Difference between revisions 121782390 and 121782391 on dewiki

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[[File:GrubStreet-London 300dpi.jpg|250px|thumb|alt=People congregate at the entrance to a narrow street, overlooked by two four-storey buildings.  Each floor of the right-most building projects further over the street than the floor below.  At the corner of each building, shops advertise their wares.  A cart is visible down the street, and one man appears to be carrying a large leg of meat.|19th-century ''Grub Street'' (latterly Milton Street), as pictured in ''(contracted; show full)oot him with a pistol.  Shocked, he took a house on Grub Street and remained there, in near-total seclusion, for the rest of his life.  He died in 1636 and was buried at [[St Giles-without-Cripplegate|St Giles]] in Cripplegate.<ref>{{Citation | last = Souden | first = David | last2 = Harrison | first2 = B. | title = Welby, Henry (d. 1636) | publisher = oxforddnb.com | url = http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/28978 | doi = 10.1093/ref:odnb/28978 | year = 2004 | accessdate = 2009-07-04}}</ref>
 The [[virginalist]] [[Giles Farnaby]] also lived in Grub Street from 1634 until his death in 1640.

[[File:Grub street map.jpg|left|thumb|alt=A hand-drawn colourless map shows a narrow network of streets and alleys.  Each is named.  The Church of St Giles is visible, as are parts of Moorfields to the east.|Grub Street, as recorded in [[John Rocque]]'s 1746 map of [[London]].  Its path was partly within [[Cripplegate]] [[Wards of the United Kingdom|Ward]], but outside the city walls of the [[City of London]].]]
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[[Category:History of literature]]
[[Category:English phrases]]
[[Category:Streets in the City of London]]

[[da:Grub Street]]
[[fr:Grub Street]]
[[ml:ഗ്രബ് സ്ട്രീറ്റ്]]