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Silver Street, London

Street in medieval London, England From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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51.51735°N 0.09454°W / 51.51735; -0.09454 Silver Street was a street in London. It ran from the north end of Noble Street at Falcon Square to Wood Street.[1] It originated in medieval times, and is one of the streets shown on a map known as the "Woodcut map of London" or the "Agas" map, which survives in a 17th-century version.[2][3]

Its inhabitants included the Mountjoy family with whom William Shakespeare lodged at the beginning of the 17th century.[3] According to Charles Nicholl, who has written a detailed analysis of Shakespeare's life on Silver Street, their house can be identified on the "Woodcut map".[4] The Mountjoys were Huguenots who ran a business making luxury headgear for ladies, including theatrical costumes.

Another resident was John Wolfall, who lived there in the 1590s. Ostensibly a skinner, Wolfall´s main activity was arranging loans.[5]

During the Second World War the Cripplegate area, where the street was located, was virtually destroyed in the Blitz.

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Legacy

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"This was the Parish Church of St. Olave Silver Street, Destroyed by the Dreadfull Fire in the Year 1666"

A commemorative stone marks the site of St Olave's Church, Silver Street, which was destroyed in the Great Fire of London.

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Plaque on Noble Street commemorating Shakespeare and the Mountjoys

On 21 April 2016, the City of London installed a blue plaque in Noble Street, near the site of the Mountjoys' house.[6][7] The plaque reads "William Shakespeare had lodgings near here in 1604, at the house of Christopher and Mary Mountjoy".

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References

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