parrot; it is thought to stem from the crest of Cirencester Abbey (which featured the bird), who owned a town house here[435][436]
- Portsoken Street – after ‘port-soke’, as it was a soke near a port (gate) of the City[437][438]
- Post Office Court – after the General Post Office which formerly stood near here[437][439]
- Poultry – after the poultry which was formerly sold at the market here[437][440][441]
- Priest’s Court – with allusion to the adjacent St Vedast Church[442]
- Primrose Hill – thought to be named after a builder of this name, or possibly the primroses which formerly grew here; formerly called Salisbury Court, as it approaches Salisbury Square[443][442]
- Primrose Street – thought to be named after a builder of this name, or possibly the primroses which formerly grew here[443][442]
- Prince’s Street – named in reference to the adjacent King and Queen Streets[444][445]
- Printers Inn Court – after the printing industry which formerly flourished here
- Printer Street – after the printing industry which formerly flourished here[446][445]
- Priory Court
- Prudent Passage
- Pudding Lane – from the former term ‘pudding’ meaning animals' entrails, which were dumped here in Medieval times by local butchers; it was formerly Rothersgate, after a watergate located here[446][447][448]
- Puddle Dock – thought to be either descriptive (after the water here), or named for a local wharf owner of this name[449][450]
- Pump Court – after a former pump located here[450]
Q
- Quality Court – a descriptive name, as it was superior when built compared with the surrounding streets[451]
- Queenhithe – formerly Ethelredshythe, after its founder King Æthelred the Unready, and hythe meaning a wharf/landing place; it was renamed after its later owner Matilda of Scotland, wife of Henry I[452][453]
- Queen Isabella Way –
- Queens Head Passage – after a former house here called the Queens Head, demolished 1829[454]
- Queen Street and Queen Street Place – named in honour of Catherine of Braganza, wife of Charles II[454][315][455]
- Queen Victoria Street – built in 1871 and named for the then reigning monarch[456][315][453]
R
- Rangoon Street – after the former warehouses here of the East India Company, Burma then been part of British India[299][457]
- Red Lion Court – after a former inn of this name[458][459]
- Regent Street – after the Prince Regent
- Rising Sun Court – after the adjacent pub of this name[460]
- Robin Hood Court – thought to be after a former inn of this name[461]
- Rolls Buildings and Rolls Passage – the former site of a house containing the rolls of Chancery[462][463]
- Rood Lane – after a former rood (cross) set up at St Margaret Pattens in the early 16th century; it became an object of veneration and offering, which helped pay for the repair of the church, but was torn down in 1558 as an item of excessive superstition[464][465][466]
- Ropemaker Street – descriptive, after the rope making trade formerly located here[464][466]
- Rose Alley – after a former inn of this name[467]
- Rose and Crown Court
- Rose Street – after a former tavern of this name here; it was formerly Dicer Lane, possibly after either a dice maker here, or a corruption of ‘ditcher’[468]
- Royal Exchange Avenue and Royal Exchange Buildings – after the adjacent Royal Exchange[469]
- Russia Row – possibly to commemorate Russia's entry into the Napoleonic wars[470]
S
- St Alphage Garden and St Alphage Highwalk – after the adjacent St Alphege London Wall church, now surviving only in ruins[471][472]
- St Andrew Street – after the adjacent St Andrew’s Church[472]
- St Andrew’s Hill – after the adjacent St Andrew-by-the-Wardrobe church[472]
- St Benet’s Place – after the former St Benet Gracechurch which stood near here; destroyed in the Great Fire, its replacement was then demolished in 1868[80][246]
- St Botolph Row and St Botolph Street – after the adjacent St Botolph's Aldgate church
- St Clare Street – after a former church/convent here of the Little Sisters of St Clare[473][378]
- St Dunstan’s Alley, St Dunstan’s Hill and St Dunstan’s Lane – after the former St Dunstan-in-the-East church, largely destroyed in the Blitz and now a small garden[216][474]
