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A07894 A briefe chronicle, of the successe of times, from the creation of the world, to this instant· Containing, the originall & liues of our ancient fore-fathers, before and after the Floude, as also, of all the monarchs, emperours, kinges, popes, kingdomes, common-weales, estates and gouernments, in most nations of this worlde: and how in alteration, or succession, they haue continued to this day. Munday, Anthony, 1553-1633. 1611 (1611) STC 18263; ESTC S112963 308,814 636

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Ludgate Westward and the Bridge-gate ouer Thames South-ward But other Gates and Posterns for ease and conueniency of passage were afterwarde made as mens affayres required to other quarters of the Citty A Posterne gate was somtime neere to the Tower of London which decaying by length of time and a deepe Ditch made without the wall it fell downe in the year 1440. the eighteenth of King Henry the sixt and was neuer after builte againe but a plaine Cottage of Timber Lath and Loame with a narrow passage being erected instead thereof it so continueth Aldgate was next in the East so named by the antiquity thereof for it was so called in king Edgars time and the Soke or Franchise wyth the Port of Aldgate and all customs thereto appertaining were likewise giuen by Matilda Q. to Henry the first to the Priour of the B. Trinitie within Aldgate and by her founded in as ample and free maner as she enioyed them The third was Bishopsgate toward the North built by some Bishop of London as is imagined for other certainty is not as yet found which Gate did much ease to such as trauailed East and by North as to Norffolke Suffolke Cambridgeshire c. because before the erection thereof such as iournied out at Aldgate of necessity helde on to the miles end and turning them on the lefte hand to Blethon-hall now Bednal-Greene r●de directly to Cambridge Heath and so tooke their iournies North or East and by North or occasion required Otherwise refusing Aldgate way they had no other helpe then out at Aldersgate through Aldersgate streete and Goswell street now tearmed Pickt-hatch towards Iseldon and by a Crosse of stone on their right hand set vp for a marke by the North end of Golding-lane passed throgh a long street yet called Ald-streete or Old-street to another Crosse by Sewers ditch Church where now stands a smiths Fordge and there they turned againe North-wards to Totenham Enfield waltham ware c. This Bishopsgate the Dutch Marchants of the Haunce Stiliard or Guildhalla Tentonicorum were bound by couenant both to repayre and defend at all times of daunger and extremity The fourth was a Posterne now called Mooregate which one Thomas Faulconer Maior of London An. 1413. and third of Henry the fift caused to be made there on the Moores side where neuer Gate was before that people might passe vpon cause-wayes into the fielde for recreation because the fielde was then a marish The fift Gate was the Posterne of Criplesgate so called long before the Conquest in regarde of Criples begging there and the body of S. Edmond the Martyre was brought into London thereat when it was conuayed from Bedrisworth now called Bury S. Edmunds thorough the East Saxons Kingdome to the parish church of S. Gregory neere to the Cathedrall church of S. Paul where it rested 3. daies This posterne of Cripplesgate was a prison of commitment for Cittizens and others being arrested for debte or common trespasses as now the Compters are it was new builded by the Brewers of London An. 1244. But in An. 1483. Edmund Shaa or Shaw Goldsmith and Maior of London gaue 400. Markes by his will and stuffe of the Olde gate to builde it againe new as now it is which his executors performed in the yeare 1491. The sixt was Aldresgate or Aldersgate not Aldrich Elders or Elderngate as deriued from ancient men that builded it or trées there sometime growing but from antiquity of the gate it selfe being one of the foure that were first builded and to serue the North-parts as Aldgate did for the East both bearing the name of Aldgate and Alder or Aldersgate to differ their seniority in building The 7. was a Posterne gate made in the 6. yeare of Edw. the 6. in the Wall of the dissolued cloyster of Gray F●iers now cald Christs Church and Hospitall seruing for passage to S. Bartholmewes in Smithfield The 8. west and by North was called Newgate because it was later buylded then the rest by reason that S. Pauls Church being burned in the Conquerors time about the yeare 1086. Mauritius then bish of London not repayring the old church but seeking to begin another extended the work in such largenes of ground that al passage from Aldgate in the East to Ludgate in the west was almost stopt vp Whereupon this gate was first deuised and made and so named seruing aptly for passage cariages from Aldgate along Cornhil through West-cheap S. Nicholas Shambles and the Market taking name of Newgate to any Westward part ouer Oldborne bridge or turning without the gate into Smithfield to Iseldon or any part North by west It hath bin a Gaole or prison for sellons other offenders long time as the records in K. Iohns time testifieth And in an 1422. the first of Henry 6. the executors to Richard Whittington had license to reedify the said gate which they did with his goods The 8. gate was Ludgate in the west builded by k. Lud before Christs natiuitie 66. years seruing for the west as Aldgate for the East was repaired with the stones of the Iewes defaced houses when the Barons were in armes in k. Iohns time as Aldgate the other gates thē were A notable testimony to confirm this assertion apeared in the year 158● when the gate was taken downe to be new builded for a stone was then found in the wal which had bin taken from one of those Iewes houses with this Inscription thereon but in Hebrew Caracters Haec est statio Rabbi Moses filij insignis Rabbi Isaac This is the station or ward of Rabbi Moses son of the honorable Rabbi Isaac And it seemed to haue bin fixed in the front of some one of the Iewes houses as a note or signe that such a one dwelled there It was made a frée prison in the 1. yeare of K. Richard 2. Nicholas Brembar being then maior after confirmed in the time of Iohn Northampton Maior 1382 by a common Counsel in the Guild-hal the fréemen of the City for debt trepasses accounts contempts shold be imprisoned in Ludgate for treasons fellonies murders and other criminall offences Newgate should be the prison Lastly there is also a breach in the Citty Wall and a Bridge made of Timber ouer the Fleete Dike betwixte Fleete-bridge and Thames directlie ouer against the House of Bride-Well but it is not as as I thinke called any Gate Now concerning the South-side of the Citty and that it was sometime walled too the Citty being then round engirt with a Wal the Testimony of William Fitz-Stephen who wrote in the raigne of King Henry the second may serue to approue it for these are his very wordes The Wall is high and great well towred on the North-side with due distances betweene the Towers On the South-side also the Citty was walled and towred but the Fishfull Riuer of Thames with his