Geoff Browell
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Eileen Chanin
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Medieval Strand
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The Strand was categorised in a mid-tenth-century charter as a ‘waste place’, and even at the time of the compilation in 1086 of the Norman inventories of landholdings called the Domesday Book it remained comparatively rural and undeveloped: the manor of Westminster lists nineteen villeins and forty-two cottars (both classes of serf), and twenty-five houses belonging to knights or Abbey staff. The Strand’s parishes reflected the intense religiosity of medieval society, and they profoundly shaped life in the Strand. The late medieval period shaped the fundamental character of the Strand. The medieval Strand was lined with grand south-facing mansions, the urban residences of the country’s bishops, who made the road a centre of political power. The medieval period, then, profoundly shaped the history of the Strand, as the time when its name, dimensions and parish boundaries were established.

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The Strand

A Biography

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