15th Century London Map

15th Century London Map. The Street in late medieval London Trades and Noise Carol McGrath Writer The map details London between 1270 and 1300 when its population reached a peak not reached again until the mid 16th century Some of the map image files are rather large, since if they are compressed too much, they become illegible

Tower of London in the 15th century Stock Photo, Royalty Free Image
Tower of London in the 15th century Stock Photo, Royalty Free Image from www.alamy.com

On the reverse of the map is Lambeth and the Archbishop of Canterbury's London. Londonist does a good job introducing us to two maps of old London published by the Historic Towns Trust a few years ago—a map of medieval London (1270-1300) published in 2019, and a map of Tudor London (1520) published in 2018 (and updated in 2022)

Tower of London in the 15th century Stock Photo, Royalty Free Image

[7] This is over three times the size of the next largest English. MoEML now includes an encyclopedia of early modern London people and places, a library of mayoral shows and other texts rich in London toponyms, and a forthcoming versioned. On the reverse of the map is Lambeth and the Archbishop of Canterbury's London.

Plan of the City of LONDON before the Fire Anno Domini 1666. London. MoEML began in 1999 as a digital atlas of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century London based on the 1560s Agas woodcut map of the city Some of the map image files are rather large, since if they are compressed too much, they become illegible

Antique 16th Century Map of London by Munster, 1598 nwcartographic. In the 1070s, London's population has been estimated at around 18,000 700 years is a very long time ago, and most of us are probably a little hazy about that period in history