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The Livery Halls of the City of London (Hardcover)
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The Livery Halls of the City of London (Hardcover)
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For more than 600 years the Livery Companies have played a leading
role in commercial activities and social and political life in the
City of London. These trade associations, each representing a
particular craft or profession, were originally responsible for
controlling, for example, wages and working conditions. As the
Companies were established and incorporated by royal charter,
largely in the 14th and 15th centuries, they began acquiring and
adapting buildings from which to operate. The Companies'
headquarters - the Livery Halls - gradually evolved from large
medieval town houses to become an identifiable building type
matched in scale and ambition only by the guild houses of northern
European mercantile cities and the Venetian scuole. By the time of
the Great Fire of London in 1666, there were at least 53 Livery
Halls. Of the 40 Halls standing today, half remain on their
medieval sites, but all have been rebuilt several times. To give
only two examples: there have been six incarnations of
Clothworkers' Hall on Mincing Lane and six Salters' Halls on three
different City sites. This beautiful book is the first major
exploration of these architecturally significant yet
under-researched buildings. Dr Anya Lucas, who has studied the
Halls in depth, provides an introduction and an illustrated history
of the buildings that have been lost over the centuries. The Great
Fire, in particular, resulted in a period of energetic
reconstruction. Companies rebuilt and beautified their Halls in
recognition that the image they projected was as crucial as their
wealth and regulatory powers. More building activity took place in
the 18th and 19th centuries as Halls were required to accommodate
new functions. Many of the Restoration Halls did not survive these
years, and, where they did, alterations continued apace. Only 3 out
of 36 Halls remained untouched after the Blitz of 1940-41, leading
to another wave of reconstruction, the buildings being
predominantly traditional or neo-Georgian in style. Henry Russell
surveys each of the 40 present-day Halls, no two of which share an
identical plan. Sited across the City from east to west, they range
from the London Proof House, the home of the Worshipful Company of
Gunmakers, on Commercial Road, outside the old City walls, to HSQ
Wellington, headquarters of the Honourable Company of Master
Mariners, moored on the Thames at Victoria Embankment. All existing
Livery Halls have been photographed especially for the project by
the renowned interiors photographer Andreas von Einsiedel, making
this a truly outstanding publication.
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