The earliest record, in
Bloomsbury History, of what would become Bloomsbury is the 1086 Domesday Book, which records that the area had vineyards
and "wood for 100 pigs". But it is not until 1201 that the name Bloomsbury
is first noted, when William de Blemond, a Norman landowner, acquired the land. The name Bloomsbury is a
development from Blemondisberi – the bury, or manor, of Blemond. An 1878 publication, Old and New
London: Volume 4, mentions the idea that the area was named after a village called "Lomesbury" which formerly stood
where Bloomsbury Square is now, though this piece of folk etymology is now discredited.
At the end of the
14th century Edward III acquired Blemond's manor, and passed it on to the Carthusian
monks of the London Charterhouse, who kept the area mostly rural.
In the 16th century, with
the Dissolution of the Monasteries, Henry
VIII took the land back into the possession of the Crown, and granted it to Thomas
Wriothesley, 1st Earl of Southampton.
In the early 1660s, the
Earl of Southampton constructed what eventually became Bloomsbury Square. The area was laid out mainly in the 18th century, largely by
landowners such as Wriothesley Russell, 3rd Duke of Bedford, who built Bloomsbury Market, which
opened in 1730. The major development of the squares
that we see today started in about 1800 when Francis Russell, 5th Duke of Bedford removed Bedford House and
developed the land to the north with Russell Square as its centrepiece.
Let's hear some thoughts from the Bloomsbury Project:
But Bloomsbury's History has had a darker side also, it was ravaged by bombing
raids in World War II and more recently in the July 2007 London bombings Tavistock Square suffered one of the more brutal attacks on a bus.
UCL rose again from the ravages of the war and today this fine old building has
been restored to past glories, it all adds to how Bloomsbury historically rich really is.
Another major part of Bloomsbury's History are the historical Churches spread throughout the District.
Bloomsbury contains three notable
churches. St. George's Church, located on Bloomsbury Way in the south of the area, was built
by Nicholas Hawksmoor between 1716 and 1731. It has a deep Roman porch with six huge Corinthian columns, and is
notable for its steeple based on the Tomb of Mausolus at Halicarnassus and for the statue of King George I on
the top.
The second is the Early English Neo-Gothic Church of
Christ the King on Gordon Square. It was designed for the Irvingites by Raphael Brandon
in 1853. Since June 10, 1954 it has been a Grade I listed building.
The third is St
Pancras New Church on the northern boundary, near Euston station. This church was completed in 1822,
and is notable for the caryatids on north and south which are based on the "porch of the maidens" from the
Temple of the Erechtheum.
The church of St George the
Martyr in Queen Square was built 1703–1706, and was where Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath married on
Bloomsday in 1956.