- St Dunstan’s Court – after the nearby St Dunstan-in-the-West church[474]
- St Georges Court – after the former St George Botolph Lane church nearby, demolished in 1904
- St Giles Terrace – after the adjacent St Giles-without-Cripplegate church
- St James’s Passage – after St James Duke's Place church, demolished 1874[475]
- St Katherine’s Row – after the St Katherine Coleman church, demolished in 1926[476][477]
- St Margaret’s Close – after the adjacent St Margaret Lothbury church
- St Martin’s le Grand – after a former church of this name here, demolished in 1538[478][479][480]
- St Mary at Hill – after the St Mary-at-Hill church here[481][482][483]
- St Mary Axe – after the former Church of St Mary Axe here, demolished in the 1500s[481][479][483]
- St Michael’s Alley – after the adjacent St Michael, Cornhill church[483]
- St Mildred’s Court – after the former St Mildred, Poultry church, demolished 1872[481][483]
- St Olave’s Court – after the former St Olave Old Jewry church here, of which only the tower remains[484][483]
- St Paul’s Churchyard – after the adjacent St Paul’s Cathedral; the churchyard was formerly far more extensive, but has since been built over[485][486]
- St Peter’s Alley – after the adjacent St Peter upon Cornhill church[486]
- St Swithins Lane – after the former St Swithin, London Stone, largely destroyed in the Blitz and later demolished[487][396][488]
- Salisbury Court and Salisbury Square – after the London house of the bishops of Salisbury, located here prior to the Reformation[489][490]
- Salters Court – after the former hall of the Worshipful Company of Salters, moved in 1600[489][413]
- Salter’s Hall Court – after the former hall of the Worshipful Company of Salters, destroyed in the Blitz[489][413]
- Sandy’s Row – after a builder or property owner of this name[491]
- Saracens Head Yard – after a former inn of this name[491][492]
- Savage Gardens – after Thomas Savage, who owned a house here in the 1620s[493][492]
- Scott’s Lane
- Seething Lane – formerly Shyvethenestrat and Sivethenelane, deriving from Old English sifetha, meaning chaff/siftings, after the local corn threshing[494][495][496]
- Serjeants Inn – after the former Serjeant's Inn located here before the Blitz[497][496]
- Sermon Lane – thought to be after Adam la Sarmoner, 13th-century landowner[497][498][499]
- Shafts Court – named after a maypole (or ‘shaft’) that formerly stood nearby at the junction of Leadenhall Street and St Mary Axe[500]
- Sherborne Lane – earlier Shirebourne Lane, alteration of the Medieval Shitteborelane, in reference to a public privy here[501][502][503]
- Ship Tavern Passage – after the nearby Ship tavern[504]
- Shoe Lane – as this lane formerly led to a shoe-shaped landholding/field[505][506][504]
- Shorter Street
- Silk Street – thought to be named for its late 18th-century builder, or the silk trade formerly located here[507][508]
- Sise Lane – as it formerly led to St Benet Sherehog church, which was dedicated to St Osyth (later corrupted to Sythe, then Sise)[507][396][508]
- Skinners Lane – after the fur trade that was former prevalent here; it was formerly Maiden Lane, after a local inn or shop[507][509][377]
- Smithfield Street and West Smithfield – derives from the Old English ‘smooth-field’, a series of fields outside the City walls[510][377][377]
- Snow Hill and Snow Hill Court – formerly Snore Hill or Snowrehill, exact meaning unknown[510][511][512]
- Southampton Buildings – after Southampton House which formerly stood here, built for the bishops of Lincoln in the 12th century and later acquired by the earls of Southampton[510]
- South Place and South Place Mews – named as it is south of Moorfields[513][514]
- Southwark Bridge – as it leads to Southwark[515]
- Speed Highwalk – after John Speed, Stuart-era mapmaker, who is buried in the nearby St Giles-without-Cripplegate
- Staining Lane – from Saxon-era ‘Staeninga haga’, meaning place owned by the people of Staines[516][517][518]
- Staple Inn and Staple Inn Buildings – after the adjacent Staple Inn[509][518]
- Star Alley – after a former inn here of this name[519]
