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Charterhouse Street

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Smithfield Market from Charterhouse Street

51°31′08.76″N 0°06′13.02″W / 51.5191000°N 0.1036167°W / 51.5191000; -0.1036167 Charterhouse Street is a street on the north side of Smithfield in the City of London. The road forms part of the City’s boundary with the neighbouring London Boroughs of Islington and Camden. It connects Charterhouse Square and Holborn Circus, crossing Farringdon Road and running along a number of historical sites, including Smithfield Market.

The nearest London Underground stations are Barbican near the east end of Charterhouse Street and Farringdon further west. Farringdon station also provides a connection to Crossrail and Thameslink rail services.

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Crossrail Archaeology: Charterhouse Square skeletons confirmed as Black Death victims
  • Crossrail Archaeology: Liverpool Street dig reaches Roman levels
  • MTR to Charter house hotel hongkong

Transcription

Excavating one of the Crossrail construction shafts Right on the edge of Charterhouse Square itself We came across an amazingly well preserved archaeological site 25 burials, buried around 25 meters below the ground level and this location, historically is within the area that we think was associated with one of the emergency burial grounds of the Black Death, set out in 1348 This site is one of the most important archaeological sites that we have got, because the period of the Black Death, the mid 14th Century, is not well understood through archaeological excavation. It;s quite a rare opportunity to find an archaeological site that is so well preserved It's one year on from the excavation work we did, and during that time we have done a series of scientific studies, to really try and tie down the results of the excavation. And we have come here today to the Charterhouse, who are very kindly hosting an event, so that we can present those results, starting with the discovery on London and the Black Death. A lot of work that has gone into the past year has been about understanding the dating, initially, and we have done that through dating the finds that we have got associated with the skeletons but also taken samples from the skeletons themselves to undertake radio carbon dating Along with that the other big question has been, what did these people die of? Are they associated with or can we associate these individuals with the Black Death itself With the Plague And again, taking tiny samples from the skeletons and applying an ancient DNA analysis to those has allowed us to identify the DNA of the pathogen - Yersinia pestis Which caused the Plague and still carries on today to cause the Plague So these two crucial pieces of evidence, we have now nailed down through this analysis work Well first of all these are a very rare resource and we don't want to do anything to make them rarer We don't want to use half of the skeleton in scientific testing We have to be reasonable about, if we do any testing we only take small amounts from the skeletons So first of all what we did, we chose half of the skeletons and we took one tooth from each of those skeletons So 12 tooth samples They can now look at the DNA within ancient bone and tooth and find out what diseases the person was exposed to during life And then we used the same tooth, what was left from the tooth, and that was sent off for radio carbon dating Stable isotopes are something that accumulate in the tooth from things that a person eats and drinks and we can use various chemicals and stable isotopes to look at where a person grew up Out of the 10 individuals where we got data back for stable isotopes six of them were definitely brought up in London and four of them came from elsewhere and it's likely that three of them came from East or Southern England One came from the North of England or Scotland The area was pretty much open fields, so it was a nearby parcel of land Owned by the local church, which the London Authorities at the time purchased specifically to manage what they expected to be a devastating Plague event They had heard about the Black Death creeping across Europe and this was some kind of premeditated preparation and a very good opportunity to have a precise window into this historical period which was ultimately probably the most devastating period of London's history Historic references suggest up to 200 a day were passing down Charterhouse Street to be buried in this area and extrapolating that over the size of the burial ground which was stated as 13 acres or seven hectares A huge area, a huge number of burials, that haven't yet been discovered So the point of the geophysics was to try and see if we can trace more burials in the immediate area and to see if we can start extrapolating the numbers up to understand how many are buried in the area Still yet to be discovered

Notable buildings

17 Charterhouse Street in 2021

Current

Several gastropubs line the street, including the Fox and Anchor. The formerly-DJ Mag #1 club Fabric nightclub is located at No. 77A.

Charterhouse Street is also the home of a 31 MWe combined heat and power plant operated by Citigen[1] (E.ON) and located within and beneath the former PLA cold store.[2]

Anglia Ruskin University has a campus in Charterhouse Street 19.[3]

De Beers

International diamond corporation De Beers has been headquartered at No. 17 since 1979, except between 2017-2020, though the street has homed De Beers since the 1930s. According to Bloomberg News, at the height of its power, over ninety per cent of the world's rough diamonds were held in the building, and by 2016, it housed over US$5 billion (£3.89 billion, equivalent to £4.35 billion in 2021) worth of gems in its underground vaults.[4] After moving to Carlton House Terrace in 2017, plans to sell the building were proposed.[5] The building was leased back on a long-term deal, with the intention that both De Beers and its parent company, Anglo American plc, would move into the building by 2020.[6] Following renovations by London architecture and design firm MCM, Anglo made No. 17 its global headquarters in 2021.[7]

Smithfield Market

The former Central Cold Store on Charterhouse Street

The 19th century Grade II listed Smithfield Market, designed by Victorian architect Sir Horace Jones, is the dominant architectural feature of the area.[8] The market, along with Billingsgate Fish Market and New Spitalfields Market are expected to move to a new consolidated site in Dagenham Dock.[9] The Museum of London plans to move into the General Market Building on Smithfield when possible,[10] vacating its nearby Barbican site in December 2022.[11]

Previous tenants

The street was formerly home to several refrigerated warehouses serving Smithfield Meat Market including the Central Cold Store, the Metropolitan Cold Stores at 77A and Port of London Authority Cold Store. The site on the corner of Farringdon Road was occupied by the 1960s Caxton House which was demolished in 2009 as part of the Farringdon station extension. [12]

References

  1. ^ "Edina 8.6MW CHP powers London, Citigen, district heating scheme". Edina. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  2. ^ "Citigen - City of London". E.ON plc. Archived from the original on 22 November 2010. Retrieved 13 November 2010.
  3. ^ "Locations". ARU London. Retrieved 28 March 2023.
  4. ^ Biesheuvel, Thomas (23 March 2017). "Where De Beers Hid Its $5 Billion Diamond Stash". Bloomberg Europe Edition. Bloomberg News. Retrieved 21 October 2022.
  5. ^ Biesheuvel, Thomas (22 April 2016). "Anglo Tells De Beers Staff It's Selling Their Historic HQ". Bloomberg Europe Edition. Bloomberg News. Retrieved 21 October 2022.
  6. ^ Bourke, Joanna (24 August 2017). "Anglo American and De Beers submit plans for sparkly London headquarters". Evening Standard. Retrieved 21 October 2022.
  7. ^ "17 Charterhouse Street". MCM. 9 March 2022. Retrieved 21 October 2022.
  8. ^ "History of Smithfield Market - City of London". www.cityoflondon.gov.uk. Archived from the original on 10 December 2014. Retrieved 30 November 2014.
  9. ^ Tobin, Olivia (28 April 2019). "Historic Smithfield Market to move as preferred new location revealed". www.standard.co.uk.
  10. ^ Dubois, Anna; Prynn, Jonathan (27 March 2015). "Museum of London going ahead with £70m move to Smithfield". London Evening Standard. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  11. ^ MoL official website - accessed June 17 2022 https://www.museumoflondon.org.uk/west-smithfield/relocation-west-smithfield
  12. ^ Caxton House demolition "Clerkenwell Liberal Democrats | the Clerkenwell Festival of Demolition". Archived from the original on 9 October 2013. Retrieved 19 February 2012.
This page was last edited on 14 August 2023, at 09:45
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