- Stationer’s Hall Court – after the adjacent hall of the Worshipful Company of Stationers and Newspaper Makers[520][521]
- Steelyard Passage – after the Hanseatic League Base, now under Cannon St. Station
- Stew Lane – after a former stew (hot bath) here[522][519]
- Stonecutter Street – after the former stonecutting trade that took place here[523][521]
- Stone House Court – after a former medieval building here called the Stone House[521]
- Stoney Lane – simply a descriptive name, streets typically being mud tracks in former times[524][521]
- Suffolk Lane – after a former house here belonging to the dukes of Suffolk[525][526][527]
- Sugar Bakers Court – presumably descriptive
- Sugar Quay Walk – presumably descriptive
- Sun Court
- Sun Street and Sun Street Passage – after a former inn of this name[525]
- Swan Lane – after a former inn here called the Olde Swanne; formerly Ebbgate, after a watergate here[528][177]
- Swedeland Court – after the former Swedish community based here[529][528]
T
- Talbot Court – after a former inn of this name (or 'Tabard')[530][529]
- Tallis Street – after the 16th-century composer Thomas Tallis, by connection with the adjacent former Guildhall School of Music and Drama[531][532]
- Telegraph Street – renamed (from Bell Alley, after a former inn) when the General Post Office’s telegraph department opened there[533][518][534]
- Temple Avenue and Temple Lane – after the adjacent Temple legal district[533][535]
- The Terrace (off King’s Bench Walk) – presumably descriptive
- Thavies Inn – after a house here owned by the armourer Thomas (or John) Thavie in the 14th century[536][537]
- Thomas More Highwalk – after 16th-century author and statesman Thomas More
- Threadneedle Street and Threadneedle Walk – originally Three Needle Street, after the sign on a needle shop located here, later corrupted due to the obvious collocation of ‘thread’ and ‘needle’[538][539][540]
- Three Barrels Walk
- Three Cranes Walk
- Three Nun Court
- Three Quays Walk
- Throgmorton Avenue and Throgmorton Street – after 16th-century diplomat Nicholas Throckmorton; the Avenue was built in 1876[538][315][540]
- Tokenhouse Yard – after a 17th-century token house here (a house selling tokens during coin shortages)[541][542]
- Took’s Court – after local 17th-century builder/owner Thomas Tooke[541][543]
- Tower Hill Terrace – after the adjacent Tower Hill[544][545]
- Tower Royal – after a former Medieval tower and later royal lodging house that stood here; ‘Royal’ is in fact a corruption of La Réole, France, where local wine merchants hailed from[544][545]
- Trig Lane – after one of several people with the surname Trigge, recorded here in the Middle Ages[526]
- Trinity Square – after the adjacent Trinity House[546][547]
- Trump Street – unknown, but thought to be after either a local builder or property owner[546] or the local trumpet-making industry[547]
- Tudor Street – after the Tudor dynasty, with reference to Henry VIII’s nearby Bridewell Palace[546][548]
- Turnagain Lane – descriptive, as it is a dead-end; recorded in the 13th century as Wendageyneslane[549][550][548]
U
V
- Victoria Avenue – named in 1901 in honour of Queen Victoria[553][33]
- Victoria Embankment – after Queen Victoria, reigning queen at the time of the building of the Thames Embankment[553][33]
- Vine Street – formerly Vine Yard, unknown but thought to be ether from a local inn or a vineyard[553][554]
- Vintners Court – after the adjacent Worshipful Company of Vintners building; the area has been associated with the wine trade as far back as the 10th century[555][554]
- Viscount Street – formerly Charles Street, both names after the Charles Egerton, Viscount Brackley, of which there were three in the 17th–18th centuries[556][557]
W
- Waithman Street – after Robert Waithman, Lord Mayor of London 1823–18233[558][559]
- Walbrook and Walbrook Wharf – after the Walbrook stream which formerly flowed here, possibly with reference to the Anglo-Saxon 'wealh' meaning 'foreigner' (i.e. the native Britons, or 'Welsh')[560][561][562]
- Wardrobe Place and Wardrobe Terrace – after the Royal Wardrobe which formerly stood here until destroyed in the Great Fire of 1666[563][564]
- Warwick Lane, Warwick Passage and Warwick Square – after the Neville family, earls of Warwick, who owned a house near here in the 1400s; formerly Old Dean’s Lane, after a house here resided in by the Dean of St Paul’s[565][566][567]
- Watergate – after a watergate which stood here on the Thames[565][567]
- Water Lane – after a former watergate that stood here by the Thames; formerly Spurrier Lane[568]
- Watling Court and Watling Street – corrupted from the old name of Athelingestrate (Saxon Prince Street), by association with the more famous Roman Watling Street[565][569][570]
- Well Court – after the numerous wells formerly located in this area[571]
- Whalebone Court
- Whitecross Place
- Whitecross Street – after a former white cross which stood near here in the 1200s[106][572]
- Whitefriars Street – after the Carmelite order (known as the White friars), who were granted land here by Edward I[106][572]
- White Hart Court – after a former inn of this name[106][573]
- White Hart Street
- White Horse Yard – after a former inn of this name[574][572]
- White Kennett Street – after White Kennett, rector of St Botolph's Aldgate in the early 1700s[574][572]
- White Lion Court – after a former inn of this name, destroyed by fire in 1765[574][572]
- White Lion Hill – this formerly led to White Lion Wharf, which is thought to have been named after a local inn[574]
- White Lyon Court
- Whittington Avenue – after Richard Whittington, former Lord Mayor of London[574][575]
- Widegate Street – thought to be after a gate that formerly stood on this street; formerly known as Whitegate Alley[576][577]
- Willoughby Highwalk – presumably after Sir Francis Willoughby, who is buried in the nearby St Giles-without-Cripplegate Church
- Wilson Street
- Wine Office Court – after an office here that granted licenses to sell wine in the 17th century[578][579]
- Wood Street – as wood and fire logs were sold here as part of the Cheapside market[580][395][581]
- Wormwood Street – after the wormwood formerly grown here for medicine[100][582]
- Wrestler’s Court – after a former Tudor-era house here of this name[582]
gollark: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2105.09938.pdf
gollark: A fun bit is that tasks and the privilege level are entirely orthogonal, and the security level of a thing is basically just what environment and upvalues it has.
gollark: All the background tasks are just Lua coroutines. You simply submit a function to run and a bit of metadata, and it runs them in the event loop.
gollark: PotatOS has a much better architecture for this.
gollark: I don't do portability; anyone trying to make my code work will have much bigger issues than the *platform*.
See also
References
Citations
- Fairfield 1983, p. 1.
- Ekwall, 1954 & p159.
- Bebbington, 1972 & p14.
- Bebbington, 1972 & p15.
- Fairfield 1983, p. 2.
- Ekwall, 1954 & p81.
- Bebbington, 1972 & p16.
- Bebbington, 1972 & p282.
- Fairfield 1983, p. 5.
- Ekwall, 1954 & p195.
- Bebbington, 1972 & p20.
- Mills, A.D. (2010). A Dictionary of London Place-Names. Oxford University Press. p. 4. ISBN 9780199566785.Fairfield 1983, p. 6Bebbington, 1972 & p20
- Fairfield 1983, p. 6.
- Ben Weinreb and Christopher Hibbert (1983) The London Encyclopedia. London, BCA:14
- Gillian Bebbington (1972) Street Names of London. London, Batsford: 21
- 'Aldermary Churchyard – Aldgate Ward', A Dictionary of London (1918), accessed: 21 May 2007
- Ekwall, 1954 & p90-1.
- Bebbington, 1972 & p20-1.
- Fairfield 1983, p. 8.
- Bebbington, 1972 & p22.
- Fairfield, 1983 & p9.
- Bebbington, 1972 & p23.
- Fairfield 1983, p. 9-10.
- Fairfield, 1983 & p10.
- Bebbington, 1972 & p24.
- Bebbington, 1972 & p25.
- Bebbington, 1972 & p27.
- Fairfield, 1983 & p13.
- Bebbington, 1972 & p29.
- Bebbington, 1972 & p30.
- Fairfield, 1983 & p18.
- Fairfield, 1983 & p316.
- Bebbington, 1972 & p322.
- "London's Alleys – Barbon Alley, EC3". IanVisits. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
- Bebbington, 1972 & p34.
- Fairfield, 1983 & p21.
- Fairfield, 1983 & p22.
- Bebbington, 1972 & p35.
- Ekwall, 1954 & p160.
- Bebbington, 1972 & p35-6.
- Fairfield, 1983 & p250.
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